This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
29334 | And where, indeed, is to be found a more splendid combination of nicely worked white wood trim with touches of mahogany and dark green stairs? |
29334 | Wherein lies the superlative picturesque appeal of the typical ledge stonework of Germantown? |
48631 | Orphan Niece,.25 Kate Walsingham,.25 Poor Cousin,.25 Ellen Wareham,.25 Who Shall be Heir? |
48631 | WHO SHALL BE HEIR? |
25970 | I remarked to a friend that there was a peculiar condition of the atmosphere, and yet who could have foretold the terrible results of that afternoon? |
25970 | We asked him if he had received assistance from any source? |
32650 | He laughingly said"No,"and then he asked, hearing the firing of the small- arms of the charging squadrons,"Are you going to have a battle here? |
32650 | If so, how long will it last?" |
32650 | What would have been the result had this charge been made? |
61529 | But, Men of the late Supervisory Committee, and the thousands whom you represented, how have you kept yours? |
61529 | When is this to begin? |
44579 | But is it enough to satisfy your own conscience?" |
44579 | Was it possible for this to be in accord with Christianity? |
44579 | What report would it cause in Europe that in this new land the Quakers handled men as there men treated their cattle? |
44579 | Would the masters wish so to be dealt with? |
44579 | [ 140]"Many negroes came,... some enquiring, have I a soul?" |
44579 | [ 261] The numbers were 1790,_ 3737_; 1800,_ 1706_; 1810,_ 795_; 1820,_ 211_; 1830,_ 67_; 1840,_ 64_(?). |
45626 | And does any one with K on June 29th forget that march of 35 miles by the 2nd Corps to hill just northeast of Uniontown, Md.? |
45626 | But let it pass now--42 or more years have passed-- what matters it now whose canteen it was? |
45626 | The''Orderly''can only glance hastily into the other fifteen, with a cheering''how d''de?'' |
45626 | We cast a look back to the time K was disbanded, and, when asked where are Co. K''s 101 members? |
45626 | Who could keep the tears back when told of how one of our brave comrades thus gave up his life in the service of his country? |
3043 | But how could a persecuted sect obtain such a region from the British Crown and the Government that was persecuting them? |
3043 | Could they, under those milder skies, have developed witchcraft, set up blue laws, and indulged in the killing of Quakers? |
3043 | What can you do with a people whose imagination allowed them to give such names to their ships as Weigh Scales, Spotted Cow, and The Pear Tree? |
3043 | Why not therefore suggest paying it instead in wild land in America, of which the Crown had abundance? |
36126 | Near 600 miles"Well Gals, you Gals& your husbands with you? |
36126 | To New Connecticut"You bant tho- To New Connecticut? 36126 Gals where are you going? |
36126 | How far is it?" |
36126 | I can not but think his cleverness( is there such a word?) |
36126 | do you ever expect to get there? |
32454 | What was, briefly, the first movement of this sect, under the Lord Proprietary''s auspices? |
32454 | Who shall tire first? |
41030 | ''Any room, sir?'' 41030 The new passenger, without any expression of anxiety, looks into the coach, and then looks up at the coachman:''Now, how do you mean to fix it?'' |
41030 | ''Shall I close the window?'' |
41030 | How delighted were the old tavern- keepers in central New York with the opening of the Erie Canal, on whose boats immigrants ate and slept? |
41030 | Mr. Moore, a traveller toward his home in Dunker''s Bottom, Fayette County, Pennsylvania,[?] |
41030 | That out of the neat[ net?] |
41030 | [ 5] Oliphant''s Iron Furnace, Union Township? |
41030 | [ 7] Bruceton''s Mills, Grant Township, Preston County, West Virginia? |
46344 | Who are you? |
46344 | ***** Who would attempt to word the feeling following upon the announcement of the surrender that Sunday afternoon, April 9th, 1865? |
46344 | And, if so, did Carroll think it would be more soldierly to fight the whole rebel army? |
46344 | But where was the string? |
46344 | Did Shields order Carroll to burn the bridge? |
46344 | Do we advance_ sentiment_ only, when we say that such a body did not, could not have died in''65? |
46344 | The bandage being removed, Ashby put the question:"Who did you say is in command here?" |
46344 | Who can say that these things were not sufficient to keep Stonewall Jackson on the other side, notwithstanding the apparent absence of arms? |
46344 | Who the general of the camp? |
46344 | Who the readiest army talker? |
46344 | Who was the best- posted man on the news? |
46344 | _ It is well to be on guard always._ And what of the present? |
41067 | Here''s some strangers that wants lodging; can we get to stay all night with you? |
41067 | Is there a ferry here? |
41067 | Leaving this lonely habitation, we continued on our journey, and crossing the Sinecocy[ Monocacy?] 41067 What in the world shall we do?" |
41067 | What''s that you say, stranger? 41067 What''s that?" |
41067 | A portly dame made her appearance at the door, and was saluted with,--"How de do, ma''am-- all well, ma''am?" |
41067 | But our attitude has been that of one asking, Why?--we have not at proper length considered all that would be contained in the question, How? |
41067 | I_ spose maybe_ you think I never_ seed_ a coach? |
41067 | May not an old route have led from Great Meadows thither on the same hillside where we find the Cumberland Road today? |
41067 | On the front these words can be traced:"[ 12?] |
41067 | The question immediately arises, What sort of vehicle could weather such roads? |
41067 | What must have been the price when one horse carried only from one hundred and fifty to two hundred and fifty pounds? |
41067 | Who keeps house?" |
22471 | But loyalty to what? |
22471 | Did democracy exist on this Pennsylvania frontier? |
22471 | Did the Fair Play settlers truly determine their own political, economic, and social institutions? |
22471 | Did the mixed national stocks enjoy religious freedom? |
22471 | If a majority of the Fair Play settlers came from the British Isles, from where did they emigrate in America? |
22471 | If democracy prizes diversity, as some claim, were the diverse elements of Fair Play society equally recognized? |
22471 | In conclusion, then, what can be said regarding the leadership of the Fair Play settlers? |
22471 | In summary then, was self- determination the central theme in the Fair Play territory? |
22471 | Was land available to all who sought it, and on equal terms? |
22471 | Was the Fair Play system marked by real representation and popular control? |
22471 | Was there equality of economic opportunity on this farmers''frontier? |
22471 | Was there some correlation between property- holdings, or national origin, and leadership? |
22471 | Were there certain offices conducive to the exercise of leadership? |
22471 | What conclusions can be drawn from this analysis of the demographic factors in the Fair Play settlement? |
22471 | What then was the nature of Fair Play society? |
22471 | What then, is the meaning of this particular study, an ethnographic interpretation of Turner''s thesis? |
22471 | Where could we find so disinterested a tavernkeeper in England? |
22471 | [ 32] What were the particular problems of this frontier and how effective were these leaders in meeting them? |
22471 | [ 3] Was the class structure open or closed, mobile or fixed? |
58315 | But what state? |
58315 | How in-- did you get here? |
58315 | In the fight? |
58315 | Then why did you take the risk? |
58315 | Well, General, what do you think of that? |
58315 | Who is in command here? |
58315 | ''You falsify the morning report of a captain and his orderly? |
58315 | But how did the boys of 1861 fulfill the promises of Governor Curtin? |
58315 | But what could keep an army of freeman from discussing political questions? |
58315 | Comrade, with a record like this have we not much to be proud of? |
58315 | Governor Curtin faced the President and said:"What will Pennsylvania do? |
58315 | Shouts are being heard all along the line:"Why are not the Reserves being supported?" |
58315 | The outlook was squally; at daybreak, the rebels would attack; what could the 57th do against such odds? |
58315 | They also yelled to us asking:"Yanks, have you got any whiskey over thar?" |
58315 | They yelled at us:"Yanks, do you know that General Sheridan is killed?" |
58315 | To me he only said,''Captain wo n''t you have a drink?''" |
58315 | What regiment?" |
58315 | When were they to be granted? |
33585 | ***** It has been asked, what could have been Haskell''s object in so perverting the facts of history relative to the Battle of Gettysburg? |
33585 | As he arrived near me he asked,''How is it going here?'' |
33585 | Call you this"running like rabbits?" |
33585 | Do they call these militia?'' |
33585 | Does the country know any better than the President that Meade, Hancock and Gibbon were entitled to some little share of such credit?" |
33585 | Had he not just received the information from First Lieutenant Haskell that the enemy had been"entirely repulsed?" |
33585 | How do the Survivors of these Regiments regard the statement of the History Commission of Wisconsin, that"they sought to hide like rabbits?" |
33585 | IS THE ASSAULT ENTIRELY REPULSED?'' |
33585 | If the object was to prove that they were just as vainglorious as Haskell, has not this fact been fully established by their published books? |
33585 | Is it anywhere upon record that General Meade sent such an order? |
33585 | Is it not clear that if such an order had been sent and obeyed, the enemy would not have been repulsed? |
33585 | Was not that a fit occasion and those fugitives the men on whom to try the temper of the Solingen steel? |
33585 | What can be the reason? |
33585 | and that the loss usually sustained by the Eleventh Corps was in prisoners? |
47274 | ***** NO TWO SHOTS, EVER STRIKE THE SAME SPOT? |
47274 | ***** WHO KILLED THAT CALF? |
47274 | ***** WHO STOLE THE DUMPLINGS? |
47274 | But how? |
47274 | By the way, Sammy, where did you play the final game, Hey? |
47274 | Do you mind the fence, all grown up with red briars, the"durned old haversack"filled with potatoes, that you wanted to get rid of, and could''nt? |
47274 | Hey? |
47274 | How did the new line of union pickets cut the rebel line in two places, as evidently it did, without seeing an enemy or firing a shot? |
47274 | I am proud of the conduct of company K, at, as well as after the battle of Gettysburg, and why should I not be? |
47274 | In what light can I set the high mark of their patriotism? |
47274 | It was at this juncture Gen''l Porter said,"Col. Roberts, ca n''t you form a line and stop those flying troops?" |
47274 | On the spur of the moment I said,"Can you supply me with just a bite to eat?" |
47274 | One aged citizen when convinced of identity of his own nephew, said"Vy Chon, for vat de defil you left dem repel soljers gum up heyr, Hey?" |
47274 | Taking courage I told the woman of my illness and my craving for home- fare, and that in her motherly goodness would she sell me two of those pies? |
47274 | The reply was,"I did''nt hit you, did''nt I? |
47274 | Tyler.--_C.S.C._***** WHO CAN EXPLAIN? |
47274 | W. do you remember that foot- race? |
47274 | What words can tell the story of their courage, with what language can I adorn their lofty heroism? |
47274 | When asked the question,"How did you do it?" |
47274 | any thing the matter, in there?" |
47274 | what do you want?" |
41392 | Are you from the Juniata? |
41392 | Do you remember any thing of the country? |
41392 | Hunt dories, eh? 41392 If you think it is cowardly, why do n''t you go and help her pull it?" |
41392 | Mr. O''Burn, have you any wheat? |
41392 | Waas ter tuyfel ish ter meaning of all dish? |
41392 | What is that? |
41392 | Will you promise to disperse and go home, and offer him no insult? |
41392 | Would n''t you like to go to your old house and see your relatives? |
41392 | And for this noble and magnanimous conduct on the part of the Indian, what return did the white man make? |
41392 | Have you the money to pay for it?" |
41392 | Is there a farm of the same size in Iowa that produced to its owner so large a sum over and above all expenses? |
41392 | Musemeelin said to the other,"How will you do to kill Catawbas, if you can not kill white men? |
41392 | Musemeelin spoke to him and said,"Where is my horse?" |
41392 | Next day, happening to meet him in front of his own house, one of them accosted him with the somewhat abrupt question of"What is your name?" |
41392 | Soon after, Musemeelin came back and said,"Why did you not kill that white man, according as I bid you? |
41392 | When they saw their pack- horses falling close by them, they called out,"Pray, gentlemen, what would you have us to do?" |
41392 | Who is there to mourn for Logan? |
41392 | _ Query_--Whether the ore should be run into portable bars at the bank, or at Middleton? |
41392 | what are you doing to my poor pappy?" |
16797 | Fly? |
16797 | Then two of his friends put to him the solemn question:''Reverend Father, do you die in Christ and in the doctrine you have constantly preached?'' 16797 [ 28] And, with all, where is the gain or wisdom of blowing smoke upon a diamond? |
16797 | --"And do I not believe that?" |
16797 | Beginning of Colonization in America, 137.--Movements in Sweden, 138.--Swedish Proposals, 143.--Was Penn Aware of these Plans? |
16797 | But the cardinals said, How can the Church reform itself without a head? |
16797 | But what are oaths and fore- pledges to candidates greedy for office? |
16797 | But what, otherwise, would have become of the Reformation? |
16797 | Charles hurried to convene his council, saying,"Luther is come; what shall we do with him?" |
16797 | Henceforth the question was, Which of them should sway the nations in the time to come? |
16797 | His father hated monkery, and he shared the feeling; but, if it would save him, why hesitate? |
16797 | If he had the truth of God, as he verily believed, what were the pope and all devils against Jehovah? |
16797 | If the strong arm of the emperor should be given to sustain the pope, who would be able to stand? |
16797 | Is he not sworn to defend God''s holy Word and Gospel? |
16797 | It is easy to tell a crab to fly, but will he do it? |
16797 | Luther was told that it was useless to think that the civil powers would go to war for his protection; and where would he then be? |
16797 | Shall those holy ashes be left to be trodden in the mire?" |
16797 | The whole history is this: Are these your books? |
16797 | WAS PENN AWARE OF THESE PLANS? |
16797 | Was he right? |
16797 | What was a father''s displeasure or the loss of all the favors of the world to his safety against a hopeless perdition? |
16797 | What will be his eternal fate and that of his people should he now hold his peace? |
16797 | What would a Chesterfield or an Addison have been in such a contest? |
16797 | Whither was the world drifting? |
16797 | _ Yes._--Will you retract them? |
16797 | or was he wrong? |
23308 | Are you figuring on starting in soon? |
23308 | Did you come across anything about the hex? |
23308 | Have you ever heard of the hex of the white feather? |
23308 | I wonder how the hex would react on a human being? |
23308 | Is that why you came here? 23308 My stupid, little peasant friend, do I look like a student of history?" |
23308 | Nothing can be done for the beast? |
23308 | Or do you want something else? |
23308 | Peter Scheinberger, heh? |
23308 | Red? |
23308 | So, why not pay me and leave? |
23308 | So, you brought a goat, heh? |
23308 | So, you were determined to find out what would happen if the hex were tried on a man? |
23308 | Well, what are you staring at? |
23308 | What are you doing, heh? |
23308 | What do you mean not as quickly as the goat-- do you think it would take more time on a human? |
23308 | What is this glorious reckoning you were speaking about? |
23308 | Why? 23308 You burned it?" |
23308 | Although the book is destroyed you still have the information in your head,_ nein_?" |
23308 | Can you find me the book that tells of it?" |
23308 | Drawing back slowly he braced himself against the table, and in a thick, guttural German asked,"Who are you?" |
23308 | Only to learn of the white feather hex?" |
23308 | So, why not pay me and leave?" |
23308 | Then why should he, a good Pennsylvania Dutchman, doubt or scoff at such tradition? |
23308 | Wait-- what''s this holding his cloak? |
23308 | What ghastly horror was he in for? |
23308 | What was that horrible sensation he felt as he passed his hand over the fleshy sore? |
23308 | Which door? |
23308 | Why do you want to see it work on a man?" |
23308 | You are in possession of the books of your grandfather, are n''t you?" |
31075 | Are there any of Company D of the Eleventh Reserves here? |
31075 | Do you see that thing? |
31075 | Well, what the---- did you wake us up for, to tell us that? |
31075 | Why, you---- lunatic, are n''t two sleeps better than one? |
31075 | A child may pronounce it; but what word that ever fell from human lips has a meaning full of such intensity of horror as this little word? |
31075 | Are we a civilized people? |
31075 | As he was picking his way stealthily among the dead and dying, he heard a well known voice calling softly near by,"Joe, Joe, is that you?" |
31075 | But the soap mines? |
31075 | But where_ was_ rear? |
31075 | Do these careless men realize that they are about to decide the fate of a great nation? |
31075 | George Preston was there, his face as honest and bright as in boyhood''s days; and George Dillinger-- or was his name Hugh? |
31075 | Had death come more swiftly and mercifully, or was he a prisoner and unharmed? |
31075 | Had he been disabled that first day in the wilderness and perished in the flames of the burning woods? |
31075 | Had he been mortally wounded, and died alone in the thick underbrush which veiled so many tragic scenes? |
31075 | Had he known that the midsummer sun would look down upon his grave, would his decision have been different? |
31075 | Have you heard their solemn songs? |
31075 | He looked at us with a frightened, helpless look, and asked:"You wo n''t hurt me, will you?" |
31075 | How was it done? |
31075 | Is it possible to eliminate the tiger from human nature? |
31075 | Looking at me intently a moment, his face brightened, and he exclaimed:"You are Rob M''Bride, are n''t you?" |
31075 | Perhaps they are unconscious of the greatness of the present hour; but what of that? |
31075 | Psalm singing? |
31075 | Was this night given over to ghosts and spirits intangible? |
31075 | What is civilization? |
31075 | What man of ordinary humanity can be unmoved by such surroundings? |
31075 | Where was any thing? |
31075 | Where was front? |
31075 | Why do n''t these men come on?" |
31075 | Why so? |
31075 | Why were not the videttes, at least, advanced into the underbrush, instead of being posted at its edge, to be shot at by rebel sharpshooters? |
31075 | [*] 2D WELDON RAILROAD,{ 190th,} Captain Birkman.(?) |
58862 | Above all, do the French physicians advise bleeding in fevers? |
58862 | And are we not led hereby to an animating view of the extent and power of medicine? |
58862 | And how rarely do we see it accompany the extreme debility of old age?" |
58862 | But when, and where, will science, humanity, and government first combine to accomplish this salutary purpose? |
58862 | Did the oil, in these cases, act by destroying miasmata in the stomach chemically? |
58862 | Do the French love soups? |
58862 | Do the French love their meats well cooked? |
58862 | Do the French physicians prescribe purges and glysters to cleanse the bowels? |
58862 | Do the French sip coffee after dinner? |
58862 | It has been asked again, why do not the putrid matters which produce the yellow fever in some years produce it_ every_ year? |
58862 | It has been asked further, why were not these bilious malignant fevers more common before the years 1791, 1792, and 1793? |
58862 | The contagions of the small- pox and measles consist of matter, and yet who has ever discovered this matter in the air? |
58862 | What do people say now of the origin of the disease? |
58862 | What quantity of blood may be taken, with safety, from a patient in an inflammatory fever? |
58862 | Who ever heard of dropsy succeeding famine? |
58862 | Who ever leaves off giving purges in a colic, attended with costiveness, before the bowels are opened? |
58862 | Why should not blood- letting be used in the same way, and have the same chance of doing good? |
58862 | or did it defend the stomach mechanically from their action? |
58862 | or did it prevent the disease, only by gently opening the bowels? |
58862 | or who lays aside mercury as a useless medicine, because a few doses of it do not cure the venereal disease? |
58861 | Again: has the body been_ suddenly_ debilitated by labour or exercise? |
58861 | Are convulsions in the nervous system attended with alternate action and remission? |
58861 | Are convulsions in the nervous system preceded by debility? |
58861 | Are nervous convulsions most apt to occur in infancy? |
58861 | Are persons once affected with nervous convulsions frequently subject to them through life? |
58861 | Are there certain grades in the convulsions of the nervous system, as appears in the hydrophobia, tetanus, epilepsy, hysteria, and hypochondriasis? |
58861 | Are there local convulsions in the nervous system, as in the hands, feet, neck, and eye- lids? |
58861 | But is their action always proportioned to the causes which excite them? |
58861 | But is this current proportioned to the loss of the equilibrium of the air? |
58861 | But wherewith shall I come before the great FATHER and REDEEMER of men, and what shall I render unto him for the issue of my life from the grave? |
58861 | But who can apply similar remarks to any one disease? |
58861 | But who can say the same thing of any one disease? |
58861 | But why do I multiply proofs of their deadly effects? |
58861 | Do convulsions go off_ gradually_ from the nervous system, as in tetanus, and chorea sancti viti? |
58861 | Do convulsions go off_ suddenly_ in any cases from the nervous system? |
58861 | Do convulsions in the nervous system impart a jerking sensation to the fingers? |
58861 | Do convulsions in the nervous system return at regular and irregular periods? |
58861 | Do convulsions in the nervous system, under certain circumstances, affect the functions of the brain? |
58861 | Do tremors precede convulsions in the nervous system? |
58861 | Does debility induced on the whole, or on a part only, of the nervous system, predispose to general convulsions, as in tetanus? |
58861 | Does not it show itself plainly in_ fevers_, faintings, palsies, consumptions, and passions of the mind[2]?" |
58861 | Does palsy in some instances succeed to convulsions in the nervous system? |
58861 | Has the body been debilitated by exposure to the cold air? |
58861 | Is a coldness in the extremities a precursor of convulsions in the nervous system? |
58861 | Is the strength of the nervous system increased by convulsions? |
58861 | Is there a rigidity of the muscles in certain nervous diseases, as in catalepsy? |
58861 | Why should it surprise us to see a yellow fever generated amongst us? |
58861 | Why should we hesitate, in like manner, in admitting acute and chronic fever, in all those cases where no local inflammation attends? |
41799 | Are you sure of that? |
41799 | Certainly I can,replied Donaldson,"what shall the new name be?" |
41799 | Does the plan which you have mentioned, of breaking up the roads, apply to gravel roads, or only to those roads composed of hard stones? 41799 How does it come,"further queried the Governor,"that all you copperheads are for Bunting?" |
41799 | I am as hard as my name,said Breakiron,"and what is your name?" |
41799 | What do you want? |
41799 | What then is it? |
41799 | When? |
41799 | Why did n''t you tell me that last night? |
41799 | And to the inquiry,''What is the water boiled down for, Uncle Isaac?'' |
41799 | And where were they all now?" |
41799 | By his amendment he proposes what? |
41799 | D.) Page 105.--"How deep do you go in lifting the roads? |
41799 | If so, how? |
41799 | May I request such information as is within your reach on this subject? |
41799 | POINTS RAISED BEFORE THE COMMITTING MAGISTRATE: Quere.--Can bail be given on any other species of property than real estate? |
41799 | Pray have you had a severe winter below? |
41799 | Quere.--Are not these persons indemnified? |
41799 | Quere.--The order is that two sureties in$ 25,000 each should be furnished-- will any other members be taken? |
41799 | Suppose the same count had charged the accused with robbing, stealing and taking? |
41799 | The simple question, then, was this: Are roads necessary to carry the mail? |
41799 | Was it not our duty to lend a helping hand to encourage, to cheer, and to sustain them in their noble and patriotic efforts? |
41799 | Was it possible that an American statesman could, at this time of day, urge such an argument? |
41799 | What a change? |
41799 | What power of this government was the sedition law intended to carry into effect? |
41799 | What would the brave freemen of this country say to the men who would deny them roads to travel on, lest the enemy might take them from us in war? |
41799 | Who can question the allegation that it is an immensely important national work? |
41799 | Who, then, can doubt its nationality? |
41799 | Would it be policy to recognize them as witnesses on the part of the United States? |
41799 | _ Who can reconcile it to his conscience and his constituents to permit it to go to destruction?_[ Illustration: ROAD WAGON] CHAPTER XVI. |
46025 | , and that companion gem,What''s the use?". |
46025 | How much money have you? |
46025 | Now, do you see that tight, brick house down there beyond? |
46025 | Shame, ai n''t it? |
46025 | Then how did you get it? |
46025 | Truant officers? 46025 Where do you suppose they''ll bring up?" |
46025 | Who give it? 46025 Wo n''t you tell me,"I asked,"who gave this park to Painter''s Row?" |
46025 | Ai n''t the Juvenile Court no way of catching the mother? |
46025 | Any typhoid? |
46025 | As a venture you suggest cows? |
46025 | But the city must grow beyond that congested triangle, and why should not the company''s policy grow as well? |
46025 | But the name,----?" |
46025 | Can he get it? |
46025 | Can you picture the effect on the mother of such a home, the overwork for her, the brief possibility of rest when the babies come? |
46025 | Do you wish to see the housing problem? |
46025 | Early? |
46025 | How shall the school, called into existence by society for its own service and protection, most effectively educate the formers of the"New Society"? |
46025 | I said:''What are you doing here? |
46025 | In considering the transit needs of the future, the first question to ask is, perhaps, does Pittsburgh really need more rapid transit? |
46025 | Is this good public policy toward the ambitious workman who is unfortunate enough not to live within the favored zone? |
46025 | It is fair to ask, why even immigrant laborers put up with such conditions? |
46025 | Little Jim church they called it, Queer name for a church, was n''t it? |
46025 | Outside of the crowded tenement rooms where are the many children to play? |
46025 | SAVINGS BANK LEGISLATION: WHAT IS NEEDED? |
46025 | The air? |
46025 | Under such conditions, when a consumptive coughs, who is safe? |
46025 | Was it not time for it to stop? |
46025 | What are they?" |
46025 | What can the Health Bureau, the officially constituted army of defence, do to remedy this condition? |
46025 | What is Pittsburgh going to do about it? |
46025 | Why do n''t you mind the authorities?'' |
46025 | [ Illustration] With what result? |
46025 | alleviate such a status? |
58860 | And may not the red colour of their skins be occasioned by an irritation excited on them by the stimulus of the air? |
58860 | Are there any advantages to be derived from the excitement of certain PASSIONS in the treatment of consumptions? |
58860 | Are_ bitters_ proper to prevent a return of this state of gout? |
58860 | Are_ issues_ proper to prevent the return of the violent state of gout? |
58860 | But does not the gout prevent other diseases, and is it not improper upon this account to cure it? |
58860 | Do dreams affect the memory, the imagination, and the judgment? |
58860 | Do we ever observe a partial insanity, or false perception on one subject, while the judgment is sound and correct, upon all others? |
58860 | Do we observe a connection between the intellectual faculties, and the degrees of consistency and firmness of the brain in infancy and childhood? |
58860 | Do we observe any of the three intellectual faculties that have been named, enlarged by diseases? |
58860 | Do we observe certain degrees of the intellectual faculties to be hereditary in certain families? |
58860 | Do we observe the imagination in many instances to be affected with apprehensions of dangers that have no existence? |
58860 | Do we observe the memory, the imagination, and the judgment, to be affected by diseases, particularly by madness? |
58860 | Do we read, in the accounts of travellers, of men, who, in respect of intellectual capacity and enjoyments, are but a few degrees above brutes? |
58860 | Does the external air act upon any other part of the body besides those which have been mentioned? |
58860 | How is animal life supported in persons who pass many days, and even weeks without food, and in some instances without drinks? |
58860 | How often do the peevish complaints of the night in sickness, give way to the composing rays of the light of the morning? |
58860 | If physical causes influence morals in the manner we have described, may they not also influence religious principles and opinions? |
58860 | May not the earth contain, in its bowels, or upon its surface, antidotes? |
58860 | May not this be the effect of the sudden impression of air upon the tender surface of their bodies? |
58860 | Othello can not murder Desdemona by candle- light, and who has not felt the effects of a blazing fire upon the gentle passions? |
58860 | Should it be asked, why does general debility terminate by a disease in the lungs and trachea, rather than in any other part of the body? |
58860 | The yellow fever carried off many chronic diseases in the year 1793, and yet who would wish for, or admit such a remedy for a similar purpose? |
58860 | What shall we say of the effects of MEDICINES upon the moral faculty? |
58860 | Where is the nation and the individual, in their primitive state of health, to whom bread is not agreeable? |
58860 | Who can compare the symptoms and seats of both diseases, and not admit the unity of the remote and immediate causes of fever? |
58860 | Why has the spirit of humanity made such rapid progress for some years past in the courts of Europe? |
58860 | Why have indecency and profanity been banished from the stage in London and Paris? |
58860 | Why should it be thought impossible for medicines to act in like manner upon the moral faculty? |
58860 | Why, under certain unfavourable circumstances, may there not exist also a moral faculty, in a state of sleep, or subject to mistakes? |
35719 | We have now performed our Promises: But where are our Prisoners; or, if they be dead, the others in their Room, now when it is so late in the Spring? 35719 After he was mortally wounded, he cried out:Must I, who have made the whole Earth tremble before me, now die by the Hands of Children?" |
35719 | And whither doth our Path lead us, but into this House? |
35719 | But, replies the Governor, how came you to call him Father? |
35719 | Does_ Achilles_''s Behaviour to_ Hector_''s dead Body, in_ Homer_, appear less savage? |
35719 | Has our King sold them? |
35719 | Have we wandered out of the Way, as the Governor of_ Canada_ says? |
35719 | How can they and we be Brethren, and make different Families? |
35719 | How can they and we be Subjects of the same great King, and not be engaged in the same War? |
35719 | How can they and we have the same Heart, the same Head, and the same Interest, as you tell us, and not have the same Thoughts? |
35719 | How comes it, that the Enemy burns and destroys the Towns in_ New- England_, and they make no Resistance? |
35719 | How comes our great King to make War, and not to destroy his Enemies? |
35719 | Is it not probable, that such Designs as these have given the first Rise to Tragedy? |
35719 | Is this Protection, to speak thus with his Lips, and at the same Time to knock us on the Head, by assisting our Enemies with Ammunition? |
35719 | Is this well done? |
35719 | Or do they draw their Arms out of our Chain? |
35719 | Or do they fail in their Obedience? |
35719 | Or has the great King commanded, that the few Subjects he has in this Place, should make War against the_ French_ alone? |
35719 | Pray make plain to us this Mystery? |
35719 | Pray_ Corlear_, how come_ Maryland_,_ Delaware River_, and_ New- England_, to be disengaged from this War? |
35719 | Shall we run away, or shall we sit still in our Houses? |
35719 | Should we not go to him after all this Intreaty, when he is come so far, and so near to us? |
35719 | Sir, have we Christians done to make them better? |
35719 | The Jesuit in the Conclusion said;"Why does not_ Corlear_ tell you what passes between the Governor of_ Canada_ and him? |
35719 | The_ Mohawks_ Speaker said,"Where shall I seek the Chain of Peace? |
35719 | We return you Thanks for the Powder and Lead given us; but what shall we do with them without Guns, shall we throw them at the Enemy? |
35719 | What shall we do? |
35719 | What shall we do? |
35719 | When our Enemies are humbled, and beg Peace, why should they not have it? |
35719 | Where shall I find it but upon our Path[18]? |
35719 | Why then not one Word of your People that are to join us? |
35719 | _ Onondio_, you have sent for me often, and as often asked, why I am afraid to come? |
35719 | _ Yonondio_, you desire to speak with us at_ Cadarackui_: Do n''t you know that your Fire there is extinguished? |
41271 | Ai n''t the river handy there? 41271 And how''s your folks? |
41271 | And so she was still kneeling? |
41271 | And where is sympathy and help more appropriate than here in the national capital? 41271 Are you all right?" |
41271 | Ca n''t pass here? |
41271 | Can we make it in five hours? |
41271 | Did you all get out? |
41271 | Do you know who I am? 41271 Do you know,"asks a tottering old man, as the pale- faced woman turns away,"whether they have found Jennie and the children?" |
41271 | Does any one know her? |
41271 | Have you anything? |
41271 | How about the babies? |
41271 | How do you know she is lost? |
41271 | How much? |
41271 | Is your house gone? |
41271 | It is a three- story house, and I do n''t think there is any trouble, do you? |
41271 | She is n''t dead, is she? |
41271 | Well, now, how many did you shoot? |
41271 | What will be the effect of the flood on the value of lots in Johnstown proper? 41271 What will you charge to take these two horses to Old Oaks Park?" |
41271 | Where are the bodies? |
41271 | Where are your folks? |
41271 | Where in the name of God,she sobbed,"did you get that chair? |
41271 | Where is he? |
41271 | Where were you? |
41271 | You challenge an officer? 41271 All over Johnstown he rode a powerful gray horse, and to each one he met whom he knew he exclaimed:Have you seen my sisters?" |
41271 | Are any of you alive? |
41271 | Are you all safe? |
41271 | As it started Acting Superintendent McIlvaine was asked:--"How quickly can we make it?" |
41271 | Fenton?" |
41271 | Here are some samples:-- Is Samuel there? |
41271 | Is Eliza safe? |
41271 | Is it our John Burn that is dead? |
41271 | Is there any hope? |
41271 | Mr. Jones,"a pale- faced woman asks, walking up, sobbing,"ca n''t you tell me where we can get a coffin to bury Johnnie''s body?" |
41271 | The first friend looked awkwardly about a moment, and then asked with suppressed eagerness:"And-- and your family-- are they all-- well?" |
41271 | They all right, too?" |
41271 | What have you?" |
41271 | Where was the telegraph office? |
41271 | You heard it again, the first salutation, whenever a friend, who had been searching for_ his_ dead, met a neighbor:"Are any of your friends gone?" |
41271 | _ To anybody in Johnstown_: Can you give me any information of Adam Brennan? |
41271 | screamed a woman who was hastening up the track,''can it be that any are in there?'' |
41271 | to its present width, as a precautionary measure against future washouts?" |
41271 | you are safe,"he exclaimed, and then added:"Is Carrie well?" |
46029 | And the other boy,I said,"does he go right on doing the same work?" |
46029 | And what has become of the mother? |
46029 | And you can not talk English? |
46029 | Do n''t you know that you ought to learn English that you may know we have laws and ordinances which must be obeyed? |
46029 | How can they,he said,"when they think of his social theories? |
46029 | How talk of love, of family life, in a society which deals out the same ration to the single man and to the father of a family? |
46029 | Is the church accomplishing the desired end toward the masses? |
46029 | Just look at one another,--hey? |
46029 | Rich? 46029 Tell me, how can a man get any pleasure out of life working that way?" |
46029 | Well,I said,"how about your sons? |
46029 | What were we to do at home? |
46029 | Where are your Irish? 46029 Why do you keep all these people?" |
46029 | Why, what else could I do? |
46029 | Are the conditions under which some of this work is carried on directly inimical to health? |
46029 | Are the risks which the law supposes that the workman assumes when he hires out for wages, fair risks under modern conditions of production? |
46029 | At a meeting last fall in his church, the following subjects were discussed:"What is the influence of the Sunday School on the children?" |
46029 | But as many a man said to me,"Oh what''s the use of a library when a man works twelve hours a day?" |
46029 | But then,"--with a smile,"what can you do about it?" |
46029 | But who was to blame? |
46029 | Can not engineers, foremen, employers and workmen come together in a campaign to reduce accidents? |
46029 | Can not this be done in Pittsburgh? |
46029 | Could they be bettered without serious loss to the trades and with great gain to the workers? |
46029 | Do you call that a happy home?" |
46029 | Have some got a small bird singing in their hearts whilst their hands grow grimy at the wheel?... |
46029 | How can a man live in Pittsburgh on$ 1.20 a day?" |
46029 | How goes it with them? |
46029 | How long before New York will catch up with Denmark? |
46029 | How much citizenship does Pittsburgh get out of a man who works twelve hours a day seven days a week? |
46029 | How rich?" |
46029 | How stands the case with the hospitals of Pittsburgh? |
46029 | I asked a leader among the Italians,"Why do you settle the serious cases for a few hundred dollars?" |
46029 | If this be so, is it not our privilege and duty to train these peoples of southeastern Europe in the principles of democracy? |
46029 | In the Pittsburgh situation what encouragement is there to the immigrant who seriously wants to get ahead in life? |
46029 | Is it surprising, then, that the children are sent to work at an early age and that many are raised in cramped and dirty quarters? |
46029 | Is the Pennsylvania law fair that exempts the employer from paying anything to the family of a killed alien if that family lives in a foreign country? |
46029 | Is the burden of this loss justly distributed? |
46029 | Or was it the community which had failed to meet him halfway? |
46029 | Shall we stop there? |
46029 | The daily tyranny of hard work in their lives, leaves little time for pondering the unanswerable"Why?" |
46029 | The judge asked him,"How do you like it?" |
46029 | There was fifty of them here with me sixteen years ago and now where are they? |
46029 | Was it the Slav boy? |
46029 | What are the chances of life of the men, women and children living in the one and in the other? |
46029 | What more do we know? |
46029 | What resources of their own have these families to fall back on? |
46029 | What share falls in the long run upon the community itself, in the care of the sick and dependent? |
46029 | What share of the loss is shouldered by the employer? |
46029 | What takes the place of the wages of these bread- winners? |
46029 | What trade equipment do they bring into the work with them? |
46029 | What will remain of them at the end of their lives to prove that they have lived? |
46029 | When I asked,"How do they live?" |
46029 | When the superintendent heard it, he said,"My God, what is the country coming to? |
46029 | Where else does the stranger find opportunity for recreation at his very hand? |
46029 | Will Pittsburgh as a community, as a democratic community, meet that responsibility? |
46029 | Will our friends not give us a plan for teaching our three largest trades, clothing, beer brewing, and sugar refining? |
46029 | Will the industrial communities of the nation, as democratic communities, meet their responsibility? |
46029 | Would it not be fine if this lusty son of a worthy sire, the Red Cross Christmas stamp, were to help get us started again? |
46029 | [ Illustration] The natural question rising in one''s mind is, Why did these great hordes come to America and to Pittsburgh? |
46029 | your Americans?" |
46029 | your Germans? |
46029 | your Welsh? |
58859 | You mean,said his neighbour,"is he not_ sometimes_ sober?" |
58859 | And may not this be the reason why so few inconveniences are felt from the mixture of a variety of vegetables in the stomach? |
58859 | Are her strength, wisdom, or benignity, equal to the increase of those dangers which threaten her dissolution among civilized nations? |
58859 | Are they inhabitants of cities? |
58859 | Are they inhabitants of country places? |
58859 | But are there no conditions of the human body in which ardent spirits may be given? |
58859 | But further, what is the practice of our modern surgeons in these cases? |
58859 | But it may be said, if we reject spirits from being a part of our drinks, what liquors shall we substitute in their room? |
58859 | But may not the same heat, moisture, and diet which produced the diseases, have produced the worms? |
58859 | But may not_ most_ of the diseases of armies be produced by the different manner in which wars are carried on by the modern nations? |
58859 | But what are we to say to a compound of two medicines which give exactly the same impression to the system? |
58859 | By what arts shall we persuade them to discover their remedies? |
58859 | Do the blessings of civilization compensate for the sacrifice we make of natural health, as well as of natural liberty? |
58859 | Does it suspend pain, and raise the body above feeling the pangs of Indian tortures? |
58859 | Does the will beget insensibility to cold, heat, hunger, and danger? |
58859 | How shall we distinguish between the original diseases of the Indians and those contracted from their intercourse with the Europeans? |
58859 | In speaking of him to one of his neighbours, I said,"Does he not_ sometimes_ get drunk?" |
58859 | Is he a husband? |
58859 | Is he a magistrate? |
58859 | Is he a minister of the gospel? |
58859 | Is he the father, or is she the mother of a family of children? |
58859 | Is it not to lay aside plasters and ointments, and trust the whole to nature? |
58859 | Is it proper to refer these complaints to the same cause which produces the scarlatina anginosa? |
58859 | Is she a wife? |
58859 | Is there any such disease as an idiopathic WORM- FEVER? |
58859 | Is this occasioned by the vigour of constitution peculiar to the inhabitants of those northern countries? |
58859 | Should they continue to exert this deadly influence upon our population, where will their evils terminate? |
58859 | What would be the effect of exciting a strong counter- action in the stomach and bowels in this disease? |
58859 | What would be the effect of_ extreme_ cold in this disease? |
58859 | What would be the effects of_ copious_ blood- letting in this disease? |
58859 | Who knows but that, at the foot of the Allegany mountain, there blooms a flower that is an infallible cure for the epilepsy? |
58859 | Why is not the same zeal manifested in protecting our citizens from the more general and consuming ravages of distilled spirits? |
58859 | [ 22]"Aurengezebe, emperor of Persia, being asked, Why he did not build hospitals? |
58859 | or has he been chosen to fill a high and respectable station in the councils of his country? |
44569 | ( abnormal?) |
44569 | ( terpsinoos, gladdening?) |
44569 | 107 4 Pinnularia legumen var.? |
44569 | 111 16 Epithemia argus var.? |
44569 | 120 4 Stauroneis? |
44569 | 124 9 Surirella oblonga Ehr.? |
44569 | 15, 19? |
44569 | 19 10 Cyclotella stylorum( Br.?) |
44569 | 4, 6? |
44569 | 4, 7 and 11(?). |
44569 | 53 28- 29 Eunotia sp.? |
44569 | 59 16- 17 Achnanthes linearis forma curta H. L. Smith 59 COCCONEIS 18 Cocconeis scutellum var.? |
44569 | 63 22 Cymbella ventricosa Kuetz.? |
44569 | 82 8 Caloneis trinodis( Lewis) 81 9 Caloneis trinodis( Lewis) var.? |
44569 | 88 8 Stauroneis anceps var.? |
44569 | 88 9 Stauroneis anceps var.? |
44569 | 89 3 Stauroneis americana A. S. 89 4 Stauroneis anceps var.? |
44569 | 96 20 Navicula pinnata Pant.? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ? |
44569 | ?) |
44569 | ?, 107 leptosoma Grun., 105 major( Kuetz.) |
44569 | ?, 108 æstuarii Cl., 105 appendiculata( Ag.) |
44569 | ?, 111_ gibba_ var. |
44569 | ?, 127 ovalis Bréb., 126 var. |
44569 | ?, 25_ omphalopelta_ Ehr., 24 undulatus( Kuetz.) |
44569 | ?, 54 gracilis( Ehr.) |
44569 | ?, 63 ventricosa Kuetz., 62 Diatoma, 41 anceps( Ehr.) |
44569 | ?, 71 æquale Greg., 72 angustatum Kuetz., 72 augur Ehr., 72 brasiliense var. |
44569 | ?, 73 capitatum Ehr., 72 capitatum var. |
44569 | ?, 85 elliptica( Kuetz.) |
44569 | ?, 85 var. |
44569 | ?, 93 maculata( Bail.) |
44569 | ?, 96 placenta Ehr., 94 prætexta Ehr., 92_ producta_ Wm. |
44569 | ?_--Valve elliptical, lateral areas narrow, convergent at the ends with short rows of punctate striæ; marginal striæ, 10 in 10 µ, punctate. |
44569 | ?_--Valve with produced ends; striæ, 30 or more in 10 µ. L. 104 µ. Willistown, Pa. Pl. |
44569 | ?_--Valve with produced ends; striæ, about 28 in 10 µ, punctate. |
44569 | ABNORMIS MACCHIATI? |
44569 | CL.? |
44569 | CYCLOTELLA STYLORUM( BR.?) |
44569 | Cl.? |
44569 | DEMERARÆ GRUN.? |
44569 | DIPLONEIS CRABRO VAR.? |
44569 | EPITHEMIA MUELLERI A. S.? |
44569 | Grun., 19 stylorum( Br.?) |
44569 | L. of side 62 µ. Pleistocene clay at Buckshutem, N. J. Fossil at Wildwood, N. J. T. americana, forma trigona Pant.? |
44569 | L.? |
44569 | L.? |
44569 | L.? |
44569 | Lower valve without distinct axial area; upper valve with axial area widened in the middle; striæ slightly radiate(?). |
44569 | PANDURELLA CL.? |
44569 | S.?, 111 musculus Kuetz., 112 var. |
44569 | Sm., var.? |
44569 | Sm.?). |
44569 | Stauros wide, striated at the margins; axial area very narrow; striæ radiate, about 26(?) |
44569 | The form corresponds closely to Witt''s Cestodiscus ovalis var.? |
44569 | VAR.? |
44569 | VAR.? |
44569 | Valve linear, sigmoid, slightly attenuated toward the obtuse apices; keel excentric, puncta, 8- 10(?) |
44569 | _ Amphora(?) |
44569 | _ Navicula_(_ latissima_ var.?) |
44569 | _ Stephanopyxis appendiculata_ Ehr.? |
44569 | _ cyprinus_( Ehr.?) |
44569 | abnormal 89 5 Navicula? |
44569 | abnormis Macchiati? |
44569 | demeraræ Grun.? |
44569 | fallax Cl.? |
44569 | of naus, a boat) Valve linear or lanceolate; median fissures turned in opposite directions, terminal fissures appearing bifurcate(? |
44569 | pandurella Cl.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
44569 | var.? |
23068 | Amy, did thee see that? |
23068 | And does the red light shine on the men''s faces? |
23068 | And have you never seen him, my fair maiden? |
23068 | And what say you, venerable sir? |
23068 | And what then? |
23068 | And who cares if he is? |
23068 | Any greens up there to- day? |
23068 | Are the people poor? |
23068 | Are you going to let down the bars for me? |
23068 | Blind, eh? |
23068 | But for what, Poet, wilt thou labour? |
23068 | But where can the monster be? |
23068 | But,said Tiny, timidly, yet as if determined that he would have the matter quite settled now and for ever--"_am_ I a singer, father? |
23068 | Did you love her? |
23068 | Do you see a funeral? |
23068 | Dost thou bleed, my immortal horse? |
23068 | Have you been all the while helping the World, and is this all the pay you get? |
23068 | Here he is,exclaimed the girl; and at the same moment a gruff voice demanded--"What do you want, you two, eh? |
23068 | How did thee come into this cart? |
23068 | Is the sun near setting? |
23068 | Is there a physician near here? |
23068 | No mother? |
23068 | No, Tiny,said Josiah;"but what are you going to do with the world? |
23068 | Of me, sir? |
23068 | Oh, Tiny, Tiny, can you see? |
23068 | Please, sir,said a child''s voice-- it was the voice of our little Grace, you know--"please, sir, will you come and help me?" |
23068 | Quite sure,answered Amy;"but is thee boy or girl?" |
23068 | Shall I ring the door bell? |
23068 | That was the meaning of all his politeness about the letters-- he expected to hoodwink us, did he? 23068 What do you mean?" |
23068 | What do you want? |
23068 | What is it that you want? |
23068 | What is that? |
23068 | What is this? |
23068 | What''s that you carry? |
23068 | Will you be kind enough to tell me whether the fountain has any name? |
23068 | Without your blessing, father? |
23068 | Yes, I did so,replied Amy;"what can the Yankee be doing with that little nigger? |
23068 | Yes; do n''t you? |
23068 | A baby clad in rags, and sheltered from the cold with them, a baby in its cradle-- what do you think that cradle was? |
23068 | And this, then, is Pirene? |
23068 | And what else did Bellerophon behold there? |
23068 | And when Tiny said, that"yes,"what do you suppose he thought of? |
23068 | But how did this man get hold of thee, if thy father and mother are free people? |
23068 | But who can tell? |
23068 | But you think they died away upon the air, those songs? |
23068 | But, pray, have you lost a horse? |
23068 | Can this be he?" |
23068 | Could he drag the plough so well, think you? |
23068 | Dear Bellerophon, do you not see that it is no bird? |
23068 | Did I tell you that a number of rich men had gathered, like a sort of outer wall, around the crowd of poor people which stood next to Tiny? |
23068 | Do you know whether the winged horse Pegasus still haunts the Fountain of Pirene, as he used to do, in your forefathers''days?" |
23068 | Do you live about here?" |
23068 | Have you ever read about that settlement? |
23068 | How are you going to prove to me that I''m mistaken? |
23068 | I know it''s not right to notice strangers, and to be sure the man''s welcome, but, Amy, did thee ever see anybody take victuals like this Yankee? |
23068 | I wonder if anybody else has got any such friend in his heart, or in his house, as our Tiny found in his very first walk through that city street? |
23068 | I wonder if you ever thought about the wonderful power there is in words? |
23068 | I''m sure you know by this time what the"cause"was? |
23068 | Israel now advanced--"Well, girls,"said he,"what''s thee doing at the tinman''s cart? |
23068 | It says it needs me; and father, shall_ your_ son hide himself when any one in need calls to him for help? |
23068 | Not meddling among his tins, I hope? |
23068 | Now, Orphy, what is to be done? |
23068 | Of what use would wings be to a horse? |
23068 | Presently Tiny went softly up to him and laid his hand upon Josiah''s arm, and his voice trembled while he said,"Dear father, are you angry with me?" |
23068 | She had wept so violently that when Tiny spoke to her and said,"What is it?" |
23068 | The black child again peeped out of the hole, and looking cautiously round, said,"Are you quite sure the naughty man wo n''t hear us?" |
23068 | The workmen were going home from their labour, he thought at first; but could it be a city full of workmen? |
23068 | Then why ca n''t he stop at a tavern, and pay for his victuals? |
23068 | Was not that absurd? |
23068 | Was_ that_ what you said?" |
23068 | We had some vegetables for dinner-- some carrots and turnips-- and he asked me if I knew where they grew? |
23068 | Well did Tiny understand the angry sound; and, as for the girl walking with him, she trembled with fear, and said,"Shall we turn down this street? |
23068 | What could he do for them? |
23068 | What''s this?" |
23068 | What, here in the free state of Pennsylvania? |
23068 | Who knows, he may be saving it up to help an old mother, or to buy back land, or something of that sort? |
23068 | Who takes care of you?" |
23068 | Why, friend, are you in your senses? |
23068 | Would no one tell him so? |
23068 | Would no one tell him that the new song to be sung unto our Lord was very different from this? |
23068 | _ am_ I a poet?" |
23068 | and why does he hide it? |
23068 | asked Orphy,"and why does the Yankee hide thee? |
23068 | asked a voice in Tiny''s soul,"_ What_ then wilt thou do?" |
23068 | can you see?" |
23068 | is it you yourself, Rushforth, my dear fellow?" |
23068 | oh my child, when wilt thou return from thy long wanderings?" |
23068 | that they did no other good than merely hushing a hungry child to sleep? |
23068 | what is dat? |
23068 | what is this?" |
29313 | ''How many have you got?'' 29313 ''What regiment do you belong to?'' |
29313 | ''You''ve heard about the orders against marauding, eh?'' 29313 How are you, mud?" |
29313 | How d''ye like Virginny woods, Yank? |
29313 | How far, General? |
29313 | How many men have you? |
29313 | Say, Yank, if I send you over a boat- load of''backy,''will ye send her back filled with coffee? |
29313 | What will you do that for? 29313 Where is your letter, sir?" |
29313 | Why do n''t you''uns come over? |
29313 | Young man,said he, with a supercilious air,"what might your business be?" |
29313 | Your knowledge of the duties of officer of the day is somewhat limited? |
29313 | After forty years, what would I take for that association with all its dangers and hardships? |
29313 | Amidst all these joyous reunions, were there no shadows? |
29313 | And the others? |
29313 | And then they sang to us:"Ai n''t ye mighty glad to get out the wilderness?" |
29313 | Being apparently reassured by my reply, he continued in a less peremptory tone,"Who ordered that line? |
29313 | But did it stir their blood? |
29313 | Can we who know of it only as we read appreciate such a home- coming? |
29313 | Could order ever be gotten out of it? |
29313 | Could we do it and keep up our end? |
29313 | Did our"Ma''s know we were out?" |
29313 | Did that require nerve? |
29313 | Do n''t you see yonder line of rebels is flanking you?" |
29313 | Does Providence graciously look out for the tenderfoot? |
29313 | Eggs, gelatin, or other notions of civilization, for settling, were studiously(?) |
29313 | Had the left grand division vigorously performed its part in the earlier movement, can any one doubt the result? |
29313 | Have n''t you had enough of the reveille here?" |
29313 | Here is Colonel Wilson''s account of the colloquy that ensued:"Who are you, sir? |
29313 | How can words describe the scene? |
29313 | How did I know so much about them? |
29313 | How did we ordinarily get our laundrying done? |
29313 | How does one feel under such conditions? |
29313 | How far out is it?" |
29313 | How shall I describe the experiences of that night''s tramp? |
29313 | How was our coffee made? |
29313 | How, then, did I come in possession of its main features, so as to note them in my diary at the time? |
29313 | I asked,"How was that?" |
29313 | If I was"hot,"what shall be said of him? |
29313 | If a reply was not forthcoming, a nagging ejaculation, calculated to provoke, would follow, such as,"What''s the matter, Yank, are ye deaf?" |
29313 | Is the theory of a misunderstanding of orders tenable? |
29313 | Need I say that, joyous as was our home- going, there was more than a pang at the bottom of our hearts as we severed those heroic associations? |
29313 | Now how was the plan carried out? |
29313 | Now, as I close this narrative, shall I speak of the gala day of our home- coming? |
29313 | Now, why did the left grand division fail to make the attack as ordered? |
29313 | Now, why this period of inactivity whilst Sedgwick was being punished? |
29313 | Only a fifth of them left? |
29313 | Otherwise, why did he attack at all? |
29313 | Personal fear? |
29313 | Pretty expensive fuel? |
29313 | Ran up against man, who grabbed me by the collar, and demanded''what are you doing here?'' |
29313 | See him behind that bush?" |
29313 | Seeing me, he stopped his horse and exclaimed,"Adjutant, where is my division? |
29313 | Should we continue the advance or retire and get further orders? |
29313 | The carol of birds in the midst of the blackest thunder- storm? |
29313 | The colonel called out,"What''s the matter with the bass drum?" |
29313 | The officer had by that time recovered himself sufficiently to ejaculate,"Who the h----l is that-- general?" |
29313 | The rebels were evidently interested observers of this mud march, for their pickets taunted ours with such questions as"How d''ye like Virginia mud?" |
29313 | To what may it be likened? |
29313 | Was it ever so dark, and did it ever rain harder? |
29313 | Was the new movement, then, to be in that direction? |
29313 | Was this little race, so short and gloriously won, prophetic of his life''s brief course? |
29313 | We marched very leisurely, making during the first four days only about twenty- five miles, to a village bearing the serious(?) |
29313 | Were these home treasures lost? |
29313 | Were you getting it ready to send to the hospital? |
29313 | What are you doing here?" |
29313 | What could I do? |
29313 | What did you come down here for? |
29313 | What for these pictures and memories? |
29313 | What in h----l do you want?" |
29313 | What is your business? |
29313 | What should I do? |
29313 | What were my sensations when hit? |
29313 | What were we going to do? |
29313 | What''s wanted?" |
29313 | Where do you belong? |
29313 | Where was our David? |
29313 | Where were we going? |
29313 | Who comes there?" |
29313 | Who''s there? |
29313 | Why do n''t we go forward?" |
29313 | Why fence rails or timbers were not placed under them as is usual? |
29313 | Why have n''t you sent us orders? |
29313 | Why this interregnum in the command? |
29313 | Will the time ever come when"the bitter shall not be mingled with the sweet"and tears of sorrow shall not drown the cup of gladness? |
29313 | You did n''t think you could whip us men of the South, did you?" |
29313 | a picnic? |
29313 | etc., etc., at the same time accepting(?) |
29313 | or a similar ejaculation, and then,"General Couch, why do you not assume command and order us forward? |
29313 | xxi., page 275:"I would also state that some cowardly members of a regiment unknown(?) |
27669 | And how did you make out, old man? |
27669 | Are many bodies being discovered now? |
27669 | Are there bodies under these ruins? 27669 Are you a Gautier man?" |
27669 | Ca n''t pass here? |
27669 | Did you all get off? |
27669 | Did you find your wife and children? |
27669 | Did your folks all escape alive? |
27669 | Do you know,asks a tottering old man, as the pale- faced woman turns away,"whether they have found Jennie and the children?" |
27669 | Do you see that fringe of trees? |
27669 | Do you you know who I am? 27669 Have yez any tobaccy?" |
27669 | Have you any instructions or inquiries? 27669 Have you enough? |
27669 | He worked for the Gautier Mill? |
27669 | Hello, where on earth did you come from? 27669 How about the movement to burn the rubbish, bodies and all?" |
27669 | How can anybody tell how many are dead? |
27669 | How do you fare? |
27669 | Now look away over to the left and then away over to the hills on the right, and what do you see? 27669 Now you would have thought that the people on the Johnstown flat would have got out of the way when warned of danger, would n''t you? |
27669 | Now, have you had enough? 27669 Oh, Mr. Jones,"a pale- faced woman asks, walking up, sobbing,"ca n''t you tell me where we can get a coffin to bury Johnnie''s body?" |
27669 | Say, mister,stammered the abashed small boy,"is this the place?" |
27669 | So you got out of it, did you, after all? |
27669 | There, you see that brick building? 27669 Well, did you ever see such a mass of wreckage? |
27669 | Well, that was cool, was n''t it? 27669 Well, what can we do for you?" |
27669 | What do you think will be the time required for the Conemaugh Valley to recover from the shock of the flood? |
27669 | What for? |
27669 | What have you there, my boy? |
27669 | What is the condition of the valley now? |
27669 | Where in the name of God,she sobbed,"did you get that chair? |
27669 | Who do you know are alive? |
27669 | You challenge an officer? 27669 You see nothing but that dazed, sickly smile that calamity leaves,"she went on,"like the crazy man wears when you ask him,''How came you here?'' |
27669 | You want to go into town, do n''t you? |
27669 | ''Where can I find a restaurant?'' |
27669 | ''Where do you think we are? |
27669 | A piece of a Bible? |
27669 | And what are you doing here, anyhow? |
27669 | Are they all saved?'' |
27669 | Are you not almost discouraged at the idea of clearing so many acres up? |
27669 | Are your dear ones saved or lost? |
27669 | As they passed one said:--"How about Aunt Mary?" |
27669 | Beneath the ghastly ruins of the once happy towns and villages along the pathway of the deluge, who shall say how many victims lie buried? |
27669 | Can the job be done safely and successfully wholesale or not? |
27669 | Can you ask, then, what became of the houses? |
27669 | Can you direct me to the nearest hack stand?'' |
27669 | Can you imagine it swelling into a mighty sea, that puny thing, that is smiling in its glee over the awful havoc it has created? |
27669 | Can you imagine that all that immense strip was covered with stores, business houses and dwellings? |
27669 | Did you ever see anything so destructive in your life? |
27669 | Do you know how many there are left? |
27669 | Do you see that old, tumble- down coal shed? |
27669 | Do you want to go in? |
27669 | Do you want us to leave that?" |
27669 | He looks every inch a soldier, does n''t he? |
27669 | Holden?" |
27669 | How''s all the folks? |
27669 | If you go up stairs, what do you think you will see in that cold, dark, damp room? |
27669 | Is he alive?" |
27669 | It is,"Will you work?" |
27669 | My God, man, would you believe me? |
27669 | Now, will you look at that? |
27669 | Queer, is n''t it? |
27669 | River, did I say? |
27669 | Shall we? |
27669 | Some one said the other day:''Why talk of sufferers? |
27669 | Stretched on these boards in this dismal room-- what do you see? |
27669 | That distance is how great? |
27669 | The General had just got up, and as the officer approached the General said:--"Who sent you here?" |
27669 | The horrors that have been enacted in that spot, the horrors that are seen there every hour, who can attempt to describe? |
27669 | The men listened attentively, and then one of them asked:"But, Mr. Smith, if we do n''t feel just like turning in to- day we do n''t have to, do we?" |
27669 | The question on every person''s lips is-- Will the Cambria Iron Company rebuild? |
27669 | The question that is heard very often is,"Where are the inhabitants?" |
27669 | There are many there, it is true, but after all, how many are good for anything? |
27669 | This led Mr. Smith to ask,"How about George Thompson? |
27669 | Two miles, do you say? |
27669 | Was this the only such scene the day saw? |
27669 | What can you expect from a description like this, picked out at random:"Woman, five feet four inches tall, long hair?" |
27669 | What could stand against such an instrument of destruction as this? |
27669 | What could they do? |
27669 | What did I tell you a little while ago? |
27669 | What do you see? |
27669 | What else can you see? |
27669 | What has become of those twelve thousand inhabitants? |
27669 | What have we here? |
27669 | What have you found there? |
27669 | What is that you have there? |
27669 | What''s that? |
27669 | What''s that? |
27669 | Where are they now? |
27669 | Where is charity to cease? |
27669 | Where''s Jim?" |
27669 | Who can tell until after the waters have wholly subsided? |
27669 | Who can tell? |
27669 | Will not some of you men help? |
27669 | Would you like to give something to help them?" |
27669 | You have been wandering around and got tangled up in the ruins and do n''t know where you are? |
27669 | You lost your two boys, did n''t you?" |
27669 | _ Walt Whitman._"Are the horrors of the flood to give way to the terrors of the plague?" |
27669 | that takes your breath, does n''t it? |
27669 | there is a man; there is his name on the sign-- Kramer, is n''t it? |
27669 | what do you see this minute? |
27669 | you just dropped in to see the sights, eh? |
55627 | ''Bout time to begin, ai n''t it? |
55627 | Ach, Emmy,cried Mrs. Schmidt,"will we ever get to your gran''pop and my brother?" |
55627 | And who,drawled the tall man,"who may Emmyline Willing be?" |
55627 | Are n''t you afraid that there biscuit''ll p''isen you? |
55627 | Are we going to give them water? |
55627 | Are you going away? |
55627 | Are you going to give we- all some of them real biscuit? |
55627 | Are you really going away from me? |
55627 | Can I ask? |
55627 | Can I go down to the woods to find my brother? |
55627 | Can you bake? |
55627 | Can you see up there some mounted officers? |
55627 | Could n''t she be got out of this? |
55627 | Did n''t we win? |
55627 | Did you find Willing? |
55627 | Did you have wounded rebels here? |
55627 | Did you see this? |
55627 | Do men like to fight? |
55627 | Do you see the white horse? |
55627 | Does this end the war? |
55627 | Emmyline,he said gently, when she brought him the things for which he had asked,"do you suppose you could help me?" |
55627 | Emmyline,said he, in his pleasant drawl,"how about them biscuit?" |
55627 | Goin''to pull out? |
55627 | Got a man here by the name of Willing? |
55627 | Grandmother, where are you? |
55627 | Has blood been shed here? |
55627 | How are they at home? |
55627 | How did_ you_ get here? |
55627 | I wonder what they are gunning? |
55627 | Is Bertha safe, mother? |
55627 | Is n''t the battle over? |
55627 | Is the battle over? |
55627 | Is there going to be_ more_? |
55627 | Is there to be a battle? |
55627 | Leetle Emmyline,he shouted,"you get some warm water in a basin and some old cloths, will you, Emmyline?" |
55627 | Like to fight, Emmyline? 55627 Like to fight?" |
55627 | Little Emmeline, is it you? |
55627 | May I go down to the square now, mother? |
55627 | Sissy, do you know any way to get this door open short of breaking it in? |
55627 | Well, sissy,he drawled,"and who may you be?" |
55627 | Well, you find out for me, will you, Sam? 55627 Were you in the battle, Emmeline?" |
55627 | What are they doing? |
55627 | What can it be? |
55627 | What in the world is the matter? |
55627 | What is it? |
55627 | What is that noise over there, say? |
55627 | What is that noise? |
55627 | What shall I do, then? |
55627 | What shall we do? |
55627 | What will become of them? |
55627 | What will they do to him? |
55627 | What will they do with them? |
55627 | What''s the matter? |
55627 | When did you come out here? |
55627 | Where are you going, Emmyline? |
55627 | Where are you? |
55627 | Where are you? |
55627 | Where have they gone? |
55627 | Where have you been? |
55627 | Where is your baby? 55627 Where will they get them?" |
55627 | Where''s the colonel? |
55627 | Where,--Henry looked about, startled,--"where are grandfather and grandmother?" |
55627 | Why do n''t they take them, too? |
55627 | Why not? |
55627 | Will it last after to- morrow? |
55627 | Will there be more wounds to- morrow? |
55627 | Will they get them? |
55627 | Will they take him away? |
55627 | Will you let me go if I bake you some? |
55627 | Without_ me_? 55627 You wo n''t go out of the kitchen, will you, sissy?" |
55627 | A battle? |
55627 | Above all, where was Henry? |
55627 | And where may the owner of this place be?" |
55627 | And where was Emmeline, her darling, her little girl, whom she had un- wittingly sent into greater danger? |
55627 | Are you going to miss_ me_?" |
55627 | Could she bake? |
55627 | Could you leave her brother here? |
55627 | Do you hear me?" |
55627 | Emmyline, would you"--Private Christy blushed like a boy--"would you give me a kiss?" |
55627 | Had Bertha been taken into the cellar as the soldier advised? |
55627 | Had there been fighting in quiet, peaceful Gettysburg? |
55627 | Henry had seen the object toward which his sister''s erratic steps were turned and had finished his sentence,"Is it mine, mother?" |
55627 | How had she got to bed? |
55627 | How had these men come up so quietly? |
55627 | How was poor Bertha? |
55627 | I suppose she could n''t come down and talk to him?" |
55627 | Illustration:_ Page 93_"EMMELINE,"HE SAID GENTLY,"DO YOU SUPPOSE YOU COULD HELP ME?"] |
55627 | Like layin''up there with arms and legs ruined? |
55627 | Like livin''their days without half a body? |
55627 | Noise ca n''t hurt ye, do n''t ye know that? |
55627 | Not one of those sick men could even raise his head-- who was it who came upon her so stealthily and suddenly? |
55627 | THE TERROR PAST 130 ILLUSTRATIONS"EMMELINE,"HE SAID GENTLY,"DO YOU SUPPOSE YOU COULD HELP ME?" |
55627 | Was he lying wounded, bleeding, alone? |
55627 | Was the army still here? |
55627 | What shall we do?" |
55627 | What would she see to- morrow? |
55627 | Where had they taken him? |
55627 | Where was Emmeline, Emmeline who was forever getting into mischief of some kind? |
55627 | Where was Mary? |
55627 | Where was her mother? |
55627 | Where was she? |
55627 | Where were the elder Willings? |
55627 | Where were they? |
55627 | Where were those thousands of blue- coated soldiers? |
55627 | Why did not the blue- coated soldiers come and drive them away? |
55627 | Why did they permit this great army to camp on these hills, to occupy her grandfather''s house, and his fields, and the other fields round about? |
55627 | Why was she still dressed? |
55627 | Would she bake? |
55627 | You would n''t bake me a real biscuit, I suppose?" |
13545 | And is mine one? |
13545 | And what use will my thrifty Aunt make of the blue violets? |
13545 | Aunt Sarah, did you know Frau Schmidt, instead of using flour alone when baking cakes, frequently uses a mixture of flour and cornstarch? 13545 Aunt Sarah, how was sgraffito ware made? |
13545 | Aunt Sarah, may I have the old spinning wheel in the attic? 13545 Aunt Sarah, why was straw ever put under this carpet?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,inquired Mary one day,"do you think it pays a housekeeper to bake her own bread?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,inquired Mary,"is the rhubarb large enough to use?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,questioned Mary one day,"do you mind if I copy some of your recipes?" |
13545 | But what did the husband think of all this? |
13545 | Did n''t I hear that worthless scamp, Fritz Schmidt, a- referrin''to me and a- sayin''to Miss Midleton fer the''servant''to bring over the butter? 13545 Do n''t you mean''That Grand Old Name Called Mary?''" |
13545 | Do tell me, Aunt, what this small iron boat, on the top shelf, was ever used for? 13545 Have you ever made rag rugs?" |
13545 | Have you forgotten, Aunt Sarah, you promised to tell me something interesting about the first red clover introduced in Bucks County? |
13545 | How are you today? |
13545 | If''twere not for God and good people, what would become of the unfortunate? |
13545 | Is_ that all_ you get? |
13545 | Mary, did you ever hear this Persian proverb? 13545 Mary, did you notice the gayly- decorated, old- fashioned coffee pot and tea caddy in the corner cupboard? |
13545 | Mary, have you ever read the poem, The Potter and the Clay?'' 13545 Now,"said Mary,"what shall we do with these stiff, ugly, haircloth- covered chairs and sofa?" |
13545 | Oh, you mean the picture on the mantel standing near those twin gilded china vases, gay with red and blue paint? |
13545 | Professor Schmidt, can you tell me the name of that weed? |
13545 | Speaking of cakes, Aunt Sarah,said Mary,"have you ever used Swansdown cake flour? |
13545 | That old mulberry tree, from the berries of which you made such delicious pies and marmalade last Summer, is it dead? |
13545 | They had no trolley cars in those days? |
13545 | Was there a pottery on your father''s farm, Aunt Sarah? |
13545 | What is it, dear? 13545 Why did you give your family of dolls such an odd name, Aunt Sarah?" |
13545 | Why,exclaimed Mary,"were there so many potteries in that locality?" |
13545 | ***** What draws my eye to yonder spot-- That bench against the wall? |
13545 | And do n''t you think we might paint the floor around the edges of the rug to imitate the woodwork? |
13545 | And is not common? |
13545 | And what is this small frame containing a yellowed piece of paper cut in intricate designs, presumably with scissors?" |
13545 | And who shall say it was not answered? |
13545 | And why was their hair all worn hanging in one braid over each shoulder, with a band over the forehead? |
13545 | And, what if we are commonplace? |
13545 | Are they anything like braided mats?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah, where did you get this very old poem,''The Deserted City''?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,"exclaimed Mary,"do you mean a carpet like the one in the spare bedroom?" |
13545 | Ca n''t we consign them all to the attic? |
13545 | Could we not have it painted to imitate chestnut wood? |
13545 | Did you ever see them grow, Mary? |
13545 | Did you notice the strong, substantial manner in which it is made? |
13545 | Do n''t you think that would be pretty, Aunt Sarah?" |
13545 | Do you suppose the same birds return here from the South every Summer?" |
13545 | Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said:"What writest thou?" |
13545 | FISH, CLAMS AND OYSTER( BONED SHAD) How many young cooks know how to bone a shad? |
13545 | Have you ever noticed, Aunt Sarah, what a symphony in green is the yard? |
13545 | Have you ever read the poem,''The Changed Cross?'' |
13545 | Have you ever seen an"Elbadritchel?" |
13545 | Have you never read the poem? |
13545 | He said''twas a good, serviceable color, and more economical to buy it all alike, and remarked:''What''s the difference, anyway? |
13545 | How will I ever repay you for all your kindness to me?" |
13545 | I''m hired girl What does that make out if I do work here? |
13545 | In what nobler work could women engage than in work to promote the comfort and well- being of the ones they love in the home? |
13545 | Is it the same as slip- decorated pottery?" |
13545 | It may be but a little corner, which you have been asked to fill; What matters it, if you are in it, doing the Master''s will? |
13545 | Jake, beaming with happiness, said,"Sibylla vos side by me yet?" |
13545 | Mary is a dear girl, why should she not think of marrying?" |
13545 | Mary replied,"Do n''t you think men are very queer, anyway, Aunt Sarah? |
13545 | Mary, have you ever eaten a small, sweet wafer called''Zimmet Waffle?'' |
13545 | No? |
13545 | No? |
13545 | Sadie, can you crochet?" |
13545 | Say not the days are evil-- who''s to blame? |
13545 | Seeing the letter in his hand she inquired:"What news, John?" |
13545 | She turned to her Aunt, saying,"Do n''t you think the room looks bright, cheery and livable?" |
13545 | Should she have equal political rights? |
13545 | Speaking of salt, my dear, have you read the poem,''The King''s Daughters,''by Margaret Vandegrift? |
13545 | Suffrage, the right of woman to vote; will it not take women from the home? |
13545 | Suppose we start a''girls''campfire,''right here in the country? |
13545 | Then this dull, dark, gray- blue painted woodwork; could any one imagine anything more hideously ugly? |
13545 | They certainly possessed intelligent faces, but why those queer- shaped Indian dresses? |
13545 | To quote an old physician,"If horses thrive on oats, why not boys who resemble young colts?" |
13545 | Was hot er dort i m Schtille g''denkt? |
13545 | Was n''t it her duty to leave the home and see where these products were produced, and if they were sanitary? |
13545 | Weescht du''s? |
13545 | Wer mecht es wisse-- sag? |
13545 | What did my son say?" |
13545 | What difference, if an honest heart beat beneath a laborer''s hickory shirt, or one of fine linen? |
13545 | What makes you think it is condescension for me to address you?" |
13545 | What to a hungry man is more nutritious and appetizing than a perfectly broiled, rare, juicy, steak, served hot? |
13545 | Who has not felt the sweet freshness of early morning before"the sunshine is all on the wing"or the birds awaken and begin to chatter and to sing? |
13545 | Who is it has said,''The discovery of a new dish makes more for the happiness of man than the discovery of a star''? |
13545 | Why so many strings of gaudy beads around their necks? |
13545 | Will man accord woman the same reverence she has received in the past? |
13545 | Wo n''t they look just sweet?" |
13545 | Would you like to see your Uncle''s old deed, which he came into possession of when he inherited the farm from his father?" |
13545 | Yes, and without an''alarm clock,''too, Sibylla, eh?" |
13545 | You remember, we could not decide what use to make of your old, tan cravenette stormcoat? |
13545 | You see that old locust tree against one side the ruined wall of the house?" |
13545 | You see the highest flat rock along the Narrows? |
13545 | [ Illustration: THE OLD MILL]"Aunt Sarah, what is pumpernickel?" |
13545 | exclaimed Mary,"is lard made from pork fat? |
13545 | inquired Mary,"is it like rye bread?" |
13545 | what then shall I say that is both bright and fine? |
22370 | ''A play''? |
22370 | And what name shall I say? |
22370 | And who could have been mean enough to take the candy? |
22370 | Are n''t you going to have any girls or women in your play? |
22370 | Are they going to have the party in that house, Jason? |
22370 | Are you ashamed of me? |
22370 | Are you_ sure_, Winifred? 22370 Aunt Deborah, the English have not captured Lafayette, have they?" |
22370 | But do you think it will be quite fair to Aunt Clara? |
22370 | But what could we do with Fluff? |
22370 | But why not let her go now? |
22370 | Can you answer that, Miss Betty? |
22370 | Did Ruth tell you that is a fairy present? |
22370 | Did n''t you like Hero? |
22370 | Did you ever see Lafayette, Aunt Deborah? |
22370 | Did you wish to see General Howe, madam? |
22370 | Do you remember that day when we began the chair for Cecilia, Ruthie? |
22370 | Do you suppose Betty is a prisoner? |
22370 | Do you suppose he is at Winifred''s? 22370 Do you suppose it really was the fairies, Betty?" |
22370 | Do you suppose the British have taken him? |
22370 | Do you suppose the English officer at your house will really lend you his red coat? |
22370 | Do you suppose you could find the way back to the stone house? |
22370 | Does it mean the same as''rehearsal''? |
22370 | Has she gone? |
22370 | Have you found a lost dog, if you please? |
22370 | How could a small girl like thee cross the Schuylkill? |
22370 | How did you get up here? |
22370 | How soon may I visit Aunt Deborah, Mother? |
22370 | How would you and Winifred like to sit with Jason on the front seat, Ruth? |
22370 | I suppose you all know what the Knights of the days of Chivalry fought for? |
22370 | I wish we could do something for him, do n''t you, Winifred? |
22370 | Indeed, I liked Hero,she said;"but suppose I decided that because he was lost I would no longer prepare thy breakfast or dinner? |
22370 | Is Hero here? |
22370 | Is n''t Betty splendid to let me have the very best part of all, and to get so many nice things for us to dress up in? |
22370 | Lafayette? 22370 May I go in and see Winifred?" |
22370 | May I go to Barren Hill to- morrow, Mother, dear? |
22370 | May I go, Mother? |
22370 | May I not go to Valley Forge to see him? |
22370 | May I not go with Farmer Withal next week? |
22370 | May I not put the little table by your chair, Mother, and have my breakfast here with you? |
22370 | May n''t we use Father''s tools? |
22370 | Might I go? |
22370 | Mother, do you think there is any harm in believing in fairies? |
22370 | Mother, you never scold me, do you? |
22370 | Perhaps you could remember some of those songs, Miss Ruth? 22370 Ruth, why did thee think I wanted thee to stay up- stairs this morning?" |
22370 | Shall we see that to- day? |
22370 | Surely thee does not mean to take this little girl? |
22370 | Then I suppose there were n''t any fairies at all? 22370 Then will General Washington and Lafayette come here, Jason?" |
22370 | Truly? 22370 Um- m,"said Betty slowly,"what does Washington say when Lord Cornwallis asks him to spare his life?" |
22370 | Was it not yesterday that thee declared Hero was stolen, only to find that he had followed Winifred Merrill home? 22370 Well, what if I did? |
22370 | Well, why do n''t you make one? 22370 What are''Knights''?" |
22370 | What did you give your aunt? |
22370 | What did you say, Gilbert? |
22370 | What does Lafayette wear? |
22370 | What does''tournament''mean, Betty? |
22370 | What has he done? 22370 What is it, Hero? |
22370 | What is the matter, Ruth? 22370 What made that other child tell all that rigmarole about fairies?" |
22370 | What nonsense is this, Dick? 22370 What shall I do, Aunt Deborah? |
22370 | What shall I do? |
22370 | What shall we do? 22370 What time do you suppose it is, Ruth?" |
22370 | What''s the matter, Ruthie? |
22370 | What''s your name? |
22370 | Where can Ruth be? |
22370 | Where is the candy? |
22370 | Who is with your mother? |
22370 | Why are you so anxious to go to- morrow? |
22370 | Why, where are the molds? |
22370 | Will she ask her mother for the cape and bonnet? |
22370 | Will you not share my breakfast, Mistress Ruth? |
22370 | Will you please find Hero the first thing to- morrow? |
22370 | Wo n''t Winifred be surprised when she knows that the English General thought I really was grown up? |
22370 | Wo n''t speak, eh? 22370 Would it not be pleasant if you could visit Aunt Deborah when I do?" |
22370 | Would n''t it be fine if we could make a sofa, and a table and a little bed for each of our dolls? |
22370 | Would thee not like to go and play with Winifred? 22370 Would you know her if you saw her again?" |
22370 | Yes; but what could two little girls do for him? 22370 You do not suppose the molds have fallen out of the window?" |
22370 | You will not forget about Hero? |
22370 | You wo n''t go back to Barren Hill when she comes, will you? |
22370 | Your sampler? |
22370 | Am I really to go to Barren Hill?" |
22370 | And what do they want of Ruth?" |
22370 | CHAPTER XI A LONG ROAD"What is this?" |
22370 | Can I not use some of your sugar, Mother, to make some heart- shaped sweets?" |
22370 | Did not thy mother tell thee? |
22370 | Did you come all alone?" |
22370 | Did you know Hero was home? |
22370 | Do n''t you know that the English soldiers give plays in the Southward Theater? |
22370 | Do n''t you remember the words you traced on it? |
22370 | Do n''t you see I ca n''t, Winifred? |
22370 | Does thee know why thy father named thy dog''Hero''?" |
22370 | Dost thou think it a small thing nearly to ruin thy mother''s best gown? |
22370 | Has Aunt Deborah made you stay up- stairs? |
22370 | I can always depend on you, Ruth, ca n''t I?" |
22370 | It means to''find fault,''which is never quite fair; do you think it is?" |
22370 | It seemed to her she could hardly wait that long; for who could tell what the English soldiers might do before warning could reach Lafayette? |
22370 | Perhaps that was one reason thee was so anxious to visit Valley Forge?" |
22370 | Ruth looked so disappointed that Aunt Deborah added:"And who knows what day Lafayette may ride this way again? |
22370 | Suppose he should remember her, and tell General Howe what she had said about Washington driving the English from the city? |
22370 | Then Ruth ventured to ask if Farmer Withely had ever seen General Washington, or, perhaps, young Lafayette? |
22370 | To go dressed as if in a play to the house of an enemy of thy country to ask a favor? |
22370 | Truly, Winifred?" |
22370 | Was I to be Lafayette in the play?" |
22370 | What do you suppose Betty will say when you tell her about the fairies?" |
22370 | What dost thou mean?" |
22370 | What is it?" |
22370 | What is the matter, Ruth? |
22370 | What is the matter? |
22370 | What made you? |
22370 | What shall I do? |
22370 | What was that?" |
22370 | What will Aunt Deborah say to me?" |
22370 | Where are you going?" |
22370 | Where are you going?" |
22370 | Where is my mother?" |
22370 | Why ca n''t I go to- morrow?" |
22370 | Why, what is the matter with Fluff?" |
22370 | Will you do just what I tell you?" |
22370 | Will you kindly pardon now That I did not hear or see When you came to visit me?" |
22370 | Will you kindly pardon now That I did not hear or see When you came to visit me?" |
22370 | Wo n''t my father come again?" |
22370 | Wo n''t she be surprised?" |
22370 | You are as bad as Ruth,"laughed Gilbert;"but do you think I ought to tell Ruth that I hid the candy, and then brought it back?" |
22370 | You will not tell her, will you, Aunt Deborah?" |
22370 | are you to have nothing but porridge?" |
22370 | asked Winifred,"and when you said you wished you could do some great service for Lafayette because he had come to help America?" |
22370 | we ca n''t have been away from home more than an hour,"said Ruth;"but the sky looks cloudy, does n''t it?" |
22370 | what will Winifred say?" |
22370 | where did he go?" |
47614 | ''And here?'' 47614 ''Are you the spirit whose coming was foretold me?''" |
47614 | ''Jacob would n''t miss anything''is what you mean, is n''t it, Sarah? |
47614 | ''Long past?'' 47614 All night?" |
47614 | Am I put out? |
47614 | And the Treaty of Ghent was the one which ended the War of 1812, was n''t it? |
47614 | And what then? |
47614 | Are n''t you glad to see me? |
47614 | Are there any more confessions to be made? |
47614 | Are you not afraid of the candles? |
47614 | Are you the young lady who missed time by being sick? |
47614 | Are you tired? |
47614 | Are you well? |
47614 | But if I do not know what to do and nobody will tell me, how shall I find out? |
47614 | But what is coming? |
47614 | Can you explain this? |
47614 | Can you get me a lot of newspapers and spread them thickly on your floor? 47614 Could n''t any one take their places?" |
47614 | Did I oversleep myself? |
47614 | Did I stay here? |
47614 | Did Miss Ellingwood nearly murder her? 47614 Did you climb up that pole and put our flag on the beam?" |
47614 | Did you never hear of gas? |
47614 | Did you never tell her about your room- mates? |
47614 | Do n''t you want to bring your books over to my room? |
47614 | Do you take regular exercise? |
47614 | Do you tell Miss Ellingwood everything that you can find out? |
47614 | Do you think I will know those girls? |
47614 | Does he know you? |
47614 | Does_ he_ know you? |
47614 | Eugene, do you think you can carry her upstairs? |
47614 | Have the boys come? |
47614 | Have you ever been sick? |
47614 | How do you feel? |
47614 | How do you suppose she ever did it? |
47614 | How is your patient? 47614 Is any one at home in this store?" |
47614 | Is it anything I can do? |
47614 | Is it time to get supper already? |
47614 | Is n''t it her usual occupation to listen and tell? |
47614 | Is n''t there anything that can be done? |
47614 | Is she afraid we''ll eat her up, Miss Ellingwood? |
47614 | Is there anything I can do? |
47614 | It is very good,the person in white would say coaxingly, and Sarah would rejoin politely but a little wearily,--"Is it so? |
47614 | May we go fishing? |
47614 | May we write with ink? |
47614 | Miss Wenner, what is the matter? 47614 Oh,"said Gertrude,"is it you, Miss Wenner? |
47614 | Physical Geography? |
47614 | Then why do n''t you come down? |
47614 | These things do n''t belong''to you nor none of your family,''I hope? |
47614 | They''re not here? |
47614 | Was Edward with them? |
47614 | We''ll have to postpone it till after Christmas, I suppose? |
47614 | Well, sir, what is it to- day? |
47614 | Well,he said, with a smile, his voice more Pennsylvania- German than ever,"where is this Sarah Wenner, about whom I have been talking?" |
47614 | Were they hard, Sarah? |
47614 | Were those_ your_ questions? |
47614 | What are you doing here? |
47614 | What are you going to do? |
47614 | What candles? |
47614 | What did I say? |
47614 | What did she do? |
47614 | What did you say, Sarah? |
47614 | What do you mean? |
47614 | What is it? |
47614 | What is the History lesson for to- morrow, Sarah? |
47614 | What is your name? |
47614 | What makes you say that? |
47614 | What was that noise? |
47614 | What''s the matter? 47614 Where are your room- mates?" |
47614 | Where do you come from? |
47614 | Where is my brother William? |
47614 | Who is out? |
47614 | Why did you do it? |
47614 | Why would you rather stay at home, Sarah? |
47614 | Why, Mrs. Wenner, how do you do? 47614 Why, Sarah, do n''t you want any breakfast?" |
47614 | Why, what is the matter? |
47614 | Why? |
47614 | Wo n''t the Juniors be furious? |
47614 | Wo n''t you? |
47614 | Yes, what were yours like? |
47614 | You did n''t see a Junior go up this side, did you, Sarah? |
47614 | You like to study, do n''t you? |
47614 | You never heard of illuminating gas? |
47614 | You''ll come down and tell us at once how she is and what is the matter, doctor? |
47614 | _ Ach_, when can_ we_ go to the Normal? |
47614 | _ Ach_, would you please help me a little? |
47614 | A sleepy and cross"What?" |
47614 | And Sarah,"--he smiled at the sudden flush of frightened color,--"you wo n''t climb any more gymnasium beams, will you?" |
47614 | And now, what shall we do with this girl?" |
47614 | And what were childhood, wanting you?" |
47614 | And who had hung the Junior banner there? |
47614 | And who is this, and how_ are_ you?" |
47614 | And"--she looked round the disorderly room--"couldn''t we fix here a little up once?" |
47614 | Are you?" |
47614 | But could the twins be persuaded to believe such wonders? |
47614 | But oh, Sarah, are you_ sure_ you know the parts?" |
47614 | But will you tell me sometimes when I am wrong?" |
47614 | Could she take the parts? |
47614 | Could they manage the tableaux without her? |
47614 | Did n''t one have to get up? |
47614 | Did n''t they wish any breakfast? |
47614 | Did you ever report your room- mates for making a noise?" |
47614 | Gertrude, you brought a trunk- cover, did n''t you?" |
47614 | Had the girls grown suddenly deaf, or were they ill? |
47614 | Had the twins done just as they were told all day? |
47614 | Had they remembered the deserted kittens in the barn? |
47614 | Have you taken the bottle out?" |
47614 | He felt her pulse, and laughed at her frightened"Did you ever have to take such examinations?" |
47614 | How did you do it?" |
47614 | How should I?" |
47614 | How should you like to do a little extra work for me?" |
47614 | How would you like to come into the Physical Geography class with the Juniors?" |
47614 | I''m not sleepy, are you?" |
47614 | If I knew anything about it, I--""What class are you?" |
47614 | If she had such difficulty with little things, what would she do when lessons began? |
47614 | In what long- past stage of her life had she read that? |
47614 | Is that the way to say it?" |
47614 | Is this true?" |
47614 | Once she had called Ethel by her first name, and Ethel had responded with a quick,"What did you say, Miss Wenner?" |
47614 | Or would they be allowed to do as they chose? |
47614 | See, they do n''t look so awesome, do they?" |
47614 | Suddenly one of them called to her:--"Who are you, out there? |
47614 | The two battles of Saratoga? |
47614 | Then wo n''t you please eat it? |
47614 | Was it Edward Ellis? |
47614 | Was it all true, or was it only a story? |
47614 | Was it part of Geography or Physiology? |
47614 | Was it possible that a few days ago she had wished to go away? |
47614 | Was she to disgrace them all? |
47614 | Was the principal telling them that she would not pass? |
47614 | Were n''t we, Sarah?" |
47614 | What Junior had crept out on the beam? |
47614 | What can she be up to?" |
47614 | What does the school think of this plan?" |
47614 | What if they should suddenly turn on the lights and she be discovered hanging in mid- air? |
47614 | What is the matter?" |
47614 | What is the trouble?" |
47614 | What makes you say that?" |
47614 | What shall we play next?" |
47614 | What would you do then, young lady?" |
47614 | What would you do with them?" |
47614 | When one was given extra studies by mistake, did one have to take examinations in them? |
47614 | Where was the Middler banner? |
47614 | Who had dared to climb out there and remove it? |
47614 | Who was this sprite who moved about so lightly? |
47614 | Who would be Uncle Daniel and Jacob Kalb and the judge of the Orphans''Court in swift succession? |
47614 | Who would be storekeeper on the morrow? |
47614 | Who would defend them if Uncle Daniel should ever come threatening again? |
47614 | Who would draw bears and tigers and"nelephunts"and all manner of birds and beasts? |
47614 | Who would help them with their lessons? |
47614 | Why did these girls not wish to get up? |
47614 | Why have n''t you written to me? |
47614 | Would Laura be able to fix the fire for the night? |
47614 | Would she see it again? |
47614 | Would these treats be forbidden them? |
47614 | You poor little chicken, did you think that you would make a better impression on the ogress if you put on a better dress? |
47614 | Your gymnasium suit is black, is n''t it? |
52257 | Ach, William, did you come home? |
52257 | And do n''t any of your uncle''s people come to stay with you at night? |
52257 | And if he does come home,went on Jacob Kalb coolly,"what will he have to say about the school- board money that he took along with him to Alaska?" |
52257 | And then Sarah will_ have_ to come here? |
52257 | And what yet? |
52257 | And what yet? |
52257 | And why do you come to school armed as though you were going to war? |
52257 | And you think he is still alive? |
52257 | And you,he said to the twins,"are n''t you willing to be good little girls, and do as Uncle Daniel wants you to?" |
52257 | Any children? |
52257 | Any others? |
52257 | Are there any relatives? |
52257 | Are they not by you? |
52257 | Are we going to one of those places? |
52257 | Are you afraid to wait here a minute with the twins, while I see what I can do? |
52257 | Are you going to have the law on her? |
52257 | Are you going to put her out of the house? |
52257 | Are you sick? 52257 Are you then out of your mind?" |
52257 | Are you well, Sarah? |
52257 | But are n''t you afraid? |
52257 | But have n''t you a little brother? |
52257 | But where,said the young man again,"is my mother? |
52257 | But who will keep house? 52257 C- can you make him well, Sarah?" |
52257 | Come home? |
52257 | Could I go and ask? |
52257 | Could n''t you stay by us? |
52257 | Did he pay it to the school- board? |
52257 | Did n''t she give him to_ you_? |
52257 | Did n''t you want them to come to school? |
52257 | Did she get after you with the gun? |
52257 | Did they then take the gun along? 52257 Did you see_ her_ here after Albert?" |
52257 | Do n''t you_ know_? |
52257 | Do you mean that this older brother stole? |
52257 | Do you want to prosecute this gentleman? |
52257 | Guardian? |
52257 | Guardian? |
52257 | How long was he sick already? |
52257 | How much candy? |
52257 | How old? |
52257 | How old? |
52257 | How wide is that? |
52257 | How wide is the Amazon River at its mouth? |
52257 | I wonder whether you would let me stay for supper? |
52257 | I? 52257 In these clothes?" |
52257 | Is anybody likely to carry you off? |
52257 | Is it a show? |
52257 | Is it the smallpox? |
52257 | Is she here yet? 52257 Is there anything I can do for you?" |
52257 | Is this the clerk''s office? 52257 Is this true?" |
52257 | It was this way--"_ Is it true?_asked William again. |
52257 | Minors? |
52257 | Miss Miflin? |
52257 | Miss Miflin? |
52257 | Not if she said you might go to school? |
52257 | Or harvest? |
52257 | Or plant the seeds? |
52257 | Pooh, what do I care? |
52257 | Sarah,he said,"if a fairy came and told you that you might have anything in the world you wanted, what would you choose?" |
52257 | Should we then give this good money to Ebert? 52257 Then she did n''t come out after you?" |
52257 | Then what did he get for his schooling? |
52257 | To school? |
52257 | Was it-- was-- it_ him_? |
52257 | Well, I mean any under age, under twenty- one? |
52257 | Well, did you get back? |
52257 | Well, what are you going to do? |
52257 | Wh- what did she come for? 52257 What did you give Albert to eat?" |
52257 | What did you say the uncle''s name is? 52257 What do you mean?" |
52257 | What do you want? |
52257 | What do you want? |
52257 | What interest have you in this case? |
52257 | What is it? |
52257 | What is then that? |
52257 | What is your name? |
52257 | What makes it go? 52257 What shall we do?" |
52257 | What would such children make with such a farm? |
52257 | What would you think of teacher for a housekeeper? |
52257 | When will you begin to plough for the little one? |
52257 | Where are then the horses? |
52257 | Where are you shot, Jacob? |
52257 | Where is Albert? |
52257 | Where is he sick? |
52257 | Where is my little sister? |
52257 | Where is my little sister? |
52257 | Where is my uncle? |
52257 | Where is then Albert? |
52257 | Where--said the young man, and Mrs. Kalb never told the story afterwards without crying--"where is my mother?" |
52257 | Who are you? |
52257 | Who is waiting at the front door? |
52257 | Who makes him guardian? |
52257 | Whom would you like to have for your guardian, children? |
52257 | Why did you accuse this young man falsely? |
52257 | Why do n''t you tell him if he do n''t go away you will shoot him with the gun? |
52257 | Why do n''t you want to live with your uncle, and have him look after your affairs? |
52257 | Why, then, was the application made? |
52257 | Why? |
52257 | Will it be in the court- room? |
52257 | Will you let him go home? |
52257 | Will you plough? |
52257 | Will you wake him up? |
52257 | Would teacher stay here with us? |
52257 | Would you like, then, to come here to school? |
52257 | Would you mind coming to tell the judge what you have told me? |
52257 | Yes? |
52257 | Yes? |
52257 | You are a school- teacher? |
52257 | You poor Tommy, where would you go if Sarah went away? |
52257 | Your name? 52257 Ach, pop, do you surely mean it? 52257 And my father? |
52257 | And the dear, battered furniture, the high chair which had held them all, from William down to Albert,--would he have sold them? |
52257 | And to whom, in such a case, should she go? |
52257 | And what did I get for it?" |
52257 | And who wants to pick them up?" |
52257 | And why do they want to run away, where some one might pick them up? |
52257 | And why was Jacob Kalb there in the kitchen? |
52257 | But they are--""Any others?" |
52257 | Could William have lived_ here_? |
52257 | Could a more suitable person be found? |
52257 | Did this young man owe the school- board forty dollars?" |
52257 | Do n''t you know me, Sallie?" |
52257 | Do n''t you know your uncle is to be your guardian?" |
52257 | Have you then not been smart?" |
52257 | He did not speak to her or greet her, except to say,"Where is my little sister?" |
52257 | He--""And you want to be appointed guardian of these minor children of your sister?" |
52257 | He--""So he paid you the forty dollars?" |
52257 | Here?" |
52257 | How can such a child possibly look after a farm and bring up three children? |
52257 | How would they be able ever to find it again? |
52257 | I brought William sometimes presents, suits, I brought him, and a little cap, and shoes, and once such a little velocipede, and what did I get? |
52257 | I-- Where are you then going, Daniel?" |
52257 | I--""Do you know anything about my little sister?" |
52257 | It was as though he had said,"Would you like to be President of the United States?" |
52257 | Must they have a guardian at all? |
52257 | Oh yes-- Can you get Weaver and Swartz here for a hearing this afternoon? |
52257 | Shall I pay for it, yet?" |
52257 | Shall the twins have a good home, or shall they not have a good home?" |
52257 | She knew that their father had died,--that would account for three or four days, but why had they not come back after the funeral? |
52257 | Suppose she should tell Miss Miflin about Uncle Daniel, and about Jacob Kalb, and all her anxieties and fears? |
52257 | Suppose that he should come home, ill, penniless, where would he go? |
52257 | Swartz? |
52257 | The value of the property of these minors?" |
52257 | Then she added fearfully,"Aunt Mena?" |
52257 | They had run off, they had come home, they were not going to school till afternoon, they-- But where was Albert? |
52257 | They''re in the court- house now? |
52257 | To school? |
52257 | To the_ county seat_?" |
52257 | Twenty- five dollars for what?" |
52257 | Was Jacob Kalb coming again to carry them out? |
52257 | Was n''t that what you wanted me to do?" |
52257 | What are you talking about? |
52257 | What is the matter?" |
52257 | What is the matter?" |
52257 | What would Uncle Daniel have done with that? |
52257 | What would William say when he came home? |
52257 | What would her mother and father have said? |
52257 | Where is Albert, I say?" |
52257 | Why did n''t she tell the aunts and uncle to go home and let them go to bed? |
52257 | Why did they not answer? |
52257 | Why had she suddenly become so strange and solemn? |
52257 | Will it come after us?" |
52257 | Will you-- will you watch them, so they do not go off to play at recess? |
52257 | Would he have left it there for Jacob Calf? |
52257 | Would n''t you like to be such a teacher like Miss Miflin?" |
52257 | Your occupation? |
52257 | bread and meat and potatoes and pie, like always, and--""And what?" |
44970 | ''You were? 44970 A shade- tail,"said he, meditatively,--"how should I know? |
44970 | About what? 44970 And it''s nearly all white, and would make an excellent mark for some Johnny to shoot at, eh?" |
44970 | And what would you do if you were? |
44970 | Andy, do you think that fellow''s gun went off by accident, or was the rascal trying to hurt somebody? |
44970 | Andy, what is a shade- tail? |
44970 | Are those your orders? |
44970 | Auntie, you''ve got a good many little folks to look after, have n''t you? |
44970 | Beautiful night, Johnny, is n''t it? |
44970 | Boys, it begins to look a little dubious, do n''t it? 44970 Boys, what are you trying to do?" |
44970 | But is n''t it rather large? |
44970 | But where are your cartridges? |
44970 | By what right or authority, sir, do you presume to tell me that a pig is like an oyster? |
44970 | Can you shoot? |
44970 | General, shall we unsling knapsacks? |
44970 | Harry, for pity''s sake, have you any water? |
44970 | Harry, would n''t you like to go out on picket with us to- morrow? 44970 Harry,"said Lieutenant Dougal,"I have n''t any tin cup, and when you get your coffee cooked, I believe I''ll share it with you; may I?" |
44970 | Has any of you fellows back there some coffee to trade for tobacco? 44970 How in the name of the American eagle is a man going to fight the battles of his country in such a uniform as this? |
44970 | How''s Bony this morning, Andy? |
44970 | I asked whether you could tell me what a shade- tail is? |
44970 | It_ was_ a fowl trick, after all, Harry, was n''t it? |
44970 | Major, you do n''t expect us drummer- boys to turn out, do you? |
44970 | Rather a warm day for work in a cornfield, is n''t it, Joe? |
44970 | Rather late in the morning to make such an offer, is n''t it? 44970 Say, Captain, tell us where are we going?" |
44970 | See that hole? 44970 Well, Johnny?" |
44970 | Well, what in the mischief''s up now? |
44970 | Well, where is he? 44970 Well, your fifers have fifes, have n''t they? |
44970 | Well,said Andy,"and what if he does? |
44970 | Well,said I,"we caught those pigs, anyhow, did n''t we? |
44970 | What are you going to do with that bottle? |
44970 | What would you get at? 44970 What''s he doing down there in that hole?" |
44970 | What''s up, fellows? |
44970 | Where are we going, Pompey? 44970 Where are we going?" |
44970 | Where did you get that chicken, Corporal? |
44970 | Where is he? |
44970 | Where''s my cap? |
44970 | Where? |
44970 | Who''s afraid of the Louisiana Tigers? 44970 Why did n''t they let us fight? |
44970 | Why, Harry, is that you? 44970 Why, Smith,"said I,"is this you? |
44970 | Why, do n''t you see? 44970 Why,"said the lieutenant,"what are you crying for, you big baby, you?" |
44970 | Would you enlist, Andy, if your father would consent? 44970 You see the commissary yonder?" |
44970 | _ Meat_ jumping around here? 44970 ''And if I might be so bold as to ask-- how did you generally kill them?'' 44970 ''I want dis yere water for Gen''l Grant; an''ai n''t he a commandin''dis yere army, or am you?'' 44970 ( You remember Warrenton? 44970 ***** And-- Andy? 44970 About the spring- fever, or about the war? |
44970 | And I, too, looked; but where was Andy? |
44970 | And beneath the starry flag We shall breathe the air again--""What''s that?" |
44970 | And do n''t you remember how excited_ you_ were when the news came about Fort Sumter last spring? |
44970 | And do n''t you think it''s pretty nearly time we should pay him back? |
44970 | And how many do you think there were? |
44970 | And the daughters, where were they? |
44970 | And where in the world is the regiment?" |
44970 | And why not, my boy?" |
44970 | Andy and I thought, as we were driving in our tent- pins:"That''s pretty hard now, is n''t it? |
44970 | Anybody know where Jim McFadden is?" |
44970 | Are_ you_ there?" |
44970 | Ay, the position is saved; but where is our corps? |
44970 | But the wars of Cæsar and the siege of Troy, what are they when compared with the great war now being waged in our own time and country? |
44970 | But what is to be done for a sick man whose only choice of diet must be made from pork, beans, sugar, and hard- tack? |
44970 | But where have you been? |
44970 | But where is he? |
44970 | But where shall I get water to make the coffee with? |
44970 | But, on consideration, I believe I would say,''Gentlemen, will you have a cigár?''" |
44970 | Coming up quietly behind him, I laid my hand on his shoulder with:"Andy, old boy, have I found you at last? |
44970 | Could n''t we somehow get a shelter and something to eat for the poor souls?" |
44970 | Did he get cross? |
44970 | Did he wish this cruel war was over? |
44970 | Did n''t I watch your feet? |
44970 | Did n''t you shoot just now?" |
44970 | Did they steal his goods? |
44970 | Did ye hear whar dey is now?'' |
44970 | Did you never eat frogs?" |
44970 | Didn''I say better git off''n dat dar mule o''mine? |
44970 | Do n''t you see? |
44970 | Do n''t you see? |
44970 | Do you ask how? |
44970 | Do you remember the words well enough to repeat it?" |
44970 | Do you see that? |
44970 | Does he know me? |
44970 | Ever had this, that, and the other disease?" |
44970 | Every time you come up to this end of your beat, speak to me, will you? |
44970 | Eyes good? |
44970 | For the winter is past; the sweet breath of spring comes balmily up from the south, and the whole army is on the move,--whither? |
44970 | Going to join the cavalry?" |
44970 | Had he children at home, may be, in the far- off South? |
44970 | Home? |
44970 | Homesick? |
44970 | How could he after so bold a dash into the horse- market? |
44970 | How did we spend our time in winter quarters, do you ask? |
44970 | How is it, now? |
44970 | I fell to wondering, as I watched him, what sort of man he was? |
44970 | I knew very well where McFadden was, for was n''t he lying right beside me in the grass? |
44970 | In the midst of the excitement, father came in from the field and greeted me with,"Why, my boy, where did_ you_ come from?" |
44970 | It concerns a question of emphasis, or rather, perhaps, of inflection, and it is this: Would you say,''Gentlemen, will you have a cigár?'' |
44970 | Just you keep an eye on my horse, will you?" |
44970 | KILLED, WOUNDED, OR MISSING? |
44970 | KILLED, WOUNDED, OR MISSING? |
44970 | May I inquire what may be the question under discussion?" |
44970 | Night set in, and we began to wonder, in all the simplicity of new troops, whether Uncle Sam expected us to march all night as well as all day? |
44970 | Now that was rather hard, was n''t it? |
44970 | Now why could n''t we catch and tame a shade- tail?" |
44970 | Or a father and mother? |
44970 | Or, may be,_ you_ had the spring- fever then?" |
44970 | Shall we strike up a tent, or bunk down here under the pines?" |
44970 | So there was not going to be any battle after all, then? |
44970 | That would n''t be nearly so nice, would it?" |
44970 | That''s fair and square, is n''t it?" |
44970 | The case is-- let''s see; what''ll we call it? |
44970 | The sutler seldom enjoyed much respect, as how could he when he flourished and fattened on our hungry stomachs? |
44970 | Upon which up comes the corporal of the guard on a full trot, with his gun at a right- shoulder shift, and saying,--"Well, what''s up?" |
44970 | Was it the moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
44970 | We had no water for thirty- six hours, and, of course, no coffee; and what is life to a soldier without coffee? |
44970 | Well, Major, did you ever kill anybody?'' |
44970 | Well, one man came up to me, and says he:"''Major, you were in the war, were n''t you?'' |
44970 | Were the sons in the war? |
44970 | Whar you goin''dar? |
44970 | Whar you gwine wid dat dar mule o''mine? |
44970 | What cared we for bounty? |
44970 | What do you mean? |
44970 | What in the name of General Jackson did you come to the army for, if you ai n''t a- going to obey orders?" |
44970 | What is a shade- tail?" |
44970 | What they saw was only this-- that they wanted somebody to raid, and who could be a fitter subject than the sutler? |
44970 | What was to be done? |
44970 | What would they do with a mere boy like you? |
44970 | What''s to hinder him?" |
44970 | What''s up?" |
44970 | Where are you hurt?" |
44970 | Where are you hurt?" |
44970 | Where is Jimmy Lucas?" |
44970 | Where were the boys who, but a week before, had marched with us through those same fragrant fields, blithe as a sunshiny morn in May? |
44970 | Where_ did_ it get to, anyhow? |
44970 | Which will you do?" |
44970 | Who are you?" |
44970 | Who goes there?" |
44970 | Who goes there?" |
44970 | Why did not the officers punish the men for doing this? |
44970 | Why did we not build winter- quarters, do you ask? |
44970 | Why what do you mean?" |
44970 | Why, where in the world are we going this time of year? |
44970 | Why_ will_ he make me all this trouble? |
44970 | Will you do it?" |
44970 | Young or old? |
44970 | _ Wo n''t_ you let me go? |
44970 | and an oft- repeated"What do you think of this, boys?" |
44970 | and gets his arm around my neck, is it any wonder? |
44970 | and the"Star- Spangled Banner,"and"Away Down South in Dixie,"and-- in short, what in the world was a poor boy to do? |
44970 | and would they ever come back again and set up their household gods in the good old place once more? |
44970 | exclaimed I,"what in the name of all conscience do you want with a horse? |
44970 | or''Gentlemen, will you have a cigàr?''" |
44970 | said Andy, wiping the perspiration from his face,"what shall we do now? |
44970 | said I, peering through the bushes,"is that you?" |
44970 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
44970 | what do you think of this? |
44970 | where did_ you_ come from?" |
31792 | ''Consent''? |
31792 | ''Honor''? |
31792 | ( Do you hear that?) 31792 And Miss Lydia, too?" |
31792 | And what kind of an idea would he have of his''father''? 31792 And you''ll help me? |
31792 | And you--? |
31792 | Are you the-- the boy who lives with Miss Sampson? |
31792 | As much as Miss Lydia? |
31792 | But how can I''love''him? |
31792 | But what can I do? |
31792 | But why? 31792 But you must promise me you wo n''t tell? |
31792 | Did I understand you to use the word''_ honor_''? |
31792 | Do n''t you-- suppose_ I_ know that it''s-- it''s-- it''s dreadful? |
31792 | Do you? |
31792 | Do you? |
31792 | Does he? |
31792 | Does n''t resemble-- anybody? 31792 For the mother?" |
31792 | Go to Miss Lydia''s? 31792 Have n''t I any rights?" |
31792 | Have you and he quarreled? |
31792 | He coming? |
31792 | Her_ own_? |
31792 | How could you''make me your son''and not have it known? |
31792 | How do you do? |
31792 | How do you make that out? |
31792 | How do? |
31792 | How do? |
31792 | How long since? |
31792 | How much do you want him, Mary? |
31792 | How''funny''? |
31792 | How? |
31792 | Hurt him? 31792 I am afraid you are troubled about something?" |
31792 | I hope that means Robertson and Carey? |
31792 | I see her when I go to Philadelphia, and she writes me duty letters occasionally, but she never mentions--"Does n''t she? |
31792 | I suppose I''ve got to go? |
31792 | I wonder what she calls curiosity? |
31792 | I''m walking too fast again? 31792 I''ve offered this youngster a place in my firm,"he explained to Doctor Lavendar, who said:"Have you, indeed?" |
31792 | If you wo n''t help me,Mary burst out,"I''ll--""Does anybody know?" |
31792 | Is it a child of shame? |
31792 | Is n''t he as fine a boy as you ever saw? |
31792 | Is n''t it right to say,''I wo n''t say I wo n''t''? |
31792 | Is n''t she well? |
31792 | It is spotted,she thought,"but what real difference does a spot make?" |
31792 | John, you''ll make the best of us, wo n''t you? |
31792 | Mary, my dear, are n''t you going to sit down? |
31792 | May I come in, Miss Sampson? |
31792 | Maybe he looks like you? |
31792 | My_ father_? |
31792 | Not poor, yet they dumped me onto your doorstep? |
31792 | Nothing will ever be known? |
31792 | Oh, that was how Mack got his broken nose, was it? |
31792 | Oh, what am I to do? 31792 Oh, what shall I do-- what shall I do-- what shall I do? |
31792 | Oh, you wo n''t, eh? 31792 Oh-- is Doctor Lavendar ill?" |
31792 | On the principle that a''mother is a mother still, the holiest thing alive''? |
31792 | Pleasant journey? |
31792 | Pretty? |
31792 | Say, Aunt Lydia-- what_ is_ all the milk in the coconut about me? 31792 Say,''How do you do?'' |
31792 | Suppose I say,''Give me some''? |
31792 | They are not Old Chester people-- so you wo n''t mind if I do n''t name names? |
31792 | They paid you to take me off their hands? |
31792 | They were n''t married, I suppose, when I was born? |
31792 | They''ve taken a fancy to him, have they? |
31792 | Unless--she hesitated--"he has done something that is n''t nice?" |
31792 | Well, what I want to know is, what do you owe people who do you favors? 31792 Well, what are you going to do?" |
31792 | Well, what of it? 31792 Well,"the young fellow said, friendly and confidential to the company at large,"what do you suppose? |
31792 | What did she say? |
31792 | What did she say? |
31792 | What do you mean? 31792 What kind?" |
31792 | What makes her? |
31792 | What''s she up to now? |
31792 | What''s the milk in the coconut about''em? |
31792 | What_ is_ the matter? |
31792 | When did they die? |
31792 | When people are kind to you-- just what do you owe''em? 31792 Where did you get your apples?" |
31792 | Where on earth has she gone? |
31792 | Who? |
31792 | Why are n''t they mine? |
31792 | Why do n''t you do it yourself? |
31792 | Why do n''t you get acquainted with the youngster? |
31792 | Why do they vegetate down here in Old Chester? 31792 Why is she always gushing round?" |
31792 | Why not? |
31792 | Why not? |
31792 | Why should he say''mother''? 31792 Wonder if Miss Lydia would give him up if she did?" |
31792 | Yet they deserted me? 31792 You are fond of the little fellow?" |
31792 | You did n''t speak to him? |
31792 | You have n''t forgotten me? |
31792 | You hear that? |
31792 | You mean that-- that woman--? |
31792 | You mean,John said,"that you wo n''t let it be known that you are-- my mother?" |
31792 | You''re not well, Mary? |
31792 | You_ knew_ that some damned fools thought_ that_, of my aunt Lydia? 31792 _ Are you his mother?_"Mary fell back, half sitting on the floor, half kneeling at Miss Lydia''s feet. |
31792 | _ Grandson?_said Doctor King, in a whisper to Mrs. Robertson. |
31792 | _ Love_ him? |
31792 | _ Lydia_ not''need''an eagle? |
31792 | _ Must_ I, to get him? |
31792 | ( And in an undertone to Miss Lydia,"No fool, eh?") |
31792 | ( Oh, said Old Chester, so that was why Mary''s wedding had to be hurried up?) |
31792 | --have been very kind to me, always,"--he paused, in a sudden, realizing adjustment: their"kindness,"then, had not been the flattery he had supposed? |
31792 | Also, I believe you know that two and two make four?" |
31792 | And after a while he added,"Now, what on earth--?" |
31792 | And again, in real alarm,"What_ is_ it?" |
31792 | And if indeed it was a travail of the spirit, would not the soul be stillborn if her son''s love should fail to sustain it? |
31792 | Are n''t they pretty? |
31792 | Are you?" |
31792 | As for this-- this lady being my''mother''-- What''s''mother''but a word? |
31792 | Besides, how could I?" |
31792 | But I''d like to know, really, who I am?" |
31792 | But she sent her husband on innumerable errands into Old Chester, and when he came back she would say,"Did you see--_him_?" |
31792 | But tell me one thing, is Smith my name?" |
31792 | But when he walked home with Doctor Lavendar, after the funeral, he said,"Have you any idea who Johnny Smith belongs to, Doctor Lavendar?" |
31792 | Can I be born again?" |
31792 | Could n''t you?--to hear him say''Father''?" |
31792 | Did n''t I tell you he is n''t particularly good- looking?" |
31792 | Do n''t you love him?" |
31792 | Do n''t you understand? |
31792 | Do n''t you understand?" |
31792 | Do you love me, Johnny?" |
31792 | Do you mean to desert it, John?" |
31792 | Do you remember what the new Mr. Smith said about her when she gave her party? |
31792 | Doctor Lavendar, jingling the happy bridegroom''s two gold pieces in his pocket, said:"What? |
31792 | He had knocked on her front door with the gold head of his cane, and when she opened it he had said,"How do? |
31792 | He only said:"You-- ah, never hear from-- ah, my daughter, I suppose, Miss Sampson?" |
31792 | He put out his big hand, and Miss Lydia, putting her little one into it, said:"Who is going to adopt him?" |
31792 | How are you?" |
31792 | How do?" |
31792 | Hurt my own child? |
31792 | I hope you are feeling better?" |
31792 | I meant, what right has_ he_ to get fond of-- the boy?" |
31792 | I? |
31792 | INSULT THIS LADY BY ASKING FOR A''PROMISE''?" |
31792 | INSULT THIS LADY BY ASKING FOR A''PROMISE''?"] |
31792 | Insult this lady by asking for a''promise''? |
31792 | It was about the middle of April that she said to her husband:"If you have n''t a tenant, I suppose we might open father''s house for a month? |
31792 | It was just as she reached this blessing that, somewhere in the shadows, a quivering voice called,"Miss Sampson?" |
31792 | It was just-- love? |
31792 | Mary said,"Who?" |
31792 | Miss Lydia said, in a fluttered voice,"How do you do?" |
31792 | Miss Lydia, coming to the door with a saucer of milk, stood for a paralyzed moment, then she said,"How do you do, Mary?" |
31792 | Mrs. Barkley said in a deep bass:"Where will Lyddy get the money to take care of it? |
31792 | Mrs. Drayton said,"What I would like to know is,_ whose baby is it_?" |
31792 | Oh, Carl, suppose I were to like him? |
31792 | Old Chester, too, said,"What on earth--?" |
31792 | Once he added,"Why do n''t you go and call on Miss Lydia-- and see him yourself?" |
31792 | Perhaps being there would be better than-- giving presents? |
31792 | Pride-- or love? |
31792 | See?" |
31792 | Shall I be like you, and desert her? |
31792 | She only said, point- blank:"Doctor Lavendar, is it ever right to tell lies to save other people?" |
31792 | She was so nervous when she entered the room that her breath caught in her throat and she could hardly say,"How do you do?" |
31792 | So now, when the new Mr. Smith considered adopting her boy, this simple soul weighed values for Johnny: Mr. Smith-- or Johnny''s grandfather? |
31792 | Suppose they should see just how"promising"Johnny was-- and want him?--and say they would take him? |
31792 | The Robertsons were asking each other the same question,"What can we do now to get him?" |
31792 | The young man''s violent agreement broke off in the middle:--"What do you mean by that?" |
31792 | Their names? |
31792 | Then anger flared up again:"Who told you? |
31792 | Then he said, casually,"Who were his father and mother?" |
31792 | Then she got the real question out: Did n''t Doctor Lavendar think it might be bad for Johnny to visit Mr. and Mrs. Robertson? |
31792 | Then suddenly he burst out:"Aunty, why does Mr. Robertson bother about me?" |
31792 | They did not speak of Johnny''s illness for two or three days; then Mary said,"If anything had happened, we should have heard by this time?" |
31792 | This was surprising enough-- for why should Lydia Sampson spend her money on going to Mercer? |
31792 | This_ cub_, and a diamond ring?" |
31792 | Understand?" |
31792 | Understand?" |
31792 | Very sick? |
31792 | Was this agony a spiritual birth or was it just the old selfishness which had never brooked denial? |
31792 | We could n''t understand it-- unless it was that Mr. Smith did n''t get along with his son- in- law? |
31792 | Well, my dear, what can I do for you?" |
31792 | Were they too poor to take care of me?" |
31792 | What about-- the boy himself? |
31792 | What am I to do?" |
31792 | What difference does his''opinion''make to me? |
31792 | What difference does it make? |
31792 | What is the matter?" |
31792 | What would Carl say? |
31792 | What?" |
31792 | When Miss Lydia and Johnny walked home together in the darkness her boy said:"A fellow''d be lucky with a mother like that, would n''t he? |
31792 | Who did you suppose was going to-- Robertson? |
31792 | Why should I take their name? |
31792 | Wonder if his mother will ever claim him?" |
31792 | Would Johnny''s mother stop?--or would Mrs. Robertson go by? |
31792 | Would it have been a good thing for him that people should know?" |
31792 | Yet why should Johnny love her? |
31792 | You knew that?" |
31792 | You see? |
31792 | You see?" |
31792 | _ What will they do next?_"she said to herself. |
31792 | madam,"he said, turning to Miss Sampson,"is this girl mine, to offer such an affront to a friend?" |
31792 | said Johnny;"but who were my father and mother?" |
31792 | tell him?" |
15135 | ... what you are getting as long as you live? |
15135 | Am I to gather that that is no longer considered admirable? |
15135 | Am I to understand that you came here to complain about Miss Jannan''s conduct? 15135 And Mariana?" |
15135 | And if they do n''t? |
15135 | Are we to construe this as a threat? |
15135 | Are you at all like-- like that below inside of you? 15135 At the house?" |
15135 | At what time? |
15135 | But Susan,Jasper Penny demanded,"what about her? |
15135 | But,she stammered,"I was told you had no... how would that--?" |
15135 | By heaven, Jasper,the lawyer exclaimed,"am I to understand that you took a-- well, an illegitimate child, to Miss Brundon, left her in the School? |
15135 | Can you fix yourself up in these? |
15135 | Come,he told her gently,"that will be very pretty; and, do n''t you think, the velvet bonnet with green?" |
15135 | Comfortable, is n''t it,she addressed him;"this feeling of superiority?" |
15135 | Could n''t that be just the smallest bit unfair? 15135 Could n''t we walk along the rill? |
15135 | Did he seem ill at ease, worried about anything? 15135 Did n''t I tell you last evening that the cast metal has been light?" |
15135 | Did you know that Mr. and Mrs. Winscombe are staying on? 15135 Do I have to go? |
15135 | Do n''t your position, your antecedents, stand for anything? 15135 Do you fully realize that Myrtle Forge, Shadrach, will be us? |
15135 | Do you know Miss Brundon, Jasper? |
15135 | Do you mean that we could n''t, perhaps, go to England, if-- if I wanted? |
15135 | Do you mind? |
15135 | For what? |
15135 | Going to stay for the night? |
15135 | Had n''t you better wait till to- morrow, when you can drive easily, or without stopping at a tavern? |
15135 | Have n''t you any proper pride? |
15135 | Have n''t you anything to say to Hatty? |
15135 | Have you any-- shall we say-- proprietary interest in Mr. Penny''s affairs? |
15135 | How can I? |
15135 | How will that affect my-- my position in other ways? |
15135 | Howat,she asked,"do you really dislike Jimmy?" |
15135 | I ca n''t get these damned studs in,he complained;"whatever do you suppose women use for starch now?" |
15135 | I wonder if I am? 15135 I wonder if she will?" |
15135 | Is everything off the table? 15135 Is it safe yet?" |
15135 | Is n''t he industrious? |
15135 | Is n''t it fierce,she demanded cheerfully,"with Jim out as many nights as he''s in bed?" |
15135 | Is n''t that the garden? |
15135 | Is that all you have to explain? |
15135 | Is the girl with her mother now? |
15135 | Is there, now, no one else that counts? |
15135 | It''s sickening, is n''t it? |
15135 | Jimmy,she said,"could n''t you come to Shadrach for those two weeks? |
15135 | Just what do you recommend me to do? |
15135 | Look here, Mariana,he proclaimed,"I wo n''t have any nonsense, do you understand?" |
15135 | Mariana,he demanded,"did n''t the reorganization come about; is n''t James Polder superintendent?" |
15135 | Must I beg you to go to the Furnace? 15135 Rudolph,"he inquired,"has Honduras gone for Miss Jannan?" |
15135 | Shall I tell the driver to return, sir? |
15135 | Shall you get a hat? |
15135 | Sweet, is n''t he? |
15135 | The first part of next week? |
15135 | Was n''t her mamma scared? |
15135 | Well,he demanded,"what do you want me to say, or what did you think I might do?" |
15135 | Well? |
15135 | Well? |
15135 | Well? |
15135 | What I''d like to know,Essie remarked,"is what''s his granddaughter?" |
15135 | What are you? |
15135 | What damned thing are you thinking of? |
15135 | What did you mean, what premonition came to you? |
15135 | What do you mean by that? |
15135 | What do you think David is saying to Myrtle now? |
15135 | What does he say about returning? |
15135 | What if they are choked by a hundred cowardly or selfish thoughts? 15135 What is it?" |
15135 | What is she to do? |
15135 | What is that sound? |
15135 | What time do you usually go to bed? |
15135 | What was the initial trouble? |
15135 | What''s the use? |
15135 | What, in heaven''s name, brought them? |
15135 | What,he asked his wife,"are they all driving at?" |
15135 | When do you have to go back? |
15135 | When do you return to Harrisburg? |
15135 | When will you come again, Daniel? |
15135 | Where did you meet him? |
15135 | Where is Polder? |
15135 | Where shall I send them? |
15135 | Where''s Myrtle? |
15135 | Where, exactly, is Eunice? |
15135 | Where,he demanded,"did you get all that about courts? |
15135 | Where? 15135 Which of us?" |
15135 | Who is it,one demanded,"John Rajennas? |
15135 | Why did n''t you telephone for Honduras? |
15135 | Why did n''t you tell me that before? 15135 Why do n''t they turn them off?" |
15135 | Why do n''t you answer me, Susan? |
15135 | Why do you call me old? |
15135 | Why not? |
15135 | Why not? |
15135 | Why not? |
15135 | Why not? |
15135 | Why not? |
15135 | Why say blame? |
15135 | Why should n''t Jim lose his temper? |
15135 | Will you sit for a little? |
15135 | Wo n''t you show her that it is impossible? |
15135 | Would you have me? |
15135 | Yes--? |
15135 | Yes? |
15135 | You are Byron Polder''s son? |
15135 | You work? |
15135 | You''ll stop at the Jannans? |
15135 | Your wife,Howat proceeded,"how is she?" |
15135 | A falling meteor flashed a brilliant arc across the black horizon, dropping into what illimitable wilderness? |
15135 | Always the Court-- do you know what that means? |
15135 | And am I to come to nothing, eternally fail, because of the past? |
15135 | And her institution-- does it continue to progress well?" |
15135 | And old George with a face like a plum--""Do n''t you find anything here that pleases you?" |
15135 | And your sudden, tender interest in husbands? |
15135 | And, yet, look here-- you can shut me up if you like-- what''s it all about? |
15135 | Any other small thing?" |
15135 | Are n''t there, after all, droves of the right men in rubber collars? |
15135 | Are you certain that Mrs. Winscombe really finds the courts-- stinking? |
15135 | Are you certain that you have comprehended? |
15135 | Are you going to- morrow?" |
15135 | But after him... what? |
15135 | But of what, Howat-- of love? |
15135 | But what was that confounded opera the name of which he had forgot? |
15135 | Can you tell me that?" |
15135 | Did Honduras meet you?" |
15135 | Did he refer to her on this particular evening, standing by the river''s brink?" |
15135 | Did you see those that followed the road this morning? |
15135 | Do you care for me at all?" |
15135 | Do you mind?" |
15135 | Do you remember your first Wellington boots? |
15135 | Do you think I could forget so much, drop the past from me, be all new and happy?" |
15135 | Do you wish to legitimatize your-- the child? |
15135 | Have n''t you a conception of how this is regarded? |
15135 | Have trouble finding us? |
15135 | Have you anything to say, suggest, at this point?" |
15135 | Have you seen the cheaper sheets? |
15135 | He asked, finally,"Will you be at the Jannans''this week, or are visitors received at the Academy?" |
15135 | He had a vague memory of such a place somewhere on the Delaware, was it at Burlington? |
15135 | He heard, as if from a distance, the questioning of the Mayor,"At what time, exactly, did you say? |
15135 | He struck you; where?" |
15135 | Hey?" |
15135 | How can you do differently? |
15135 | How could he provide for a reasonable happiness, a healthy, normal existence? |
15135 | How could you? |
15135 | How did you know that?" |
15135 | How long did you remain at the river? |
15135 | How old was she? |
15135 | How?" |
15135 | Howat expostulated,"What does it matter which he marries? |
15135 | Howat said at last:"Are you still so angry at life, at yourself?" |
15135 | Howat thought of Mariana, in her room-- alone with what feelings? |
15135 | Howat, do you think so? |
15135 | Howat, what is it that makes people what they are, and are n''t?" |
15135 | I should like to stay, I think.... Are you content?" |
15135 | I will have Eunice fetched--""Where is she?" |
15135 | In London you''d be that, a lady''s servant of love; but, in the Province, I wonder?" |
15135 | Is it necessary, your absence?" |
15135 | Is n''t he beautiful?" |
15135 | Is n''t it funny? |
15135 | Is n''t there any escape, any hope, any possibility? |
15135 | Is there no family, men, to support her? |
15135 | Jasper Penny ejaculated sharply,"How much, Essie?" |
15135 | Jasper Penny wondered abstractedly what was to be done with the tense, excitable child at his side? |
15135 | Just where were you, Jasper?" |
15135 | Mr. Forsythe is very abrupt, but ridiculously proud of him--""These Winscombes,"Howat interrupted,"what about them? |
15135 | Mrs. Penny asked,"And London-- how are you amused there now?" |
15135 | My letter was clear enough; she''s had bronchitis, and there''s the doctor, and--""Just where is Eunice?" |
15135 | Now, Mr. Penny, what is your personal opinion of engine as against the public coach? |
15135 | Of a feeling that, perhaps, I''d found a reason for living?" |
15135 | Penny-- where?... |
15135 | She said generally, patently only delaying for the moment communications of much greater interest than himself,"Where were you last night?" |
15135 | She saw some one and had a part, that ought to be good, offered to her; and, so--""Is that all, Jim?" |
15135 | Surely, surely, you do n''t uphold Howat? |
15135 | The gambling room and veranda at Saratoga? |
15135 | The rain and that musty little store house and the wonderful iron; a memory to hold, carry away--""To carry where?" |
15135 | The woman continued audibly,"How can I-- like this? |
15135 | Then, turning to the woman:"Are those all the clothes she has?" |
15135 | Then,"I wonder about a smaller plant? |
15135 | Try to consider only the immediate question, what I have asked you-- will you marry me?" |
15135 | Was he hurried in manner?" |
15135 | Well-- why do n''t you say so?" |
15135 | Were n''t we lucky?" |
15135 | Were there everywhere, back of each heart, puddles, sloughs, masked in the deceiving probity maintained for public view? |
15135 | What can it matter if I care about you?" |
15135 | What chance would he have had answering her letters married to you?" |
15135 | What do you think?" |
15135 | What is there to be afraid of? |
15135 | What is this pretended affection for your mother worth if you are unwilling to conserve, make safe, her future, in case I die?" |
15135 | What was that Polder, whose voice persisted so darkly in his hearing, about, getting himself into such a snarl? |
15135 | What''ll my friends think of you? |
15135 | What, in God''s name, was he to do with the child? |
15135 | What, in thunder, choice of reply did he have? |
15135 | What, justly, was he to do with her? |
15135 | Whatever do you suppose father and Myrtle will say?" |
15135 | Where are the others? |
15135 | Where is she?" |
15135 | Where, now, could be seen such an audience as Dr. Damrosch had gathered for his first season of German opera? |
15135 | Which was the first double?" |
15135 | Who is to come still, Hoffernan?" |
15135 | Who would with what he does? |
15135 | Who would? |
15135 | Why did n''t Stephen put an end to such ill- timed jocularity? |
15135 | Why did n''t you write? |
15135 | Why did you come at all if you could n''t behave genteel?" |
15135 | Why do n''t we sit down?" |
15135 | Why must they suffer so unreasonably? |
15135 | Will the railroad survive the experimental stage, and are such gentlemen as yourself behind it?" |
15135 | Will you have a gin and bitters?" |
15135 | Will you stop for me on the thirtieth? |
15135 | Would she fight against it, deny, satirize his tumult; or surrender? |
15135 | You honestly thought he''d do it, and snatched a pistol out of a table drawer, and.... Do you understand? |
15135 | You''ll be a dear, Howat, wo n''t you?" |
15135 | You''re not thinking of one for yourself, are you? |
17156 | ''And h- o- p- hop- e- s- t- hopest thou then unthscathed to go?'' |
17156 | A week or a month? |
17156 | A what? |
17156 | A what? |
17156 | Ai n''t you comin''? |
17156 | Ai n''t you heard it yet, Mark? 17156 Alluring?" |
17156 | And for that reason you went to war? |
17156 | And he is engaged to Miss Smyth? |
17156 | And is Tip going? |
17156 | And now, Tip, having performed your duty, you are going over the mountain? |
17156 | And the rest? |
17156 | And this English father? |
17156 | And this is what? |
17156 | And what has Edith Parker to do with all this? |
17156 | And when did she go? |
17156 | And where is Edith? |
17156 | And where-- back to Kansas? |
17156 | And you-- what are you doing here? |
17156 | Any news, Elmer? |
17156 | Are n''t you coming? |
17156 | Are n''t you coming? |
17156 | Are you going to read the rest of the letter? |
17156 | As you have to stay here, I''d rather sit with you, and after all what could be better? |
17156 | At that he gave you up? |
17156 | At this hour? |
17156 | Attractive? |
17156 | But do you love me? |
17156 | But is it Parker? |
17156 | But it''s a good half mile from our house to the spring,Tip said,"and who''ll carry the water?" |
17156 | But must you go on a day''s notice? |
17156 | But tell me about Tim-- did he leave no word? |
17156 | But what''s that to us when you are to be married? 17156 But who is she-- a stranger here?" |
17156 | But why did n''t you go to see the places yourself? |
17156 | But will you? |
17156 | But your pension? |
17156 | Ca n''t you go on home? |
17156 | Can I help you upstairs? |
17156 | Cevery never done me no harm, and who''ll dandle him? |
17156 | Could n''t he do that, Mark? 17156 Could n''t you hear me saying Dutch words? |
17156 | Did I say heifer? 17156 Did I say that?" |
17156 | Did it feel that way when you left? |
17156 | Did n''t you know,said Weston,"how I''d shot myself all to pieces, and how there''s a live fox in the hollows across the ridge?" |
17156 | Do I deck myself out in gaudy finery, Mark? |
17156 | Do n''t you mind, Ike, it come the same day and on the wery same stage as the news of the sinkin''of the Spaynish fleet? |
17156 | Do n''t you think you''d better rest now? |
17156 | Do you blame her? 17156 Do you suppose I was wanted then? |
17156 | Do you suppose you can disappear off the face of the earth for two weeks and that I will not be worried? 17156 Do you think I''ll walk?" |
17156 | Do you think I''m going over the mountain, too? |
17156 | Do you think it an improvement? |
17156 | Does he like work? |
17156 | Does you think I''d let you die? 17156 Does you think we''ll walk by that graveyard alone?" |
17156 | Edith? |
17156 | Eggs? |
17156 | Even when it ca n''t talk? |
17156 | Feel better now? |
17156 | For with you a tea- king, Tim, and I a lawyer, it would be just the same, would it not? |
17156 | From where? |
17156 | Handsome? |
17156 | Has he been hurt? |
17156 | Has no one asked him point- blank what he is doing here? |
17156 | He thinks maybe Nanny will give him up this time? |
17156 | He''s lookin''pretty spry yet, ai n''t he, boys? |
17156 | How could you hear what Tim was saying? |
17156 | How does what feel? |
17156 | How in the world does Mary know? |
17156 | How long have I been here? |
17156 | How long is it since he left? |
17156 | I guesst you was never hit on the eye by a ball, was ye? |
17156 | I says to myself to- night,''I hope Mark is as fortunate,''I says, when I saw them two a----"What two? |
17156 | I suppose you have told a hundred other persons of Aaron''s prowess? |
17156 | I suppose you think I''ve been a fool about Edith? |
17156 | Improvements? |
17156 | In other words, when you came to live with your pious uncle, he picked you? |
17156 | In the face of all that, what did you say? |
17156 | Is Tim out at this hour? |
17156 | Is it eight dollars he is making, did you say? |
17156 | Is it two million five hundred and sixty thousand, or two hundred and fifty- six thousand persons that are bitten annually by snakes in India? |
17156 | Is n''t he a beauty? |
17156 | Is she dead? |
17156 | Is that the dogs again? |
17156 | It''s a- blowin''up most a- mighty, ai n''t it? |
17156 | It''s just like being torn in two, is n''t it? |
17156 | Like Isaac Bolum and Henry Holmes? |
17156 | Mary, will you tell him? |
17156 | May I be spared myself, but see here, Tim, how does it feel? |
17156 | Me-- I''ve kept you waiting? |
17156 | No,Tim answers,"but suppose----""And could I have better company to watch and listen with?" |
17156 | Of me? |
17156 | Oh,he exclaimed,"is that you? |
17156 | Over the mountain, eh, Tim? |
17156 | Poor thing-- ain''t the Miracle workin''? |
17156 | Right,said I;"and we''ll begin eternity to- day, wo n''t we, Mary?" |
17156 | She''s pretty, Tim,said I,"and rich, you say?" |
17156 | Teacher Thomas, Teacher Thomas,came in the shrill voice of Chester Holmes,"ai n''t it Dooglas?" |
17156 | Tell me,I went on, following up my advantage,"when is she coming here, or when are you going to move up there?" |
17156 | That''s just the thing-- a statue of Washington or Lincoln or General Grant-- how''s that for an idee, Mark? |
17156 | The attraction? |
17156 | The little what, Mark? |
17156 | The same to me? |
17156 | The woman? 17156 Then the question arises, what shall I do?" |
17156 | Then why did you turn soldier? |
17156 | Then why go away at all? |
17156 | They''ve always done it; why worry now? |
17156 | This is John Shadrack''s house? |
17156 | Tim and Mary? |
17156 | Tim gone? |
17156 | Tim? |
17156 | To sech a lovely home? |
17156 | To see Mary? |
17156 | Was I saying anything? |
17156 | Was I? |
17156 | Was I? |
17156 | Was n''t it you and William? |
17156 | Well, is it my talking that''s driving you away, or is it Weston''s alluring offers? |
17156 | Well, old chap,I said, as I scratched his nose ever so gently,"you at least have no one to think of but me and Tim there, eh?" |
17156 | Well? |
17156 | What could you have given her, Mark-- or I, compared to what his wealth means to a woman like Mary? |
17156 | What day is this? |
17156 | What did I tell you, Tip? |
17156 | What did you powwow for? |
17156 | What does it illustrate? |
17156 | What doing''s? |
17156 | What has Tip been doing all this while? |
17156 | What makes you so quiet, Mark? |
17156 | What of it? |
17156 | What of it? |
17156 | What were you saying? |
17156 | What would you do? |
17156 | When did Weston arrange all this for you? |
17156 | Where have you been? |
17156 | Who is the young woman? |
17156 | Who told you? |
17156 | Who will look after Mrs. Bolum? 17156 Who?" |
17156 | Whose? |
17156 | Why did you choose me instead of a lad like Tim? |
17156 | Why did you go away? |
17156 | Why did you say flirt? |
17156 | Why does n''t everybody in Black Log go to Florida in winter or take the waters at Carlsbad? 17156 Why have you deserted the others?" |
17156 | Why send her a picture of a slate- colored cow when a herd of Durhams pastures every day right under her eye? |
17156 | Why, Mary, ca n''t you see I was joking? 17156 Why, do n''t you know her?" |
17156 | Why, in Heaven''s name, could n''t you keep her for yourself? |
17156 | Why, was n''t you there? |
17156 | Wise? |
17156 | With what? |
17156 | With what? |
17156 | With what? |
17156 | Yes, what of it? |
17156 | Yes-- and how did you know it? |
17156 | You are going over the mountain, Tip? |
17156 | You are not going out? |
17156 | You know her? |
17156 | You lead the life of a hermit? |
17156 | You would go over the mountain? |
17156 | Your girl? |
17156 | A hero? |
17156 | A soldier? |
17156 | Ai n''t you gittin''well agin? |
17156 | Am I the first to know?" |
17156 | And Edith? |
17156 | And Mr. Weston-- delighted-- I''m sure----""What, Mark?" |
17156 | And is she spare or fleshy?" |
17156 | And is there any cry more appealing than that of a lonely puppy? |
17156 | And she says:''Does you''spose I''ll let you run''round lookin''like a load of wood?'' |
17156 | And the quail, perched on the fence- stake, would she address herself to us or to Mr. Robert White down in the meadow? |
17156 | And when she comes-- that woman-- we''ll go to your house-- all three of us-- the same as now-- eh, Captain?" |
17156 | And who was the quiet, lanky man? |
17156 | Are you sure you have your ticket, and your check, and your lunch? |
17156 | Bolum?" |
17156 | Bolum?" |
17156 | Bolum?" |
17156 | But about Tip''s wife agin-- she must have a lovely disposition?" |
17156 | But how could I look careless and dashing, with Josiah Nummler in the chair I had fixed so close to mine? |
17156 | But it''s hard not to be picked yourself-- ain''t it?" |
17156 | But supposing one of us had won-- would it have been the same-- the same as it was before she came-- the same as it is now?" |
17156 | But this Miss Parker-- are they engaged?" |
17156 | But what can a fellow get? |
17156 | But what did I care? |
17156 | But what''ll she run to? |
17156 | But why say"Dooglas"? |
17156 | But, as Theop says, who is he detecting?" |
17156 | Ca n''t you feel that bandage?" |
17156 | Can you conceive her smile, Mark, if she saw us now-- if this fine Brooklyn girl with her city ways dropped down here in Black Log?" |
17156 | Could n''t he go away with his head up and face set, or must he totter along and wail simply because he is doing a fair thing that any man would do?" |
17156 | Could n''t you forgive her, Mark, for that one moment of forgetting? |
17156 | Could n''t you see, Mark, how angry Mary was with me for forgetting her? |
17156 | Could the bleating of the sheep swing in sweeter to the music of the valley as she is rocked to sleep? |
17156 | Could you, tea- king, buy for my eyes a picture more wonderful? |
17156 | Could your millions, tea- king, buy for me a sweeter music than the valley''s heart throb as it rocks itself to sleep? |
17156 | Did I know then that you loved her? |
17156 | Did n''t the family know? |
17156 | Did n''t the powwow do it?" |
17156 | Did you ever hear her sing?" |
17156 | Do you blame her?" |
17156 | Do you wonder she turned to Weston?" |
17156 | Does I look like I was goin''to jump down the well? |
17156 | Else how could he have done it so accurately? |
17156 | Ever see Smyth''s daughter? |
17156 | For what had I to offer her? |
17156 | For who when She comes would not look his best? |
17156 | God''s fireplace? |
17156 | Had Mark Hope become proud? |
17156 | Had you ever told me? |
17156 | Has old Smyth gone?" |
17156 | Have you ever worn leaky boots when the snow was banked fence high? |
17156 | He come July six, for do n''t you mind how they called him Cevery out of pity and generosity for the Spayniards? |
17156 | He pinted his long finger at Ernest and says,''How much is five times eleven apples? |
17156 | Hope?" |
17156 | How about it, Hope?" |
17156 | How can they imagine Pleasantville station when some of''em ai n''t yet seen a train?" |
17156 | How could I blame Luther Warden? |
17156 | How''s that for a starter?" |
17156 | I had spoken in spite of my better self, for what right had I to stand between my brother and a broader life? |
17156 | I suppose you have travelled?" |
17156 | It''s Weston, eh? |
17156 | Lonely? |
17156 | Luther Warden is all she has of kin, and if it makes him any happier to see her togged out in that gawky Dunkard gown-----""Gawky?" |
17156 | Mind the big creek-- there by the kivered bridge-- ain''t it gleamin''cheerful? |
17156 | No-- why, who did you think was coming?" |
17156 | Politeness? |
17156 | S''pose every man here did lick the teacher in his time-- what of it, I says, what of it?" |
17156 | S''posin''she just kind of looks at the floor quiet- like or else up to him-- you''ll begin to think you ai n''t there at all, wo n''t you? |
17156 | She--""She is not a Dunkard, then?" |
17156 | Suddenly she dropped her work and asked,"Is that a footstep on the porch?" |
17156 | Then I asked,"Where is Tip?" |
17156 | Then I said to myself,"Is it best?" |
17156 | Then with a glance of inquiry, he said,"Edith Parker?" |
17156 | They''ve fine gold frames and----""Why send her a picture of a tree when the finest oak in the valley is at her door?" |
17156 | To whom must I appeal when I see signs there?" |
17156 | V"Who is Robert Weston?" |
17156 | Was I to blame for that moment when I knew I loved the girl and that she loved me?" |
17156 | We ca n''t go as fast as we used to, Captain, but we can go together, eh?" |
17156 | Well, Piney Martin he has got him one-- let me see-- when did he git it, Henery?" |
17156 | Weston?" |
17156 | Weston?" |
17156 | What did I say?" |
17156 | What''s this all about?" |
17156 | Where now was glory to be gained? |
17156 | Why did n''t you come to me and tell me?" |
17156 | Why do n''t you tell him about the improvements instead of pintin''out the bad spots in the road?" |
17156 | Will you take me with you to Happy Valley?" |
17156 | With what? |
17156 | Wo n''t you believe me this time? |
17156 | Would the cloud coals over there on Thunder Knob blaze up higher in our honor? |
17156 | Would the night- hawk, circling in the clouds, strike one note to our glory? |
17156 | Would you know that Aaron Kallaberger was a hero of Gettysburg if he did n''t wear an army overcoat?" |
17156 | XV Tim''s minute? |
17156 | You mind the fuss your ma made to my ma about it, do n''t you? |
17156 | You mind the time you swallered my copper cent, do n''t you? |
17156 | You think I''m a murderer? |
17156 | [ Illustration:"Are n''t you coming?" |
48501 | ''Were you away from the church?'' 48501 ''What would I do with a communion set?'' |
48501 | ''William,''said he to me,''did you open the cupboard?'' 48501 ''William,''said the preacher to me,''do you remember how I gave you the key to the cupboard when you fixed the wall?'' |
48501 | Ach, where are you? |
48501 | Ach, who will tell her? |
48501 | Ai n''t it so, Katy, that you often put money in that hole for me? |
48501 | Alvin who? |
48501 | Am I to have_ this_ again? |
48501 | And David? |
48501 | And do the Koehlers still live on the mountain? |
48501 | And what will you do when you are educated? |
48501 | And what would you do when you were educated? |
48501 | And what--said he,--"what are you going to do in this world, Miss Katy?" |
48501 | And where did you think you would go? |
48501 | And you never told any one? |
48501 | Are n''t you going to school_ ever_? |
48501 | Are you getting ready for school, Katy? |
48501 | Are you in any trouble, Katy? |
48501 | Are you in trouble? |
48501 | Are you not going to school? |
48501 | Are you sick? |
48501 | Are you, then, marrying a lady, Alvin? |
48501 | But can he take education? |
48501 | But what is it? |
48501 | But, grandmother, why do you cry? |
48501 | But_ why_? |
48501 | Ca n''t you learn enough here? |
48501 | Ca n''t you see that I had to tell you? |
48501 | Can I do anything for you? |
48501 | Can you understand me? |
48501 | Cassie? |
48501 | Could Koehler have had any motive for taking it himself? |
48501 | Dare I, then, come to see you, Essie? 48501 Did Koehler tell?" |
48501 | Did a letter come? |
48501 | Did any of you tell your folks? |
48501 | Did he tell where he put it? 48501 Did it slam?" |
48501 | Did my father never say that he had been in the church that afternoon? |
48501 | Did n''t she look like this one? |
48501 | Do n''t you believe he took it, Alvin? |
48501 | Do n''t you have any money in the bank? |
48501 | Do n''t you have any money? |
48501 | Do n''t you want me in your class, David? |
48501 | Do n''t you wish you knew? |
48501 | Do they take me for a dictionary? 48501 Do you confess that your accusation is not true?" |
48501 | Do you dare to say I did n''t take you by the ear? |
48501 | Do you forget how smart the governor thought you were, Katy? |
48501 | Do you know me? |
48501 | Do you like poetry, Katy? |
48501 | Do you like teaching? |
48501 | Do you mean she can not cook, Alvin? 48501 Do you mean that it is over?" |
48501 | Do you mean--faltered Katy--"do you mean that my Uncle Daniel is coming home once, my Uncle Daniel Gaumer?" |
48501 | Do you not leave your love for David? |
48501 | Do you remember what learning you had? |
48501 | Do you suppose any one else has it like this? |
48501 | Do you want anything, David? |
48501 | Do you want to engage me? |
48501 | Does n''t anybody know? |
48501 | Dumb? |
48501 | For my living, you mean? |
48501 | Had Koehler ever made this accusation before the time of my father''s funeral? |
48501 | Has war broken out in Millerstown? |
48501 | Have you made everything right? |
48501 | Have you paid for the furniture? |
48501 | How are you, Katy? |
48501 | I mean, Katy, when are you going to school? |
48501 | I, sing? 48501 If I am not going, I can all the better help you to go; do n''t you see that, Alvin? |
48501 | Is it so that he will have the Millerstown school? |
48501 | Is it true? |
48501 | Is there anything you would rather do? |
48501 | Is there no life? |
48501 | Is this so, Katy? |
48501 | Is this thing so? |
48501 | Is what true? |
48501 | Is your gran''mom yet sick? |
48501 | It''s beautiful up here, is n''t it, Katy? |
48501 | Katy, dear, are you in any trouble? |
48501 | Katy, did you keep your money in the putlock hole? |
48501 | Katy,began the squire in a stern voice,"what is this I hear about you?" |
48501 | Our Katy? |
48501 | Perhaps we could get him in the church? |
48501 | Say you gave money to me often, Katy? |
48501 | Shall I bring a gun? |
48501 | Shall I go down, David? |
48501 | Shall I go now to quiltings and surprise parties when I would not go before? 48501 Since when have you changed your mind?" |
48501 | Sing? |
48501 | That my uncle the governor is coming? |
48501 | The communion cup? |
48501 | The furniture? |
48501 | The governor? |
48501 | Then why did you come here? |
48501 | Then, when will she be well again? |
48501 | To her? |
48501 | To whom? |
48501 | To- night, David? |
48501 | Was he ugly this morning? |
48501 | Was the window there? |
48501 | Well? |
48501 | What ails you, Alvin? 48501 What am I to do for her?" |
48501 | What are you going to do about it? |
48501 | What are you going to do now, Katy, that gran''mom is gone? |
48501 | What cake- not- turned will have him? |
48501 | What communion cup? |
48501 | What did I say? 48501 What do you hear about me?" |
48501 | What do you mean to do with me? |
48501 | What do you mean, then? |
48501 | What do you mean? |
48501 | What do you mean? |
48501 | What do you suppose became of it? |
48501 | What has come over John Hartman? |
48501 | What hole in the wall, Katy? |
48501 | What hole? |
48501 | What in this world are you talking about? |
48501 | What is a serving- table, Alvin? |
48501 | What is it, David? |
48501 | What is it, Katy? 48501 What is it, sir?" |
48501 | What is it? |
48501 | What is it? |
48501 | What is it? |
48501 | What is it? |
48501 | What is it? |
48501 | What is it? |
48501 | What is the matter? |
48501 | What is this I hear about Koehler''s boy? |
48501 | What is this fuss? 48501 What is wrong with everybody?" |
48501 | What is your plan, David? |
48501 | What money? 48501 What money?" |
48501 | What nonsense is this? |
48501 | What on earth is the matter with you people? |
48501 | What shall I do? |
48501 | What shall I tell David? 48501 What will I do?" |
48501 | What will you do in this world all alone? |
48501 | What will you do with three woolen quilts, Katy, when I gave you already nice blankets? 48501 What would he want with it?" |
48501 | What_ did_ he mean? |
48501 | What_ for_? |
48501 | When the people want advice, do they go to Sarah Ann? 48501 Where are you? |
48501 | Where does the money go, then? |
48501 | Where have_ you_ got it? |
48501 | Where is William? 48501 Where is he?" |
48501 | Where? |
48501 | While he is so cross, you mean? |
48501 | Who are you? |
48501 | Who are you? |
48501 | Who is it? |
48501 | Who is that child? |
48501 | Who says it, gran''mom? 48501 Who told you you had the dare to ring this bell?" |
48501 | Who will tell her? |
48501 | Who? |
48501 | Why did gran''pop stay here always? |
48501 | Why did n''t you tell it long ago? |
48501 | Why did uncle go away? |
48501 | Why did you select such a place for a bank, Katy? |
48501 | Why do you want money? |
48501 | Why no hope? |
48501 | Why this year? |
48501 | Why? |
48501 | Why? |
48501 | Will my grandmother die? |
48501 | Will you teach in a school like Millerstown? |
48501 | William, do you remember anything about the window that you plastered shut in the church and about the communion set? |
48501 | Wo n''t you ever go to your uncle any more? |
48501 | Would she like_ murders_? |
48501 | You are sure you could do nothing in Millerstown with an education? |
48501 | You ca n''t throw money round when you do n''t have it, ca n''t you? 48501 You did n''t believe what?" |
48501 | You did n''t count on bent wire, did you? 48501 You do not mean that perhaps she will never be well?" |
48501 | You know the church? |
48501 | You mean he took it? 48501 You mean that he fell_ dead_?" |
48501 | You mean that she will be sick a long, long time? |
48501 | You say he_ pushed_ it in, Katy? |
48501 | You think it would be better to be a missionary? |
48501 | You took my raspberries, you say? 48501 You will then bring your pop home from the poorhouse, I suppose, Alvin?" |
48501 | _ Will_ you come in? |
48501 | Ain''t--"Alvin''s normal school training suddenly forsook him--"ain''t it so, Katy?" |
48501 | Am I to have no peace in this world?" |
48501 | And little Sarah Knerr, did she not know"Das Krischkindel,"which told of the divine Christmas spirit? |
48501 | And why, having pushed it in, did John Hartman not take it out? |
48501 | Are you crazy? |
48501 | Are you_ crazy_, Alvin?" |
48501 | Are_ you crazy, Katy?" |
48501 | But his father-- how could reason be returned to him? |
48501 | But how then should she attain to an equality with Alvin? |
48501 | But how"--this with desperate appeal--"how can I learn if you do not make it right?" |
48501 | But why, oh, why did he not write? |
48501 | Can you remember anything else you did?" |
48501 | Cherries that you_ stole_? |
48501 | David should be sent for; must she remind them that David should be sent for? |
48501 | Did persons ever die of broken hearts? |
48501 | Did she cry, Bevy?" |
48501 | Did you come to it by accident? |
48501 | Did you fall?" |
48501 | Do they think I am a encyclopà ¦ dia?" |
48501 | Do you forget how you were up to him in school and he is older than you?" |
48501 | Do you want to make some money, Alvin?" |
48501 | Do you want to put a hex on everything? |
48501 | HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY BOSTON AND NEW YORK KATY GAUMER[ Illustration:( p. 334)"IT''S BEAUTIFUL UP HERE, ISN''T IT, KATY?"] |
48501 | Had Cassie died of a broken heart? |
48501 | Had Cassie known of the hiding- place of the silver service? |
48501 | Had Katy lost her mind? |
48501 | Had he heard her aright? |
48501 | Had they come to make him pay for his father''s theft? |
48501 | He said to us in school,''We are to have nothing but English here,_ do you versteh_?'' |
48501 | He says he did n''t, does he? |
48501 | How much money did you have there, Katy?" |
48501 | How was it possible for him to be anything else but silent with a wife so cold, so immovable, so strange? |
48501 | How will Katy then be educated? |
48501 | I wonder if you would have the time to do it for me?" |
48501 | If Grandmother Gaumer were to be a long time sick, who would take care of her? |
48501 | If you are not going to do anything about it, why did you come here?" |
48501 | In Heaven''s name, Katy, what is wrong?" |
48501 | In the name of sense what has come over the girl?" |
48501 | Is it any good yet? |
48501 | Is it so, Alvin? |
48501 | Is n''t that enough?" |
48501 | Louisa can not even understand,''Where, oh, where are the visions of morning?'' |
48501 | Must she go through this house searching for her mistress? |
48501 | Now, what is the matter, Katy?" |
48501 | Oh, what shall I do, what shall I do?" |
48501 | On Sunday evening he had taken all Katy''s hoard; why had he been so mad as to return to seek more? |
48501 | Or bake?" |
48501 | Or wash? |
48501 | Reparation must be made, but what adequate reparation could be offered? |
48501 | Sally Edwin, you peel a few more potatoes for me, will you, Sally, for the mashed potatoes? |
48501 | School? |
48501 | The governor had come back; this was his home; should he find it an alien place? |
48501 | The married people sit round and do n''t say anything, and--""Do you want them to_ fight_?" |
48501 | The two hundred that the governor sent you a while back, have n''t you, Katy?" |
48501 | Was he only to be relieved of a burden of whose existence he had been to this time unaware? |
48501 | Was he really going to punish her in some strange way? |
48501 | Was his father not now to have a decent burying? |
48501 | Was she going, of her own accord, to deliver herself up to punishment? |
48501 | Was that why you went so often to the preacher this summer? |
48501 | Were you studying again?" |
48501 | What am I made of? |
48501 | What am I to do? |
48501 | What could he do with it?" |
48501 | What could he have done with it?" |
48501 | What could my father have wanted with the communion service? |
48501 | What could she have done? |
48501 | What do I care for a''wisitor''?" |
48501 | What do you know about it, you little chicken?" |
48501 | What do you think of that now?" |
48501 | What had she done? |
48501 | What in the world were her relatives about? |
48501 | What is it that you have stolen?" |
48501 | What is this, Katy?" |
48501 | What shall I do, Katy?" |
48501 | What shall I do?" |
48501 | What_ am_ I to do? |
48501 | What_ are_ you going to do?" |
48501 | When can you do it?'' |
48501 | When did you steal cherries? |
48501 | Where are you?" |
48501 | Where did he get the money to get educated? |
48501 | Where does he put his money? |
48501 | Where had she gone? |
48501 | Where had you money, Katy? |
48501 | Where was Alvin Koehler, the despicable, to whom Katy had seemed attached? |
48501 | Where will he live?" |
48501 | Who could ever have dreamed that Katy would treat him so shabbily? |
48501 | Who had made up this bed? |
48501 | Who says I dare go to school?" |
48501 | Who stole it? |
48501 | Who will take care of gran''mom? |
48501 | Why had John Hartman done this thing? |
48501 | Why had not Katy remembered the strange incident long before this? |
48501 | Why should not bees be bottled and labeled and sold? |
48501 | Why, and again why, why, why, did John Hartman push the silver service into the hole? |
48501 | Why_ because_?" |
48501 | Will Edwin and Sally move home or will they get some one from outside?" |
48501 | Will they use it? |
48501 | Will you sell us a bee in a bottle, or wo n''t you?" |
48501 | Wo n''t that be fine, Katy?" |
48501 | Would Grandfather Gaumer look like that? |
48501 | You want to pay for cherries?" |
48501 | You want to pay me? |
48501 | You will not turn me off?" |
48501 | _ Are_ you crazy, Katy?" |
48501 | _ Do you understand me?_"besought Katy in a sudden agony of fright. |
48501 | _ Hamlet:_ Well was is''s? |
48501 | asked Katy, sharply;"or do n''t you want to engage me?" |
48501 | protested Sarah Ann,"are you not going to be high gelernt?" |
48501 | said Katy,"I sing? |
48501 | that he was late and recess was over? |
47655 | A Bittenbender? 47655 A financial backer is styled an''angel,''is n''t he-- in theatrical parlance? |
47655 | A horse? 47655 All-- don''t you know what that is? |
47655 | Almost all what? |
47655 | Already, Happie? |
47655 | Am I an animal? |
47655 | Am I likely to meet him, dear? 47655 And I may ask Rosie for her satchel?" |
47655 | And Laura, the dignified? 47655 And did you ever see finer views? |
47655 | And do n''t you know you asked us to put those bean poles in the garden, and set the pea brush? |
47655 | And hain''t Hattie herself said so, and to Eunice yet? 47655 And how could there be digestion when one ate nothing?" |
47655 | And is n''t there something Snigs could get from the drug store in the meantime? |
47655 | And what about the trunks? |
47655 | And what am I to do? |
47655 | And what''s the matter with writing songs and poems to some other girl beside yourself? |
47655 | And who could you play and sing to? 47655 And would n''t it be better to decide on something soon? |
47655 | Are there many tramps around here? |
47655 | Are you a losted Bippenbender? 47655 Are you going to take all your own Lares and Penates?" |
47655 | Are you hurt, Snigs? 47655 As''tis, what you goin''to do about it?" |
47655 | Aunt Keren, would you please come into the library where mother is? |
47655 | Because you wanted to see us, we hope? |
47655 | Books are in running brooks; is that why you like them? |
47655 | Boys, what do you think? |
47655 | But green for our room with the morning sunshine to lighten it-- would you mind, Aunt Keren? |
47655 | But wo n''t you be glad when we are able to make a home for mother instead of her making one for us? |
47655 | By all means the tea, and for us all, please, but what is the story? |
47655 | By the way, where are the abominable things? |
47655 | Ca n''t you ever come to see me? |
47655 | Ca n''t you hear that_ afar_ and_ star_ do n''t rhyme with_ Laure_? |
47655 | Can she be a lost Bittenbender? |
47655 | Can they read Dutch yet? |
47655 | Come to ride to the barn, Penny? |
47655 | Could n''t Bob and I ride over with him, Aunt Keren? |
47655 | Dare we see the teacher? |
47655 | Deported? 47655 Did you ever hear of such an outrageous piece of injustice? |
47655 | Did you ever hear such a name? |
47655 | Did you have a bottle of ginger pop in there, Snigs? |
47655 | Do n''t you get lonely here? 47655 Do n''t you know, Rosie, how hard Aunt Keren tried to find the will, so she could give the place over to Gretta?" |
47655 | Do n''t you mean it is too little for you? |
47655 | Do n''t you see that it is exactly what the flat is like? |
47655 | Do n''t you think there''s any way that this Pete you spoke of could get us over? |
47655 | Do you guess she could do such a thing if she ai n''t? |
47655 | Do you know why I came? |
47655 | Do you like it here? |
47655 | Do you mean that you would stay here? |
47655 | Do you not know the full title of this highest form of philosophy, my sisters? |
47655 | Does n''t that sound just like nostalgia? 47655 Does n''t the Honorable Keren- happuch mean precede?" |
47655 | Does the directors know how bad they ca n''t read? |
47655 | Eunice''s cousin? |
47655 | Free? |
47655 | Going to stay? |
47655 | Good gracious, Gretta, has it been found at last? 47655 Had I better come down?" |
47655 | Have you always lived here? |
47655 | Have you been around here nights lately? |
47655 | Have you been good and happy all this day? |
47655 | Hidden wills and tardy justice done the heroine, who has been poor and oppressed-- now is n''t it a regular fairy- tale? |
47655 | How can she? 47655 How can you have indigestion when you do n''t eat?" |
47655 | How could I have an idea? |
47655 | How could you put seven one way and five the other? 47655 How did you get on driving the borrowed chariot?" |
47655 | How did you manage to wake up so early? |
47655 | How do you do, Margery? |
47655 | How do you make out with Rosie Gruber? |
47655 | How indeed? |
47655 | How is it coming on this time? |
47655 | How much would you give her, Anna? |
47655 | How was I to know that horrid chair''s third leg was just stuck in? |
47655 | How were you to know which was its third leg? 47655 I always think of how the girls in Little Women got ready for their mother to come home, do n''t you? |
47655 | I suppose the only question is: What can be done about it? |
47655 | I suppose we must get ready that little room, Miss Keren? 47655 I wonder if I should have insisted on your going to Bar Harbor?" |
47655 | I wonder if your cat-- Whoop- la, is n''t it?--got into both pans of fudge, Happie? |
47655 | If it comes to swapping ambitions, mine is to go to college, and it looks as if I could go, now does n''t it? 47655 Is Gretta at home alone?" |
47655 | Is n''t it right; anything wrong with it? |
47655 | Is n''t she nice? |
47655 | Is n''t that comfortable, Hapsie? |
47655 | Is n''t that perfectly be- au- ti- ful? |
47655 | Is she graduated as a teacher? |
47655 | Is that the way they make teachers? |
47655 | Is there any one here who will take us to the Bittenbender farm? |
47655 | It could be a postman, a peddler, a life insurance agent, a bill, a friend, a foe, the landlord, company, country cousins-- shall I go on? |
47655 | Look here, do you think we''re hoppers? |
47655 | Margery gone? |
47655 | Mothers find little texts everywhere, do n''t they, motherums? |
47655 | My dear little girl, would you have me compound a felony? |
47655 | My dear, grateful, generous Gretta,said Miss Bradbury,"did you ever hear that Shakespeare said that some people had greatness thrust upon them? |
47655 | No; do you? |
47655 | Now, Happie, why do n''t you let mother tell us about Auntie Cam? |
47655 | Now, did you ever in all your life? |
47655 | Now, how''ll we get the baby down? |
47655 | Now, who could that be? |
47655 | Oh, Aunt Keren, do you think it would matter to any one else if we had this in our room? |
47655 | Oh, Hapsie, dearest, are you hurt? |
47655 | Oh, Laura,she cried,"how can you be such a goose? |
47655 | Oh, Penny, what made you go up there in all that dust? 47655 Oh, girls, oh, Margery, is n''t it heavenly?" |
47655 | Only to hand organs? |
47655 | Or are you hinting that I should not kick? 47655 Or is it because they chatter, chatter as they flow-- fellow feeling, you know?" |
47655 | Or shall Snigs come up? |
47655 | Putting her out? |
47655 | Reading aloud? |
47655 | Really, Keren- happuch, what are you talking about? |
47655 | Say, what do you think, Hap; will there be room for this stuff? |
47655 | Say, what''s the matter with you? |
47655 | See what? 47655 See,"she went on,"how the rooms come along, one after the other, just precisely like these patty- pan cups? |
47655 | Shall we have a die cut for our letter paper:''Patty- Pans,''and printed in bright silver like new tins? 47655 She''s a nice Auntie Cam, nicer than most own aunts; what does she say? |
47655 | She? |
47655 | Should I speak for you? 47655 Some one to help you out? |
47655 | Supper ready, Happie? |
47655 | Suppose I had n''t you? |
47655 | Teacher, would you mind going down to the door once, and find my handkerchief for me? 47655 The late; he is dead, is n''t he?" |
47655 | The two of whom you wrote us? |
47655 | They are your cousins with whom you live, are n''t they? 47655 They''re taking in a basket that looks as if it had a cat in it; I wonder if it''s yellow, too?" |
47655 | To prowl? 47655 Tsupper ready, Happie?" |
47655 | Was it your fudge? 47655 We do not know this third lady?" |
47655 | Well, do you raise mermaids? |
47655 | Well, my dear Charlotte, you would not have her flight over barren waters, would you? 47655 Were you going down on the afternoon train to feed him, little Lady Bountiful?" |
47655 | What about Snigs? |
47655 | What about, Pfennig? |
47655 | What are you going to do to- day, my house- keepers? |
47655 | What did she do then? 47655 What do you ask?" |
47655 | What do you mean by embroiling me with my neighbors, Keren- happuch? |
47655 | What do you mean? |
47655 | What doctor shall I fetch? |
47655 | What does the tea room mean, precisely? |
47655 | What ginger ale? |
47655 | What got you up so early? |
47655 | What has come over you? |
47655 | What have you got? |
47655 | What in the world are you doing with two boys here when you''re sweeping? 47655 What is it about attic salt? |
47655 | What is it to- day, Happie? |
47655 | What is it, Rosie? 47655 What is it, what has happened?" |
47655 | What is it? |
47655 | What is? |
47655 | What is? |
47655 | What is? |
47655 | What relation is she to you? |
47655 | What should I do? |
47655 | What will you do, Margery, if we stay here all winter? 47655 What''s the matter?" |
47655 | What''s the wail about now? 47655 What''s up?" |
47655 | What''s wrong with you? |
47655 | What? |
47655 | When we was to school we could read more good when we was littler, say not? |
47655 | Where can we get supper? |
47655 | Where is Penny? 47655 Who can kalsomine?" |
47655 | Who did that pistol kill? |
47655 | Who is wounded; tell me quick who is wounded? |
47655 | Who knows the tune? |
47655 | Why did n''t you hang that there basket alongside the stove? 47655 Why not ask Jake Shale if he knows of one? |
47655 | Why should I tell you to choose if I minded? |
47655 | Why, good gracious, hain''t I said so? |
47655 | Why, you do n''t suppose I thought your Aunt Keren was a- goin''to keep it? |
47655 | Will it be funny, your show on the Fourth? |
47655 | Wo n''t it be fun, jogging around the country picking up a roast here and a chop there? |
47655 | Wo n''t you tell me-- just me? |
47655 | Would you be so very kind as to return our cat? |
47655 | Would you mind telling us what you''re driving at, Keren- happuch, my dear? |
47655 | Yes, and how we used to hold up the yardstick and father''s cane for torches when our men came back from their raids? |
47655 | You can wait to see more, you are not impatient for your new home, are you, Happie? 47655 You could n''t come back after her, Jake?" |
47655 | You do n''t mean that literally? |
47655 | You do n''t mean that we are going to need you for-- well, that there is any trouble coming, Aunt Keren? |
47655 | You do n''t think there would be any harm in it? |
47655 | You do n''t? 47655 You had a good time, did n''t you, dear?" |
47655 | You have n''t any calves, have you? |
47655 | You know our place, the Bittenbender farm? |
47655 | You too have noticed the older note, then? 47655 You will let Gretta come over, wo n''t you?" |
47655 | You wo n''t mind if this Eunice does scold now, will you, Gretta? 47655 You wo n''t wait? |
47655 | You''re not hurt, are you? 47655 51''CAN''T YOU EVER COME TO SEE ME?''" |
47655 | AN ARK ADRIFT? |
47655 | Ai n''t they going to help you yet?" |
47655 | And are n''t we to have any meat till he has come through it? |
47655 | And how they would talk horse while they waited for it? |
47655 | And right here in the house? |
47655 | And then to see her face when she finds us out?" |
47655 | And when one remembered that the beauty was to restore their mother, what did exile and more or less furniture matter? |
47655 | And who knows what good may be in store for us, as well as you? |
47655 | And why did they go off and leave Aunt Keren their house, furnished, too, after its way, and with their worn- off- horsehair trunk left behind?" |
47655 | And why do you keep one on a step- ladder?" |
47655 | And wo n''t it be funny to see us so solemn and dignified, and Gretta talking Dutch''yet,''as they say up here, and the girl teacher not knowing her? |
47655 | And you know how many are left when you take seven from twelve, do n''t you? |
47655 | And you like the view outside better than inside? |
47655 | And you wo n''t feel lonely? |
47655 | Any one else coming forth? |
47655 | Are you going to adopt your beauty?" |
47655 | Are you intending to rent a room, and furnish and carry it on in the way you describe-- or rather in the way you sketchily outline?" |
47655 | Are-- you are going to let her come, are n''t you?" |
47655 | Buck?" |
47655 | But did you find any girls of your own age that you liked? |
47655 | But do you think I can help minding being treated so ungratefully, even insulted by those horrid, ignorant people?" |
47655 | But do you think I could let you take my place, and support all my family for several months?" |
47655 | But the log wented down the brook, and we did n''t know it was going, but I was n''t much scared; I could hold Dorà © e, do n''t you see? |
47655 | But what did he call you?" |
47655 | But why should I laugh at Gretta? |
47655 | By the way, what did your Cousin Eunice mean that day when she made me so hopping, by saying you ought to own that house?" |
47655 | CHAPTER IX JUNE''S PERFECT DAYS"DO you know we love the Ark?" |
47655 | CHAPTER XIV AN ARK ADRIFT? |
47655 | Ca n''t you just rest him, Bob?" |
47655 | Can you come to see me?" |
47655 | Can you do it?" |
47655 | Can you tell me how to get my friends over there?" |
47655 | Charlotte, we could not let them open their tea- library combination without an older person to take care of them, could we?" |
47655 | Der teacher do n''t seem to know you dare, say not? |
47655 | Did n''t I tell Gretta this very afternoon that I was glad to stay here? |
47655 | Did you ever hear of such a magnificent, glorious, blissful thing in all your life?" |
47655 | Did you ever see a girl so cast down by good fortune? |
47655 | Do I look a perfect pig?" |
47655 | Do n''t you think it might be hard to make them understand, Laura? |
47655 | Do n''t you want to come with me, Margery, and hear the crash when I break the news?" |
47655 | Do you consider yourself a woman at your age?" |
47655 | Do you know what nostalgia means?" |
47655 | Do you remember how they used to talk about that express train? |
47655 | Do you remember how we used to pretend that the playroom was so dark we could n''t see to walk in it, Bob?" |
47655 | Do you suppose the animals were glad that there was a flood that drove them into the ark? |
47655 | Do you suppose we could live if motherkins were ill? |
47655 | Don Dolor would look well drivin''you, now would n''t he? |
47655 | For instance, what would they do if it was cloudy and misting a little? |
47655 | From the city? |
47655 | Go for-- who, Margery?" |
47655 | Gretta, when are you goin''down cellar after them potatoes?" |
47655 | Hain''t there always work to do, I''d like to know?" |
47655 | Have you the heart to say me nay, when I beg you with my paws folded, like a nice little dog, and say_ please_ so prettily?" |
47655 | He was playing he was a goldfish and I was a pink water lily--''cause I''ve got on my pinkie chamray, do n''t you see?" |
47655 | Here is a little pot of stuff what makes you red in your cheeks; you like to be red und pretty, say not? |
47655 | How can a child of mine be so pompous and so foolish?" |
47655 | How can one leave''us''alone? |
47655 | How could she bear it? |
47655 | How could we help loving a place that cured motherkins?" |
47655 | How did you get on that dreadful log, out in the middle of the brook?" |
47655 | How do you know things like that?" |
47655 | How many sticks do you see there? |
47655 | How much good has it done me since I took it until this summer? |
47655 | How shall I ever get the school dismissed and these children in order?" |
47655 | How shall I get there?" |
47655 | How''s your Charlotte- mother?" |
47655 | I am Robert,''Robert toi qui j''aime''--you know the air? |
47655 | I am in my eighteenth year----""Yes, but how far in it?" |
47655 | I can imitate almost any voice I ever heard, and I''ll talk Dutch so she wo n''t ever guess who it is-- you never heard me talk Dutch, did you? |
47655 | I do n''t believe I am equal to resuming everything-- manage to add to it, I mean?" |
47655 | I mean to sing to people, my own songs, and play to them my own music and all the other composers''----""Why so modest, Laura? |
47655 | I might make a speech after your songs; should I? |
47655 | I think, perhaps, I saw more-- or rather I was-- I think the Baltimore girl''s brother and I were more friendly, more congenial, do n''t you see? |
47655 | I was wondering, motherums, if Aunt Keren would mind if we got a boulder and made a rockery out there on the side of the lawn? |
47655 | I wonder if I can find a place not too dusty to kiss?" |
47655 | I wonder what can be the matter? |
47655 | Is n''t it a good joke on us all that the will was reposing quietly in our attic all the time that we were scouring the country for a trace of it?" |
47655 | Is n''t it almost all? |
47655 | Is n''t life queer and mixy? |
47655 | Is n''t she all right?" |
47655 | Is n''t she blessed? |
47655 | Is n''t that a large order to fill? |
47655 | Is n''t that best now?" |
47655 | It does n''t seem likely on the face of it that half a dozen Scollards could miss one ancient Bradbury, does it?" |
47655 | It never occurred to any of them that they should separate, and in that case what did it matter, after all, in whose name the farm stood? |
47655 | It''s a beautiful place, Crestville, is n''t it?" |
47655 | It''s lodge night, anyhow, an''you''ll be comin''down, wo n''t you?" |
47655 | Look at me; do n''t I look pleading? |
47655 | Looked in the cellar and on the attic? |
47655 | May n''t we have yours?" |
47655 | May we open it? |
47655 | Mother, when do you suppose we shall get anything to eat besides eggs? |
47655 | My days, what kind o''jedgment has Preacher Buck to leave her have the church?" |
47655 | My watch goes fast; you wo n''t mind?" |
47655 | No? |
47655 | Nor did he, for he accepted her decision meekly, and asked:"What then should I do?" |
47655 | Nor motherums?" |
47655 | Nothing serious? |
47655 | Now what in the world does the butcher come through? |
47655 | Now, is n''t that silly? |
47655 | Of course you''re going to have her here, are n''t you?" |
47655 | Oh, Laura, when will you learn to use words right, or to use only those you understand?" |
47655 | Oh, Margery, have you come to the mooning age?" |
47655 | Oh, come on, Happie; will you do it?" |
47655 | Oh, mother, is n''t it awful?" |
47655 | Or how would they know what to do in a shower? |
47655 | Or was it she, after all, who was crazy? |
47655 | Or would you rather go into the room and lie down? |
47655 | Ralph and I are going to the store; want anything from the emporium?" |
47655 | Say not? |
47655 | Say seven of the twelve, for instance?" |
47655 | Say, Gretta, he is''the late,''is n''t he?" |
47655 | Say, shall I harness up, and go right down to fetch Gretta? |
47655 | Say, there hain''t nothin''wrong with the boy, is they? |
47655 | Say, would n''t that fix it, Jimmy?" |
47655 | Shall Bob make a fire, a wood- fire on the hearth, Miss Keren? |
47655 | Shall I see to it?" |
47655 | Shall they laugh at it, say not?" |
47655 | She says''twouldn''t have been done if Hattie had n''t been her cousin-- now did you ever hear tell of such nonsense? |
47655 | She''s in there, is n''t she?" |
47655 | So are you all warm and happy inside, are n''t you, Rosie?" |
47655 | Still poor old Crestville? |
47655 | That''s''cause I was holding him, do n''t you see? |
47655 | The nuts were hickory and chestnuts, grown and gathered on the farm-- how could the best intentioned help overeating? |
47655 | The school; visit it?" |
47655 | Then Ralph picked up Snigs with agony stamped on his face, and Rosie cried:"What in time has happened? |
47655 | Then looking puzzled he inquired:"Do n''t they know at your house what you''re doing? |
47655 | There, you see what good it does to pat her and to speak to her gently? |
47655 | They''d have to go in twos, because we''ve each got two feet, do n''t you see?" |
47655 | Thirteen hundred a year-- we ca n''t live on it, but perhaps we could manage? |
47655 | This kitchen is eight feet wide, and we have twelve feet, we six, have n''t we? |
47655 | We never had such a dandy lair as this would have made, did we, Happie?" |
47655 | What I want to do is improve people, do n''t you see?" |
47655 | What Margery had she had, and what she had n''t she had n''t, so what good did it do to git all dragged out fussin''over things yet?" |
47655 | What are you doing, Laura?" |
47655 | What do I get out of the sort of summers I usually spend? |
47655 | What do you know about the Bittenbenders? |
47655 | What does she give and bequeath-- to whom?" |
47655 | What for?" |
47655 | What fur a person do you guess I am? |
47655 | What good does she expect a city horse to be on these mountains?" |
47655 | What has become of the Bittenbenders? |
47655 | What in creation do you s''pose she''s a- goin''to do?" |
47655 | What makes the people stand such directors?" |
47655 | What makes you take orders; are n''t you the Head of the House? |
47655 | What sort of dog is this one?" |
47655 | What was a Bittenbender anyway? |
47655 | What were you doing, Pennypet? |
47655 | What you standin''round fer? |
47655 | What you want to buy, teacher?" |
47655 | What''s the best tune? |
47655 | What''s the matter with Happie? |
47655 | What''s the matter with putting a few of our feet down the length of it? |
47655 | What''s the matter?" |
47655 | What''s the matter?" |
47655 | What''s the use of gittin''up by dark and foolin''away the whole mornin''yet?" |
47655 | What''s up?" |
47655 | When shall we go?" |
47655 | Where''s Bob?" |
47655 | Where? |
47655 | Who locks up, Hattie?" |
47655 | Who told you? |
47655 | Why and whence?" |
47655 | Why did n''t she write me that she could n''t attend to it?" |
47655 | Why did you want to know?" |
47655 | Why do n''t you say all the other_ great_ composers?" |
47655 | Why what''s the matter, Gretta? |
47655 | Why, this old man your grandmother married was a rare old scamp, and would you have me as bad as he was? |
47655 | Why, what harm can a little frolic do?" |
47655 | Why,"she added, feeling of Snigs,"you''re all wet; are you bleeding?" |
47655 | Will you?" |
47655 | Wo n''t Gretta and Bob be dumbfounded? |
47655 | Wo n''t you come?" |
47655 | Wo n''t you please,_ please_ let her come home with me? |
47655 | Would n''t I hate to live where I drove down once a day to get the mail and to''see the flyer go through,''as they used to up at Pennyroyal last year? |
47655 | Would n''t you feel sure that meant some one dying of homesickness if you heard it, and no one told you?" |
47655 | Would n''t you like to understand it?" |
47655 | Would you mind handing me Whoop- la?" |
47655 | You are sure she''ll come?" |
47655 | You do n''t make fudge as often as you used to make it in town; would fudge be a solution?" |
47655 | You had n''t any idea, had you?" |
47655 | You know that girl down to Neumanns''? |
47655 | You will all come, wo n''t you?" |
47655 | You will let us stay on a while, wo n''t you?" |
47655 | You wo n''t tell any one till just before the Fourth, will you?" |
47655 | You''ll let her go, for a little while, wo n''t you?" |
47655 | Your wood''s almost all; had n''t you ought to git some?" |
47655 | [ Illustration:"''CAN''T YOU EVER COME TO SEE ME?''"] |
47655 | [ Illustration:"''HOW DO YOU DO, MARGERY?''"] |
47655 | and never:"Would I?" |
47655 | gasped Mrs. Scollard, leaning far out of the carriage, while at the same time Miss Bradbury demanded:"Where did you get it?" |
22297 | ''Baccy? |
22297 | Afraid of failing? |
22297 | After I''ve asked you? 22297 All? |
22297 | All? |
22297 | Am I so changeable? |
22297 | And I''m perfectly free to go or to stay, as far as your wish is concerned? |
22297 | And do you believe she could get her picture into the exhibition? |
22297 | And does she get a great deal of satisfaction out of it? |
22297 | And does she know about it? |
22297 | And have you ever been in Santa FÃ ©? |
22297 | And is there anything else I can do? 22297 And should you think,"said the mother gesturing toward him with the sketches in her hand,"that she could get in?" |
22297 | And well: have they met? |
22297 | And were you thinking of her going on? |
22297 | And what are you going to do? |
22297 | And what did you do then? |
22297 | And where would you have been, mother? |
22297 | And will you call me Charmian? |
22297 | And will you ever speak to me, or look at me, as if we were ever anything but the most perfect strangers? |
22297 | And you believe that I can do something? |
22297 | And you do n''t care whether I''m ever an artist or not? |
22297 | And you told her you would? |
22297 | And you will go in the morning? |
22297 | And you''ve come to one of the crowd to inquire? |
22297 | Are they very poor? |
22297 | Are you going to drive me from you because I do n''t care for all this? |
22297 | Are you going to have yours here? |
22297 | Are you staying here-- in this house? |
22297 | At pleasing_ me_? |
22297 | Breakfast? 22297 But if Charmian was created out of nothing, what should you say if I were frank about the other characters of my story? |
22297 | But if I do n''t? 22297 But is it a likeness? |
22297 | But she has n''t said so? |
22297 | But what do you think of my theory? 22297 But where_ are_ you? |
22297 | But who''d ever have thought of having to take such precautions? 22297 But you are going to exhibit it?" |
22297 | Dark? |
22297 | Did I do that? 22297 Did I scare you? |
22297 | Did he? |
22297 | Did he? |
22297 | Did n''t I do it magnificently? |
22297 | Did n''t I tell you I did n''t understand her? 22297 Did you look at your watch?" |
22297 | Did you notice the gown Miss Saunders had on? 22297 Did you think of her becoming an artist, a painter?" |
22297 | Do let me ring for some coffee, then? |
22297 | Do n''t you suppose I think of that, too, mother? 22297 Do n''t you think he would do it tremendously well, Miss Saunders?" |
22297 | Do n''t you think she ought? 22297 Do n''t you want me to?" |
22297 | Do they laugh at her a little, too? |
22297 | Do we ever? |
22297 | Do you call it plain- speaking? |
22297 | Do you call that an answer? |
22297 | Do you draw any now? |
22297 | Do you mean that I behave as badly as I did in the Fair House? 22297 Do you mind my having said that about your drawing?" |
22297 | Do you really mean that? |
22297 | Do you really think so? |
22297 | Do you smoke? |
22297 | Do you suppose it would be twice as much as it is here? 22297 Do you suppose they would be letting me talk so to you if it were n''t? |
22297 | Do you suppose they would let me exhibit it in the Fine Arts Department? |
22297 | Do you think I''d break down? |
22297 | Do you think he would be very much excited? |
22297 | Do you think she is going to do much in art? |
22297 | Do you want me to? |
22297 | Does he? |
22297 | Does what? |
22297 | For nothing? |
22297 | Given it up? |
22297 | Had they taken many premiums? |
22297 | Has Wetmore been talking to you about it? |
22297 | Has she so much talent? |
22297 | Have you any idea why she''s changed her mind? |
22297 | Have you been talking me over all this time, mother? |
22297 | Have you got that little Manet, yet? |
22297 | He_ did_? 22297 How can you care for such subjects?" |
22297 | How much use can a man be to a girl when he knows that he ca n''t be of the greatest? |
22297 | How should I know? |
22297 | How should I know? |
22297 | How soon? |
22297 | How were they dressed? |
22297 | How would the weather do? |
22297 | I could make a picture of her,he said,"but could I make a portrait? |
22297 | I do n''t know; is n''t she? 22297 I do n''t suppose I could stop it if I did, could I?" |
22297 | I mean, do you think she could do it? |
22297 | I remember this at the American Artists; three or four years ago, was n''t it? 22297 I thought, perhaps,"the mother began, and she stopped, and then resumed,"How many lessons do you expect to take?" |
22297 | I wonder what''s the matter? |
22297 | I? 22297 I?" |
22297 | I? |
22297 | If I left your studio looking as you want it, and there should be a fire, what would people think? |
22297 | If she were your sister what should you wish her to be? |
22297 | Is it? |
22297 | Is n''t he grand, gloomy and peculiar? |
22297 | Is n''t there something a little vulgar in that notion of ours that a woman always wishes first and most of all to get married? |
22297 | Is she one of the students? |
22297 | Is she so independent? 22297 Is there any particular form of words in which you like to be prompted, when you get to this point?" |
22297 | It does n''t matter, does it? |
22297 | Like to? 22297 Look at my watch?" |
22297 | May I come to see you? 22297 May I stay a moment?" |
22297 | Me? |
22297 | Me? |
22297 | Miss Saunders? 22297 Mr. Ludlow? |
22297 | Mrs. Burton,she asked,"who was it do you suppose Nie was so mad with that she had to go off and play the fool, that way?" |
22297 | Mrs. General Westley? |
22297 | No, I have just breakfasted-- that is, I have breakfasted----"Why, were_ you_ up early, too? |
22297 | No, no----"Or that I''m sorry I did it? |
22297 | No,he said,"why is it over? |
22297 | No----"You have n''t? 22297 No; I should have despised you if you hadn''t----""Well?" |
22297 | Nothing you could say would stop her? |
22297 | Oh, did you? |
22297 | Oh, do you think that would be quite safe? |
22297 | Oh, my goodness, what shall I do? |
22297 | Oh,said her mother, with sarcasm that could not sustain itself even by a smile letting Mrs. Burton into the joke,"going to be a Rosa Bonnhure?" |
22297 | Really? |
22297 | See? |
22297 | See? |
22297 | She''s actually come then? |
22297 | Should you think there was anything any one but you would notice? |
22297 | The Synthesis? |
22297 | The little school- mistress? |
22297 | Then I may say to her mother that I will make a try at the portrait? |
22297 | Then if you do n''t think you ought to do it for that, do you think you ought to do it for nothing? |
22297 | Then there is nothing for me to do about it? |
22297 | Then we shall hope to see you? |
22297 | Then what are you going to do? |
22297 | Then what makes you think she does? |
22297 | Was she looking well? 22297 Was that all?" |
22297 | Was the daughter pretty? |
22297 | Well, then, what should you think of some other man if he could care for such a thing, when some other girl had told it him of herself? 22297 Well, what do you think of it?" |
22297 | Well,he said, avoiding the point in controversy,"why_ should n''t_ she perfectly hate him?" |
22297 | Well,said Wetmore,"how long are you going to make us wait?" |
22297 | Well? |
22297 | Well? |
22297 | Well? |
22297 | Well? |
22297 | Were they both very graceful? |
22297 | Wetmore, what was it you saw in my picture today, when you began with that''Hello''of yours, and then broke off to say something else? |
22297 | What are you afraid of, then? |
22297 | What are you laughing at? |
22297 | What did I tell him about you? |
22297 | What did he say? |
22297 | What did you advise her to do? |
22297 | What do you mean? |
22297 | What do you mean? |
22297 | What do you think, mother? |
22297 | What ever became of that painter who visited you year before last at fair time? |
22297 | What good is your being an artist going to do_ me_? |
22297 | What have I to do with it? |
22297 | What is it, Nelie? |
22297 | What is it? 22297 What is it?" |
22297 | What is it? |
22297 | What is the matter? 22297 What is the matter?" |
22297 | What is your name? |
22297 | What makes you think so? 22297 What makes you think so?" |
22297 | What part? |
22297 | What would_ you_ have done? |
22297 | What-- what is it? 22297 What_ is_ her business?" |
22297 | When did you see her? |
22297 | When it was the very first thing I thought of? 22297 When? |
22297 | Where did that cigar go? |
22297 | Where in the world have you met before? 22297 Where?" |
22297 | Which? |
22297 | Who is it? |
22297 | Who? 22297 Why did n''t you let me see how you were looking? |
22297 | Why do n''t you go to bed? |
22297 | Why do n''t you stay and have breakfast with me? |
22297 | Why in the world should my name be Gladys? |
22297 | Why not? 22297 Why not?" |
22297 | Why should I? |
22297 | Why, did n''t you expect me? |
22297 | Why, do n''t you suppose he ever meant to come? |
22297 | Why, do n''t you think she has talent? |
22297 | Why? |
22297 | Why? |
22297 | Why? |
22297 | Why? |
22297 | Why? |
22297 | Why? |
22297 | Will you call me by my first name? |
22297 | Will you let me call you by your first name? |
22297 | Will you let me see the letter before you send it? 22297 Will you let me show you how-- as well as I can?" |
22297 | Will you tell me all about it, then? |
22297 | With Mrs. Maybough? 22297 Wo n''t you have a cup of tea?" |
22297 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
22297 | Yes, Chicago is big, and the name is Indian; but is it pretty? |
22297 | Yes, has n''t it been beautiful? |
22297 | Yes; what else could I tell him? |
22297 | Yes? 22297 You do n''t happen to have an olive or a cracker any where about? |
22297 | You do n''t mean that you''re going to carry it any farther? |
22297 | You mean the two girls themselves? 22297 You wo n''t mind it, I hope?" |
22297 | You wo n''t mind? |
22297 | You? 22297 _ Did_ she?" |
22297 | _ Is n''t_ she? |
22297 | _ What!_ Not when I''ve come down here before breakfast to ask you? 22297 _ Why_ not? |
22297 | A keb, a keb, a keb? |
22297 | After a moment Cornelia stirred and asked,"Do you want to see it, Charmian?" |
22297 | An olive, or a-- cracker?" |
22297 | And is n''t this something_ like_?" |
22297 | And-- and-- well?" |
22297 | Are n''t you going to join the sketch class?" |
22297 | Are you afraid of mice?" |
22297 | Are you feeling quite well?" |
22297 | Are your father and mother living?" |
22297 | At last Mrs. Burton said,"Why do n''t you let me write to Mr. Ludlow, Nelie, and ask him all about it?" |
22297 | B., with Gates& Clarkson, art goods? |
22297 | Burton?" |
22297 | Burton?" |
22297 | But ca n''t we reason about it as if it were?" |
22297 | But do I treat you like a child?" |
22297 | But do n''t you think the whole place is perfect? |
22297 | But must you write it?" |
22297 | But she said,"Wo n''t you come in?" |
22297 | But somehow----""What?" |
22297 | But what difference? |
22297 | But you know Miss Saunders-- is not staying with us?" |
22297 | But you''ve done something to it, have n''t you?" |
22297 | Ca n''t you understand?" |
22297 | Can she draw?" |
22297 | Can the people themselves be made to see it and feel it? |
22297 | Can they be interested in a picture-- a real work of art that asserts itself in a good way? |
22297 | Charmian demanded,"Do n''t you see?" |
22297 | Cornelia said"Oh, yes,"and Charmian asked, at her perfervidest, Had Mr. Ludlow painted_ her_? |
22297 | Cornelia sighed dreamily, as she drew back for an effect of her drawing, which she held up on the table before her,"Is it time?" |
22297 | Cornelia was silent, and Charmian urged,"You know that much, do n''t you?" |
22297 | Cornelia''s heart danced, but she governed herself outwardly, and asked through her set teeth,"Can I begin at once?" |
22297 | Days of yore, generally? |
22297 | Dickerson?" |
22297 | Did you know he was going to give me his?" |
22297 | Do n''t I tell you I_ never_ cared for you?" |
22297 | Do n''t you always plan out the character you want them to think you?" |
22297 | Do n''t you care anything for it yourself?" |
22297 | Do n''t you like romantic people? |
22297 | Do n''t you like to do that?" |
22297 | Do n''t you remember me? |
22297 | Do n''t you see? |
22297 | Do n''t you see?" |
22297 | Do n''t you think it''s like the_ Marble Faun_, somehow? |
22297 | Do n''t you think she''s a little of both?" |
22297 | Do n''t you think so?" |
22297 | Do n''t you think society is very frivolous, or, any way, very stupid?" |
22297 | Do n''t you think we had both better give the reader a chance, now?" |
22297 | Do n''t you want to go out and sit on the stairs awhile?" |
22297 | Do you know that you are_ terribly_ calm?" |
22297 | Do you know what he''s done?" |
22297 | Do you know whether she does? |
22297 | Do you know who Walter_ Ludlow_ is? |
22297 | Do you mind my being fascinated with you?" |
22297 | Do you tell your wife everything?" |
22297 | Do you think she can ever do anything in art?" |
22297 | Do you think you ought to break our engagement because I did n''t let you tell me this at first?" |
22297 | Do you think you shall like me? |
22297 | Do you want me to tell you?" |
22297 | Do you want the real reason first?" |
22297 | Do you?" |
22297 | Do you_ dare_ to mean that I want him to ever speak to me again-- or look at me?" |
22297 | Does it scare you?" |
22297 | Five dollars a week?" |
22297 | Has n''t he been here to- night?" |
22297 | Has she a pleasant place to stay?" |
22297 | Has she ever spoken of it to you? |
22297 | Has she had instruction?" |
22297 | Has she said anything about Mr. Ludlow lately?" |
22297 | Have I been asleep? |
22297 | Have I kept you waiting long?" |
22297 | Have you got your waterproof?_ I''m going to make you tell me every word he said when he came to see you yesterday; it''ll be mean if you do n''t. |
22297 | Have you seen her?" |
22297 | He asked her mother:"Has she been doing this sort of thing long?" |
22297 | He asked, as if it immediately followed,"Mrs. Westley, should you mind giving me a little advice about a matter-- a very serious matter?" |
22297 | He did not try to exculpate himself, but he asked,"May I talk with Miss Maybough about it?" |
22297 | He glanced over the shoulder next her, and asked, as if Charmian were not there,"What makes you do her always alike?" |
22297 | He listened patiently, and at the end he asked,"Is that all?" |
22297 | He said finally,"Why not?" |
22297 | He stopped, and Cornelia asked, as if forced to say something,"Does Charmian know?" |
22297 | Her character? |
22297 | How are you getting on with your picture?" |
22297 | How did you like your school?" |
22297 | How does it feel to be proud? |
22297 | How is that cellebrated picture that you are painting with Mr. Ludlow getting along?" |
22297 | How much do you suppose it would cost a person to live in New York? |
22297 | How old are you?" |
22297 | How_ did_ you meet him before? |
22297 | I congratulate Miss Saunders on the conservatism of Py--?" |
22297 | I do n''t think she''s looking very well, of late; do you?" |
22297 | I hope half- past two wo n''t be too early?" |
22297 | I hope it does n''t seem too extraordinary?" |
22297 | I hope you have n''t lost that yet?" |
22297 | I mean, do you care if I like_ you_--very,_ very_ much?" |
22297 | I meant that other picture of her-- the last one-- the one I painted out before I gave up painting her---- Did you see that it was like you?" |
22297 | I suppose she''s too young to commence taking lessons regularly?" |
22297 | I suppose they''ll have one?" |
22297 | I''ve never told you about Mrs. Saunders, have I, Mrs. Montgomery? |
22297 | I''ve tried to make it just what a studio ought to be, and yet keep it free from pose, do n''t you know?" |
22297 | If I ca n''t? |
22297 | If I have, wo n''t you at least let me come and be forgiven?" |
22297 | In the hall, Charmian whispered passionately,"Do n''t you_ envy_ them? |
22297 | Is he afraid of Mr. Ludlow becoming too popular?" |
22297 | Is it in a Salvation Hotel?" |
22297 | Is it she? |
22297 | Is that a practicable pipe? |
22297 | Is that you? |
22297 | Is this the way the folks at Pymantoning expect you to spend your evenings?" |
22297 | It is n''t much like the genuine thing, as we used to see it in Paris, is it? |
22297 | It must have been this effect of restlessness and anxiety that made the janitress speak to her at last:"Expecting friends to meet you?" |
22297 | It seems rather difficult, does n''t it?" |
22297 | It''s after dark, now, and if they come here and find you gone, they''ll be uneasy, wo n''t they?" |
22297 | It''s easy enough to prove to the few that our life is full of poetry and picturesqueness; but can I prove it to the many? |
22297 | Keb? |
22297 | Living and well, I hope?" |
22297 | Ludlow stayed, too, and when the old gentleman got away, he said, the same as if there had been no interruption,"Why are n''t you getting on?" |
22297 | Ludlow?" |
22297 | Ludlow?" |
22297 | Ludlow?" |
22297 | Me?" |
22297 | Me?" |
22297 | Mother still doing business at the old stand? |
22297 | Mrs. Burton retorted,"Why should n''t she? |
22297 | Mrs. Burton,"she broke off, with a nervous laugh,"I do n''t suppose you expect that Mr. Ludlow out to the fair this year?" |
22297 | Must n''t tell you how you''ve grown, I suppose? |
22297 | No girl that she ever heard or read of, had ever fallen quite so low as to hope that; but was not she hoping just that? |
22297 | Now you wo n''t really, will you?" |
22297 | Now, will you promise?" |
22297 | Or perhaps I am not quite discreet----""Why not? |
22297 | Or that Cornelia''s mother existed by any better right than your once happening to see a poor lady try to hide the gap in her teeth when she smiled? |
22297 | Or that Ludlow was not at first a mere pointed beard and a complexion glimpsed in a slim young Cuban one night at Saratoga? |
22297 | Or, what was more likely, had not Cornelia cared? |
22297 | Pymantoning? |
22297 | Saunders?" |
22297 | Saunders?" |
22297 | She asked, with her back to her mother,"What would_ you_ do, if I went?" |
22297 | She did not wait for her daughter to speak, but took Cornelia''s hand, and said in a soft voice,"Miss Saunders? |
22297 | She had been weak, and had brought on herself the worst she had to tell, and should she be false, even though he wished it, and not tell? |
22297 | She now turned a knotted forehead on her companion, but stopped her hissing to ask,"What?" |
22297 | She paused again, and then while Charmian turned away with an effect of impatience, she asked,"Do you ever go out on Sundays?" |
22297 | She said,"Not on your way to the White House, I suppose? |
22297 | She seemed to be laughing, too, and Charmian went on:"What is there to be ashamed of? |
22297 | She stood looking from Ludlow to her daughter and back, and now she ventured, seeing him so intent on the sketch he still held,"You an artist?" |
22297 | She stopped so long that Cornelia asked, somewhat crossly,"Well?" |
22297 | She thought that he wanted her to ask him why, and she asked,"What are you waiting for?" |
22297 | Should you like her to paint me?" |
22297 | Somebody he''s engaged to?" |
22297 | Somebody trying to scare you? |
22297 | Something, she did not know what, in Mrs. Burton''s manner, made her ask:"Have you heard from him lately? |
22297 | Stranger in the city?" |
22297 | Suppose we go ask her?" |
22297 | The decorator laughed, and Charmian asked,"Is n''t she nice not to say anything about a block head? |
22297 | The mother made bold to ask,"Where are_ you_ taking lessons?" |
22297 | The question appeared to give Mr. Dickerson great satisfaction; he laughed, throwing back his head:"Who, Tweet? |
22297 | Then what is the reason you wo n''t let it all be as if nothing had happened? |
22297 | Then you ai n''t heard?" |
22297 | Then-- what would you do? |
22297 | There came a tap at her door and the voice of Charmian Maybough asked,"May I come in, Miss Saunders,--Cornelia?" |
22297 | Those your things, of course?" |
22297 | Want a keb? |
22297 | Was it true that you could not get away from what you had been? |
22297 | Was n''t it delightful? |
22297 | Was she glad to be released, and had she joyfully hailed his letter and its enclosure as a means of escape? |
22297 | Was that what discouraged you?" |
22297 | Was there really nothing else, then? |
22297 | Well, how''s the folks? |
22297 | Well: and has he-- turned up?" |
22297 | Westley?" |
22297 | Wetmore?" |
22297 | Wetmore?" |
22297 | What are you proud_ for_?" |
22297 | What can I do?" |
22297 | What do you suppose he did to provoke her?" |
22297 | What do you think of that? |
22297 | What do you think of that?" |
22297 | What do you think the chance of that would be?" |
22297 | What do_ you_ think of it yourself?" |
22297 | What has become of Mr. Ludlow? |
22297 | What have I to do with it?" |
22297 | What made her say you were n''t in? |
22297 | What makes him want to bring a lady friend to meet her? |
22297 | What part are you going to play, today?" |
22297 | What part of the country did you come from?" |
22297 | What was the matter out there? |
22297 | What''ll you give?" |
22297 | What, Katy?" |
22297 | When d''you leave Pymantoning, Nelie?" |
22297 | Where did you see them?" |
22297 | Where''s your theory of a picture, then? |
22297 | Where''s_ your_ picture?" |
22297 | Why ca n''t you?" |
22297 | Why have n''t you been round to the house?" |
22297 | Why not? |
22297 | Why should n''t we talk of it as if we were other people? |
22297 | Why wo n''t Miss Maybough and Miss Saunders come and see it? |
22297 | Why would n''t this do?" |
22297 | Will you ever speak of this to any living soul?" |
22297 | With the friends you''ve got on the Committee---- But you do n''t suppose I came up here to see these things alone, did you? |
22297 | Would you like anything now? |
22297 | Would you speak to her about it?" |
22297 | You been sitting here behind us all the time?" |
22297 | You have to take her as she is, do n''t you think?" |
22297 | You know that young girl you said you would go with me to meet when I should ask you?" |
22297 | You know what one instructor said to a girl that asked him what she should do after she had been five years in the Synthesis?" |
22297 | You say she did n''t look well?" |
22297 | You think it_ is_ her nature, do n''t you?" |
22297 | You would n''t have thought it was n''t a real ceiling?" |
22297 | You''ll come, wo n''t you, Miss Maybough?" |
22297 | You''ve been trying to give something more of her character than you found in her face; is that it? |
22297 | You_ do n''t_ think I expected you to do that? |
22297 | _ Do you think its going to rain before we get home?_ His eyes keep turning this way, all the time; you ca n''t see them, but they do. |
22297 | _ He_ thinks that, does he?" |
22297 | _ How_ did they come to tell you?" |
22297 | _ Is n''t_ there any way of atoning for it? |
22297 | _ When_ did you?" |
22297 | and then added impressively, to her daughter:"Why do n''t you show them to him, Cornelia?" |
22297 | cried her mother,"what''s the matter?" |
22297 | said the landlady,"where did you spring from? |
34427 | A sister? |
34427 | Ah, Switzerland? 34427 And Alice is her daughter; is n''t she, Dr. Lavendar? |
34427 | And Annie? |
34427 | And Edwin means all right,the father would assure himself; and then add that he could n''t understand their boy--"at least, I suppose he''s ours? |
34427 | And how is poor Lydia to make repairs? 34427 And how much do you suppose I got out of him?" |
34427 | And is there to be cake also? |
34427 | And kill your father? |
34427 | And what did Lute say? |
34427 | And who will buy the oats? |
34427 | And you are economical, are n''t you, Lydy? |
34427 | Annie,Dr. Lavendar said,"were you with her?" |
34427 | Appreciate ye? 34427 Are n''t you sorry for the poor men that do n''t like to sew?" |
34427 | Are you Mr. Metcalf, the editor of the_ Globe_? |
34427 | As_ your_ house? |
34427 | Been shooting this morning? |
34427 | Bridegroom? |
34427 | But David-- how about David? |
34427 | But I am sure your brother- in- law''s family is much attached to you? |
34427 | But I did n''t know my mother had any relations? |
34427 | But I infer that poverty has taught her economy? |
34427 | But what do you mean? |
34427 | But where is he? 34427 But who has left the money to me-- if it is to me?" |
34427 | But why should I be sent out, Lute? |
34427 | But why, do you suppose, was it all so sudden? |
34427 | But will she like that-- the poor widow? |
34427 | But, Lydia, my dear,Dr. Lavendar said, gently,"I am afraid it is extravagant, is n''t it, to try to give us all so much pleasure? |
34427 | But, as I understand, Lydia has been provided with the means of mending the chimney? |
34427 | But, why? |
34427 | But,Dr. Lavendar said,"I rather hoped you would see your way clear to making your house a little more comfortable?" |
34427 | But,Luther said, thoughtfully,"I think she''s sorry to have him go?" |
34427 | Ca n''t I ask that? 34427 Cassock?" |
34427 | Come, now, Miss Harriet, what''s wrong? |
34427 | Did n''t I tell you about''em? 34427 Did she bring a lantern?" |
34427 | Did you ever know anything so perfectly absurd? |
34427 | Did you ever see so deadly a drink? 34427 Did you know I was engaged to him, years ago, Dr. Lavendar? |
34427 | Do n''t you see, if I had told her, she would not have made the purchase? |
34427 | Do n''t you think,David said, after a pause,"that my coat is somewhat shabby? |
34427 | Do n''t you? |
34427 | Do you mean on account of money, Spangler? |
34427 | Do you mean to say_ that the President has written to Helen Hayes_? |
34427 | Do you mean you do n''t want me to have it at all? |
34427 | Do you really think it is worth while, ma''am? |
34427 | Do you suppose it will be$ 2000? 34427 Do you suppose we need go on with the present?" |
34427 | Does he? |
34427 | Dr. Lavendar, sir, wo n''t you have a glass of something? |
34427 | Edward, you do n''t understand.... How much do you want for him? |
34427 | Fit? |
34427 | For why,he had said, reasonably enough,"should I pay for what I do n''t get?" |
34427 | Has Ellen started up some fantastic conscientiousness? 34427 Has he given you anything more for your complexion, Edward?" |
34427 | Has the creature asked you for a loan? |
34427 | He knew-- this Urquhart-- that she had a child? |
34427 | He''ll pick up pins as faithfully as any man I know,said Dr. Lavendar,"and that''s what you religious newspapers want, I believe?" |
34427 | Her father? |
34427 | How did you get such an idea? 34427 How do I feel? |
34427 | How is Miss Harriet, Willy? |
34427 | How is she, Lute? |
34427 | How many years ago was it that he went away from Old Chester? 34427 I believe you ladies always want to shop?" |
34427 | I declined--"Oh,said Dr. Lavendar,"have you? |
34427 | I do n''t want to brag,she used to say,"but I''ve got my health and my friends; so what on earth more do I want?" |
34427 | I found this muff, and I thought it was yours; and Neddy''s gone, too, and I thought-- both of you--"Neddy_ gone_? |
34427 | I hope you do n''t think it''s wrong to be young? |
34427 | I hope your object in seeking to obtain information is to benefit this young lady? 34427 I only thought, perhaps-- maybe-- Mr. Rives--""William Rives''s presence in Old Chester wo n''t improve draughts, will it?" |
34427 | I suppose he thinks I''d never pay it back? |
34427 | I suppose her father feels it very much? |
34427 | I suppose she went to buy some of her horrid supplies? |
34427 | I suppose you think,the drummer said, sheepishly,"that it was pretty darned foolish to drop three times?" |
34427 | I suppose you wish to arrange for the alterations of your house? |
34427 | I think a party with presents for everybody will be very unusual, do n''t you? |
34427 | I thought you were starving yourself to get thin, Milly? |
34427 | I was under the impression that your circumstances--"My circumstances? |
34427 | I? |
34427 | Is it? |
34427 | Is it? |
34427 | Is n''t it strange that my cousin likes to-- to do that to animals? 34427 Is n''t it wonderful?" |
34427 | It will make quite a difference to you, wo n''t it? |
34427 | It''s a pretty late repentance,Luther said, with a chuckle;"and how did he know about you, Alice? |
34427 | Lydia, my dear-- does Mr. Rives know about this? |
34427 | Lydia,he said,"I-- I have been thinking--""Yes?" |
34427 | Ma''am? |
34427 | May I ask one question? |
34427 | Maybe he went to see somebody in Upper Chester? |
34427 | Mending my chimney? |
34427 | Milly, can he be our boy, this sneak? |
34427 | Miss Harriet, when you were a child, did n''t you always want to poke around under the seats when it was over and find things? 34427 Miss Harriet,"said William, chuckling--"you wo n''t tell anybody, will you? |
34427 | Miss Lydia,he said, and looked hard at the tea,"what do you suppose? |
34427 | More than once? |
34427 | Mr. David says, please, ma''am, will you give him money for two coach fares? |
34427 | My dear Miss Harriet, you''ve been''preparing''for fifty years-- or is it fifty- one? 34427 My dear man, what fitness is needed? |
34427 | My dear sir, would you have a girl, for a paltry £5000, break her father''s heart? |
34427 | My dear, you ca n''t think I am capable of joking? 34427 My friend,"she said, gravely,"what else can you expect? |
34427 | No!--do I? |
34427 | Not take the money? |
34427 | Not your fault? |
34427 | Now, Milly, honestly,he used to say,"apart from the fact that they are ours, do n''t you really think they are the nicest girls in Old Chester?" |
34427 | Now, why ca n''t she be sensible in other things? |
34427 | Oh, Alice, what do you suppose has happened? 34427 Oh, Alice,"Luther said, suddenly,"I meant to ask you; was n''t your mother''s name spelled''Alys''?" |
34427 | Oh, Dr. Lavendar,_ can_ you think of anything? 34427 Oh, Edward,"John Gordon said--"oh, Edward, why did you rouse him? |
34427 | Oh, Mrs. Gray, where''s Alice? 34427 Oh, but Dr. Lavendar, wo n''t you go and talk to her? |
34427 | Oh, dear, why did n''t father spell me''Alys''instead of''Alice''? 34427 Oh, father, did you find Ned? |
34427 | Oh, you was going on, was you? |
34427 | Perhaps we might walk up and down for a minute longer? |
34427 | Perhaps,Dr. Lavendar observed, mildly,"Ellen''s affections are not very deeply engaged? |
34427 | Promise you wo n''t tell? |
34427 | Really? |
34427 | Really? |
34427 | Rob him? |
34427 | Saying she''d release you, I suppose? |
34427 | Secretaryship? |
34427 | Sha''n''t we say--''for repairs''? |
34427 | Shall we go right in and get our seats? |
34427 | Sir,said Rebecca,"why does Mr. Urquhart leave £5000 to Robert Gray''s daughter?" |
34427 | Sister, do n''t you want to smell the bottle? |
34427 | So you have that Drayton cat on your hands again? |
34427 | Something I must do? |
34427 | Spangler, what are you talking about? |
34427 | Stick that in, Ezra, will you, about going up to the house? |
34427 | Supplies? 34427 Suppose it should be some inheritance? |
34427 | The expense of an extra person is not very considerable, is it? |
34427 | The late Mrs. Gray, the mother of this young lady,said Mr. Carter--"do you happen to know her nationality?" |
34427 | The trouble with him? 34427 The-- party?" |
34427 | The_ rest_? |
34427 | Then why did n''t you say so? 34427 Then you say Mrs. Drayton has no soul?" |
34427 | This town does n''t belong to you, does it? |
34427 | Thought you said you were n''t going to pay any bills? |
34427 | Tired? 34427 Tired?" |
34427 | Upon my word; upon my word, Spangler, what were you thinking of to let it go on? 34427 Urquhart?" |
34427 | Wait a minute, ca n''t you? 34427 Was Alex at home? |
34427 | Was n''t it nearly time to get a new carpet for the chancel? |
34427 | Was she? |
34427 | We are so situated-- each alone, that perhaps we might-- we might, ah-- marry-- to our mutual advantage? |
34427 | Well, Ellen Baily,Mrs. Barkley said, briskly, as Miss Baily came into the circle of lamplight by the parlor- table,"so you had a visitor to- day? |
34427 | Well, Miss Harriet, how do you know but what I was worrying over a case? |
34427 | Well, if you really think so? |
34427 | Well, then,Algy said, resentfully;"what''s the use of talking?" |
34427 | Well,said Miss Lydia,"look here-- do you see that?" |
34427 | Well? |
34427 | What I would like to know is: How did you bring Miss Gray to look at the thing in this way? |
34427 | What about it? |
34427 | What are you talking about? |
34427 | What are you two people talking about? |
34427 | What can I do, Edward? 34427 What could you expect?" |
34427 | What did she say? |
34427 | What did you do? |
34427 | What do you walk for? 34427 What for?" |
34427 | What is business compared to Art? |
34427 | What is trapped, sister? |
34427 | What mischief have you all been up to? |
34427 | What news? |
34427 | What time are you going, mother? |
34427 | What were you going to say about him, sir? |
34427 | What''s cruel, William? |
34427 | What''s that to me? |
34427 | What''s the news? |
34427 | What-- what? |
34427 | What? |
34427 | When? |
34427 | Where is he going to stay? 34427 Where will it end?" |
34427 | Who can say what the result of Milly Dilworth''s negligence will be? |
34427 | Who has been talking nonsense to you? 34427 Who said it?" |
34427 | Who would be the better for that kind of publicity? 34427 Who?" |
34427 | Why did n''t you make a better boy of me, then? 34427 Why does Mr. Urquhart leave the child of Robert Gray £5000? |
34427 | Why does n''t he take a charge where he could have his comforts? |
34427 | Why does n''t he try boot- blacking? 34427 Why not?" |
34427 | Why not? |
34427 | Why should n''t I be? 34427 Why should n''t she?" |
34427 | Why should they? 34427 Why would n''t it be right, sister?" |
34427 | Why, William-- I do n''t know that I ought to tell you, but do you remember a sketch of yourself that you gave her in-- in other days? 34427 Why, they cross their breast and say''honest and true''; do n''t you know?" |
34427 | Why? |
34427 | Why? |
34427 | Wicked people might enjoy it,Dr. Lavendar ruminated,"but--"--"but God do n''t cater to the wicked?" |
34427 | Will ye have a pipe? |
34427 | Would either of them have softened if the baby had lived, do you think, sir? |
34427 | Would it inconvenience you,Alex said,"to stop there? |
34427 | Would n''t you rather be dead, sister? |
34427 | Would you have asked him for a receipt? |
34427 | Would you have had it diamonds? |
34427 | Would you live in Old Chester? |
34427 | Wrong? |
34427 | Ye''re not going out_ again_? |
34427 | You are a good nurse, are n''t you, Lydy? |
34427 | You are going to Mercer? |
34427 | You are sure you are healthy, Lydia, are n''t you? |
34427 | You declined it? 34427 You do n''t think it''s wrong, do you?" |
34427 | You have been informed of my errand, madam? |
34427 | You know how it is yourself, maybe? |
34427 | You know that picture of Aunt Gordon that hung in the dining- room? 34427 You mean a chance to give him some money?" |
34427 | You mean his fiddle? |
34427 | You mean my temper? |
34427 | You see how it is, Edward, do n''t you? 34427 You want to get some work to help Lute, do you, good- for- nothing?" |
34427 | You wo n''t let her, sir? 34427 You wo n''t speak of it again, Edward? |
34427 | You would build, I suppose? |
34427 | You-- saw her? |
34427 | _ Him_--offering to lend money to--? |
34427 | _ In Lydia''s house_? 34427 _ Marry?_""Yes,"William said, earnestly;"I should be pleased to marry, Lydy. |
34427 | _ Milly_? 34427 ''How would you like to be caught in a trap, Miss Harriet?'' 34427 A hundred? 34427 Alice said, in a dazed way;I thought father said-- I''m sure he said-- she had n''t any relations? |
34427 | Alice said;"the man who was so unkind? |
34427 | All the great things she had done, all the petty things she had suffered, rose up in a great wave of merit before her; and against it-- what? |
34427 | And Mary Ann? |
34427 | And as for you-- it''s a chance to play the man; do n''t you see that?" |
34427 | And his comfortable old house? |
34427 | And if the wonder is caused only by the man''s coat, and not by his character, why be distressed about it? |
34427 | And is a blue silk frock very-- well, serviceable, I believe, you ladies call it?" |
34427 | And it would be-- still? |
34427 | And when he paused a minute in the darkness on the porch, he added, softly,"If you get rich, maybe you wo n''t want a poor printer?" |
34427 | And why should n''t Dr. Lavendar bubble over with happiness in Ellen''s happiness? |
34427 | And, Lydy-- shall we, for the moment, keep this to ourselves?" |
34427 | And, after all, why should he? |
34427 | At first she could not remember.... What was the something behind her consciousness? |
34427 | Books are safe presents, do n''t you think?" |
34427 | But I suppose you never knew the envy of the ladies''clothes? |
34427 | But I think she is healthy?" |
34427 | But I want to tell you; so I guess you''ll listen to please me?" |
34427 | But just tell David to come, will you?" |
34427 | But suppose it were a baby that was suffering-- or a dog? |
34427 | But what could she say with any kind of truth? |
34427 | But when he knew it, what then? |
34427 | But when she came out to us, and said, in a sweet, fluttered voice,"Children, will one of you take this letter to the post- office?" |
34427 | But, Lydy, we might utilize the occasion? |
34427 | But--_you_ understand? |
34427 | Ca n''t you ask her for the pattern?" |
34427 | Ca n''t you give him a hint that women of twenty- five do n''t care for little boys''talk? |
34427 | Can our lords say as much, my mistresses? |
34427 | Can you tell me anything of the parentage of the lady?" |
34427 | Come, now, why should n''t I get a job out of you for once? |
34427 | Did he consent?" |
34427 | Did n''t I tell you they were the best people going? |
34427 | Did n''t you know it?" |
34427 | Did you answer her note?" |
34427 | Did you ever notice, Ellen, that the truth always hurts people''s feelings? |
34427 | Did you ever see a horse with so broad a back, Willy? |
34427 | Did you have a delightful evening?" |
34427 | Did you think he was with me? |
34427 | Dilworth?" |
34427 | Do n''t you remember the time you broke your ankle and I tried morphine-- a baby dose-- to give you some relief? |
34427 | Do n''t you see, he must go on believing that she is"--her voice grew suddenly tender--"that she is''a creature of light?''" |
34427 | Do n''t you see? |
34427 | Do you have a system of charges, Willy? |
34427 | Do you hear me?" |
34427 | Do you hear that? |
34427 | Do you know, I have n''t had an instant''s pain since I first spoke of the thing to you? |
34427 | Do you mean that carrying out, now, directions given before the death of my old friend would be against the law? |
34427 | Do you think I''d rob the boy?" |
34427 | Do you understand? |
34427 | Do you understand?" |
34427 | Dr. Lavendar is coming, I presume? |
34427 | Dr. Lavendar took it, and John Gordon called after him,"You wo n''t tell Alex?" |
34427 | Dr. Lavendar, I thought maybe you''d let me hitch Goliath up and drive you out to the house?" |
34427 | Ellen Baily, did you know that we have a new- comer in Old Chester? |
34427 | For what could she say ill of that beautiful creature whose only wrong- doing lay in dying? |
34427 | Gray?" |
34427 | Gray?" |
34427 | Gray?" |
34427 | Gray?" |
34427 | Had she been sick long?" |
34427 | Handsome, is n''t he? |
34427 | Harriet, did n''t get it herself?" |
34427 | Has he come back rich?" |
34427 | Has he sent some money? |
34427 | Have n''t you got your own check- book?" |
34427 | Have n''t you, mother?" |
34427 | He began to ask questions: How long was it since she had been in Mercer? |
34427 | He himself had seen her several times, but she had never let him be personal:"Was Mrs. Drayton still gossiping about her soul?" |
34427 | He''s a school- teacher, I understand; and you know yourself, Ellen Baily, how much a school- teacher can do in that way?" |
34427 | He''s gone off to the woods, has n''t he?" |
34427 | Hey, Spangler?" |
34427 | How did you drop your muff, dear? |
34427 | How long were they together? |
34427 | How would she like to be caught in a trap? |
34427 | How''s business, Lute?" |
34427 | I do n''t see any condition which warrants them: but--""What did I tell you? |
34427 | I had n''t the slightest idea-- Tom, you''re joking?" |
34427 | I have wondered whether my cassock would be misunderstood?" |
34427 | I hope he is doing you good?" |
34427 | I hope there was nobody in the stage you knew to talk you to death?" |
34427 | I suppose he''ll want another extension?" |
34427 | I suppose these good people do pretty much as they please, so far as you are concerned?" |
34427 | I suppose you know about him?" |
34427 | I think you mentioned that the stage leaves at four?" |
34427 | I think you told me you were pretty determined?" |
34427 | I thought you''d think that would please Mary?" |
34427 | I wanted to go into the office and learn to set type, but Mrs. Gray--""Well?" |
34427 | I was just sitting down to breakfast, but of course I ran--""Martha must have been pleased?" |
34427 | I will ask a few questions, if you please?" |
34427 | I''ll put her repairs through, Dr. Lavendar-- unless you want to get up another present?" |
34427 | I-- I suppose I''m a great fool, but I almost thought maybe, sometime, I''d destroy that note, Edward?" |
34427 | I-- am--""What for, precious?" |
34427 | I-- do you know I''ve a great mind to get a man in Mercer to look you over? |
34427 | II"And who do you suppose I found there?" |
34427 | IV"Does not Mr. Baily take any part whatever in his sister''s work?" |
34427 | If she gave up her teaching--"what would that fellow live on?" |
34427 | Is he well? |
34427 | Is n''t it to buy food and clothes and shelter? |
34427 | Is n''t that something to be ashamed of? |
34427 | Is this condition thus, or so--?" |
34427 | It is n''t every woman that would be pleasant then, is it?" |
34427 | It was at this point that she began to make wild schemes to relieve the situation: Suppose she asked that Hayes girl to come and make them a visit? |
34427 | It was on Thursday? |
34427 | Just what had William heard her say? |
34427 | Lavendar? |
34427 | Lavendar?" |
34427 | Lavendar?" |
34427 | Lavendar?" |
34427 | Lending money to-- But you say he was good to her? |
34427 | Look here, Milly-- it is pretty late, honestly?" |
34427 | Love? |
34427 | Lute, is it-- is it$ 1000? |
34427 | Milly smiled, too, faintly; but she was saying to herself:"What did they talk about? |
34427 | Milly, why do n''t you ask her to come to supper, sometime? |
34427 | Milly, why do n''t you have one of those pink wrappers? |
34427 | Miss Annie did n''t find him, to let him out?" |
34427 | Miss Harriet, would you mind coming into my office and just letting me look you over? |
34427 | Money- making was sordid folly, he said; because,"What do you want money for? |
34427 | Mr. Carter, are you looking for anything? |
34427 | Mr. Carter, still standing in the doorway, smiled, and said,"Do I understand that this Miss Alice is the daughter of the person named Alys Winton?" |
34427 | Mr. Gordon, sitting in his big, winged chair close to the hearth, said, after a long pause:"You said-- to- morrow, Edward? |
34427 | Mr. Rives inquired, in his mild voice,"and not fond of dress?" |
34427 | Mrs. Barkley, will you do me the honor?" |
34427 | No condolences? |
34427 | No pity? |
34427 | Not suffer? |
34427 | Nothing to be ashamed of? |
34427 | Of course I never thought of it again, until I came home the next day-- and what do you suppose?" |
34427 | Oh, Annie, do n''t you want to go and see your chickens?" |
34427 | Oh, how much is it? |
34427 | Oh, what if he should find her out? |
34427 | Oh, where did you find him?" |
34427 | Oh-- don''t you see what I mean? |
34427 | Once he said, nervously:"I scarcely think, Mrs. Gray, that it is necessary to be quite so severe?" |
34427 | Perhaps-- perhaps it is a mistake, after all?" |
34427 | Shall I have some shells warmed up?" |
34427 | She has a queer elemental reasonableness about her, has n''t she? |
34427 | She might burn up some night; and then,"said Mrs. Barkley, in a deep bass,"how would that Smith person feel?" |
34427 | She need not merely sit still and die? |
34427 | She need not wait idly for the end? |
34427 | Sister, I''ll get you your big bottle?" |
34427 | Smily?" |
34427 | So I am going to have company, am I?" |
34427 | So much for a look over your glasses? |
34427 | So much for that solemn cough? |
34427 | So why should n''t Ellen Baily love him? |
34427 | Spangler here has had a fine business offer made him, have n''t you, Mr. Spangler? |
34427 | Still,"said the boy, gayly,"I guess we wo n''t complain?" |
34427 | Suppose I take some cash out of the safe to repair the roof of the vestry? |
34427 | Suppose he had asked me-- last week, perhaps, to destroy-- well, say that old account- book there on the table, could n''t I do it to- day?" |
34427 | Suppose she went away herself and made a visit, and asked Miss Helen Hayes to come and keep house for her? |
34427 | Suppose the child should now decline to take it, what then? |
34427 | The statement of a fact may be a lie, he had said, smiling whimsically; and Rebecca used to wonder how a fact could be a lie? |
34427 | Then Lute, suddenly:"Is it your mother''s father that left it to you, Alice?" |
34427 | Then she winced; he would-- suffer? |
34427 | Then, in a low voice,"She-- didn''t lack for comforts?" |
34427 | Then, on Thursday, suddenly, he was startled by a question in his own mind: Was it unreasonable? |
34427 | There was a pause; then she said, faintly,"For your own sake?" |
34427 | To pay the scoundrel for what he did to us? |
34427 | To sorrow in the sorrows of Tom and Dick and Harry and their wives, to rejoice in their joys-- what is better than that? |
34427 | Understand?" |
34427 | Was he going to do something, after all? |
34427 | Was he going to offer Lydia a position as housekeeper? |
34427 | Was she going to call on friends? |
34427 | Was she going to shop? |
34427 | Well, are you sugar or salt, to be so scared of a drop of rain?" |
34427 | Well, how much do you suppose I''ve got left now, Dr. Lavendar, out of$ 1140? |
34427 | What about him, sir?" |
34427 | What could she say ill of that poor creature, so beloved and so harmless? |
34427 | What did I tell you? |
34427 | What did it mean? |
34427 | What difference does it make in this world of life and death and joy and sorrow, if things are shabby? |
34427 | What do the children do when they make a solemn promise?" |
34427 | What does he say? |
34427 | What excuse does she make?" |
34427 | What feminine mind ever understood why uselessness attracts a sensible man? |
34427 | What is the name of the kind person? |
34427 | What use for her existence? |
34427 | What will Mrs. Dale say? |
34427 | What will people say? |
34427 | What''s comfort?" |
34427 | When will she come back? |
34427 | Where did you get so much money, my dear? |
34427 | Where is the middle- aged housekeeper who does not soften at being told that her pink stuff is better than anything the Hayeses can produce? |
34427 | Where would he find his occasional new coat, or even the hat with the blue band, if there were no school in the basement? |
34427 | Where?" |
34427 | Where?" |
34427 | Why do n''t you smell your big bottle? |
34427 | Why does n''t he know better? |
34427 | Why not combine your supper with our wedding? |
34427 | Why should I be tired? |
34427 | Why should he present a field to Amanda? |
34427 | Why should n''t he say where he''s going when he goes out in the evening? |
34427 | Why, what else could she do?" |
34427 | Why, why did we always hurry on to the main tent? |
34427 | Why?" |
34427 | Why?" |
34427 | Will she go? |
34427 | Will you promise me?" |
34427 | Will you promise me?" |
34427 | Will you remember that?" |
34427 | Will you take this to my brother?" |
34427 | William was stricken into silence; then he said, shaking his head,"Do you really mean it, Lydy?" |
34427 | William, what are you talking about? |
34427 | Willy, what will your wife say?" |
34427 | Wo n''t you take me, Lydy?" |
34427 | Would the doctor-- this on perfumed paper, ruled, and with gilt edges-- would the doctor"ask him if he would extend?" |
34427 | Would twice in a fortnight be liable to be misunderstood? |
34427 | Would you like to see it, sir? |
34427 | Yes, it is--""_ What?_"said Rebecca Gray. |
34427 | Yet on Mrs. Dilworth''s birthday this family witticism was always in order:"Father, how long have you been mother''s beau?" |
34427 | You always seem cheerful, Lydy?" |
34427 | You do really think there''s no reason to be uneasy about Ned?" |
34427 | You hear them singing before breakfast; at the table they are full of eager questions: Is it going to rain? |
34427 | You know the morning hymn, William? |
34427 | You will believe me when I say so? |
34427 | You will excuse me, sir?" |
34427 | You''ll forgive him? |
34427 | You''ll make her give it back?" |
34427 | You, I infer, are a clergyman in this place? |
34427 | [ Illustration:"''WHAT IS THE NAME OF THE KIND PERSON?''"] |
34427 | [ Illustration:"THOMAS DILWORTH GOT ON HIS FEET AND SWORE"]"You wo n''t mind very much? |
34427 | _ You_ know? |
34427 | and not look at the animals? |
34427 | do you suppose he''s popped?" |
34427 | he entreated;"sorry for what? |
34427 | he said,"is it possible that you--? |
34427 | his ease? |
34427 | his leisure? |
34427 | how can people live so much in- doors?") |
34427 | no pills?" |
34427 | said Dr. Lavendar, looking at him over his spectacles;"what''s wrong?" |
34427 | said Lydia,"how can I be anything but economical? |
34427 | said Mr. Spangler, passionately;"what shall I do?" |
34427 | said Mrs. Drayton;"it almost looks--""How do you know it was sudden?" |
34427 | said Tom--"that Hayes girl? |
34427 | sir; I suppose you''ve heard?" |
34427 | the other exclaimed, with dismay,"do n''t you think of your father at all? |
34427 | the younger man cried out, furiously;"you mean to see her buried? |
34427 | there was something left for her to do? |
34427 | to leave me? |
34427 | what has caused this great commotion-- motion-- motion Our country through?" |
34427 | what will I do without her?" |
34427 | you do n''t''call''very loudly, do you? |
34427 | you have heard, I suppose? |
52019 | A little stupid is she, Fetzer? 52019 A what?" |
52019 | About what? |
52019 | And Amos? |
52019 | And Ellen? |
52019 | And Grandfather? |
52019 | And Matthew? |
52019 | And Millie? 52019 And how are you?" |
52019 | And is this understanding of their affection sufficient food for the heart? |
52019 | And she would n''t listen? |
52019 | And the man, where''s he? |
52019 | And what did Matthew say? |
52019 | And where is Ellen? |
52019 | And you are happy? |
52019 | And you feel that now you have somebody? |
52019 | Annoyed her? 52019 Anything the matter?" |
52019 | Are n''t you? 52019 Are the boys still so dumb?" |
52019 | Are these your books? |
52019 | Are you Ellen? |
52019 | Are you afraid to stay alone a little longer? 52019 Are you awake yet?" |
52019 | Are you back? 52019 Are you fond of the river?" |
52019 | Are you glad to see me? |
52019 | Are you going to bed, Ellen? |
52019 | Are you going to college? |
52019 | Are you going to let Matthew do all your knowing? |
52019 | Are you going to take him? |
52019 | Are you going to walk to the station? |
52019 | Are you going with me? |
52019 | Are you interested in astronomy? |
52019 | Are you ready to go? |
52019 | Are you sorry to go? |
52019 | Are you then still trying to be learned, Ellen? |
52019 | Are you there alone with him in his store? |
52019 | Are you tired? |
52019 | At the shoulder? |
52019 | But if I''m not willing to stay here, if I think it''s wrong, if I_ refuse_? |
52019 | But where did I learn to be hard on her? |
52019 | But why here? |
52019 | Ca n''t you change your mind? |
52019 | Ca n''t you cut it out, Ellen? 52019 Ca n''t you sleep, Hilda?" |
52019 | Ca n''t you stop him, Father? |
52019 | Ca n''t you stop work a little while and sit down in the woods and talk to me? |
52019 | Can he be seen? |
52019 | Can you prepare to go at once? |
52019 | Can you remember his name, Ellen? |
52019 | Can you walk into the other room? |
52019 | Could n''t she? 52019 Could n''t you get along, taking it slowly?" |
52019 | Could n''t you smell this stuff? |
52019 | Could you walk upstairs to see your room? |
52019 | Did I understand you correctly? |
52019 | Did he walk? |
52019 | Did n''t you know, Ellen? |
52019 | Did she go upstairs the front way? |
52019 | Did they drive you away? |
52019 | Did they take it off? |
52019 | Did you come to see me once then, Ellen? |
52019 | Did you ever try to believe again? |
52019 | Did you expect to earn enough to go to college in a housemaid''s position? |
52019 | Did you just come in, Ellen? |
52019 | Did you know that my niece had-- had passed away? |
52019 | Did you know the real author? |
52019 | Did you never wonder why I did n''t come? |
52019 | Did you put that note in, Levis? |
52019 | Did you say you were going back to school? 52019 Did you speak to me?" |
52019 | Did you speak to me? |
52019 | Did you think I could n''t get no other girls that you could try to make such a fool of me, say? 52019 Did you think waiting on everybody who came in was what I had you for?" |
52019 | Did you try to persuade her to come home? |
52019 | Did you write those words? |
52019 | Did your father ever speak of me? |
52019 | Do n''t you believe that I tell you the truth? |
52019 | Do n''t you live with Grandfather? |
52019 | Do n''t you remember me at all? |
52019 | Do n''t you remember_ now_? |
52019 | Do n''t you want Ellen to come here? |
52019 | Do you expect to be a physician without going to school? |
52019 | Do you go to school? |
52019 | Do you know anything of Matthew? |
52019 | Do you know anything which begins''I believe''? |
52019 | Do you live in Harrisburg? |
52019 | Do you mean I ca n''t go? |
52019 | Do you remember the day that Father died? |
52019 | Do you suppose I''ll ever see it again? |
52019 | Do you suppose he''s very wise or very stupid? |
52019 | Do you suppose it is best for her to come? 52019 Do you think I could fill the place?" |
52019 | Do you think many persons beside yourself would have recognized it? |
52019 | Do you think so? |
52019 | Do you trust Mayne and me to use our best judgment for you? |
52019 | Do you wish her to accompany you? |
52019 | Does Matthew like Philadelphia? |
52019 | Does any one but yourself go to the cupboard? |
52019 | Does he know anything of this? |
52019 | Does it frighten you? |
52019 | Ellen, is it you? |
52019 | Ellen? |
52019 | Ever been sick in your life? |
52019 | Ever see anything like that? |
52019 | Glad to see me too, Fetzer? |
52019 | God in Heaven, Edward, now that he is here and safe, would you ruin him deliberately? 52019 Got what?" |
52019 | Grandfather? |
52019 | Had your father no property? |
52019 | Has anything important happened? |
52019 | Has she been prepared for my visit? |
52019 | Have you a place for me? |
52019 | Have you any clothes here that he can put on? |
52019 | Have you any stimulant in the house? |
52019 | Have you anything that he can take hot? |
52019 | Have you brothers or sisters? |
52019 | Have you ever missed any? |
52019 | Have you said good- bye to Miss Knowlton and Miss MacVane? |
52019 | Here? |
52019 | How did you happen to come here? 52019 How do you happen to be here?" |
52019 | How do you happen to be here? |
52019 | How far has he gone? |
52019 | How is Grandfather? |
52019 | How is school? |
52019 | How long ago was this, then? |
52019 | How long have you been out in this storm? |
52019 | How many bones are there in the human body? |
52019 | How much schooling have you had? |
52019 | How old is this man who is helping you, Ellen? 52019 How so?" |
52019 | How soon could you get married, Millie? |
52019 | How spoiled? |
52019 | How were the relatives? |
52019 | How? |
52019 | I do n''t mean for a long trip, but for a little journey? |
52019 | If you told me to stop it-- that is, if I were doing it-- you know I''d stop, do n''t you? |
52019 | In a month, then? |
52019 | Is Ellen studying in summer? |
52019 | Is Miss Knowlton here? |
52019 | Is he alone? |
52019 | Is he ill? |
52019 | Is he still ill? |
52019 | Is her physical condition also likely to grow worse? |
52019 | Is his wife living? |
52019 | Is it possible, Matthew, that you wo n''t help me go to school? 52019 Is my granddaughter, Ellen Levis, here?" |
52019 | Is n''t Mrs. Lanfair heavy against your shoulder? |
52019 | Is she coming for Christmas? |
52019 | Is she going away? |
52019 | Is she going to stay? 52019 Is she here? |
52019 | Is that a party, Father? |
52019 | Is that you, Ellen? |
52019 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
52019 | Is there anything I can do? |
52019 | Is there anything you want? |
52019 | It did n''t burn? |
52019 | It is commonly known, then? |
52019 | It''s a warm night, is n''t it? |
52019 | Know it? 52019 Lanfair, can you understand me?" |
52019 | Manda, where are you going? |
52019 | Matthew, what are you going to do this evening? |
52019 | May I copy their names? |
52019 | May I get a pair of gloves for Grandfather and something for Amos? |
52019 | May I invite them for Christmas dinner? |
52019 | May I stay here to- night? |
52019 | May I stay here to- night? |
52019 | May I take him a Christmas present and speak to him then? |
52019 | Medical convention at Vienna? |
52019 | Miss Knowlton and Miss MacVane here? |
52019 | No; why should I? 52019 Nobody will come in here to see an old man, will they? |
52019 | Now, Brother, what''s your trouble? |
52019 | Now? |
52019 | Nutty? |
52019 | Oh, is it you? |
52019 | Oh, why do n''t you go to Cornell? |
52019 | Shall we leave the office as it is, Matthew? |
52019 | Shall we really come again? |
52019 | She does, does she? |
52019 | So you have everything arranged? |
52019 | The prospect of studying delights you? |
52019 | Then what? |
52019 | They did n''t live long together? |
52019 | To live with him? |
52019 | Trunk packed? |
52019 | Walking together? |
52019 | Was he married when you knew him? |
52019 | Was this bottle in its usual place? |
52019 | We have a nice baby here, have n''t we, Grandfather? |
52019 | We''ve had a good day, have n''t we? |
52019 | Well, Matthew? |
52019 | Well, Sister? |
52019 | Well, she has her hand, has n''t she? |
52019 | Well? |
52019 | Well? |
52019 | Well? |
52019 | Were you ever a patient of mine? |
52019 | Were you looking for me? |
52019 | What ails her? |
52019 | What ails you, Ellen? |
52019 | What are the poles? |
52019 | What are we going to do? |
52019 | What are you going to do about Ellen? |
52019 | What are you going to do next? |
52019 | What are you going to do now? |
52019 | What arrangements? |
52019 | What did you engage me for? |
52019 | What did you say to me? |
52019 | What did you say? |
52019 | What do they do? |
52019 | What do you believe, Edward? |
52019 | What do you mean by a long time? |
52019 | What do you mean by a nice Christmas? |
52019 | What do you mean to make of Ellen? |
52019 | What do you study? |
52019 | What do you suppose the Lutherans would say about you? 52019 What does he think I do?" |
52019 | What else have you? |
52019 | What for? |
52019 | What have you worked out? 52019 What in the midst lay but the tower itself? |
52019 | What in the world are you doing out here? |
52019 | What in the world have you done? |
52019 | What is going to happen? |
52019 | What is his name? |
52019 | What is it you wish? |
52019 | What is it, Ellen? |
52019 | What is it, Hilda? 52019 What is it?" |
52019 | What is it? |
52019 | What is the matter? |
52019 | What is the matter? |
52019 | What is the shape of the earth? |
52019 | What is the trouble? |
52019 | What is then this? |
52019 | What is there Ellen wants which she ca n''t have? |
52019 | What is this paper? |
52019 | What is your name? |
52019 | What is your plan? |
52019 | What kind of a place have you? |
52019 | What makes you think so? |
52019 | What seems wicked? |
52019 | What shall I do now? |
52019 | What time does my granddaughter come from her work? |
52019 | What trees? |
52019 | What were you going to meditate about? |
52019 | What''s the matter, Ellen? |
52019 | What''s the matter? 52019 What''s the matter?" |
52019 | What''s the matter? |
52019 | What''s the matter? |
52019 | When did you eat? |
52019 | When did you recognize me? |
52019 | When did your husband leave? |
52019 | When shall we go? |
52019 | When will that be? |
52019 | When, then, am I to go? |
52019 | When? |
52019 | When? |
52019 | Where are you going, Ellen? |
52019 | Where are you going? |
52019 | Where are you going? |
52019 | Where are your grand people? |
52019 | Where do they live? |
52019 | Where do you keep it? |
52019 | Where does he live? |
52019 | Where has she gone? |
52019 | Where have you two been? |
52019 | Where is Ellen? |
52019 | Where is she? |
52019 | Where? |
52019 | Who are they? |
52019 | Who else has he? |
52019 | Who has dementia? |
52019 | Who is he? |
52019 | Who is this friend? |
52019 | Why a doctor? |
52019 | Why are the days shorter in winter? |
52019 | Why are you going to college? |
52019 | Why could n''t you stand it? |
52019 | Why did n''t you come home? |
52019 | Why did n''t you find me? |
52019 | Why did n''t you go on to college? |
52019 | Why did n''t you speak? |
52019 | Why did n''t you? |
52019 | Why do you blame those things on education? 52019 Why do you go before Christmas, Fetzer?" |
52019 | Why do you study? |
52019 | Why does she leave her nice home? |
52019 | Why not? 52019 Why not?" |
52019 | Why not? |
52019 | Why not? |
52019 | Why, Ellen, dear, what''s the matter? 52019 Why, Grandfather, when did you come?" |
52019 | Why, Mrs. Fetzer, what ails you? |
52019 | Why, where''s your maid? |
52019 | Why? |
52019 | Why? |
52019 | Will she come home? |
52019 | Will you do exactly as I tell you for a month? |
52019 | Will you tell Ellen that? |
52019 | With you? |
52019 | Wo n''t you advise me? |
52019 | Wo n''t you go, Millie? 52019 Wo n''t you join us?" |
52019 | Wo n''t you stay and have supper with us? 52019 Wo n''t you stay?" |
52019 | Would it help if I went away? |
52019 | Would you consider other work, perhaps? |
52019 | Would you like me to move your bed to the bay- window each evening? |
52019 | Would you like me to sit by you? |
52019 | Would you like to go through it now? |
52019 | Would you like to live here, Father? |
52019 | Would you like to walk? |
52019 | Would you like to_ go sleepy by_? |
52019 | Would you not become converted and be immersed? 52019 Would you, Ellen?" |
52019 | You are Manda Sassaman''s sister? |
52019 | You did n''t write this after your father died, Ellen? |
52019 | You do n''t doubt immortality? |
52019 | You do n''t have any ill- feeling toward me, Ellen, I hope? |
52019 | You do n''t mean that I''m not to go to church at all? |
52019 | You do n''t suppose that all wisdom is incarnate in Grandfather, do you, Matthew? |
52019 | You get Dr. Salter, quickly, will you? |
52019 | You knew that you might come with me, surely, Ellen? |
52019 | You knew you were writing words which would take your brother''s property away? |
52019 | You mean Dr. Lanfair''s secretary? |
52019 | You mean a lover? |
52019 | You mean you''re going to stay here? |
52019 | You saw her run across, did n''t you? |
52019 | You say the solution was all right yesterday? |
52019 | You see nothing Jesuitical in that, I suppose? 52019 You sneak on me, do you? |
52019 | You were the young girl who begged us to stay to supper? 52019 You wish Good to come professionally?" |
52019 | You wo n''t come, any of you? |
52019 | You''ll lock the doors? |
52019 | You''re all alone? |
52019 | You''re going away for a trip? |
52019 | You''re going to your sister? |
52019 | You''re not fleeing from arrest, are you? |
52019 | You''ve entirely made up your mind? |
52019 | You''ve seen Ellen? 52019 A dreadful word which Levis had used tempted him-- was she not a fool to give up love? 52019 After supper, can you come with me to see Grandfather? |
52019 | Aloud she said,"Does she know she is to come?" |
52019 | And Ellen-- what of Ellen, with whom he had expected to be in a few hours? |
52019 | And I saw--""What is this?" |
52019 | And what would become of her who fled from church? |
52019 | Any of these doctrines?" |
52019 | Are n''t they beautiful? |
52019 | Are n''t you glad you did n''t go to school?" |
52019 | Are n''t you satisfied?" |
52019 | Are n''t you well?" |
52019 | Are you afraid of her?" |
52019 | Are you still employed here?" |
52019 | Books?--ah, what miserable defect in her made them seem dull? |
52019 | Brother Matthew, Sister Ellen, is it well that you should postpone what is right for you to do, that you should longer reject the peace of God?" |
52019 | But he grew confused and asked in a jovial and impertinent tone,"What''s the matter with you, old boy?" |
52019 | But what was it he had meant to do? |
52019 | But where was Ellen? |
52019 | Can I help you, Ellen?" |
52019 | Can you remember just what was said to you and Matthew?" |
52019 | Could n''t you lend me money? |
52019 | Could some fool have meddled? |
52019 | Could such misery be real? |
52019 | Could the mistake have been Miss Knowlton''s? |
52019 | Did Ellen dance? |
52019 | Did Fetzer advertise?" |
52019 | Did God hear His children, or did He not? |
52019 | Did God hear the prayers of the faithful, or did He not? |
52019 | Did he mean to sacrifice himself and all his plans to make her comfortable? |
52019 | Did his pleading gaze ask only that the period of departure might not be long? |
52019 | Did she even walk out here to say good- bye to you? |
52019 | Did she feel weariness? |
52019 | Did she hear now a half- smothered voice? |
52019 | Did she hear the sound of a creeping approach? |
52019 | Did she mean to flee? |
52019 | Did some hideous immolation threaten? |
52019 | Did the doctor have a son? |
52019 | Did they look upon Ellen with desire? |
52019 | Did you eat already?" |
52019 | Did you know they were coming?" |
52019 | Did you think I run a university? |
52019 | Did you?" |
52019 | Do you mean our Ellen?" |
52019 | Do you remember that, Matthew?" |
52019 | Do you want to remain an ignoramus?" |
52019 | Does Fetzer think I''m off on a holiday?" |
52019 | Especially under these circumstances?" |
52019 | Even those women in the office do n''t need to know, ai n''t it so, Ellen?" |
52019 | Fetzer advancing for a second time heard him ask,"Where''s Fetzer?" |
52019 | Fetzer, did you bring your crocheting?" |
52019 | From the drug- store she would call the hospital and talk to Miss Knowlton-- why had she not thought of it this morning? |
52019 | Get me?" |
52019 | God had given him another chance in his grandchildren-- had he also forfeited that? |
52019 | Goldstein?" |
52019 | Had Hilda come back? |
52019 | Had he said the foolish words or merely thought them? |
52019 | Had she behaved with unwarrantable officiousness? |
52019 | Had she had experience in clerking? |
52019 | Had the never- failing broom of Mrs. Sassaman left lint, or had her own dust- cloth touched them too lightly? |
52019 | Had the object of love died or had he been married? |
52019 | Have I made you afraid of me, Ellen? |
52019 | Have you had bad news?" |
52019 | Have you money? |
52019 | Have you seen Ellen at any time?" |
52019 | He had been trained by precept and example; was his father''s last hour made easy by confidence in his ultimate return? |
52019 | He had received the impression from Mayne that the family malady never appeared after early youth, but had he understood him aright? |
52019 | He saw that the agonized figure was relaxed; he heard himself asking,"Is there no doctor at Chestnut Ridge?" |
52019 | He seemed to hear now distinctly his father''s voice-- would it be necessary for him to console the dying? |
52019 | He would be known as the man who lived with-- lived with whom? |
52019 | Here was something to tell Mrs. Sassaman-- what would she say to such ironing as that? |
52019 | His mind traveled to Matthew''s babyhood, to Matthew''s childhood-- would things have been different if he had been different? |
52019 | How did she get her fine clothes? |
52019 | How does she get her lessons?" |
52019 | How is Ellen?" |
52019 | How much education-- High School? |
52019 | How was Ellen going to college? |
52019 | How were explanations to be begun? |
52019 | I still say to her,''Manda, why did you come if you were not going to stay?'' |
52019 | If his hand was there and sound, why this agony in his other shoulder? |
52019 | In what way?" |
52019 | Is any one expecting you?" |
52019 | Is any one ill?" |
52019 | Is he an old man?" |
52019 | Is it Ellen?" |
52019 | Is n''t it foolish to hire a woman when you are well and strong?" |
52019 | Is n''t it lovely here?" |
52019 | Is n''t she with Manda Sassaman''s sister?" |
52019 | Is that right?" |
52019 | Is there anything the matter with Matthew?" |
52019 | It seemed a long, long time since he had come home-- was it a day and night or two days and nights or four? |
52019 | It was plain to Ellen entering that they had been discussing her-- why, otherwise, should they all look so self- conscious? |
52019 | It was possible that Matthew and Millie were away-- was she then alone, poor, poor Ellen? |
52019 | Lanfair?" |
52019 | Lanfair?" |
52019 | Levis stepped off the porch, calling,"Home so soon, Manda?" |
52019 | Matthew asked stupidly,"Who has gone?" |
52019 | Matthew, are you listening to me?" |
52019 | Matthew, will you give me a part of my money?" |
52019 | Might there not be a higher duty? |
52019 | Neither Stephen nor Hilda greeted her, unless Hilda''s careless"A new housemaid, Fetzer?" |
52019 | Nothing wrong with your knees, I hope?" |
52019 | On account of her lessons?" |
52019 | Only a few of the shades were raised-- had the occupants died also? |
52019 | Or salvation by faith? |
52019 | Or trine immersion? |
52019 | Perhaps you would come with me?" |
52019 | Poor Fetzer, was an eye easier to lose than an arm? |
52019 | Salter?" |
52019 | She had not seen his face when he greeted Ellen; who knew what his look had expressed? |
52019 | She implied that for all her troubles he was to blame; a bride married by capture could have uttered a no more triumphant"Whose fault is it?" |
52019 | She read over his shoulder--"''Dementia''--Father, who has that?" |
52019 | She saw the small, arched foot, set in absurd, high- heeled shoes-- how did she manage to stand, and how to walk? |
52019 | She was frightened-- would she be left without Ellen''s help? |
52019 | She was here two years ago, was n''t she? |
52019 | She--""Where is Ellen?" |
52019 | Should she run in and say good- bye to Grandfather? |
52019 | Should she take a step forward or wait for their eyes to find her? |
52019 | Stephen saw her at first dimly across the wide room-- could she be a deluding vision? |
52019 | The doctrine of the Trinity? |
52019 | The farm belongs to you and me-- isn''t it sensible that we stay here and work it? |
52019 | The men on the street say to me,''Say, is it true that you employ a reader to sit in your window all the time and read a book?'' |
52019 | The mysterious visitor to whom her father meant to entrust her-- who and where was he? |
52019 | The women have sure always the easy time, ai n''t it so?" |
52019 | Then Ellen flushed-- remembering Hilda''s bare shoulders, the turn of her wrist as she flicked the ash of her cigarette-- what would Amos say to that? |
52019 | Then she said aloud,"You''ll come here for supper before you go away?" |
52019 | Then what would become of her father who did not go to church? |
52019 | There was a savage defiance in Stephen''s"Why not, pray?" |
52019 | There was in his heart a new and irritating undercurrent of astonishment-- how could human beings live like this? |
52019 | They had not looked at her, but what would they say when they did? |
52019 | To borrow from a fund, was she? |
52019 | To whom did they belong? |
52019 | Training in business college? |
52019 | Was Ellen studying in advance of her class? |
52019 | Was everything then over? |
52019 | Was he not going to answer, to get somehow between her and the dreadful eyes, the deathlike beard of Grandfather? |
52019 | Was he to lose in a moment''s doubting in his old age that heaven which he had desired from his youth? |
52019 | Was he to pay good money for this? |
52019 | Was he to take her home_ now_? |
52019 | Was it all a dream? |
52019 | Was n''t she here all summer?" |
52019 | Was not Matthew angry, would he not be angry, would he not take her and himself away from this glittering, searching eye? |
52019 | Was she an employee of Stephen''s, like the middle- aged women who were so concerned about him? |
52019 | Was she going to cry? |
52019 | Was she the victim of an hallucination? |
52019 | Was this the world into which he had thought to send pure and lovely Ellen? |
52019 | Weller?" |
52019 | Were there any young men in the house? |
52019 | What did you give her then?" |
52019 | What had Fetzer to do with it? |
52019 | What had annoyed her? |
52019 | What had come over Matthew? |
52019 | What have you done?" |
52019 | What if you could n''t go to meeting for a while? |
52019 | What is the matter with Matthew?" |
52019 | What might a man not accomplish under circumstances which were entirely favorable-- with health and fortune and domestic happiness? |
52019 | What should she do now? |
52019 | What was it his father had said? |
52019 | What was the motive for this amazing offer? |
52019 | What would Levis think of him? |
52019 | What would you like to do?" |
52019 | When can you come?" |
52019 | When?" |
52019 | Where are you going?" |
52019 | Where did you discover that antediluvian absurdity?" |
52019 | Where do they come from?" |
52019 | Where is he?" |
52019 | Where is she?" |
52019 | Where''s Matthew? |
52019 | Whither, oh, whither had he come? |
52019 | Who had carried these books to this spot? |
52019 | Who was helping her? |
52019 | Why are you home so early? |
52019 | Why did Stephen prefer to work incessantly, to be with them, rather than with her? |
52019 | Why did these women stay on year after year? |
52019 | Why did you leave school?" |
52019 | Why had he given up friends and recreation? |
52019 | Why had he not gone before? |
52019 | Why not at Christmas- time? |
52019 | Why not spend her brief hour with memories of her father and spare herself a keener pain? |
52019 | Why not?" |
52019 | Why not?" |
52019 | Why so early, Ellen?" |
52019 | Why was he unwilling to go away? |
52019 | Wo n''t you come back?" |
52019 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
52019 | Work?--the reminder had consoled her this morning, why could it not console her now? |
52019 | Would he try to keep her? |
52019 | Would n''t you like the place for the sake of your father? |
52019 | Would not Mrs. Fetzer be astounded? |
52019 | Would you like to go to Buffalo again? |
52019 | Yes he could come very soon-- and bring Dr. Good? |
52019 | You understand my motive?" |
52019 | You understand, Dr. Lanfair, that Mrs. Lanfair''s attitude toward you is a part of her malady?" |
52019 | You were studying with your father and you had a little table by the window?" |
52019 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
792 | And where are the proofs that must justify so foul and so improbable an accusation? 792 Answer me; whose form-- whose voice-- was it thy contrivance? |
792 | Are they well? |
792 | But are you sure? |
792 | But how was the information procured? 792 But why,"said I,"must the Divine Will address its precepts to the eye?" |
792 | But,said I,"when she knows your pleasure, will she not conform to it?" |
792 | Can you doubt,said he,"that these were illusions? |
792 | Catherine was with you the whole time? |
792 | From what you know, do you deem a formal vindication necessary? 792 Have I not said,"returned he,"that the performance was another''s? |
792 | I will obey,said he in a disconsolate voice;"yet, wretch as I am, am I unworthy to repair the evils that I have committed? |
792 | Is Louisa well? 792 Is it not to be desired that an error so fatal as this should be rectified?" |
792 | Is it not,answered I,"an unavoidable inference? |
792 | It was my sister''s voice; but it could not be uttered by her; and yet, if not by her, by whom was it uttered? 792 Madness, say you? |
792 | Man,said my brother, in a voice totally unlike that which he had used to me,"what art thou? |
792 | Need I dwell upon the impressions which your conversation and deportment originally made upon me? 792 She wrung her hands, and exclaimed in an agony,"O tell me, where is she? |
792 | To what scene, or what interview, I asked, did you allude? 792 Well,"said he, at length,"What think you of this? |
792 | What am I to fear? |
792 | What are these twenty suppositions? |
792 | What art thou? |
792 | What could I answer? 792 What could I do? |
792 | What demand was this? 792 What do you mean?" |
792 | What is it you fear? 792 What phrenzy has seized you? |
792 | What task would I not undertake, what privation would I not cheerfully endure, to testify my love of thee? 792 What terrible disaster is it that you think of?" |
792 | What then,resumed I,"do you fear? |
792 | What voice was that which lately addressed you? |
792 | Who are they whom I have devoted to death? 792 Who then is this assassin? |
792 | Whom do you then suppose to be the agent? |
792 | Why art thou here? 792 Why do I linger here? |
792 | Why do I summon thee to this conference? 792 Why not? |
792 | Why should I go further? 792 Why should I paint the tempestuous fluctuation of my thoughts between grief and revenge, between rage and despair? |
792 | Wilt thou then go? 792 ''What mean you? 792 --Catharine, have you not moved from that spot since I left the room?" |
792 | --"Why not?" |
792 | --She was affected with the solemnity of his manner, and laying down her work, answered in a tone of surprise,"No; Why do you ask that question?" |
792 | After some pause, in which his countenance betrayed every mark of perplexity, he said to me,"Why would you pay this visit? |
792 | Am I helpless in the midst of this snare? |
792 | Am I not myself hunted to death? |
792 | Am I not thy wife? |
792 | Am I not thy wife?" |
792 | And is it so? |
792 | And is this good to be mine? |
792 | And thou, O most fatal and potent of mankind, in what terms shall I describe thee? |
792 | And who was he that threatened to destroy me? |
792 | And why was the treason limited to take effect in this spot? |
792 | And why, since some one was there, had silence been observed? |
792 | And yet, having made this discovery, how could you persist in dragging me forth: persist in defiance of an interdiction so emphatical and solemn? |
792 | Are Benjamin, and William, and Constantine, and Little Clara, are they safe? |
792 | Are human faculties adequate to receive stronger proofs of the existence of unfettered and beneficent intelligences than I have received? |
792 | Are not motion and touch sufficient to impart feelings such as mine? |
792 | Are the circumstances attending the imparting of this news proof that the tidings are true? |
792 | Are thy mistakes beyond the reach of detection? |
792 | Are you sure? |
792 | Art thou gone? |
792 | As soon as I recovered from my first amazement,"Who is it that speaks?" |
792 | At length he said,"What has happened? |
792 | At length, he said, looking round upon us,"Is it true that Catharine did not follow me to the hill? |
792 | Bereft of thee, what hold on happiness remains to thy offspring and thy spouse? |
792 | Besides, riches were comparative, and was he not rich already? |
792 | Besides, what aid could be afforded me by a lamp? |
792 | Besides,"continued I,"if it be a mere fit of insanity that has seized him, may not my presence chance to have a salutary influence? |
792 | But by what means is this to be effected? |
792 | But could both of us in that case have been deceived? |
792 | But had I not been told by some one in league with this enemy, that every place but the recess in the bank was exempt from danger? |
792 | But how can we suppose it to be madness? |
792 | But how comest thou hither? |
792 | But how was I to regard this midnight conversation? |
792 | But how was this error to be unveiled? |
792 | But setting these considerations aside, was it laudable to grasp at wealth and power even when they were within our reach? |
792 | But what are the proofs?" |
792 | But what emotion should possess me when the arm lifted aginst me was Wieland''s? |
792 | But what encouragement is wanting? |
792 | But what is this? |
792 | But what know you respecting it? |
792 | But what measures were now to be taken? |
792 | But what purpose? |
792 | But what was now to be done? |
792 | But where was my safety? |
792 | But who was this man''s coadjutor? |
792 | But why did he prohibit me from relating this incident to others, and what species of death will be awarded if I disobey? |
792 | But why should his remorse be feigned? |
792 | But why should we expect him to adhere to the minute? |
792 | But with what new images would he then be accompanied? |
792 | By putting out the light did he seek to hide himself, or mean only to circumvent my incautious steps? |
792 | By what inexplicable infatuation was I compelled to proceed? |
792 | By what means could he hide himself in this closet? |
792 | By what means, and whither was he traced? |
792 | By whose organs was it fashioned? |
792 | Can I bear to think-- can I endure to relate the outrage which my heart meditated? |
792 | Can I do nothing for you?" |
792 | Can I wish for the continuance of thy being? |
792 | Can not he be made to see the justice of unravelling the maze in which Pleyel is bewildered? |
792 | Can ye give me back Catharine and her babes? |
792 | Can ye recall to life him who died at my feet? |
792 | Can ye restore to me the hope of my better days? |
792 | Can you confide in my care, and that of Mrs. Baynton''s? |
792 | Can you harbour for a moment the belief of my guilt?" |
792 | Catharine, exclaimed I, where are you? |
792 | Could I have remained unconscious of my danger? |
792 | Could I have tranquilly slept in the midst of so deadly a snare? |
792 | Could I proceed until this was explained? |
792 | Could Pleyel have observed his exit? |
792 | Could any hand but his have carried into act this dreadful purpose?" |
792 | Could he be suspected of a design so sordid as pillage? |
792 | Could he make this request with the expectation of my compliance? |
792 | Could the interview have been with him? |
792 | Could the long series of my actions and sentiments grant me no exemption from suspicions so foul? |
792 | Could this be the summerhouse alluded to? |
792 | Dead? |
792 | Did I place a right construction on the conduct of Wieland? |
792 | Did he build on this incident, his odious conclusions? |
792 | Did he hope to take me by surprize? |
792 | Did he imagine it possible that I should fail to secure the door? |
792 | Did he regard the effect which his reproaches had produced as a proof of my sincerity? |
792 | Did insanity ever before assume this form?" |
792 | Did it arm me with caution to elude, or fortitude to bear the evils to which I was reserved? |
792 | Did it not become my character to testify resentment for language and treatment so opprobrious? |
792 | Did my ears truly report these sounds? |
792 | Did not equity enjoin me thus to facilitate his arrest? |
792 | Did some unlooked- for doubt insinuate itself into his mind? |
792 | Did the violence with which he closed the door testify the depth of his vexation? |
792 | Did you never hear of an instance which occurred in your mother''s family?" |
792 | Do I not merit to partake with thee in thy cares? |
792 | Does heaven, think you, interfere for such ends?" |
792 | Else why that startling intreaty to refrain from opening the closet? |
792 | Even if I execute my purpose, what injury is done? |
792 | For God''s sake what is the matter? |
792 | For a precarious possession in a land of turbulence and war? |
792 | For the ambiguous advantages which overgrown wealth and flagitious tyranny have to bestow? |
792 | For what end could he have entered this chamber? |
792 | From what evil was I now rescued? |
792 | Full of this persuasion, I called;"Judith,"said I,"is it you? |
792 | Gone forever?" |
792 | Had I ever seen the criminal? |
792 | Had I not demeaned myself like one indifferent to his happiness, and as having bestowed my regards upon another? |
792 | Had I nothing more to fear? |
792 | Had Pleyel likewise dismissed his vivacity? |
792 | Had any thing occurred during my fit, adequate to produce so total an alteration? |
792 | Had he not avowed himself a ravisher? |
792 | Had he not designed to cross the river that morning to make some necessary purchases in Jersey? |
792 | Had he personal or extraordinary reasons for desiring its republication? |
792 | Had he rifled from you the secret of your love, and reconciled you to concealment and noctural meetings? |
792 | Had not the belief, that evil lurked in the closet, gained admittance, and had not my actions betokened an unwarrantable security? |
792 | Had not their rectitude and their firmness been attested by your treatment of that specious seducer Dashwood? |
792 | Had not this chamber witnessed his atrocious purposes? |
792 | Had the paper sent to him been accompanied by any information respecting the convict? |
792 | Has he made me the subject of this morning''s conversation?" |
792 | Has he not destroyed the wife whom he loved, the children whom he idolized? |
792 | Has he not vowed my death, and the death of Pleyel, at thy bidding? |
792 | Has he nothing to fear from the rage of an injured woman? |
792 | Has not one in whom you more reasonably place trust assured you of it? |
792 | Have I not fulfilled my destiny? |
792 | Have I not reason on my side, and the power of imparting conviction? |
792 | Have I not resolved? |
792 | Have I not said that my actions were dictated by phrenzy? |
792 | Have I not sufficiently attested my faith and my obedience? |
792 | Have I not told you, you are safe? |
792 | Have I power to escape this evil? |
792 | Have you failed to discover them already? |
792 | Have you found Clara?" |
792 | Have you found her?" |
792 | Have you risen? |
792 | He approached, took my hand with a compassionate air, and said in a low voice,"Where, my dear Clara, are your brother and sister?" |
792 | He resumed, in a tone half suffocated by sobs:"But why should I upbraid thee? |
792 | Her eyes pursued mine, and she said,"What is the matter? |
792 | Her interrogations Of"what was the matter?" |
792 | His opinion was not destitute of evidence: yet what proofs could reasonably avail to establish an opinion like this? |
792 | His restlessness, his vicissitudes of hope and fear, and his ultimate despair? |
792 | His voice was not absolutely new, but had I never heard it but once before? |
792 | His wife and children were destroyed; they had expired in agony and fear; yet was it indisputably certain that their murderer was criminal? |
792 | How can this be reconciled to the stratagem which ruined my brother? |
792 | How could he be at once stationed at my shoulder and shut up in my closet? |
792 | How could he stand near me and yet be invisible? |
792 | How could my passage from the house be accomplished without noises that might incite him to pursue me? |
792 | How could you have otherwise remained so long in the chamber apparently fearless and tranquil? |
792 | How have I merited this unrelenting persecution? |
792 | How imperfectly acquainted were we with the condition and designs of the beings that surrounded us? |
792 | How little did I then foresee the termination of that chain, of which this may be regarded as the first link? |
792 | How many incidents might occur to raise an insuperable impediment in his way? |
792 | How shall I counterwork his plots, or detect his coadjutor? |
792 | How shall I detail the means which rendered the secrecy of thy purposes unfathomable? |
792 | How should I communicate without alarming you, the intelligence of my arrival? |
792 | How was I to interpret this circumstance? |
792 | How was it that a sentiment like despair had now invaded me, and that I trusted to the protection of chance, or to the pity of my persecutor? |
792 | How was the truth of this news connected with the circumstance of Catharine''s remaining in our company?" |
792 | How will a spectacle like this be endured by Wieland? |
792 | I cried when my suffocating emotions would permit me to speak,"the ghosts of my sister and her children, do they not rise to accuse thee? |
792 | I eagerly inquired, when and where did she die? |
792 | I exclaimed,"what say you? |
792 | I muttered in a low voice, Why should I live longer? |
792 | I opened and read as follows:"To Clara Wieland,"What shall I say to extenuate the misconduct of last night? |
792 | If he had really made you the object of his courtship, was not a brother authorized to interfere and demand from him the confession of his views? |
792 | If he were, would he have suffered any obstacle to hinder his coming? |
792 | If it were an artifice, what purpose would it serve? |
792 | If, instead of this, I had retired to bed, and to sleep, to what fate might I not have been reserved? |
792 | In what other way was it possible for him to construe these signals? |
792 | Instead of glowing approbation and serene hope, will he not hate and torture himself? |
792 | Is it Miss Wieland?" |
792 | Is it not so?" |
792 | Is it not time, said I, to rectify this error? |
792 | Is it possible for any calamity to disqualify me for performing my duty to these helpless innocents? |
792 | Is it shame that makes thee tongue- tied? |
792 | Is not this man the agent? |
792 | Is not thy effrontery impenetrable, and thy heart thoroughly cankered? |
792 | Is she in her chamber? |
792 | Is she sick? |
792 | Is she sick? |
792 | Is there a glimpse afforded us into a world of these superior beings? |
792 | Is there a thing in the world worthy of infinite abhorrence? |
792 | Is there any thing the matter with you?" |
792 | It can only be done by a change of deportment in me; but how must I demean myself for this purpose? |
792 | Meanwhile what was I to think? |
792 | Might I not advance cautiously, and, therefore, without danger? |
792 | Might I not knock at the door, or call, and be apprized of the nature of my visitant before I entered? |
792 | Might I not trust to the same issue? |
792 | Might he not conceive this omission to be a proof that my angel had deserted me, and be thereby fortified in guilt? |
792 | Might it not originate in the same cause? |
792 | My case, at present, was not dissimilar; and, if my angel were not weary of fruitless exertions to save, might not a new warning be expected? |
792 | My impatience would not allow me to be longer silent:"What,"said I,"for heaven''s sake, my friend, what is the matter?" |
792 | My joyous ebullitions vanished, and I asked myself who it was whom I saw? |
792 | Nay, would he not do more? |
792 | Now, was it not equally true that my actions and persuasions were at war? |
792 | Or meant he thus to crown the scene, and conduct his inscrutable plots to this consummation? |
792 | Perceiving that Carwin did not obey, he continued;"Dost thou wish me to complete the catalogue by thy death? |
792 | Shall I call him to thy presence, and permit him to confess before thee? |
792 | Shall I carry away with me the sorrow that is now my guest? |
792 | Shall I go on to repeat the conversation? |
792 | Shall I go on? |
792 | Shall I make him the narrator of his own tale?" |
792 | Shall I not do better in the next?" |
792 | Shall every hour supply me with new proofs of a wickedness beyond example? |
792 | She looked at the windows and saw that all was desolate--"Why come we here? |
792 | Should I adventure once more to explore its recesses? |
792 | Should I confide in the testimony of my ears? |
792 | Should I explore my way to my chamber, and confront the being who had dared to intrude into this recess, and had laboured for concealment? |
792 | Should I knock at the door? |
792 | Should I not bedew with my tears the graves of my sister and her children? |
792 | Should I not cast from me, with irresistible force, such atrocious imputations? |
792 | Should I not explore their desolate habitation, and gather from the sight of its walls and furniture food for my eternal melancholy? |
792 | Should I not haste to snatch you from the talons of this vulture? |
792 | Should I not hurry to a distance from a sound, which, though formerly so sweet and delectable, was now more hideous than the shrieks of owls? |
792 | Should I not pay a parting visit to the scene of these disasters? |
792 | Should I not shudder when my being was endangered? |
792 | Should I see you rushing to the verge of a dizzy precipice, and not stretch forth a hand to pull you back? |
792 | Should I shew this letter to Wieland, and submit myself to his direction? |
792 | Should I station guards about the house, and make an act, intended perhaps for my benefit, instrumental to his own destruction? |
792 | Should I suffer this mistake to be detected by time? |
792 | So unexpected an incident robbed me of all presence of mind, and, starting up, I involuntarily exclaimed,"Who is there?" |
792 | Some object was expected to be seen, or why should I have gazed in that direction? |
792 | Some of them seem to be propitious; but what should I think of those threats of assassination with which you were lately alarmed? |
792 | Tell me truly, are they well?" |
792 | Terror enables us to perform incredible feats; but terror was not then the state of my mind: where then were my hopes of rescue? |
792 | That she did not just now enter the room?" |
792 | The Baroness de Stolberg is dead?" |
792 | The door was opened by her, and she was immediately addressed with"Pry''thee, good girl, canst thou supply a thirsty man with a glass of buttermilk?" |
792 | The extent of his power is unknown; but is there not evidence that it has been now exerted? |
792 | The visage-- the voice-- at the bottom of these stairs-- at the hour of eleven-- To whom did they belong? |
792 | Think ye that malice could have urged me to this deed? |
792 | Thinkest thou that thy death was sought to gratify malevolence? |
792 | To thee?" |
792 | Was Carwin aware of his absence on this night? |
792 | Was I capable of holding on in the same perilous career? |
792 | Was I not likewise transformed from rational and human into a creature of nameless and fearful attributes? |
792 | Was I not transported to the brink of the same abyss? |
792 | Was I really deceived in imagining that I heard the closet conversation? |
792 | Was he listening whether my fears were allayed, and my caution were asleep? |
792 | Was her death absolutely certain? |
792 | Was his belief suddenly shaken by my looks, or my words, or by some newly recollected circumstance? |
792 | Was his compact really annulled? |
792 | Was it a stratagem of hell to overthrow my family? |
792 | Was it not he whose whispers betrayed him? |
792 | Was it not love? |
792 | Was it not wise to bar the lower door? |
792 | Was it not wise to foster this persuasion? |
792 | Was it possible for me not to obey? |
792 | Was it possible that I had been mistaken in the figure which I had seen on the bank? |
792 | Was it possible that he had returned, and glided, unperceived, away? |
792 | Was it possible to execute this mischief without witness or coadjutor? |
792 | Was it sheer cruelty, or diabolical revenge that produced this overthrow? |
792 | Was it suddenly extinguished by a human agent? |
792 | Was it the infraction of a similar command, that brought so horrible a penalty upon my father? |
792 | Was not Carwin my foe? |
792 | Was not Carwin the assassin? |
792 | Was not the hour at hand, which should render me the happiest of human creatures? |
792 | Was the conjecture that my part was played by some mimic so utterly untenable? |
792 | Was the danger which threatened me at an end? |
792 | Was the error that misled him so easily rectified? |
792 | Was the genius of my birth entrusted by divine benignity with this province? |
792 | Was the ignorance which these words implied real or pretended?--Yet how could I imagine a mere human agency in these events? |
792 | Was the mischief exhausted or flown? |
792 | Was the tempest that had just past a signal of the ruin which impended over me? |
792 | Was then the death of my father, portentous and inexplicable as it was, the consequence of human machinations? |
792 | Was there not deceit in his admonition? |
792 | Was there not reason to doubt the accuracy of my perceptions? |
792 | Was this confirmation to be deprecated or desired? |
792 | Was this night, or this hour to witness the accomplishment? |
792 | Was this the penalty of disobedience? |
792 | Wast thou the agent?" |
792 | Were not these sights, and these sounds, really seen and heard?" |
792 | Were not these the two great sources of depravity? |
792 | Were views so vivid and faith so strenuous thus liable to fading and to change? |
792 | Were you not apprized of his intents? |
792 | What a portion is assigned to you? |
792 | What are the means that will inform me of what nature it is? |
792 | What but my own assertion had I to throw in the balance against it? |
792 | What can I wish for thee? |
792 | What can he say which will avail to turn aside this evil? |
792 | What certainty was there, that he would not re- assume his purposes, and swiftly return to the execution of them? |
792 | What conclusion could I form? |
792 | What construction could I put upon them? |
792 | What could I do, but retire from the spot overwhelmed with confusion and dismay? |
792 | What could I say? |
792 | What could I say? |
792 | What could I say? |
792 | What could be supposed but that I deserted the chamber and the house? |
792 | What could be the purpose of a contest? |
792 | What could detain him? |
792 | What could have obliterated the impressions of his youth, and made him abjure his religion and his country? |
792 | What did they mean, she asked, by their silence, and by their thus gazing wildly at each other, and at her? |
792 | What direful illusion led thee hither? |
792 | What do you want? |
792 | What evidence could possibly suggest conceptions so wild? |
792 | What excuse should I form for changing my plan? |
792 | What face was that which I saw at the bottom of the stairs? |
792 | What fatal act of despair or of vengeance might not this error produce? |
792 | What had I to suffer worse than was already inflicted? |
792 | What had become of the family? |
792 | What had he seen in me, that could justify him in admitting so wild a belief? |
792 | What has become of her? |
792 | What has happened? |
792 | What has happened?" |
792 | What hast thou to answer for? |
792 | What have I done to deserve thus to die? |
792 | What have I withheld which it was thy pleasure to exact? |
792 | What heart is forever exempt from the goadings of compunction and the influx of laudable propensities? |
792 | What horrid apparition was preparing to blast my sight? |
792 | What is it that I am called to vindicate? |
792 | What is it that enables him to bear the remembrance, but the belief that he acted as his duty enjoined? |
792 | What is she that is now before me? |
792 | What is the testimony of his guilt?" |
792 | What is there unreasonable in this demand? |
792 | What knew he of the life and character of this man? |
792 | What language was this? |
792 | What minister or implement of ill was shut up in this recess? |
792 | What monstrous conception is this? |
792 | What more would you have? |
792 | What motive but atrocious ones could guide his steps hither? |
792 | What motive could influence him to adopt this conduct? |
792 | What obstacle will be able to divert thy zeal or repel thy efforts? |
792 | What other did he mean? |
792 | What pretext would justify this change in my plan? |
792 | What purpose but concealment was intended? |
792 | What purpose did I meditate? |
792 | What reasons could he have for making this request? |
792 | What recess could be more propitious to secrecy? |
792 | What right had I to expect his attendance? |
792 | What security had he, that in this change of place and condition, he should not degenerate into a tyrant and voluptuary? |
792 | What should I do? |
792 | What should I fear in his presence? |
792 | What should I infer from this deportment? |
792 | What sight was about to be exhibited? |
792 | What subsequent events had introduced so total a change in his plans? |
792 | What thinkest thou? |
792 | What transaction had taken place adverse to my expectations? |
792 | What useful purpose can it serve?" |
792 | What was it that had shaken conviction so firm? |
792 | What was it that she feared? |
792 | What was it that suggested the design of perusing my father''s manuscript? |
792 | What was it that swayed me? |
792 | What was my security against influences equally terrific and equally irresistable? |
792 | What was the cause of her death? |
792 | What was the scene of his former conspiracy? |
792 | What was to be done? |
792 | What were the limits and duration of his guardianship? |
792 | What words are adequate to the just delineation of thy character? |
792 | What, I again asked, could detain him in this room? |
792 | Whatever supposition I should adopt, had I not equal reason to tremble? |
792 | When I had done, he said, to me, in a tone which faultered through the vehemence of his emotions,"How were you employed during our absence?" |
792 | When he hears that I have left the country, without even the ceremonious attention of a visit, what will he think of me? |
792 | When his passion should subside, would he not perceive the flagrancy of his injustice, and hasten to atone for it? |
792 | When were they to come? |
792 | When, and where had they met? |
792 | Whence could his sagacity have contracted this blindness? |
792 | Whence then did it come? |
792 | Whence, but from an habitual defiance of danger, could my perseverance arise? |
792 | Where go? |
792 | Where is the proof, said I, that daemons may not be subjected to the controul of men? |
792 | Where were my means of safety? |
792 | Where would you have me go?" |
792 | Which of my senses was the prey of a fatal illusion? |
792 | Who are you?" |
792 | Who calls? |
792 | Who could say whether his silence were ascribable to the absence of danger, or to his own absence? |
792 | Who detains thee? |
792 | Who had a thousand times expatiated on the usefulness and beauty of virtue? |
792 | Who is there present a stranger to the character of Wieland? |
792 | Who shall describe the sorrow and amazement of the husband? |
792 | Who was it that blasted the intellects of Wieland? |
792 | Who was it that urged him to fury, and guided him to murder? |
792 | Who was it whose suffocating grasp I was to feel, should I dare to enter it? |
792 | Who was the performer of the deed? |
792 | Who was there with whom I had ever maintained intercourse, who was capable of harbouring such atrocious purposes? |
792 | Who, but thou and the devil, with whom thou art confederated?" |
792 | Whom had I offended? |
792 | Whose society was endeared to us by his intellectual elevation and accomplishments? |
792 | Why but because an omen of my fate was ordained to be communicated? |
792 | Why did I dream that my brother was my foe? |
792 | Why did he not forbear when this end was accomplished? |
792 | Why did his misjudging zeal and accursed precipitation overpass that limit? |
792 | Why did my bosom heave with sighs, and my eyes overflow with tears? |
792 | Why did you drag me hither?'' |
792 | Why expose myself to thy derision? |
792 | Why may not this event have already taken place? |
792 | Why not deal with him explicitly, and assure him of the truth? |
792 | Why not personate an enemy, and pretend that celestial interference has frustrated my schemes? |
792 | Why not terminate at once this series of horrors?--Hurry to the verge of the precipice, and cast myself for ever beyond remembrance and beyond hope? |
792 | Why should I approach nearer? |
792 | Why should I drag a miserable being? |
792 | Why should I dwell upon the rage of fever, and the effusions of delirium? |
792 | Why should I enter the lists against thee? |
792 | Why should I paint this detestable conflict? |
792 | Why should I prolong, by hypocrisy or silence, his misery as well as my own? |
792 | Why should I protract a tale which I already begin to feel is too long? |
792 | Why should I refuse to see him? |
792 | Why should I repeat my vows of eternal implacability and persecution, and the speedy recantation of these vows? |
792 | Why should I rescue this event from oblivion? |
792 | Why should I return? |
792 | Why should I suppose him impregnable to argument? |
792 | Why should he be here if he had not meditated evil? |
792 | Why should such a one be dreaded? |
792 | Why talk you of death? |
792 | Why then did I again approach the closet and withdraw the bolt? |
792 | Why then did he remain? |
792 | Why this unseasonable summons? |
792 | Why was I enjoined silence to others, on the subject of this admonition, unless it were for some unauthorized and guilty purpose? |
792 | Why was my mind absorbed in thoughts ominous and dreary? |
792 | Why was the illumination produced, to be thus suddenly brought to an end? |
792 | Why were they removed, I asked, and whither? |
792 | Why will ye torment me with your reasonings and reproofs? |
792 | Why, I said, since I must sink in her opinion, should I not cherish this belief? |
792 | Why, on hearing these words, did Pleyel hesitate? |
792 | Will not he tare limb from limb this devoted wretch? |
792 | Will not his rage mount into whirlwind? |
792 | Will that avail thee when thy fateful hour shall arrive? |
792 | Will you not hear me? |
792 | Will you not rather be astonished that I read thus far? |
792 | Would any evil from this quarter befall the girl? |
792 | Would he not seize this opportunity of executing justice on a criminal? |
792 | Would it not tend to confirm the imputations of Pleyel? |
792 | Would not that exertion be made? |
792 | Would not this danger, when measured by a woman''s fears, expand into gigantic dimensions? |
792 | Would not truth, and the consciousness of innocence, render me triumphant? |
792 | Would they justify a measure like this? |
792 | Would this be permitted to outweigh the testimony of his senses? |
792 | Would you cherish resentment at my conduct? |
792 | Would you extort from me a statement of my motives? |
792 | Would you rashly bereave him of this belief? |
792 | Yet could it be long concealed from him? |
792 | Yet has he not avowed himself my enemy? |
792 | Yet have I not projected a task beyond my power to execute? |
792 | Yet if a human being had been there, could he fail to have been visible? |
792 | Yet if not from her, from whom could it come? |
792 | Yet was he not precipitate? |
792 | Yet was it not more probable that he desired my absence by thus encouraging the supposition that the house was unoccupied? |
792 | Yet was not this the man whom we had treated with unwearied kindness? |
792 | Yet what but falshood was a deliberate suppression of the truth? |
792 | Yet what salutary end did it serve? |
792 | Yet what were the grounds on which I had reared this supposition? |
792 | Yet what will avail my efforts? |
792 | Yet what would a lie avail me? |
792 | Yet when minds are imbued with a genuine sympathy, are not words and looks superfluous? |
792 | Yet who would have imagined the arrival of Pleyel at such an hour? |
792 | Yet why should I not relinquish it now? |
792 | Yet would not the more correct judgment of Wieland perceive and expose the fallacy of his conclusions? |
792 | Yet, if so, why did he allow so many noisy signals to betray his approach? |
792 | You are acquainted with the grounds of my opinion, and yet you avow yourself innocent: Why then should I rehearse these grounds? |
792 | You are apprized of the character of Carwin: Why then should I enumerate the discoveries which I have made respecting him? |
792 | a journey? |
792 | and before whom? |
792 | and where was Wieland in thy hour of distress? |
792 | and why this hasty departure? |
792 | and wouldst thou kill me? |
792 | and"whither was I going?" |
792 | fearest thou, my sister, for thy life? |
792 | is it you, Catharine? |
792 | is the tendency of thy thoughts? |
792 | once more hast thou come? |
792 | or art thou satisfied with what has been already said?" |
792 | or had Carwin, by some inscrutable means, penetrated once more into this chamber? |
792 | or shall that sorrow be accumulated tenfold? |
792 | or should I stand under your chamber windows, which I perceived to be open, and awaken you by my calls? |
792 | replied I;"what, all?" |
792 | said I,"whence did you procure these dismal tidings?" |
792 | said he;"Do you know the author?" |
792 | that I at least endeavoured no longer to withdraw the door? |
792 | this the stroke of a vindictive and invisible hand? |
792 | torment me not with thy presence and thy prayers.--Forgive thee? |
792 | was I not assured, that my life was safe in all places but one? |
792 | what have I done? |
792 | what is her name? |
792 | what is it you mean? |
792 | what is it you say? |
792 | what is that? |
792 | when?" |
792 | whence does she come? |
792 | whither? |
792 | who knows him not as an husband-- as a father-- as a friend? |
792 | who made thee quicksighted in the councils of thy Maker? |
792 | wilt thou hear me further? |
792 | you are not well: What ails you? |
4760 | ''Personal freedom to be true to one''s self''? |
4760 | ''Set back''? |
4760 | ''The Enemy''? |
4760 | ''The things that are worth having''? 4760 ''Uniform''?" |
4760 | ''Walter''? |
4760 | A eclectic? |
4760 | A-- WHATEVER? |
4760 | Ai n''t I followin''Scripture when I train up my child to obey to her parent? |
4760 | Ai n''t he did, Tillie? |
4760 | Ai n''t you feelin''good? |
4760 | Ai n''t you leavin''Tillie keep comp''ny? |
4760 | Ai n''t you my child, then, where I begat and raised? 4760 And I says to him,"added the doctor,"I says,''You ai n''t much fur sociability, are you?'' |
4760 | And are n''t you even a little bit glad to see me? |
4760 | And are they strangers to you? |
4760 | And ca n''t your doctor cure you? |
4760 | And do you say,demanded Absalom, indignantly,"that Teacher he says it''s the same to him as prayin''--this here musin''?" |
4760 | And do you suppose that they will be able to influence the other two-- John Coppenhaver and Pete Underwocht? |
4760 | And how''s the patient? |
4760 | And if I do n''t suit? |
4760 | And make me work from four in the morning until eight or nine at night? 4760 And mebbe you punished her?" |
4760 | And then what would happen? |
4760 | And this is the uni-- the garb of the New Mennonites? |
4760 | And was he out there all by hisself the whole afternoon? |
4760 | And what did the lady say to that? |
4760 | And what does he think of your unconwerted state? |
4760 | And what must I call you? |
4760 | And when I said, after while,''Now I must go,''she was that unneighborly she never ast me,''What''s your hurry?'' |
4760 | And when is the next election? |
4760 | And who else, Tillie? |
4760 | And who''d be payin''fur all this here? |
4760 | And wo n''t Miss Tillie go too? |
4760 | And you fancy,the bishop indignantly demanded,"that I will give one dollar for your support while you are adhering to this blasphemy? |
4760 | Are n''t you well? 4760 Are you a Baptist?" |
4760 | Are you an Allopath? |
4760 | Are you feelin''too mean to go help pop? |
4760 | Are you from Lancaster, or wherever? |
4760 | Are you goin''or stayin''? |
4760 | Are you goin''to keep on at William Penn all winter, Absalom? |
4760 | Are you havin''the Doc in fur her, then? |
4760 | Are you joking? |
4760 | Are you mebbe feelin''oneasy, Teacher, about meetin''the school directors to- night? 4760 Are you so dumm, Jake, you do n''t know YET who we mean?" |
4760 | Are you too sick to take interest? |
4760 | Are you well? 4760 Are you?" |
4760 | Are yous home long a''ready? |
4760 | Before night? |
4760 | Bought? 4760 But I thought--""It was Pestalozzi? |
4760 | But fur why did n''t you say the person it WAS? 4760 But how are you going to help yourself?" |
4760 | But how could you have missed getting them? |
4760 | But what do I get out of it? |
4760 | But whatever made you take it into your head to act so vain, Tillie? |
4760 | But why must they not know it? |
4760 | But why? |
4760 | But you would rather stay in school until four, would n''t you, than go home to help your father in the celery- beds? |
4760 | But, Aunty Em--"Are you mindin''me, Tillie, or ai n''t you? |
4760 | But, Doc,Tillie pleaded with him in an agony of mind,"you wo n''t let them take my school from me, will you? |
4760 | But, Doc,faltered Tillie,"wo n''t it be bribery?" |
4760 | But, child, has not God made the world beautiful for our pleasure? 4760 But,"he questioned,"Mrs. Wackernagel, why are your daughters allowed to do what you think wrong and would not do?" |
4760 | But,said Margaret,"the question means do you practise allopathy, homeopathy, hydropathy, osteopathy,--or, for instance, eclecticism? |
4760 | Ca n''t you take your own part, Tillie? |
4760 | Ca n''t you tell pop what''s hurtin''you, Tillie? |
4760 | Can you eat along, Tillie? |
4760 | Can you learn''em''rithmetic good? |
4760 | Cleanness? |
4760 | Could I possibly hurt this little bird, which is so entirely at my mercy? 4760 D''you want supper?" |
4760 | DARE I go to school to- morrow? |
4760 | Did she drink tea? |
4760 | Did you get your religion at Bethel rewiwal? |
4760 | Did you lend this off the Doc again? |
4760 | Did you tell the teacher you were going to do this? |
4760 | Did yous, now? |
4760 | Do I think? 4760 Do YOU think so poorly of me?" |
4760 | Do n''t the size make nothin''? |
4760 | Do n''t you feel fur your wittles? |
4760 | Do n''t you find it dull working alone? |
4760 | Do n''t you know I can collect your wages off the secretary of the Board myself? |
4760 | Do you enjoy it? |
4760 | Do you have no help at all? |
4760 | Do you hear me, Tillie? 4760 Do you hear me, Tillie?" |
4760 | Do you know my pop''s Nathaniel Puntz, the director? |
4760 | Do you like your job? |
4760 | Do you mean it fur really, that you''d ruther be a''ole maid? |
4760 | Do you mean to say,hotly argued the doctor,"that they had automobiles in them days?" |
4760 | Do you mebbe leave her set up readin''books or such pamp''lets, ai n''t? |
4760 | Do you never do anything just for the pleasure of it? |
4760 | Do you never have any doubts, Tillie, of the truth of your creed? |
4760 | Do you suppose I''d leave her KEEP them caps she stole the money off of me to buy? |
4760 | Do you think I should dare to run away to the Normal? |
4760 | Do you think that your daughter, when she is grown and realizes all that she has lost, will''rise up and call you blessed''? |
4760 | Do you think you have a right to bring children into the world only to crush everything in them that is worth while? |
4760 | Does he-- does HE-- care that much what happens to me? |
4760 | Done a''ready? |
4760 | Eh-- ain''t WHAT? |
4760 | Fur me? 4760 Fur why did you say it was Elviny?" |
4760 | Fur why do n''t you want to tell, then? |
4760 | Good night, Miss-- Tillie, is n''t it? |
4760 | Has any of yous saw her? |
4760 | Has he made anything for pleasure apart from usefulness? |
4760 | Have you any other boarders? |
4760 | Have you strangers? |
4760 | He kept them from you? |
4760 | He says? |
4760 | He told you that? |
4760 | Heh? |
4760 | How can we possibly get away to- night? |
4760 | How can you forgive such things? |
4760 | How d''do? |
4760 | How did Absalom take it, anyhow? |
4760 | How did you come by that there''Iwanhoe''? |
4760 | How do you mean? |
4760 | How late,thought Tillie,"will he stay the SECOND time he sits up with me? |
4760 | How long does it take you to get''em from a, b, c''s to the Testament? |
4760 | How long will it go till you come again? |
4760 | How much did you find? |
4760 | How much do you want I should give you out of your wages every month, then? |
4760 | How''s her? |
4760 | How''s missus? |
4760 | I can get board there, no doubt? |
4760 | I guess you''re right down sick fur all; ai n''t? 4760 I suppose I have n''t the least chance?" |
4760 | I wonder will she come? 4760 I''m burnin''every book you bring home, do you hear?" |
4760 | I''m well- fixed enough, ai n''t I? 4760 If I ai n''t to hold your hand or kiss yon, what are we to do to pass the time?" |
4760 | If I do? 4760 If I say you ca n''t go home?" |
4760 | If Tillie did get smallpox,Mrs. Getz here broke in,"would she mebbe have to be took to the pest- house?" |
4760 | If they put him out? |
4760 | If they''re strangers to us? 4760 If you ai n''t here to influence our wotes, what are you here fer?" |
4760 | If you kin? 4760 Indeed?" |
4760 | Is everybody well? |
4760 | Is it any stranger,Tillie asked, her low voice full of pain,"than that your uncle should send you away because of your UNbelief?" |
4760 | Is it for this that I have spent my time and money upon you-- to bring up an INFIDEL? |
4760 | Is it somepin you''re got ag''in''me? |
4760 | Is it that I kreistle you, Tillie? |
4760 | Is it that she''s so spited about that letter pop burnt up? 4760 Is it that your pop wo n''t leave you, or whatever?" |
4760 | Is it-- is it really you, Tillie? |
4760 | Is she a gradyate? 4760 Is she my own child or ai n''t she, Em Wackernagel? |
4760 | Is she such a foreigner yet? |
4760 | Is that so? |
4760 | Is that the English you''re speakin'', or whatever? |
4760 | Is the childern all well? |
4760 | Is there nobody left for you but me? |
4760 | Is they a''applicant? |
4760 | Is this a conundrum, Tillie? 4760 Is your composition written, Absalom?" |
4760 | It seems too great a risk to run, does n''t it? 4760 It''s a bad sign, ai n''t, when they ca n''t tell what''s hurtin''''em?" |
4760 | Jake Getz, you ai n''t givin''in THAT easy? |
4760 | Leave me see you at it, do you hear? 4760 Lemme see-- your name''s Fairchilds, ai n''t?" |
4760 | Let him stay? |
4760 | May I go to my room? |
4760 | Mebbe you''ve been leavin''Tillie work too much in the hot sun out in the fields with you? |
4760 | Miss or Mrs.? |
4760 | Miss-- Matilda-- I hope I''ve not hurt your feelings? 4760 Mocking? |
4760 | Must you wait till you see me again oncet? |
4760 | My dear little goosie, what IS the matter with you? 4760 My job at breaking you in? |
4760 | My''Persuasion''? 4760 Now are you behavin''yourself-- like a good girl-- till I come again?" |
4760 | Now, Absalom,she feebly protested,"did you ever see me afraid of work?" |
4760 | Now, Jake, what are you up to? |
4760 | Now? |
4760 | Och, I just mean, SAY NOT? 4760 Och, why do n''t you speak yourself?" |
4760 | Of course you''re writin''to her to- night, Tillie, ai n''t you? |
4760 | Often? 4760 Oh, do you really, REALLY think I am?" |
4760 | Oh, doctor,whispered Tillie, in a tone of distress,"ca n''t I go to school? |
4760 | Oh, you mean the garb? 4760 Oh,"said the doctor,"medicine, is it? |
4760 | Please, Miss Margaret,said the child,"pop says to ast you will you give me the darst to go home till half- past three this after?" |
4760 | Say, Jake, you ai n''t been badgerin''this kid again fur somepin? 4760 School?" |
4760 | So now,he added, after a moment''s thoughtful pause,"you think your game''s played out here, heh?" |
4760 | So that''s how you come by it, is it? |
4760 | So you choose poverty and hardship for the sake of this perversity? |
4760 | Some better, heh? 4760 Some one sick again?" |
4760 | Sorry to turn you down, do you mean? |
4760 | Studying all alone? |
4760 | That dude teacher you got stayin''here mebbe gives her things to read, ai n''t? |
4760 | Then perhaps my interference was unwelcome? |
4760 | Then she''s a female, is she? |
4760 | Then wo n''t you find out off of him about the Board meetin''? |
4760 | Then you walk yourself right back over to the hotel and get''em back of? 4760 Then,"said Margaret,"you might be called an eclectic?" |
4760 | There now,he said, drawing the cover over her again;"now lay still and be a good girl, ai n''t you will?" |
4760 | Tillie, ai n''t you afraid of your pop no more? |
4760 | Well, ARE you a perfessor? |
4760 | Well, I''d like to know where at? 4760 Well, and do n''t you get affected too?" |
4760 | Well, did he die unconverted? |
4760 | Well, fur why do n''t you want to have me? |
4760 | Well, the women could n''t go bare- headed neither, could they? 4760 Well, then, if you ai n''t afraid of workin'', what makes you talk so CONTRARY?" |
4760 | Well, why do n''t you gimme the money, then? 4760 Well,"she parried,"why do n''t YOU?" |
4760 | Well,the doctor considered,"it looks some fur fallin''weather-- ain''t? |
4760 | Well? 4760 Well? |
4760 | Well? |
4760 | Well? |
4760 | Well? |
4760 | Were they such agents, or what? |
4760 | What IS it? |
4760 | What ails you? |
4760 | What are you goin''to do, Tillie? |
4760 | What are you struggling FUR? |
4760 | What business have you lettin''her buy anything? |
4760 | What did yous do all while we was to meeting? |
4760 | What do we want with her_ pop_? |
4760 | What for? |
4760 | What fur bank? |
4760 | What fur book''s that there? |
4760 | What fur did you lie to me about that there piece entitled''Iwanhoe''? |
4760 | What fur kind of a man do you WANT, then? |
4760 | What fur sermont did yous have this morning? |
4760 | What fur would it be worth while to waste time meetin''to elect her if they ai n''t none? |
4760 | What have we here? |
4760 | What he thinks? 4760 What is going to happen, Doc?" |
4760 | What is it, honey? |
4760 | What makes you think I am promised to Absalom? |
4760 | What makes you think you ought not to read''just for pleasure''? |
4760 | What method would you pursue with a boy in your school who was addicted to swearing? |
4760 | What might her name be? |
4760 | What pay will Ezra get at Janeville? |
4760 | What reasons did they give for voting for the teacher? |
4760 | What shall I do? |
4760 | What was the subjeck of that there novel, Tillie? |
4760 | What was your Persuasion then? |
4760 | What was your experience a''ready as a teacher? |
4760 | What would it mean to you if you had it? |
4760 | What you goin''to do about it, Tillie? 4760 What you laughin''at, anyhow?" |
4760 | What you mean, runnin''off up here, heh? 4760 What you mean?" |
4760 | What you sayin''to me? 4760 What''s THAT?" |
4760 | What''s ailin''YOU, anyways, that you want to be so spunky about Teacher? 4760 What''s ailin''you?" |
4760 | What''s he mean, throwin''away so much money on books? |
4760 | What''s it all about? |
4760 | What''s musin''? |
4760 | What''s that again? |
4760 | What''s the matter of her anyways? |
4760 | What''s the matter, dear? |
4760 | What''s the matter? 4760 What''s the use of hiding, Aunty Em? |
4760 | What''s them again? |
4760 | What''s them pecooliar views of hisn you was goin''to speak to us, Doc? |
4760 | What''s your hurry? 4760 What, in your judgment, may I ask, would be a suitable answer to that?" |
4760 | What-- what brings you here? |
4760 | What? |
4760 | What? |
4760 | When I''m dead, wo n''t you and the others inherit off of me all I''ve saved? |
4760 | When does Ezra go? |
4760 | When must I go, Aunty Em? |
4760 | When you show him your certificate, wo n''t that appease him? 4760 Where are you got the others hid?" |
4760 | Where d''you come by them books you read? |
4760 | Where did you come by the plain dress? |
4760 | Where do I come in, yet?--I where raised her since she was born, a''ready? |
4760 | Where is the hotel, may I ask? |
4760 | Where you goin''? |
4760 | Where you goin''to? |
4760 | Where''s Doc, anyhow? |
4760 | Where''s Sammy? |
4760 | Where''s the good of your religion, I''d like to know, Em-- settin''a child on to defy her parent? 4760 Where''s your others, then?" |
4760 | Where? 4760 Whether she''d have to be took to the pest- house?" |
4760 | Whether they were agents? 4760 Who are you goin''to marry, then?" |
4760 | Who tole you to stop workin'', heh? |
4760 | Who took it to Lancaster fur you? |
4760 | Who''s the party? |
4760 | Why SHOULD a woman get married? |
4760 | Why ai n''t she familiar with me, then? |
4760 | Why ca n''t you speak now? |
4760 | Why did n''t Tillie say it was yourn? |
4760 | Why do n''t you get married? |
4760 | Why do n''t you hire your washin''or buy her a washin''-machine? 4760 Why do n''t you speak?" |
4760 | Why me? |
4760 | Why should I give it to you, father? 4760 Why, dear me, Tillie, what on earth is it?" |
4760 | Why? |
4760 | Will that lad be taking up your whole Sunday evening again? |
4760 | Will you leave me come to see you Sundays, still, if I take my chancet that I''m wastin''my time? |
4760 | Will you leave me go to school to- morrow? |
4760 | Will you, now, take it all right if I call you by your Christian name? 4760 Wo n''t she be here to- night to leave us see her oncet?" |
4760 | Wo n''t you buy me the plain garb, pop? |
4760 | Wo n''t you have some more sliced radishes, Teacher? |
4760 | Would you mind if I called you by your Christian name? |
4760 | Would you ruther keep your job than quit and get married? |
4760 | Yes, ai n''t? 4760 Yes, what''s that ag''in?" |
4760 | Yes, what''s your conwictions? |
4760 | Yes? 4760 Yes? |
4760 | Yes? |
4760 | Yes? |
4760 | Yes? |
4760 | You ai n''t a gradyate, neither, are you? |
4760 | You ai n''t no fears of smallpox, are you? |
4760 | You and Tillie are engaged to be married? |
4760 | You are getting supper very early, are n''t you?'' 4760 You are not a Mennonite, are you?" |
4760 | You are not free to be yourself? |
4760 | You did, did you? |
4760 | You find it inconvenient to take me to board? |
4760 | You fully realize all that this step must mean? |
4760 | You have, of course, been a pupil at William Penn? |
4760 | You mean,he said, light coming to him,"they will ask me whether I am a professor of religion, do n''t you?" |
4760 | You took notice of it too, Tillie, ai n''t? 4760 You was paid to- day, was n''t you?" |
4760 | You were expecting me this afternoon, were n''t you? |
4760 | You were looking for me? |
4760 | You were sneering at Miss Spooner, were n''t you? |
4760 | You wrote to me? |
4760 | You''ll be over to Board meetin''to- night, ai n''t? |
4760 | You''re wonderful easy kreistled[ disgusted]; ai n''t? 4760 Your letters?" |
4760 | ''"Where did you attend lectures?''" |
4760 | ''To what School of MEDICINE do you belong?'' |
4760 | ''To what School of Medicine do you belong?''" |
4760 | ''What d''you say?'' |
4760 | AIN''T he, now, a queer feller not to want a girl along when one was so handy?" |
4760 | After so many years of struggle, just as she was tasting success, to lose all the fruits of her labor-- how could she endure it? |
4760 | Ai n''t Tillie?" |
4760 | Ai n''t so, Tillie? |
4760 | Ai n''t, Doc? |
4760 | Ai n''t, Tillie?" |
4760 | Ai n''t, Tillie?" |
4760 | Ai n''t, mom?" |
4760 | Ai n''t? |
4760 | Ai n''t? |
4760 | Ai n''t? |
4760 | Ai n''t?" |
4760 | Ai n''t?" |
4760 | Ai n''t?" |
4760 | And I''ll redd up for you, Fridays, still, till it''s paid for a''ready, Miss Margaret, if you''ll leave me, wo n''t you, please? |
4760 | And all them fancy things they keep in their dry- goods stores? |
4760 | And can I do with my own what I please, or must I ast you and Abe Wackernagel?" |
4760 | And could God be less kind, less merciful to me than I could be to this little bird? |
4760 | And do n''t you see it''s not just to poor Absalom? |
4760 | And do_ I_ look as if I need to know any more''n what I know a''ready?" |
4760 | And if Aunty Em do n''t want you partic''lar, you''re to come home and mind the childern, do you hear?" |
4760 | And is ear- rings and such things like them useful? |
4760 | And next Saturday, when I come, I want to find them clo''es done, do you understand?" |
4760 | And what,"she wondered,"do other girls see in it?" |
4760 | And why had she put the blame on Elviny, who was her little friend? |
4760 | And yet, could hell hold anything worse than the loss of Miss Margaret''s kindness? |
4760 | And you ca n''t say you do n''t owe me no thanks-- ain''t I always kep''you?" |
4760 | And-- now-- what was it that came to the apple- tree?" |
4760 | Anything else?" |
4760 | Are you sayin''that to ME, Tillie? |
4760 | Are you tormentin''this here kid about THAT yet? |
4760 | Are you willin''to leave go your nice education, where you''re gettin'', fur a couple of damned curls? |
4760 | Are you, for example, a homeopathist?" |
4760 | But I dare tell missus, ai n''t?" |
4760 | But ca n''t you see the inconsistentness of the plain people? |
4760 | But is they any symptoms?" |
4760 | But what would YOU mean, anyhow, by a eclectic doctor, so to speak, heh?" |
4760 | But what would they get down on me for?" |
4760 | But what''s a letter to get spited about? |
4760 | But you can not mean that we are not to meet at all after this?" |
4760 | But you-- what must I call you?" |
4760 | But, Teacher, what can a body do against a feller like Jake Getz? |
4760 | But-- look here, Absalom, if you were a woman, would YOU marry? |
4760 | By the way, will you take a message to him from me? |
4760 | Ca n''t I? |
4760 | Ca n''t you mebbe talk English wery good? |
4760 | Ca n''t you stay and eat along? |
4760 | Can you give me some pointers?" |
4760 | Could I judge it, condemn and punish it, for some mistake or wrong or weakness it had committed in its little world? |
4760 | Could I risk that?" |
4760 | Could he assure them that he was"a Bible Christian"? |
4760 | Could he hold my soul in the hollow of his hand and vivisect it to judge whether its errors were worthy of his divine anger? |
4760 | Could she trust him with the secret of Miss Margaret''s letters? |
4760 | Could this be Tillie-- his meek, long- suffering Tillie? |
4760 | D''you hear that? |
4760 | D''you understand?" |
4760 | Did he have in any least degree the desire, the yearning, for her that she had for him? |
4760 | Did he send one thought to her, so far away, so desolate? |
4760 | Did you lend that other''n''off of Teacher too? |
4760 | Did you think I would? |
4760 | Do n''t I own you? |
4760 | Do n''t you know you must always leave on the ladies ai n''t doin''nothin''?'' |
4760 | Do you call that consistentness?" |
4760 | Do you feel fur eatin''any supper?" |
4760 | Do you hear me? |
4760 | Do you hear me?" |
4760 | Do you mind, Rebecca?" |
4760 | Do you play the organ?" |
4760 | Do you realize what a big truth you have gotten hold of-- and all that it involves?" |
4760 | Do you suppose you could learn a boy carpenterin''by settin''him down to read books on sawin''boards and a- lekshurin''him on drivin''nails? |
4760 | Do you think she will come to see me, mebbe?" |
4760 | Do you understand?" |
4760 | Do you want better proof than that, Doc? |
4760 | Do you want him to go?" |
4760 | Doc, will you write and tell her for me?" |
4760 | Getz?" |
4760 | HEH? |
4760 | HOW could she tell her of that burned- up book and endure to see her look at her with cold disapproval? |
4760 | Has he not given us appetites and passions for our pleasure?--minds and hearts and bodies constructed for pleasure?" |
4760 | Have you ever read a novel?" |
4760 | Have you fever, or the headache, or whatever?" |
4760 | He certainly has, now, a lot of manners, ai n''t, Tillie?" |
4760 | He''d ast like you,''All what?'' |
4760 | Heh?" |
4760 | Home- o- pathy? |
4760 | How are we goin''to work that there? |
4760 | How could one be constantly hurting and thwarting a person whom one cared for? |
4760 | How could she ever tell Miss Margaret? |
4760 | How did Elviny Dinkleberger come by such a novel?" |
4760 | How do you bring it out that the Scripture says,''Childern, obey your parents''?" |
4760 | How had he so easily"licked"him? |
4760 | How is it, Miss Tillie? |
4760 | How would that benefit ME?" |
4760 | How your father be in Lancaster now and yet be home until half- past three? |
4760 | I guess you''re mebbe thinkin''he''ll cut you out with Tillie, ai n''t?" |
4760 | I tole Cousin Sally,''Why did n''t you bring me a bigger book?'' |
4760 | I wonder shall I mebbe tell him on her or not, if he do n''t get in till she''s home a''ready?" |
4760 | I''ll be well enough, wo n''t I? |
4760 | I''ll send fur the Doc, then, and he can mebbe give you some pills, or what, to make you feel some better; ai n''t?" |
4760 | I''m a-- now what d''you call''em?" |
4760 | III"WHAT''S HURTIN''YOU, TILLIE?" |
4760 | III"WHAT''S HURTIN''YOU, TILLIE?" |
4760 | Is it after some of your folks?" |
4760 | Is it now, mebbe, the Doc? |
4760 | Is it some one where lives around here?" |
4760 | Is n''t it true?" |
4760 | Is n''t there some one thing you care more about than other things?" |
4760 | Is them New Mennonite principles to take what ai n''t yourn? |
4760 | Just to lose''em as soon as they are growed enough to help earn a little? |
4760 | Let me see-- will a Baptist do?" |
4760 | Mebbe I''ll just call you Teacher; ai n''t?" |
4760 | Mr. Getz suddenly said, fixing on her a suspicious and searching look,"do you uphold to novel- readin''?" |
4760 | Mr. Getz turned again to the doctor and inquired irritably,"What is it to YOU if I teach my own child to mind me or not, I''d like to know?" |
4760 | Not that I want to ast questions too close-- but what was you writin'', now, in that letter of yourn, about Jake Getz?" |
4760 | Now look- ahere, Tillie, is your pop to be tole about your certificate?" |
4760 | Now see here,"he sternly said,"what did you do somepin like this fur? |
4760 | Now was they hisn or was they yourn?" |
4760 | Now, childern-- er-- what grows on apple- trees, heh?" |
4760 | Och, I wisht he was stoppin''here; ai n''t, Tillie? |
4760 | Oh, wo n''t you never like me no more?" |
4760 | One on you, ai n''t? |
4760 | One week I cooked forty strange meals; say not, Abe?" |
4760 | Only you wo n''t leave no one else set up with you, ai n''t not?" |
4760 | Please tell me-- why did you never answer my letters?" |
4760 | See? |
4760 | See?" |
4760 | See?" |
4760 | Shall I tell him you''ll go if he''ll come for you?" |
4760 | That I will ever again even so much as break bread with you, until, in humble contrition, you return to your allegiance to the Church?" |
4760 | That you got to do somepin I tole you you have n''t the dare to do? |
4760 | The only question is, How are you going to get off to attend the examination?" |
4760 | Then you have been doing it for some time?" |
4760 | There is a hotel in the place, I suppose?" |
4760 | Tillie breathed, gazing up at her, her eyes wide and strained with distress,"if you go away and get married, wo n''t I NEVER see you no more?" |
4760 | Tillie gasped,"how do you know?" |
4760 | Tillie said;"it seems so much, do n''t it?" |
4760 | To get no use out of''em? |
4760 | To grow up to be no use to them that raised it? |
4760 | WHERE HAD TILLIE OBTAINED THAT BOOK? |
4760 | Was he angry, or-- almost worse-- did that compressed mouth mean concealed amusement? |
4760 | Was he foiled in his anticipated revenge upon the girl who had"turned down"his Absalom? |
4760 | Was it to an abyss of degradation that her nature was bearing her in a swift and fatal tide-- or to a holy height of blessedness? |
4760 | Well, Tillie she come round all right, ain''t?--till a little while?" |
4760 | Well, it''s my fault, is n''t it?" |
4760 | Well, then, Doc, you think she ai n''t serious?" |
4760 | Well-- er,"he floundered for a moment, then, by a sudden inspiration,"what can a bird do?" |
4760 | What am I struggling FOR?" |
4760 | What are we in this world for but to help one another? |
4760 | What could it mean? |
4760 | What d''you want about that there theology?" |
4760 | What did Adam Oberholzer and Joseph Kettering say, Doc?" |
4760 | What did you give her that she could n''t keep with her?" |
4760 | What do you count as such things?" |
4760 | What do you think they done yet?" |
4760 | What does a body go to the bother of raisin''childern FUR? |
4760 | What does a body have childern fur? |
4760 | What does a woman gain?" |
4760 | What fur?" |
4760 | What is it, Tillie?" |
4760 | What might your name BE?'' |
4760 | What reasons can you show?" |
4760 | What shall I do?" |
4760 | What should I do and where could I go after that? |
4760 | What was there before her but a return to the farm, or perhaps, at best, marriage with Absalom? |
4760 | What was there to like? |
4760 | What will your Miss Margaret say?" |
4760 | What would I do without you?" |
4760 | What you mean?" |
4760 | What you talkin''?" |
4760 | What''s Tillie doin''this morning?" |
4760 | What''s a child FUR? |
4760 | What''s hurtin''you, Tillie?" |
4760 | What''s the use of struggling? |
4760 | What''s your first name now?" |
4760 | What, then?" |
4760 | What?" |
4760 | Whatever was the matter with Tillie? |
4760 | When do you ever spend two dollars on me? |
4760 | Where d''you get that there candle?" |
4760 | Where had he took himself to?" |
4760 | Where have you got it?" |
4760 | Where shall we be, or will we go, When we must leave this world below?" |
4760 | Where was he at this moment, and what was he doing? |
4760 | Who took it in fur you-- and what fur bank? |
4760 | Whose book was that there?" |
4760 | Why could n''t it be Tillie instead of Amanda? |
4760 | Why did n''t they realize, as she did, how far above them he was? |
4760 | Why did n''t you write to me?" |
4760 | Why was Fate so perverse in her dealings with him? |
4760 | Why was he anxious about her? |
4760 | Will they be satisfied with a Baptist?" |
4760 | Will you do it with this here? |
4760 | Will you give me the dare to come next Sunday?" |
4760 | Wo n''t you? |
4760 | Would he really write to her again? |
4760 | Would not the result be fraught with tragedy for her? |
4760 | Would she be able, she wondered, to stand firm against his opposition when, a second time, it came to an issue between them? |
4760 | Would she ever see him again, her heart kept asking? |
4760 | Would the members think for one moment of paying forty dollars a month to a teacher without experience? |
4760 | You ca n''t come over that there, can you? |
4760 | You ca n''t come over that, can you? |
4760 | You dassent sharpen your slate- pencils, do you hear? |
4760 | You do n''t mean to tell me you never got my letters?" |
4760 | You do n''t suppose I''d let a small matter like that stand in the way of our friendship?" |
4760 | You do n''t talk like us; ai n''t?" |
4760 | You mean my Church?" |
4760 | You was sewin'', was you?" |
4760 | You''ll make them let me keep it?" |
4760 | You''ve got some money saved, ai n''t you?" |
4760 | You''ve took notice, ai n''t you, how reg''lar I''tend meeting? |
4760 | Your father will be home BY half- past three and wants you then?" |
4760 | and-- YOU understand, do n''t you, Teacher?" |
4760 | contemptuously;"I mean you ai n''t a gradyate of Millersville Normal?" |
4760 | he asked hastily,"and rather uphill?" |
4760 | he said,"why wo n''t you abandon this''carnal''life you are leading, be restored to the approbation of the brethren, and come back to the hotel? |
4760 | said Fairchilds;"are they?" |
4760 | she appealed to her niece, who had shyly stepped half behind her,"do you know right what he means?" |
4760 | the doctor answered for her,"Tillie she ai n''t so easy hurt to her feelin''s, are you, Tillie? |
4760 | the doctor asked,"and go out to the mourners''bench?" |
4760 | the doctor roused himself to greet the young man;"were you''lected?" |
4760 | whispered Miss Margaret, her arms about the child;"WHAT''S the matter with you, honey? |
55298 | ''Benefactor?'' |
55298 | ''Chaperon?'' 55298 ''Distinguished?''" |
55298 | ''Draw the line?'' |
55298 | ''Fellah?'' |
55298 | ''If at all?'' 55298 ''Learned scholars''are not men, then, in your category?" |
55298 | ''Little goal?'' 55298 ''Pleasant?'' |
55298 | ''Portia?'' 55298 ''Providential''that a young girl should be brutally murdered and a young man falsely accused so that you might--''succeed?''" |
55298 | ''Renters?'' |
55298 | ''Respectable?'' 55298 ''Several tons?'' |
55298 | ''Silver''mines? |
55298 | ''Spoke too soon?'' |
55298 | ''Surmise?'' 55298 ''Tendencies?''" |
55298 | ''We?'' 55298 A baby''s teething is only Nature, but we help and comfort it, do n''t we? |
55298 | A cow? |
55298 | A dozen? 55298 A lawyer?" |
55298 | A mother''s love? |
55298 | A surprise? |
55298 | About his step- mother, you mean? |
55298 | Am_ I_, then,she inquired with interest,"a devil and a beast as well as an angel and a goddess, do you think?" |
55298 | And a friend of yours, you said? |
55298 | And do n''t she care if you want it on the sideboard setting, Danny? |
55298 | And have been getting acquainted since? |
55298 | And is that the proper way to do? |
55298 | And my part in your fine scheme? |
55298 | And necessarily inhuman? |
55298 | And that twenty dollars I gave you? |
55298 | And the twins? |
55298 | And their wives are''undesirable?'' 55298 And what did she say?" |
55298 | And what,Daniel asked, his lips stiff,"do you think you are going to_ get_ out of this?" |
55298 | And what,asked Jennie,"did she answer to_ that_?" |
55298 | And you, Lizzie, are you ashamed of her? |
55298 | And you,he sharply demanded,"would n''t you feel a little more comfortable if you paid_ rent_ for the house you live in?" |
55298 | And_ you''d_ support them? |
55298 | Any special reason for deferring such a pleasant announcement? |
55298 | Anything_ more_? |
55298 | Are both your parents living? |
55298 | Are they so fond of her, too? |
55298 | Are they your only relatives in New Munich? |
55298 | Are you a Christian, sister- in- law? |
55298 | Are you a college graduate? |
55298 | Are you coming? |
55298 | Are you fond of reading? |
55298 | Are you? |
55298 | As a woman? |
55298 | As for gratitude, have n''t we repaid her for her ten years''service for us by our thirty years of taking care of her? |
55298 | At me? |
55298 | At the time of your father''s death was the title of the farm at Martz vested absolutely in him? |
55298 | Because she is''plain and common?'' |
55298 | But I mean,explained Lizzie, colouring a little at her own temerity, but with curiosity oozing from every pore of her,"what did you_ bring_ Danny? |
55298 | But Mrs. Leitzel,pursued Mrs. Ocksreider,"how_ could_ you''forget''a thing like our Missionary Jubilee, unless you were deaf, dumb, and blind?" |
55298 | But Walter pays you rent, of course, for your share in it? |
55298 | But aside from your employees and their wives there would be only your family''s friends, of course? |
55298 | But did n''t Miss Jennie and Miss Sadie tell you? 55298 But do n''t you see, Daniel, this is n''t the sort of house for old colonial furniture? |
55298 | But do the ideal conditions ever exist? |
55298 | But from me? |
55298 | But have n''t I consented to send cards to her, Margaret? |
55298 | But how could we know much when Danny himself has knew her only a little over a month, Jennie? |
55298 | But how would his wife ever get a chance to see her? 55298 But how,"Margaret ventured a question,"could she let you know except in the way she''s taking, since she ca n''t write herself? |
55298 | But if half its belongings are_ yours_? |
55298 | But if they do n''t care for money down there, then what''s this girl marrying Dan Leitzel for? |
55298 | But is n''t it nice,cried Margaret, holding her arm around Mrs. Leitzel to keep Jennie off,"that I''ve succeeded in_ coaxing_ her to stay to- night? |
55298 | But it looks as if she did n''t_ have_ much, do n''t it? |
55298 | But of course you understand, my dear,returned Walter,"that you ca n''t keep him in ignorance of it long?" |
55298 | But she seems so disinterested in her love for me, how can I seem less so in mine for her? 55298 But surely you know that Mr. Leitzel is very rich?" |
55298 | But what are we going to do about it, poor shrimps that we are? 55298 But what have you come down to my office for?" |
55298 | But what would you suggest then? |
55298 | But where would the_ disgrace_ come in? |
55298 | But who could be more important than you-- you who took care of them all when they were children? 55298 But why ten cards,"asked Daniel,"if she came by herself?" |
55298 | But why would he hurry it up so, like as if he was afraid we would mebby put a stop to it? 55298 But why,"smiled Walter,"should my''feeling''in the matter interest_ you_?" |
55298 | But you and I are one,said Daniel jocularly,"and what''s mine is----""Your own?" |
55298 | But, Catherine--''rich and influential?'' 55298 But, Daniel, are you sure we can afford all that?" |
55298 | But, Daniel, how can you take it to heart like this? 55298 But, Lizzie, do n''t you think the room is too close for him?" |
55298 | But, Miss Hamilton,cried Daniel as his clerk settled Herself comfortably beside his wife,"why are you not at your desk?" |
55298 | But, dear,she exclaimed in surprise,"have n''t I yet made it clear to you that I do n''t intend to?" |
55298 | But,asked Margaret, surprised,"why do you have to be''old- fashioned''because they are?" |
55298 | By depriving my sister of a home? 55298 By whom? |
55298 | Ca n''t I help you dress, dear? |
55298 | Ca n''t one thank God except in church and at the vulgar hour of feeding? |
55298 | Can he surely recover her share? |
55298 | Considering what, Jennie? |
55298 | Could n''t afford to? 55298 Could n''t you spare a little from what they''ll inherit to keep that dear old step- mother of yours for her remaining years?" |
55298 | Daniel could n''t make you, could n''t he? 55298 Daniel,"said Margaret gravely, a faint colour coming to her cheeks,"Walter surely did not give you to understand that_ I_ had any money?" |
55298 | Daniel? |
55298 | Danny supported them? |
55298 | Did Margaret send for you to come up North for_ this_? |
55298 | Did he get off so easily as that? 55298 Did n''t he ever explain it to you?" |
55298 | Did she say that? |
55298 | Did she take the twins with her? |
55298 | Did she tell you I had called on her? |
55298 | Did you cash the check? |
55298 | Did you ever happen to see her, Catherine? |
55298 | Did you love_ him_? |
55298 | Did you think I had money, Daniel? |
55298 | Did you? |
55298 | Did you_ give_ Catherine the note I sent her this morning? |
55298 | Did_ they_ tell you I took care of them, my dear? |
55298 | Do I look like a woman who does n''t? |
55298 | Do n''t tell Danny what you seen here, my dear, will you? |
55298 | Do n''t you see, Daniel, that''s why it behooves me not to be excused to her? |
55298 | Do n''t you think Danny''s too smart a lawyer, my dear, for you to get''round him? |
55298 | Do n''t you think mebby one of these days they''ll go_ too_ far and you''ll answer them back? 55298 Do n''t you think you are?" |
55298 | Do they hire me and pay me my wages? |
55298 | Do they talk so dumb? |
55298 | Do you have any from me, Daniel? |
55298 | Do you have secrets from me, Margaret? |
55298 | Do you intend to obey me? |
55298 | Do you know( not many people in New Munich do seem to know) that the Leitzels''_ mother_ is living? |
55298 | Do you like his wife? |
55298 | Do you love being Mr. Leitzel''s secretary like that? |
55298 | Do you mean to tell me, sister- in- law, that you ai n''t a Christian? |
55298 | Do you mean you''d rather damage your baby than have them quarrel with you? |
55298 | Do you mean,faltered Mrs. Leitzel,"you think they_ cheated_ me? |
55298 | Do you see_ no_ connection between the two facts, you goose? |
55298 | Do you suppose for an instant, Daniel, that she was idiot enough to believe that? |
55298 | Do you think you can stick it out with them? |
55298 | Do you think, Jennie,she anxiously asked,"folks will talk at our still keeping house for Danny when he''s married? |
55298 | Do you think, Margaret, that the Leitzels,_ for their own spiritual discipline_, ought to lose or get that money? 55298 Do you, my dear? |
55298 | Do you_ think_ Danny could be so easy worked? |
55298 | Does it matter? 55298 Does it? |
55298 | Eh? 55298 Had a--_what_?" |
55298 | Has Miss Ocksreider got back from New York? |
55298 | Has anybody victimized her? |
55298 | Hattie and Walter, when they married, were romantically in love, and now, what could be more prosaic than their jog- trot relation? 55298 Have I done nothing for you? |
55298 | Have you done anything, Walter, about securing me a loan on our property? |
55298 | Have you read many of these books? |
55298 | Have you? |
55298 | Have your sisters sent my friend away when she came to see me and kept it from me that she was here? |
55298 | He died unsaved? |
55298 | He looks like Hiram-- ain''t? |
55298 | Here, Emmy,Jennie ordered the maid,"do n''t you see Mr. Danny''s milk glass is empty? |
55298 | Hiram will have more jealous feelings than ever when he sees what a genteel lady Danny picked out; ai n''t? |
55298 | His will does n''t say so, does it? |
55298 | How about married women who are bearing children? |
55298 | How did a weasel like Dan Leitzel ever put it over a girl like_ that_? 55298 How did_ you_ like my sermon this morning, sister- in- law?" |
55298 | How do they look? |
55298 | How high dare she go, Danny, for her new dress? |
55298 | How many English dukes, pray? 55298 How many children has he? |
55298 | How many children? |
55298 | How old are your sisters? |
55298 | How would I be better than a woman of the streets? 55298 How would they have dare to say that when the land come from our own mother in the first place?" |
55298 | I am to understand, then, that you actually have the boldness to tell me to my face that you expect me to leave to you all I die possessed of? |
55298 | I could be firm against tears or temper; but when she just jokes about it and laughs at me and goes on doing as she pleases, what can I do with her? |
55298 | I did n''t see them at your reception last fall, did I? |
55298 | I never understood,she added,"that it was a question of affection between you and me, did you, my dear?" |
55298 | I suppose even your five- dollar- a- week clerks have to be especially equipped, do n''t they? |
55298 | I suppose--she changed the subject and perfunctorily made conversation--"a lawyer''s work is full of interest and excitement?" |
55298 | I suppose,Margaret speculated,"if their step- mother had money to leave them, they would n''t feel so''high- minded''about her, would they?" |
55298 | I understand that the party is to be a large general affair, not small and exclusive? 55298 I wonder if she''s a fancy dresser?" |
55298 | I''m afraid we''ve lost the art of keeping them within their''true sphere''; they''ve got rather beyond us in these days, have n''t they? |
55298 | I''m''common?'' |
55298 | I? 55298 If she is a lady?" |
55298 | In their effort to win in the race, however-- what they call winning-- they''re very likely to lose their own souls; and''What profiteth it a man?'' |
55298 | In what church were_ you_ raised? |
55298 | Indeed? 55298 Is a lie ever justifiable?" |
55298 | Is it a shock to you to find me penniless? |
55298 | Is n''t any of the land cultivated? |
55298 | Is n''t she the very dearest thing that ever happened? |
55298 | Is n''t that enough? |
55298 | Is she that smart, Danny? |
55298 | Is this your idea of not''teasing''me? 55298 Is_ that_ all the religion you have?" |
55298 | It does n''t seem possible,_ does_ it? |
55298 | It looks, Danny, as if Margaret took up with your clerk just to spite and worry you; for what else_ would_ she run with her for? |
55298 | It sounds like Marcus Aurelius, does n''t it? 55298 It''s more than I can manage to live up to, and we''d better not have_ very_ much more religion than we can live out, do you think so?" |
55298 | Its furnishings? |
55298 | Its grandmother? 55298 Jennie and Sadie be my-- select my friends for me?" |
55298 | Lizzie,she changed the subject abruptly,"have you ever seen your husband''s step- mother?" |
55298 | Make myself''common?'' |
55298 | Margaret authorizes you to say all this to me? |
55298 | Margaret,said Daniel incredulously,"surely you are not deliberately refusing what I ask of you?" |
55298 | Meaning_ me_? |
55298 | Miss Berkeley? |
55298 | Mrs. Frantz? 55298 Not even an occasional novel?" |
55298 | Not what? |
55298 | Of course you all heard of her telling mother,said Miss Ocksreider,"that she hated Women''s Auxiliaries? |
55298 | Oh, ai n''t you? 55298 Oh, but, Daniel, my dear, because her family are''renters?'' |
55298 | Oh, so you are acting independently, as a counterstroke to save yourself from being forced to pay rent for the good home you and your family enjoy?. |
55298 | Oh, you have another chaperon then? 55298 One day, my dear, sich a sharper come to my house out there in the country and he says,''Where''s your husband at?'' |
55298 | Profit at your expense? 55298 Really?" |
55298 | Shall we go down now? |
55298 | She has told you she was going to put it into a lawyer''s hands? |
55298 | She lives in New Munich? |
55298 | Since when have you taken to making epigrams? |
55298 | So the advantage of having me rather than a child''s nurse is that I''d be a fixture? |
55298 | So? |
55298 | Some other time then? 55298 Suppose I said to_ her_,''You must not make engagements without first finding out what mine are?'' |
55298 | Suppose_ your_ husband wanted his sisters to live here,Margaret asked curiously,"you would not consent to it? |
55298 | Supposing she wo n''t leave_ him_ in her room? |
55298 | Surely you know whether you paid two- fifty or three dollars for the book? |
55298 | Taking care of her? |
55298 | Tell me, Walter, dear,_ how_ shall the old woman set about getting her dues? |
55298 | Telling Walter I''m not signing over to you the power of attorney? 55298 That the Episcopals are so tony that way? |
55298 | The James brothers? 55298 The claim of gratitude?" |
55298 | The classics''do help to furnish a room nicely, do n''t they? |
55298 | The essentials to what? |
55298 | The work of a corporation lawyer,she asked Daniel,"is it anything more than a money- making job?" |
55298 | Their will? 55298 Then have I got_ four_ bosses yet at this here place? |
55298 | Then he and his sisters share your enthusiasm over the Hamiltons? |
55298 | Then what do you mean? 55298 Then will you let me use the telephone here?" |
55298 | Then you admit that you_ are_ acting disgracefully in turning her out? |
55298 | Then you think, Margaret, that motherhood is going to be all that it''s cracked up to be? |
55298 | Then_ you_ own those rugs and that silver and china? |
55298 | There never has been a great woman lawyer, has there? |
55298 | They will inherit a great deal, will they? |
55298 | This estate,Daniel cautiously put out a feeler to Miss Berkeley,"belonged to your grandfather?" |
55298 | To go with us? 55298 To marry without love? |
55298 | To whom did the land belong? |
55298 | Two women? 55298 Want to take a little ride, my dear?" |
55298 | Was it? |
55298 | Was n''t your uncle a Christian? |
55298 | Was the young man hanged? |
55298 | We have more interesting things to talk about, have n''t we? 55298 Well, but do n''t you see that''s where we have the advantage over Hiram? |
55298 | Well, dearest? |
55298 | Well, did she get her dress? 55298 Well, if we did?" |
55298 | Well, then, can you, or can you not,_ afford_ to give me more than ten dollars a month for pocket money? 55298 Well, then?" |
55298 | Well, what can a man do? |
55298 | Well, what do_ you_ pay for a party dress? |
55298 | Well, what have you to say for yourself, wench? |
55298 | Well, what is good breeding if it is n''t being courteous in your own house? 55298 Well, what?" |
55298 | Well, what? |
55298 | Well, why_ did n''t_ you think about the cost, when it was all for_ you_? |
55298 | Well? |
55298 | Well? |
55298 | What I want to know is, did she or did n''t she bring Danny_ any_thing? |
55298 | What I''m''worth?'' 55298 What about it?" |
55298 | What about? |
55298 | What are the signs, Harriet? 55298 What are''renters?''" |
55298 | What did you pay for the book, Margaret? |
55298 | What did you spend on_ them_? |
55298 | What do you call''rich,''Margaret? |
55298 | What do you mean by that-- that she_ thinks_ she has told you nothing? |
55298 | What do you mean? |
55298 | What do you mean? |
55298 | What do you want me to write? |
55298 | What else would you call your son''s wife, dearie? |
55298 | What got into her, anyhow, to act so hystericky all of a sudden? |
55298 | What in hell do you imagine the word means? |
55298 | What is that? |
55298 | What is the homestead supposed to be worth and how many heirs are there? |
55298 | What is_ this_ to do? |
55298 | What kind of a woman would it be that could stand Dan Leitzel''s penuriousness? |
55298 | What luncheon? |
55298 | What makes you ask that? |
55298 | What right have I? 55298 What was your impression of her?" |
55298 | What will folks_ say_ to this news, anyhow? |
55298 | What will they be when they get the vote? |
55298 | What would we do without you Leitzels to keep us interested, not to say excited? |
55298 | What''s that package you have, Margaret? |
55298 | What''s up? 55298 What? |
55298 | What? 55298 What?" |
55298 | What? |
55298 | What? |
55298 | What? |
55298 | What_ about_? 55298 When I ca n''t afford to keep up my social end, let alone hers? |
55298 | When can we get together again? |
55298 | When you told Danny all this,asked Margaret, laying her hand on Mrs. Leitzel''s,"he said you had no claim on him?" |
55298 | Where is Mrs. Leitzel, Amanda? |
55298 | Where is the money? |
55298 | Where would the disgrace come in? |
55298 | Which was it, Margaret? |
55298 | Who brought you up here? |
55298 | Who? |
55298 | Why do you wish to know? |
55298 | Why not, when Danny offers you the money? |
55298 | Why not? 55298 Why not? |
55298 | Why not? |
55298 | Why should n''t she believe it? |
55298 | Why should that make any difference to me-- their''having''anything? |
55298 | Why, then, are you not with them? |
55298 | Will we leave Mom know about Danny''s getting married? |
55298 | Will you hook this thing up the back, please, Hattie? |
55298 | Will you let her spend the night here? |
55298 | Will you please excuse me, Mrs. Ocksreider? 55298 Will you see that she gets it, dearie? |
55298 | Will you write the letter before I go to the office to- morrow morning? |
55298 | Wo n''t it do after dinner? |
55298 | Wo n''t she be at Hiram''s to- morrow at the family party at Millerstown? |
55298 | Wo n''t you_ try_ to get up and write the letter? 55298 Would Mr. Leitzel come under that head?" |
55298 | Would it mebby make you ashamed, too,asked Lizzie,"before your grand friends in New Munich, to have her''round, she talks so Dutch and ignorant?" |
55298 | Would n''t you have married me if you had known? |
55298 | Would n''t you think Mrs. Leitzel would have removed it before this party? |
55298 | Would you have gone to her? |
55298 | Yes, ai n''t their coats grand? 55298 Yes, do n''t it, now, beat all?" |
55298 | Yes, how did she, when you gave her the money to go home yet? |
55298 | Yes, well, but how could they blame us when she ai n''t our own mother? |
55298 | Yes, well, but supposing she met_ Mom_ by chance, what would she think? 55298 Yes?" |
55298 | You are a Christian, I trust? |
55298 | You are interested in eugenics? |
55298 | You are not friendly with her? 55298 You are with the old lady a great deal, are n''t you? |
55298 | You are writing something to your brother- in- law you do n''t want me to know about? |
55298 | You bought your new dress-- frock-- gown, this morning? |
55298 | You call_ that_ good breeding, do you, stamping your foot at your benefactor? |
55298 | You could hardly call''em such a trussoo, could you? 55298 You defy me?" |
55298 | You did n''t? |
55298 | You get me? |
55298 | You like children, I hope? |
55298 | You mean they are not profane? |
55298 | You mean_ you_ brought her in? |
55298 | You never get tired of them? |
55298 | You prefer to continue to live in Margaret''s house without in any way compensating her? 55298 You really did all that?" |
55298 | You really think so? |
55298 | You say your husband''s clerk was working on the case? 55298 You say, though, that she is''inoffensive and good- hearted,''and she was your father''s wife?" |
55298 | You spoke of two women, Mr. Leitzel--''Jennie and Sadie''--are they relatives of yours? |
55298 | You think so? |
55298 | You think? |
55298 | You wo n''t consider a compromise? |
55298 | You''consent''to_ let_ me? 55298 You''d deceive him?" |
55298 | You''d like Mr. Leitzel for a brother- in- law, would you, Harriet? |
55298 | You''re begging the question: is it well- bred for a young lady to stamp her foot? |
55298 | You''re only joking, are n''t you? |
55298 | You_ wo n''t_ tell, will you? |
55298 | Your parents are not living? |
55298 | _ Could n''t_ you have proved his innocence? |
55298 | _ Did_ you inherit, too, from your parents? |
55298 | _ Harriet_ wants---- Is she running this wedding? |
55298 | _ How_ do you know? |
55298 | _ What?_"I know a woman that knows her. 55298 _ What_ luncheon? |
55298 | _ Why_ not? |
55298 | _ Why_ would n''t you let her stay here to- night? |
55298 | _ You_ do that? |
55298 | _ Your_ condition? 55298 ''Do n''t you hear our taxicab registering out there while I linger to talk to you? |
55298 | ''Not in society in a little town like this Leesburg, and living in a mansion like_ that_?'' |
55298 | ''You run things and handle the money, do you?'' |
55298 | Ah, Daniel, wo n''t you come home?" |
55298 | Ai n''t it so, Lizzie?" |
55298 | Ai n''t they always glad to see me back again, Lizzie, after my vacation?" |
55298 | Ai n''t you worrying us enough all the time, without raising more trouble between us and Danny''s wife yet?" |
55298 | Ai n''t, Danny? |
55298 | Ai n''t? |
55298 | Ai n''t?" |
55298 | Ai n''t?" |
55298 | And I guess they often bragged to you already, did n''t they-- how they never get over an in_sult_?" |
55298 | And as to Miss Hamilton, have n''t I made it clear to you that it would humiliate me unbearably to have my wife seen in company with my stenographer?" |
55298 | And did I pause for a word, sister- in- law, did I?" |
55298 | And have n''t_ you_ something to say if that owl shall stand on the sideboard or no?" |
55298 | And how could she help having the neighbours in if she was ill and helpless and alone?" |
55298 | And if we should spend money that way for Margaret, where would the children come in?" |
55298 | And in Pennsylvania who asks anything more of a man?" |
55298 | And that she wore her grandmother''s old furs because she_ could n''t afford_ to buy new ones? |
55298 | And they ca n''t afford to pay you rent?" |
55298 | And was the drygoods person who was with her also wholesale?" |
55298 | And what right have_ you_, I''d like to know, to meddle in our family affairs?" |
55298 | And what''s your authority for all the rest of your bluff?" |
55298 | And where is she at?" |
55298 | Any chance of success?" |
55298 | Anyhow, who''s keeping house here, Margaret?" |
55298 | Anyway, see what I_ saved_ in the past twenty years by not standing for treats? |
55298 | Anyway, was not that lack( if lack it had been) now to be supplied by the newcomer, Mrs. Daniel Leitzel? |
55298 | Are n''t we gossiping rather dreadfully? |
55298 | Are they an eminently useful class-- corporation lawyers? |
55298 | Are they here? |
55298 | Are you, my dear, repenting of your unwifely behaviour and writing to him what I want you to?" |
55298 | As for Jennie and Sadie themselves---- Oh, what can Walter be coming here for? |
55298 | As to his view of his own fitness for fatherhood, had he not always led a clean and wholesome life? |
55298 | Blank, how do you do? |
55298 | But I do n''t do it, do I? |
55298 | But are n''t we beginning to think we could get along without corporations?" |
55298 | But as your suitor? |
55298 | But children born outside of love? |
55298 | But do n''t you think, Myrtle, that we might make it all more worth while?" |
55298 | But how was she to spring such a thing upon Walter, who knew no other standard of hospitality than that of the open Southern home? |
55298 | But now? |
55298 | But what could she do about it? |
55298 | But, my dear, why do you, clever as you are, remain in a position that is two thirds drudgery? |
55298 | But,"Daniel chuckled,"I fooled him, did n''t I?" |
55298 | But_ why_ do n''t she want it here?" |
55298 | Ca n''t you get up and write to Walter now? |
55298 | Can anything you ever have or ever will do for me cover_ that_ debt?" |
55298 | Can you give me the names and addresses of any reliable contractors of Charleston?" |
55298 | Church, or do you attend the Episcopal?" |
55298 | Church, would it?" |
55298 | Congressman Ocksreider that you''re down already?" |
55298 | Could I have done_ more_?" |
55298 | Could it be, he wondered with a sinking heart, that she was already engaged to another man? |
55298 | Could you_ understand_ our deep remarks, Daniel?" |
55298 | Did he rue his"blind and headlong"( so he considered it) yielding to her fascination? |
55298 | Did n''t you find him so, Harriet?" |
55298 | Did n''t you find him so?" |
55298 | Did other men''s wives so disregard their husbands''wishes and commands? |
55298 | Did you actually suppose I''d give you the items, like a little school- girl?" |
55298 | Did you and my friend Danny exchange views on social economics before you were married?" |
55298 | Did you buy_ me_ some? |
55298 | Did you ever see me fail to hold my audiences, Lizzie?" |
55298 | Did you make_ his_ acquaintance at Harvard?" |
55298 | Do n''t it wonder you?" |
55298 | Do n''t let the children come to my room and wake me, will you, dear?" |
55298 | Do n''t suppose you''d want me to go to Philadelphia or Lancaster just now, for a gown, with the expense of the party on your hands?" |
55298 | Do n''t you think so?" |
55298 | Do n''t_ you_, too? |
55298 | Do you like these pickles, Danny? |
55298 | Do you mean that you swallowed a bone or something?" |
55298 | Do you notice how spryly he walks? |
55298 | Do you want to come to New Munich with your new aunt, my dear?" |
55298 | Do you_ think_ mebby?" |
55298 | Does Walter have them in charge?" |
55298 | Eastman?" |
55298 | Eh, Margaret?" |
55298 | Eh, dear?" |
55298 | Eh? |
55298 | Family affection? |
55298 | Fancy a grown woman asking a man,''_ May_ I buy a hat to- day?'' |
55298 | Good scheme, was n''t it? |
55298 | Has the baby had her five o''clock bottle?" |
55298 | Have n''t I just been telling you? |
55298 | Have n''t you found_ that_ out yet? |
55298 | Have you fixed the date for the party?" |
55298 | He wondered what it really was that made him tongue- tied whenever he thought of"sounding"her? |
55298 | He''ll be some business man if he does, wo n''t he?" |
55298 | Henry and William James? |
55298 | How awfully narrow our lives are, are n''t they? |
55298 | How can you suppose yourself better qualified than I am to choose my friends? |
55298 | How could even Hiram be hard to_ you_?" |
55298 | How did she dare to do it? |
55298 | How did you get up_ here_, mother?" |
55298 | How do you know Margaret objects to the source of my wealth? |
55298 | How else explain this indifference? |
55298 | How explain to him upon his arrival that her home and her husband''s was not open to him, and that he must stop at a hotel? |
55298 | How much will you give, Jennie?" |
55298 | How would it have_ looked_? |
55298 | How, then, are you receiving your share?" |
55298 | How?" |
55298 | How_ was_ a husband to meet such unnatural behaviour in a wife? |
55298 | I feel ill.""Motor riding makes you ill?" |
55298 | I had not-- you mean, perhaps, some ancient Greek?" |
55298 | I told him once,''If I can better afford than you can to give her a little, and I do n''t ask you to help out, what are you kicking about?'' |
55298 | I''m going ahead too fast, am I? |
55298 | I? |
55298 | In New Munich is a grocer better than a teacher?" |
55298 | In our own country, has any one of our really great Presidents been educated in private schools? |
55298 | Is anything wrong?" |
55298 | Is it tight enough?" |
55298 | Is n''t it deplorable?" |
55298 | Is n''t it queer how they are so proud of their money and yet so afraid to_ spend_ it?" |
55298 | Is n''t she_ queer_?" |
55298 | Is that necessary?" |
55298 | It ai n''t many husbands that would so spend for a wife that-- well, do n''t you think, too, Margaret, that Danny''s awful generous_ considering_?" |
55298 | It belongs to-- to you?" |
55298 | It is rather unsatisfactory, is n''t it? |
55298 | It sounds grand, do n''t it?" |
55298 | It''s next Sabbath we''re invited to Millerstown to spend the day at Hiram''s, you mind?" |
55298 | It''s rather surprising so sharp a lawyer has not made more of a success of himself, eh?" |
55298 | Jennie appealed to her brother,"do you hear the impudence she give me?" |
55298 | Kaufman?" |
55298 | Leave us a few of the old- fashioned women, wo n''t you?" |
55298 | Leitzel?" |
55298 | Leitzel?" |
55298 | Leitzel?" |
55298 | Leitzel?" |
55298 | Leitzel?" |
55298 | Leitzel?" |
55298 | Leitzel?" |
55298 | Let me have another look at the baby before I go, wo n''t you?" |
55298 | Let us go home, now, will you? |
55298 | Lizzie took a step after her:"Maybe you think I spoke too soon?" |
55298 | Love? |
55298 | Margaret sighed as she obeyed,"is it going to be_ that_ awful dope to- day? |
55298 | Margaret suggested;"or of mere humanity?" |
55298 | My dear,"she added, clinging to Margaret''s hand,"stay by me, will you? |
55298 | No good at all, eh?" |
55298 | Nothing wrong, I hope?" |
55298 | Now was n''t that a fix for me? |
55298 | Now what do you mean by that nonsense? |
55298 | Now what was there to laugh at in so serious a question? |
55298 | Of course you were at the luncheon yesterday, however? |
55298 | Portia who? |
55298 | Pretty cute, is n''t it?" |
55298 | Reason with him? |
55298 | See? |
55298 | See?" |
55298 | Shall I, then, excuse you?" |
55298 | Shall we go home now? |
55298 | She was not a good step- mother to you?" |
55298 | She wo n''t can home herself in a strange bed, can you, Mom?" |
55298 | So I really think it would only be poetic justice for you to leave me your money, do n''t you?" |
55298 | Some of that''Feminist''talk, is it, that Miss Hamilton was trying to stuff you with?" |
55298 | Spent for_ what_?" |
55298 | Tell me that, will you?" |
55298 | Tell me, you did not sign an agreement, did you, to accept the house and backyard in lieu of your one third interest in the estate?" |
55298 | That right?" |
55298 | The books?" |
55298 | The other two, then, were respectable?" |
55298 | The world needs more of such souls, does n''t it, as a little leaven in the hardness and sordidness all about us?" |
55298 | Then it''s the case of a client of his?" |
55298 | Think so?" |
55298 | To be sure, the ones she made herself so common with will look to be invited; ai n''t?" |
55298 | To have me die and leave you rich?" |
55298 | Uncle Osmond, what chance have I to fit myself for an occupation, out here at Berkeley Hill, taking care of you? |
55298 | Was he not expensively educated, clever, industrious, honest within the law, and eminently successful? |
55298 | Was n''t Christ''s father nothing but a carpenter?'' |
55298 | Was old Mrs. Leitzel wise or wrong in willing it away from them? |
55298 | Was she laughing at him? |
55298 | We are willing to overlook your having flouted our wishes if you''ll now----""Has Miss Hamilton been to see me and been turned away?" |
55298 | Weak? |
55298 | Well, if up to the present it had lacked old families of"distinguished lineage,"who, in these commercial days, regarded that kind of thing? |
55298 | What can I do?" |
55298 | What could be more quaint and fetching than their spotless white caps on their glossy hair? |
55298 | What do you know of business matters like that anyhow?" |
55298 | What do you say, Sadie?" |
55298 | What do you think of that?" |
55298 | What does he find to write about to such an extent?" |
55298 | What does the man mean?" |
55298 | What for? |
55298 | What is home without a grandmother? |
55298 | What man could give his children a better heritage? |
55298 | What pertness is this? |
55298 | What she did say was:"You did n''t feel this crushing sense of responsibility until after you found yourself pregnant?" |
55298 | What would Uncle Osmond have done with a creature like this Hiram? |
55298 | What would happen, I wonder, if I said''damn''before him? |
55298 | What''ll he say anyhow?" |
55298 | What''s Margaret to her anyhow? |
55298 | What?" |
55298 | What?" |
55298 | When did you ever see a melodrama?" |
55298 | Where are they?" |
55298 | Where is she at?" |
55298 | Which shall I bring you to- night, an eggnog or beer?" |
55298 | Which, in a general way, do you think would cost more to keep-- an automobile or-- or a-- well, a wife?" |
55298 | Who?" |
55298 | Why did n''t you honourably close your door? |
55298 | Why do you say''No?''" |
55298 | Why do you want to?" |
55298 | Why had Walter taken it for granted so easily that because a man was a successful and prominent lawyer he was a gentleman? |
55298 | Why not?" |
55298 | Why not?" |
55298 | Why on earth did she marry him if not for his money? |
55298 | Why should n''t it be? |
55298 | Why, do n''t you feel under some obligation to do something for me, in return for all I do for you?" |
55298 | Why, what could have made you think so? |
55298 | Why, where on earth would you go?" |
55298 | Will she, I wonder, ever reach the point of telling me why she did? |
55298 | Will that make you need me any less? |
55298 | Will that satisfy you?'' |
55298 | Will you attend to it?" |
55298 | Will you be wronging or helping their immortal souls-- if they have any,"Catherine ventured rather fearfully to add,"if you give it back to them? |
55298 | Will you come in to see it and me this afternoon after four o''clock?" |
55298 | Will you?" |
55298 | Will you?" |
55298 | Wo n''t Lizzie look common anyhow, alongside of her?" |
55298 | Wo n''t they be pleased?" |
55298 | Would he have married her if he had known? |
55298 | Would you feel for a cup of tea before you go?" |
55298 | Yes, in these days, when a man marries, he finds himself very_ much_ married, eh, Leitzel?" |
55298 | You came for me? |
55298 | You dictate to me? |
55298 | You do n''t go anywhere any more, do you? |
55298 | You know how Danny always made us promise we''d stay by him, married or single?" |
55298 | You remember, Margaret, the leather store on the corner of Third and Prince streets?" |
55298 | You think well of yourself, do n''t you, wench?" |
55298 | You''d oppose Hiram, would you? |
55298 | Your sisters live in New Munich?" |
55298 | Your telephone out of order?" |
55298 | Your uncle had a lot of sentiment, did n''t he, about your sacrificing your life for him?" |
55298 | Your wives?" |
55298 | _ Frontispiece_"''Benefactor''?" |
55298 | _ Why_ could n''t he make Margaret talk property? |
55298 | _ Why_ would I?" |
55298 | about your smart''deal''with your tenant, George Trout, and your treatment of your step- mother? |
55298 | exclaimed Margaret, her face flushed with excitement,"why did n''t you, from the very first, get your one third interest in those coal lands? |
55298 | he exclaimed,"what can you be thinking of? |
55298 | he laughed sardonically,"would n''t you rather go to hell than have to hear him preach?" |
55298 | said Daniel almost coquettishly,"that''s to remind me that you have n''t accepted me yet? |
55298 | she asked him,"except Portia?" |
55298 | she cried in a tragic voice,"is the owl broke?" |
55298 | she exclaimed as she saw that Mr. Leitzel looked unenlightened,"you do n''t know who he_ was_? |
23108 | ''Where are you working?'' 23108 A dollar?" |
23108 | A quarter? |
23108 | About how old? |
23108 | About the old matter? |
23108 | After he had charged me with stealing? 23108 Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself?" |
23108 | Am I right about there being a future for the place? |
23108 | Am I to arrest this man? |
23108 | An artist, and own real estate? 23108 And did you get any money for it?" |
23108 | And do you get good pay for them? |
23108 | And does that pay? |
23108 | And have you ever been in arrears before? |
23108 | And he did n''t pay it? |
23108 | And he is a real estate broker? |
23108 | And if he offers you back your old place you wo n''t take it? |
23108 | And is she well? |
23108 | And perhaps you put your friends in occasionally? |
23108 | And that reminds me, do n''t you feel hungry? 23108 And then you put it in your pocket?" |
23108 | And then you''ll get me into the place? |
23108 | And where do you live? |
23108 | And who authorized you to meddle in a matter that did not concern you? |
23108 | And why have you only three dollars and a half, I''d like to know? |
23108 | And why not, I should like to know? |
23108 | And you are a contributor to_ Puck_ and other papers? |
23108 | And you bring it to me? |
23108 | And you come from Clement Fairchild? |
23108 | And you find him better than Chester? |
23108 | And you handle the funds? |
23108 | And you have never been out this way before? |
23108 | And you knew my poor son? |
23108 | And you managed to live on five dollars a week? |
23108 | And you received ten dollars each? |
23108 | And you used to see Edward? |
23108 | And-- you are staying at the Fifth Avenue Hotel? |
23108 | Any other objectionable habits? |
23108 | Are you Chester Rand? |
23108 | Are you a fool? 23108 Are you a friend of his?" |
23108 | Are you a minister, too? |
23108 | Are you at leisure this afternoon? |
23108 | Are you doin''a large business? 23108 Are you doin''anything yet?" |
23108 | Are you doing pretty well? |
23108 | Are you expecting to earn your living that way? |
23108 | Are you fond of the theater? |
23108 | Are you going as an artist? |
23108 | Are you going to stay here long? |
23108 | Are you going to the theater, Chester? |
23108 | Are you in trouble, my friend? |
23108 | Are you not afraid that I will take you to a gambling house? |
23108 | Are you out of work? |
23108 | Are you sick? |
23108 | Are you through work for the day? |
23108 | Are you willing to pay his expenses? 23108 At once?" |
23108 | At what price are lots selling on this street? |
23108 | But I thought he sent you to call on me? |
23108 | But how came she to give you a pie? |
23108 | But how can I give it to you? |
23108 | But how could he do it if the money was took last night? 23108 But is it right for me to live there when you are rich and prosperous?" |
23108 | But it would n''t be well to sell at present, would it? |
23108 | But the money, Chester? |
23108 | But what shall I do for a bed? |
23108 | But what was the matter? 23108 But what work can you do there?" |
23108 | But when will you work? |
23108 | But will he do it? 23108 But will she be willing to pay so much?" |
23108 | But would your uncle approve of your giving me such a valuable present? |
23108 | But you are going there? |
23108 | But you''ve lost the place? |
23108 | By that rascal, Mullins? 23108 Ca n''t you give me a quarter? |
23108 | Can I sell you a house this morning? |
23108 | Can you furnish any evidence of this? |
23108 | Can you throw any light on the events of to- day? |
23108 | Cash down, or do you want to have part of the purchase money on mortgage? |
23108 | Chester,said Mr. Fairchild,"has Mr. Mullins mentioned to you that I start next Monday on a Western trip?" |
23108 | Chester,said the bookkeeper,"you may go up to the Fifth Avenue Hotel and ask at the office if Mr. Paul Perkins, of Minneapolis, has arrived?" |
23108 | Chester,said the minister, kindly,"how does it happen that you have an assistant to- day?" |
23108 | Could n''t you mention my name, too, Uncle Edgar? |
23108 | Did Ernest ever see him before, sir? |
23108 | Did I hear you speaking of Tacoma? |
23108 | Did Mr. Mullins say where he was going? |
23108 | Did he give his name? |
23108 | Did he take anything with him? |
23108 | Did he? |
23108 | Did my nephew leave any money? |
23108 | Did n''t Chester look glum when you bounced him? |
23108 | Did n''t I see him going to the Elevated station with you just now? |
23108 | Did n''t Mr. Mullins give you one? |
23108 | Did n''t he invite you to spend the night in the house? |
23108 | Did n''t my friend Floyd see him drowned? |
23108 | Did n''t they leave no traces? |
23108 | Did the bookkeeper have any other reasons for disliking you? |
23108 | Did you come to see me? |
23108 | Did you dine with Mr. Perkins last evening? |
23108 | Did you ever lose or mislay a receipt, sir? |
23108 | Did you go to Long''s? |
23108 | Did you go with them? |
23108 | Did you hear anything of him? |
23108 | Did you know Edward''s companions? |
23108 | Did you know the ticket was missing when you boarded the train? |
23108 | Did you make any entry on the books? |
23108 | Did you make yourself known to him? |
23108 | Did you really draw this yourself? |
23108 | Did you see Chester? |
23108 | Did you see anything of Ralston? |
23108 | Did you see that man from Minneapolis and Chester? |
23108 | Did you tell him you wanted an office? |
23108 | Do I think so? 23108 Do n''t you believe my ticket was stolen?" |
23108 | Do you box, Chester? |
23108 | Do you consider it too much? 23108 Do you expect her back?" |
23108 | Do you get good pay? |
23108 | Do you get pay for that? |
23108 | Do you get six dollars? |
23108 | Do you have to work hard? 23108 Do you know anything about him?" |
23108 | Do you know anything about the city? |
23108 | Do you know anything of Mr. Mullins outside of the office? |
23108 | Do you know what I am going to do with this sketch of yours? |
23108 | Do you know what he is now? |
23108 | Do you know what it''s about? |
23108 | Do you know where Lexington Avenue is? |
23108 | Do you know where he lives? |
23108 | Do you like to cry out in that manner? |
23108 | Do you need an advance for the expenses of your journey? |
23108 | Do you really mean it? |
23108 | Do you receive as much as that? |
23108 | Do you see that man in front of us? |
23108 | Do you see that man? |
23108 | Do you suppose he suspects anything? |
23108 | Do you think I shall pull through, doctor? |
23108 | Do you think that he acted wrongfully? |
23108 | Do you want me to break off acquaintance with him? |
23108 | Do you want me to bring an affidavit from my employers? |
23108 | Do you want me to do anything? |
23108 | Do you want me to take you with me, mother? |
23108 | Do-- do you think Cousin David will come back? |
23108 | Does Mr. James Long live here? |
23108 | Does he ever sit in your lap, like this? |
23108 | Does he suffer pain? |
23108 | Does he treat my mother well? |
23108 | Does that mean you are sorry I was not drowned? |
23108 | Does the new boy smoke cigarettes? |
23108 | Eighteen hundred dollars? |
23108 | Ernest, which do you like best, me or him? |
23108 | Felix,said the bookkeeper,"you remember the arrangement I made with you yesterday?" |
23108 | Give me time, ca n''t you? 23108 Good joke, was n''t it? |
23108 | Has Mr. Tripp spoken to you? |
23108 | Has anybody been in? |
23108 | Has he adopted you? |
23108 | Has he any bad habits? 23108 Has he got another place?" |
23108 | Has the old fellow got money? |
23108 | Have I got to lose the money? |
23108 | Have n''t you the receipt? |
23108 | Have one? |
23108 | Have you another place? |
23108 | Have you any engagement for this evening? |
23108 | Have you been to New York to- day? |
23108 | Have you brought the money? |
23108 | Have you ever been further West than Minneapolis? |
23108 | Have you got a better boy in his place? |
23108 | Have you got a loose quarter about you? 23108 Have you got a place yet, Chester?" |
23108 | Have you grown to feel at home in the city? |
23108 | Have you had any communication with her since you left Portland? |
23108 | Have you had bad news? |
23108 | Have you had supper, sir? |
23108 | Have you opened any of the other packages? |
23108 | Have you seen Chester Rand lately? |
23108 | Have you seen him since you came to Wyncombe? |
23108 | Have you-- seen my mother lately? |
23108 | He took the money? |
23108 | Hey? 23108 How am I to return it?" |
23108 | How are you getting along, Felix? |
23108 | How are you off for wood, mother? |
23108 | How are you, Chester? |
23108 | How are you, Dick? 23108 How are you, kid?" |
23108 | How can I get acquainted with him? |
23108 | How can I repay you? |
23108 | How can there be? |
23108 | How could it? 23108 How did he know about my store?" |
23108 | How did that window come open, Abel? |
23108 | How did you become so poor? |
23108 | How did you know that I was coming to New York? 23108 How did you like it?" |
23108 | How do you account for that, Herbert? |
23108 | How do you account for that? |
23108 | How do you feel about coming to New York, Chester? |
23108 | How do you get along with Silas Tripp? |
23108 | How do you know I am rich and prosperous? |
23108 | How do you know I have? |
23108 | How do you know my name? |
23108 | How do you like working in the store, Abel? |
23108 | How is that? |
23108 | How is that? |
23108 | How is that? |
23108 | How is that? |
23108 | How long ago was this? |
23108 | How long did it take you to draw this picture? |
23108 | How long does he stay in the city? |
23108 | How long has Mr. Mullins been in Mr. Fairchild''s employ? |
23108 | How long has your cousin-- Mr. Mullins-- been in this office? |
23108 | How long have you been drawing? |
23108 | How long were you in making the drawing? |
23108 | How much did he give you? |
23108 | How much do you charge for_ Puck_? |
23108 | How much do you think his uncle offered me? |
23108 | How much is the fare to Tacoma from this point? |
23108 | How much money will take you home? |
23108 | How much pay do you get? |
23108 | How much salary do you expect to get? |
23108 | How much would you be willing to give? |
23108 | How much? |
23108 | How old are you, Walter? |
23108 | How soon do you expect Fairchild back? |
23108 | How was he employed? |
23108 | How will you do it? |
23108 | How''s she goin''to live? 23108 How''s that?" |
23108 | How''s that? |
23108 | How''s that? |
23108 | How''s your mother this mornin'', Chester? |
23108 | How? |
23108 | How? |
23108 | I believe this is Mr. Perkins, of Minneapolis? |
23108 | I believe you know Chester Rand? |
23108 | I have got along pretty well in the last twelve months, have n''t I? |
23108 | I know the ropes pretty well, and I flatter myself I can show you the town as well as anyone, eh, Mullins? |
23108 | I s''pose it cost you considerable money? |
23108 | I say, Cousin David, are n''t you going to bounce that boy pretty quick and give me his place? |
23108 | I say, boss,said the tramp,"ca n''t you give a poor man a quarter to help him along?" |
23108 | I say, boy,said Ralston,"you''re employed by Fairchild, the real estate man, ai n''t you?" |
23108 | I suppose he did n''t say nothin''about his place? |
23108 | I suppose that means Robert Fisher? |
23108 | I suppose there is no change in him? |
23108 | I suppose you began your art education early? |
23108 | I suppose you do n''t care to come back to the office, Chester? |
23108 | I suppose you hear from her? |
23108 | I suppose you went to the theater? |
23108 | I suppose you''ve heard that the widder Rand has lost her boarder? |
23108 | I think you mentioned that you were going into a real estate office? |
23108 | I understand you wish to leave the entire property to your husband? |
23108 | I wish I could see the young man whose life you saved,she said, after a pause,"Have you his name and address?" |
23108 | In Maine? |
23108 | In New York Bay? |
23108 | In the same business? |
23108 | In what way? |
23108 | In what way? |
23108 | Is Chester at home? |
23108 | Is Mr. Fairchild in? |
23108 | Is Mr. Fairchild in? |
23108 | Is Mr. Fairchild in? |
23108 | Is Mr. Fairchild in? |
23108 | Is he at home? |
23108 | Is he off for a journey? |
23108 | Is he sick or in pain? |
23108 | Is he there now? |
23108 | Is he-- sick? |
23108 | Is he? |
23108 | Is he? |
23108 | Is it a trick of yours? |
23108 | Is it possible? |
23108 | Is it possible? |
23108 | Is it so much as that? |
23108 | Is it, indeed? 23108 Is n''t he here now?" |
23108 | Is n''t it a good bill? |
23108 | Is n''t it, uncle? 23108 Is n''t the handkerchief yours?" |
23108 | Is n''t this something new,he asked,"about you going to New York, I mean?" |
23108 | Is that Mr. Fairchild''s office? |
23108 | Is that so, Chester? |
23108 | Is that so? 23108 Is that what you sell?" |
23108 | Is the bookkeeper in? |
23108 | Is the man who has just left you related to you? |
23108 | Is there a lawyer in the village? |
23108 | Is there any chance of it? |
23108 | Is there anyone you would wish me to notify if the worst comes? |
23108 | Is there anything too base for such a man to do to get money? |
23108 | Is this the editor of_ The Phoenix_? |
23108 | Is your mother willin''to have you go? |
23108 | Is zis zer store? 23108 It might be stipulated that if the missing son does not appear within three years from the time the will is made he may be regarded as dead?" |
23108 | Matter? 23108 May I come in, uncle?" |
23108 | Meanwhile-- that is, while he is away-- you have full swing, eh? |
23108 | More''n five dollars a week? |
23108 | Mr. Mullins, did Mr. Long come to the office on the day when he says he paid the rent? |
23108 | Mr. Mullins,he said,"what could induce you to engage in such a wicked plot?" |
23108 | Mr. Mullins,he said,"you wish to know who robbed your office boy of the money he drew from the bank?" |
23108 | Mr. Perkins must be a rich man? |
23108 | Mr. Sharpleigh, will you accompany the officer and prefer charges? |
23108 | No, really? 23108 No; what makes you ask?" |
23108 | Now, where shall we go? |
23108 | Oh, he did, did he? |
23108 | Oh, wo n''t you come back to the office with me and tell my cousin that? 23108 Oh, you can, can you? |
23108 | Oho, that''s what you''re after, is it? |
23108 | Oho, you admit that, do you? 23108 Perhaps you can get some more work of the same kind?" |
23108 | Perhaps,he said, nervously,"you would raise me to three dollars and a half?" |
23108 | Robbed-- of what? |
23108 | Sha n''t I get anything for my trouble? |
23108 | Shall I bring him up? |
23108 | Shall I carry him his handkerchief? |
23108 | Shall I tell her you will take Chester back? |
23108 | Shall we say next Wednesday evening, at eight o''clock sharp? 23108 Since you own property in our neighborhood, Mr. Rand,"said Prof. Nugent,"why do n''t you make us a visit?" |
23108 | So Mr. Tripp wants to see me? |
23108 | So he has a comfortable home? |
23108 | So he puts on airs, does he? |
23108 | So sorry? 23108 So that is the way you spent the quarter I gave you?" |
23108 | So you are getting on your high horse, Mullins, are you? |
23108 | So you do n''t know what he wants to see me about? |
23108 | So you''re promoted to boss? |
23108 | So you''ve come, have you, you young thief? |
23108 | So, Mr. Fairchild engaged you through Mr. Conrad, did he? |
23108 | So? 23108 So? |
23108 | So? 23108 Some friend of mine notified you of my coming to New York? |
23108 | That is where Mr. Conrad lives, is n''t it? |
23108 | That means a glass of whisky, does n''t it? |
23108 | That means that the odds are against me? |
23108 | The apple orchard? 23108 The real estate agent?" |
23108 | The store was robbed? |
23108 | Then Ralston does n''t come into the office? |
23108 | Then he brought all this upon you? |
23108 | Then he gave you a receipt? |
23108 | Then how came your handkerchief here? |
23108 | Then how did it come open, that''s what I want to know? |
23108 | Then it was not all put in one parcel? |
23108 | Then this five- dollar bill did n''t come from him? |
23108 | Then why are you not there? |
23108 | Then why did you leave the handkerchief on the flour barrel? |
23108 | Then you are satisfied, sir? |
23108 | Then you did n''t know I was here? |
23108 | Then you have been in Wyncombe before? |
23108 | Then you wo n''t do anything for him? 23108 Then,"said the landlady, in some dismay,"is n''t it imprudent to take a more expensive room?" |
23108 | To go to New York? |
23108 | To live? |
23108 | To my letter? |
23108 | To whom do you wish to give them? |
23108 | To whom will you leave the thousand dollars? |
23108 | Two thousand? |
23108 | Was all the money bogus? |
23108 | Was he in any business? |
23108 | Was it the boy I saw just after I came in-- a dark- complexioned boy with black hair? |
23108 | Was she dissatisfied, do you think? |
23108 | Was the board good? |
23108 | Was there any boat near, Floyd? |
23108 | Was this handkerchief found in the store? |
23108 | Was this package given you at the bank? |
23108 | Well, Chester,said Mr. Gardener, pleasantly,"have you disposed of your lots in Tacoma yet?" |
23108 | Well, ai n''t you? |
23108 | Well, did he pay his rent? |
23108 | Well, did you pass the evening with that cowboy from Minneapolis? |
23108 | Well, it''s no worse for being a poorhouse, is it? |
23108 | Well,said David Mullins, addressing his cousin Felix,"did you go to the Fifth Avenue Hotel last evening?" |
23108 | Well,said the bookkeeper,"what''s the matter?" |
23108 | Well? |
23108 | Well? |
23108 | Were you at work there? 23108 Were you in pain?" |
23108 | What are you looking at so intently, my son? |
23108 | What can I do for you? |
23108 | What complaint does Mr. Fairchild make of you? |
23108 | What could they suspect? |
23108 | What did he say? |
23108 | What did you find out? |
23108 | What did you get for this? |
23108 | What do you say to that, Chester? |
23108 | What do you think he done this mornin''? |
23108 | What do you think of that, Chester? |
23108 | What do you work at when you are employed? |
23108 | What does it mean, Arthur? |
23108 | What have you found? |
23108 | What have you there, Chester? |
23108 | What house is that? |
23108 | What if you have? |
23108 | What if''tis? 23108 What is it, then?" |
23108 | What is it? |
23108 | What is it? |
23108 | What is the boy thinkin''of? 23108 What is the matter, my boy?" |
23108 | What is the matter? |
23108 | What is your name, boy? |
23108 | What kind of an artist are you? |
23108 | What made him do it? |
23108 | What name? |
23108 | What on earth brought Mr. Tripp to New York? |
23108 | What pay do you get? |
23108 | What shall we do, Chester? |
23108 | What shall you do about Ralston? |
23108 | What sort of a boy is he? |
23108 | What sort of a contract? |
23108 | What sort of a man is he? |
23108 | What sort of a place is it? |
23108 | What sort of work do you do? |
23108 | What time do you leave the office? |
23108 | What time does he shut up shop? |
23108 | What was his name? |
23108 | What was it? |
23108 | What was taken? |
23108 | What was the appearance of the person? |
23108 | What was you doin''out West? |
23108 | What would you have me do? |
23108 | What''s it? |
23108 | What''s that? |
23108 | What''s the matter with whisky? |
23108 | What''s the matter, Edward? |
23108 | What''s the matter, Felix? |
23108 | What''s wanted, Silas? |
23108 | What''s your name? |
23108 | What, and leave the store? |
23108 | What-- this boy? |
23108 | What? |
23108 | Whaz- zer matter? |
23108 | When did you last see your ticket? |
23108 | When do you think Jimmy will get well? |
23108 | When do you want me to go up to the house? |
23108 | When he worked for you? |
23108 | When was that? |
23108 | When was your birthday? |
23108 | When will he be in? |
23108 | When? |
23108 | Where am I? |
23108 | Where are you employed? |
23108 | Where did they go? |
23108 | Where did you come from, sir? |
23108 | Where did you find it? |
23108 | Where did you get so much money? |
23108 | Where did you get the money to come? |
23108 | Where did you get the money, Chester? |
23108 | Where did you get them all? |
23108 | Where did you work? |
23108 | Where do you come from? |
23108 | Where do you live? |
23108 | Where do you live? |
23108 | Where do you wish me to work? |
23108 | Where is Mr. Fairchild''s office? |
23108 | Where is he now? |
23108 | Where is it? |
23108 | Where is my money, you villain? |
23108 | Where is the office? |
23108 | Where''s Mullins? |
23108 | Where? 23108 Where? |
23108 | Where? |
23108 | Where? |
23108 | Whereabouts? |
23108 | Who are you? |
23108 | Who are you? |
23108 | Who is he? |
23108 | Who is he? |
23108 | Who is interested in Tacoma? |
23108 | Who is it? |
23108 | Who is it? |
23108 | Who is it? |
23108 | Who says I will? |
23108 | Who says he is going to work here? |
23108 | Who told you I was? |
23108 | Who told you so? |
23108 | Who told you? |
23108 | Who''s that boy? |
23108 | Whom have you selected for that office? |
23108 | Why did n''t you call upon me? 23108 Why did n''t you stay in the country, where you had a comfortable home?" |
23108 | Why did you discharge him? |
23108 | Why did you leave him? |
23108 | Why did you take my handkerchief last night? |
23108 | Why do n''t you sell it? 23108 Why do some people have so much and others so little?" |
23108 | Why do you think Mr. Mullins discharged you? |
23108 | Why is it curious? |
23108 | Why not? |
23108 | Why should n''t I go to Tacoma? |
23108 | Why were you not more careful when you knew you had so much money in your care? |
23108 | Why, Mr. Tripp? 23108 Why, mother,"said Rob,"is that you?" |
23108 | Why? |
23108 | Will four dollars a week be too much? |
23108 | Will my being a boy make any difference? |
23108 | Will you ask him to call here to- morrow? |
23108 | Will you come and see me again? |
23108 | Will you do it to- day? |
23108 | Will you give me an idea of what has been done during my absence? |
23108 | Will you really be my friend? |
23108 | Will you serve? |
23108 | Will you stay with me a little while? |
23108 | Will your son be able to pay this? |
23108 | With a grip in his hand? |
23108 | Wo n''t I get somethin''for tryin''to save the kid''s life? |
23108 | Wo n''t it cost a good deal of money? |
23108 | Wo n''t you come in and take a cup of coffee while Chester is finishing his breakfast? |
23108 | Wo n''t you come in? |
23108 | Wo n''t you give me a specimen of your work? 23108 Wo n''t you give me a trifle, Dick?" |
23108 | Wo n''t you go out and take a drink? 23108 Wo n''t you introduce me to your friend?" |
23108 | Would he give me one? |
23108 | Would you advise me to keep them or sell if I have the chance? |
23108 | Yes; but suppose you were to fall sick, with no one to look after you? |
23108 | Yes; what of him? |
23108 | You Chester Rand? |
23108 | You ai n''t goin''to run a bill, be you? |
23108 | You ai n''t rich, are you? |
23108 | You are going to live in New York, are n''t you? |
23108 | You are left in charge here during Mr. Fairchild''s absence? |
23108 | You are not afraid of failure, are you? |
23108 | You came to New York directly? |
23108 | You do n''t feel any grudge against me for taking your place? |
23108 | You do n''t know? |
23108 | You do n''t mean that? |
23108 | You do n''t say so? 23108 You do n''t think he took the money?" |
23108 | You do n''t want to take me into your office and make a lawyer of me, Mr. Gardener, do you? |
23108 | You do? |
23108 | You have been in New York recently? |
23108 | You have n''t missed money before, have you? |
23108 | You have never been to New York, Chester? |
23108 | You have no property to dispose of by will? |
23108 | You have relatives there? |
23108 | You have? |
23108 | You mean run away? |
23108 | You seem to have been very careless? |
23108 | You sold it? |
23108 | You think he meant to cheat me? |
23108 | You think the lots are worth something? |
23108 | You will be willing to testify to this at the police office? 23108 You would n''t get more than thirty- five cents for such a picture, would you?" |
23108 | You would n''t have us turn him into the street? |
23108 | You''ll illustrate my book, wo n''t you? |
23108 | You-- a boy? 23108 Your father?" |
23108 | Your mother lives in the country, does n''t she? |
23108 | After Chester went out, Ralston inquired,"Is there a man named Paul Perkins?" |
23108 | And how do you like my quarters?" |
23108 | And then?" |
23108 | Are you at work?" |
23108 | Are you living here?" |
23108 | Are you trying to get a place?" |
23108 | Are you willing to work exclusively for_ The Phoenix_?" |
23108 | As Felix started off on a half run, Mr. Perkins said:"Do you know why I was so polite to Felix, who by all accounts is n''t your friend at all?" |
23108 | At the end of that time, how do you think I stood?" |
23108 | Bruce?" |
23108 | But ai n''t you working up at the store?" |
23108 | But his brain was busy with the thought,"Where could James Long have obtained the receipt?" |
23108 | But how did he happen to call on you?" |
23108 | But wo n''t it be too much for your mother?" |
23108 | By the way, how much do they pay you at the office?" |
23108 | Can I do anything for you this morning?" |
23108 | Can you spare me?" |
23108 | Can you tell me where he lives?" |
23108 | Can you tell where I can get a good dinner moderate?" |
23108 | Carlin?" |
23108 | Coleman?" |
23108 | Come, you''ll help me, wo n''t you?" |
23108 | Conrad?" |
23108 | Conrad?" |
23108 | Conrad?" |
23108 | Conrad?" |
23108 | Could he send her enough from the city to help her along? |
23108 | Dexter?" |
23108 | Did he have that much?" |
23108 | Did n''t he tell you?" |
23108 | Did n''t you send this boy with a message?" |
23108 | Did the paying teller look suspicious when you presented the check?" |
23108 | Did you enjoy the play, Felix?" |
23108 | Did you ever take lessons?" |
23108 | Did you find Chester?" |
23108 | Did you have a pleasant journey?" |
23108 | Did you have the toothache?''" |
23108 | Did you really design it?" |
23108 | Did you see anyone likely to commit the theft, sir?" |
23108 | Did you wish to see him?" |
23108 | Do n''t I, Mullins?" |
23108 | Do n''t you know me any better than that?" |
23108 | Do you come as a friend or an enemy?" |
23108 | Do you expect to save it out of your salary?" |
23108 | Do you get fair pay?" |
23108 | Do you know how much money I spent the first three months I was at work?" |
23108 | Do you know if they keep company outside?" |
23108 | Do you know what he paid?" |
23108 | Do you know whom he is walking with?" |
23108 | Do you know, Mullins, you are owing me seven hundred and fifty dollars?" |
23108 | Do you know,"he continued, changing the subject,"that you have got the situation I was after?" |
23108 | Do you often produce such sketches?" |
23108 | Do you think Mrs. T. will believe your story if you come to her smelling of whisky?" |
23108 | Do you think they suspected anything?" |
23108 | Do you think we can give him a bed?" |
23108 | Do you think you can copy them?" |
23108 | Do you want to see him?" |
23108 | Do your folks go to bed early, Chester?" |
23108 | Does Mr. Tripp suspect anybody?" |
23108 | Does he drink?" |
23108 | Does he get as much pay as he did at the other place?" |
23108 | Edward Granger?" |
23108 | Fairchild?" |
23108 | Fairchild?" |
23108 | Fairchild?" |
23108 | Fairchild?" |
23108 | Fairchild?" |
23108 | Fairchild?" |
23108 | Father does n''t give me much spending money-- only twenty- five cents a week, and what''s a fellow to do with such a beggarly sum as that?" |
23108 | Finally Mr. Mullins said,"What did I understand you to call yourself?" |
23108 | Floyd?" |
23108 | Floyd?" |
23108 | For what?" |
23108 | Gardener?" |
23108 | Gardener?" |
23108 | Greene?" |
23108 | Hain''t he writ anything special to you?" |
23108 | Has Mr. Fairchild returned?" |
23108 | Has he got money?" |
23108 | Has the receipt been found?" |
23108 | Have n''t you got any money saved up?" |
23108 | Have you a boy workin''for you named Chester-- Chester Rand?" |
23108 | Have you a taste for jewelry? |
23108 | Have you any message for him if I happen to meet him?" |
23108 | Have you any work ready? |
23108 | Have you been living in the country?" |
23108 | Have you ever been out West?" |
23108 | Have you ever seen him before?" |
23108 | Have you ever thought of coming to New York to live? |
23108 | Have you got a place?" |
23108 | Have you got another place?" |
23108 | Have you had supper, Felix?" |
23108 | Have you had supper?" |
23108 | Have you heard from Fairchild yet?" |
23108 | He asked me to inquire if he left his gloves here?" |
23108 | He does n''t have any chance to pick up any money in this office, does he?" |
23108 | He is not what may be called an intemperate man?" |
23108 | How about that quarter?" |
23108 | How can I make such a long and costly journey?" |
23108 | How can he? |
23108 | How did you leave your mother?" |
23108 | How do you like it?" |
23108 | How do you propose to pay me the nine hundred and sixty- odd dollars you owe me? |
23108 | How do you think you shall like the city?" |
23108 | How far are you going?" |
23108 | How is it with you, Chester?" |
23108 | How long have you been in the office?" |
23108 | How long is he going to stay at the Fifth Avenue?" |
23108 | How long will Mr. Fairchild be absent?" |
23108 | How many lots do you own?" |
23108 | How much did you get at the other place?" |
23108 | How much do you think I have to pay for my room-- without board?" |
23108 | How much money is there on deposit in the bank?" |
23108 | How much wages did you pay him?" |
23108 | How much wages do you pay him?" |
23108 | How old are you?" |
23108 | How old are you?" |
23108 | How should he occupy his spare time? |
23108 | How soon do you expect him back?" |
23108 | How soon shall you try to get even with that boy?" |
23108 | How would you like to take a boarder?" |
23108 | How''d you get it?" |
23108 | I believe I agreed to pay you two dollars for each sketch?" |
23108 | I did as well as I could, and what do you think he said?" |
23108 | I hope he did n''t drink?" |
23108 | I may rely upon you bearing in mind what I told you the other day?" |
23108 | I s''pose you was sorry to hear that Miss Dolby had gone away?" |
23108 | I suppose Long will call at the office to- morrow?" |
23108 | I suppose you do n''t know much about New York?" |
23108 | I suppose you do n''t know where it is?" |
23108 | I suppose you have been there?" |
23108 | I suppose you have n''t any houses like that in Wyncombe?" |
23108 | I suppose, under the circumstances, we must let you go; but why need you give up your work? |
23108 | If Dick Ralston and others could be lucky, why not he? |
23108 | If you''ll only wait a little while, sir----""How long have you been paying rent here?" |
23108 | Is Tiffany''s near here?" |
23108 | Is he a good friend of yours?" |
23108 | Is he as big as me?" |
23108 | Is he extravagant? |
23108 | Is it a fashionable place?" |
23108 | Is it far off? |
23108 | Is it in the real estate business?" |
23108 | Is it likely to be permanent?" |
23108 | Is there any chance in that line here?" |
23108 | Is your mother workin''?" |
23108 | It''s a smart yarn, is n''t it?" |
23108 | It''s a two- story building, ai n''t it, with a piazza?" |
23108 | Let me ask how you became possessed of these lots?" |
23108 | Long?" |
23108 | May I ask you if you live in New York-- the city, I mean?" |
23108 | Mullins?" |
23108 | Mullins?" |
23108 | Mullins?" |
23108 | Must you have me risk prison?" |
23108 | Now the opportunity had come, but could he accept it? |
23108 | Now, do n''t you?" |
23108 | Now, shall we go back to my room, or would you like to take a walk and see something of the city?" |
23108 | Now, will you take the fifty dollars I offered you?" |
23108 | Otherwise, how could James Long have recovered the receipt? |
23108 | Perhaps you will come, too, Edward?" |
23108 | Perkins?" |
23108 | Perkins?" |
23108 | Perkins?" |
23108 | Ralston?" |
23108 | Rand?" |
23108 | Rand?" |
23108 | Say, Chester, old Tripp is rich, ai n''t he?" |
23108 | See?" |
23108 | Shall I carry your valise?" |
23108 | Shall I take the baby?" |
23108 | Shall I tell him how you found and gave me back the receipt?" |
23108 | Shall I tell you my experience?" |
23108 | Shall I tell you what I did once?" |
23108 | Shall I write her that you will receive her?" |
23108 | Sharpleigh?" |
23108 | She is Scotch, is n''t she?" |
23108 | So you are just beginning the battle of life?" |
23108 | The bookkeeper might still play a trick upon you?" |
23108 | The question arose, How would his mother get along in his absence? |
23108 | The young man, encouraged perhaps by this evidence of interest, spoke, hurriedly:"Do you know,"he asked,"where I can get a bed for the night?" |
23108 | Their hearts were filled with pity for the young man, but how could they bear the expense which this sickness would entail upon them? |
23108 | Trimble?" |
23108 | Trimble?" |
23108 | Trimble?" |
23108 | Tripp?" |
23108 | Tripp?" |
23108 | Tripp?" |
23108 | Tripp?" |
23108 | Tripp?" |
23108 | Tripp?" |
23108 | Was Mr. Rand in the same office with you?" |
23108 | Was it possible that he had misjudged him? |
23108 | Was n''t he discharged? |
23108 | Was the robbery planned?" |
23108 | Well, what do you say? |
23108 | What about?" |
23108 | What are you going for?" |
23108 | What are your hours?" |
23108 | What can he be doing in New York?" |
23108 | What did he do?" |
23108 | What do you propose to do with the four thousand dollars you will receive in cash?" |
23108 | What do you think I had better do?" |
23108 | What do you think of Mr. Conrad''s proposal?" |
23108 | What does he say now?" |
23108 | What is his name?" |
23108 | What is the matter with you? |
23108 | What is the trouble?" |
23108 | What is your address?" |
23108 | What is your address?" |
23108 | What is your business?" |
23108 | What kind of property?" |
23108 | What made him come to Wyncombe to get sick? |
23108 | What makes you think so?" |
23108 | What name?" |
23108 | What of him?" |
23108 | What on earth makes him think I would stoop to do such a thing?" |
23108 | What sends him home so soon?" |
23108 | What should he do with it? |
23108 | What sort of a boy is Felix?" |
23108 | What sort of a lookin''man is this man Tripp? |
23108 | What square is this?" |
23108 | What street is this?" |
23108 | What was the name of the friend who spoke about me and my plans?" |
23108 | What will you do?" |
23108 | What''ll you charge to shovel a path?" |
23108 | What''s the figure?" |
23108 | What''s up?" |
23108 | When Chester returned to the office Mullins asked, sharply:"What did Perkins want to say to you?" |
23108 | When am I to go to work?" |
23108 | When at leisure, Chester asked:"Has Mr. Paul Perkins, of Minneapolis, arrived at the hotel?" |
23108 | When did Mr. Fairchild return?" |
23108 | When did you leave the store?" |
23108 | When do you want to start?" |
23108 | When do you wish me to commence?" |
23108 | When he entered the office, Mullins demanded, sharply,"What made you so long?" |
23108 | When he had gone, Ralston said,"Who is that, Mullins?" |
23108 | When they were in the street, Felix asked:"Where did you pick up the boy? |
23108 | When you hired your rooms, you agreed to pay the rent, did n''t you?" |
23108 | Where are you goin''to work?" |
23108 | Where did you come from?" |
23108 | Where did you get such a boarder in Wyncombe?" |
23108 | Where is it?" |
23108 | Where is the money you took?" |
23108 | Where on earth did he get the money? |
23108 | Where shall I direct?" |
23108 | Where''d you get it?" |
23108 | Where?" |
23108 | Who says it was my handkerchief?" |
23108 | Who told you I was dead?" |
23108 | Who was that Ralston? |
23108 | Why did n''t I get the place?" |
23108 | Why did n''t you introduce me to the old duffer? |
23108 | Why did n''t you take it and stay with them?" |
23108 | Why did you scream so loud a little while ago?" |
23108 | Why do n''t you set your cap for him?" |
23108 | Why do you want to know?" |
23108 | Why pinch himself for five months to pay his debt, when a single evening''s luck would clear him from every obligation? |
23108 | Why, how can you get along without one?" |
23108 | Will he be in soon?" |
23108 | Will that pay?" |
23108 | Will that satisfy you?" |
23108 | Will you allow Chester to go out with me for five minutes?" |
23108 | Will you be kind enough to take care of the papers for me?" |
23108 | Will you come in, or shall I give him your message?" |
23108 | Will you come, Chester?" |
23108 | Will you give me your address?" |
23108 | Will you go over with me to Mr. Taylor''s office? |
23108 | Will you join us this evening?" |
23108 | Will you see him?" |
23108 | Will you stay along and work for two dollars and a half a week?" |
23108 | Wilson?" |
23108 | Wilson?" |
23108 | Wilson?" |
23108 | Wo n''t you step in for a few minutes?" |
23108 | Would n''t it have been better, he asked himself, to accept reduced wages than to give up his job? |
23108 | Would you like to see him?" |
23108 | You are discharged-- do you understand?" |
23108 | You do n''t happen to have any whisky in the house, do you?" |
23108 | You got five dollars, did n''t you?" |
23108 | You have coached him, have you?" |
23108 | You have five lots, have you not?" |
23108 | You know that half- acre lot that j''ins onto the widder''s land?" |
23108 | You live in Wyncombe, do n''t you?" |
23108 | You remember how you came to know about the drowning?" |
23108 | You saw the accident?" |
23108 | You say that he wrote out a receipt?" |
23108 | You''ll send me any information about the bonds?" |
23108 | Your employer will give you a recommendation, wo n''t he?" |
23108 | how much did he leave?" |
23108 | she murmured,"are you really alive?" |
54350 | ''Can you give me and my boy a night''s lodging?'' 54350 A broker? |
54350 | A fight? 54350 A lie, of course?" |
54350 | About fifty? 54350 Am I charged with any offense?" |
54350 | And did the town give you leave to rob me? 54350 And did the wicked uncle get the title and estate?" |
54350 | And he actually played a part? |
54350 | And how are you yourself? |
54350 | And how did you get in with him? |
54350 | And how old are you? |
54350 | And if he does? |
54350 | And is Mrs. Avery still living? |
54350 | And is there no one except you to take care of the boy? |
54350 | And of course you have n''t had any breakfast? |
54350 | And that was all? |
54350 | And the young woman never called again? |
54350 | And then? |
54350 | And this large estate ought to belong to poor Jed? |
54350 | And what are you going to do with this desperate young man? |
54350 | And what is the name of the wicked uncle? |
54350 | And what is your program? |
54350 | And what was your object in bringing him here? |
54350 | And what was your present object? |
54350 | And where have you been since? |
54350 | And who do you say they are? |
54350 | And why not? |
54350 | And you have decided to take this important step? |
54350 | And you have had no other since? |
54350 | And you live in the poorhouse? |
54350 | And you say that the mother is living? |
54350 | And you say you lived in this forlorn place, Robert? |
54350 | Any hitch, Bertram? |
54350 | Any one waiting on you, young man? |
54350 | Anything else? |
54350 | Are you Sir Robert Fenwick? |
54350 | Are you a friend of his? |
54350 | Are you acquainted in New York? |
54350 | Are you an American? |
54350 | Are you an actor? |
54350 | Are you entirely dependent on your earnings? |
54350 | Are you goin''to play it again? |
54350 | Are you going in bathing? |
54350 | Are you going to play anywhere near here? |
54350 | Are you going to play with them again? |
54350 | Are you going to stand the boy''s impudence, Simeon? |
54350 | Are you going to stay in Scranton to- day? |
54350 | Are you going to stay much longer, father? |
54350 | Are you his father? |
54350 | Are you in communication with Guy Fenwick? 54350 Are you not sixteen yet?" |
54350 | Are you quite sure you do n''t want another nurse? |
54350 | Are you really and truly a lord, Jed? |
54350 | Are you staying at Sea Spray this summer, young man? |
54350 | Are you the girl who brought the boy Jed to me fourteen years ago? |
54350 | Are you to have your plans changed by a set of graceless boys? |
54350 | Are you travelling? |
54350 | Are you well paid? 54350 Are you willing to explain why it was that you were led to place your nephew under my care?" |
54350 | Are you-- in business? |
54350 | At the poorhouse? |
54350 | At what time shall I meet you, sir? |
54350 | But how did he get into such company? |
54350 | But how did it happen? 54350 But how did you learn this?" |
54350 | But how on earth did you get a chance to go on the stage? |
54350 | But what took him there? 54350 But,"said Jed, in bewilderment,"is-- is it yours?" |
54350 | Ca n''t you find another broker to take you in his office? |
54350 | Ca n''t you scare up a sheet of paper and an envelope? |
54350 | Can you describe the enemy? |
54350 | Can you give me a chance? |
54350 | Can you tell me how long Mr. and Mrs. Avery were here? |
54350 | Can you tell me where you were born? |
54350 | Can you tell me why he left? |
54350 | Could n''t he play to- night? 54350 Did I hear what?" |
54350 | Did I scald you, Simeon? |
54350 | Did Mrs. Fogson give you any idea where he was? |
54350 | Did Mrs. Fogson send the message by you? |
54350 | Did he borrow any money from you? |
54350 | Did he explain how he came to have anything to do with the boat? |
54350 | Did he say who the owner was? |
54350 | Did he take_ all_ your money? |
54350 | Did he write you that he was coming? |
54350 | Did he, indeed? |
54350 | Did it occur to you that she might be in any way related to the child? |
54350 | Did n''t it strike you as singular that you should have been employed on such an errand? |
54350 | Did she give me a good character? |
54350 | Did they never tell you the circumstances of your being placed in the institution? |
54350 | Did you act last evening? |
54350 | Did you apprise my brother of this fact when he engaged you? |
54350 | Did you bring in this man? |
54350 | Did you ever go to a theatre? |
54350 | Did you ever hear the like? |
54350 | Did you form any conjectures relative to her or her object in bringing you the child? |
54350 | Did you have it when I met you? |
54350 | Did you hear that? |
54350 | Did you live in the same town? |
54350 | Did you mean that soaking for Jed, whoever he is? |
54350 | Did you see any of your Scranton friends in the audience? |
54350 | Did you see him on the beach? |
54350 | Did you touch me? |
54350 | Did you wish to see me, sir? |
54350 | Did you witness the play this evening? |
54350 | Did your pa come with you? |
54350 | Discharged? 54350 Do I come up to your expectations?" |
54350 | Do I live at the poorhouse? |
54350 | Do I understand you to say that he actually called me unfit for the position? |
54350 | Do most employers require that, sir? |
54350 | Do n''t you have tea? |
54350 | Do n''t you know that your business is to stay here and work? |
54350 | Do n''t you know where you are? |
54350 | Do n''t you remember boarding my yacht with felonious intent last night? |
54350 | Do n''t you? 54350 Do n''t your parents call you so?" |
54350 | Do they have the same dinner as you? |
54350 | Do you act with the Gold King Company? |
54350 | Do you claim Jed as your nephew? |
54350 | Do you expect to go back to the stage? |
54350 | Do you have puddings or pies? |
54350 | Do you inquire as a friend of the poor boy? |
54350 | Do you know anything of Jed? |
54350 | Do you know anything of his antecedents? |
54350 | Do you know anything of his family? 54350 Do you know anything of his family?" |
54350 | Do you know him? |
54350 | Do you know that I would have had no breakfast if Mrs. Gately had not taken compassion on me? |
54350 | Do you know where I''ve been to- night? |
54350 | Do you know who you are talking to? |
54350 | Do you like him as much as Clara? |
54350 | Do you mean to say you''ve spent it already? 54350 Do you mean to tell me that you have placed your son in the charge of a young play actor?" |
54350 | Do you mean to tell me you are going to run away? |
54350 | Do you mind telling me how long you have known the person who employed you? |
54350 | Do you really mean the watch and chain for me? |
54350 | Do you remember me? |
54350 | Do you remember what he was talking about? |
54350 | Do you require payment in advance? |
54350 | Do you reside there? |
54350 | Do you think Mr. Holbrook would have discharged you? |
54350 | Do you think so, father? 54350 Do you think so?" |
54350 | Do you think there will be any difficulty in your getting away? |
54350 | Do you think they recognized you? |
54350 | Do you think they will go after you? |
54350 | Do you think you can spare me to go on shore for a couple of hours? |
54350 | Do you think you could get me a chance? |
54350 | Do you think,he asked,"it can be Jane Gilman herself come back after all these years?" |
54350 | Do you want to bathe, Chester? |
54350 | Do you want to find him? |
54350 | Do you want to see him particular? |
54350 | Do you want to see me? |
54350 | Do you want your fortune told? |
54350 | Do you wish to subscribe? |
54350 | Does he know anything to your disadvantage then? |
54350 | Does he know that you are looking for his nephew? |
54350 | Does she look like the picture in the locket? |
54350 | Does the lady bear any resemblance to the girl who brought the child to you? |
54350 | Dr. Redmond,said Jed after a pause,"do you think it would be wrong for me to run away from the poorhouse?" |
54350 | Going to see the world, eh? |
54350 | Going to stay in the city? |
54350 | Got parents? |
54350 | Has he got into any scrape? |
54350 | Has she a title, too? |
54350 | Have you a situation? |
54350 | Have you any letters from him in reference to the matter? |
54350 | Have you any particular choice as to the business you take up? |
54350 | Have you any relations among the paupers? |
54350 | Have you any such intention? |
54350 | Have you been to lunch? |
54350 | Have you come here with any message for me? |
54350 | Have you ever spoken in public? |
54350 | Have you ever spoken to them on the subject? |
54350 | Have you found anything yet? |
54350 | Have you known him long? |
54350 | Have you never attended a theatre? |
54350 | Have you never done anything else? |
54350 | Have you never seen the sea before? |
54350 | Have you one of the thieves aboard? |
54350 | Have you opened it? |
54350 | Have you parents residing in the city? |
54350 | Have you seen the bad young man who robbed you? |
54350 | Have you that letter? |
54350 | Have you the locket with you? |
54350 | Have you? |
54350 | He did n''t make arrangements to run the poorhouse, with your help, did he? |
54350 | He does not assist you? |
54350 | How am I to feel sure you are entitled to it? |
54350 | How are you, Jed? |
54350 | How are you, Master Percy? |
54350 | How came you here and where is Jed? |
54350 | How can a young boy have an enemy? |
54350 | How can you afford it? |
54350 | How could I tell? |
54350 | How did it happen? |
54350 | How did it happen? |
54350 | How did you come here? |
54350 | How did you come to be so poor? |
54350 | How did you get acquainted with him? |
54350 | How did you happen to get such a fine chance as that? |
54350 | How did you like it? |
54350 | How do you do, Master Percy? |
54350 | How do you do, Squire Dixon? |
54350 | How expensive a watch would you like, sir? 54350 How many packages will you take?" |
54350 | How much have you? |
54350 | How much was there? |
54350 | How much? |
54350 | How much? |
54350 | How often did you have tea, Mrs. Connolly, when Mr. and Mrs. Avery were here? |
54350 | How often do you give them meat? |
54350 | How shall I manage to get dinner? |
54350 | How soon are you going back? |
54350 | How was that? |
54350 | However, I suppose it is quite familiar to you? |
54350 | I could n''t knock him down, could I? |
54350 | I do wonder what that boy''s done? |
54350 | I say, Jed,asked the little boy,"how do you like Aunt Maria?" |
54350 | I see you were; but what business have you to take the box? |
54350 | I suppose Dr. Redmond put himself out to entertain such a distinguished guest? |
54350 | I suppose he is a friend of yours? |
54350 | I suppose that means in pawn? |
54350 | I suppose you are going to New York for the day? |
54350 | I suppose you could n''t come to Duncan? |
54350 | I suppose you told him so? |
54350 | I suppose you wo n''t have to take a trunk of clothes from here? |
54350 | I wonder how the girl came to give the boy the name of Jed Gilman? |
54350 | I wonder if Mr. and Mrs. Fogson would recognize me if they should see me on the stage? |
54350 | I wonder if he has any idea how glad I am to accept his invitation? |
54350 | I wonder what under the canopy Jed''s been doing? 54350 I wonder when it is all going to end?" |
54350 | I wonder whether he really writes for the_ Tribune_? |
54350 | I wonder whether that woman''s husband has her amiable traits? |
54350 | I wonder whether there is any work for me anywhere? |
54350 | If I am not, who is, I''d like to know? 54350 If she had scalded Jed instead of you, would you say the same thing?" |
54350 | In his ragged suit? |
54350 | In the Scranton poorhouse? 54350 In what English town or village was he born?" |
54350 | Is Chester''s father rich? |
54350 | Is Mr. Osprey one of your brothers? |
54350 | Is he a nice- looking boy? |
54350 | Is he here now? |
54350 | Is he here, or has he gone out? |
54350 | Is he here? |
54350 | Is he, indeed? 54350 Is he? |
54350 | Is his mother living? |
54350 | Is it a good business? |
54350 | Is it a good paying business? |
54350 | Is it a large estate? |
54350 | Is it a straight road all the way? |
54350 | Is it far away? |
54350 | Is it from a friend of yours? |
54350 | Is it-- hard to learn to act? |
54350 | Is it? 54350 Is n''t it true, then?" |
54350 | Is n''t it? 54350 Is n''t there any one else you can send for, papa? |
54350 | Is n''t your name Jed after all? |
54350 | Is that against him? |
54350 | Is that so? 54350 Is that so? |
54350 | Is that so? |
54350 | Is that so? |
54350 | Is that true? |
54350 | Is that watch yours? 54350 Is the fare much worse than it was when Mrs. Avery was in charge?" |
54350 | Is the injury serious? |
54350 | Is the man who employed me a thief? |
54350 | Is there a boy named Jed Gilman living here? |
54350 | Is there a picture inside? |
54350 | Is there any answer? |
54350 | Is there anything else? |
54350 | Is there more than one man in the boat? |
54350 | Is there such a boy as Ralph Clinton here? |
54350 | Is there? |
54350 | Is this boy your brother? |
54350 | Is this little boy your brother? |
54350 | Is this the one? |
54350 | Is this true? |
54350 | Is your brother still living? |
54350 | It looks like it, does n''t it? |
54350 | It makes me feel very badly, but what can I do? 54350 Jed Gilman?" |
54350 | Jed will stay with me? |
54350 | Jedediah,she said,"is it true that your earlier years were spent at the Scranton poorhouse?" |
54350 | Madam,said the servant bowing,"do you receive visitors?" |
54350 | May I ask if you are a business man? |
54350 | May I ask your name, young man? |
54350 | Miss Gilman,said Detective Peake,"will you permit me to keep this letter-- for the present?" |
54350 | Mrs. Avery, I believe? |
54350 | Mrs. Fogson,said her husband solemnly,"did you ever hear of such perverseness?" |
54350 | Mrs. Fogson,went on the doctor,"do you limit yourself to tea once a week?" |
54350 | My dear Ralph, what does this person mean? |
54350 | My wife tells me you did her a great service to- day? |
54350 | Never heard of Macy''s? 54350 No; I want to ask whether you have an editor named Hamilton Barry?" |
54350 | Nor sent you any message, oral or written? |
54350 | Not Howell Foster? |
54350 | Now, what I want to know is, did n''t I have a right to take the money from Jed? |
54350 | Oh it''s you, is it? |
54350 | Oh, it''s you, Percy? |
54350 | Oh, you wo n''t, hey? |
54350 | Old Fogson wo n''t make a fuss about your going, will he? |
54350 | Percy Dixon? |
54350 | Perhaps you have come in quest of work? |
54350 | Perhaps you would like to visit it? |
54350 | Probably this Jed is a very ordinary boy? |
54350 | Say, does actin''pay well? |
54350 | Sent for it? |
54350 | Shall I go and take a walk with Jed? |
54350 | Shall I hold him, Simeon? |
54350 | Shall I stop him? |
54350 | Shall I tell you where your early years were passed? |
54350 | Shall I? 54350 Shall we go in, Jed?" |
54350 | She died young, I suppose? |
54350 | Sir Guy Fenwick? |
54350 | So I am your dear Mr. Schmidt, hey? 54350 So he prepared himself to claim the Fenwick title in an almshouse?" |
54350 | So he was n''t at work at that time? |
54350 | So you are Jed? |
54350 | So you have got home? |
54350 | So you know Jed? |
54350 | So you know Roper, too? |
54350 | So you like Jed, do you? |
54350 | So you like the Astor well enough to come back? |
54350 | So you ran away? 54350 Suppose he should come now, what would he say to your making so free?" |
54350 | Ten dollars a week and my meals? |
54350 | Thank you, doctor; but will you save it till I am ready to leave Scranton? |
54350 | Thank you; how much do you pay for your room? |
54350 | That is why you came to Scranton? |
54350 | That was all? |
54350 | Then he is not here now? |
54350 | Then how can you afford to board at a first- class hotel? |
54350 | Then how dare you compare my friend Ralph to a boy like that? |
54350 | Then if the boy had his rights would he be Sir Jed Gilman? |
54350 | Then it was n''t Jed? |
54350 | Then perhaps you do n''t need any more? |
54350 | Then shall I tell you of the future? |
54350 | Then why are you discharged? |
54350 | Then why did n''t you engage another? |
54350 | Then why do n''t you look for Jed Gilman? 54350 Then why do you have her come here, papa? |
54350 | Then why should it be addressed to me? 54350 Then will you authorize me to demand the money from him?" |
54350 | Then you are acquainted with Harry Bertram? |
54350 | Then you are not married? |
54350 | Then you baffled him? |
54350 | Then you have left Scranton for good? |
54350 | Then you have n''t a high opinion of him? |
54350 | Then you think he is comfortably situated? |
54350 | Then, Mr. Gilman, may I inquire your age? |
54350 | This accounts for your visit, then? |
54350 | WHO WAS JED? |
54350 | WHO WAS JED? |
54350 | Was Jed born in England? |
54350 | Was he boarding here? |
54350 | Was he your child? |
54350 | Was that before you were robbed of your money? |
54350 | Was there any article of dress, or any ornament, left with the child that might help to identify it? |
54350 | Was there any attempt to rob the yacht? |
54350 | Well, and what else? |
54350 | Well, do you think that Jed, whatever he is, could act like my friend Ralph? |
54350 | Well, it''s true, is n''t it? |
54350 | Well, what are you going to do? |
54350 | Well, what do you want? |
54350 | Well, what next? |
54350 | Well, what would you advise? |
54350 | Were they any relations of yours? |
54350 | What are you about here, young fellow? |
54350 | What are you talking about? |
54350 | What boy? |
54350 | What brings him to New York? |
54350 | What brings you here? |
54350 | What business has a lady writing to you? |
54350 | What can we have? |
54350 | What did he do? |
54350 | What did he say? |
54350 | What did he tell you? |
54350 | What did you calc''late to do, if you could get a chance? |
54350 | What do I want? 54350 What do they give you for dinner?" |
54350 | What do you know of Claflin? |
54350 | What do you mean by that? |
54350 | What do you mean by that? |
54350 | What do you mean by this absurd statement? |
54350 | What do you mean by this insolence? |
54350 | What do you mean, Percy? |
54350 | What do you mean, you lunatic? |
54350 | What do you mean? 54350 What do you mean?" |
54350 | What do you mean? |
54350 | What do you mean? |
54350 | What do you mean? |
54350 | What do you pay, sir? |
54350 | What do you think of our bill of fare? |
54350 | What do you want of Jed Gilman? |
54350 | What do you want to do with it? |
54350 | What do you want to do with the dollar? |
54350 | What do you want to do-- sell papers? |
54350 | What does he want? |
54350 | What does it mean? |
54350 | What else? |
54350 | What has happened, Jed? |
54350 | What has he done? |
54350 | What have I lost? |
54350 | What have you been up to? |
54350 | What have you? |
54350 | What is her reason? 54350 What is his real name?" |
54350 | What is it? |
54350 | What is it? |
54350 | What is that? |
54350 | What is that? |
54350 | What is that? |
54350 | What is the character of his relations? |
54350 | What is the date of your birth? |
54350 | What is the price? |
54350 | What is your name? |
54350 | What letter have you there? |
54350 | What makes you go away? |
54350 | What name was given him? |
54350 | What paper do you write for? |
54350 | What right have you to ask me questions? |
54350 | What runaway horse? |
54350 | What shall I do? |
54350 | What shall I do? |
54350 | What shall you do about it? 54350 What sort of a person is Jed''s mother?" |
54350 | What sort of people are they? |
54350 | What sum will get them out? |
54350 | What time is it, Jed? |
54350 | What was he doing-- blacking boots for a living? |
54350 | What was his mother''s maiden name? |
54350 | What was the man''s appearance? |
54350 | What was your brother''s name? |
54350 | What was your business, then? 54350 What was your last employment?" |
54350 | What will happen if I do? |
54350 | What will you have? |
54350 | What will you order? |
54350 | What would he say if he could see the inside of my pocket- book? |
54350 | What would you do? |
54350 | What would you have me to do? |
54350 | What yacht are you working on? |
54350 | What young man? |
54350 | What''ll you have? |
54350 | What''s the matter with the boy? |
54350 | What''s the matter, Simeon? |
54350 | What''s the matter? |
54350 | What''s up now, I wonder? |
54350 | What''s wanted? |
54350 | What''s wanted? |
54350 | What''s your name? |
54350 | What? |
54350 | What? |
54350 | When can you get a place if you get your razors back? |
54350 | When did he offer to repay you? |
54350 | When did they die? |
54350 | When did you arrive? |
54350 | When did you leave Sea Spray? |
54350 | When did you leave off acting? |
54350 | When do you have dinner? |
54350 | When do you want me? |
54350 | When shall I commence, sir? |
54350 | When will the season commence? |
54350 | When will you start for Bar Harbor? |
54350 | When? |
54350 | Where are they? |
54350 | Where are you staying, Jedediah? |
54350 | Where did he get''em? |
54350 | Where did you dine? |
54350 | Where do you live? |
54350 | Where do you mean to go? |
54350 | Where have I met you? |
54350 | Where have you been? |
54350 | Where have you met me? |
54350 | Where have you played? |
54350 | Where is Nassau Street? |
54350 | Where is he, then? |
54350 | Where is he? |
54350 | Where is the restaurant? |
54350 | Where is your trunk? |
54350 | Where is your writing- room? |
54350 | Where is_ my_ bed? |
54350 | Where shall we stay? |
54350 | Where was he? |
54350 | Where were they sitting? |
54350 | Where would you advise me to sell? |
54350 | Where''s Chester? |
54350 | Where? |
54350 | Who am I? |
54350 | Who are you? |
54350 | Who cares for Fogson? 54350 Who could, with such a change of dress? |
54350 | Who is it? |
54350 | Who is it? |
54350 | Who is that boy? |
54350 | Who is that? |
54350 | Who owns this yacht? |
54350 | Who put you in authority over me? |
54350 | Who said I was his friend? 54350 Who says so?" |
54350 | Who says this-- who dares say it? |
54350 | Who sent you for it? |
54350 | Who told you I had a master? |
54350 | Who told you? |
54350 | Who was here before you? |
54350 | Who were they? |
54350 | Who''m I? 54350 Who''s Fogson?" |
54350 | Who, then, am I? |
54350 | Whose miniatures are those in the locket? |
54350 | Why am I? |
54350 | Why am I? |
54350 | Why ca n''t I? 54350 Why ca n''t you?" |
54350 | Why did n''t he come back last evening? |
54350 | Why did n''t you ask him to call at Macy''s? |
54350 | Why did n''t you manage to speak to him after the play? |
54350 | Why do n''t you apply for a position for yourself? |
54350 | Why do you go to a hotel? 54350 Why do you laugh?" |
54350 | Why do you think I know him? |
54350 | Why has there been no search for him till now? |
54350 | Why is Percy so malicious? |
54350 | Why is n''t he with you? |
54350 | Why is n''t it? |
54350 | Why not? |
54350 | Why not? |
54350 | Why not? |
54350 | Why should he? |
54350 | Why there, in particular? |
54350 | Why, Jed, how are you? |
54350 | Why? |
54350 | Why? |
54350 | Will I have to get up too? |
54350 | Will it be soon? |
54350 | Will it prejudice him against me? |
54350 | Will you address them, squire? |
54350 | Will you have a cigar? |
54350 | Will you jump into the buggy and drive me to my home? 54350 Will you let me see the handwriting?" |
54350 | Will you promise this? |
54350 | Will you tell Jedediah that I wish to see him at once on important business? |
54350 | Will you wait till Mr. Holbrook returns? |
54350 | Without what? |
54350 | Wo n''t he be astonished when the thunderbolt falls? |
54350 | Wo n''t you call at our house? 54350 Wo n''t you come in and take a cup of tea?" |
54350 | Wo n''t you get into trouble by making so free with your master''s things? |
54350 | Wo n''t you take a glass of something? |
54350 | Wo n''t you wait till after supper? |
54350 | Would n''t you like to know how they are? |
54350 | Would you be kind enough in that case, Master Percy, to tell the boy Jed to go and call my husband from the three- acre lot? 54350 Would you have me let the boy go?" |
54350 | Would you know him if you saw him again? |
54350 | Would you like employment? |
54350 | Would you prefer this boy? |
54350 | Yes; do you want a place? |
54350 | Yes; do you want to see him? |
54350 | Yes; is this true? |
54350 | Yet you tell me you are penniless? |
54350 | You are convinced then of his innocence? |
54350 | You are going to fill a business position, perhaps? |
54350 | You are partially acquainted with a woman named Jane Gilman? |
54350 | You are still with Schuyler? |
54350 | You bring a letter from--here Mr. Claflin referred to a note--"from a man who calls himself Hamilton Barry?" |
54350 | You do n''t feel like going back to your old home? |
54350 | You do n''t mean to say that you were goose enough to lend him thirty- five dollars? |
54350 | You do n''t mind telling me what he has been doing? |
54350 | You do n''t say so? |
54350 | You do n''t say? 54350 You had a pleasant time, I presume?" |
54350 | You have business with me? |
54350 | You have n''t any trade, have you? |
54350 | You have promised that I shall be well paid? |
54350 | You have seen me somewhere? 54350 You have some money to keep you while you are waiting for work?" |
54350 | You hope I did? |
54350 | You infer from that that he was anxious? |
54350 | You may have seen a boy of ten walking about with me? |
54350 | You meant to scald Jed? |
54350 | You must be crazy, or do you mean to deliberately insult him? |
54350 | You sha n''t stay here long? |
54350 | You take your meals at the Spray House? |
54350 | You think then that I could succeed? |
54350 | You would n''t, hey? 54350 You''ll let me know sometime?" |
54350 | You''re from the country, ai n''t you? |
54350 | You_ suppose_ so? |
54350 | Young man, will you do me the favor to move your chair a little nearer? |
54350 | Young man,said the stranger,"am I on my way to the poorhouse?" |
54350 | Zis a hotel? |
54350 | _ Me_--eat with paupers? |
54350 | 182 far off?" |
54350 | And how often do you give them butter?" |
54350 | Are you a business man?" |
54350 | Are you acquainted with him?" |
54350 | Are you boarding here?" |
54350 | Are you going in bathing?" |
54350 | Are you going to Duncan?" |
54350 | Are you going to see the play this evening?" |
54350 | Are you going to stay long in Scranton?" |
54350 | Are you in the habit of borrowing money from people who are asleep?" |
54350 | Are you staying at a hotel?" |
54350 | Are you sure you are not mistaken?" |
54350 | Are you sure you have n''t sold or pawned it?" |
54350 | At this moment the sallow- faced man called in an impatient tone,"What are you about there, you lazy young rascal? |
54350 | Bertram?" |
54350 | Bertram?" |
54350 | Bertram?" |
54350 | Bertram?" |
54350 | Bertram?" |
54350 | Bless me, you do n''t mean to say you''ve got a yacht?" |
54350 | But do n''t you think it would have been better to have left me the whole?" |
54350 | But first tell me, what kind of a boy is he?" |
54350 | But first, am I right in my belief that you were once in charge of the Scranton poorhouse?" |
54350 | But perhaps business is more in your line?" |
54350 | But perhaps you would not like being encumbered with a small boy?" |
54350 | But where are you going to send the letter?" |
54350 | But where did you pick up this boy?" |
54350 | But, Mr. Peake, are you prepared to substantiate Jed''s claim to his title and inheritance?" |
54350 | By the way, has Mr. Holbrook got home from Chicago yet?" |
54350 | By the way, what have you in view?" |
54350 | Can you recommend a_ cheap_ hotel?" |
54350 | Can you row a boat?" |
54350 | Can you show me some?" |
54350 | Can you tell me why he is coming?" |
54350 | Can you"--something in the detective''s face prompted the question--"can you give me any information on the subject?" |
54350 | Connolly?" |
54350 | Could he venture to ask a part of the sum he was to earn in advance? |
54350 | Did he say he ever worked for me?" |
54350 | Did he say he knew me?" |
54350 | Did it take you long to write it?" |
54350 | Did she give you anything?" |
54350 | Did she tell you that I was robbed of thirty- five dollars during the night, and that I awoke penniless?" |
54350 | Did you find it?" |
54350 | Did you have him arrested?" |
54350 | Did you wish to see any of the paupers?" |
54350 | Did your parents lose their property?" |
54350 | Dixon?" |
54350 | Do I understand that you are actuated by a desire to save the town''s money?" |
54350 | Do Mr. and Mrs. Fogson eat with you?" |
54350 | Do n''t you think so, Simeon?" |
54350 | Do they-- ahem!--complain of anything in particular?" |
54350 | Do you ever write for publication yourself?" |
54350 | Do you expect he will take you back?" |
54350 | Do you feel tired?" |
54350 | Do you go in?" |
54350 | Do you know of any situation that I could fill?" |
54350 | Do you know what I will do with it?" |
54350 | Do you know whether he is now at Fenwick Hall?" |
54350 | Do you know whether that is true?" |
54350 | Do you know, I am to be your mother in the play? |
54350 | Do you think I would be friends with a pauper?" |
54350 | Do you think I would demean myself by any such low action? |
54350 | Do you think he would do?" |
54350 | Do you think of trying the stage?" |
54350 | Do you think of trying to get a place at Daly''s or Palmer''s?" |
54350 | Do you understand?" |
54350 | Do you want me to tell your fortune, my pretty?" |
54350 | Do you, Jed?" |
54350 | Do you, Jed?" |
54350 | F.?" |
54350 | F.?" |
54350 | Fenwick?" |
54350 | First, do you think you have the nerve to stand before an audience and play the part of a telegraph boy?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Fogson?" |
54350 | Gately?" |
54350 | Gilman?" |
54350 | Gilman?" |
54350 | Gilman?" |
54350 | Has anything gone wrong?" |
54350 | Have the rest of the actors left Duncan?" |
54350 | Have you been there?" |
54350 | Have you got any old maid aunts?" |
54350 | Have you got any place engaged?" |
54350 | Have you got any-- any better clothes than those?" |
54350 | Have you known Mr. Holbrook long?" |
54350 | Have you observed anything queer in his conduct of late?" |
54350 | He did not appear to move fast enough for the amiable Mrs. Fogson, for she called out in a sharp voice:"Why do you walk like a snail? |
54350 | He hurried forward, and taking off his hat to Miss Holbrook, said,"Chester, do n''t you remember me?" |
54350 | He stood a moment silent, and then said, in a hesitating tone,"Is there a boy in the institution named Jed Gilman?" |
54350 | He turned his face toward the side door at which stood a woman, thin and sharp- visaged, and asked:"Well, what''s wanted?" |
54350 | He walked up to Broadway, then down to the City Hall Park, and asked a boy whom he met,"Where is the_ Tribune_ office?" |
54350 | How about yourself?" |
54350 | How can you recommend me?" |
54350 | How could I rob you?" |
54350 | How did he happen to offer you a letter?" |
54350 | How did you get in here?" |
54350 | How did you get the chance to take care of the little boy?" |
54350 | How did you lose your money?" |
54350 | How do you happen to be in funds?" |
54350 | How long have you worn it?" |
54350 | How much of it can you return to me?" |
54350 | How much were you to be paid for your services?" |
54350 | How old are you?" |
54350 | How old are you?" |
54350 | How old are you?" |
54350 | How will fifty dollars a month answer?" |
54350 | I hope he did not get all your money?" |
54350 | I may conclude that you have no information in regard to your family or parentage?" |
54350 | I presume none of them have left the poorhouse in consequence?" |
54350 | I should like to know whether I am not a prominent man also, Mr. Fogson? |
54350 | I suppose you are hungry?" |
54350 | I suppose you had some way of making a living?" |
54350 | I suppose you know that he is rich?" |
54350 | I suppose you remember them?" |
54350 | I suppose you''ve heard of Macy''s?" |
54350 | I was to make big wages by selling them, hey?" |
54350 | I went round two days in Montclair, and how many packages you think I sell, hey?" |
54350 | In what direction are you going?" |
54350 | Is he a good actor?" |
54350 | Is he known as Jed Gilman?" |
54350 | Is he respectably connected?" |
54350 | Is he the one you mean?" |
54350 | Is he your son?" |
54350 | Is it for yourself?" |
54350 | Is it not so?" |
54350 | Is n''t it-- all right?" |
54350 | Is n''t there anything you can do?" |
54350 | Is she beautiful?" |
54350 | Is the building used as a poorhouse near by?" |
54350 | Is this true?" |
54350 | Is your season over?" |
54350 | Jed had walked about half way when a man in a top buggy overtook him, and, stopping his horse, called out,"Is this the road to Duncan?" |
54350 | Let me see, what was the name? |
54350 | May I ask your name?" |
54350 | May I go?" |
54350 | May I take Chester in and introduce him to my mother?" |
54350 | Maybe you prefer to have me step on your necktie, hey?" |
54350 | Mordaunt?" |
54350 | Mordaunt?" |
54350 | Mr. Gilman, can you oblige me with a quarter?" |
54350 | Mr. Higgins shrank back as if fearful of a personal assault, and inquired in uneasy tones:"Who are you, my friend?" |
54350 | Never went to a theatre? |
54350 | Now how are you going to Duncan?" |
54350 | Now tell me why you attempted to horsewhip the boy?" |
54350 | One of the boy bootblacks who carry on business in the park came up to him with his box on his shoulder and asked,"Shine your boots?" |
54350 | Peake?" |
54350 | Peake?" |
54350 | Redmond?" |
54350 | Roper?" |
54350 | Roper?" |
54350 | Say, what do you do for a livin''?" |
54350 | Sha n''t you go after him?" |
54350 | Shall I ever go back to-- to the place where my earlier years were passed?" |
54350 | Shall I meet my-- any one belonging to me-- any one to whom I am related?" |
54350 | Shall I tell you what we are able to prove?" |
54350 | So he is impudent?" |
54350 | So he is your charge?" |
54350 | So there is a gentleman in the boat outside?" |
54350 | So this is the mare''s nest you have stirred up? |
54350 | So you liked Mr. and Mrs. Avery better than the Fogsons?" |
54350 | Squire Dixon, what shall I do?" |
54350 | The man in drab paused a moment, then assuming a look of mystery, said,"Can you keep a secret?" |
54350 | Then he has grown up a good boy?" |
54350 | Then upon the impulse of the moment Jed inquired,"Do you know him?" |
54350 | Then who brought you up?" |
54350 | Was n''t the boy scalded at all?" |
54350 | Was that meant for you, too?" |
54350 | Well, and what next?" |
54350 | Well, do you accept my offer? |
54350 | Were n''t you frightened at all?" |
54350 | What are you doing for a living?" |
54350 | What are you going to do about it?" |
54350 | What are your plans?" |
54350 | What did you do first?" |
54350 | What did you propose to do with the dollar in case you had obtained it from Jed?" |
54350 | What did you propose to say to him?" |
54350 | What do you expect to do if you leave? |
54350 | What do you know of Harry Bertram?" |
54350 | What do you mean?" |
54350 | What do you propose to do?" |
54350 | What do you say to this?" |
54350 | What do you want me to do?" |
54350 | What have I been doing, I should like to know?" |
54350 | What have I got to do with him?" |
54350 | What have you done?" |
54350 | What house do you represent?" |
54350 | What is he coming to?" |
54350 | What is his name?" |
54350 | What is there to hinder your making off with it and never coming back?" |
54350 | What is your name, my little friend?" |
54350 | What kind of a fight?" |
54350 | What kind of work have you done?" |
54350 | What makes you think so?" |
54350 | What part did you take?" |
54350 | What possesses the boy to snore so?" |
54350 | What shall I do?" |
54350 | What was he doing?" |
54350 | What was he to do next? |
54350 | When are you going to mail the letter?" |
54350 | When did you pick him up, Schuyler?" |
54350 | When he had concluded, Mr. Roper asked,"And where is this nurse whose testimony is so important?" |
54350 | When the patient was more comfortable he turned gravely to Mrs. Fogson and asked:"Will you explain how your husband got scalded?" |
54350 | Where is he?" |
54350 | Who can have written me from there?" |
54350 | Who did it?" |
54350 | Who discharged you?" |
54350 | Who is it?" |
54350 | Who told you so?" |
54350 | Why ca n''t I, I''d like to know?" |
54350 | Why ca n''t you call round some evening? |
54350 | Why did n''t she take better aim?" |
54350 | Why did n''t you tell me that before?" |
54350 | Why do you ask?" |
54350 | Why do you ask?" |
54350 | Why do you say there was n''t time to ask permission to leave your work?" |
54350 | Why was the visit postponed till near midnight? |
54350 | Will ten dollars a week satisfy you?" |
54350 | Will you go along with me?" |
54350 | Will you guarantee that it shall be forthcoming?" |
54350 | Will you oblige me by letting the boy Jed take it?" |
54350 | Will you permit me to ask him a few questions?" |
54350 | Will you permit me to take it and show it to Lady Fenwick?" |
54350 | Will you tell me if that box contains anything valuable?" |
54350 | Will you tell me your name?" |
54350 | Wo n''t you get into the carriage and go with us, Percy?" |
54350 | Wo n''t you stay for supper? |
54350 | Would the party accommodate me, do you think?" |
54350 | Would you like to have me read one or two agents''letters?" |
54350 | Would you like to look at them?" |
54350 | You actually have n''t anything left?" |
54350 | You admit that I have told the truth?" |
54350 | You ai n''t little Lord Fauntleroy, are you?" |
54350 | You could n''t possibly tell me what Jed has done?" |
54350 | You do n''t mean to give me in charge when we reach New York?" |
54350 | You do n''t mean to say you''ve been a play actor?" |
54350 | You do n''t think I took the money?" |
54350 | You drink beer, do n''t you?" |
54350 | You have heard of H. B. Claflin, probably?" |
54350 | You have n''t been paid anything yet, have you?" |
54350 | You have n''t got any money?" |
54350 | You have n''t told me what you have to do with him?" |
54350 | You say you have neither seen nor heard anything of this girl since Jed was left in your hands?" |
54350 | You understand that, hey?" |
54350 | You will let it be understood that you have given me authority, wo n''t you? |
54350 | Your nerve wo n''t fail you, will it?" |
34406 | A Bible? 34406 A jigger? |
34406 | A pickpocket? 34406 A what?" |
34406 | About what, George? |
34406 | Against the ethics of the trade, I suppose? |
34406 | Ai n''t been out long, have you? |
34406 | Ai n''t you got no shoes? |
34406 | Alexander Ossipovitch,he addresses me in his courtly manner,"your mother is very ill. Are you alone with her?" |
34406 | Alive? |
34406 | Am I in your thoughts, dear? |
34406 | An''why do n''t you believe it? |
34406 | And what? |
34406 | And you are an agent of a New York employment firm? |
34406 | And you gave the name''Alexander Berkman''to gain access? |
34406 | And you prefer that to being honest? |
34406 | And your father? |
34406 | Any chance here, Wingie? |
34406 | Are there no women on the road? |
34406 | Are you a Homestead striker? |
34406 | Are you crooning Sasha to sleep, Philo? |
34406 | Are you going to refuse work? |
34406 | Are you hurt, Madge? |
34406 | Are you locked up''for cause''? |
34406 | Are you really so dumb? 34406 Are you thieves?" |
34406 | Awake, Sasha? |
34406 | Bad shot, ai n''t you? |
34406 | Been kickin''? |
34406 | Billy, have you ever read anything about Nihilists? |
34406 | But ca n''t I have something to read now? |
34406 | But on what ground did they dismiss your application? 34406 But the letter, Chaplain?" |
34406 | Ca n''t be a prisoner? |
34406 | Ca n''t talk, eh? 34406 Can you read?" |
34406 | Can you show credentials or a union card? |
34406 | Catholic? |
34406 | Coffee you call it? 34406 D''ye mean t''tell me you work?" |
34406 | Damn your soul t''hell,the officer rages,"do n''t you know better than to bother me when I''m counting, eh? |
34406 | Dead? |
34406 | Did any one see the man fall? |
34406 | Did n''t like it outside, Red? |
34406 | Did n''t the branch break? |
34406 | Did n''t they write that I tried to jump over the wall-- it''s about thirty feet high-- and that the guard shot me in the leg? |
34406 | Did n''t you tell Cosson you were in Sing Sing, not in Columbus? |
34406 | Did the lady from New York have a permit? |
34406 | Do I? 34406 Do I? |
34406 | Do n''t you know it''s wrong to fight, my little man? |
34406 | Do n''t you know me, Mr. Berkman? 34406 Do you care much for me, Felipe?" |
34406 | Do you know where you are? |
34406 | Do you mean there are no honest men? |
34406 | Do you plead guilty or not guilty? |
34406 | Do you think, Mr. Hopkins, Jasper could eat the apple in two bites? |
34406 | Do you think-- mine nice? |
34406 | Do you wish to say something, Colonel? |
34406 | Doctor, I seem to be gettin''worser, and I''m afraid--"What''s the trouble? |
34406 | Economic necessity--has Socialism pierced the prison walls? |
34406 | Ever had syphilis? |
34406 | Feelin''better to- day, Charley? |
34406 | Forgotten? 34406 Foxy, ai n''t you? |
34406 | From Pittsburgh? |
34406 | Gallagher? |
34406 | Get you pard''n, in two, three years may be, see? 34406 Go an''take a-- thump to yourself, will you?" |
34406 | Good job, Doc? |
34406 | Got your answer ready? |
34406 | Has anything happened? 34406 Have you anything to say why sentence should not be passed upon you?" |
34406 | Have you heard Most? |
34406 | Have you read it? |
34406 | Have you the essay? |
34406 | Hello, Berk, ai n''t you glad t''see an old pal? |
34406 | Hey, you, Wilson, what are you after? |
34406 | Hm, what''s this? |
34406 | Ho, ho, playing the old game, are you? 34406 Honest? |
34406 | How are you, Reddie? |
34406 | How are your eyes? |
34406 | How big is the stump? |
34406 | How can you love a boy? |
34406 | How dare you leave it without permission? |
34406 | How did Johnny take it? |
34406 | How did he do it? |
34406 | How did he manage to get away in stripes? 34406 How do you happen here, Dan? |
34406 | How do_ you_ happen to be here? |
34406 | How long are you doing? |
34406 | How long did you serve there? |
34406 | How long have you been locked up this time? |
34406 | How much time have you yet? |
34406 | How old were you then? |
34406 | How so? |
34406 | How so? |
34406 | How''re you, Aleck? |
34406 | How''s he doing? |
34406 | How''try me,''Wingie? |
34406 | How, good luck? |
34406 | How, your kid? |
34406 | How? 34406 I am sorry,"he continues,"they gave you such a long sentence, Mr. Berkman, but--""How do you know my name?" |
34406 | I understand you asked for some water? |
34406 | I was, was I? 34406 I''ll jimmy you damn carcass for you,"the old man bellows, angrily,"Where th''hell are you?" |
34406 | In free America? |
34406 | In the old prison, then? |
34406 | Is he as bad as all that, Red? |
34406 | Is he? 34406 Is it serious, Philo?" |
34406 | Is it true, Bob? 34406 Is n''t there a Bible in your cell?" |
34406 | Is that all? |
34406 | Is that right, Billy? |
34406 | Is that true, Doctor? |
34406 | Is that you, Aleck? 34406 Is there any chance now through the roof?" |
34406 | Is there any hope later on, Aleck? |
34406 | Is this the celebrated prisoner? |
34406 | Is yo sick, Ahlick? |
34406 | Is your mother here? |
34406 | It ai n''t, eh? 34406 It ai n''t, eh? |
34406 | Like''i m, do n''t you? 34406 Look at this, will you?" |
34406 | Make''em sick? 34406 Mamma, what happened to Uncle Maxim?" |
34406 | Manage? 34406 Me? |
34406 | Me? 34406 More letters from Homestead?" |
34406 | Mother? 34406 Mr. Cosson,"I said, with simulated respectfulness,"may I ask you a question?" |
34406 | Mr. Frick, do you identify this man as your assailant? |
34406 | Nev''r knew_ that_, did yer? 34406 Nihilists?" |
34406 | No? 34406 Not feeling well, m''boy?" |
34406 | Now tell me, Mr. Berkman, what is your name? 34406 Number?" |
34406 | Of what? 34406 Oh, an infidel, are you? |
34406 | Oh, got me name, have you? 34406 Oh, lay down, Slim, will you? |
34406 | Oh, let her be, Charley, wo n''t you? |
34406 | Oh, what''s the matter with you,he drawls,"get a move on, wo n''t you, Burk?" |
34406 | Oh, you ai n''t next? 34406 Oh, you mean Ivan Strogov, do n''t you?" |
34406 | Oh, you suspect me of this? |
34406 | On that rotten grub they feed us? |
34406 | On what charge? |
34406 | Papa Mitchell, be good now, wo n''t you? |
34406 | Perhaps in the family? |
34406 | Pie, Wingie? |
34406 | Poor boy, did you never go to school? |
34406 | Quiet as me grandmother at church, ai n''t ye? 34406 Read? |
34406 | Really, Aleck? 34406 Really? |
34406 | Really? |
34406 | Refuse? 34406 Russell--?" |
34406 | Sasha, what is it? |
34406 | Say, Mister,a voice calls behind the door,"are you all right?" |
34406 | See who''s rapping there, will you? |
34406 | Shall I ask her? |
34406 | Shall I call you Felipe? |
34406 | Shall I come along, Chaplain? |
34406 | Smell the pot- pie, do you? |
34406 | Stand treat on this festive occasion? |
34406 | Sure it''s you? 34406 That sho?" |
34406 | That you thar, Berkman? 34406 The informer, who denounced Dempsey and Beatty?" |
34406 | The man who shot Frick? |
34406 | The officers locked me up--"Who said you''re locked up? |
34406 | The screw? |
34406 | The weaving department? |
34406 | The women are in the South Block? |
34406 | Then why do you ask me? |
34406 | To Buffalo? |
34406 | Two years? |
34406 | Up here, 18 C."Is that you, Ed? |
34406 | Want coffee? 34406 Want to be smart, do n''t you? |
34406 | Warden, what for? |
34406 | Was he in stripes, Wingie? |
34406 | Wat am yo doin''heah? 34406 Wat_ he_ wan''teh work foh? |
34406 | Well, Red, how did you manage to keep away from work in Columbus? |
34406 | Well, d''ye know a moon when you see''t? |
34406 | Well, if you do n''t want the damned scabs, keep out the soldiers, you understand? 34406 Well, what have you got to say?" |
34406 | Well, what of it? |
34406 | Were you very lonesome in New York? |
34406 | Wha- a- t? 34406 What Inspector?" |
34406 | What Johnny? |
34406 | What Russell? |
34406 | What Smithy, Bob? |
34406 | What are you after? |
34406 | What are you always telling the men? |
34406 | What are you driving at, Red? |
34406 | What are you men doing here? |
34406 | What are you really talking about? 34406 What are your plans?" |
34406 | What business have you at that man''s door? |
34406 | What could I do? 34406 What d''ye think of_ that_, eh?" |
34406 | What d''you say? 34406 What did I tell you, eh, Scot? |
34406 | What did I tell you? |
34406 | What did he do? 34406 What did you do?" |
34406 | What did you mean by''trying''me, Wingie? |
34406 | What did you say? |
34406 | What did you say? |
34406 | What did you wish to see me about? |
34406 | What do you call the second? |
34406 | What do you call your line? 34406 What do you care about work or a place? |
34406 | What do you mean by that? |
34406 | What do you want to know? |
34406 | What do you want to make the kid feel bad for? |
34406 | What do you want to see the Warden about? |
34406 | What do you want, Berkman? |
34406 | What do you want, Deputy? |
34406 | What for? |
34406 | What has he done, Officer? |
34406 | What have they done with the boys? |
34406 | What have you done? |
34406 | What have you got on you? |
34406 | What have you, Bob? |
34406 | What in th''name of Jesus Christ do you want, Slim? |
34406 | What is an Anarchist? |
34406 | What is it you wish? |
34406 | What is it, Maximotchka? |
34406 | What is it? |
34406 | What is it? |
34406 | What is the charge, Officer? |
34406 | What is your name? |
34406 | What mail? |
34406 | What meeting? |
34406 | What province is that? |
34406 | What t''hell do you want, Butch? |
34406 | What t''hell''s the matter with you, eh? 34406 What was the name?" |
34406 | What would he do to you if he saw you talking to me? |
34406 | What yo wan''teh shoot Frick foah? |
34406 | What you pryin''out for? |
34406 | What''pards''? |
34406 | What''s a yegg, Red? |
34406 | What''s corn dodger? |
34406 | What''s the difference between a yegg and a bum? |
34406 | What''s the matter here? |
34406 | What''s the matter with you? |
34406 | What''s the matter, Sashenka? 34406 What''s the matter, boys?" |
34406 | What''s the trouble? |
34406 | What''s this, eh? |
34406 | What''s this? |
34406 | What''s this? |
34406 | What''s your hurry, Aleck? 34406 What''s your hurry? |
34406 | What''s your name? |
34406 | What''s''putting a jigger on''? |
34406 | What, Felipe? |
34406 | What, Luba? |
34406 | What? 34406 What?" |
34406 | What? |
34406 | Whatcher in for? |
34406 | When did you have your last visit? |
34406 | When did you write it? |
34406 | When was that? |
34406 | When was the jury picked? |
34406 | Where are the others? |
34406 | Where do you come from? |
34406 | Where do you get such luxuries? |
34406 | Where is he? |
34406 | Where is that man who-- er-- we read in the papers yesterday? 34406 Where is the hammer? |
34406 | Where th''devil d''you think you''re going, anyhow? 34406 Where was I before I came here?" |
34406 | Where''s he working? |
34406 | Where''s my dinner? |
34406 | Where''s the difference? |
34406 | Where? |
34406 | Where? |
34406 | Who are you? |
34406 | Who are you? |
34406 | Who gave you the note, Coz? |
34406 | Who is he? |
34406 | Who is he? |
34406 | Who is it? |
34406 | Who is that man? |
34406 | Who is that, Officer? |
34406 | Who is there? |
34406 | Who is this? |
34406 | Who sends clandestine mail for you? |
34406 | Who shaid I want to hear''t? |
34406 | Who trained them? |
34406 | Who was that? |
34406 | Who was, then? |
34406 | Who went with you to Mr. Frick''s office? |
34406 | Who''s calling? |
34406 | Who''s talkin''here? |
34406 | Who''s the kid? |
34406 | Who, then? |
34406 | Who-- told-- you? 34406 Who? |
34406 | Who? |
34406 | Who? |
34406 | Whom do you mean, Red? |
34406 | Why ca n''t you make it here? |
34406 | Why did n''t you say so at once? 34406 Why do n''t you keep that tongue of yours in check?" |
34406 | Why do n''t you let them go? 34406 Why do n''t you sit down, Aleck?" |
34406 | Why do you use so much slang? 34406 Why not?" |
34406 | Why not? |
34406 | Why should I be afraid of you? |
34406 | Why so? |
34406 | Why so? |
34406 | Why so? |
34406 | Why was_ I_ picked out? 34406 Why, Mr. Cosson, what''s th''trouble?" |
34406 | Why, why, m''boy, do you understand Latin or Greek? |
34406 | Why? 34406 Why?" |
34406 | Will you come with me? |
34406 | Will you get out of that chair? |
34406 | Will you have a bite, or something? |
34406 | Will you have a drink with me? |
34406 | Will you please excuse me from the shop for a few days? |
34406 | Will you promise not to laugh at me, Sashenka? |
34406 | Will you tell me the reason, Warden? |
34406 | Wingie? |
34406 | Wo n''t you issue me a special visit? 34406 Worse? |
34406 | Wotcher doin''? |
34406 | Would I dare it now? |
34406 | Ye- e- s? |
34406 | Yo am strikeh? 34406 You actually confess to such terrible practices? |
34406 | You are not working, m''boy? |
34406 | You bloke, long here? |
34406 | You call it work? |
34406 | You did n''t? 34406 You do n''t be- lie- ve? |
34406 | You do, do you? 34406 You don''min''it, Aleck, do you?" |
34406 | You got a personal grievance against him? |
34406 | You have just come out? |
34406 | You have not changed your views? |
34406 | You have not refused to work, have you? |
34406 | You hear what the officer says? 34406 You know about it, Wingie?" |
34406 | You know what they are? |
34406 | You know who this man is, Jasper? 34406 You like the change?" |
34406 | You mind your own business, you hear? |
34406 | You want him here? |
34406 | You want to know who the young lady is? |
34406 | You wo n''t make the task, eh? 34406 You would go back to your Anarchist friends?" |
34406 | You would protect the Federal Government, then? |
34406 | You would protect the people from being cheated by counterfeit money? |
34406 | You would return to New York, if released? |
34406 | You, Davis? |
34406 | You-- like them, really, Sasha? |
34406 | Young man, when, permit me to ask, did you reach so profound a conclusion? |
34406 | Your case is up for revision? |
34406 | _ That_ bother you, Aleck? 34406 _ What_ is n''t possible?" |
34406 | ''Fraid you wo n''t get''nough in yer twenty- two spot, eh? |
34406 | ''Why,''says I to him, kind of suddenly,''see the house there right across the street? |
34406 | ''you mean a whore- house, do n''t you?'' |
34406 | ***** Two days, and still alive? |
34406 | *****"Do you mean that the poet is less to you than the revolutionist?" |
34406 | A coward? |
34406 | A smile of timid joy suffuses the sightless face, as Bill Nye slaps him on the shoulder, crying jovially,"What did I tell you, eh? |
34406 | A young man in civilian dress, who is accompanying the police, inquires, not unkindly:"Are you hurt? |
34406 | A. DEAR TONY: Why do you insist on the hole in the ground? |
34406 | After such a tremendous effort, can we jeopardize it all so lightly? |
34406 | Ai n''t much to lose, is there, Burk?" |
34406 | Alive? |
34406 | Alive?... |
34406 | Always acquitted himself with flying colors, sir, merely by being wise and preserving a stiff upper lip; see th''point?" |
34406 | Always that way?" |
34406 | Am I forgotten? |
34406 | Am I not dead? |
34406 | An''say, kid, how long are you here?" |
34406 | And Fedya, also? |
34406 | And Most? |
34406 | And even if you leave the upper crust intact for a foot or two, how am I to dive into the hole in the presence of so many? |
34406 | And is it for this I have yearned and suffered, for this spectre that haunts my steps, and turns day into a nightmare-- this distortion, Life? |
34406 | And now comes Tarass Bulba-- is it our own Tarass, the fearless warrior, the scourge of Turk and Tartar? |
34406 | And now he lives, the vampire.... And Homestead? |
34406 | And the poor Sailor? |
34406 | And then to die for it,--ah, could there be a more glorious fate for a man, a real man? |
34406 | And they, our accusers? |
34406 | And what could be higher in life than to be a true revolutionist? |
34406 | And what d''you think, Aleck? |
34406 | And what is their attitude toward my deed? |
34406 | And what kind of a boy is he, do you know? |
34406 | And what"screws"must I watch? |
34406 | And who is this innocent Johnny, hm, Davis?" |
34406 | And who is to enlighten him? |
34406 | And who? |
34406 | And why, hm, hm, did you see it, my good man? |
34406 | And you want to welcome the murderers, do you? |
34406 | And you, dear friend? |
34406 | And you?" |
34406 | And, Aleck-- you remember when I was down in the dungeon six days? |
34406 | Answer my questions, d''ye hear?" |
34406 | Any one here?" |
34406 | Are n''t you glad?" |
34406 | Are they making propaganda out of it? |
34406 | Are they permitted? |
34406 | Are they suspecting the tunnel? |
34406 | Are you angry with me?" |
34406 | Are you deaf? |
34406 | Are you next, me bye? |
34406 | Are you next? |
34406 | Are you on? |
34406 | Are you sure you sent one?" |
34406 | Are you there, Aleck? |
34406 | As I was about to say when you interrupted-- eh, what? |
34406 | As he turns to leave, my can crashes against the door-- one, two, three--"What t''hell do you want, eh?" |
34406 | Assured I''ll keep his confidence, he begins to talk quickly, excitedly:"Nobody dere, Alick? |
34406 | B. DEAR, DEAR COMRADE: Can you realize how your words,"I am socialistically inclined,"warmed my heart? |
34406 | Berkman?" |
34406 | Blind to his own slavery and degradation, can I expect him to perceive the wrong suffered by others? |
34406 | Broke now? |
34406 | But I am indifferent to consequences: what matter what happens? |
34406 | But do n''t you see that you must also examine society, to determine to what extent social conditions are responsible for criminal actions? |
34406 | But does this lightning really illumine the social horizon, or merely confuse minds with the succeeding darkness? |
34406 | But how can that make any difference? |
34406 | But how did he procure these things? |
34406 | But how did he smuggle in this note? |
34406 | But how proceed in the matter? |
34406 | But if you did, what the devil could have become of it? |
34406 | But is it really great and noble to be slaves and remain content? |
34406 | But perhaps you have not found it so, Aleck, after your many years of absence?" |
34406 | But supposing he has, what has become of it? |
34406 | But what can I expect of a lawyer, when even the steel- worker could not understand my act? |
34406 | But what can he do? |
34406 | But what can it be? |
34406 | But what can it be? |
34406 | But what could they do for me?" |
34406 | But what did I want to kill the man for? |
34406 | But what does it matter? |
34406 | But what has all this to do with the question I asked you?" |
34406 | But what has become of the Chaplain? |
34406 | But what is he afraid of? |
34406 | But what is that red- headed Misha from Odessa saying? |
34406 | But what matter who are the men to judge me? |
34406 | But what shall I turn to? |
34406 | But when, when will the dullard realize things? |
34406 | But where is the X- ray of social insight that will discover in human understanding and mutual aid the elements of true progress? |
34406 | But wherein is the improvement that augments misery and crowds the prisons? |
34406 | But who am I, to presume to teach? |
34406 | But who knows? |
34406 | But why do you need them? |
34406 | But why sadden you? |
34406 | But why should they want to trap me? |
34406 | But why should_ I_ lie for his sake? |
34406 | By an''by I return to the house, and mother and sisters are kind of excited, and I says innocent- like,''What''s up, girls?'' |
34406 | By the way, what is the matter with your eyes? |
34406 | By what right? |
34406 | CHAPTER XXV HOW SHALL THE DEPTHS CRY? |
34406 | Ca n''t you say''sir''? |
34406 | Can any one understanding my motives, doubt the justification of the_ Attentat_? |
34406 | Can it be? |
34406 | Can it be?... |
34406 | Can this be Tuesday, only Tuesday? |
34406 | Can this great criminal determine Right? |
34406 | Can you hear me? |
34406 | Can you tell me_ that_?" |
34406 | Carl Nold? |
34406 | Casting a glance at my assistant, the Warden inquires:"Your time must be up soon, Red?" |
34406 | Catch on, eh? |
34406 | Catch on? |
34406 | Cell 6 K.""What is it, my boy?" |
34406 | Christ, d''you think I''d ever turn another trick? |
34406 | Cold and cruel must be the world, my little Dick; or is it friendship, that is stronger than even love of liberty? |
34406 | Cosson?" |
34406 | Could I have overlooked him in the closely walking ranks? |
34406 | Could anything be nobler than to die for a grand, a sublime Cause? |
34406 | Could you get no work at home, in Oil City?" |
34406 | Could you sit up with her to- night?" |
34406 | Did I notice the dark glasses he wears? |
34406 | Did he not issue a secret circular letter to aid my plans concerning Russia? |
34406 | Did he not say it was her poor husband''s own carelessness? |
34406 | Did n''t I come from New York? |
34406 | Did n''t he look mad, though? |
34406 | Did n''t you hear th''bell?" |
34406 | Did she remember that terrible scene when mother struck her? |
34406 | Did the turnkey call"six"? |
34406 | Did you hear about the kid born here? |
34406 | Did you see him?" |
34406 | Did you see how the fight started?" |
34406 | Do I think the judge will have pity on him? |
34406 | Do n''t use the weed? |
34406 | Do n''t you be leanin''on th''door, d''ye hear?" |
34406 | Do n''t you know the rules, eh? |
34406 | Do n''t you know?" |
34406 | Do n''t you really recognize me?" |
34406 | Do n''t you remember? |
34406 | Do n''t you remember?" |
34406 | Do n''t you think it showed a noble trait in the boy? |
34406 | Do n''t you, Frenchy?" |
34406 | Do you consider him a true, active revolutionist? |
34406 | Do you follow the argument, me bye?" |
34406 | Do you know her?" |
34406 | Do you know what Johnny did? |
34406 | Do you prefer whiskey or beer?" |
34406 | Do you remember that glorious face, so strong and tender, on the wall of our little Houston Street hallroom? |
34406 | Do you remember the last time I was in the dungeon? |
34406 | Do you see things like in a fog, Charley?" |
34406 | Do you want to see them?" |
34406 | Does a real revolutionist need to prepare himself, to steel his nerves and harden his body? |
34406 | Does he know about the Nihilists, I wonder? |
34406 | Does he only pretend? |
34406 | Does he realize that I am just out of prison? |
34406 | Does not the Pinkerton janizary represent organized authority, forever crushing the toiler in the interest of the exploiters? |
34406 | Does she, too, think I''ve failed? |
34406 | Does that strike you in th''right spot, sonny?" |
34406 | Doing all right?" |
34406 | Enough time; why has n''t he done something? |
34406 | Ever had dealings with him? |
34406 | Ever hear such a thing? |
34406 | Ever read Billy Shakespeare? |
34406 | Every time he passed my bed, he''d say:"You still alive? |
34406 | Failed?... |
34406 | Feeling good to- day?" |
34406 | Flushing slightly, and frowning, he asks:"But you would protect the poor?" |
34406 | For days I debate in my mind the momentous question: shall I confide the project to Tony? |
34406 | For what purpose? |
34406 | Free? |
34406 | Frick?" |
34406 | Frick?" |
34406 | From whom can it be? |
34406 | Good manager, ai n''t he? |
34406 | Got it, Sasha?" |
34406 | Got me sized up all right, eh? |
34406 | Got no chance t''choo, so I turns an''biffs him on de jaw, see?" |
34406 | Got shoes?" |
34406 | Green? |
34406 | HOW SHALL THE DEPTHS CRY? |
34406 | Has that prison experience influenced his present attitude? |
34406 | Has the unexpected revelation of my magnanimous generosity deprived you of articulate utterance, sir?" |
34406 | Have I been here only since yesterday? |
34406 | Have I been there? |
34406 | Have I failed? |
34406 | Have I gone blind? |
34406 | Have I got a chew of tobacco about me? |
34406 | Have I grown morbid, or do they actually presume to reproach me with my failure to suicide? |
34406 | Have they forgotten me?... |
34406 | Have we no such in our ranks? |
34406 | Have you a copy of the rules in the cell, my man?" |
34406 | Have you money on you?" |
34406 | He ca n''t come out now, Officer?" |
34406 | He had been unjust to me; but who is free from moments of weakness? |
34406 | He is counting nineteen, twenty, ten pair; twenty- one, twenty- two.... What was that? |
34406 | He speaks to- morrow; will you come with me?" |
34406 | Help the strikers? |
34406 | Hey, Aleck, you there?" |
34406 | His hands folded, eyes turned upwards, lips slightly parted in silent prayer, he inquires of the rangeman:"Whose cell is this?" |
34406 | His mouth between the bars, he whispers very low:"Principles opposed to a get- a- way, Aleck?" |
34406 | Hm, what is your number?" |
34406 | How about those revolvers, though? |
34406 | How can I broach the subject to the Twin? |
34406 | How can a self- respecting gentleman explain himself to you? |
34406 | How can it be possible? |
34406 | How can that be? |
34406 | How could you_ think_ that of me?" |
34406 | How d''you like the grub, anyhow?" |
34406 | How dare you demand?" |
34406 | How dare you?" |
34406 | How did he manage to"get his man"? |
34406 | How did he try to, hm, hm, to commit suicide?" |
34406 | How do you know?" |
34406 | How explain such a change in Most? |
34406 | How helped amid the injustice and brutality of a society whose chief monuments are prisons? |
34406 | How his mother would suffer if she knew that her carefully reared boy passes the nights in the.... What is that pain I feel? |
34406 | How is he going to do it, to keep the soldiers out? |
34406 | How is he?" |
34406 | How is his conduct, Superintendent?" |
34406 | How old are you now?" |
34406 | How shall they be helped? |
34406 | How will it affect conditions there? |
34406 | How''re you feeling to- day?" |
34406 | How''s that for classic style, eh? |
34406 | How? |
34406 | How? |
34406 | I have done nothing for the agonized men in the dungeon darkness-- have I forgotten them? |
34406 | I have the opportunity; why am I idle? |
34406 | I have visited the Carnegie offices only--"Do you plead guilty or not guilty?" |
34406 | I hear a suppressed, hollow voice:"That you, Aleck?" |
34406 | I just heard him say,"Aleck, work a little faster, ca n''t you? |
34406 | I keep wondering, can such a world of misery and torture be compressed into one short month?... |
34406 | I recognize the mumbling speech of Deputy Greaves, as he calls out to the silent prisoner:"Want a drink?" |
34406 | I shall, so to speak, assume benevolent guardianship over you; over you and your morals, yes, sir, for you''re my kid now, see?" |
34406 | I shtands in, see? |
34406 | I take pride in being a thief, and what''s more, I_ am_ an A number one gun, you see the point? |
34406 | I tried to do the square thing, Aleck, but where''s a fellow to turn? |
34406 | I was thinking-- how shall I tell you? |
34406 | I''ll first peep in through the window-- I wonder what she''ll be doing-- and who will be at home? |
34406 | I''m a free man; I can live on my wits, see? |
34406 | I''m no damn murderer like you, see? |
34406 | I''ve got to eat, have n''t I? |
34406 | If I had not found it, I vaguely wonder, were the thing mere fancy? |
34406 | If I happened to appear anywhere alone, they would inquire, anxiously,"What is the matter? |
34406 | If I only knew about"them"in New York-- the Girl and Fedya-- it would be easier to die then.... What are they doing in the case? |
34406 | If he''d only come-- why is he so long? |
34406 | If"Papa"Mitchell is about, he thunders at the chief cook, his bosom swelling with packages:"Wotch''er got there, eh? |
34406 | Impulsively I blurt out:"Was the story inspired, perhaps?" |
34406 | In Parsons and Lum, this country has produced her Zheliabovs; is the genius of America not equal to a Hartman? |
34406 | In reference to French leave, have you read about the Biddle affair? |
34406 | Innocent? |
34406 | Inspector?" |
34406 | Is Nold up there on your gallery?" |
34406 | Is a revolutionist to respect such a travesty? |
34406 | Is he done already? |
34406 | Is he not prepared to take the responsibility for his terrorist propaganda, the work of his whole life? |
34406 | Is it because of greater maturity? |
34406 | Is it consequent in me to decline liberty, apparently within reach? |
34406 | Is it fancy, or did I hear my name? |
34406 | Is it night? |
34406 | Is it safe to trust him? |
34406 | Is it sheer apathy and languor that hold the weak thread of life, or nature''s law and the inherent spirit of resistance? |
34406 | Is it the death watch? |
34406 | Is liberty sweet only in the anticipation, and life a bitter awakening? |
34406 | Is not the terrorizing of scabbery, and ultimately of the capitalist exploiters, an effective means of aiding the struggle? |
34406 | Is that you, Aleck?" |
34406 | Is there another? |
34406 | Is there no Nemesis in Spain? |
34406 | Is this the fruit of progress? |
34406 | Is your chum sick?" |
34406 | It ai n''t no two years, though, see?" |
34406 | It represents Undine, rising from the water, the spray glistening in the sun...."Are you tired, Aleck?" |
34406 | It was in connection with Homestead, is it not so, m''boy?" |
34406 | It''s a little tunn''l, connectin''th''cellar with th''females, see? |
34406 | It''s you, Aleck?" |
34406 | Jest leave that to th''Horsethief, an''write till you bust th''paper works, see?" |
34406 | Jest wanted t''try you, see?" |
34406 | Jim is silent for a while, then he demands, abruptly:"Wat dey put you here for?" |
34406 | Just tell me, where do you stay in New York?" |
34406 | Keep it up? |
34406 | Keep quiet now, will you? |
34406 | Know any one here?" |
34406 | Know how''t''s made?" |
34406 | Know what punk is? |
34406 | Know who''s Shorty?" |
34406 | Know_ him_, do n''t you?" |
34406 | Labor can never be unjust in its demands: is it not the creator of all the wealth in the world? |
34406 | Let me see; what is to- day? |
34406 | Let''s see, what you call''em again?" |
34406 | Makes your mouth water, eh, kid? |
34406 | May he not, then, voice a favorable sentiment? |
34406 | May not a similar purpose be served by my application for a pardon? |
34406 | McIlvaine?" |
34406 | Me ask a favor o''the damn swine? |
34406 | Me? |
34406 | Milligan?" |
34406 | Moreover, sir, neither you nor me will live to see a change, so why should I worry me nut about''t? |
34406 | Mr. McPane, what is the sentence for the possession of a dangerous weapon?" |
34406 | Must the oppressed forever submit? |
34406 | My teacher-- the author of the_ Kriegswissenschaft_--the ideal revolutionist-- he to denounce me, to repudiate propaganda by deed? |
34406 | My tomb will open-- oh, to see the light, and breathe the air again...."Officer, is n''t my time up yet?" |
34406 | Need I enlarge? |
34406 | No scroo? |
34406 | No- o- o? |
34406 | No- o- o? |
34406 | No? |
34406 | No? |
34406 | Not a steel- woikeh?" |
34406 | Not dead?... |
34406 | Not long on lingo, are you? |
34406 | Now explain, what do you mean by it?" |
34406 | Now what did the judge and jury know about him? |
34406 | Now, tell me, where did you stop in Pittsburgh?" |
34406 | Numb''r? |
34406 | Of what use are all these preliminaries? |
34406 | Of what value is it without a high purpose, uninspired by revolutionary ideals? |
34406 | Officers, take him directly to the South Wing, you understand? |
34406 | Often I am assailed by doubts: is it advisable to mention the matter to the Deputy? |
34406 | Often I have wondered in the years gone by, was not wisdom dear at the price of enthusiasm? |
34406 | Oh, what has happened to him? |
34406 | Oh, what''s the matter with you? |
34406 | Oh, you do n''t believe me, do you? |
34406 | On whom did you mean to use it?" |
34406 | Only a month? |
34406 | Only three hours since my arrest? |
34406 | Overheard a plot to kill th''king by them fellows-- er-- what''s you call''em?" |
34406 | Passionately she showers kisses upon my face and hands, entreating:"_ Golubchik_, what is it?" |
34406 | Perhaps better to fall against the blade? |
34406 | Perhaps my little candle with its bold defiance has shortened the reign of darkness,--who knows? |
34406 | Perhaps the underground passage does not extend to the penitentiary? |
34406 | Perhaps they did not take me through the yard-- Is it the Block Captain''s voice? |
34406 | Perhaps you have one with Greek or Latin annotations?" |
34406 | Perhaps-- is it possible? |
34406 | Personal dislike? |
34406 | Pipe''is lamps, kid?" |
34406 | Presently he surprises me by asking:"Friend Aleck, what do they call you in Russian?" |
34406 | Presently he whispers, hoarsely:"Fresh fish?" |
34406 | Presently he whispers:"See me hand it to''i m, Aleck? |
34406 | Pretending to wash his hands, he asks:"Can I use your towel, Aleck? |
34406 | Pretty desp''rate, eh?" |
34406 | Pretty stiff, eh? |
34406 | Pretty stiff, eh?" |
34406 | Products? |
34406 | Remember the stiff[25] you got in them things, tow''l an''soap?" |
34406 | Rotten, ai n''t he?" |
34406 | S''pose you have oriented yourself, sir, concerning the developments in the culinary experiment?" |
34406 | Savvy now, Innocent Abroad?" |
34406 | Say, Berk, d''ye think they''ll hang me? |
34406 | Say, I''ve got somethin''for you from Shorty, I mean Carl, you savvy?" |
34406 | Say, how old are you, Alex?" |
34406 | Say, that kid is all to the good, ai n''t he? |
34406 | Say, what''s that you said, you do n''t believe what I endeavored so conscientiously, sir, to drive into your noodle? |
34406 | Says it''s artistic, see? |
34406 | Scrap, Dep''ty?" |
34406 | See dis?" |
34406 | See him jump on me?" |
34406 | See where Sandy gets his slice, eh? |
34406 | See? |
34406 | Several days? |
34406 | Shall one seal his emotions, or barricade his heart? |
34406 | Shall we diagnoze the peculiar mental menstruation as, er-- er-- what''s your learned opinion, my illustrious colleague, eh? |
34406 | She asks abruptly:"You like poetry?" |
34406 | She''ll tell me about Most,--but what is the use? |
34406 | Should I refuse the opportunity which would offer such a splendid field for agitation? |
34406 | Some business misunderstanding, eh?" |
34406 | Some guard? |
34406 | Some one shouts to a distant friend,"Hey, Bill, are you there? |
34406 | Stealing nickels off passengers on the street cars, and--""Me? |
34406 | Suicide? |
34406 | Suppose they obey their own rules? |
34406 | Suppose you remember, do n''t you? |
34406 | Sure you''re not afraid?" |
34406 | Sure? |
34406 | Take me for such small fry, do you? |
34406 | Talk, did they? |
34406 | Talkin''there, was n''t you?" |
34406 | That boy on the whitewash gang?" |
34406 | That you, Aleck?" |
34406 | That''s me talkin'', Big Bob, see? |
34406 | That''s what you mean?" |
34406 | That''s when you first came here, eh, Jasper?" |
34406 | That''s_ me_ talkin'', understand?" |
34406 | The Assistant Deputy smiles, produces a large apple from his pocket, and, holding it up to view, asks:"How does this strike you, Jasper?" |
34406 | The Block Captain retraces his steps, and, facing the boy, storms at him:"What did you say? |
34406 | The Board promised a rehearing at the previous application,--why this refusal? |
34406 | The Deputy looks uneasy and fidgets in his chair, but catching the severe eye of Hopkins, he shouts vehemently:"What do you want in the block?" |
34406 | The Warden and several officers accompanied him to court, on the way coaching the poor idiot to answer"yes"to the question,"Do you plead guilty?" |
34406 | The brutal mockery of it-- had I anything to say why sentence should not be passed? |
34406 | The croaker here is giving you some applications, ai n''t he?" |
34406 | The danger, the heroic self- sacrifice-- what money could buy such devotion? |
34406 | The drawn face, the look of horror, your whole being the cry of torture-- were_ you_ not the real prisoner? |
34406 | The fancy lures me with its warming embrace, when suddenly the assistant startles me:"Say, pard, slept bad last night? |
34406 | The future is dark; but, then, who knows?... |
34406 | The legal aspect aside, can the morality of the act be questioned? |
34406 | The new arrivals grow uneasy; perhaps they are still too expensive? |
34406 | The officer turns to my assistant:"Has he been talkin'', Reddie?" |
34406 | The quiet grows unbearable, and Johnny calls again:"What are you doing, Sashenka?" |
34406 | The road to death is so short, why suffer? |
34406 | The strong disapproval of my sentiments I met with this challenge:"Do you mean to help Edelstadt, the poet and man, or Edelstadt the revolutionist? |
34406 | The tall stranger puts his hand familiarly on my shoulder, exclaiming:"Do n''t you recognize me, Mr. Berkman? |
34406 | The_ how_? |
34406 | Them''s empty pipes, no standin''water, see? |
34406 | Then, changing his tone, he vociferates,"Do n''t stand there like a fool, d''ye hear? |
34406 | There are none in the cell; where am I to get them? |
34406 | There is no more striking example in the annals of the Russian movement than that peerless Nihilist-- what was his name? |
34406 | There you go and shove your damn neck into th''noose for the strikers, but what did them fellows ever done for you, eh? |
34406 | They ca n''t fool me so easy, can they, Burk?" |
34406 | Think I can walk off all right with a team of horses, but ai n''t got brains enough to get away with a bit of scribbling, eh? |
34406 | Think I''d get off as easy if he was n''t chuck full of th''stuff? |
34406 | Think I''d open my guts to my Lord Bighead? |
34406 | Think I''m a cur, do you?" |
34406 | Think I''m a nigger, eh? |
34406 | Think I''m so dumb I have to slave all week for a few dollars?" |
34406 | Think this a barroom, do you? |
34406 | Think you''re on th''platform haranguing the long- haired crowd? |
34406 | This is no playhouse, you understand?" |
34406 | This soldier-- what is his name? |
34406 | To a ball?" |
34406 | To what purpose, with my impossible sentence? |
34406 | Trying to steady his voice, he demanded:"What do you mean? |
34406 | Twenty- one, ai n''t you? |
34406 | Understand now?" |
34406 | Want a piece of pie? |
34406 | Want coffee? |
34406 | Want coffee? |
34406 | Want to get out o''here?" |
34406 | Want to go to th''hole again, eh?" |
34406 | Want to see them? |
34406 | Was it I that spoke? |
34406 | Was it all a dream? |
34406 | Was it last night? |
34406 | Was it really necessary to halt operations so long? |
34406 | Was it suicide or accident? |
34406 | Was it the extreme self- consciousness of the idealist, the power of revolutionary traditions, or simply the persistent will to be? |
34406 | Was my vision of the_ palátch_ a presentiment, or the echo of an accomplished tragedy? |
34406 | Was not"he"alone, my beloved,"unknown"Grinevitzky, isolated, scorned by his comrades? |
34406 | Was the Spanish Inquisition ever guilty of such organized child murder? |
34406 | Wat d''_you_ know''bout it? |
34406 | We''ll all club together to get your case up for a pardon, wo n''t we, boys?" |
34406 | We, criminals? |
34406 | We, who are ever ready to give our lives for liberty, criminals? |
34406 | Well, me saintly bye, I''m Johnny- on- the- spot to serve the cause, all right, all right, and the cause is Me, with a big M, see? |
34406 | Well, then, how could the strike concern me? |
34406 | Well, what did they do?" |
34406 | Well, your friends are all right, ai n''t they?" |
34406 | Wha- at? |
34406 | What am I in for? |
34406 | What are you here for?" |
34406 | What beauties of his rich mind are hidden to- day in the quaint German type? |
34406 | What can be the matter with my friend? |
34406 | What can it be? |
34406 | What cell?" |
34406 | What cheering message does Reitzel bring me now? |
34406 | What could have prompted his denunciation of my act? |
34406 | What could he have meant by"trying"me? |
34406 | What could they do, Wingie?" |
34406 | What d''I want to work for, eh? |
34406 | What d''you stay in for?" |
34406 | What did I want to kill him for, anyhow? |
34406 | What did I want to"nose in"for? |
34406 | What did the Warden mean? |
34406 | What did you notice, Aleck?" |
34406 | What do they want, anyhow?" |
34406 | What do you know about the piping, eh? |
34406 | What does she think of it all? |
34406 | What good can my continued survival do? |
34406 | What has become of your caution, your judgment? |
34406 | What has the_ palátch_ done? |
34406 | What horrors await me at the new prison? |
34406 | What if it is lost? |
34406 | What is all indignation and lamenting, in the face of the revival of the Inquisition? |
34406 | What is he to do but commit another crime and be returned to prison? |
34406 | What is it?" |
34406 | What is the matter,_ golubchik_?" |
34406 | What is the misery of the People to_ them?_ Probably they are laughing at me. |
34406 | What is the third about, Red?" |
34406 | What is the use of all this misery and torture? |
34406 | What is the use? |
34406 | What is the use?... |
34406 | What is this? |
34406 | What is your request?" |
34406 | What lamps? |
34406 | What matter the immediate outcome of the revolution in Russia? |
34406 | What matter the personal consequences to Frick? |
34406 | What of it? |
34406 | What purpose could it serve? |
34406 | What right had a revolutionist to such self- indulgence? |
34406 | What shall I do, what shall I do? |
34406 | What th''devil-- damn me soul t''hell, what d''you mean, you do n''t b''lieve? |
34406 | What then? |
34406 | What they call you, Narchist? |
34406 | What time are you through with it?" |
34406 | What was I thinking about? |
34406 | What was it? |
34406 | What was it? |
34406 | What would it not offer me after this experience? |
34406 | What you grinnin''for, Four Eyes? |
34406 | What you talkin''''bout? |
34406 | What''s his name, Johnny Davis? |
34406 | What''s principle got t''do with''t? |
34406 | What''s the matter with you, anyhow?" |
34406 | What''s the pen? |
34406 | What''s the use talkin''to you, anyhow? |
34406 | What''s your number?" |
34406 | What''s''is game, anyhow? |
34406 | What_ is_ it, Bob?" |
34406 | Whatcher hehawin''about?" |
34406 | Whatcher in for?" |
34406 | Whatcher sighin''for?" |
34406 | When did I come here?" |
34406 | When did I come? |
34406 | When did you have your last visitor?" |
34406 | When will he open his eyes? |
34406 | When will they stop? |
34406 | Where are they?" |
34406 | Where do you live?" |
34406 | Where is Rosa now? |
34406 | Where is it? |
34406 | Where shall I begin now? |
34406 | Where the hell did you get your cramp mixture, when you was spilling around in a freight car, eh?" |
34406 | Where''s me wife?" |
34406 | Where''s my husband?" |
34406 | Where, where is it all? |
34406 | Who are you? |
34406 | Who are your friends?" |
34406 | Who are your friends?" |
34406 | Who cares for a heifer when you can get a kid? |
34406 | Who is in cell six? |
34406 | Who is it?" |
34406 | Who knows what shall be the amalgam, some day to be recast by the master hand of a new Turgenev?... |
34406 | Who knows? |
34406 | Who said you was crazy? |
34406 | Who would have expected it? |
34406 | Who''s stealing your socks, eh? |
34406 | Who''s there?" |
34406 | Whose fault is it; mine?" |
34406 | Whose voice is it I hear? |
34406 | Why am I deprived of visits?" |
34406 | Why are the prisoners given qualitatively and quantitatively inadequate food? |
34406 | Why are they dead? |
34406 | Why ca n''t they understand the motives that prompted my act? |
34406 | Why continue the unprofitable torture? |
34406 | Why could n''t they agree? |
34406 | Why did Wingie leave me? |
34406 | Why did n''t I go? |
34406 | Why did n''t it break?... |
34406 | Why did n''t they write before? |
34406 | Why did n''t_ you_ ask him?" |
34406 | Why did she not write before? |
34406 | Why did you take that direction at all? |
34406 | Why do my friends regard the matter so indifferently? |
34406 | Why do n''t you say something? |
34406 | Why do n''t you take it over to th''loopers, Burk?" |
34406 | Why do n''t you talk sensibly?" |
34406 | Why do you delay? |
34406 | Why do you speak of failure? |
34406 | Why does he insist I should plead guilty? |
34406 | Why has he suddenly been stricken with fear? |
34406 | Why has the route been changed? |
34406 | Why have my friends ignored the detailed plan I had submitted to them through Carl? |
34406 | Why have n''t I thought of it before? |
34406 | Why in America? |
34406 | Why in hell did n''t he get his own men to do th''job? |
34406 | Why is he laughing? |
34406 | Why not give the unemployed men air and exercise, since the management is determined to keep them idle? |
34406 | Why not in America? |
34406 | Why not try to understand an honest man even if he feels called on to kill? |
34406 | Why should Alice be anxious to see me? |
34406 | Why should I live? |
34406 | Why should I watch it? |
34406 | Why should I, the revolutionist, be moved by such remarks? |
34406 | Why should he be so much interested in my seeing a stranger? |
34406 | Why should it not be? |
34406 | Why should the bird starve as long as I have bread? |
34406 | Why should they concern themselves with misery and want? |
34406 | Why so much misery and strife? |
34406 | Why that note of disappointment, almost of resentment, as to Tolstogub''s relation to the Darwinian theory? |
34406 | Why this torture? |
34406 | Why were the talesmen not examined in my presence? |
34406 | Why will we not abstain from sin and evil, for just"the twinkling of an eye- lash"? |
34406 | Why, do n''t I know? |
34406 | Why, it is terrible to think of Most-- a coward? |
34406 | Why, then, prolong the agony? |
34406 | Why, then, these regrets? |
34406 | Why, you know, pard, or perhaps you do n''t, greenie, Columbus is a pretty tough dump; but d''ye think I worked the four- spot there? |
34406 | Why? |
34406 | Why? |
34406 | Why?" |
34406 | Will they ever pass?... |
34406 | Will you come?" |
34406 | Will you kindly communicate with her at once? |
34406 | Will you permit me to give them an airing in the yard?" |
34406 | With torpid brain I wonder,"Is it possible, is it really possible?" |
34406 | With unconcealed annoyance, he demands:"What did you want?" |
34406 | Wo n''t hang a blind man, will they?" |
34406 | Wo n''t the judge sympathize with a blind man? |
34406 | Wo n''t you please take off a bit? |
34406 | Woods?" |
34406 | Would I accept his services? |
34406 | Would I have a cigarette? |
34406 | Would I pay? |
34406 | Would I"take lunch with the Chief"? |
34406 | Would he really stoop to such an outrage? |
34406 | Would it not be folly to afford the enemy the triumph of my gradual annihilation? |
34406 | Would it not be more in conformity with his reputation as a skilled"gun,"I argue, to"do the job"in a"smoother"manner? |
34406 | Would my skull break with one blow? |
34406 | Would n''t believe it, eh, would you? |
34406 | Would n''t he be recognized as an escaped prisoner?" |
34406 | Would n''t that jar you, eh? |
34406 | Would you believe it? |
34406 | Would you like to see him?" |
34406 | Ye- es? |
34406 | Yes, she will be glad-- they could n''t torture me here-- she''ll know I cheated them-- yes, she.... Where is she now? |
34406 | Yes? |
34406 | Yes? |
34406 | Yet who knows? |
34406 | Yet why? |
34406 | Yet, who can tell? |
34406 | Yo am deep all right, Ahlick-- dat am yuh name? |
34406 | You all know who I am, do n''t you?" |
34406 | You are one of the Homestead strikers, are you not?" |
34406 | You did n''t? |
34406 | You do n''t believe it possible, you do n''t, eh? |
34406 | You go to work now, and you''d better make the task, understand?" |
34406 | You have never seen me before?" |
34406 | You hear?" |
34406 | You know Flem, the night nurse? |
34406 | You know watta for ma fader an''Gianni come outa da grave? |
34406 | You know what he done yesterday?" |
34406 | You know what that woman did?" |
34406 | You know what''moon''is, do n''t you?" |
34406 | You know what''s about?" |
34406 | You know who I am?" |
34406 | You listen t''me, Aleck, that''s your friend talkin'', see? |
34406 | You love a boy as you love the poet- sung heifer, see? |
34406 | You no tell nobody, yes?" |
34406 | You not know wat it mean? |
34406 | You remember when we were celling together on that upper range, on R; you were in the stocking shop then, were n''t you? |
34406 | You remember, Aleck?" |
34406 | You see, I would n''t apply for a pardon, because it would be asking favors from the government, and I am against it, you understand? |
34406 | You see, Mr. Berkman,--may I call you Aleck? |
34406 | You see, pipe''s runnin''up an''down, an''you can talk to any range you want, but always to th''same cell as you''re in, Cell 6, understand? |
34406 | You seen old Henry? |
34406 | You want''em?" |
34406 | You was only kiddin''me, was n''t you?" |
34406 | You was there, Jasper, when''Shoe- box''Miller got out, was n''t you?" |
34406 | You would like the position?" |
34406 | You''Snakes''there, what business you got here, eh?" |
34406 | You''d better say nothing about it, see? |
34406 | You''ve been very sick, but you feel better now, do n''t you, dear?" |
34406 | You''ve got money; what more do you want? |
34406 | You-- know?" |
34406 | You-- you''re laughing?" |
34406 | Your principle''s''gainst get- tin''out?" |
34406 | _ That''s_ your point? |
34406 | _ This_ world? |
34406 | _ You_ never worked, did you?" |
34406 | he bristles up,"think I''m such a dummy?" |
34406 | he drawls sarcastically; then, turning to the keeper, he says:"How is that, Officer? |
34406 | that''s what you said, eh? |
34406 | the merely physical results of my_ Attentat_? |
34406 | this the spirit of our Christian civilization? |
34406 | whither? |
14153 | ''Do you think it fordable?'' 14153 A ball"--said John--"in the stable?" |
14153 | A woman''s minute or a man''s minute? |
14153 | About the election, you mean? |
14153 | About the mills? |
14153 | After all, what does it matter? |
14153 | Ah, Mrs. Penhallow, there must be in the North and South many families divided in opinion; what do you suppose they do? 14153 Ah,"returned Cushing,"but will they be asked to talk today?" |
14153 | All well at Grey Pine? |
14153 | Am I to be allowed to write to her? |
14153 | Am I? 14153 Am I? |
14153 | Am I? 14153 An operation?" |
14153 | And Kansas? |
14153 | And do n''t they pay slaves? |
14153 | And do you not? |
14153 | And he is in this county? |
14153 | And here is mine,said Leila, and laughing asked with both hands behind her back,"Which hand, John?" |
14153 | And how am I to keep young, Miss Grey? |
14153 | And how is Pole, aunt; and the doctor and Crocker and his fat wife-- oh, and everybody? |
14153 | And may I ask where do I come in? |
14153 | And not otherwise? |
14153 | And ours? |
14153 | And so it was Grey? |
14153 | And so, when that failed, you went to bank and drew out the poor fellow''s savings? |
14153 | And still you advise it? |
14153 | And the general election? |
14153 | And then? |
14153 | And they mean to take him back? |
14153 | And what did he say? |
14153 | And what did he say? |
14153 | And what do you think about, John? |
14153 | And what else should I be? |
14153 | And what else? |
14153 | And what of Leila? 14153 And what, John-- men eating?" |
14153 | And where did you get all this about a prig? |
14153 | And where do I come in? |
14153 | And where, my dear, did you get all this gossip? |
14153 | And who will cast the first stone? |
14153 | And why? |
14153 | And you are glad to go? |
14153 | And you are going on with the business? |
14153 | And you got on again? |
14153 | And you let all these suns go down upon your wrath? |
14153 | And you really mean that? |
14153 | And you will write to me, Leila? |
14153 | And you would like that best? |
14153 | And you write to him, of course? |
14153 | And you, John Penhallow, my brother''s son, were afraid? |
14153 | And you, dear lady? |
14153 | And your own? |
14153 | Ann,he said,"have you seen the papers to- day?" |
14153 | Any bad news, Leila? |
14153 | Any barber in this town? |
14153 | Any letters from my boy? |
14153 | Any messages for aunt or uncle? |
14153 | Any other stable slang, Leila? |
14153 | Anything I can do for you? |
14153 | Anything else? |
14153 | Anything new at Westways? |
14153 | Are n''t you ashamed? |
14153 | Are n''t you getting wet, John? |
14153 | Are they so bad? |
14153 | Are you afraid, John? 14153 Are you asleep? |
14153 | Are you aware, Penhallow, that this wicked business about Josiah has beaten Buchanan in Westways? 14153 Are you badly hurt?" |
14153 | Are you fully resolved on this, Penhallow? |
14153 | Are you glad to be free? |
14153 | Are you hit? |
14153 | Are you not well? |
14153 | Are you really able? |
14153 | Are you through, with this nonsense, Leila? |
14153 | Are you tired? |
14153 | Are you? |
14153 | Busted? |
14153 | But Aunt Ann? |
14153 | But after all,said Mrs. Ann,"is it so very comic?" |
14153 | But how will I ever get it? |
14153 | But if he is so good a soldier, why did he make what you call a frontal attack on entrenched troops at Malvern? |
14153 | But what do you mean, Leila? 14153 But what examination remains?" |
14153 | But what is an abolitionist, aunt? |
14153 | But what is it-- trust me a little-- what is it? |
14153 | But what would you do, uncle? |
14153 | But why did you run away? |
14153 | But why do you do it? |
14153 | But why,she urged,"why do you go?" |
14153 | But why? |
14153 | But why? |
14153 | But why? |
14153 | But will it, James? |
14153 | But, James, what shall we do with him? 14153 But, Mr. Rivers, may it not work also for good and suggest possibilities-- let you into seeing what other men may do?" |
14153 | But, aunt, do you not understand how serious this one was? |
14153 | But, is it safe? 14153 But, is n''t it very limited?" |
14153 | But, why? |
14153 | But,said John,"how can he?" |
14153 | But,she said,"is there not work enough here? |
14153 | Ca n''t you? |
14153 | Can I do anything for you? |
14153 | Can I in any way help you? |
14153 | Can he coast? 14153 Can you account for it, Tom?" |
14153 | Can you bear a little frank talk? |
14153 | Can you bear-- I said it yesterday to Mrs. Penhallow-- a frank opinion? |
14153 | Can you get my horse up? |
14153 | Can you make out their flags? |
14153 | Come to get those scalp- locks trimmed, John? 14153 Come to see Grace, sir?" |
14153 | Could I not go there for a while? |
14153 | DEAR LEILA: I am just now with the Second Corps, but where you will know in a week; now I must not say.--"What''s the date? |
14153 | Did I? 14153 Did he say anything?" |
14153 | Did he? 14153 Did it end there?" |
14153 | Did many die, uncle? |
14153 | Did she send back the tea? |
14153 | Did she tell you that, Mark, or has it improved in your hands? |
14153 | Did you chance to go by the old cabin? |
14153 | Did you ever kiss a woman, John-- just for practice? |
14153 | Did you ever read Hebrews, John? 14153 Did you find where he lives?" |
14153 | Did you never read a poem called''The Talking Oak''? 14153 Did you notice his face?" |
14153 | Did you? |
14153 | Did you? |
14153 | Did you? |
14153 | Did_ he_ draw it-- I mean in person? |
14153 | Do n''t you hear, Leila? 14153 Do n''t you notice, Leila, how she has kind of softened? |
14153 | Do not hurry, John; have another cup? |
14153 | Do with him? 14153 Do you enjoy it?" |
14153 | Do you know that he is on the verge of complete financial ruin? |
14153 | Do you know this General? |
14153 | Do you really like the life here, John? |
14153 | Do you recall, Squire, what Thucydides said of the Greeks at the time of the Peloponnesian War? |
14153 | Do you remember how, when we were small, we used to fight violets? |
14153 | Do you think me unreasonable, James? |
14153 | Do you think so? |
14153 | Do you think you convinced him? |
14153 | Does Leila like it? |
14153 | Does Tom McGregor swim there? |
14153 | Does he never ride, Leila? |
14153 | Does he require anything? |
14153 | Does n''t the rector dine here, to- day, Leila? |
14153 | Does she ask for me? |
14153 | Does she like it at school? |
14153 | Does the Emancipation Proclamation please you? |
14153 | Dr. McGregor has, I trust, told you of our difficulties with my aunt? |
14153 | Excuse me, sir, could I talk to you? 14153 For sale-- how much?" |
14153 | For what? |
14153 | From town? |
14153 | God help me!--where can I go? 14153 Good- morning, Ellen,"he said,"what brings you here over the snow this frosty day? |
14153 | Got hit, John? 14153 Got through, John? |
14153 | Got what? |
14153 | Had n''t you boys better shake hands? |
14153 | Hancock will suffer long-- but now, about you-- did no one think you could be relieved by an operation? 14153 Has Mr. Rivers got back?" |
14153 | Has Uncle Jim gone back to his pipe? |
14153 | Has any one heard of Josiah? |
14153 | Has he never been here before? |
14153 | Has n''t it something to do with slavery? 14153 Has the town wickedness accumulated in your absence, Mark?" |
14153 | Have I greatly troubled you? |
14153 | Have I said a word? |
14153 | Have n''t you any other name? |
14153 | Have you any letters for me? |
14153 | Have you had a fall, John? 14153 Have you seen yesterday''s papers?" |
14153 | Have you written that letter? 14153 He is in Washington?" |
14153 | He said:''Did they sting?'' 14153 He would get it; but what made you ask about sense of the humorous? |
14153 | He''ll do,he murmured,"but what the deuce was my young dandy doing on the roof?" |
14153 | Head back a bit-- that''s right comfortable now, is n''t it? |
14153 | Heard from Mrs. Penhallow lately? |
14153 | His lips? 14153 Hoops-- what for?" |
14153 | How about the first polka as absolution? |
14153 | How are my chickens? |
14153 | How are politics, Billy? |
14153 | How are you? 14153 How can I?" |
14153 | How can a man venture to speak, John, like Mr. Jefferson Davis? 14153 How can he? |
14153 | How can you say that? |
14153 | How could you think I would kiss you twice-- I was so ashamed--"Well, Leila? |
14153 | How did he use it, Leila? |
14153 | How did you know all this? |
14153 | How do I find her? 14153 How do you know he is afraid, my dear James?" |
14153 | How do you know that? |
14153 | How far have you travelled on that rocker, Rivers? |
14153 | How far must I consider her, or be guided by the effect my decision will have on her? 14153 How far was he accountable, Tom?" |
14153 | How goes the swimming, John? |
14153 | How is Aunt Ann? |
14153 | How is Leila? |
14153 | How is it interesting? |
14153 | How many rows can I knit until I hear? 14153 How many will be left?" |
14153 | How old are you? |
14153 | How you feeling, Master John? |
14153 | How''s your arm, Captain? 14153 How?" |
14153 | I did, Leila, but how did you know? |
14153 | I do really need help-- how can I make Aunt Ann see this famous surgeon? 14153 I have myself a few words to say-- but, is that all?" |
14153 | I suppose he recognized Josiah readily? |
14153 | I suppose so-- what next? |
14153 | I suppose you still swim here, every morning, Leila? 14153 I suppose, Squire, you''ll get Joe Boynton, the carpenter, to put on the roof? |
14153 | I will not,he returned, and then--"What else is there?" |
14153 | I wonder what Grant is doing? |
14153 | I wonder what I would fetch, Leila? |
14153 | I-- how the deuce should I?--what did he say? |
14153 | I-- no-- Do you suppose I know every runaway nigger? |
14153 | I? 14153 If by mishap he were captured while trying to escape, what then? |
14153 | In trouble, Josiah? 14153 Indeed-- but what else? |
14153 | Indeed? |
14153 | Interesting, my dear? 14153 Is Hoodoo in good order?" |
14153 | Is John ill? |
14153 | Is he dead? |
14153 | Is he dead? |
14153 | Is it because the hideous business called war attracts you? |
14153 | Is it too late? |
14153 | Is n''t Mrs. Penhallow rather on the other side? |
14153 | Is n''t it like a big chess- board? |
14153 | Is n''t it queer,he said,"how people think about the same things? |
14153 | Is n''t it, Squire? 14153 Is n''t that Leila with Rivers, Ann?" |
14153 | Is n''t that absurd, John, as if--"Well, what more? |
14153 | Is n''t that delightful, Uncle Jim? 14153 Is n''t there a walk down through the woods?" |
14153 | Is obsession the word you want? |
14153 | Is she dead? |
14153 | Is that a charade, John? 14153 Is that all of it?" |
14153 | Is that all, sir? |
14153 | Is that all? 14153 Is that so?" |
14153 | Is that wise, aunt? 14153 Is that your own wisdom, Miss Grey? |
14153 | Is that your poetry or your folly, James Penhallow? |
14153 | Is the Squire alive? |
14153 | Is there any message you want me to carry? |
14153 | Is this an ingenious little game set up between you and John? |
14153 | Is this certain? |
14153 | Is your letter from John, Leila? |
14153 | It is chilly, Mark; would you like a fire? |
14153 | It is half- past two,said General Hunt;"what next? |
14153 | It makes one feel uncomfortable,said Penhallow, and turning to John,"Who was first there after you came?" |
14153 | It was about her dead husband--"Am I to hear it or not? |
14153 | It was at the bank, James? |
14153 | It will be of use, but could n''t I persuade you to speak at the meeting next week at the mills? |
14153 | John,said his uncle in his usual direct way,"have you ever been on the back of a horse?" |
14153 | Know him? 14153 Look here,"said Tom McGregor turning to John,"did you tell the Squire we fellows set it up?" |
14153 | Mark,said Mrs. Ann,"if George Grey comes-- James, did you leave the wine- closet key?" |
14153 | May I ask why? |
14153 | May I come? |
14153 | May I ride today with you, uncle? |
14153 | May I smoke? |
14153 | Message-- who would I send messages to? |
14153 | Mine, my dear? 14153 Must you go?" |
14153 | My God, was that all? 14153 No one knows where you are-- you''ll go to- night?" |
14153 | No pipe, Mark? |
14153 | No, I am serious; but it leads up to this: Am I free to say you will vote the Republican ticket? |
14153 | No, sir-- never no more-- and the captain and Miss Leila-- it''s awful-- where can I go? |
14153 | No, why should I? |
14153 | No,cried John,"and what does it matter?" |
14153 | No-- hit in both arms-- why the deuce ca n''t I walk? |
14153 | None for me, Uncle? |
14153 | Now, John, what terrible task shall I put upon you? 14153 Of course not; but why my aunt, Mr. Josiah? |
14153 | Of me? 14153 Oh, I just wondered if you''d like to change with me-- guess you would n''t for all the pain?" |
14153 | Oh, James, must I be put in a corner? |
14153 | Oh, John, and did n''t you know my eyes were blue? |
14153 | Oh, Leila, is n''t it wonderful? |
14153 | Oh, Leila, is that the best you can do? |
14153 | Oh, do you think so? 14153 Oh, do you think so?" |
14153 | Oh, is she? 14153 Oh, the tragedy of Arnold,--the pathos of Washington''s despair,--his words,''Who is there now I can trust?''" |
14153 | Oh, why? |
14153 | On what terms will you take me in? 14153 On your honour?" |
14153 | One moment, James--"Oh, what is the matter? |
14153 | Or a lawyer, or a doctor like Tom McGregor? |
14153 | Or your son, Tom? 14153 Pansy-- pansy-- why is she like a pansy, Josiah?" |
14153 | Penhallow, may I take the liberty to bother you with a bit of unasked advice? |
14153 | Perhaps-- perhaps,he returned humbly; and then with a quite gentle retort,"Do n''t you sometimes preach too much from the head, Brother Rivers?" |
14153 | Quiet, is n''t it? 14153 Quite too interesting, but will he try it on the Squire and your aunt? |
14153 | Receptive? |
14153 | See John too, Leila? 14153 Seen yesterday''s_ Press_?" |
14153 | Shall I write it down? |
14153 | Shall we go home? |
14153 | Shall you ride with your uncle tomorrow, Leila? |
14153 | She said that? |
14153 | So Billy upset you; and John, where is he? |
14153 | So, he will never ask me again? |
14153 | So, then, my dear, John went and gave the man a warning? |
14153 | Thank me, what for? 14153 Thank you and her,"he returned, and then added abruptly,"How are you meaning to vote, Squire?" |
14153 | Thank you-- but what of the army? 14153 That fellow said nothing of Mrs. Penhallow, you are sure?" |
14153 | The face? 14153 The right,"said Penhallow,"Miss Politician?" |
14153 | The trouble would be, sir, who''s to shave the Colonel? |
14153 | Then I would know--"Know what, John? 14153 Then since the world began there never was another me or Leila?" |
14153 | Then why not to Aunt Ann? |
14153 | Then you think I was unreasonably angry? |
14153 | Then, James, there will be no income from the mills-- from-- from that contract? |
14153 | There''s no news of John? |
14153 | They are going to attack,said Haskell,"and can they mean our whole line-- or where?" |
14153 | Think a little-- a little? |
14153 | To whom, John? |
14153 | Told what? 14153 Trout or baby?" |
14153 | Uncle Jim!--what-- when? |
14153 | Want me to steal? 14153 Was I so loved as this-- so honoured?" |
14153 | Was Josiah really here, sir? 14153 Was Peter Lamb at the fire?" |
14153 | Was n''t his mother a Virginia mare, James? |
14153 | Was n''t your hero Cromwell just magnificent, stately blank verse? |
14153 | Was the boy amused or-- or scared? |
14153 | Well, Ann? |
14153 | Well, James,she said,"did you ever see a better mannered lad, and so intelligent?" |
14153 | Well, John,said the doctor,"what''s up now? |
14153 | Well, Penhallow,he said,"what can I do for you?" |
14153 | Well, Pole,said Rivers,"how are you and Mrs. Crocker? |
14153 | Well, Uncle Jim-- to talk prose-- the elections please you? |
14153 | Well, and what did Mrs. Penhallow do? |
14153 | Well, and what of it? 14153 Well, and where, please?" |
14153 | Well, any more news, Leila? |
14153 | Well, are you done? |
14153 | Well, that is exasperating? 14153 Well, was that all?" |
14153 | Well, well, is that so? 14153 Well, what conclusion did you come to?" |
14153 | Well, what did Pole do? |
14153 | Well, what is it? |
14153 | Well, what is it? |
14153 | Well, what is it? |
14153 | Well, what was it? |
14153 | Well, what''s the matter? 14153 Well,"he said, with some impatience,"what is it?" |
14153 | Well,he said,"what''s your opinion, Miss Grey?" |
14153 | Well,said Haskell,"it would be madness-- can Lee remember Malvern Hill?" |
14153 | Well,said Penhallow,"is this all?" |
14153 | Well,said the little lady, Ann Penhallow,"how did the game go, John?" |
14153 | Well,said the rector,"left anything?" |
14153 | Well,she said,"did you see Josiah?" |
14153 | Well? |
14153 | Well? |
14153 | Were guinea pigs really pigs? 14153 Were we? |
14153 | Were you at school in Europe? |
14153 | Were you never here before, John? |
14153 | What about her? 14153 What about that contract for ambulances?" |
14153 | What amuses you, James? |
14153 | What amuses you, John? |
14153 | What are you about? |
14153 | What are you grinning at, you young scamp? |
14153 | What are you thinking about? |
14153 | What are you thinking of, Jack? |
14153 | What better society? |
14153 | What came, Leila? |
14153 | What can I do for you? |
14153 | What did he mean? 14153 What did he see?" |
14153 | What did he want? |
14153 | What do you know? |
14153 | What do you mean, Ann? |
14153 | What do you mean? |
14153 | What do you mean? |
14153 | What do you propose to do? |
14153 | What do you want me to say, John Penhallow? |
14153 | What does he say, Josiah? |
14153 | What does he want now? |
14153 | What does that matter? 14153 What else is there to talk about nowadays? |
14153 | What fool did that? |
14153 | What gets the matter with men? 14153 What happened, James?" |
14153 | What is a meliorist, sir? |
14153 | What is his name? 14153 What is it, Billy?" |
14153 | What is it, James? |
14153 | What is it, John? 14153 What is it, John?" |
14153 | What is it, John? |
14153 | What is it? |
14153 | What is it? |
14153 | What is it? |
14153 | What is it? |
14153 | What is swinging on a gate? |
14153 | What is that? |
14153 | What is the matter, my dear child? |
14153 | What is the matter? |
14153 | What is there, my dear Mr. Rivers, you can not get? 14153 What is your letter, Ann?" |
14153 | What is your name? |
14153 | What kind of questions, John? |
14153 | What limitations? |
14153 | What must be rather awkward? |
14153 | What next? |
14153 | What put Grey on the track of Josiah as a runaway? 14153 What put that into your head-- it does not seem suitable?" |
14153 | What road is that? |
14153 | What the deuce is the matter? |
14153 | What then, sir? |
14153 | What time is it, Penhallow? |
14153 | What was it? |
14153 | What was the matter, sir? 14153 What will they do with him?" |
14153 | What would you give? |
14153 | What you done to Hoodoo, Master John? 14153 What''s a rummage- sale?" |
14153 | What''s all this row about, Ann? 14153 What''s that, Ann?" |
14153 | What''s that, sir? |
14153 | What''s that? |
14153 | What''s that? |
14153 | What''s the matter, John? |
14153 | What''s the matter-- who is he? |
14153 | What''s the matter? 14153 What''s wrong now, Penhallow?" |
14153 | What''s wrong, Uncle Jim? 14153 What, about kissing? |
14153 | What, not smoking, Grace? |
14153 | What, you wo n''t do it? |
14153 | What,he said,"would our children have been without you? |
14153 | What-- already, Tom? |
14153 | What-- what? |
14153 | When do you go? |
14153 | When does Mark Rivers go back? |
14153 | When does he return? |
14153 | When were you not at everybody''s service? |
14153 | Where did you get this, Josiah? |
14153 | Where did you suppose I would be? 14153 Where is Lee?" |
14153 | Where is he? 14153 Where is your aunt?" |
14153 | Where is your present, James? |
14153 | Where was it? |
14153 | Where-- Jack? |
14153 | Which dare was it, Leila? |
14153 | Who cares for him? |
14153 | Who could help laughing? |
14153 | Who drew it? |
14153 | Who is that with Uncle James? |
14153 | Who owns that horse? |
14153 | Who said he was a scamp? |
14153 | Who says I lied? 14153 Who was Prince Fine Ear?" |
14153 | Who was it? 14153 Who''ll bid?" |
14153 | Who''s your General? |
14153 | Who, Lonesome Man or the spring? 14153 Who-- what flag?" |
14153 | Who? 14153 Why did n''t you swim?" |
14153 | Why did n''t you tell me, aunt? |
14153 | Why did you not get up and help? |
14153 | Why did you? |
14153 | Why do n''t you put such reflections into verse, John? 14153 Why do n''t you smoke, John?" |
14153 | Why do n''t you talk, John? |
14153 | Why do they call it Indian summer? |
14153 | Why do you do that, Uncle Jim? |
14153 | Why do you say that? |
14153 | Why mention that, James? |
14153 | Why not have rocking- chairs in church, Mark? 14153 Why not, my friend?" |
14153 | Why not? |
14153 | Why not? |
14153 | Why not? |
14153 | Why not? |
14153 | Why should n''t he be alive? |
14153 | Why so? 14153 Why, Mr. Rivers, I know I drink, and then I''m not responsible, but how could I say to that poor old darkey what I do n''t mind I said yesterday?" |
14153 | Why, did you never hear the rhyme about it? |
14153 | Why, what''s the matter, sir? |
14153 | Why? 14153 Why? |
14153 | Why? 14153 Will I?" |
14153 | Will aunt go to church to- morrow? |
14153 | Wo n''t you come? |
14153 | Wo n''t you think a little of how I feel-- and-- and shall feel? |
14153 | Worried, Squire? |
14153 | Would I like? |
14153 | Would he have won, uncle? |
14153 | Would it? 14153 Would n''t Uncle Sam make a row?" |
14153 | Would n''t the other way be more wholesome on the whole? |
14153 | Would you keep him here longer, if you could? |
14153 | Would you like to be a clergyman? |
14153 | Would you like to be bought and sold? |
14153 | Would you like to have been there, Jack? |
14153 | Yes, I said to George that we would buy Josiah''s freedom-- what amuses you, James? |
14153 | Yes, I want to introduce you to-- Dixy-- yes--"And may I ride with you? |
14153 | Yes, but shall you vote for him? 14153 Yes, sir-- what''s that?" |
14153 | Yes, yes-- and everything-- those years of war and what it has brought us-- and my dear Uncle Jim-- and how is it to end? 14153 Yes-- but--""But what?" |
14153 | Yes-- probably-- but who can say? 14153 Yes-- what next?" |
14153 | Yes-- who told you to tell me? |
14153 | Yes-- why not? |
14153 | You ai n''t him--?? 14153 You ai n''t him--?? |
14153 | You cannot-- you really cannot-- where could you be more useful than here? |
14153 | You did not think it impertinent, Jack? |
14153 | You mean to preach politics, Grace? |
14153 | You want my advice? 14153 You will do, James, whatever Dr. Askew wishes?" |
14153 | You will help me? 14153 You wo n''t be too hard on him, James?" |
14153 | You wo n''t telegraph? |
14153 | --"Is that explanatory?" |
14153 | --Isn''t it funny?" |
14153 | A moment later Penhallow opened his eyes, sat up, and said,"Where am I? |
14153 | A week later she spoke again,"What conclusion have you reached?" |
14153 | All well?" |
14153 | Am I clear?" |
14153 | Am I clear?" |
14153 | And John-- where is he?" |
14153 | And Leila? |
14153 | And do tell me how old must a girl be before she has a right to think?" |
14153 | And is n''t it a nice, good- natured day? |
14153 | And now, how is your beautiful Grey Pine and its mistress and Leila? |
14153 | And now, let me know what is our lesser and more material debt?" |
14153 | And who was Lonesome Man?" |
14153 | And why did he himself not altogether like it? |
14153 | And why did he not write more about himself? |
14153 | Ann Penhallow said,"Where did you leave off, Leila? |
14153 | Ann says,''What''s the difference? |
14153 | Ann, how about that?" |
14153 | Another and younger man with his arm in a sling asked,"Are they only cavalry?" |
14153 | Any errands, my dear?" |
14153 | Any letters for us?" |
14153 | Any news of our John? |
14153 | Any news?" |
14153 | Anything I can do for him?" |
14153 | Anything else, my dear?" |
14153 | Anything wrong with the horses?" |
14153 | Are n''t these flowers beautiful? |
14153 | Are the men gone?" |
14153 | Are there any others in the house-- servants-- any one?" |
14153 | Are things better at the mills?" |
14153 | Are we-- am I to lose also your friendship-- or is even that at an end?" |
14153 | Are you cross enough for that now?" |
14153 | Are you in pain, John?" |
14153 | As Billy drove away, Mrs. Penhallow called back,"You will come to dinner to- day?" |
14153 | As I came back I saw Captain Penhallow ride away-- and why not with you, Miss Grey? |
14153 | As Rivers rose to his feet, Lamb said,"Could n''t I have just a little whisky? |
14153 | As he bade them good- morning, his uncle said,"How goes the examination?" |
14153 | As he stood he asked,"How did those men get in, Josiah?" |
14153 | As the train stopped, he said as he got out,"There is no carriage-- you telegraphed, McGregor?" |
14153 | As they faced the snow, he asked,"How tall are you, Leila?" |
14153 | As they walked down the avenue Grace said,"What are you doing about Lamb? |
14153 | As they walked homeward, Rivers said,"What do you want to do, John? |
14153 | As they walked over the crackling ice- cover of the snow, he said,"Why do you want to sled, Leila? |
14153 | As they were leaving, Penhallow said,"But there will be our workmen-- what will become of them?" |
14153 | As to your naughty ending, I do not care who the man was-- why should I? |
14153 | Askew?" |
14153 | At dinner, the Squire asked kindly:"Are you all right, my boy?" |
14153 | At last she rose and excused herself, saying,"Another cup? |
14153 | Been here long?" |
14153 | Between half- hysterical laughter and ready tears, she gasped,"Where did you get that prettiness?" |
14153 | Bugs gone?" |
14153 | But are you satisfied?" |
14153 | But did what interested you interest Leila?" |
14153 | But how the deuce does it concern you? |
14153 | But how-- how? |
14153 | But if the gentleman did not own Josiah''s years of lost labour, some one else did, and who was it? |
14153 | But now-- the rest-- the rest-- what am I to do?" |
14153 | But tell me are you really in earnest about it?" |
14153 | But what about Lamb?" |
14153 | But what could this man know? |
14153 | But what else could he do? |
14153 | But what had been their errand? |
14153 | But what of you?" |
14153 | But what you tell me-- is it very bad? |
14153 | But who could have warned the black? |
14153 | But why not, Cousin Ann?" |
14153 | By the bye, how will the county vote?" |
14153 | By the way, do you ever read the papers?" |
14153 | Ca n''t you believe a fellow?" |
14153 | Can I never get away from it-- never-- never?" |
14153 | Can you keep a secret?" |
14153 | Can you run?" |
14153 | Can you take that fence?" |
14153 | Can you think of any one with malice enough to make him want to bum a house and risk the possibility of murder?" |
14153 | Can you walk to the river?" |
14153 | Can you walk?" |
14153 | Come to look for you-- can you ride? |
14153 | Could he answer all of them and abide too by the silence he meant to preserve until the war was over? |
14153 | Could not you pay for a new roof?" |
14153 | Could she and James live for years afraid to speak of what was going on? |
14153 | Crocker?" |
14153 | Crocker?" |
14153 | Crocker?" |
14153 | Dear Aunt Ann, how can one keep on not talking about politics and things that are next to one''s religion-- and concerning our country-- my country?" |
14153 | Did Leila too consider him a boy? |
14153 | Did he do it?" |
14153 | Did he have dreams of airy freedom? |
14153 | Did he know it or care? |
14153 | Did he really mean to discuss, to criticize her relations to James Penhallow? |
14153 | Did he talk much?" |
14153 | Did n''t he write about him at-- where was it? |
14153 | Did she write you anything about Josiah?" |
14153 | Did the man see you-- I mean, recognize you?" |
14153 | Did they kill any Indians?" |
14153 | Did they show you the horses?" |
14153 | Did you believe him even for a moment?" |
14153 | Did you ever feel that, sir?" |
14153 | Did you ever notice how its leaves differ in shape?" |
14153 | Did you ever think that an honest love may be to a man like a second-- an angelic-- conscience? |
14153 | Did you see what Seward said,''An irrepressible conflict,''and that man Lincoln,''The house divided against itself can not stand''? |
14153 | Did you suppose a middle- aged ostrich could not use her eyes? |
14153 | Did you think, Grey, that to save your life or my own I would permit you to escape with your work? |
14153 | Do n''t these big pines talk to you sometimes, and the wind in the pines-- the winds--?" |
14153 | Do n''t you feel how still it is? |
14153 | Do n''t you know Aunt Ann?" |
14153 | Do n''t you love it?" |
14153 | Do n''t you miss her?" |
14153 | Do n''t you see things before you fall asleep? |
14153 | Do you go to mother''s room--""What for?" |
14153 | Do you hear? |
14153 | Do you know the Cornish rhyme? |
14153 | Do you know why I sent for you?" |
14153 | Do you know-- do you realize what it means to us?" |
14153 | Do you mean to slide down to that brook?" |
14153 | Do you talk to him about it?" |
14153 | Do you think she would send word to some one-- to take you back? |
14153 | Do you think so?" |
14153 | Do you want to read John''s letters? |
14153 | Does he know of this man''s fate?" |
14153 | Does he say that?" |
14153 | Does he think me a child? |
14153 | Does the North suppose we will endure a sectional President? |
14153 | Ever feel that way, Ann?" |
14153 | Ever try it, Squire?" |
14153 | Five cents-- do I hear ten? |
14153 | Good idea-- how do you play it?" |
14153 | Grey?" |
14153 | Grey?" |
14153 | Had Mr. Grey been imprudent? |
14153 | Had he been wise to commit himself to a reversal of his sentence? |
14153 | Had he deserved a fate so sad? |
14153 | Had her aunt''s recent look of ill- health represented nothing but the depressing influence of a year of anxiety? |
14153 | Half- way up the avenue Penhallow said,"Before we go in, a word or two--""What is it, Jim?" |
14153 | Has Mr. Grey gone to bed?" |
14153 | Has the_ Tribune_ come? |
14153 | Have I-- ever kissed a woman? |
14153 | Have you been to- day in the graveyards you call trenches?" |
14153 | Have you heard from John lately?" |
14153 | Have you heard the news?" |
14153 | Have you no adventures? |
14153 | Have you read any of the speeches of a man named Lincoln in Illinois? |
14153 | Have you read his speech?" |
14153 | He asked one evening,"What was the Missouri Compromise?" |
14153 | He had hoped to find an ally in his cousin''s husband, and now what should he do? |
14153 | He had loved her once; did he now? |
14153 | He has quite lost his foreign boyish ways, and do n''t you think he is like my husband?" |
14153 | He heard Blake ask,"Are you at home, Penhallow?" |
14153 | He looks-- Don''t you think he looks worried, aunt? |
14153 | He reads my papers, and how can I stop him? |
14153 | He rose flushed and troubled, and said,"Are you vexed, Leila?" |
14153 | He said,"How long ago was the last sale? |
14153 | He shall not do it-- do you hear me? |
14153 | He turned to his wife,"Any news of Leila, Ann?" |
14153 | He was as cool as a cucumber--""Why are cucumbers cool?" |
14153 | He was bobbin''for eels-- and-- he saw you go by--""Well, what else?" |
14153 | He was here to- day in the utmost distress about you--""About me?" |
14153 | He was more surprised that Mrs. Ann asked,"What did you say, Leila?" |
14153 | He was silent, however, while Grey exclaimed,"Fear, sir-- fear? |
14153 | He was sorry-- but it was too late-- oh, James!--you will not-- oh, you will not--""Will not what, dear?" |
14153 | He will get well, Doctor, I suppose?" |
14153 | Heard the good news? |
14153 | Her aunt said quickly,"But James Penhallow-- he is in Washington?" |
14153 | Her curiosity got the better of her dislike of being praised for what to her was a simple duty, and she added,"Well, what did he say?" |
14153 | Horses all right?" |
14153 | How about the moral, Ann?" |
14153 | How are the people here going to vote? |
14153 | How are they all?" |
14153 | How are you, old fellow?" |
14153 | How could he be of use to her and these dear people to whom he owed so much? |
14153 | How could he sleep without a pillow? |
14153 | How could she amuse them?" |
14153 | How did he end?" |
14153 | How did you come to grief?" |
14153 | How did you get out of the mills, uncle?" |
14153 | How did you happen to die?" |
14153 | How did you know that?" |
14153 | How do you fellows like that?" |
14153 | How does it look to you, or have you thought of what you mean or want to do? |
14153 | How does it strike you, Mark?" |
14153 | How does, or how did, Leila take Mrs. Ann''s teachings?" |
14153 | How far is a man accountable who inherits a family tendency to insanity? |
14153 | How is John? |
14153 | How is he? |
14153 | How is my sister, and your beauty, Leila?" |
14153 | How is that?" |
14153 | How long is it?" |
14153 | How long will it be before you begin to turn out cannon?" |
14153 | How many Indians were there?" |
14153 | How old are you?" |
14153 | How will the Squire vote?" |
14153 | How''s the Colonel?" |
14153 | I can understand his alarm, and how can I reassure him? |
14153 | I do n''t like it any better than you do-- but--"Bill Baynton, the youngest boy, broke in,"Who told the Squire what fellows was in it?" |
14153 | I have no direct evidence of his guilt, and what am I to do? |
14153 | I mean, is he-- are the mills-- likely to fail?" |
14153 | I said this abominable business was to be closed out--""And is it not?" |
14153 | I shook hands with him and said,''Where did you come from? |
14153 | I sometimes wish Josiah was twins and I had one of him.--""What''s that?" |
14153 | I suppose that under Leila''s care and a good out- of- door life he will drop his girl- ways-- but--""But what, James?" |
14153 | I think that''s silly,"said the young philosopher,"do n''t you, John?" |
14153 | I was thinkin''how Pole, the butcher, sold the Squire a horse that''s spavined-- got it sent back-- funny, was n''t it?" |
14153 | I wonder what I did say to Josiah?" |
14153 | I wonder where that little coin is to- day? |
14153 | I''m going to the mills to see my girl-- want you to shave me-- got over my joke; funny, was n''t it?" |
14153 | If he falls in love, what ought he to do or not do? |
14153 | If the man were reclaimed, he, Swallow, would be heard of all through the State; but would that help him before the people in a canvass for the House? |
14153 | If there is to be war, have I no interest? |
14153 | If you do not prefer better society, may I ask to ride with you to- morrow?" |
14153 | If you undertake to offer advice at your tender years, what will you do when you are older?" |
14153 | In a few minutes the man returning said,"Want me with you? |
14153 | Is he not a relation of the handsome Miss Grey we met on the avenue?" |
14153 | Is he well up in mathematics?" |
14153 | Is he well?" |
14153 | Is his pet scamp any better?" |
14153 | Is it possible you know Josiah?" |
14153 | Is it really wise to talk to him?" |
14153 | Is it the mills and-- the men out of work? |
14153 | Is it the mills?" |
14153 | Is it true? |
14153 | Is n''t it Captain Penhallow of the engineers?" |
14153 | Is n''t it dreadful, Leila?" |
14153 | Is n''t it interesting, Uncle John?" |
14153 | Is n''t it odd how one is brought to realize what a small place our world is? |
14153 | Is n''t that Josiah I hear?" |
14153 | Is n''t that like what aunt was before the war?" |
14153 | Is n''t that slave law wicked? |
14153 | Is n''t the rector on the porch? |
14153 | Is n''t this outlook beautiful? |
14153 | Is she"--and he hesitated--"is she herself?" |
14153 | Is that courage? |
14153 | Is the news confirmed?" |
14153 | Is there anything you are afraid of?" |
14153 | Is there evil news?" |
14153 | Isaac Grace,"What about the trout- brook this afternoon?" |
14153 | It rained yesterday-- will it be wet in the woods?" |
14153 | It ran thus:"MY DEAR SIR: Will you not reconsider the offer of the colonelcy of a regiment? |
14153 | It was-- wasn''t it in May? |
14153 | John hesitated before he asked,"Could not I have, sir, a few days with Aunt Ann at the Cape?" |
14153 | John looked the uneasiness he felt, as he said,"Do you think it is safe?" |
14153 | John looked up, hesitated a moment, and said,"What horse, sir?" |
14153 | John said at last,"If I write a cheque for you, can you sign your name to it?" |
14153 | John?" |
14153 | Josiah asked one of the men who had brought about the arrest,"Who is that man?" |
14153 | Josiah said,"Would n''t you just let me have a minute with the Captain?" |
14153 | Josiah stopped her horse and got badly hurt--"Then with quick insight, she added,"What interest have you in our barber, George? |
14153 | Josiah?" |
14153 | Josiah?" |
14153 | Leila called out,"Any letters, Mrs. Crocker? |
14153 | Leila could only say,"Why not, aunt?" |
14153 | Let me think-- what was it scared Josiah?" |
14153 | Like it? |
14153 | Like to have them, Leila? |
14153 | Like to see it?" |
14153 | Listen, sir-- what''s that?" |
14153 | Makes old fellows look younger-- ever notice that?" |
14153 | May I ask of you one thing? |
14153 | May I ask what you propose to do about this present case?" |
14153 | May I ask your name?'' |
14153 | May I have another cigar? |
14153 | May I make use of another room?" |
14153 | May I ride Dixy, Uncle Jim?" |
14153 | May I talk to you a little about your husband?" |
14153 | McGregor?" |
14153 | McGregor?" |
14153 | Meanwhile Rivers, walking with McGregor, said,"Did the figure of that doomed wretch haunt you as we talked to John?" |
14153 | Might I ask your name, sir?" |
14153 | Miss Leila having exhausted all the possible explanations, said with sweet simplicity,"Did you ever find out the origin of that name? |
14153 | Morally better, John?" |
14153 | Mr. Rivers? |
14153 | Much surprised, he said,"These attacks-- has he had them before?" |
14153 | Must you go? |
14153 | No, she was unprepared to commit herself for life, for would he too be of the same mind? |
14153 | Not for a moment would he have gone back-- but why had he run away? |
14153 | Not particularly-- why?" |
14153 | Nothing serious?" |
14153 | Now as he walked with his friend to the door, he said,"Does Mrs. Penhallow know of your change of duty? |
14153 | Now he said,"Were all these women, Squire, who had the gift of bewitchment, good?" |
14153 | Now how are you going to find him? |
14153 | Now what would you advise? |
14153 | Now why do you suppose James Penhallow wants to plunge into this chaotic war?" |
14153 | Now, Aunt Ann, what would you have done or said?" |
14153 | Now, be sure, is that the man? |
14153 | Now, can you dine with me?" |
14153 | Now, gentlemen, will you leave at once or in an hour or less?" |
14153 | Now, how can it be managed?" |
14153 | Now, is n''t that real jolly?" |
14153 | Now, she''s kind of gentled-- noticed that?" |
14153 | Now, what have you to say?" |
14153 | Now, who betrayed the man-- who told Grey?" |
14153 | Now, you will, sir, wo n''t you?" |
14153 | Oddly enough she had the thought,"Who will now shave James?" |
14153 | Oh, my!--are you hurt bad?" |
14153 | Once I saw you pat a big pine and say''how are you, old fellow?'' |
14153 | One day when I was breakin''a colt, Mr. Woodburn says to me-- I was leanin''against a stump-- how will that colt turn out? |
14153 | One of the maids? |
14153 | Penhallow, groping in the confusion of remote memories, returned,"I seem to recall-- yes-- it was talked of--""But not done? |
14153 | Penhallow?" |
14153 | Penhallow?" |
14153 | Penhallow?" |
14153 | Penhallow?" |
14153 | Pole joined in their merriment, and the carpenter punched the butcher in the ribs for emphasis, as he said,"How''s that, Pole?" |
14153 | Presently she asked,"Why, Uncle Jim, are you suddenly in such haste to go?" |
14153 | Putting aside angry comment, he fell back upon his one constant resource, What would Christ have said to this sinful man? |
14153 | Shall you go to church?" |
14153 | Shall your free black vote? |
14153 | She asked,"How was the Captain wounded? |
14153 | She faltered,"How are you feeling, James-- any better?" |
14153 | She has-- what do you call it--?" |
14153 | She leaned over, laid a hand on his arm and said,"Is not one dear life enough?" |
14153 | She said only,"Why?--I ask-- you-- why indeed?" |
14153 | She said, with a laugh in which there was no mirth,"I presume one of you will, of course, run my sewing- class?" |
14153 | She went upstairs thinking how hard it would be to keep off of the forbidden ground, and after all was her aunt entirely wise? |
14153 | Should he marry? |
14153 | Suppose Leila had been told such a thing, how would she feel, and Aunt Ann? |
14153 | Swallow ventured to connect me or any of my family with this matter?" |
14153 | Swallow, that if a master reclaimed a slave in this county that there would be any trouble in carrying out the law?" |
14153 | Swallow?" |
14153 | That is clear-- is it not?" |
14153 | The Squire much amused asked,"Well, Leila, did you run away?" |
14153 | The Squire shut the door on all outward show of mirth, and said gravely,"Is n''t it pronounced irrelevant, my dear Miss Malaprop?" |
14153 | The aunt cast a look of anxiety at the expressionless face of James Penhallow, as he rose to his feet, saying,"Why was n''t I told?" |
14153 | The captain said,"Where is the surgeon?" |
14153 | The fear-- would he have been afraid? |
14153 | The general, white and grave, said to Haskell,"How has it gone here?" |
14153 | The house is as melancholy as-- I feel as if I were in a mousetrap--""Why mouse- trap, my dear?" |
14153 | The long lost terror returned-- but what could he know? |
14153 | The music ceased, and as they moved on Penhallow asked,"What about Gresham, your friend?" |
14153 | The older man was silent until John asked,"Is it worth while to talk to Aunt Ann about it-- advise against it?" |
14153 | The tearful face looked up,"And you do forgive me?" |
14153 | The young cashier was asked about his sick sister, and then rather surprised as he took the cheque inquired,"How will you have it, ma''am? |
14153 | The young fellow replied smiling,"Do you think Aunt Ann would hurt anybody? |
14153 | Then I said,''Would you not, James?'' |
14153 | Then Josiah, of a sudden wisely cautious, said,"You wo n''t tell Mrs. Penhallow, nor no one, about me, what I said?" |
14153 | Then he asked anxiously,"Did Billy get as far as the house?" |
14153 | Then he had talked with Rivers and straightened up, and now did the Squire''s offer imply any pledge on his own part? |
14153 | Then he laughed,"Did you ever get that cane?" |
14153 | Then he remounted, and said to the scared captive,"What have you got to say?" |
14153 | Then he said to the aide,"We have a few minutes-- how are things going? |
14153 | Then he said, in an absent way,"Are we men of the North all cowards like Josiah? |
14153 | Then he took himself to task, reflecting that he should have been more gently kind, and was there not some better mode of approaching this man? |
14153 | Then he ventured,"And Aunt Ann, was she here?" |
14153 | Then she said quickly,"Have you taken any steps in this matter?" |
14153 | Then she said suddenly,"You are pale-- are you in pain?" |
14153 | Then why does any one buy?" |
14153 | Then with renewed strength, she said,"You wo n''t have them go after him?" |
14153 | Then, becoming grave, he asked,"What effect will my proclamation of emancipation have in the South? |
14153 | Then, of course, Uncle Jim gives her more money-- and Peter gets it--""Where is he?" |
14153 | There is firing over beyond the cemetery?" |
14153 | There were, it seemed, others; how many?--what had they done? |
14153 | They was in and out all day-- and he went to shops and carried things away--""What kind of shops?" |
14153 | Things at the mills are in confusion-- what is to be done? |
14153 | Think I''m safe here? |
14153 | This crime or craze will make mischief?" |
14153 | To cut my tale short, after we passed our outlying pickets and I had answered a dozen questions, he said,''Can you see their pickets?'' |
14153 | Tom grinned,"Got a handle to your name?" |
14153 | Two army commanders who do n''t swear? |
14153 | Uncle Jim is pleased, and as for war, Mr. Rivers, if that is what you dislike, what chance of war is there?" |
14153 | Want to get in, Colonel?" |
14153 | Was I wrong-- was I foolish, James?" |
14153 | Was Tom McGregor badly hurt?" |
14153 | Was he not a spirit in prison, as St. Peter said? |
14153 | Was it a mere accidental encounter?" |
14153 | Was it better for boys to abuse one another or to settle things by a fight? |
14153 | Was it her fault? |
14153 | Was it hopeless? |
14153 | Was it right for the Jew to pay the tax which sustained this Government? |
14153 | Was n''t it last year?" |
14153 | Was there any one missing me?" |
14153 | Was you wanting a saddle of lamb to- day? |
14153 | We never knew-- is it so bad?" |
14153 | We played tag in the water--"The Squire had at once a divergent interest,"Tag-- tag-- swimming? |
14153 | Well, John has passed in the first half dozen-- he does not yet know just where--""And are you not entirely contented? |
14153 | Well, John, any more?" |
14153 | Well, what else, Leila?" |
14153 | Well, what is it?" |
14153 | Well, what more?" |
14153 | Well, what then?" |
14153 | What about yourself, Grace?" |
14153 | What amuses you?" |
14153 | What are these things which are at need to be rendered to Him? |
14153 | What are you two talking over-- you were laughing?" |
14153 | What day is this?" |
14153 | What did he say?" |
14153 | What did you think of me?" |
14153 | What do I care for the war or-- or anything but to have you as you were? |
14153 | What do you make of him?" |
14153 | What do you mean?" |
14153 | What do you propose? |
14153 | What do you see?" |
14153 | What do you think of it, Squire?" |
14153 | What do you want, my dear? |
14153 | What does a boy want with a bag? |
14153 | What does it matter?" |
14153 | What else does Leila say?" |
14153 | What else is there? |
14153 | What else? |
14153 | What had a girl to do with it? |
14153 | What happened?" |
14153 | What has that got to do with the matter?" |
14153 | What is his name?" |
14153 | What is it now, James?" |
14153 | What is it? |
14153 | What is it?" |
14153 | What is it?" |
14153 | What is it?" |
14153 | What is it?" |
14153 | What is rather satisfactory? |
14153 | What is that boy of yours going to do?" |
14153 | What is the Cornish rhyme? |
14153 | What is the other letter?" |
14153 | What larger tax? |
14153 | What made you start him? |
14153 | What must I pay?" |
14153 | What of Caesar, John?" |
14153 | What of the platform?" |
14153 | What right had he with his beliefs to despair of any human soul? |
14153 | What shall it be? |
14153 | What the deuce made you speak to me? |
14153 | What time is it? |
14153 | What was he doing? |
14153 | What was it?" |
14153 | What was that?" |
14153 | What was the hematite iron- ore his uncle used at the works?" |
14153 | What will Uncle Jim say?" |
14153 | What woman can define that defensive instinct? |
14153 | What would Leila fetch in the marriage market?" |
14153 | What would he do-- must he do-- if he wakened? |
14153 | What would life be worth or how could character be developed without temptation? |
14153 | What would my uncle say?" |
14153 | What would you do?" |
14153 | What would you know?" |
14153 | What''s all this about?" |
14153 | What''s it called watch for if it do n''t watch?" |
14153 | What''s the good? |
14153 | What''s the matter now?" |
14153 | What''s the matter? |
14153 | What''s the use of praying in hell? |
14153 | When after a night of deep sleep Ann woke to find Leila standing by her bed, she rose on an elbow saying,"What time is it? |
14153 | When does he come?" |
14153 | When is your nephew to be buried-- at the mills?" |
14153 | When outside of the room he said,"We must trust Billy, I suppose?" |
14153 | When they sat down beside the Indian graves, to his surprise she suddenly shifted the talk and said,"John, who would you vote for? |
14153 | When was it I was hit? |
14153 | When you marry, be sure to ask,''what are your politics, Jeremiah?''" |
14153 | Where are the other fellows?" |
14153 | Where are those Indian graves?" |
14153 | Where are you bound, Peter?" |
14153 | Where are you staying?" |
14153 | Where did he learn to skate?" |
14153 | Where did you walk-- or did you walk?" |
14153 | Where have you been all these uneasy days?" |
14153 | Where is the man?" |
14153 | Where shall I go?" |
14153 | Where was he? |
14153 | Where will it all end? |
14153 | Where will it end? |
14153 | Where will it end?" |
14153 | Where would the man go? |
14153 | Where you going, Master John?" |
14153 | Who can be sure of that?" |
14153 | Who cares now?" |
14153 | Who could it have been?" |
14153 | Who done it, I wonder?" |
14153 | Who invented that game? |
14153 | Who lives there?" |
14153 | Who set them on me? |
14153 | Who told? |
14153 | Who was the_ lonesome man_? |
14153 | Who were his companions and where were they? |
14153 | Who will bid?" |
14153 | Who would meet him? |
14153 | Who''ll bid? |
14153 | Who''ll buy silly Billy?" |
14153 | Who''s dead now?" |
14153 | Who''s that officer on the big horse? |
14153 | Who?" |
14153 | Why are you here?" |
14153 | Why at a time so solemn as this do you lie to me? |
14153 | Why did I not? |
14153 | Why did he change?" |
14153 | Why did he run away, John?" |
14153 | Why did she say it?" |
14153 | Why did they send_ you_?" |
14153 | Why did you desert? |
14153 | Why do I talk my despair out to a young life like yours? |
14153 | Why do men keep their useless, shabby clothes?" |
14153 | Why do you ask, John?" |
14153 | Why do you ask?" |
14153 | Why do you get up of a winter night to ride miles to see some poor woman who will never pay you a penny?" |
14153 | Why do you speak of your wife?" |
14153 | Why had he talked to her? |
14153 | Why had she not known all this? |
14153 | Why not have no day or night? |
14153 | Why should his aunt and Leila interfere? |
14153 | Why?" |
14153 | Will that do?" |
14153 | With a look of disgust at his condition, as he faced the laughing troopers he said, with his somewhat formal way,"To whom am I indebted?" |
14153 | With abrupt change of expression, she added,"Wounded? |
14153 | Wo n''t you help me?" |
14153 | Wo n''t you pray for me?" |
14153 | Wo n''t you sit down, sir?" |
14153 | Would they ever see him again? |
14153 | You are limping, John-- what''s wrong? |
14153 | You do not like it?" |
14153 | You do suffer?" |
14153 | You go off duty, when?" |
14153 | You have, I suppose? |
14153 | You leave on Monday?" |
14153 | You said eleven, sir?" |
14153 | You said that you would not let the carpenter use him, but why not? |
14153 | You said''once''--well?" |
14153 | You saw his letter?" |
14153 | You saw it first-- where did it begin?" |
14153 | You see, sir?" |
14153 | You set some one on me? |
14153 | You think I was intemperate?" |
14153 | You will be at the hop of course? |
14153 | You will come and shoot with me at Grey Pine in the fall? |
14153 | You will give me the first dance?" |
14153 | You will like to stay here with me, John?" |
14153 | You will not question his mother?" |
14153 | You will stay to dine?" |
14153 | You will watch over her?" |
14153 | You would like to change his name?" |
14153 | You''ll be mighty careful, Master John?" |
14153 | Your aunt reads to you or with you, I believe?" |
14153 | Your old master, Woodburn, is coming to catch you-- he will be here soon-- I know he wo n''t be here for a day or two--""Is that so, Master John? |
14153 | Your son, I suppose?" |
14153 | and for stealing chickens? |
14153 | asked Gibbon,"or their numbers?" |
14153 | cried Sibley,"what do you mean? |
14153 | cried the black in alarm,"anything wrong at the house?" |
14153 | did you? |
14153 | do you want me to apologize?" |
14153 | does he? |
14153 | exclaimed Billy,"did n''t he howl?" |
14153 | express?" |
14153 | he cried,"what is the matter?" |
14153 | he exclaimed,"what''s the worth while of it?" |
14153 | he said as they came in,"what have you done with your young man?" |
14153 | he said,"where did you come from?" |
14153 | he will stop and pat it and say,''How are you?'' |
14153 | how wicked of you-- why did you keep so still?" |
14153 | in four days? |
14153 | is that so? |
14153 | is that so?" |
14153 | not really? |
14153 | or as Dr. McGregor would say,''wholesome''?" |
14153 | said Grey, of a sudden reflecting,"two fingers--""Know him?" |
14153 | said Josiah,"and where must I go? |
14153 | said Mrs. Ann,"at his chapel?" |
14153 | said the traveller out of fairyland,"what put that in your head?" |
14153 | she said coldly,"what next, George Grey?" |
14153 | twice?" |
14153 | what am I to do without you?" |
14153 | what? |
14153 | who did you say-- Like Polly, owner withdraws her-- Can''t you speak out?" |
14153 | why did I?" |
14153 | why was not James at home? |
14153 | you hurt, sir? |
14153 | you were there too, sir?" |
42766 | ***** Thomas Furlong,_ re- called_: By Mr. Lindsey: Q. Mr. Furlong, were you at the Twenty- eighth street crossing at the time the firing occurred? |
42766 | --you heard nothing before the word"fire!"? |
42766 | 1 of your report? |
42766 | 1876, you mean? |
42766 | 1877? |
42766 | 1? |
42766 | A boy? |
42766 | A boy? |
42766 | A cap? |
42766 | A citizen of the city? |
42766 | A citizen? |
42766 | A couple of stones? |
42766 | A deputy of Sheriff Fife''s? |
42766 | A dollar a day, or less? |
42766 | A fire had already broken out? |
42766 | A freight train? |
42766 | A full history you give here? |
42766 | A great deal of that? |
42766 | A great many all the time are traveling, are they not? |
42766 | A hack? |
42766 | A little above the watch- house? |
42766 | A major of whose staff was Major Lazarus? |
42766 | A man of family? |
42766 | A man, such as Mr. Coleridge described in that quotation you have made, would have had that effect? |
42766 | A mass meeting of all classes of laboring men? |
42766 | A member of the National Guard? |
42766 | A member of the National Guard? |
42766 | A military blouse? |
42766 | A military company with arms? |
42766 | A minute? |
42766 | A number of the officers sat with them? |
42766 | A party says, What is this coming down the avenue? |
42766 | A pistol shot? |
42766 | A police station- house? |
42766 | A portion of them from your city? |
42766 | A practicing physician in the city of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | A prisoner generally makes a show to go willingly? |
42766 | A railroad employé? |
42766 | A railroad torpedo, you mean? |
42766 | A rattling volley? |
42766 | A reduction of wages? |
42766 | A regimental court- martial? |
42766 | A regular police blouse? |
42766 | A secret organization? |
42766 | A soft hat? |
42766 | A square box? |
42766 | A stranger would not have known you were a police officer? |
42766 | A stranger would not have recognized you as being a police officer? |
42766 | A volley or a scattering fire? |
42766 | A what? |
42766 | A. D. L. and W. Co. Q. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western? |
42766 | A. I am not positive of the date of that? |
42766 | A. I am under oath, am I not? |
42766 | A. I can not tell you exactly, but it was very quick? |
42766 | A. I did n''t? |
42766 | A. I do n''t remember of that? |
42766 | A. I do n''t think so-- I never heard an order given from a soldier in the ranks? |
42766 | A. I do not remember the number, sir, but he said a goodly number? |
42766 | A. I do not think there was any of any account? |
42766 | A. I had a summer uniform-- police blouse? |
42766 | A. I have answered it? |
42766 | A. I knew nothing of it? |
42766 | A. I presume that the men---- Q. I just asked you the question, how much did you get the last month that you worked? |
42766 | A. I presume there was, or Mr. Watt would not have come down there and asked for police? |
42766 | A. I remained there until Monday evening-- at the city hall? |
42766 | A. I was coroner; yes, sir? |
42766 | A. Langon? |
42766 | A. Norman Smith? |
42766 | A. O, yes; that they would kill the firemen, and one thing and another? |
42766 | A. Saturday? |
42766 | A. Seventeen or eighteen men? |
42766 | About eleven o''clock, between that and twelve o''clock---- Q. Thursday night? |
42766 | About four hundred of them? |
42766 | About four o''clock in the evening? |
42766 | About going out? |
42766 | About how large was the crowd at that time? |
42766 | About how long did it take you to get through that crowd and behind the oil- house? |
42766 | About how long? |
42766 | About how many men did you see? |
42766 | About how many of those were dismissed? |
42766 | About how many pistol shots did you hear before your men fired? |
42766 | About one o''clock? |
42766 | About sixteen of them? |
42766 | About that squad of officers? |
42766 | About the 20th of July-- were you not at work at that time? |
42766 | About the scene of the riot? |
42766 | About the strike-- this particular strike that took place at Martinsburg-- did your union communicate with them? |
42766 | About the switch- box? |
42766 | About what I am speaking about is ordinary mining? |
42766 | About what proportion of them? |
42766 | About what street is that? |
42766 | About what time in the afternoon was that? |
42766 | About what time was it that the police cleared the crowd off the wall? |
42766 | About what time? |
42766 | About what was it in round numbers-- the loss sustained by the company? |
42766 | About? |
42766 | Above Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Absolutely? |
42766 | Across the tracks? |
42766 | Active service? |
42766 | Addressed to any particular person? |
42766 | Advanced to meet them part way? |
42766 | Advised them or commanded them? |
42766 | After General Pearson gave the command to fire, was it repeated by any other officers? |
42766 | After General Pearson left, then General Brinton was the commanding officer? |
42766 | After Mr. Watt went away it was that Mayor McCarthy gave you instructions? |
42766 | After a consultation with the mayor, was it? |
42766 | After coming out and manoeuvering in the street, your troops were steady and kept in good order? |
42766 | After coming to the central station, Sunday morning, did you return again? |
42766 | After daylight? |
42766 | After daylight? |
42766 | After he left the round- house? |
42766 | After he returned? |
42766 | After his command left the ground you stayed there some little time-- your regiment? |
42766 | After or before the fire? |
42766 | After ordering out the military force of the State, are the civil authorities relieved or superceded by the military force? |
42766 | After supper, about what hour? |
42766 | After that letter was read what was done? |
42766 | After the Philadelphia troops left the round- house, how long was it before it was on fire? |
42766 | After the car was fired, was it put in motion? |
42766 | After the collision occurred, what time was it when General Pearson arrived at the Union Depot hotel? |
42766 | After the command to fire was given, you retreated to the oil- house? |
42766 | After the conflict? |
42766 | After the crowd got to Lackawanna avenue, where did you go? |
42766 | After the crowd started to run, did they fire? |
42766 | After the fire? |
42766 | After the firing by the militia, you mean? |
42766 | After the firing on the Philadelphia troops, you rejoined your regiment on the hill-- your company? |
42766 | After the firing you went back there? |
42766 | After the firing? |
42766 | After the firing? |
42766 | After the mayor refused? |
42766 | After the order was issued to run double- headers, did you hear of any dissatisfaction? |
42766 | After the railroad employés agreed with you that they would protect the railroad property, did they permit the crowd of roughs to remain with them? |
42766 | After the railroad property was destroyed-- by that time you had a pretty good police force? |
42766 | After the reduction of ten per cent.? |
42766 | After the riot? |
42766 | After the riot? |
42766 | After the sheriff called upon the Governor for troops, did n''t that intensify the feeling in Pittsburgh? |
42766 | After the soldiers got away, did the crowd re- assemble? |
42766 | After the soldiers marched out the round- house, if they had torn up the track, would it have prevented any further firing west? |
42766 | After the troops fired on the crowd, the crowd ran, and the tracks were cleared for a time? |
42766 | After their dismissal, did you think then you had no further occasion to keep the police force there? |
42766 | After these policemen were taken up to the central station, did any of them return? |
42766 | After they fired Union depot, did they fire any other property? |
42766 | After they got up to where a few hose carriages were, they came to Twenty- third street-- and I said,"what is the matter?" |
42766 | After they had been dismissed by General Brown? |
42766 | After they had made an effort? |
42766 | After they left the round- house? |
42766 | After they passed through the cut, did they encounter the mob at the end of the cut? |
42766 | After you crossed the bridge, you do n''t remember of meeting Major Baugh? |
42766 | After you got back you say the crowd had assembled-- had there been any attempt by the crowd to prevent trains from running? |
42766 | After you had walked some distance, General Brinton halted, I understand you to say? |
42766 | After you left the round- house and were marching along Penn avenue, did you see any police officers fire at you? |
42766 | After you left the round- house? |
42766 | After you returned from your dinner on Friday, how large a crowd did you find in the yard? |
42766 | After you returned to Harrisburg, who directed the troops from that time until the arrival of the Governor in the State? |
42766 | After you tried to start this train, and the men waved their hands, and the train stopped, did you get off? |
42766 | Afterwards did you? |
42766 | Afterwards, you ordered him to join Guthrie, at Torrens? |
42766 | Afterwards? |
42766 | Against such an uprising, what would capital have to oppose? |
42766 | Against the mob? |
42766 | Against the policeman? |
42766 | Against whom? |
42766 | All employés? |
42766 | All gave that as their reason? |
42766 | All gave the command to fire? |
42766 | All had swords? |
42766 | All mixed together? |
42766 | All night? |
42766 | All of General Brinton''s command? |
42766 | All of them? |
42766 | All of them? |
42766 | All proclamations of the Governor are signed by the Secretary of the Commonwealth, are they not? |
42766 | All railroad employés? |
42766 | All railroad men? |
42766 | All refused to go out on the double- headers? |
42766 | All stand united? |
42766 | All that I want to know is what occurred after the command to fire was given? |
42766 | All that Saturday night? |
42766 | All that were tried were acquitted? |
42766 | All the dispatches you referred to were brought by him? |
42766 | All the firing? |
42766 | All the manufactories? |
42766 | All the time? |
42766 | All these men were with you on the ground? |
42766 | All this occurred on Friday? |
42766 | All through the county? |
42766 | All trains? |
42766 | All we want to ask is, did you see General Pearson on the afternoon of the 21st of July? |
42766 | All we want to know, is just what came under your observation, and what was officially reported to you by your policemen? |
42766 | Allow no man to arrest him? |
42766 | Allowed nobody to pass? |
42766 | Almost touching him? |
42766 | Always, when any difficulty had arisen or any complaint had been made, you had come to an amicable solution? |
42766 | Among all the men? |
42766 | Among mechanics? |
42766 | Among the citizens? |
42766 | Among what class of merchants? |
42766 | An editorial? |
42766 | An engineer, conductor, or brakeman? |
42766 | An officer of your force? |
42766 | An official report from the police? |
42766 | An organization without a head-- do you mean to say that? |
42766 | An organized effort? |
42766 | And Colonel Rodgers and the troops in that vicinity? |
42766 | And Mr. Thaw with the Pennsylvania? |
42766 | And Pitcairn, the superintendent? |
42766 | And Sunday night? |
42766 | And a great variety of other things? |
42766 | And after the organization of that committee of public safety, the peace was preserved from that time forward? |
42766 | And all the switches you needed to get your trains out? |
42766 | And all tried? |
42766 | And all you know about ammunition or provisions is what you were directed to do in relation to it? |
42766 | And also of Colonel Guthrie? |
42766 | And are the wages of miners fixed by the price of coal at entirely the same scale? |
42766 | And arms were given to the strikers in that way, by the citizens? |
42766 | And as such were in consultation with the general during the night? |
42766 | And at eleven o''clock you marched down? |
42766 | And before morning? |
42766 | And brakemen? |
42766 | And brakemen? |
42766 | And brakemen? |
42766 | And by what means? |
42766 | And cartridges for it? |
42766 | And character? |
42766 | And conceal yourselves? |
42766 | And conversation? |
42766 | And could judge of the crowd? |
42766 | And could they have done so, if they had made a vigorous effort to do so-- protect the property and prevent the lawlessness? |
42766 | And delivered it to him? |
42766 | And did what he directed you to do simply? |
42766 | And did you do so? |
42766 | And did you have any conversation with General Pearson on the subject, when he came in? |
42766 | And did you remain at the Union depot all night? |
42766 | And discharged under the order discharging the day force? |
42766 | And do what he told them to do? |
42766 | And drove them as far as they desired to? |
42766 | And entered into the strike like the railroad men? |
42766 | And faced about and faced the crowd? |
42766 | And followed up the firing until he dispersed the crowd? |
42766 | And from Beaver where? |
42766 | And from what you know of being there, did you consider that this shooting was musketry, or was it pistol shots? |
42766 | And get away? |
42766 | And guard the track? |
42766 | And had possession of the property of the railroad? |
42766 | And he did n''t offer you any protection? |
42766 | And he did not communicate anything of the kind to you? |
42766 | And he discharged them? |
42766 | And he gave you that letter you spoke of at that time? |
42766 | And how it caught? |
42766 | And if such statements were made by the crowd, they were made without authority? |
42766 | And in August? |
42766 | And in one line? |
42766 | And in one sense you call it skilled labor, in addition to the risks they run? |
42766 | And is that a reason why you have adhered to the rules that you have just mentioned? |
42766 | And it was before the firing took place? |
42766 | And it was the only thing that prevented you from exercising your powers? |
42766 | And killed? |
42766 | And learned what steps had been taken by the State officials? |
42766 | And never went back to the regiment after that, that night? |
42766 | And no ammunition for them? |
42766 | And no arrests were made? |
42766 | And no attempt at violence was made? |
42766 | And no definite plan was adopted by the union to act upon the railroad companies in any way? |
42766 | And not by field officers? |
42766 | And not enough men? |
42766 | And not to go after your men that night after the men had retired to their homes, and take them up quietly, and take them to the station house? |
42766 | And not until after they had failed, in your judgment? |
42766 | And of engineers? |
42766 | And official position? |
42766 | And over hours? |
42766 | And participated in by women? |
42766 | And placed in the hands of this constable? |
42766 | And prevent others from working, at the same time? |
42766 | And prevent the running of trains? |
42766 | And rank? |
42766 | And remained in the city of Allegheny all the time? |
42766 | And remained with him until Monday? |
42766 | And requested Colonel Norris to deliver that order to General Brinton-- did he inform him-- so inform? |
42766 | And restored order? |
42766 | And saw them open order, and one rank faced about, and they took positions on two sides of the track, which left a place between? |
42766 | And some clerks? |
42766 | And some of them had been in the service of the company and discharged? |
42766 | And started, did he? |
42766 | And stayed at home? |
42766 | And still you allowed that crowd to remain there? |
42766 | And still you suspended your operations or your efforts to suppress this riot and keep the peace? |
42766 | And stones thrown from the mob and other missiles? |
42766 | And succeeded in preserving the peace? |
42766 | And suppress the riot? |
42766 | And that a large number of men were idle on Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | And that a little girl was killed? |
42766 | And that he would not interfere? |
42766 | And that is the reason you went down there? |
42766 | And that the Adjutant General was there exercising his powers and duties as Adjutant General proper? |
42766 | And that would justify you? |
42766 | And that you could have prevented the spreading of the fire? |
42766 | And the Baltimore and Ohio about that time? |
42766 | And the ammunition? |
42766 | And the arms were still stacked? |
42766 | And the balance of the regiment were up on the hill? |
42766 | And the civil authorities are not relieved from any responsibility after that just because the military are present? |
42766 | And the command to fire, you say, was given by captains? |
42766 | And the first dissatisfaction was among that class of men, was it? |
42766 | And the military is to support? |
42766 | And the mob resisted them? |
42766 | And the news from the city of Pittsburgh from the outbreak there stimulated the movement? |
42766 | And the organization of the police? |
42766 | And the other squad that was brought from Rockville, how many were there of them? |
42766 | And the principal strike or trouble would be there? |
42766 | And the railroad property? |
42766 | And the rest followed from a general sympathy of all laboring classes with them? |
42766 | And the shops adjoining the round- house? |
42766 | And the superintendent''s office and car shops? |
42766 | And the uniform was the same that you saw those men wearing? |
42766 | And their occupation? |
42766 | And their purpose of doing it? |
42766 | And then a command in front of them in the direction of the railroad? |
42766 | And then allowed them to go on? |
42766 | And then guarded it as far out as you could? |
42766 | And then the difference between a mob and an insurrection is in strength and power? |
42766 | And then the firing was done-- it was not a volley of musketry-- it was just done at random, was it? |
42766 | And then they left there? |
42766 | And then turned to the right? |
42766 | And then what was done with them? |
42766 | And then you led off and they followed? |
42766 | And there they thought you were taking too much authority on you? |
42766 | And therefore you are responsible, as editor of that paper, for that advertisement? |
42766 | And therefore you should disband entirely? |
42766 | And they absolutely refused? |
42766 | And they all went to the shops, a large number? |
42766 | And they declined? |
42766 | And they dispersed that mob? |
42766 | And they fired into your rear? |
42766 | And they remained in the city? |
42766 | And they were hostile to the troops? |
42766 | And they were taken from the custody of the constable by this company of Huidekoper''s? |
42766 | And they were there hearing the report of the committee appointed by the miners? |
42766 | And this stone that took two men to throw down-- did that hit anybody? |
42766 | And this vigilance committee was organized for the purpose of protecting property? |
42766 | And this was three o''clock on Saturday afternoon, until that time on Sunday? |
42766 | And those others were paid? |
42766 | And to head the police yourself? |
42766 | And to the officers, from the president down? |
42766 | And took hold and assisted you? |
42766 | And trains had been started? |
42766 | And until the arrival of General Brinton, with his force, no attempt was made? |
42766 | And use the necessary efforts to disperse the mob? |
42766 | And went to Scranton with you? |
42766 | And were hostile towards the Philadelphia soldiers? |
42766 | And were sworn in? |
42766 | And what is it? |
42766 | And what is your business? |
42766 | And what position did you hold? |
42766 | And what was the first thing that you noticed or discovered? |
42766 | And you accompanied General Brinton''s division to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | And you acted? |
42766 | And you did n''t hear what took place? |
42766 | And you did not get anything after that until you reached Sharpsburg? |
42766 | And you have stated that you heard General Pearson give the command to fire? |
42766 | And you refused to go? |
42766 | And you registered when you went to the Monongahela house? |
42766 | And you remained there all night? |
42766 | And you say that they made no effort to arrest any of the parties following you? |
42766 | And you then prepared the first proclamation? |
42766 | And you think that most any troops would have fired under such circumstances without orders? |
42766 | And you told him that you would keep the peace? |
42766 | And you understood then that General Latta would call them in pursuance of the call of the sheriff? |
42766 | And you went out with Colonel Norris because you were directed to go out there by the Adjutant General? |
42766 | And you were in July last? |
42766 | And you were not called upon by them? |
42766 | And you would not want to risk it? |
42766 | And you, as commanding officer, were to protect him in making his arrests? |
42766 | And your business? |
42766 | And your conversation was with the employés of the roads leading in and out of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Another strike preceding that? |
42766 | Answer it yes or no? |
42766 | Answer that question? |
42766 | Any act of Assembly? |
42766 | Any brakemen? |
42766 | Any citizens? |
42766 | Any dentists? |
42766 | Any freight in them? |
42766 | Any further effort made to run trains after that? |
42766 | Any further statement you desire to make you can do so? |
42766 | Any more important duty to perform than to get these men to assemble? |
42766 | Any more than there had been previously? |
42766 | Any of the citizens furnish provisions? |
42766 | Any of the sheriff''s posse? |
42766 | Any of them killed? |
42766 | Any of your officers missing-- subordinates? |
42766 | Any of your own men? |
42766 | Any officers among them? |
42766 | Any one that had remained in the city during the night? |
42766 | Any one that you know? |
42766 | Any orders to General Guthrie to your knowledge? |
42766 | Any other facts? |
42766 | Any other military men? |
42766 | Any other trainmen? |
42766 | Any other? |
42766 | Any other? |
42766 | Any others? |
42766 | Any railroad men in this delegation? |
42766 | Any railroad property? |
42766 | Any stones or missiles thrown at them? |
42766 | Any stones thrown at the posse by the crowd? |
42766 | Any stones thrown from below where you were standing? |
42766 | Any threats made by any of the men when the train started? |
42766 | Anybody else you know? |
42766 | Anybody in? |
42766 | Anybody near him? |
42766 | Anybody with him? |
42766 | Anything else? |
42766 | Anything else? |
42766 | Anything else? |
42766 | Anything fired at them-- see any shots or hear any? |
42766 | Anything in relation to the Duquesne depot that you know of? |
42766 | Anything said about getting provisions to them? |
42766 | Approximate about? |
42766 | Approximately? |
42766 | Are all the dispatches that you read or saw, as coming from General Brinton that night, published in the Adjutant General''s report? |
42766 | Are double- headers used as a general thing where there are heavy grades? |
42766 | Are the loyal people in shape to protect life and property? |
42766 | Are there any other facts that you wish to state? |
42766 | Are these unions secret organizations? |
42766 | Are they from the town of Beaver? |
42766 | Are they long? |
42766 | Are they on the force now? |
42766 | Are they subject to greater expense than others? |
42766 | Are those lodges composed of different trades-- different branches of the trades? |
42766 | Are those telegrams that Robert Ammon received from the railroad officials during the time that he had charge of the road? |
42766 | Are you a member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers? |
42766 | Are you a member of the Firemen''s Brotherhood? |
42766 | Are you a member of the National Guard? |
42766 | Are you a member of the National Guard? |
42766 | Are you a member of the National Guard? |
42766 | Are you a member of the organization? |
42766 | Are you a resident of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Are you acquainted with Bob Ammon? |
42766 | Are you at liberty to state the object of the Engineers''Brotherhood? |
42766 | Are you certain he made that remark and used that language? |
42766 | Are you employed by the railroad now? |
42766 | Are you in the employ of the Pennsylvania Company now? |
42766 | Are you in the employ of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | Are you in the employ of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | Are you on the force now? |
42766 | Are you prepared to give the figures as to the pay for mining per ton or per car? |
42766 | Are you right positive what the balance of the order was? |
42766 | Are you still the chief of police? |
42766 | Are you subordinate to the railroad authorities? |
42766 | Are you testifying to facts within your knowledge? |
42766 | Are you the father of Robert Ammon, known as Bob Ammon during the troubles in July? |
42766 | Are you under bail now? |
42766 | Are you well acquainted with General Brown? |
42766 | Are you well acquainted with the laboring men about the city? |
42766 | Are you willing to assist me in arresting this murderer?" |
42766 | Are you willing to assist me in arresting this murderer?" |
42766 | Are you working now? |
42766 | Are your files here? |
42766 | Are your local freight rates governed by your through rates in any way? |
42766 | Armed citizens? |
42766 | Armed with muskets, and rifles, and shot guns? |
42766 | Arms port? |
42766 | Arrested on information of some of the rioters? |
42766 | As a freight engineer? |
42766 | As a member of the organization, what action would your organization have taken in reference to that unlawful assemblage there? |
42766 | As a military officer, what should you have done under the circumstances? |
42766 | As a posse? |
42766 | As a regiment you were not re- organized until Monday morning? |
42766 | As a union or a society, or did the boys contribute what they saw fit? |
42766 | As an experienced officer, you would not have made the arrest that night in that crowd? |
42766 | As boiler tender? |
42766 | As brakeman? |
42766 | As chief of police, can you not give us the number of policemen on duty during Sunday, in the whole city? |
42766 | As chief of police? |
42766 | As commander of them? |
42766 | As commander- in- chief? |
42766 | As every other citizen of the State, you would have the right to demand protection? |
42766 | As far as you can, you will give us what information you have upon the causes of this riot, and whether it was pre- arranged among the men? |
42766 | As late as seven o''clock? |
42766 | As near as you can remember? |
42766 | As near as you can tell? |
42766 | As prisoners? |
42766 | As railroad men? |
42766 | As soon as it came down to individual property, then what? |
42766 | As soon as the police began making arrests, the citizens took the matter into their own hands, and the destruction ceased? |
42766 | As soon as you returned on Thursday night from Twenty- eighth street, you telegraphed to the Governor? |
42766 | As such, what are your duties? |
42766 | As the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | As the commander- in- chief wanted? |
42766 | As the fire progressed on Sunday morning, what seemed to be the motive? |
42766 | As the militia were passing here, did they throw away their arms or ammunition? |
42766 | As they came up the track? |
42766 | As they marched along? |
42766 | As though they meant exactly what they said? |
42766 | As to the fire, and who were present-- what officers? |
42766 | As to the removal of those troops? |
42766 | As to whether it would be general? |
42766 | As who wanted? |
42766 | As you understand the law, is it necessary for the sheriff to make an effort to obtain a_ posse comitatus_ before calling on the Governor? |
42766 | Asking for fifty men? |
42766 | Assembled in a hall? |
42766 | At Altoona? |
42766 | At Blairsville Junction? |
42766 | At Greenwood? |
42766 | At Rochester? |
42766 | At Twenty- eighth street, did the mob of men stop the train going east? |
42766 | At Twenty- eighth street, were the same men there all the time from Thursday until Saturday-- until the firing of the troops? |
42766 | At Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | At Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | At Union depot? |
42766 | At a charge bayonet? |
42766 | At any other time within the last twenty- five years, were the military called out to preserve the peace? |
42766 | At any time before the Philadelphia troops came, could you have or could the military have dispersed the mob at any time? |
42766 | At any time did you receive any protection from the police? |
42766 | At any time during the progress of the strike or previous to the strike? |
42766 | At any time during the riots-- during the violence? |
42766 | At any time prior to that Sunday? |
42766 | At any time sent policemen to arrest Mr. Ammon, in preserving the peace? |
42766 | At any time you were there, did the firemen call on you to assist them? |
42766 | At any time? |
42766 | At any time? |
42766 | At different times? |
42766 | At four o''clock Sunday afternoon? |
42766 | At night? |
42766 | At that time did this gentleman ask you to swear in a certain number of police officers, and the railroad company would pay them? |
42766 | At that time did you know it? |
42766 | At that time was any one besides the military on the hill side? |
42766 | At that time were your crews ready to go out, during the time the tracks were cleared? |
42766 | At that time, when you heard this command, were any officers in advance of the column? |
42766 | At that time? |
42766 | At that time? |
42766 | At that time? |
42766 | At that time? |
42766 | At that time? |
42766 | At that time? |
42766 | At the Fort Wayne and Chicago depot? |
42766 | At the Union depot? |
42766 | At the city hall steps? |
42766 | At the depot on Sunday night, when you called for the citizens to assist the police in protecting that train, did they respond? |
42766 | At the distance you were off, what led you to believe that no order was given to fire? |
42766 | At the door? |
42766 | At the drug store, did you meet any citizens more than the druggist himself? |
42766 | At the junction of the Allegheny and Monongahela? |
42766 | At the lower shops? |
42766 | At the mayor''s office? |
42766 | At the mayor''s suggestion? |
42766 | At the meeting you spoke of, did the engineers and firemen agree to go into that union? |
42766 | At the office where you found the young lady, state whether any assault was made upon that by the crowd or mob? |
42766 | At the police station? |
42766 | At the preliminary hearing were dismissed? |
42766 | At the rear of the line? |
42766 | At the request of the sheriff? |
42766 | At the same time? |
42766 | At the same time? |
42766 | At the side of the track? |
42766 | At the silk- factory meeting? |
42766 | At the time of a row, if the men are armed, it is all right, and if they are not armed, it is all right, too? |
42766 | At the time of issuing the proclamation? |
42766 | At the time of the July riots? |
42766 | At the time of the occurrence? |
42766 | At the time of the shooting? |
42766 | At the time of the strike on the 19th of July? |
42766 | At the time the military arrived there? |
42766 | At the time the sheriff made the call on the Governor, was it not principally local? |
42766 | At the time the strike was contemplated, in June? |
42766 | At the time there was firing by the troops? |
42766 | At the troops? |
42766 | At this particular time that the strike occurred? |
42766 | At this time they had possession of the railroad property? |
42766 | At what bridge? |
42766 | At what day did the first disturbance appear here? |
42766 | At what distance were guards placed from the round- house? |
42766 | At what hour was that? |
42766 | At what hour? |
42766 | At what hour? |
42766 | At what hour? |
42766 | At what hours did you leave the Union depot? |
42766 | At what particular places did you get them? |
42766 | At what particular time, or do you mean in general? |
42766 | At what place? |
42766 | At what point did you stop first? |
42766 | At what point on the railroad? |
42766 | At what point was it you saw the mayor struck? |
42766 | At what point was that? |
42766 | At what point was that? |
42766 | At what point was this? |
42766 | At what point were they stationed? |
42766 | At what point? |
42766 | At what point? |
42766 | At what point? |
42766 | At what point? |
42766 | At what point? |
42766 | At what point? |
42766 | At what points? |
42766 | At what shops? |
42766 | At what time did you abandon the hill? |
42766 | At what time did you come off? |
42766 | At what time did you get the last rations? |
42766 | At what time did you report at head- quarters, and with how many men? |
42766 | At what time was any train stopped? |
42766 | At what time was the first effort made to prevent men from going out who were willing to go? |
42766 | At what time were you arrested? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At what time? |
42766 | At which time? |
42766 | At whose establishment, or store? |
42766 | At whose instance did you and Colonel Norris go in pursuit of General Brinton? |
42766 | At whose instance was the citizens''meeting organized-- who were the movers in it? |
42766 | At whose instigation was he arrested? |
42766 | Attached to or in close proximity to the round- house? |
42766 | Attended to by your clerks? |
42766 | Be good enough to state, then, what you know about it? |
42766 | Be kind enough to describe what came under your observation? |
42766 | Be kind enough to relate what occurred? |
42766 | Be kind enough to state what occurred there? |
42766 | Be kind enough to state what occurred? |
42766 | Be kind enough to state what occurred? |
42766 | Be kind enough to state what those remarks were? |
42766 | Be kind enough to state what your recollection of the occurrence is? |
42766 | Because the rates would be cheaper? |
42766 | Because they were being destroyed by the fire? |
42766 | Because they would not let you? |
42766 | Been engaged in the business a long time? |
42766 | Been shown you by the men? |
42766 | Before it took place? |
42766 | Before or after the troops came out? |
42766 | Before that firing began? |
42766 | Before that shot was fired, were there any stones or missiles thrown? |
42766 | Before the Philadelphia troops came out there? |
42766 | Before the burning of the property? |
42766 | Before the collision with the troops? |
42766 | Before the day of the 19th of July? |
42766 | Before the firing by the military? |
42766 | Before the firing from the soldiers? |
42766 | Before the strike? |
42766 | Before the strike? |
42766 | Before the troops went out? |
42766 | Before there was any firing by the military? |
42766 | Before there was any firing by the troops? |
42766 | Before they started from the Union depot? |
42766 | Before what judge? |
42766 | Before whom were they taken? |
42766 | Before you at the coroner''s inquest? |
42766 | Before you go any further, did you command that force? |
42766 | Before you go on, state to us what effect this address had upon them? |
42766 | Before you left? |
42766 | Before you ordered your men to load? |
42766 | Before your works started up again? |
42766 | Behind the end, as they were marching along? |
42766 | Behind the fire? |
42766 | Behind you? |
42766 | Below you then? |
42766 | Besides yourself, and aside from the engineer and fireman? |
42766 | Between what points? |
42766 | Between what points? |
42766 | Between yourself and the sheriff? |
42766 | Bid you take the battery with you? |
42766 | Both acted in conjunction harmoniously? |
42766 | Both sides of Lackawanna? |
42766 | Boys employed? |
42766 | Bring your command down to the armory? |
42766 | Broad brimmed hat? |
42766 | Broke ranks for the evening? |
42766 | Broke ranks right there at the depot? |
42766 | Brother of Sheriff Fife, of Allegheny county? |
42766 | Business men of the place expostulated with you? |
42766 | Business men? |
42766 | But I ask were the citizens in sympathy with the strikers? |
42766 | But I mean the question? |
42766 | But after you had refused to work, had you any right to interfere with that property? |
42766 | But afterwards you said there was a regular meeting? |
42766 | But answer my question? |
42766 | But answer my question? |
42766 | But answer yes or no, then explain after answering the question? |
42766 | But by suspension do you mean discharge, or do you mean suspension temporarily? |
42766 | But could n''t the soldiers have checked them there? |
42766 | But did Brinton and Colonel Norris have any conversation by themselves? |
42766 | But did not the sheriff throw a guard around the burned district? |
42766 | But did not your organization have a particular signal by which you could stop the trains? |
42766 | But did the mayor give you instructions to demand them to go with you? |
42766 | But did you do so? |
42766 | But disagreements leading to the riots? |
42766 | But do not remember whether it was a hat or cap? |
42766 | But do you say that you have the right to go on another man''s property and stay there if he wants you to go away? |
42766 | But during Saturday night? |
42766 | But from any class of men in the city-- if he had just called for a posse from any source-- for extra men? |
42766 | But from the time you became acquainted with the difficulty first? |
42766 | But from the time you heard the command given to charge bayonets up to the time of the firing, were you still in the same position? |
42766 | But have you any right to interfere with his property in any way, under any circumstances? |
42766 | But he made a speech? |
42766 | But he made no official demand? |
42766 | But he summoned no posse from the citizens of the city during the riots, did he? |
42766 | But if he would not be coaxed? |
42766 | But if that was not heeded? |
42766 | But if you were working for a man and stopped work, or he turned you off, have you any right to remain around? |
42766 | But it is his business to keep the track clear? |
42766 | But it was common rumor that the citizens of Pittsburgh were in sympathy with the strikers? |
42766 | But never carried out? |
42766 | But none of the officials of Allegheny condemned the action of the strikers? |
42766 | But not on the railroad property? |
42766 | But plenty of them were willing to go? |
42766 | But prior to the fire? |
42766 | But received no orders? |
42766 | But suppose he had authority? |
42766 | But suppose they had authority from General Latta? |
42766 | But that was considered to be the head- quarters of the strike? |
42766 | But the amount of money you made depended on the amount of the business of the road? |
42766 | But the mayor made no call, so far as you know, for a posse? |
42766 | But then, what is the poor laboring man? |
42766 | But there was no actual violence? |
42766 | But they did not assault your men? |
42766 | But they got obstreperous at last on your hands? |
42766 | But they said nothing? |
42766 | But they were not opposed to the railroad company? |
42766 | But they were offered for the purpose of keeping the peace, were they not? |
42766 | But those arms were not given you to resist the troops? |
42766 | But those on the railroad were Philadelphia troops? |
42766 | But was the thing not officially reported? |
42766 | But were any answers sent? |
42766 | But were communications going on between you and the leaders of the Pennsylvania road-- the leaders of the strike? |
42766 | But were not those arms offered for the purpose of keeping the peace? |
42766 | But were they ordered back for duty before this mob came? |
42766 | But were you not the man who run it? |
42766 | But what else? |
42766 | But when did the first firing occur-- that is, when was the fire first kindled by the mob? |
42766 | But when ordered off, have you the right to refuse to go? |
42766 | But when you gave them the protection they asked, did they not make an effort to throw the water? |
42766 | But when you strike, you are no longer in the employ of the railroad company? |
42766 | But you conferred with the officers or advised them? |
42766 | But you did not give any order to start? |
42766 | But you give that opinion, having formed it after intercourse with the people, and after being in the crowd? |
42766 | But you had communications with the parties who were striking on the Pennsylvania road? |
42766 | But you heard that talk about the railroad officials? |
42766 | But you include the destruction of cars, and engines, and shops, and tracks? |
42766 | But you knew what was necessary for you to do as sheriff? |
42766 | But you must have had some plan, sir? |
42766 | But you refused to go? |
42766 | But you said if the soldiers fiddled, you proposed to dance? |
42766 | But you say you had arms? |
42766 | But you were not there? |
42766 | But you were not to prevent other men from working? |
42766 | But you were not to try to drive him off? |
42766 | But you were to be the judges whether General Latta had authority or not? |
42766 | But you were well aware he was out of the State? |
42766 | But you, as an officer, did not exactly believe in official appearance, without something to knock down with in case of a row? |
42766 | But your own judgment directed you to take the other course, and go to Union depot? |
42766 | By Mr. Larrabee: Q. Alternately from each regiment? |
42766 | By Mr. Larrabee: Q. I suppose you did n''t shoot to waste your fire? |
42766 | By Mr. Larrabee: Q. I understood you to say that the first pistol shot fired at you was before your posse fired? |
42766 | By Mr. Larrabee: Q. I understood you to say they were miners, engineers, and brakemen? |
42766 | By Mr. Larrabee: Q. I was endeavoring to ascertain the first time that the crowd interfered? |
42766 | By Mr. Larrabee: Q. Workingmen''s Benevolent Association? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I suppose it is secret? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I understand you to say that it is your judgment that those troops might have held that place? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I understood you there was a shot that hit your gun? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I understood you to say the mayor and police tendered their services to you? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I want to ask you this question, if you think that you can be superseded by the military? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I want to know whether the railroad men struck before or after the strike at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I wish you would state once more just what is the object of the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. I would like to ask Mr. Stewart in what capacity he was acting? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. Inviting the soldiers? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. Mr. Yutzy asks you whether you are certain that he made that remark? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey: Q. Whence did the order come? |
42766 | By Mr. Lindsey? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. Ammon and his party-- did he accept the proposition from the railroad officials that they should have an operator? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I am not a newspaper man, but, I suppose, if I should write an article for your paper, you would require the name? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I simply want to know this: Did the railroad officials believe that half a loaf was better than no bread? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I suppose you considered them more safe, than taking them away in the street? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I suppose you mean that there were no demonstrations to destroy either life or property? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I want to know if those troops left their arms stacked while the crowd was still accumulating? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I would like to know from whom you received the fire-- or if you did receive any-- at the cut at Penn street, I believe you call it? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I would like to know where and when your regiment was disbanded? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. I would like you tell what passed between you and the chairman of the committee that waited upon you? |
42766 | By Mr. Means: Q. Mr. Breen, in your opinion, was the sympathy of the citizens of Pittsburgh with the strikers, when they first struck and quit work? |
42766 | By Mr. Reyburn: Q. I suppose the Senator means that they were not pistol shots? |
42766 | By Mr. Reyburn: Q. I would like to ask the gentleman whether those were men or boys, or what aged men they were? |
42766 | By Senator Reyburn: Q. Beside the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, then, there was an organization of brakemen and firemen? |
42766 | By Senator Reyburn: Q. Friday? |
42766 | By Senator Reyburn: Q. I suppose you can tell what the conduct of the militia was after you came home and took charge? |
42766 | By Senator Reyburn: Q. I think that is in your testimony before? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. Fifteen cents a day? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. Fraternize with the people-- with the crowd? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. Gratuitously? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. I see, in this editorial you speak of, the"sympathy being with the strikers and their friends?" |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. I understood the witness to say that the railroad men struck first? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. I understood you to say that you organized this citizens''committee-- this committee organized of companies-- and armed them? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. I want to know what you mean by shops? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. I would like to ask a few more questions in regard to the sheriff and military superseding the mayor? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. I would like you to state what the Pennsylvania lines were? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. Oath bound? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. Policemen hid behind trees? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. Tramps? |
42766 | By Senator Yutzy: Q. Wings of the round- house? |
42766 | By any of the authorities? |
42766 | By any officer? |
42766 | By any one belonging to the road? |
42766 | By any orders that you know of? |
42766 | By calling upon the sheriff? |
42766 | By citizens? |
42766 | By curiosity? |
42766 | By officers of companies? |
42766 | By orders? |
42766 | By over work? |
42766 | By pistols or muskets? |
42766 | By rebates? |
42766 | By sending out deputies through the county, do you think he could have collected a posse, or not? |
42766 | By telegraph? |
42766 | By that company? |
42766 | By that order you could run your trains with a less number of men? |
42766 | By the Secretary of the Commonwealth? |
42766 | By the constable? |
42766 | By the crowd? |
42766 | By the police force? |
42766 | By the rioters or strikers? |
42766 | By the sheriff? |
42766 | By the strikers? |
42766 | By the troops? |
42766 | By what authority did you assume charge of the Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad? |
42766 | By what authority-- by whom? |
42766 | By what road did he or could he have made it? |
42766 | By what route? |
42766 | By whom did you hear it talked of? |
42766 | By whom was it signed? |
42766 | By whom was it signed? |
42766 | By whom was the notice signed? |
42766 | By whom were the missiles thrown? |
42766 | By whom were they sent there? |
42766 | By whom were they worked? |
42766 | By whom were they written? |
42766 | By whom were you told that? |
42766 | By whom-- the court? |
42766 | By whom? |
42766 | By whom? |
42766 | By whom? |
42766 | By whom? |
42766 | By whom? |
42766 | By whom? |
42766 | By whose authority was the citizens''meeting called? |
42766 | By whose command? |
42766 | Ca n''t you make an estimate? |
42766 | Ca n''t you tell something about what class of people they were from their dress? |
42766 | Ca n''t you tell whether they were tramps or railroad men or people of the poorer class? |
42766 | Called into action again Monday? |
42766 | Can he delegate that power as commander- in- chief to any person? |
42766 | Can you estimate the damage to the Pennsylvania Company? |
42766 | Can you form an estimate of the strength of your regiment on Saturday? |
42766 | Can you form any idea as to how many were actively engaged? |
42766 | Can you get any other gentlemen that could relate the same fact that Major Mumma can? |
42766 | Can you give an approximate estimate of the number in Pittsburgh, at that time? |
42766 | Can you give an estimate account of that? |
42766 | Can you give an estimate of what a man can make a day, should they work in the mines all day? |
42766 | Can you give any idea of the loss to property that occurred through this riot? |
42766 | Can you give his place of business or residence? |
42766 | Can you give it? |
42766 | Can you give pretty nearly the contents of it? |
42766 | Can you give the committee any information upon the occurrences that came under your observation? |
42766 | Can you give the contents of the letter, or the substance of it? |
42766 | Can you give the date of this? |
42766 | Can you give the extent of the burning, the destruction of property in general? |
42766 | Can you give the extent of the destruction of the railroad property by the fire? |
42766 | Can you give the language of Colonel Norris-- the exact words that Colonel Norris used? |
42766 | Can you give the name of the flagman who first refused to go out? |
42766 | Can you give the purport of those messages? |
42766 | Can you give the reason why he did not move it? |
42766 | Can you give the substance of the first dispatch? |
42766 | Can you give the substance of the order? |
42766 | Can you give those figures to the committee now? |
42766 | Can you give us an estimate-- an approximate estimate of the amount of loss sustained, by reason of the riot, in the works of the company? |
42766 | Can you give us an estimate? |
42766 | Can you give us any new light, as to the organization of the men or their plans of action, or the names of the prominent strikers? |
42766 | Can you give us any of the methods you have tried for the purpose of preventing those complaints by the people of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Can you give us any party that can give us the name? |
42766 | Can you give us the amount, or an estimated amount, of the destruction of property at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Can you give us the extent of that organization? |
42766 | Can you give us the extent of the organization in the city? |
42766 | Can you give us the language-- what he said? |
42766 | Can you give us the name of that police officer? |
42766 | Can you give us the name of the flagman who refused to go out first? |
42766 | Can you give us the names of any men that would be willing to appear before our committee, and give information about the strike or their grievances? |
42766 | Can you give us the names of the parties for whom the warrants were issued? |
42766 | Can you give us the names? |
42766 | Can you give us the original of that? |
42766 | Can you give us the street where it was? |
42766 | Can you judge? |
42766 | Can you make some arrangement to get victuals for these men on watch? |
42766 | Can you name any gentlemen that came up from Beaver with you? |
42766 | Can you name any of the parties? |
42766 | Can you not ship freight at a less rate per ton per mile for a long distance than for a short? |
42766 | Can you produce them? |
42766 | Can you protect them? |
42766 | Can you remember that remark? |
42766 | Can you state the date when the first proclamation was issued? |
42766 | Can you state the nature of it-- the contents of it? |
42766 | Can you state the nature of the conversation? |
42766 | Can you state the nature of the dispatch? |
42766 | Can you state what day the first difficulty among the railroad employés broke out here, or commenced? |
42766 | Can you tell us any of the occurrences of the riot? |
42766 | Can you tell us what became of the crowd during the night? |
42766 | Can you tell us what portion of the round- house, or the buildings attached to it, were on fire when they left? |
42766 | Can you tell us what the result of that firing, at the point cleared, was as to loss of life? |
42766 | Can you tell what induced them to abandon the union? |
42766 | Can you tell what the class of men were getting in the shops you had charge of? |
42766 | Captain Aull: Will General Latta add that he gave me no instructions to report back? |
42766 | Certainly you could n''t have been a law- abiding citizen if you did n''t? |
42766 | Charge bayonets and then fire? |
42766 | Chilled, were they? |
42766 | Citizen''s dress? |
42766 | Citizens of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Citizens of the city? |
42766 | Citizens said that? |
42766 | Citizens''meeting? |
42766 | Citizens''meeting? |
42766 | Clearing the tracks and keeping the crowd off? |
42766 | Close to the railroad? |
42766 | Close to what? |
42766 | Colonel Gray and the entire Fourteenth regiment? |
42766 | Colonel Snowden''s regiment? |
42766 | Colonel, you may state briefly the facts and details in reference to your visit to General Brinton, on Saturday morning, of July 22? |
42766 | Come down where? |
42766 | Coming this way? |
42766 | Commanding all citizens to disperse? |
42766 | Commanding the hill? |
42766 | Committees appointed to visit them, and ask them to quit work? |
42766 | Communications, in the shape of letters and dispatches, are they placed on file in your office, when received in your absence? |
42766 | Companies of citizens? |
42766 | Compelling them to serve? |
42766 | Complaining against those who would not join them? |
42766 | Composed of citizens? |
42766 | Composed of employés of your railroad, and of the different roads? |
42766 | Composed of what class of men? |
42766 | Composed of what classes? |
42766 | Confined to the coal regions? |
42766 | Constitution, ai n''t it? |
42766 | Could General Brinton have taken his troops then, and marched them down towards the Union depot, and kept the crowd back, or kept the crowd above? |
42766 | Could a force of fifty good police have dispersed the mob? |
42766 | Could a man have got on to the engines as they stood in the stalls? |
42766 | Could a skirmish line have maintained its position and kept the crowd back? |
42766 | Could any force of determined men have stopped the riot? |
42766 | Could any of them be distinguished from any other citizens? |
42766 | Could he have gone on to Pittsburgh at that time? |
42766 | Could he have gone through those buildings soon after the troops evacuated them? |
42766 | Could he not see? |
42766 | Could he on Saturday, up until the time of the arrival of the militia? |
42766 | Could it have been done by doing some shooting? |
42766 | Could it have been done on Thursday? |
42766 | Could it have been moved at that time without much danger? |
42766 | Could n''t these Black Hussars have marched out and down to your house? |
42766 | Could n''t you distinguish the officers from the private? |
42766 | Could n''t you get at General Latta, and was n''t he there? |
42766 | Could n''t you guess from their appearance what their trades or occupations were? |
42766 | Could n''t you have formed then, after driving the crowd? |
42766 | Could n''t you have made a mistake, and only heard the last word? |
42766 | Could n''t you have saved those guns, and taken them with you? |
42766 | Could n''t you have taken those guns out of the same gate you took the Gatling guns out? |
42766 | Could not that danger have been counteracted by having less trains? |
42766 | Could not the mayor have commanded them? |
42766 | Could not you find them? |
42766 | Could not you see Fife and who was with him? |
42766 | Could that have run into the cellar of the buildings or the superintendent''s office? |
42766 | Could the destruction of property have been prevented by any other distribution of the troops that night, do you think? |
42766 | Could the mayor or the sheriff have raised a posse, either in the city or in the county, including both, sufficient to have dispersed the crowd? |
42766 | Could the trains have been run out that afternoon, if the engineers and firemen had gone? |
42766 | Could there have been such a construction placed on your message? |
42766 | Could they have driven the crowd away from the burning cars? |
42766 | Could they have prevented them from following you-- the policemen that you saw? |
42766 | Could you at any time have taken the men out of the crowd with your force? |
42766 | Could you have demanded citizens to serve as police on your force? |
42766 | Could you have depended on them, do you think, for any emergency? |
42766 | Could you have got back any sooner? |
42766 | Could you have got fifty or sixty good men, with rifles and ammunition, at the time that you and Bishop Tuigg went up to remonstrate with the mob? |
42766 | Could you have heard a command? |
42766 | Could you have heard any firing? |
42766 | Could you have intrenched yourself on the hill side, so as to make the position secure and safe? |
42766 | Could you have quelled the disturbance without the use of fire arms? |
42766 | Could you have remained in that round- house for any length of time after the time you retired, in your opinion? |
42766 | Could you have seen a white vest if he had had one on? |
42766 | Could you have taken a position in the Union depot, and used it as a fortification to defend yourself against the mob? |
42766 | Could you have taken that train out that day? |
42766 | Could you judge? |
42766 | Could you mention their names? |
42766 | Could you name any of them? |
42766 | Could you not furnish us with a bound copy, with references to the pages? |
42766 | Could you not have arrested this man who was firing on the troops? |
42766 | Could you not have formed at some cross street, say Fifteenth or Sixteenth street, and then have resisted the crowd and kept them back? |
42766 | Could you not have got fifty men at that time? |
42766 | Could you not have got them if you had commanded them? |
42766 | Could you not have marched out away from there and held your body? |
42766 | Could you not have quietly slipped up and taken them? |
42766 | Could you not have sent out detachments to have driven away any mob that might have gathered for the purpose of burning buildings? |
42766 | Could you not, have ordered Colonel Guthrie to have marched down Fifth street by a circuitous route, and brought him to the Union depot at night? |
42766 | Could you pick out the men who gave the command? |
42766 | Could you see any demonstrations they made in the furnace and work- shops below? |
42766 | Could you see anything of the number engaged in the burning-- the actual burning? |
42766 | Could you see into the telegraph room? |
42766 | Could you see the man who uttered the words? |
42766 | Could you see the men being driven out of the shops or any of the works from this store? |
42766 | Could you see the officers inside this hollow square? |
42766 | Could you see who threw the stones? |
42766 | Could you tell from their dress what class of people they were? |
42766 | Could you tell whether there was a volley or skirmishing? |
42766 | Could you tell who fired? |
42766 | Dated where? |
42766 | Define fully the position of the battery-- was it on the railroad track? |
42766 | Demonstration at Altoona? |
42766 | Describe the appearance of the man you met at the house, supposed to be Major Buffington? |
42766 | Describe the crowd during Friday night? |
42766 | Describe the crowd? |
42766 | Describe things then? |
42766 | Describe where you were and what occurred, as near as you can recollect? |
42766 | Destroy it? |
42766 | Did Ammon and his men who were acting in concert with them, make any effort to compel saloons from selling whisky? |
42766 | Did Captain Breck come there at any time during Sunday, to move the ammunition? |
42766 | Did Captain Breck have charge of those pieces? |
42766 | Did Captain Clines and his command carry anything away from there? |
42766 | Did Captain Norris claim to be acting on the staff of General Latta, or on that of the Governor in any way? |
42766 | Did Colonel Carpenter, who was in command there, receive your orders to move to Rochester? |
42766 | Did Colonel Guthrie have any ammunition? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris ask him to fall back to Sharpsburg, near the railroad, where he could be supplied with ammunition and food? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris ask him to go back to Sharpsburg, where he could be supplied with ammunition and rations near the railroad? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris deliver it as an order coming from the Adjutant General, or did he state that Captain Aull had had such an order? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris give General Brinton any orders? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris make any other business known to General Brinton, except this one matter? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris repeat the substance of the order which Captain Aull had? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris repeat to General Brinton the substance of the order? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris say anything about Captain Aull''s having an order for General Brinton? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris say anything to you as surgeon of the division about having the column halted at any point? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris tell General Brinton that Captain Aull had an order for him? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris tell General Brinton that Captain Aull had an order? |
42766 | Did Colonel Norris walk with General Brinton with his command for any distance? |
42766 | Did General Brinton and Colonel Norris sit down and have a conversation together, upon a bank or a log? |
42766 | Did General Brinton complain of being short of ammunition in any of those dispatches? |
42766 | Did General Brinton give orders to that effect? |
42766 | Did General Brinton know that the ammunition was at the Union depot? |
42766 | Did General Brinton receive any orders to move his command to Torrens station? |
42766 | Did General Brinton say anything about having seen Colonel Norris? |
42766 | Did General Brinton say anything that would lead you to think that he did not recognize Colonel Norris as an officer? |
42766 | Did General Brinton say to Colonel Norris he would be damned if he would go back to Torrens and form a junction with Colonel Guthrie? |
42766 | Did General Brinton send you back for orders? |
42766 | Did General Brinton stay as long as he could in the round- house? |
42766 | Did General Brinton stop himself? |
42766 | Did General Brinton telegraph you at Blairsville Junction that he, General Brinton, could clear the tracks with the force under his command? |
42766 | Did General Brinton then move on with his command? |
42766 | Did General Latta know that, to your knowledge? |
42766 | Did General Latta order Colonel Norris to proceed with any orders to General Brinton? |
42766 | Did General Pearson give this command to an officer standing close by him? |
42766 | Did General Pearson have anything about him, or his uniform, that would indicate his rank? |
42766 | Did General Pearson have on a belt and sword? |
42766 | Did General Pearson talk to you about the propriety of undertaking to open the road Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | Did Governor leave any orders with you? |
42766 | Did Huidekoper report to you any reasons for it? |
42766 | Did I not tell you half a dozen times that I knew nothing about that-- I received no dispatch-- how often must I repeat that? |
42766 | Did I see him when he started? |
42766 | Did I understand you to say that all the trains, both passenger and freight, were running on Saturday? |
42766 | Did I understand you to say you appealed to the Governor not to attempt to move trains on that Saturday? |
42766 | Did I understand you, that you disbanded for fear of exasperating the mob? |
42766 | Did Langon say anything to you about going to the silk- works? |
42766 | Did Lieutenant Lyon make any such remark? |
42766 | Did Major Buffington come up to the gate before you left? |
42766 | Did Major Buffington give any reason for refusing admission into the arsenal grounds? |
42766 | Did Mayor Philips take active measures to raise a force for the purpose of preventing or suppressing violence and riot? |
42766 | Did Mayor Phillips, to you, give your son the credit for maintaining peace, and of restraining the crowd and rioters from the destruction of property? |
42766 | Did Mr. Ammon give any reasons for his taking charge of the railroad and telegraph at Allegheny City? |
42766 | Did Mr. Jenkins offer to furnish flour to the strikers? |
42766 | Did Mr. Lennig? |
42766 | Did Mr. Paul report to you after seeing the committee? |
42766 | Did Mr. Scott state that they had called on the mayor before calling on the sheriff? |
42766 | Did Mr. Watt have to promise to pay the men before the mayor gave that instruction? |
42766 | Did Officer Daniel Motts say anything to you at any time? |
42766 | Did Officer Daniel Motts speak to you at any time, offering to protect you? |
42766 | Did Officer McGovern report to the mayor during the afternoon? |
42766 | Did Robert Ammon tell you how many lodges of Trainmen''s Unions he had established? |
42766 | Did Ross have any conversation with you as chief of police in regard the situation of things there? |
42766 | Did a man by the name of Colonel Smith reach you during the day, Sunday? |
42766 | Did all that crowd appear to be violent and riotous, or were there a great many there that were simply there out of curiosity? |
42766 | Did all that happen? |
42766 | Did all the miners employed by the company strike? |
42766 | Did any citizens speak to you or to Cassatt, in your presence, in regard to any meeting any time to move trains on Saturday? |
42766 | Did any come there? |
42766 | Did any constables refuse to go? |
42766 | Did any freight cars leave the depot or arrive at the depot that night-- Friday night? |
42766 | Did any of the citizens call upon the mayor, requesting him to put on an additional force? |
42766 | Did any of the civil authorities? |
42766 | Did any of the men from your works come up? |
42766 | Did any of the mob follow them up Sunday? |
42766 | Did any of the officers come to the telegraph office while you were there? |
42766 | Did any of the officers have swords, or did you notice the other officers? |
42766 | Did any of the strikers? |
42766 | Did any of them try to persuade men not to run their trains? |
42766 | Did any of those firemen or engineers who left you at that time, ever make application to come back? |
42766 | Did any of your engines play on the fire on the railroad? |
42766 | Did any of your mechanics in the city engage in the riots when it was once precipitated? |
42766 | Did any of your men leave you at the arsenal? |
42766 | Did any of your men straggle off and desert? |
42766 | Did any of your men who were not able to join you the night you left undertake to come to you at Pittsburgh afterwards? |
42766 | Did any officer or any person reach General Latta from General Brinton asking for orders, on Sunday evening? |
42766 | Did any one sign that paper setting forth their grievances? |
42766 | Did any one, after the reading of the letter, make any comments upon it, or advise the crowd what to do? |
42766 | Did any other gentlemen with him offer their services? |
42766 | Did any other offer to furnish any? |
42766 | Did any other words precede the word"fire?" |
42766 | Did any police officer? |
42766 | Did any report reach you from Colonel Gray or Colonel Howard? |
42766 | Did any whisky or high wines run down into the round- house while you were there? |
42766 | Did anybody else say so? |
42766 | Did anybody in Sharpsburg furnish your men with provisions and water as your men passed through? |
42766 | Did anybody offer to furnish you flour or articles to live on during the strike? |
42766 | Did anybody there state to you that General Pearson had better go out of town? |
42766 | Did he accompany you to General Brinton? |
42766 | Did he accompany you, or did he come up afterwards and join the group? |
42766 | Did he afterwards come up to the gate? |
42766 | Did he arrive here before the firing took place in the cut? |
42766 | Did he ask about the regular troops-- whether they were on the way? |
42766 | Did he ask for any assistance? |
42766 | Did he ask him to go to Pittsburgh at all? |
42766 | Did he at ten o''clock, on Thursday, ask you to go to the scene of the disturbance? |
42766 | Did he belong to the rioter party? |
42766 | Did he bring you any report as to the number of the mob? |
42766 | Did he call for any posse to assist you in any way? |
42766 | Did he call upon any of the crowd to follow him? |
42766 | Did he call upon citizens to go out? |
42766 | Did he come back again at all, before the firing? |
42766 | Did he discharge any of them? |
42766 | Did he draw his musket away? |
42766 | Did he execute the warrants? |
42766 | Did he express any intention to use violence? |
42766 | Did he fire at the man? |
42766 | Did he follow the troops up? |
42766 | Did he get the three dollars out of them? |
42766 | Did he give him any written orders to your knowledge? |
42766 | Did he give that directly to the men themselves? |
42766 | Did he give the command himself to fire, or did he give it to somebody else? |
42766 | Did he give the command to fire, or was he cautioning the men? |
42766 | Did he give you any protection? |
42766 | Did he give you the order when you first saw him-- the first time he was called upon? |
42766 | Did he have a blouse on? |
42766 | Did he have a cap on? |
42766 | Did he have a sword on? |
42766 | Did he have a sword or belt? |
42766 | Did he have a sword? |
42766 | Did he have a sword? |
42766 | Did he have a white vest on? |
42766 | Did he have any braid or anything of that kind about the uniform? |
42766 | Did he have brass buttons on his blouse? |
42766 | Did he have his sword? |
42766 | Did he have it on at night? |
42766 | Did he have on a belt? |
42766 | Did he have on a hat? |
42766 | Did he have soldier straps on? |
42766 | Did he instruct you to return the warrants? |
42766 | Did he intimate to you in these communications that he had control of these men-- that they would obey him? |
42766 | Did he know that there had been firing? |
42766 | Did he leave you in general command after he left? |
42766 | Did he make a demand upon the citizens of the city to join the police force at any time? |
42766 | Did he make a request to you that you would order the saloons of the city closed? |
42766 | Did he make any attempt to arrest anybody that night? |
42766 | Did he make any attempt to raise a posse? |
42766 | Did he make any call for a posse of police? |
42766 | Did he make any call for troops? |
42766 | Did he make any effort at any time? |
42766 | Did he make any effort to arrest the parties who were in the disturbance during Monday? |
42766 | Did he make any order at that time, calling out policemen? |
42766 | Did he make any proclamation calling for police? |
42766 | Did he make any refusal the first time you saw him? |
42766 | Did he make any remarks to that effect, that led you to think he did not recognize him? |
42766 | Did he make any reply? |
42766 | Did he make this proposition of his own accord, or by the authority of the officials of the railroad company? |
42766 | Did he mention Captain Aull''s name? |
42766 | Did he mention having sent Colonel Norris or Captain Aull with orders? |
42766 | Did he mention the name of the other citizen? |
42766 | Did he not come out of the crowd? |
42766 | Did he order them to load, or anything preliminary-- he just said fire? |
42766 | Did he participate in the conflict? |
42766 | Did he receive any orders from you before that? |
42766 | Did he refer to the crowd? |
42766 | Did he refuse to swear you in as special police? |
42766 | Did he refuse? |
42766 | Did he remain there until you left? |
42766 | Did he report that he received that order? |
42766 | Did he represent himself to be? |
42766 | Did he respond promptly to that call? |
42766 | Did he respond? |
42766 | Did he say anything about a large amount of valuable ammunition and stores? |
42766 | Did he say anything about an order having been given to fire on the crowd? |
42766 | Did he say anything about having received any orders from General Latta? |
42766 | Did he say anything about his refusal to join Colonel Guthrie? |
42766 | Did he say anything about the condition of General Brinton''s troops? |
42766 | Did he say anything about what his business had been to the command? |
42766 | Did he say anything more to you? |
42766 | Did he say anything to General Brinton about returning and joining Colonel Guthrie at Torrens? |
42766 | Did he say anything to you about having sent orders to General Brinton? |
42766 | Did he say he had artillery ammunition, but no ammunition for infantry? |
42766 | Did he say he had been sent there by anybody-- been ordered to go out and find General Brinton? |
42766 | Did he say he had in the first place? |
42766 | Did he say in response to your application-- did he say whether he had the policemen or not, or did he make any excuse that he could not raise them? |
42766 | Did he say it would be endangered by bringing on a conflict with the mob? |
42766 | Did he say that he had direction of the different strikes? |
42766 | Did he say that? |
42766 | Did he say to us? |
42766 | Did he say what he intended to do? |
42766 | Did he say what those terms were? |
42766 | Did he say where the parties were from that were in it? |
42766 | Did he send any policemen down? |
42766 | Did he send anybody to the store? |
42766 | Did he set fire then to the elevator? |
42766 | Did he shoot as if he was taking aim? |
42766 | Did he show unusual excitement-- nervousness? |
42766 | Did he speak it in a low tone? |
42766 | Did he state exactly where he found him? |
42766 | Did he state his reasons? |
42766 | Did he state to you that Captain Aull had received an order from General Latta, to communicate to you? |
42766 | Did he state to you what he wanted? |
42766 | Did he state what regiment it was? |
42766 | Did he stop and address the crowd? |
42766 | Did he strike you at that time as laboring under any mental disability? |
42766 | Did he suggest that it was a bad time to undertake to open the road that afternoon? |
42766 | Did he take any part with them? |
42766 | Did he take any part? |
42766 | Did he take them away from your store? |
42766 | Did he talk as if he came to warn you for that purpose? |
42766 | Did he tell General Brinton there was no small ammunition there? |
42766 | Did he tell them that they must keep the peace? |
42766 | Did he tell you anything about Colonel Norris having been to see him? |
42766 | Did he tell you at any time that one of your police officers attempted to arrest him, and he refused to be arrested? |
42766 | Did he tell you how the men were to be paid? |
42766 | Did he tell you on what roads he had established them? |
42766 | Did he tell you that he had all the men that they wanted? |
42766 | Did he tell you that he would take care of the wounded? |
42766 | Did he tell you that one of your officers had attempted to arrest him, and he refused to submit, because he had not a warrant? |
42766 | Did he tell you the object of that Union? |
42766 | Did he tell you why it would be necessary? |
42766 | Did he tell you, if you would commence playing on a certain point, that the police would protect you? |
42766 | Did he turn his back to give the command? |
42766 | Did he turn them over to General Brinton? |
42766 | Did he wear a hat or a cap? |
42766 | Did he wear his belt? |
42766 | Did he wear this cap up there, just prior to the firing of the military on the mob? |
42766 | Did he wear whiskers? |
42766 | Did his dress indicate a railroad employé or a factory man? |
42766 | Did it appear that the citizens were in sympathy with the strikers? |
42766 | Did it appear to be in front of the command-- the head of the column where the command came from to fire? |
42766 | Did it appear to be pistol shots or musketry? |
42766 | Did it appear to you that the boys had taken these soldiers prisoners? |
42766 | Did it apply to the Pennsylvania Central Railroad and all its branches? |
42766 | Did it apply to you? |
42766 | Did it become necessary for you to call on the civil authorities here? |
42766 | Did it clear the track? |
42766 | Did it come from the officers or the crowd? |
42766 | Did it extend on the Erie road, and to the Atlantic and Great Western? |
42766 | Did it extend to the miners-- had there been any reduction in miners''wages? |
42766 | Did it include all the employés of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | Did it include all the trunk lines? |
42766 | Did it include any passenger conductors and brakemen? |
42766 | Did it include the engineers? |
42766 | Did it increase in number? |
42766 | Did it not look to you like it? |
42766 | Did it occur to you that Saturday would be a bad day to undertake the movement of trains? |
42766 | Did it occur to you that it would be good policy to go to the Union depot? |
42766 | Did it occur to you to march out with your command at any time-- out of the round- house-- and disperse the mob gathered there? |
42766 | Did it reach Colonel Carpenter? |
42766 | Did it run down into the cellar? |
42766 | Did it strike you that they had? |
42766 | Did many of your men-- the rank and file-- have experience in the army as soldiers? |
42766 | Did many participate in riotous conduct there? |
42766 | Did n''t Mr. Watt ask you? |
42766 | Did n''t Mr. Watt inform you that your presence could do a good deal towards quelling the disturbance there? |
42766 | Did n''t Mr. Watt tell you of the circumstances? |
42766 | Did n''t have any talk about going over to the scene of this riot? |
42766 | Did n''t he also say that you must not interfere with the railroad property? |
42766 | Did n''t he tell the crowd to disperse and let the railroad property alone? |
42766 | Did n''t it sound like a pistol shot? |
42766 | Did n''t most of the men who were at work in the forenoon come over to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did n''t notice? |
42766 | Did n''t one recognize and call to you"Doctor, get down from that?" |
42766 | Did n''t require any effort to ascertain? |
42766 | Did n''t see a great many of them? |
42766 | Did n''t see him? |
42766 | Did n''t see it? |
42766 | Did n''t tell you why they got off? |
42766 | Did n''t the New York Central make a reduction about that time? |
42766 | Did n''t the policemen tell you to go? |
42766 | Did n''t the sergeant there point out to you and General Brinton the gate to Major Buffington''s quarters? |
42766 | Did n''t they all have cellars under them? |
42766 | Did n''t they burn east of you, also? |
42766 | Did n''t they do it on Friday? |
42766 | Did n''t they give you any object? |
42766 | Did n''t they refuse to obey your orders? |
42766 | Did n''t they stop other trains-- freight trains? |
42766 | Did n''t they undertake to disperse you? |
42766 | Did n''t you consider it proper, as a military man, to exercise your own discretion in an emergency of that kind, and take the responsibility of it? |
42766 | Did n''t you consider the men justifiable in firing? |
42766 | Did n''t you exercise care of it, and did n''t you afterwards deliver it over to the railroad officials? |
42766 | Did n''t you go to a meeting with some citizens to a hall? |
42766 | Did n''t you have the address in your mind? |
42766 | Did n''t you know it was an unlawful assemblage of men? |
42766 | Did n''t you know of a large collection of people in that vicinity? |
42766 | Did n''t you know that he was going to make the call? |
42766 | Did n''t you say those were Philadelphia troops up at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did n''t you see some of these men out there on Friday? |
42766 | Did n''t you send a committee down to Philadelphia to see Mr. Scott? |
42766 | Did n''t you tell him that he had done wrong in being led away by the Brotherhood? |
42766 | Did n''t you think you were managing that western road pretty successfully, with the experience you had? |
42766 | Did n''t your clerks or any of your subordinates notify you that such a telegram had been received from Mr. Watt? |
42766 | Did n''t your police inform you that the mob had overpowered the police, and also the railroad authorities, on Thursday? |
42766 | Did not a demand have to be made on them? |
42766 | Did not a party come down armed to prevent the troops from coming in? |
42766 | Did not find it necessary? |
42766 | Did not hear a conversation of that kind? |
42766 | Did not know anything about that at all? |
42766 | Did not learn from them how long their complaint had been standing-- how long it had been running-- whether recent? |
42766 | Did not notice that? |
42766 | Did not reach Washington avenue? |
42766 | Did not say who did it? |
42766 | Did not see any stones thrown? |
42766 | Did not see the party with the man who was pointed out as the sheriff? |
42766 | Did not the officials, when you sent your committee to them, did n''t they talk over this matter with you? |
42766 | Did not the strikers send a party down to the lower end of the yard, or below the depot, to intercept any train of troops that might be coming in? |
42766 | Did not your mine wagons average more than two tons of clean coal? |
42766 | Did or did not the mayor say to you that it was necessary for the officers of the railroad to go out of town, that their lives were in jeopardy? |
42766 | Did other companies here reduce their wages also? |
42766 | Did she hear any of the parties? |
42766 | Did that apply to any other employés but the engineers? |
42766 | Did that cause any complaint from the employés? |
42766 | Did that depend upon his being attentive? |
42766 | Did that detachment afterwards report for duty? |
42766 | Did that disperse the crowd? |
42766 | Did that fire from the militia disperse the crowd? |
42766 | Did that house stand near the gate that leads up to the hospital? |
42766 | Did that order purport to be signed by order of the Governor, sent by him as Adjutant General? |
42766 | Did that order require the discharge of any number of men, or did it not? |
42766 | Did that proclamation appear in the morning papers? |
42766 | Did that shot hit any of the soldiers? |
42766 | Did that take effect in the mines, or only in the machine shops? |
42766 | Did the Fourteenth or Nineteenth make any effort? |
42766 | Did the Governor communicate with you? |
42766 | Did the Nineteenth regiment remain on the hill? |
42766 | Did the Reading railroad continue to run their trains? |
42766 | Did the Trainmen''s Union break up at that time, or did they continue their organization? |
42766 | Did the carriage remain back? |
42766 | Did the cars stop at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did the cars stop near the round- house? |
42766 | Did the cheap rates at New York arise from competition with water transportation? |
42766 | Did the chief of police make any arrests, to your knowledge, prior to the conflict between the troops and the mob? |
42766 | Did the citizens generally express a willingness to go elsewhere, where there was riot or lawlessness besides in their own locality? |
42766 | Did the citizens respond heartily to your call? |
42766 | Did the companies commanded by the officers who gave the command, fire? |
42766 | Did the crowd appear to have a head or a leader? |
42766 | Did the crowd assemble between the depot and where the militia were then stationed? |
42766 | Did the crowd assemble in very large numbers? |
42766 | Did the crowd disperse? |
42766 | Did the crowd increase there? |
42766 | Did the crowd intimidate the engineer in any way, do you know? |
42766 | Did the crowd know that the Black Hussars were in your house? |
42766 | Did the crowd make any demonstrations? |
42766 | Did the crowd remain together during the night of Sunday night, or did it disperse during the evening? |
42766 | Did the crowd resist that charge? |
42766 | Did the crowd resist these men? |
42766 | Did the crowd resist these soldiers when they marched to Twenty- eighth? |
42766 | Did the crowd scatter when they fired? |
42766 | Did the crowd seem excited? |
42766 | Did the engineer get off when McAllister told him he could n''t go down to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did the fire commence from that direction? |
42766 | Did the firemen throw water on private property when it was burning? |
42766 | Did the firing commence from that direction? |
42766 | Did the firing disperse the sheriff''s posse, too? |
42766 | Did the gentleman who was with Colonel Norris get out of the carriage and accompany you up to where General Brinton was? |
42766 | Did the greater part of the crowd come down through the shops? |
42766 | Did the issuing of the order running double- headers necessarily discharge any men? |
42766 | Did the leaders seem to be railroad men-- that is, that you came in contact with? |
42766 | Did the letter state when and where Mr. Scranton had made that declaration? |
42766 | Did the major come out of the house there, and stand on the steps? |
42766 | Did the major know who you were? |
42766 | Did the man fall that you shot at? |
42766 | Did the mayor have any communication with the men out there during the night? |
42766 | Did the mayor increase his police force after that, to your knowledge? |
42766 | Did the mayor issue any call, or any command, or summon any posse of citizens as a police force? |
42766 | Did the mayor make any demand on the citizens for help? |
42766 | Did the mayor make that a condition before he instructed you to send out for the men? |
42766 | Did the mayor make that inquiry of Mr. Watt, as to who would pay? |
42766 | Did the mayor of Allegheny City give your son credit for maintaining the peace and order, and saving the destruction of property-- did he do that? |
42766 | Did the mayor of Allegheny City send a relief guard? |
42766 | Did the mayor require Mr. Watt to become responsible for their pay? |
42766 | Did the mayor say that? |
42766 | Did the mayor say to you who had taken this matter out of his hands-- what authority had taken it out of his hands? |
42766 | Did the mayor''s clerk come down and order those policemen to report? |
42766 | Did the mayor, in that interview, express any intention or desire to suppress this-- making any attempt to control it? |
42766 | Did the members of your union make any effort to have those parties disperse and go to their homes during Friday, Saturday, and Sunday? |
42766 | Did the men appear to think that they should be allowed to make... and higher up, and none of them discharged? |
42766 | Did the men fire as if they had received a command? |
42766 | Did the men fire as soon as he gave the command? |
42766 | Did the men know of any reason why the double- headers were to be run? |
42766 | Did the men make any complaint about that order? |
42766 | Did the men that he ordered to charge bayonets, fire? |
42766 | Did the military supersede you? |
42766 | Did the militia fire towards you? |
42766 | Did the miners have any organization, any societies among themselves? |
42766 | Did the miners join in with that crowd? |
42766 | Did the mob come there? |
42766 | Did the mob flee or disperse before your men every time you gave the order to load? |
42766 | Did the mob interfere with private property at any time? |
42766 | Did the mob make a rush? |
42766 | Did the officers attempt to stop the men when the firing took place? |
42766 | Did the officers who repeated that command repeat it in a distinct, loud tone of voice? |
42766 | Did the organization approve of it? |
42766 | Did the other men make any reply when he made that remark? |
42766 | Did the people unite heartily in carrying out the suggestions made by that committee? |
42766 | Did the people, in your opinion, justify these men, called workingmen, in driving out the troops and triumphing over them? |
42766 | Did the police get off too? |
42766 | Did the police offer you any protection? |
42766 | Did the policemen make any remarks as you passed? |
42766 | Did the posse remain together? |
42766 | Did the president of that road, or any of the officials of that road, say to you that they were satisfied that Bob should have charge of this road? |
42766 | Did the railroad lead you by the shops? |
42766 | Did the reduction apply to officers of the company-- book- keepers and so forth? |
42766 | Did the rioters make any resistance to the police? |
42766 | Did the road continue to run during the troubles? |
42766 | Did the sheriff command the mob to disperse before the firing? |
42766 | Did the sheriff go out himself, and command men to join him in putting down the riot? |
42766 | Did the sheriff make any call upon the crowd to disperse? |
42766 | Did the sheriff say anything to the crowd? |
42766 | Did the sheriff succeed in raising a_ posse comitatus?_ A. |
42766 | Did the soldiers act as if they were prisoners of war? |
42766 | Did the soldiers attempt to press them back at first? |
42766 | Did the soldiers attempt to shoot at them as they ran up the bank? |
42766 | Did the soldiers carry arms? |
42766 | Did the soldiers fire in a volley? |
42766 | Did the soldiers march out in good order? |
42766 | Did the sound seem to come from that direction? |
42766 | Did the street car stop after they fired? |
42766 | Did the strikers attempt to prevent other men from working, that you employed? |
42766 | Did the strikers say they would prevent them from going out by violence? |
42766 | Did the subject of conversation appear to be the stopping of the trains? |
42766 | Did the trains go out on the roads leading west? |
42766 | Did the troops accomplish what they were sent to-- started to accomplish-- gaining possession of the car? |
42766 | Did the troops move out in good order? |
42766 | Did the troops preserve order there? |
42766 | Did there appear to be any feeling on the part of your regiment men against the Philadelphia troops? |
42766 | Did there appear to be any tramps or any strangers connected with this party who were with the engineers or employés of the Reading road? |
42766 | Did there seem to be any leader who was taking charge of the riot? |
42766 | Did there seem to be any officers among the soldiers? |
42766 | Did these men appear to be railroad men? |
42766 | Did these men state what their grievances were? |
42766 | Did these men tell you how they were going to proceed? |
42766 | Did these men who were working at a dollar a day have an opportunity to put in full time? |
42766 | Did they afterwards escape from the office, and reach their homes? |
42766 | Did they all continue to work? |
42766 | Did they allow the passenger cars to pass? |
42766 | Did they anywhere along the road? |
42766 | Did they appear to be leading this crowd? |
42766 | Did they appear to be wounded from rifle bullets or pistol bullets? |
42766 | Did they appear to fire in the direction of where the missiles and stones came from? |
42766 | Did they ask the police officers to help them? |
42766 | Did they ask you to play upon any particular point of the fire, and say they would protect you? |
42766 | Did they assist in trying to start the train? |
42766 | Did they at any other point? |
42766 | Did they at any time after your arrival? |
42766 | Did they attempt any violence on the men running the trains during the day of Friday by throwing stones or clubs? |
42766 | Did they attempt to interfere with the property of the road? |
42766 | Did they belong to the city, mostly? |
42766 | Did they belong to the rioters? |
42766 | Did they break in the door or unlock it? |
42766 | Did they carry off pretty much everything? |
42766 | Did they carry out that arrangement? |
42766 | Did they claim a right to stop trains-- interfere with trains? |
42766 | Did they claim that they had any right to set themselves up against the authorities? |
42766 | Did they claim that they had the right to interfere with others? |
42766 | Did they come back? |
42766 | Did they come there in larger numbers than usual-- that is, in larger crowds than six or eight or ten? |
42766 | Did they comply? |
42766 | Did they continue to fire on them then until they got down on to Penn street, where the cut runs down level? |
42766 | Did they continue to walk along? |
42766 | Did they disperse? |
42766 | Did they do that-- did they coöperate? |
42766 | Did they drive back the crowd? |
42766 | Did they drive them as long as they continued to charge? |
42766 | Did they enter into this article of agreement with a perfect understanding of what they were doing? |
42766 | Did they ever join Doctor Donnelly? |
42766 | Did they ever rally, or come together again? |
42766 | Did they express any intention of using violence? |
42766 | Did they fall back? |
42766 | Did they fire altogether, as if they were ordered to fire? |
42766 | Did they fire as if they had been commanded or ordered to fire? |
42766 | Did they fire as you passed them? |
42766 | Did they fire at any time? |
42766 | Did they fire before the front line fired? |
42766 | Did they fire in a volley? |
42766 | Did they fix upon any definite price per day that you would demand? |
42766 | Did they furnish arms and ammunition on Sunday? |
42766 | Did they gather in any considerable force after your arrival in the city? |
42766 | Did they get back to Philadelphia? |
42766 | Did they get fifty more policemen that they called for? |
42766 | Did they get on and off the engine as if they were men used to being around the cars? |
42766 | Did they get the goods out? |
42766 | Did they give any intimation of any intention to make an attack upon the city and disturb the peace in any way? |
42766 | Did they go alone? |
42766 | Did they go for you once in the depot? |
42766 | Did they go with him, or did they remain? |
42766 | Did they halt or march off down the street? |
42766 | Did they have ammunition? |
42766 | Did they have any meetings after that? |
42766 | Did they have arms? |
42766 | Did they have arms? |
42766 | Did they have guns when they came in from Philadelphia? |
42766 | Did they have pistols in their hands? |
42766 | Did they have the appearance of railroad men-- familiar with tracks and with getting on and going about cars? |
42766 | Did they have their arms with them? |
42766 | Did they have their maces? |
42766 | Did they hit any of the sheriffs posse? |
42766 | Did they hold it for any length of time? |
42766 | Did they hold their position until six o''clock? |
42766 | Did they interfere with you? |
42766 | Did they interfere with your property in any way here? |
42766 | Did they intimate about what they intended to do? |
42766 | Did they lay down their arms any of them? |
42766 | Did they listen to it? |
42766 | Did they load after the command to fire was given? |
42766 | Did they make any complaint or any demand upon the company of any kind? |
42766 | Did they make any demand of you? |
42766 | Did they make any demands at that time, and if so, what were the nature of those demands? |
42766 | Did they make any effort to find out who the policeman was, afterwards? |
42766 | Did they make any effort to prevent any destruction of property? |
42766 | Did they make any efforts to disperse the mob? |
42766 | Did they make any efforts? |
42766 | Did they make any hostile demonstration? |
42766 | Did they make any objections to the classification-- what is called the classification? |
42766 | Did they make any proposal to the mayor, to take an active part himself-- to hold the nozzle? |
42766 | Did they make any reply to that? |
42766 | Did they make any response to it in any way? |
42766 | Did they make any threats? |
42766 | Did they make them manifest in any way? |
42766 | Did they march in good order? |
42766 | Did they march in regular order? |
42766 | Did they move when the order came-- did they obey the command? |
42766 | Did they not complain of double- headers? |
42766 | Did they not have a secret organization? |
42766 | Did they not telegraph you for fifty more additional police? |
42766 | Did they observe their duty as soldiers after that? |
42766 | Did they offer any protection to you? |
42766 | Did they offer to become responsible for the payment of the additional police? |
42766 | Did they pay their fines? |
42766 | Did they re- assemble at any time after being dispersed that night? |
42766 | Did they recall them? |
42766 | Did they refuse to go on when you insisted? |
42766 | Did they regard the stopping of trains as an overt act? |
42766 | Did they remain in force during all the night? |
42766 | Did they remain near the round- house? |
42766 | Did they remain out all night that distance? |
42766 | Did they remain there during the night, Thursday? |
42766 | Did they remain there? |
42766 | Did they remain with your command during the rest of your military movements? |
42766 | Did they resist? |
42766 | Did they return before you were driven out of the store by the mob? |
42766 | Did they return to General Brinton that night? |
42766 | Did they say anything else? |
42766 | Did they say anything to you or did they expect to ally other classes of laboring men with them? |
42766 | Did they say that the strikers were taking proper action? |
42766 | Did they say to you how much advantage it would be to you to join it? |
42766 | Did they say to you what they proposed to do? |
42766 | Did they say to you, or did you understand from any employés on the Pennsylvania Central road, that there would be a strike on the 19th? |
42766 | Did they say what they were going for? |
42766 | Did they say who notified them? |
42766 | Did they say why they thought it was not necessary? |
42766 | Did they seem to be coming in wagons from a distance? |
42766 | Did they seem to be general or just local? |
42766 | Did they seem to have any organized leaders, or were they directed by anybody? |
42766 | Did they seem to have any particular thing? |
42766 | Did they seem to have that impression after you arrived in Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did they seem willing to help in suppressing the arson and riot that was then going on? |
42766 | Did they send any such word to you personally? |
42766 | Did they send any word or have any interviews with the miners to persuade the miners to strike? |
42766 | Did they serve during the day Saturday? |
42766 | Did they serve during the day on Friday? |
42766 | Did they shoot or fire? |
42766 | Did they so notify them? |
42766 | Did they start the train? |
42766 | Did they state in what respect the agreement had not been carried out by the companies after 1872? |
42766 | Did they state who was engaged in the destruction of property? |
42766 | Did they stop you? |
42766 | Did they strike any of your horses? |
42766 | Did they succeed in clearing the track and driving them away from that point? |
42766 | Did they supersede you at any time-- the railroad authorities? |
42766 | Did they surrender, because they were in sympathy, or would it have been folly for them to have resisted? |
42766 | Did they take away any more arms than they wanted themselves? |
42766 | Did they take forcible possession of the dispatcher''s office? |
42766 | Did they take their arms to the armory, or did they go away, each one taking his own gun home with him? |
42766 | Did they talk? |
42766 | Did they tell you they did not want you? |
42766 | Did they tell you they had become separated from their command? |
42766 | Did they treat them as prisoners, escort them in unarmed? |
42766 | Did they try to pull the bayonets off the guns? |
42766 | Did they turn any of the switches? |
42766 | Did they turn round to fire? |
42766 | Did they understand that they had no right to interfere with the running of trains, or with any other employé who desired to work? |
42766 | Did they use any violence towards men that were willing to run trains? |
42766 | Did they use any violence towards the firemen? |
42766 | Did they wait until your men had passed, before they fired? |
42766 | Did this all occur before your men fired? |
42766 | Did this coke car stand entirely alone? |
42766 | Did this commence prior to the issuing of the order to run double- headers? |
42766 | Did this company of Doctor Donnelly''s go up there armed with anything else but pick handles? |
42766 | Did this company turn around and face the crowd-- how did they face? |
42766 | Did this crowd seem to be bent on plunder? |
42766 | Did this crowd throw stones? |
42766 | Did this crowd-- all of them-- seem to be citizens? |
42766 | Did this gang of men fire property below the depot, or did that catch from the depot? |
42766 | Did this man give you any reasons? |
42766 | Did this man say anything? |
42766 | Did this number of men out of employment have a tendency to produce restlessness among them, and bring on the trouble? |
42766 | Did this organization--"Kights of Labor"--did they by any resolution or by- law discountenance any interference with men that wished to work? |
42766 | Did those houses catch fire, or were they set on fire? |
42766 | Did those messages come in answer to messages that had been sent out? |
42766 | Did those that were facing down towards Liberty street fire at that time? |
42766 | Did those two prominent citizens? |
42766 | Did you accompany the command at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did you accompany the troops to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did you accompany the troops under General Brinton to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did you act as general superintendent of the Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad, while you were in charge of it? |
42766 | Did you admonish them that it was wrong to be assembled in such large numbers there? |
42766 | Did you allow any freight trains to go out after that time? |
42766 | Did you and General Brinton walk side by side? |
42766 | Did you apply to any of the other officials-- sheriff or any other authorities? |
42766 | Did you apprehend any danger from any one? |
42766 | Did you approve of his course in remaining at Greenville? |
42766 | Did you arrest all of those who undertook to take McCall''s part? |
42766 | Did you arrest any of the parties that were pillaging? |
42766 | Did you ascertain from the men that there was any communication between the rioters here and the rioters at the other places you have mentioned? |
42766 | Did you ascertain what force accompanied the constable to make these arrests? |
42766 | Did you ascertain what the purpose of the mob was on Monday night, in case you had not succeeded in dispersing them? |
42766 | Did you ascertain who he was? |
42766 | Did you ascertain who the privates were with that crowd? |
42766 | Did you ascertain who these men were that were interfering with the pumps at the mines? |
42766 | Did you ask General Pearson whether he had a consultation with the sheriff or the mayor? |
42766 | Did you ask any of the business men? |
42766 | Did you ask for protection? |
42766 | Did you ask for protection? |
42766 | Did you ask for the letter? |
42766 | Did you ask him anything about it? |
42766 | Did you ask him for it? |
42766 | Did you ask him who the lieutenant of the police was? |
42766 | Did you ask him? |
42766 | Did you ask protection from the mayor? |
42766 | Did you ask them whether trains had been moved? |
42766 | Did you ask them why they were there? |
42766 | Did you assist on Saturday in raising that posse? |
42766 | Did you assist the railroad men in protecting the property of the company? |
42766 | Did you assist the strikers in running the cars down out of danger? |
42766 | Did you at any time deem it necessary to increase your force of police? |
42766 | Did you attempt at any time on Sunday to gather your police force in a body so as to have an organized force large enough to accomplish something? |
42766 | Did you attempt on that day to eject those men? |
42766 | Did you attempt to locate them at their homes that night-- you did not go to their homes? |
42766 | Did you attempt to scare him? |
42766 | Did you call for any posse that night? |
42766 | Did you call in person upon the mayor? |
42766 | Did you call on any of the constables to go out with you? |
42766 | Did you call on any physicians? |
42766 | Did you call on any professional men? |
42766 | Did you call on the mayor for protection in any way for your fire department? |
42766 | Did you call on the police for protection? |
42766 | Did you call on the police force for protection? |
42766 | Did you call the attention of the commanding officer to that fact? |
42766 | Did you call upon professional men? |
42766 | Did you call upon the mayor for assistance before you called upon the sheriff? |
42766 | Did you carry this man down the Allegheny track, or the Pennsylvania track? |
42766 | Did you claim any right to interfere with railroad property? |
42766 | Did you come in on your regular trip in the morning? |
42766 | Did you come up to Twenty- fifth street? |
42766 | Did you come up, then, with the crowd that came up to the shop? |
42766 | Did you command the crowd to disperse? |
42766 | Did you communicate that to the mayor? |
42766 | Did you communicate that very freely to your acquaintances here? |
42766 | Did you communicate these facts and your apprehensions to the city officials, any of them, of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did you communicate to him the fact of having seen Captain Aull at the arsenal? |
42766 | Did you communicate your views, as you have given them to us, to Sheriff Fife? |
42766 | Did you consider at any time until the military arrived that the crowd that assembled there was an illegal crowd? |
42766 | Did you consider it dangerous to have gone there? |
42766 | Did you consider that an assault on your troops? |
42766 | Did you consider that they had superceded you by the order? |
42766 | Did you consider the firing by the troops justifiable? |
42766 | Did you consider their conduct, as troops, commendable during the time that you had charge of them after your return to the State? |
42766 | Did you consider you had the right to take that property and pack it away on the side tracks? |
42766 | Did you consult with him during the march from the round- house to Sharpsburg? |
42766 | Did you consult with them? |
42766 | Did you converse with the troops any? |
42766 | Did you convey any orders, or visit General Brinton at any time to convey any orders to him from General Latta? |
42766 | Did you deliver that order to General Brinton? |
42766 | Did you demand-- make a demand on them to go? |
42766 | Did you depend upon your reporters for the information upon which you wrote? |
42766 | Did you designate those in your message to General Latta? |
42766 | Did you discharge them permanently? |
42766 | Did you discover that it produced any commotion among the men? |
42766 | Did you disperse them? |
42766 | Did you drive them off? |
42766 | Did you employ all your powers during these riots, regardless of any other efforts adopted to subdue the riots, in preserving the peace? |
42766 | Did you endeavour to ascertain whether the outbreak on Thursday was the result of a pre- arranged plan among the railroad employés or not? |
42766 | Did you ever ascertain afterward who they were and where they came from? |
42766 | Did you ever ascertain where those two strangers that were killed came from? |
42766 | Did you ever ascertain who fired-- have you ever been able to learn the names of the parties? |
42766 | Did you ever attend any meeting, during that excitement, of citizens or people, for the purpose of organizing to resist the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you ever converse with any of the employés on the Baltimore and Ohio road? |
42766 | Did you ever examine to see what powers are given to the mayor by your city charter? |
42766 | Did you ever have any difficulty in getting strikers quiet-- dispersed from your works? |
42766 | Did you ever have any strike before? |
42766 | Did you ever hear it said? |
42766 | Did you ever hear that a signal was agreed upon? |
42766 | Did you ever hear them name any special day, or any particular time when there would likely be a strike, or when there would probably be a strike? |
42766 | Did you ever learn? |
42766 | Did you ever make any application to the mayor of Pittsburgh or of Allegheny for protection? |
42766 | Did you ever make any effort? |
42766 | Did you ever state to anybody that you had heard the commanders of companies give the command to fire, before stating it here? |
42766 | Did you ever try to ascertain the causes? |
42766 | Did you exhaust all your powers during the riots, irrespective of these other parties? |
42766 | Did you expect there was anything going on? |
42766 | Did you expect to receive further orders from General Pearson when you received your communications from General Latta? |
42766 | Did you feel perfectly safe, after the Governor arrived with the troops, in going to work? |
42766 | Did you feel safe from another demonstration of the railroad employés, or from any other source? |
42766 | Did you find any difficulty in getting into the city that day, from New Brighton, Beaver county? |
42766 | Did you find any of the men you went to arrest? |
42766 | Did you find any of the railroad employés among that crowd? |
42766 | Did you find any officers? |
42766 | Did you find out what motive induced or actuated the man to send it? |
42766 | Did you fire? |
42766 | Did you follow down with your department? |
42766 | Did you form any opinion of yourself? |
42766 | Did you gather facts enough to enable you to determine when this strike would probably take place? |
42766 | Did you gather from these conversations that their object was to force the railroads to pay them the wages which they demanded? |
42766 | Did you get an introduction to the proprietor? |
42766 | Did you get another call from the railroad company? |
42766 | Did you get any anywhere else? |
42766 | Did you get any further instructions after you returned to the city and reported to the chief of police? |
42766 | Did you get any order after this firing, and after the Philadelphia troops had entered the round- house, to clear the tracks with your regiment? |
42766 | Did you get any report of the committee? |
42766 | Did you get such instructions from the mayor? |
42766 | Did you get that information from conversation with your men? |
42766 | Did you get that response from any considerable number? |
42766 | Did you get the proposition before the collision from the strikers? |
42766 | Did you get their residences? |
42766 | Did you get your information from one of these reporters? |
42766 | Did you go across the river? |
42766 | Did you go back again? |
42766 | Did you go back and report to Mr. Cassatt? |
42766 | Did you go back? |
42766 | Did you go down to the scene of the riot and burning on Sunday? |
42766 | Did you go in the first door? |
42766 | Did you go inside the shops? |
42766 | Did you go out again after coming in on Friday night? |
42766 | Did you go out again? |
42766 | Did you go out on time and come in on time all day Friday? |
42766 | Did you go out that night? |
42766 | Did you go outside of the city in search of men? |
42766 | Did you go outside of the city in trying to raise the posse? |
42766 | Did you go over to the store to see who it was? |
42766 | Did you go there in your official capacity? |
42766 | Did you go through the round- house or the shops? |
42766 | Did you go to General Pearson? |
42766 | Did you go to Martinsburg, Virginia? |
42766 | Did you go to any trouble to ascertain the extent of that disturbance, on the first disturbance on Thursday? |
42766 | Did you go to see? |
42766 | Did you go to their houses during the time that you had the warrants? |
42766 | Did you go to them and talk with them, or did you try and see whether you could cooperate with them in any manner? |
42766 | Did you go up ahead of them? |
42766 | Did you go up there where that crowd was Friday morning, to see, of your own knowledge, whether the trains could run through or not? |
42766 | Did you go up to the scene of the disturbance at any time during Friday? |
42766 | Did you go with the command when it retreated out Penn avenue, and across the river? |
42766 | Did you go with the engines during this time? |
42766 | Did you go with them to Twenty- eighth street, on Saturday? |
42766 | Did you go? |
42766 | Did you go? |
42766 | Did you go? |
42766 | Did you have a physician to make a_ post mortem_ examination of the dead? |
42766 | Did you have a police uniform on? |
42766 | Did you have a sufficient police force to guard a train-- I mean on Thursday afternoon? |
42766 | Did you have all you needed? |
42766 | Did you have an interview with either General Latta or General Pearson, in regard to preventing the mob from firing the property? |
42766 | Did you have an opportunity to mingle in with the crowd? |
42766 | Did you have any arrangement to watch those men? |
42766 | Did you have any arrangements made to do that? |
42766 | Did you have any assistance from the military at any time? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with General Brinton? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with General Pearson? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with him that afternoon? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with him? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with the Secretary of State, on your arrival, Mr. Quay? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with the citizens of Pittsburgh-- did you go out into the crowd among the rioters at any time? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with the committee that was sent up from Harrisburg? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with the men at Martinsburg before they struck? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with the railroad officials in regard to it? |
42766 | Did you have any communication with the sheriff, after the firing at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did you have any consultation before the troops started with the civil authorities? |
42766 | Did you have any consultation with General Pearson or railroad men about the propriety of undertaking to start trains that evening-- that afternoon? |
42766 | Did you have any consultation with him after his arrival? |
42766 | Did you have any consultation with the officers on Sunday? |
42766 | Did you have any consultation with the railroad authorities when this occurred-- or did you take any measures to avert this? |
42766 | Did you have any consultation with the sheriff about his calling for militia? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation about orders with him? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with General Latta at that time? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with Lieutenant Lyon? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with Mr. Robert Ammon during the time he had charge of that railroad-- the Fort Wayne railroad? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with any of the men? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with any of them? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with any of these men except Hice, or did you hear any of the strikers talking? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with any other men? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with citizens of Pittsburgh, or come in contact with them? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with citizens of Pittsburgh, or with the rioters or the strikers? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with many of those people? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with more than one of the regiments? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with the mayor in regard to these policemen? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with the mayor? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with the men after you returned from your dinner? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with the men engaged in the riot, at any time? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with the railroad men to ascertain what their grievances were? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with the strikers that day? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with them as to the reasons or causes that led to the strike? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with these soldiers, after they had surrendered their arms? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with these wounded men to ascertain how they were wounded? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with those men that refused to go at first to ascertain their reasons for their refusal? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with those men yourself at that time? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with those that were engaged in burning? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation with those tramps? |
42766 | Did you have any conversation? |
42766 | Did you have any difficulty in getting extra police to serve? |
42766 | Did you have any difficulty in getting the men you wanted? |
42766 | Did you have any difficulty in getting your men together? |
42766 | Did you have any difficulty in raising a posse of citizens? |
42766 | Did you have any encounter with the mob? |
42766 | Did you have any fear of violence from the employés of the road if you started out? |
42766 | Did you have any further connection with the movements of the police? |
42766 | Did you have any further conversation with them? |
42766 | Did you have any information, or make any arrests of them-- interfere with them? |
42766 | Did you have any interview with the Governor on his arrival? |
42766 | Did you have any interview with the miners? |
42766 | Did you have any knowledge leading you to suppose that this strike would take place before the 19th? |
42766 | Did you have any negotiations with the magnates of the road in regard to that? |
42766 | Did you have any negotiations with the mayor about additional policemen? |
42766 | Did you have any orders for General Brinton? |
42766 | Did you have any reporter with the troops as they retired from the round- house and went out Penn street? |
42766 | Did you have any soldiers, any of the militia at your disposal during any of them? |
42766 | Did you have any spotters out in the crowd at all? |
42766 | Did you have any talk with any of the other strikers besides Ammon about their places? |
42766 | Did you have any talk with him? |
42766 | Did you have any talk with the mayor yourself in relation to that subject? |
42766 | Did you have any talk with the mob? |
42766 | Did you have any trouble in assembling your regiment-- in getting them together? |
42766 | Did you have any trouble in doing that? |
42766 | Did you have any trouble in getting them to obey orders, or do anything you required of them to do to preserve the peace? |
42766 | Did you have any trouble in raising it or getting the citizens to aid you? |
42766 | Did you have any trouble in reaching the command? |
42766 | Did you have any trouble or meet with any resistance in disembarking your command? |
42766 | Did you have any wounded at the gate? |
42766 | Did you have anybody with you? |
42766 | Did you have charge of the prisoners captured at Johnstown? |
42766 | Did you have conversation with them after they returned? |
42766 | Did you have none of your engines in service before the troops left? |
42766 | Did you have reference to the citizens''committee? |
42766 | Did you have sufficient? |
42766 | Did you have the interests of the stockholders at heart? |
42766 | Did you have the sympathy of the citizens in the destruction of the railroad property? |
42766 | Did you have the sympathy of the citizens while destroying the property of the railroad, or while burning it? |
42766 | Did you have these engines at the head of the trains at all times, or did you have one in the front and one in the rear? |
42766 | Did you hear General Brinton say what he intended to do, and what course he intended to pursue? |
42766 | Did you hear General Latta give him any instructions? |
42766 | Did you hear General Pearson give such an order as follows, to the officers:"Order your men to fire,"before the firing took place? |
42766 | Did you hear General Pearson say anything else but"fire!"? |
42766 | Did you hear General Pearson, or anybody else, notify the mob to disperse? |
42766 | Did you hear Mr. Ross make any proposition at all? |
42766 | Did you hear a command from any officer to cease firing? |
42766 | Did you hear any abusive or threatening language on the part of the crowd towards the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you hear any body state that the rioters or the mob had prevented the fire department from throwing water on the railroad property? |
42766 | Did you hear any command given by any of the officers to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command given to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command given to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command given to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command given to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command given to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command given to the soldiers to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command to cease firing? |
42766 | Did you hear any command to fire by any officer? |
42766 | Did you hear any command to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any command to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any conversation between him and General Latta? |
42766 | Did you hear any conversation in the office by some men, in regard to the burning of all the railroad property, on Sunday? |
42766 | Did you hear any conversation, while at the city hall, from the mayor''s clerks in reference to the riot and burning? |
42766 | Did you hear any expression by legal gentlemen as to what the power of the mayor was? |
42766 | Did you hear any expression of that kind in the crowd? |
42766 | Did you hear any expressions from the crowd what they were going to do? |
42766 | Did you hear any firing by the crowd before the soldiers were ordered to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any firing from any one in the crowd? |
42766 | Did you hear any firing from near the station- house as you passed? |
42766 | Did you hear any firing from the watch- box there? |
42766 | Did you hear any firing? |
42766 | Did you hear any general give a command in this way:"Order your men to fire?" |
42766 | Did you hear any of the citizens have any conversation with the men when you were there, counseling them to hold it? |
42766 | Did you hear any of the men say why they struck? |
42766 | Did you hear any of those railroad men speak of a preconcerted arrangement for a general strike through the country? |
42766 | Did you hear any of those strikers say it was because the men struck at Pittsburgh and in Virginia or any other place? |
42766 | Did you hear any order given by any officer to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any orders given to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any orders given to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear any other cause of complaint from the men that struck? |
42766 | Did you hear any other command given by General Latta to General Brinton? |
42766 | Did you hear any other conversation or learn anything of any other union or organization to strike from that morning until the 19th? |
42766 | Did you hear any pistol shot from the crowd? |
42766 | Did you hear any pistol shots, or any shots fired from the crowd, or in the crowd, before the firing of the soldiery? |
42766 | Did you hear any pistol shots? |
42766 | Did you hear any shots fired from the crowd before the firing by the military? |
42766 | Did you hear any talk about men coming from a distance? |
42766 | Did you hear any talk about resisting the soldiers, and not allow them to clear the track? |
42766 | Did you hear any talk of resisting the troops if they attempted to clear the track? |
42766 | Did you hear any threats of violence from the railroad men or engineers or any railroad strikers? |
42766 | Did you hear any threats? |
42766 | Did you hear any women using obscene language to the troops? |
42766 | Did you hear any? |
42766 | Did you hear anybody breaking into the store during the night, and if so, at what time? |
42766 | Did you hear anybody give orders to load? |
42766 | Did you hear anybody make any threats against the railroad officers? |
42766 | Did you hear anybody shoot before the soldiers shot? |
42766 | Did you hear anything about the proposed strike of the 27th of June that was talked about by the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Did you hear anything or all of what took place between them? |
42766 | Did you hear from him again that night? |
42766 | Did you hear him call his name? |
42766 | Did you hear him give any orders? |
42766 | Did you hear him make any report to the Adjutant General? |
42766 | Did you hear him say anything about Captain Aull having received any order from General Latta? |
42766 | Did you hear him say those words? |
42766 | Did you hear him tell him that? |
42766 | Did you hear him tell him to resist any person that should attempt to arrest him? |
42766 | Did you hear in the crowd anything expressive of what it was? |
42766 | Did you hear it before the news of the strike on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad? |
42766 | Did you hear that command given by more than one officer? |
42766 | Did you hear that command given? |
42766 | Did you hear the Adjutant General give Colonel Norris any orders to tell to General Brinton? |
42766 | Did you hear the command to cease firing? |
42766 | Did you hear the conversation between the men and Mr. Garrett? |
42766 | Did you hear the conversation between them? |
42766 | Did you hear the conversation? |
42766 | Did you hear the crowd say what they would do when the Philadelphia soldiers came in? |
42766 | Did you hear the disturbance? |
42766 | Did you hear the mayor offer the services of the police force to the firemen to protect them, at any time during the fire on Saturday night or Sunday? |
42766 | Did you hear the mayor tell Ammon that he should have charge of the lower part of the city of Allegheny? |
42766 | Did you hear the order from an officer to fire? |
42766 | Did you hear the order to load? |
42766 | Did you hear the railroad men fix that time or talk about that time as there would likely be a strike? |
42766 | Did you hear the testimony of Generals Brinton and Mathews? |
42766 | Did you hear them make any remarks as you passed? |
42766 | Did you hear them say anything? |
42766 | Did you hear them talk in the crowd about resisting the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you hear them when they first came there? |
42766 | Did you hear what was said by General Pearson to General Latta? |
42766 | Did you hold your position on the hill until six o''clock---- Senator Yutzy: On Saturday, at the time of the firing? |
42766 | Did you increase them any on Friday night? |
42766 | Did you increase your police force before you were ordered to do so by the public committee? |
42766 | Did you indicate all the editorials you wrote during the riot on that subject in these papers? |
42766 | Did you infer from any of those messages received from General Brinton that his men were in a demoralized condition or inefficient? |
42766 | Did you inform him before or after the proclamation had gone out to the public? |
42766 | Did you inform him of the dispatch? |
42766 | Did you intend to leave the property of corporations at the mercy of the mob? |
42766 | Did you intend to resist the militia had they attempted to disperse the crowd? |
42766 | Did you intend to resist the militia? |
42766 | Did you intend to strike? |
42766 | Did you interfere with the men who wanted to go out in any way? |
42766 | Did you issue an order calling on men, demanding them to join your police force? |
42766 | Did you issue warrants for that? |
42766 | Did you keep a record of it? |
42766 | Did you keep any men in these commands you knew were among the rioters? |
42766 | Did you keep the track clear? |
42766 | Did you know Colonel Norris? |
42766 | Did you know General Pearson before that? |
42766 | Did you know Mr. Stewart, who accompanied Colonel Norris? |
42766 | Did you know a proclamation had been issued? |
42766 | Did you know any of the men you saw there? |
42766 | Did you know any of the men? |
42766 | Did you know any of the men? |
42766 | Did you know any of the railroad employés? |
42766 | Did you know any of the ten or twelve men that stood around, trying to prevent the arrest of McCall? |
42766 | Did you know any of them? |
42766 | Did you know any of those men who got on your train? |
42766 | Did you know any thing about it then, or understand that there would be a strike then? |
42766 | Did you know any thing about the strike at Martinsburg? |
42766 | Did you know anyone in particular who was carrying away goods there? |
42766 | Did you know anything about his disbanding his command and sending them home? |
42766 | Did you know anything about his dismissing his command-- ordering Colonel Gray or Colonel Howard to dismiss their regiments? |
42766 | Did you know anything about the meeting at the silk- works? |
42766 | Did you know anything about the organization of the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Did you know anything about this party of soldiers that were captured across the river here? |
42766 | Did you know at that time that the adjutant general was in the Union depot? |
42766 | Did you know from the commander- in- chief that General Brinton was short of ammunition? |
42766 | Did you know him by sight? |
42766 | Did you know him? |
42766 | Did you know him? |
42766 | Did you know of any meeting being held out Penn street or Butler street? |
42766 | Did you know of any of those railroad officers being out of town? |
42766 | Did you know of any preconceived plan of striking? |
42766 | Did you know of his being out of town? |
42766 | Did you know of the existence of what was called the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Did you know on Friday, when you went to Twenty- eighth street, that the militia had been called out? |
42766 | Did you know on that day that General Latta had already ordered out the militia? |
42766 | Did you know or hear of any order being given to General Brinton by Colonel Norris to move to Torrens station? |
42766 | Did you know or see where General Brinton went? |
42766 | Did you know that Lieutenant Ash was there? |
42766 | Did you know that engineer that jumped off the train? |
42766 | Did you know that man? |
42766 | Did you know that that committee was in existence at that time? |
42766 | Did you know that the trains had been stopped during Thursday and Friday? |
42766 | Did you know that they started to the shops when they started to persuade the men to quit work? |
42766 | Did you know the carriage? |
42766 | Did you know the engineer? |
42766 | Did you know the fellow who did that? |
42766 | Did you know the fireman? |
42766 | Did you know the leader of this crowd? |
42766 | Did you know the man that waved, to stop the train? |
42766 | Did you know the man? |
42766 | Did you know the man? |
42766 | Did you know the object and purpose of that organization? |
42766 | Did you know the officers? |
42766 | Did you know the police force had been reduced in the city, and, if so, when were you informed of that fact? |
42766 | Did you know the spokesmen yourself? |
42766 | Did you know them to be the leaders of that crowd or mob? |
42766 | Did you know they were going to be placed in the round- house? |
42766 | Did you know they were ordered in the transfer depot? |
42766 | Did you know this man? |
42766 | Did you know this man? |
42766 | Did you know this officer that approached you and asked permission to bring his men inside? |
42766 | Did you know those engineers that jumped off the train? |
42766 | Did you know those men? |
42766 | Did you know those two men, Langon and Dunledin? |
42766 | Did you know what wages they were making on an average? |
42766 | Did you know where General Pearson was, about the time the firing took place? |
42766 | Did you know where the Fourteenth and the Nineteenth regiments were, commanded by Colonel Gray and Colonel Howard? |
42766 | Did you know where the head- quarters of the citizens''committee was during the day, Sunday? |
42766 | Did you know where the telegraph was of the railroad company? |
42766 | Did you know whether General Latta contemplated ordering General Brinton''s command out of the round- house, prior to receiving that first dispatch? |
42766 | Did you know who that man was? |
42766 | Did you know who the officer was? |
42766 | Did you know who those men were? |
42766 | Did you know, before the strike commenced at Martinsburg, Virginia, that it was going to take place? |
42766 | Did you know, of your own knowledge, that the leading railroads throughout the whole country were reducing the wages of the employés? |
42766 | Did you learn anything more about it between that time and twelve o''clock? |
42766 | Did you learn from these men where the first strike was to be made? |
42766 | Did you learn his name? |
42766 | Did you learn it from any of the men themselves? |
42766 | Did you learn of any arrangement among the men for the strike? |
42766 | Did you learn on Sunday that Captain Aull had not reached General Brinton with that order? |
42766 | Did you learn that day, or any time after that, when these parties resolved to strike? |
42766 | Did you learn that the mob had commenced firing at that time? |
42766 | Did you learn that troops were expected to arrive from Erie or from Meadville? |
42766 | Did you learn the objects of the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Did you learn what action had been taken by the committee and the officers of that committee? |
42766 | Did you learn what reductions had been made in the wages of these men? |
42766 | Did you learn what the cause of the outbreak was? |
42766 | Did you learn when that reduction had taken place? |
42766 | Did you learn where he was wounded-- where he was when he was shot? |
42766 | Did you leave him at the arsenal? |
42766 | Did you leave with the troops in the morning? |
42766 | Did you leave your command there? |
42766 | Did you make all the time? |
42766 | Did you make any application to the mayor or sheriff of the county for aid? |
42766 | Did you make any arrests after? |
42766 | Did you make any attempt to arrest this man? |
42766 | Did you make any call for police-- any demand for a posse of police? |
42766 | Did you make any call on the night force? |
42766 | Did you make any demand to recruit your police-- demand upon men to serve on the police? |
42766 | Did you make any direct application to the State authorities for protection? |
42766 | Did you make any effort after this firing to keep the track clear? |
42766 | Did you make any effort before you disbanded to see him? |
42766 | Did you make any effort on Friday forenoon to raise a posse? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to arrest the parties? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to communicate with General Brinton or General Pearson? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to find out who the black- whiskered man was? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to have any conference with these parties to agree on some plan that would be effected? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to move a train on Friday morning? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to re- assemble the night police after you ascertained they had left? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to see who those men were? |
42766 | Did you make any effort to stop those that were setting fire to property and burning? |
42766 | Did you make any effort? |
42766 | Did you make any efforts to disperse them? |
42766 | Did you make any further effort to keep the track clear? |
42766 | Did you make any regular call upon the citizens to serve as a posse? |
42766 | Did you make any report of the policeman who refused? |
42766 | Did you make any report to the mayor, during the afternoon? |
42766 | Did you march in that form? |
42766 | Did you meet Sheriff Fife on your arrival there? |
42766 | Did you meet any of the men? |
42766 | Did you meet any of them to have conversation with them on that day? |
42766 | Did you meet any officer of General Brinton''s command on your return to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did you meet any other persons that had been members of the police force? |
42766 | Did you meet him before calling at the door or ringing the bell? |
42766 | Did you meet him when you were returning to Pittsburgh anywheres about the arsenal, or on the way going to General Brinton''s command? |
42766 | Did you meet him, or have any conversation with him? |
42766 | Did you meet with any opposition in your efforts to raise the men? |
42766 | Did you meet with any resistance in marching down? |
42766 | Did you meet with any trouble in getting men to start them? |
42766 | Did you mingle with the crowd after you dressed yourself in citizen''s clothing? |
42766 | Did you move down to Twenty- eighth street with the sheriff, ahead of the militia? |
42766 | Did you not consider it your duty to make an effort to suppress the riot and disturbance after they had made an effort to do so? |
42766 | Did you not have charge at the commencement? |
42766 | Did you not have charge of these in the beginning of the riot or disturbance? |
42766 | Did you not have men to watch these men or follow them around? |
42766 | Did you not have the right from the mayor to demand them to go with you? |
42766 | Did you not hear some expression from these men that came out of the shops? |
42766 | Did you not propose to do it in a quiet way? |
42766 | Did you not regard him as your superior officer, if you were the only man in his brigade? |
42766 | Did you not say there was a party rode in the carriage, when you met General Brinton? |
42766 | Did you not then consider the order to fire justifiable? |
42766 | Did you not think it was your duty, as constable, to stop that man from shooting? |
42766 | Did you not understand these persons were the leaders in the disturbances on Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did you notice any firing by the mob, musketry or pistols, at the troops in the round- house? |
42766 | Did you notice any uneasiness among the men, or disposition to strike, prior to the strike at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did you notice how he was dressed that day? |
42766 | Did you notice in what direction they fired? |
42766 | Did you notice what became of him? |
42766 | Did you notice whether any of the other officers had swords on? |
42766 | Did you notice whether it was buttoned that way? |
42766 | Did you notice whether there were any doors leading out of this office to any other rooms, or from the hall you went into to other rooms? |
42766 | Did you notice whether they were uniformed or not? |
42766 | Did you notify the mayor of that call for fifty additional police? |
42766 | Did you obey him? |
42766 | Did you observe a belt he had on-- a very fine belt? |
42766 | Did you occupy that position in July last? |
42766 | Did you occupy that position in July last? |
42766 | Did you occupy that position last July? |
42766 | Did you offer assistance at any other time than the one you speak of now? |
42766 | Did you offer to be sworn in? |
42766 | Did you offer your services to the railroad officers on the 19th of July? |
42766 | Did you offer your services to the railroad officials on Friday, the 20th? |
42766 | Did you offer your services, as a policeman, to the mayor? |
42766 | Did you or any one else attempt to arrest him at any time during the riot? |
42766 | Did you or any one, on behalf of the railroad company, communicate with those men? |
42766 | Did you or any other officer that you know of have a warrant in his hands for the arrest of some ten or twelve men? |
42766 | Did you or the party with you interfere with trains going out in any way? |
42766 | Did you organize lodges over the Baltimore and Ohio road? |
42766 | Did you pick it up? |
42766 | Did you propose to fight the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you publish the proclamation in your message? |
42766 | Did you quit? |
42766 | Did you raise the fifty men you wanted? |
42766 | Did you rap at the door or call at the door, and meet him outside, or did he come out before you arrived at the house? |
42766 | Did you read the order to Colonel Norris, or did he see the order, to your knowledge? |
42766 | Did you read the order? |
42766 | Did you receive any assistance from the police? |
42766 | Did you receive any communication from General Latta, or any other superior officer, before you got to Blairsville? |
42766 | Did you receive any communication from Mr. Scott, the solicitor of the road, on Thursday? |
42766 | Did you receive any communication or order from him? |
42766 | Did you receive any communications from General Latta, or from any person connected with the department, prior to the issuing of the proclamation? |
42766 | Did you receive any further instructions? |
42766 | Did you receive any general instructions prior to the departure of the Governor for the West, as to what would be done in case of an emergency? |
42766 | Did you receive any information that this crowd were about to drive your men out of these furnaces? |
42766 | Did you receive any instructions from him during the day in regard to this disturbance at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did you receive any instructions from him during the night? |
42766 | Did you receive any order from Colonel Grey upon Captain Patterson to furnish you with men? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders during Sunday night from the mayor? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders from General Brown to disband your regiment at any time? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders from General Pearson, or from any of your superior officers? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders from any one else before you left Philadelphia, than from General Latta? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders from any one else before you reached Sharpsburg or Claremont? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders from him? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders from him? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders from him? |
42766 | Did you receive any orders, and if so, what were they in relation to the riots of July? |
42766 | Did you receive any protection from the police force? |
42766 | Did you receive any report from Officer McGovern during the afternoon? |
42766 | Did you receive any reports during the night-- Thursday night? |
42766 | Did you receive any reports from him during the night? |
42766 | Did you receive any reports from your officers on Friday, that everything was quiet? |
42766 | Did you receive any telegram from Mr. Watt calling for fifty police? |
42766 | Did you receive any telegram from him calling for fifteen more men or twenty- five more men? |
42766 | Did you receive any word from Mr. Watt after he left you with the ten police? |
42766 | Did you receive information of them? |
42766 | Did you recognize any of that class in this crowd? |
42766 | Did you recognize them as any particular class of men? |
42766 | Did you refuse to go? |
42766 | Did you regard it proper for the Adjutant General to call out troops or furnish troops for the suppression of the riot in the absence of the Governor? |
42766 | Did you regard the conduct of your subordinate officers commendable during those troubles? |
42766 | Did you remain at the Union depot during Saturday night? |
42766 | Did you remain home during the night? |
42766 | Did you remain in the round- house? |
42766 | Did you remain in the same position after you heard that command until after the firing commenced? |
42766 | Did you remain on duty during the day Sunday? |
42766 | Did you remain standing all the time? |
42766 | Did you remain there during the entire day? |
42766 | Did you remain there during the night-- Saturday night? |
42766 | Did you remonstrate with any of them for the rioting? |
42766 | Did you report as ordered? |
42766 | Did you report back to the citizens''meeting? |
42766 | Did you report to the chief of police or the mayor? |
42766 | Did you request the mayor to come to the Union depot, or request an interview with him? |
42766 | Did you reside in Pittsburgh at the time of the riots, in July last? |
42766 | Did you reside there in July last? |
42766 | Did you return to Twenty- eighth street that night again-- Saturday night? |
42766 | Did you return with Colonel Norris? |
42766 | Did you return without any interference? |
42766 | Did you run any engine during that time-- from Thursday until Monday? |
42766 | Did you run before the command was given? |
42766 | Did you run on Saturday? |
42766 | Did you say as you wanted? |
42766 | Did you say he had a cap on? |
42766 | Did you say that other cars were burning when this man Marshall fired this coke car? |
42766 | Did you say that the elevator was going to be burned? |
42766 | Did you say the troops came out of the round- house, Sunday? |
42766 | Did you say to Daniel Corbus that the elevator had got to be burned-- that it was a monopoly, and had got to be burned? |
42766 | Did you say to any of them that you commanded them as a peace officer-- you demanded their assistance as a posse to assist in suppressing the riot? |
42766 | Did you say to them after you heard it, that you would shoot them? |
42766 | Did you say to those men-- this committee-- when the times got better you were willing to advance their wages? |
42766 | Did you see Captain Aull when he started with the order? |
42766 | Did you see Colonel Moore? |
42766 | Did you see Colonel Norris on your march from the round- house to Claremont? |
42766 | Did you see Colonel Norris when he joined General Brinton''s command? |
42766 | Did you see Colonel Norris when he started in the carriage? |
42766 | Did you see Colonel Norris? |
42766 | Did you see Daniel Corbus near the elevator? |
42766 | Did you see Father Dunn? |
42766 | Did you see General Brinton during the day on Friday? |
42766 | Did you see General Brown there? |
42766 | Did you see General Latta before he left for Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did you see General Loud there? |
42766 | Did you see General Matthews with him? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson about there? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson after the firing? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson as he returned from the round- house or that vicinity? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson at that time? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson in the round- house, after you retired there? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson on the ground just before the firing or during the time of the firing? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson that afternoon? |
42766 | Did you see General Pearson there? |
42766 | Did you see James Park, junior, Saturday evening? |
42766 | Did you see Lieutenant Ash? |
42766 | Did you see Major Buffington? |
42766 | Did you see Mayor McCarthy about on Sunday? |
42766 | Did you see Mayor McCarthy at any time? |
42766 | Did you see Mr. Scott? |
42766 | Did you see Mr. Stewart on Friday? |
42766 | Did you see Mr. Watt after he left with the ten men? |
42766 | Did you see Mr. Watt, the superintendent, at any time? |
42766 | Did you see Pitcairn during the night? |
42766 | Did you see a light with the gun? |
42766 | Did you see a published proclamation of the Governor''s? |
42766 | Did you see a uniform on any one policeman-- a full uniform? |
42766 | Did you see any arms in their hands? |
42766 | Did you see any attempt while you were there to destroy or set fire to individual property? |
42766 | Did you see any business men of the city standing about? |
42766 | Did you see any considerable number of the Pan- Handle men or employés in the crowd? |
42766 | Did you see any demonstrations made to clean out the Philadelphia troops? |
42766 | Did you see any efforts made by anybody to stop the burning? |
42766 | Did you see any efforts made by the police during Sunday to stop the burning? |
42766 | Did you see any firing along the route from the round- house? |
42766 | Did you see any firing from citizens or policemen on your troops? |
42766 | Did you see any firing from houses along the street? |
42766 | Did you see any firing from houses? |
42766 | Did you see any firing? |
42766 | Did you see any further efforts of the policemen after eleven o''clock to stop the riot and stop the fire? |
42766 | Did you see any interference? |
42766 | Did you see any men coming out of the lower works immediately in the vicinity of where the stables are? |
42766 | Did you see any men that you knew-- railroad men or mechanics-- about the city-- the men you were accustomed to see? |
42766 | Did you see any men there throwing stones? |
42766 | Did you see any messages or dispatches while in the round- house from General Brinton to General Latta? |
42766 | Did you see any mob following in the rear? |
42766 | Did you see any musket firing? |
42766 | Did you see any muskets or rifles in the hands of the mob? |
42766 | Did you see any of the committee of public safety? |
42766 | Did you see any of the movements of the military in that vicinity, or while you were there? |
42766 | Did you see any of the officers of the Sixth division there between these two lines? |
42766 | Did you see any of the policemen carrying away any goods? |
42766 | Did you see any of the policemen on your return to the city, who were in that crowd? |
42766 | Did you see any of the railroad employés with whom you had conversations before and were acquainted? |
42766 | Did you see any of the same men in the crowd on Friday? |
42766 | Did you see any of the soldiers struck by any stones? |
42766 | Did you see any of the soldiers struck down by missiles before the firing took place? |
42766 | Did you see any of the soldiers struck with stones? |
42766 | Did you see any of the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you see any of the troops struck with stones? |
42766 | Did you see any of them hurt? |
42766 | Did you see any of them taking cigars or anything of that kind? |
42766 | Did you see any of your men among the crowd on Sunday morning? |
42766 | Did you see any officers in advance of that command? |
42766 | Did you see any one ask the mayor to go along up to the railroad, and see Mr. Cassatt or Pitcairn or anybody else? |
42766 | Did you see any one with a lanyard in his hand fire that gun at any time? |
42766 | Did you see any other fires kindled? |
42766 | Did you see any other officers there that wore hats? |
42766 | Did you see any other one than those that are published in the Adjutant General''s report? |
42766 | Did you see any party of citizens in front of the military, as they came up? |
42766 | Did you see any person in the group not an officer in the command? |
42766 | Did you see any person when they fired? |
42766 | Did you see any pistols in their hands? |
42766 | Did you see any pistols in their hands? |
42766 | Did you see any police about the fire during Sunday-- see them making any effort to put out the fire or prevent it? |
42766 | Did you see any police in this crowd when you went there Saturday-- when you went to see this friend of yours? |
42766 | Did you see any police up at the crossing near the scene of the riots? |
42766 | Did you see any policeman fire yourself? |
42766 | Did you see any policemen about there? |
42766 | Did you see any policemen at the station, as you passed out Penn street? |
42766 | Did you see any policemen on your march? |
42766 | Did you see any policemen there at the time of the fire? |
42766 | Did you see any portion of the military in ranks? |
42766 | Did you see any railroad men among them? |
42766 | Did you see any stone thrown from the crowd at the soldiers before the firing? |
42766 | Did you see any stones or anything thrown at the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you see any stones or missiles thrown by the crowd at the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you see any stones thrown? |
42766 | Did you see any stones thrown? |
42766 | Did you see any that you knew in that vicinity? |
42766 | Did you see any trenches dug along the road? |
42766 | Did you see any whisky running into any of those buildings on fire? |
42766 | Did you see any? |
42766 | Did you see anybody besides Mr. Fox? |
42766 | Did you see anybody carrying any plunder from the cars? |
42766 | Did you see anybody else shoot? |
42766 | Did you see anybody fire on them? |
42766 | Did you see anybody fire? |
42766 | Did you see anybody in the room-- the first room-- the front room-- to which this door led to, through the windows or door? |
42766 | Did you see anybody in this crowd that came up Washington avenue with clubs? |
42766 | Did you see anybody set fire to any car or building, or anything in the vicinity of Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did you see anybody try to start a train on Thursday? |
42766 | Did you see anything more of him? |
42766 | Did you see anything of General Brinton''s command during this trouble, up to the time the collision occurred at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did you see anything of General Latta that day? |
42766 | Did you see anything of Lieutenant Lyon? |
42766 | Did you see anything of that kind? |
42766 | Did you see anything of the fire that night? |
42766 | Did you see anything of the firing? |
42766 | Did you see anything thrown at the soldiers? |
42766 | Did you see anything thrown, or any disturbance in the crowd? |
42766 | Did you see anything thrown? |
42766 | Did you see anything thrown? |
42766 | Did you see him any time during Sunday in the city? |
42766 | Did you see him immediately on his arrival? |
42766 | Did you see him shoot? |
42766 | Did you see him shot? |
42766 | Did you see him there on Saturday with the troops? |
42766 | Did you see him? |
42766 | Did you see it set on fire? |
42766 | Did you see one of those soldiers fall, in the ranks that marched down there? |
42766 | Did you see or hear anything from General Brown or his command that night? |
42766 | Did you see stones and missiles thrown? |
42766 | Did you see that crowd that came out of the shops with clubs in their hands? |
42766 | Did you see that man with the linen duster following the command, with a musket? |
42766 | Did you see that policeman any time after that-- have you seen him since? |
42766 | Did you see the Philadelphia troops come out of the round- house? |
42766 | Did you see the arms loaded at any time? |
42766 | Did you see the chief of police or any of the officials there? |
42766 | Did you see the communications from either one? |
42766 | Did you see the crowd during the day? |
42766 | Did you see the crowd going up to the works? |
42766 | Did you see the crowd on Saturday morning? |
42766 | Did you see the crowd when they dispersed from that point? |
42766 | Did you see the daily papers of that week? |
42766 | Did you see the fire during the night? |
42766 | Did you see the fire when it first started? |
42766 | Did you see the fire? |
42766 | Did you see the firing of the cars when it commenced? |
42766 | Did you see the grain elevator set on fire? |
42766 | Did you see the major, Saturday? |
42766 | Did you see the man the soldiers sent over? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor about at any time? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor before going? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor bleeding as if he had been struck? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor himself? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor hit? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor in the vicinity of the firing? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor there during the day? |
42766 | Did you see the mayor? |
42766 | Did you see the mob as it approached the depot with torches, and the burning of Union depot? |
42766 | Did you see the mob? |
42766 | Did you see the officer of the company-- the captain? |
42766 | Did you see the officers in the hollow square? |
42766 | Did you see the operation? |
42766 | Did you see the sheriff after you arrived at Pittsburgh, or the Union depot, before the troops were sent to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Did you see the sheriff and his posse? |
42766 | Did you see the sheriff in front of the military? |
42766 | Did you see the sheriff or any posse about? |
42766 | Did you see the sheriff? |
42766 | Did you see the shooting on Saturday night? |
42766 | Did you see the soldiers afterwards? |
42766 | Did you see the soldiers come out of the round- house, Sunday? |
42766 | Did you see the troops after they came out of the round- house on Sunday? |
42766 | Did you see the troops come out of the round- house the next day? |
42766 | Did you see the troops come out of the round- house? |
42766 | Did you see the troops come out? |
42766 | Did you see the troops come out? |
42766 | Did you see the troops fired on as they went out? |
42766 | Did you see the troops retiring from the round- house? |
42766 | Did you see the troops start from the Union depot, out? |
42766 | Did you see the troops when they came out of the round- house? |
42766 | Did you see them after they came out? |
42766 | Did you see them afterwards or talk to them about it afterwards? |
42766 | Did you see them breaking into any gun stores? |
42766 | Did you see them come out? |
42766 | Did you see them fired at? |
42766 | Did you see them handling the cars and switches? |
42766 | Did you see them leaving the round- house? |
42766 | Did you see them load afterwards? |
42766 | Did you see them load? |
42766 | Did you see them make any effort to keep any portion of the track clear? |
42766 | Did you see them march out? |
42766 | Did you see them or any of them commit any illegal acts-- railroad men? |
42766 | Did you see them when they fired? |
42766 | Did you see them when they marched up? |
42766 | Did you see this crowd-- was it an organized effort to follow up the burning-- did it seem to be followed systematically? |
42766 | Did you see those parties who set Union depot on fire? |
42766 | Did you see troops as they marched up? |
42766 | Did you see whether there was any other offices right there, close by this-- that is, where you carried this soldier? |
42766 | Did you see who it was that fired first? |
42766 | Did you see who set the elevator on fire? |
42766 | Did you send a communication to General Latta by a messenger, before you received the orders from him to hold the round- house? |
42766 | Did you send any of those nine men? |
42766 | Did you send any policemen to Mr. Bown''s store? |
42766 | Did you send any policemen to protect the fire companies? |
42766 | Did you send for any? |
42766 | Did you send for any? |
42766 | Did you send out any scouts? |
42766 | Did you send out surgeons with the command-- as you distributed them, they went out? |
42766 | Did you ship goods or freight cheaper from New York to San Francisco than from Pittsburgh to San Francisco, such as steel or iron? |
42766 | Did you so inform the mayor of that week? |
42766 | Did you speak to him? |
42766 | Did you start that morning or make any attempt to start? |
42766 | Did you state to them anything about their pay-- as to how they would be paid? |
42766 | Did you stay there with those men, or put him down? |
42766 | Did you stop at the arsenal? |
42766 | Did you succeed in getting any? |
42766 | Did you succeed in getting in? |
42766 | Did you succeed in keeping the crowd out then? |
42766 | Did you succeed in securing the crews? |
42766 | Did you succeed in tracing that thing to a reliable source to find whether there was a union organized here? |
42766 | Did you succeed? |
42766 | Did you take advantage of his absence in this strike? |
42766 | Did you take any active steps prior to Saturday evening? |
42766 | Did you take any measures to ascertain what the purpose of the assemblage was? |
42766 | Did you take any measures to disperse that assemblage? |
42766 | Did you take any measures to prevent this destruction? |
42766 | Did you take any of those prisoners to Pittsburgh, and hand them over to the civil authorities? |
42766 | Did you take into consideration their interests more than the interests of the employés of the road-- the men you represented? |
42766 | Did you take it into consideration? |
42766 | Did you take particular notice of it? |
42766 | Did you take that to be a signal to stop? |
42766 | Did you take them before the mayor? |
42766 | Did you talk with the men on different roads-- did you converse with men on different roads? |
42766 | Did you talk with the men to find out whether there was any prearranged plan to strike that morning? |
42766 | Did you talk with them-- did they state to you how they intended to force the railroad? |
42766 | Did you talk with them? |
42766 | Did you talk with those men to find out whether they had arranged for this strike previously? |
42766 | Did you telegraph more than once to the Governor? |
42766 | Did you telegraph them to more than one point? |
42766 | Did you telegraph to him? |
42766 | Did you tell him the mayor had sent you? |
42766 | Did you tell him to resist any arrest that might be attempted to be made upon him? |
42766 | Did you tell him to take charge of the lower part of Allegheny City? |
42766 | Did you tell him you had been sent for that purpose? |
42766 | Did you tell him you wanted a force to guard that gun store? |
42766 | Did you tell him your name? |
42766 | Did you think at that time that the crowd was so large that the trains could not run through it? |
42766 | Did you think at that time there might be trouble? |
42766 | Did you think that either of these two parties-- the parties carrying away, and the parties breaking up the cars, were citizens? |
42766 | Did you think that that order of General Brown''s to dismiss the regiment could be justified on any grounds? |
42766 | Did you think they were all gun- shot wounds? |
42766 | Did you try to collect a posse? |
42766 | Did you try to convey the idea to General Latta, that your troops were unfit for duty? |
42766 | Did you try to get somebody else to assist you in arresting this man? |
42766 | Did you try to persuade the men not to go out or to run their trains? |
42766 | Did you try to prevent them going through the gates when they came back? |
42766 | Did you try to raise any crew on Friday? |
42766 | Did you try to spot the men among the crowd? |
42766 | Did you understand General Pearson to be giving directions to the military force there? |
42766 | Did you understand that he was acting commander- in- chief of the forces? |
42766 | Did you understand that the sheriff was coming there with a posse? |
42766 | Did you understand that this letter had been written by Scranton? |
42766 | Did you understand the railroad company-- the officials, I mean-- to believe that they could run trains? |
42766 | Did you understand, from what Pearson said to you then, that he had countermanded the order to keep the track clear? |
42766 | Did you undertake to hold possession of the crossing of the track any distance there at the crossing, or merely clear it off and fall back? |
42766 | Did you visit the round- house after the troops left? |
42766 | Did you visit the scene of the riot at any time during its progress? |
42766 | Did you walk along with him? |
42766 | Did you wear a cap? |
42766 | Did you wear that uniform all the time? |
42766 | Did you witness any of the occurrences during the night after the firing? |
42766 | Did you witness any of the occurrences? |
42766 | Did you write that article? |
42766 | Did you write that? |
42766 | Did you, as superintendent, have any communication with the men that you understood were joining the organization in relation to it? |
42766 | Did you, at any time during the riots, employ your night force in the day time? |
42766 | Did you, at any time, attempt to arrest Ammon-- any of your officers? |
42766 | Did you, at any time, give an order to the troops to fire? |
42766 | Did you, from any source, receive any intimation that there was liability to be any strike here, prior to the outbreak at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Did you, on your march, see any policemen on the street? |
42766 | Did you, with any of the parties that you arrested? |
42766 | Did your Trainmen''s Union include the employés of the Baltimore and Ohio road? |
42766 | Did your association have an attorney employed-- the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Did your committee intend to make a report at that meeting, also? |
42766 | Did your company reëmploy any of those men that made threats? |
42766 | Did your company take any means-- adopt any plan-- to bring those men to justice? |
42766 | Did your force act in concert with the strikers in protecting the property of the Fort Wayne railroad? |
42766 | Did your information at that time lead you to suppose that there had been no attack made by the mob? |
42766 | Did your men all join in that organization? |
42766 | Did your men fight them, or use the bayonet? |
42766 | Did your men say who made the threats against them-- of who they were afraid? |
42766 | Did your troops keep good order during the entire retreat out Penn avenue? |
42766 | Did your work in the blacksmith shops depend upon the work going on in the collieries? |
42766 | Die-- make a fight before these trains would go out? |
42766 | Different from the ordinary signal? |
42766 | Different manufactories? |
42766 | Directly from Mr. Watt? |
42766 | Directly? |
42766 | Discharged them? |
42766 | Discharged? |
42766 | Distributed? |
42766 | Do I understand that you had no right to order the saloons closed? |
42766 | Do I understand you that because they did not consult you, you put yourself in hostility to all these parties? |
42766 | Do I understand you to say that there was an antagonism between you and the sheriff of the county? |
42766 | Do I understand you to say that you called your council together with a view of then taking some action on this subject? |
42766 | Do I understand you to say that you had no ammunition for any of your arms? |
42766 | Do I understand you to say that you were willing to let trains go out if they could get the men to run them? |
42766 | Do I understand you to say that you would have resisted if the soldiers had undertaken to disperse you? |
42766 | Do I understand you to say you are a member of the executive committee of miners? |
42766 | Do I understand you to say, that the company that was marched toward Twenty- eighth street did connect with those two wings of the flanks? |
42766 | Do I understand you went with those men to Liberty street? |
42766 | Do n''t belong to it? |
42766 | Do n''t they puddle more than that some days? |
42766 | Do n''t think he made any comments or advised the crowd what to do? |
42766 | Do n''t you know anything about the doings of the mob down there? |
42766 | Do n''t you know how many lodges there were organized? |
42766 | Do n''t you know that there was a large crowd there before the military arrived? |
42766 | Do n''t you know who gave the order to load? |
42766 | Do n''t you know, as a railroad man, that double- headers are used generally on heavy grades, if at all? |
42766 | Do n''t you remember that he said anything about the railroad property? |
42766 | Do n''t you think it was an unlawful assemblage, and that it was your duty, as mayor, to have gone there, and have dispersed that crowd? |
42766 | Do not know anything about what occurred then, of your own observation? |
42766 | Do they control the movements of the fire department in case of a fire? |
42766 | Do they ever assist the miners of a colliery that are on a strike? |
42766 | Do what? |
42766 | Do you allow your clerks to act upon intelligence received at the office, without instructions from you? |
42766 | Do you approve of General Brown''s course, in disbanding his regiments at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Do you ask that the order be issued? |
42766 | Do you believe that the local authorities could have preserved order, and finally quieted the strike, without any loss of property? |
42766 | Do you claim it as a right to interfere with those who want to work? |
42766 | Do you claim that it is one of the rights that you have? |
42766 | Do you claim that you have a right to assemble in crowds or groups upon the property of the railroad company? |
42766 | Do you claim the right at all times to strike as a body? |
42766 | Do you desire me to give an account of how we proceeded there, and what took place? |
42766 | Do you expect to put me in the hole, Mr. Yutzy? |
42766 | Do you go to Pittsburgh and renew your bail every time? |
42766 | Do you hold any official position? |
42766 | Do you keep ammunition, also? |
42766 | Do you know Colonel Brown or Moore? |
42766 | Do you know General Pearson well? |
42766 | Do you know General Pearson? |
42766 | Do you know General Pearson? |
42766 | Do you know General Pearson? |
42766 | Do you know General Pearson? |
42766 | Do you know Pearson? |
42766 | Do you know about his history? |
42766 | Do you know any of the causes that led them to strike? |
42766 | Do you know any of the men that did interfere with the movement of the trains who belonged to the union? |
42766 | Do you know any of the parties that made those threats? |
42766 | Do you know any of those men that were hammering your engineer? |
42766 | Do you know anything about a collision that occurred at Reading, with General Reeder''s troops? |
42766 | Do you know anything about a request made by the civil authorities of Allegheny county on the Governor, for troops? |
42766 | Do you know anything about any oil cars that were dropped down on the Pennsylvania railroad towards the round- house? |
42766 | Do you know anything about any organization formed to resist the soldiers? |
42766 | Do you know anything about any proclamations issued by the Governor, in relation to this riot? |
42766 | Do you know anything about citizens going to Mayor McCarthy and asking him to swear in police officers to maintain peace in the city of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Do you know anything about him at all-- you knew the man? |
42766 | Do you know anything about its being broken into on the morning of the 1st of August-- some time after midnight, or before daylight? |
42766 | Do you know anything about that boat load of men that came down the Monongahela river? |
42766 | Do you know anything about that? |
42766 | Do you know anything about the causes leading to this riot? |
42766 | Do you know anything about the conduct of the Pittsburgh troops called out here during that day, or any time during the riot? |
42766 | Do you know anything about the movements of the military about Harrisburg and vicinity and county? |
42766 | Do you know anything about the movements of the troops about the arsenal or anywheres about this town? |
42766 | Do you know anything about those warrants? |
42766 | Do you know anything as to the reasons that induced General Brown to disband those two regiments? |
42766 | Do you know anything connected with the riots? |
42766 | Do you know anything else that would be of interest to our committee, any information that you have not already stated? |
42766 | Do you know anything of the causes leading to this strike? |
42766 | Do you know from where they came? |
42766 | Do you know from your own knowledge? |
42766 | Do you know him? |
42766 | Do you know him? |
42766 | Do you know his name? |
42766 | Do you know how General Pearson was dressed on that day? |
42766 | Do you know how far and wide it extended? |
42766 | Do you know how large a crowd there was there? |
42766 | Do you know how large a crowd was there? |
42766 | Do you know how long before it took place that this information was communicated to him? |
42766 | Do you know how long the troops remained in the round- house? |
42766 | Do you know how many cars were destroyed? |
42766 | Do you know how many divisions there were in this city? |
42766 | Do you know how many members it has throughout the State? |
42766 | Do you know how many members of this organization there were in Pittsburgh at the time of the contemplated strike in June? |
42766 | Do you know how many men he had? |
42766 | Do you know how many of the soldiers were wounded? |
42766 | Do you know how many of them were on duty at that time? |
42766 | Do you know how many offered themselves or responded to his notice? |
42766 | Do you know how many organizations this Trainmen''s Union had in existence-- how many lodges? |
42766 | Do you know how many persons were killed there? |
42766 | Do you know how many were fined? |
42766 | Do you know how many were killed there that evening? |
42766 | Do you know how many were tried and convicted? |
42766 | Do you know how much the miners made per day during May, June, and July, 1877? |
42766 | Do you know how the militia happened to come here? |
42766 | Do you know how you got that impression? |
42766 | Do you know if he got out of the carriage and walked up with you? |
42766 | Do you know it officially? |
42766 | Do you know it was a Napoleon? |
42766 | Do you know of an alderman that was with them, from the south side? |
42766 | Do you know of an order, given by the mayor to his officers, to compel men to serve on the police force, during those troubles? |
42766 | Do you know of any arrangement that was made through the colonel to have the troops rationed at any place or at any time? |
42766 | Do you know of any articles that were published in your paper that were calculated to arouse and inflame the people that were paid for for insertion? |
42766 | Do you know of any citizens''committee that waited on General Brinton or that waited on your command to have a conversation in relation to this riot? |
42766 | Do you know of any communication at all that he had with them? |
42766 | Do you know of any communications sent by General Brinton to General Latta while in the round- house? |
42766 | Do you know of any disturbance at Limerick, south side, on that day? |
42766 | Do you know of any disturbance on Second Avenue park? |
42766 | Do you know of any effort being made to have trainmen take out trains? |
42766 | Do you know of any engineers or firemen being driven off their engines when there were policemen with them on the train? |
42766 | Do you know of any instance where iron or steel has been shipped from Pittsburgh to New York and from there to San Francisco by rail? |
42766 | Do you know of any official communication that Ammon had with the railroad officials? |
42766 | Do you know of any oil that was run under them? |
42766 | Do you know of any one that advised the meeting? |
42766 | Do you know of any orders having been received by General Brinton from any one or by the hands of any one to make any movement in any direction? |
42766 | Do you know of any organization among the railroad employés? |
42766 | Do you know of any other officer of the police force being called upon to assist them? |
42766 | Do you know of any other places where they were requested to quit pumping? |
42766 | Do you know of any protection given to you by the police? |
42766 | Do you know of any railroad men at the time of the disturbance, who were ready to go out on the trains? |
42766 | Do you know of any resolutions being passed by any of those lodges and by this association, condemning interference with men who wished to work? |
42766 | Do you know of any resolutions passed at that meeting? |
42766 | Do you know of any supplies being provided to General Brinton''s command during the night, or at Torrens station? |
42766 | Do you know of any telegrams passing between General Brinton and Colonel Scott in regard to General Brinton clearing those tracks? |
42766 | Do you know of any troops that were ordered to Pittsburgh returning without orders? |
42766 | Do you know of any understanding between the railroad officials and this man Ammon, that he should run that railroad in their interest? |
42766 | Do you know of anybody waiting upon the city authorities? |
42766 | Do you know of his having taken any step at any time? |
42766 | Do you know of quite a number of citizens carrying away goods and bringing them over to near your works, in that vicinity? |
42766 | Do you know of such an organization called the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Do you know of the fact that one of your police officers attempted to arrest him? |
42766 | Do you know of your own knowledge that they sent a man over? |
42766 | Do you know on what day? |
42766 | Do you know that Brinton had received that communication? |
42766 | Do you know that he had an order? |
42766 | Do you know that he was at that time laboring under any physical or mental disability? |
42766 | Do you know that man that came up to you? |
42766 | Do you know that man? |
42766 | Do you know that of your own knowledge, or only by hearsay? |
42766 | Do you know that the mayor had been called upon to furnish a police force, for the protection of the railroad? |
42766 | Do you know that the mob did not fire-- that, at least, the soldiers did not fire on the mob in front of them? |
42766 | Do you know that to be a fact? |
42766 | Do you know the date of the warrants? |
42766 | Do you know the existence? |
42766 | Do you know the fact of your own knowledge that the police had been dismissed? |
42766 | Do you know the man? |
42766 | Do you know the men composing the mayor''s posse? |
42766 | Do you know the names now? |
42766 | Do you know the nature of those communications? |
42766 | Do you know the number of the wounded altogether? |
42766 | Do you know the number that were killed in that fire? |
42766 | Do you know the object of that organization? |
42766 | Do you know the objects of the organization? |
42766 | Do you know the parties referred to? |
42766 | Do you know the policeman? |
42766 | Do you know the purport of those resolutions? |
42766 | Do you know them? |
42766 | Do you know these men? |
42766 | Do you know what action the mayor or civil authorities took to suppress or disperse the mob or crowd that was about the depot? |
42766 | Do you know what authority the mayor has in case of riot and disturbances, given by the charter of the city or the laws relating to the city? |
42766 | Do you know what became of the ammunition in the Union depot? |
42766 | Do you know what date it went into effect? |
42766 | Do you know what days the strike was at its height in Chicago? |
42766 | Do you know what effort he made to secure a force? |
42766 | Do you know what efforts were made by the mayor to suppress the riots? |
42766 | Do you know what efforts were made by the sheriff and his subordinates or the county authorities to suppress the riot? |
42766 | Do you know what his mission was? |
42766 | Do you know what his occupation is? |
42766 | Do you know what hotel it was? |
42766 | Do you know what steps were taken by the civil authorities at Reading to suppress the riot at that time? |
42766 | Do you know what that dispute was? |
42766 | Do you know what the feeling was in this city when the strike broke out? |
42766 | Do you know what the law is in regard to calling out the militia to suppress a riot? |
42766 | Do you know what the law is in regard to that? |
42766 | Do you know what they were actually getting? |
42766 | Do you know what those boys did with that squad? |
42766 | Do you know what those orders were? |
42766 | Do you know what time General Latta gave that order to General Pearson to take charge? |
42766 | Do you know what time the call was made by the mayor of Wilkes- Barre? |
42766 | Do you know what time you telegraphed it to Pittsburgh from here? |
42766 | Do you know what your officers did when that crew refused to go? |
42766 | Do you know when he sent to the Governor for troops? |
42766 | Do you know when it was that she sheriff made the call on the Governor for troops to support him? |
42766 | Do you know when the first call was made on the sheriff, of your own knowledge? |
42766 | Do you know when the last reduction was made? |
42766 | Do you know when they were disbanded by order of General Brown? |
42766 | Do you know where General Pearson was during the firing between the troops and the people? |
42766 | Do you know where Isaac B. Felts lives? |
42766 | Do you know where Mr. Carrigan lives? |
42766 | Do you know where he belonged? |
42766 | Do you know where he encamped that night? |
42766 | Do you know where he got his information? |
42766 | Do you know where he is now? |
42766 | Do you know where he is now? |
42766 | Do you know where he lives? |
42766 | Do you know where he lives? |
42766 | Do you know where he resides? |
42766 | Do you know where he started to go? |
42766 | Do you know where he went? |
42766 | Do you know where he went? |
42766 | Do you know where his store is? |
42766 | Do you know where it commenced? |
42766 | Do you know where that crowd was from that broke into Bown''s store? |
42766 | Do you know where the mayor was on Friday? |
42766 | Do you know where they went to from there? |
42766 | Do you know where they were from? |
42766 | Do you know where they were in the evening? |
42766 | Do you know where they were that night? |
42766 | Do you know where those men were from? |
42766 | Do you know where those two men are now? |
42766 | Do you know whether Captain Breck''s command retired to the round- house with your command? |
42766 | Do you know whether Colonel Norris communicated that fact to General Latta that you have just related? |
42766 | Do you know whether Colonel Norris had returned? |
42766 | Do you know whether General Brinton received any orders after leaving the round- house or not during that day? |
42766 | Do you know whether General Brinton received the order from General Latta, to join you at the stock- yards? |
42766 | Do you know whether General Brinton telegraphed to Colonel Scott of the Pennsylvania Railroad? |
42766 | Do you know whether General Latta gave him any orders or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether General Latta was notified that General Brinton had not received the order? |
42766 | Do you know whether General Pearson was there at the time the firing took place? |
42766 | Do you know whether any men were arrested or not that attempted to come in on that road by this citizens''police force? |
42766 | Do you know whether arrangements were made at Chicago to pool the earnings of the three trunk lines? |
42766 | Do you know whether he complied with it or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether he is in the employ of the company now or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether he left it there in the depot or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether he made any call for help from the State? |
42766 | Do you know whether he made any effort that night to raise a posse or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether he was a railroad man or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether he was among the strikers? |
42766 | Do you know whether he was commissioned or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether he was sent for? |
42766 | Do you know whether it did exist on other roads in June? |
42766 | Do you know whether it extends throughout the State, or whether it is confined to the coal region? |
42766 | Do you know whether it was the proprietor of the drug store with whom you had the conversation? |
42766 | Do you know whether the Engineers''Brotherhood assisted or encouraged this strike of the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Do you know whether the command was given to fire that day, by any of the officers? |
42766 | Do you know whether the conductors of those trains were all prepared to start them or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether the officers of the soldiery in the round- house had any communication with anybody outside, during the night? |
42766 | Do you know whether the police of the city were there-- any of them to protect the firemen? |
42766 | Do you know whether the property was destroyed at the Union depot? |
42766 | Do you know whether the round- house was on fire when the military left it? |
42766 | Do you know whether the strike was confined to freight men entirely? |
42766 | Do you know whether there was a man selected to start this strike in any way? |
42766 | Do you know whether there was any aid asked of or any consultation held with the authorities before the strike came about? |
42766 | Do you know whether there was any coöperation between Bob Ammon and the railroad officials during these troubles, working together? |
42766 | Do you know whether there was any effort made to shadow these men-- following them to their homes? |
42766 | Do you know whether there was any effort made to take any provisions or ammunition to the troops in the round- house on Saturday night? |
42766 | Do you know whether there was any efforts made by the civil authorities of the city to disperse the crowd during the day? |
42766 | Do you know whether there was any other organization? |
42766 | Do you know whether there were any lodges in the vicinity of here, around in the townships? |
42766 | Do you know whether there were two engines on it? |
42766 | Do you know whether they have a secret organization or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether they were part of the crowd that broke into the stores or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether this mounted citizens''police force went out of the city, and patrolled the streets leading to the city? |
42766 | Do you know whether this soldier was killed by a shot fired from the mob or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether this was delivered to the mayor or not? |
42766 | Do you know whether those men came from the silk- works? |
42766 | Do you know whether those people were citizens of Pittsburgh, or people that had just run in? |
42766 | Do you know whether those twenty men assembled there were members of that organization or not? |
42766 | Do you know who broke open the stores? |
42766 | Do you know who did that firing? |
42766 | Do you know who drove the carriage? |
42766 | Do you know who gave the command? |
42766 | Do you know who he saw of the committee of public safety? |
42766 | Do you know who it is? |
42766 | Do you know who it was? |
42766 | Do you know who made the application to the State for protection? |
42766 | Do you know who set the first on fire? |
42766 | Do you know who that gentleman was? |
42766 | Do you know who the man was who asked protection from the mayor? |
42766 | Do you know who the officer was? |
42766 | Do you know who the parties were that were at the store? |
42766 | Do you know who was in charge of the police? |
42766 | Do you know whose command they belonged to or what regiment? |
42766 | Do you know why they stopped at Greenfield? |
42766 | Do you know why they went back? |
42766 | Do you know your son''s handwriting? |
42766 | Do you know yourself? |
42766 | Do you know, of your own knowledge, what were the movements of the police force there during the balance of the day? |
42766 | Do you know, of your own knowledge, whether any demand was made upon the chief of police for protection? |
42766 | Do you know, of your own knowledge? |
42766 | Do you know, of your own personal knowledge, that the fire department did call upon the mayor for protection? |
42766 | Do you know? |
42766 | Do you mean Mayor Phillips? |
42766 | Do you mean after they were fired into? |
42766 | Do you mean as long as no overt act was committed? |
42766 | Do you mean at night or at that time? |
42766 | Do you mean helter- skelter? |
42766 | Do you mean just what you said: that General Brinton did all he could to help along the trouble that occurred? |
42766 | Do you mean non- union men? |
42766 | Do you mean of the brigade? |
42766 | Do you mean on Saturday? |
42766 | Do you mean per ton per mile? |
42766 | Do you mean that it could have been stopped at that time and place? |
42766 | Do you mean that that expresses the feeling at that time? |
42766 | Do you mean the pay for mining? |
42766 | Do you mean the tax- payers? |
42766 | Do you mean they were railroad men? |
42766 | Do you mean to say that they had deserted? |
42766 | Do you mean whether or not the crowd could have taken possession of any of those arms without interference? |
42766 | Do you mean you could have prevented the mob from firing it? |
42766 | Do you mean you did not see it at all-- you did not see any police officers? |
42766 | Do you mean, that the mob had a right to stand on the railroad track and take possession of the railroad track, and refuse to allow traffic? |
42766 | Do you mean, whether we were to prevent it, or whether as to the possibility or the feasibility of General Brinton''s preventing it? |
42766 | Do you not know that such things did take place-- that some were beaten and driven out violently? |
42766 | Do you not think it was your duty, after having refused to work, to leave the premises entirely and go away? |
42766 | Do you recognize Major Stewart here as being the man who came up with Colonel Norris? |
42766 | Do you recollect how many soldiers were brought in wounded? |
42766 | Do you recollect how the next dispatch reached the Union depot? |
42766 | Do you recollect of General Matthews making any remarks when he received the first dispatch? |
42766 | Do you recollect that? |
42766 | Do you recollect the day he arrived here? |
42766 | Do you recollect the day the trains stopped running? |
42766 | Do you recollect the day when they struck? |
42766 | Do you recollect what he said about it? |
42766 | Do you recollect whether he named the regiment? |
42766 | Do you reduce the rates on local traffic when you reduce them on other traffic in equal proportion? |
42766 | Do you regard your authority and powers subordinate to those of the sheriff of the county-- within the limits of your city, I mean? |
42766 | Do you remember Ammon telling you this? |
42766 | Do you remember how General Pearson was dressed when the troops went out to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Do you remember of any citizens calling at the office of the Union Depot hotel, and advising against moving the trains that afternoon? |
42766 | Do you remember of seeing Surgeon Mears? |
42766 | Do you remember of seeing any person? |
42766 | Do you remember the point from which the order was sent? |
42766 | Do you remember the prices paid the trainmen? |
42766 | Do you remember the street? |
42766 | Do you remember whether he wore a mustache or not? |
42766 | Do you remember who? |
42766 | Do you remember? |
42766 | Do you reside in the city of Harrisburg? |
42766 | Do you reside in the city? |
42766 | Do you say all the citizens? |
42766 | Do you say you never made any requisition on the State authorities for protection? |
42766 | Do you speak of Tuesday or Wednesday? |
42766 | Do you state you told McGovern not to arrest the men, but to get them at their houses? |
42766 | Do you suppose that was the way this meeting was called? |
42766 | Do you suppose they could run out, and did you have sufficient force to protect them? |
42766 | Do you suppose they were citizens of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Do you think Tuesday, 24th? |
42766 | Do you think a well organized police force would have been able to have driven away the crowd on Saturday morning? |
42766 | Do you think he could have quelled the trouble without calling on the militia-- that the police force could have suppressed the riot? |
42766 | Do you think if a train had started you could have run it through the crowd, and gone on-- in your opinion? |
42766 | Do you think it was two minutes after the order to fire was given, before the firing began? |
42766 | Do you think that force of soldiers, with twenty rounds of ammunition, could have held their position and kept the crowd off during the night? |
42766 | Do you think that the police force of the city could have protected you so that you could have played on the fire? |
42766 | Do you think that this firing was in consequence of the order to fire? |
42766 | Do you think the troops could have remained any longer in the round- house than they did? |
42766 | Do you think there was any real necessity for calling on the militia for assistance here? |
42766 | Do you think you would recognize that policeman? |
42766 | Do you think, with the fire department, you could have cut the fire and stopped it during Sunday, if you had had protection? |
42766 | Do you want me to go on and repeat the whole conversation? |
42766 | Do you want me to state where? |
42766 | Do you want me to talk on that subject? |
42766 | Do you want the order? |
42766 | Do you wish a statement, as to the firing? |
42766 | Do you wish me to change my head- quarters? |
42766 | Do you wish to know anything in regard to the interview with the authorities? |
42766 | Doctor Donnelly''s command was organized at that time? |
42766 | Doctor Scovill''s testimony in regard to that was correct? |
42766 | Does Colonel Gray or Colonel Howard mention the fact in their official report? |
42766 | Does anything else occur to you? |
42766 | Does anything more of importance occur to you? |
42766 | Does he live here in Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Does he occupy any position in the division? |
42766 | Does he work in the railroad shops as a machinist? |
42766 | Does that cover the merchandise? |
42766 | Does that telegram state that? |
42766 | Does the West Pennsylvania road run through Sharpsburg? |
42766 | Doing anything more? |
42766 | Doing it at their houses mainly? |
42766 | Done in the night or during the morning? |
42766 | Done quietly, was it? |
42766 | Down at that meeting? |
42766 | Down on the railroad were any persons looking on-- were they along the railroad track, or were they back on the hill? |
42766 | Down the track? |
42766 | Down where? |
42766 | Drawings on paper? |
42766 | Dressed differently? |
42766 | Dressed in a gray uniform? |
42766 | Driven away by force? |
42766 | Driving the troops off? |
42766 | Drove the engineer from his engine? |
42766 | Drove them towards the city, you mean? |
42766 | During Friday night and during the day, Saturday, you were masters of the situation there in Allegheny City? |
42766 | During May, June, and July? |
42766 | During Saturday night or the day of Sunday? |
42766 | During Saturday night, describe what took place? |
42766 | During Sunday night how many police did you have on duty? |
42766 | During all the excitement you were free to run in and out? |
42766 | During any of those days? |
42766 | During the day Friday and Saturday, state whether the police officers made any attempt to disperse the crowd that were assembled about the railroad? |
42766 | During the day on Saturday, while occupying the hill, you had a view of the track, and the scene of the riot, did you not? |
42766 | During the day, Saturday, throughout the city, I mean? |
42766 | During the day, Sunday, did you receive any orders from the mayor? |
42766 | During the day, Sunday, were you interfered with by the mob? |
42766 | During the day, Sunday? |
42766 | During the day, on Sunday, how many policemen had you in the vicinity of the riot? |
42766 | During the day, what companies were on duty at the foot of the hill? |
42766 | During the day-- Sunday and Sunday night-- were you interfered with by the crowd in throwing water? |
42766 | During the day-- Sunday? |
42766 | During the entire riot you preserved your organization? |
42766 | During the evening? |
42766 | During the night of Saturday you had nothing? |
42766 | During the night of Thursday, where were you? |
42766 | During the night was the crowd noisy and boisterous? |
42766 | During the progress of the depredations or burning on Sunday were you present? |
42766 | During the strike? |
42766 | During the time the troops were in the round- house? |
42766 | During the time they were making an effort? |
42766 | During this time, the balance of your regiment reserved, was up on the hill-- how far from the crossing? |
42766 | Editor and publisher? |
42766 | Editor of the_ Pittsburgh Post_? |
42766 | Employ a large number of men, do you not, sir? |
42766 | Employ a large number of men? |
42766 | Encouraging the men? |
42766 | Engaged in actual burning and rioting? |
42766 | Engaged in actual riotous conduct? |
42766 | Engaged in the riot? |
42766 | Engineers congregate more on their engine? |
42766 | Engineers, too? |
42766 | Ever know what became of him? |
42766 | Ever practiced firing any in the militia? |
42766 | Every fellow for himself, was it? |
42766 | Every fellow has his work, and if he undertakes to do anything else, they do n''t allow him? |
42766 | Every week? |
42766 | Everything was quiet on Friday, as I understand you, when you left? |
42766 | Except on the Fort Wayne road? |
42766 | Except you heard it talked among several of the laboring men, that there was to be such a meeting? |
42766 | Expect to see any fun? |
42766 | Explode after they came into the round- house? |
42766 | Extending over how much space? |
42766 | Faced outwards, both ranks? |
42766 | Faced towards you? |
42766 | Facing down this way? |
42766 | Facing east? |
42766 | Facing toward the hill? |
42766 | Facing towards Twenty- eighth and Liberty streets? |
42766 | Far enough to express any opinion on the subject? |
42766 | Fed by their captors? |
42766 | Felt''s store do you live? |
42766 | Felt''s store? |
42766 | Fired at the military? |
42766 | Fired in the air, did they? |
42766 | Firing at the round- house? |
42766 | Firing from the troops or the mob? |
42766 | Firing out of houses-- was there much of that? |
42766 | First and foremost, do you know the chairman? |
42766 | First state your rank and official position here under the United States Government? |
42766 | Five o''clock of what day? |
42766 | Five or ten minutes? |
42766 | Fixed ammunition, also? |
42766 | For a month at a time? |
42766 | For fifty men? |
42766 | For how long a time did he keep these men employed? |
42766 | For how long a time did you work at it? |
42766 | For how long did this last, that you did n''t have cars enough? |
42766 | For how long previous? |
42766 | For how long were you in the service? |
42766 | For how long? |
42766 | For how long? |
42766 | For how many men? |
42766 | For how many? |
42766 | For instance, blacklegs? |
42766 | For instance, if they were in the depot? |
42766 | For its delivery or its non- delivery? |
42766 | For larceny and disorderly conduct? |
42766 | For manslaughter? |
42766 | For protecting the works? |
42766 | For several years past? |
42766 | For that reason I ask you the question whether you considered yourself superseded by other authorities, and should refrain from making any effort? |
42766 | For the Hussars to go out in disguise? |
42766 | For the city? |
42766 | For the preservation of law and order, how many of you will go with me to suppress it?" |
42766 | For the purpose of carrying out the strike, do you mean? |
42766 | For the purpose of getting supplies? |
42766 | For the purpose of protecting trains going out? |
42766 | For the purpose of stopping traffic-- the running of trains? |
42766 | For the reserves? |
42766 | For what class of employés was that organized? |
42766 | For what company were you working at the time? |
42766 | For what distance was the firing kept up? |
42766 | For what distance? |
42766 | For what purpose did you pursue Brinton? |
42766 | For what purpose was that meeting called? |
42766 | For what purpose were they assembled there, so far as you know? |
42766 | For what purpose-- why did you disband? |
42766 | For what purpose? |
42766 | For what reason? |
42766 | For what reason? |
42766 | For what reason? |
42766 | For what reasons? |
42766 | For your own safety, you thought it better to get away? |
42766 | For your protection? |
42766 | Four o''clock on Saturday he asked you to take two men out and close all the saloons in what district? |
42766 | Four squares? |
42766 | Freight? |
42766 | From General Latta? |
42766 | From Twenty- eighth street did you go out to Torrens? |
42766 | From Washington street? |
42766 | From a distance and from other sections of the country? |
42766 | From any one else? |
42766 | From communities within a short distance of the city? |
42766 | From here west? |
42766 | From personal knowledge? |
42766 | From ten o''clock Friday until ten o''clock Saturday evening? |
42766 | From that I would infer that it was not the pay, but it was the time they were making? |
42766 | From that heretofore in practice? |
42766 | From that point, I had left my young friend, and took the buggy and started, when a fireman says to me,"You are going down town?" |
42766 | From that portion of the city? |
42766 | From the Executive Department? |
42766 | From the Union depot? |
42766 | From the car window? |
42766 | From the commander- in chief? |
42766 | From the commencement of the trouble? |
42766 | From the commencement to the end, in your opinion, you suppose there was no regular organization? |
42766 | From the crowd or mob? |
42766 | From the crowd? |
42766 | From the direction of the hospital? |
42766 | From the head of the column? |
42766 | From the information that the railroad authorities had, they could not have run trains through to their destination? |
42766 | From the information you got, do you think there was an organization, and it was understood that the railroad men were the first to strike? |
42766 | From the interviews that you had with the railroad employés, what did you gather as being the cause-- the real cause of the strike? |
42766 | From the lodge? |
42766 | From the mob? |
42766 | From the side towards the depot no attack was made? |
42766 | From the time you left the army until you were elected a member of the Legislature what business were you engaged in? |
42766 | From the transfer station? |
42766 | From the works about the city? |
42766 | From their appearance could you form any idea as to whether they were railroad men or not? |
42766 | From their dress, you would think they were? |
42766 | From their reports then to you, you wrote this article? |
42766 | From there on, as to what occurred? |
42766 | From there you went to the Union depot? |
42766 | From what direction did the order come? |
42766 | From what direction did the stones and other missiles come? |
42766 | From what men? |
42766 | From what part of the line of this hollow- square did the firing commence? |
42766 | From what point did the stones appear to come? |
42766 | From what point did you start when you started to reach General Brinton? |
42766 | From what point did you start? |
42766 | From what point were the stones thrown? |
42766 | From what point? |
42766 | From what railroad officer? |
42766 | From what source were you to collect them? |
42766 | From what source? |
42766 | From what you saw, do you think it would have been possible for the police to have stopped it? |
42766 | From what you saw, would you consider an order to fire justifiable? |
42766 | From whence did the fire proceed-- what part of the city? |
42766 | From where General Pearson was standing to where you were? |
42766 | From where did you receive the order? |
42766 | From where you were stationed? |
42766 | From whom did this order come? |
42766 | From whom did you get the first information that a strike existed there at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | From whom did you get the information? |
42766 | From whom? |
42766 | From whom? |
42766 | From whom? |
42766 | From whom? |
42766 | From whom? |
42766 | From whom? |
42766 | From you? |
42766 | From your acquaintance with them could you form an estimate? |
42766 | From your experience and knowledge of the number of railroad men in the country, is there a surplus? |
42766 | From your experience as a military man, do you consider that it was a prudent move to go into the round- house with the troops at that time? |
42766 | From your information-- from what you know of the circumstances and the men engaged in it? |
42766 | From your intercourse with the citizens, was it your understanding that you, as strikers, had the sympathy of the community? |
42766 | From your knowledge and information, was there any necessity for calling out the troops? |
42766 | From your knowledge of the kind of people, did you regard it as necessary to call the military to suppress them? |
42766 | From your knowledge of these men as soldiers during the war, do you think they were competent or incompetent men? |
42766 | From your knowledge was there a less amount of work to be done on the railroads by the men than there had been formerly? |
42766 | From your observations during this disturbance, what opinion have you of the conduct of the officers and those in charge of the military? |
42766 | From your own knowledge of the state of the case then, as I understand it, you think the railroad men struck first of their own accord? |
42766 | From your position you could not see who done the firing? |
42766 | From your position, you should judge that was the reason why the reduction was made? |
42766 | From your regiment? |
42766 | Gave you gratuitous advice? |
42766 | General Beaver''s command? |
42766 | General Brinton could have obeyed your instructions or disobeyed them? |
42766 | General Brinton did n''t come back again? |
42766 | General Brinton did not mention the fact of Colonel Norris having met him that day? |
42766 | General Brinton, or who? |
42766 | General Latta had no power as a commanding officer, had he? |
42766 | General Pearson appeared to stand at the head of the column? |
42766 | General Pearson could not have been there at the time of the firing? |
42766 | General Pearson passed you before the firing commenced? |
42766 | General Pearson passed you, then, going down to go to Pitcairn''s office? |
42766 | General Pearson was in command of the troops, then, until ten o''clock? |
42766 | General Pearson, after the firing at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | General Pearson, then, had a fatigue cap? |
42766 | General Pearson? |
42766 | Generally speaking? |
42766 | Gentlemanly? |
42766 | Get eighty cents a day after the first reduction? |
42766 | Give an estimate of the number, if you can, Mr. McKune? |
42766 | Give any reasons for striking you? |
42766 | Give it in substance, as near as you can? |
42766 | Give us a description? |
42766 | Give us a full history of what occurred after that time? |
42766 | Give us an estimate? |
42766 | Give us his name? |
42766 | Give us his name? |
42766 | Give us the circumstances of the affair; how it occurred-- you were present there at the time, were you not?--as briefly as you can? |
42766 | Give us the detailed movements, now, of the troops? |
42766 | Give us the exact language of the command? |
42766 | Give us the exact words if you can? |
42766 | Give us the nature of the second communication? |
42766 | Give us the position of your men at that time? |
42766 | Give us the reason for that? |
42766 | Give us the substance of it-- of his reply? |
42766 | Give us the summary of that conversation? |
42766 | Give your full name and address? |
42766 | Go ahead? |
42766 | Go on Mr. Bissell? |
42766 | Go on and relate from that time what occurred during the progress of the strike? |
42766 | Go on and relate just what occurred after your arrival at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Go on and state all the particulars? |
42766 | Go on and state the circumstances, omitting the details? |
42766 | Go on and state what knowledge you have of the occurrences at Pittsburgh last July, and the movements of the militia? |
42766 | Go on and state what took place there? |
42766 | Go on and state what you know in relation to the riots of last July? |
42766 | Go on and state why you were not, and give us the facts connected with the strike here, and all that you are acquainted with? |
42766 | Go on and state, then, how it was? |
42766 | Go on and tell us all the facts about? |
42766 | Go on and tell us what occurred? |
42766 | Go on and tell us what you did that day? |
42766 | Go on for the present? |
42766 | Go on now? |
42766 | Go on, Mr. Mannis? |
42766 | Go on, and relate what you saw, commencing at the time you arrived at, or in the vicinity of Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Go on, general? |
42766 | Go on? |
42766 | Go to your homes? |
42766 | Go up to the ground? |
42766 | Going eastward? |
42766 | Going to work?" |
42766 | Going which direction? |
42766 | Gold braid? |
42766 | Gold wreath, with the letters U.S. in front? |
42766 | Good discipline? |
42766 | Goods that were carried off? |
42766 | Got it from some of the hands that heard it talked? |
42766 | Got that from what? |
42766 | Had General Pearson his coat off when he came in? |
42766 | Had a breech- loading musket? |
42766 | Had a great portion of your command seen service? |
42766 | Had any differences arisen between the employés and the company at any time? |
42766 | Had any of the troops been in this machine shop? |
42766 | Had any of your command ever seen actual service during the late war? |
42766 | Had any property been fired or burned at that time? |
42766 | Had any stones and missiles been thrown at the soldiers before the command to charge bayonets was given? |
42766 | Had been called by previous announcement? |
42766 | Had double- headers been run before that day on the road? |
42766 | Had he a plume, the same as the privates? |
42766 | Had he a sword and belt on? |
42766 | Had he any braid on his breast? |
42766 | Had he any braid, or any thing else; a wreath, or anything on his hat? |
42766 | Had he any trimmings on his coat to distinguish him from the other officers? |
42766 | Had he been discharged or was he still in the employ of the company? |
42766 | Had he been in your employ? |
42766 | Had he been instrumental in instigating the strike? |
42766 | Had he shoulder straps on? |
42766 | Had it buckled around his body? |
42766 | Had it increased in numbers? |
42766 | Had n''t any idea? |
42766 | Had n''t whisky helped a good deal at that time to place them_ hors du combat_? |
42766 | Had n''t you been told by citizens and others, that there was a large crowd there-- likely to be trouble? |
42766 | Had no difficulty in that respect? |
42766 | Had no knowledge of that? |
42766 | Had no other complaint? |
42766 | Had no pistol? |
42766 | Had the Philadelphia troops arrived then? |
42766 | Had the burning commenced when you disbanded? |
42766 | Had the crowd dispersed? |
42766 | Had the crowd got across Lackawanna avenue? |
42766 | Had the fire stopped when you left? |
42766 | Had the mayor intimated to you that the railroad officials had taken this matter into their own hands? |
42766 | Had the men any grievances or complaints to make outside of that, when it was talked of that a strike should take place on the 27th of June? |
42766 | Had the miners been at work up to that time? |
42766 | Had the news of the burning of the bridge reached you then? |
42766 | Had the order cut their wages down below what they could have lived on, or could the men make fair wages enough to live on? |
42766 | Had the press had time to deliberate, would they have cast these articles broadcast to the world? |
42766 | Had the regiment re- assembled as a regiment? |
42766 | Had the soldiers been called out? |
42766 | Had the strikers-- had the men sent a committee to the railroad officials? |
42766 | Had the wages been reduced any last year, during the summer? |
42766 | Had the work commenced then, by the company, in clearing off the tracks-- the_ debris_? |
42766 | Had there been a falling off in business? |
42766 | Had there been a large number of them discharged by the company prior to this disturbance? |
42766 | Had there been any arrangement made for a strike at or near that time? |
42766 | Had there been any assembly prior to their reaching the silk- works? |
42766 | Had there been any change in rates, so far as you know? |
42766 | Had there been any complaints made prior to the one made by this committee on that subject? |
42766 | Had there been any difficulty threatened before that, to your knowledge? |
42766 | Had there been any prior reduction? |
42766 | Had there been any reduction in wages? |
42766 | Had there been any reduction made? |
42766 | Had there been any reduction of wages among the miners prior to that strike? |
42766 | Had there been any reduction of wages on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, or any of the roads leading to your town? |
42766 | Had there been any reduction of wages on your road prior to July? |
42766 | Had there been any reduction prior to the 1st of August? |
42766 | Had there been any reductions in 1877? |
42766 | Had there been any rumors of any difficulty here, prior to the commencement of the Pittsburgh riots? |
42766 | Had there been any talk among the men where you work about striking? |
42766 | Had there been any talk of striking before-- during those eleven months? |
42766 | Had there been any talk or organization among the men about a strike prior to the strike at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Had there been complaints by shippers in Pittsburgh about discrimination? |
42766 | Had there been firing by the crowd before that? |
42766 | Had these rumors of difficulty and of attack upon property and destruction of property existed here before the Pittsburgh riots? |
42766 | Had they all agreed to strike on that day? |
42766 | Had they any in last summer-- in 1877? |
42766 | Had they any secret organization? |
42766 | Had they begun to destroy property in any way? |
42766 | Had they complained of low wages prior to that time? |
42766 | Had they made full time they would have made ample pay? |
42766 | Had they on the Pennsylvania Central, before the order was issued to run the double- headers? |
42766 | Had they thrown any missiles? |
42766 | Had they warrants against all the posse? |
42766 | Had they weapons? |
42766 | Had this blouse buttons up close to the throat? |
42766 | Had you a constitution and by- laws? |
42766 | Had you a dispatcher acting in that capacity? |
42766 | Had you a preliminary hearing before the court? |
42766 | Had you a reporter there? |
42766 | Had you any arrangements by which you would transport that ammunition to General Brinton''s command-- from the round- house, I mean? |
42766 | Had you any business there? |
42766 | Had you any communication with him? |
42766 | Had you any communication with the Governor? |
42766 | Had you any communication with the mayor on that day with reference to the disturbance of the peace? |
42766 | Had you any communication with the mayor prior to the 1st day of August? |
42766 | Had you any communication with the sheriff of Luzerne county direct? |
42766 | Had you any conversation with freight conductors up to the time of the riot, or before that time in relation to any contemplated strike? |
42766 | Had you any grievances before? |
42766 | Had you any intimation from any source prior to the appearance of Mr. Watt on Thursday at your office of an outbreak among the railroad employés? |
42766 | Had you any intimation of it before that? |
42766 | Had you any intimation of trouble before the military were ordered out? |
42766 | Had you any knowledge before Thursday morning that such a refusal would be made? |
42766 | Had you any knowledge of any anticipated outbreak or strike by the men before it was communicated to you by Mr. Watt? |
42766 | Had you any knowledge of any pre- arranged purpose among those men to strike on that day? |
42766 | Had you any knowledge of the existence of an organization called the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Had you any knowledge that your men would not go out until you met them-- those two men? |
42766 | Had you any men that refused to report for duty when you first got the call to proceed to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Had you any number of cars there at the time the burning occurred? |
42766 | Had you any other intelligence from Pittsburgh than that contained in the telegram of Sheriff Fife? |
42766 | Had you any reason to apprehend any strike, prior to the breaking out of the one here among your men? |
42766 | Had you any reason to suppose, or did you know that this proclamation had been written by the railroad officials? |
42766 | Had you any right to do anything with it? |
42766 | Had you any right to interfere with that property in any way? |
42766 | Had you any superior officer present then? |
42766 | Had you any talk with men that did belong to it? |
42766 | Had you any talk with the mayor during the day, Sunday, about sending out a posse of policemen there? |
42766 | Had you any trouble getting through the crowd when you wanted to get away on Saturday? |
42766 | Had you anything else to complain of? |
42766 | Had you become satisfied then that you could not run your trains on account of the mob which had assembled? |
42766 | Had you become satisfied, then, that it was necessary to call out the troops? |
42766 | Had you been at Pittsburgh during the riot-- the entire progress of it? |
42766 | Had you been directed to Major Buffington''s house by anybody? |
42766 | Had you been informed they were in danger? |
42766 | Had you been so informed? |
42766 | Had you been there any time previous to the firing? |
42766 | Had you been up at the scene of the riot before Sunday? |
42766 | Had you been with General Latta and Colonel Quay during the night? |
42766 | Had you before that had any day police? |
42766 | Had you crews that were willing to go out in case they could get out without any disturbance? |
42766 | Had you ever had any strikes on that road prior to this time? |
42766 | Had you gone to any trouble to ascertain the truth of the facts as they really occurred before the fire by the mob, before you wrote this article? |
42766 | Had you had any talk with Mayor McCarthy before Sunday? |
42766 | Had you heard anything said by the men about the order prior to that morning? |
42766 | Had you heard of any dissatisfaction on that point from any other source than from this committee? |
42766 | Had you heard, prior to your information at Walls, anything about the strike? |
42766 | Had you held any meetings or contemplated a strike until after you heard of the strike at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Had you knowledge of any organization prior to this time? |
42766 | Had you known him for years? |
42766 | Had you maces? |
42766 | Had you made any demand prior to that Sunday night? |
42766 | Had you more than one edition on that Sunday of the riot? |
42766 | Had you no communication with the citizens of Pittsburgh after your arrival? |
42766 | Had you not entire authority and control, at all times, within the limits and jurisdiction of the city? |
42766 | Had you noticed any influx of people in the city, prior to this time-- within a few days? |
42766 | Had you noticed any influx of strangers into the city prior to that time? |
42766 | Had you or any of the officials of the road been able to ascertain whether there was any arrangement for a strike of the employés of the road? |
42766 | Had you received any instructions from him during the day,( Saturday before this,) in regard to the disturbance out there? |
42766 | Had you run through freight trains as double- headers before Thursday? |
42766 | Had you stopped work before you called that meeting? |
42766 | Had you talked with the conductors or brakesmen-- had intercourse with them? |
42766 | Had you the front and rear ranks of any companies on each side of the railroad? |
42766 | Had you then learned where Brinton''s troops were? |
42766 | Had you tried to quell it? |
42766 | Had you, at any time, formed across Lackawanna avenue during the time you were at Washington avenue? |
42766 | Had your wages been reduced any during the spring? |
42766 | Half an hour? |
42766 | Hardware merchant? |
42766 | Has he a telegraph instrument there? |
42766 | Has he been in the employ of the company since? |
42766 | Has it been generally followed by violence, so far as your observation and knowledge extends? |
42766 | Has it been the custom on your road to get a larger rate from New York than from Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Has not that been the case in all business for the last year? |
42766 | Has that been the case for any length of time? |
42766 | Has the National Guard been increased under your administration? |
42766 | Has the Secretary of the Commonwealth, or his deputy, authority, under general instructions, to issue proclamations, in the absence of the Governor? |
42766 | Has there been strikes? |
42766 | Has this reduction been general in all the mines, the same per centage? |
42766 | Have I not answered that question a dozen times? |
42766 | Have any conversation with the officers? |
42766 | Have any of those threats ever been carried out? |
42766 | Have both of those men been tried? |
42766 | Have no knowledge of any being killed-- children or women? |
42766 | Have there been cars enough since? |
42766 | Have they ever taken any steps to bring on your trial? |
42766 | Have they got control, equal to yourself, with any police in this city? |
42766 | Have you a copy of them? |
42766 | Have you a family? |
42766 | Have you a police commission or police committee, that have any special duty in taking charge of the police or in regulating the police? |
42766 | Have you a telegram notifying you of the issue of the first proclamation? |
42766 | Have you an extensive acquaintance with the laboring men? |
42766 | Have you an idea how many employés are employed in the different mills in the cities of Allegheny and Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Have you any call-- is there any call to assemble the police, by telegraph or otherwise? |
42766 | Have you any estimate of the loss of freight? |
42766 | Have you any idea as to how many were hurt? |
42766 | Have you any idea of the number of thousands of laborers employed in and about Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Have you any idea? |
42766 | Have you any influence with Bob?" |
42766 | Have you any information concerning the riots of July, the subject which we are investigating? |
42766 | Have you any information, or did you see any of the occurrences on Saturday-- Sunday that would be? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge about what time that fire commenced? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge as to the necessity of calling the military to this place? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge as to what was done by the railroad company after that time? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge as to who sent for the troops at Philadelphia, who ordered them here? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of any disagreements between the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and their employés prior to that date? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of any officer of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company calling on the Governor for troops? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of any steps taken by the mayor to preserve the peace? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of new facts not related by the other engineers or conductors here who have testified? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of people coming to Pittsburgh at any time previous to the 19th of July? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of some men being clubbed and beaten and injured? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the causes leading to the riot, at all? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the causes leading to the strike? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the causes leading to the strike? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the causes leading to this strike first? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the causes leading to this strike? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the causes? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the number of new men employed? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge of the occurrences during that time in Allegheny City? |
42766 | Have you any knowledge whether the mayor tried to subdue the riot or assist the sheriff in trying to subdue the riot? |
42766 | Have you any new facts to communicate to us that have not been gone through? |
42766 | Have you any other information on that subject-- the cause, which is, as you have expressed, this man''s opinion? |
42766 | Have you any personal knowledge of any of the occurrences over there? |
42766 | Have you any recollection of a party of eighty sent to the work- house? |
42766 | Have you any recollection of the military being called out at that time? |
42766 | Have you any scabs in this county? |
42766 | Have you anything else to communicate, Mr. Bennett? |
42766 | Have you anything else to say? |
42766 | Have you asked for your discharge? |
42766 | Have you been able to gather anything from the men, showing that they had a pre- arranged plan for a strike that morning? |
42766 | Have you copies of those telegrams? |
42766 | Have you demanded a trial? |
42766 | Have you ever been a conductor on passenger trains? |
42766 | Have you ever been in active service in the army? |
42766 | Have you ever found it out since? |
42766 | Have you ever had any military experience in the army? |
42766 | Have you ever had any strikes in your works? |
42766 | Have you ever heard? |
42766 | Have you ever stated to any person before to- day, outside of the court, or anywhere, that you heard officers of companies give the command to fire? |
42766 | Have you ever succeeded in getting anything from the employés themselves-- any statement from them that would lead you to that conclusion? |
42766 | Have you ever told anybody that you heard the firing there, and heard the command given to fire? |
42766 | Have you given all the conversation that took place as near as you recollect it? |
42766 | Have you got any idea who wrote that article, if you were paid for it? |
42766 | Have you got them in your possession? |
42766 | Have you got your files bound for the month of July? |
42766 | Have you had any conversation or communications with any of the railroad employés who were engaged in the strike, other than Mr. Ammon? |
42766 | Have you had any difficulties lately-- any violence, that is the last few years? |
42766 | Have you had any experience in active service in the army? |
42766 | Have you had experience before with strikers? |
42766 | Have you had experience in the army? |
42766 | Have you learned whether it was by a pre- concerted arrangement that they should strike here? |
42766 | Have you not had a strike among your puddlers, within the last few years? |
42766 | Have you not had quite a number of strikes among the employés in the mills or factories in this vicinity, during the last five or six years? |
42766 | Have you not heard an estimate of the number in this vicinity or this county? |
42766 | Have you not stated several times, on the street corners, to different parties, that you heard General Pearson give the command to fire? |
42766 | Have you observed the cut-- have you been up there? |
42766 | Have you seen any of the threatening letters-- letters with coffins,& c., on them? |
42766 | Have you talked with them since any? |
42766 | Have you testified as to that? |
42766 | Have you that dispatch, or can you get it? |
42766 | Have you that dispatch? |
42766 | Have you the record now in your office? |
42766 | Have you them here? |
42766 | Have you those dispatches? |
42766 | Have you told anybody outside that you heard the command to fire given? |
42766 | Have you told persons you heard General Pearson give the command to fire? |
42766 | He allowed the passenger trains to run? |
42766 | He asked you to go out, did n''t he? |
42766 | He called in the capacity of a private citizen? |
42766 | He can give us an approximate estimate? |
42766 | He did his duty well? |
42766 | He did it upon his own responsibility? |
42766 | He did n''t fire up into the air? |
42766 | He did n''t make that? |
42766 | He did n''t offer you any protection? |
42766 | He did n''t say it as though he meant business? |
42766 | He did not let them go until he got that? |
42766 | He did not respond? |
42766 | He did not say not to fire? |
42766 | He did not tell you himself? |
42766 | He first asked you whether he had left General Brinton in command? |
42766 | He followed them up? |
42766 | He gave it in a low tone of voice? |
42766 | He had a fit, did n''t he? |
42766 | He had a gun? |
42766 | He had a uniform on, and I asked him the question:"How long have you been here?" |
42766 | He had his back towards the watch- box when the command was given to fire? |
42766 | He had lived in Allegheny for some time? |
42766 | He had no conversation with Mr. Cassatt in your presence, that you recollect of? |
42766 | He had no trouble in beating the crowd away? |
42766 | He had nothing then by which you could distinguish him as an officer-- he had no shoulder straps? |
42766 | He had notified you that there would be an attempt made? |
42766 | He had them one night, had he not? |
42766 | He is a brother? |
42766 | He is a good listener? |
42766 | He is an employé of the railroad? |
42766 | He is not the one that signed it? |
42766 | He is subject to the orders of the commissioners? |
42766 | He knew it had been left there? |
42766 | He made no effort to increase his police force by swearing in extra men? |
42766 | He made no reply when Mr. Follensbee offered to do special duty? |
42766 | He mentioned the Liberty street track? |
42766 | He only received eighteen dollars a month? |
42766 | He proposed that if he was in Rome he would do as Rome does? |
42766 | He referred to the Liberty street track? |
42766 | He replied"Yes, but the rioters also have arms?" |
42766 | He said he expected to help pay for it? |
42766 | He said to me: Fred., are you willing to go out? |
42766 | He said you were not to do anything at all, except to go out with those trains? |
42766 | He said, why do n''t you stay down in Sharpsburg? |
42766 | He said,"Your men to fire?" |
42766 | He says,"Do n''t you see it?" |
42766 | He seemed to express the ideas of all of them-- he was a man of intelligence? |
42766 | He showed me his hand, and says he,"Do you see that I am a workingman myself? |
42766 | He stated that he had been ordered to fire? |
42766 | He took possession of the dispatcher''s office? |
42766 | He was among the strikers? |
42766 | He was delivering the orders of the Adjutant General, as you understood? |
42766 | He was dressed like a laboring man? |
42766 | He was engaged in rioting? |
42766 | He was engaged in the riot? |
42766 | He was facing in that direction? |
42766 | He was further out on Penn avenue? |
42766 | He was general superintendent and dispatcher both? |
42766 | He was just simply dressed as a civilian, with the exception of his blouse and brass buttons? |
42766 | He was left at the arsenal? |
42766 | He was near the elevator? |
42766 | He was not a railroad official? |
42766 | He was not here? |
42766 | He was not one of the soldiers who put the mob back? |
42766 | He was not present? |
42766 | He was not there at all-- how far is that from where the firing was? |
42766 | He was not with his command? |
42766 | He was out there during the day Sunday looking over the crowd? |
42766 | He was supposed to be the leader in the start? |
42766 | He was the only one? |
42766 | He was the person that struck Mr. Watt? |
42766 | He was throwing water at that time without any molestation from the mob? |
42766 | He was to follow strictly the regulations that had been adopted heretofore? |
42766 | He was to form a junction with Guthrie''s troops where? |
42766 | He went to Bob-- when he wanted anything he went to Bob? |
42766 | Hear any expressions from any of them? |
42766 | Heard no order to fire? |
42766 | Heavy artillery? |
42766 | Held the post of honor? |
42766 | Help to guard it? |
42766 | Here in the city? |
42766 | Here is another addressed to J. D. L.:"Can you arrange to send me to- day some hundreds of cartridges? |
42766 | Hid you have any conversation with them? |
42766 | Hid you hear any order to fire given? |
42766 | Hold on until I return? |
42766 | How are they paid? |
42766 | How are those men paid-- the brakemen and conductors-- by the hour, or the day, or the month? |
42766 | How close to the mob? |
42766 | How close was he to the men he gave the order to? |
42766 | How close were they to the persons carrying on the riot? |
42766 | How close were you to him? |
42766 | How close were you to him? |
42766 | How close were you to the military when the firing took place? |
42766 | How close were you? |
42766 | How could you know that he wore a white vest? |
42766 | How deep is a round- house generally dug out-- from the top of the rails down? |
42766 | How did freights compare in July last with what they had been for three months preceding that time? |
42766 | How did he come to give you that letter? |
42766 | How did he show the white feather? |
42766 | How did it happen-- how did he come to strike you? |
42766 | How did rates compare the fore part of last season with the year before, at the same time? |
42766 | How did that place become saturated with oil-- by the mob? |
42766 | How did the amount of freight or tonnage during the months of May and June, 1877, compare with the months of May and June, 1876? |
42766 | How did the boys take the remarks of the Governor? |
42766 | How did the business compare with the amount of business done at the same time in the previous year? |
42766 | How did the business of your company compare with the business done by the company for the three months preceding that time? |
42766 | How did the firing by the militia commence-- was it one shot-- one shot or a volley? |
42766 | How did the idea that there would be a meeting there get abroad? |
42766 | How did the local rates compare with the previous year? |
42766 | How did the news reach you? |
42766 | How did the prices for the carrying of freight compare in 1877 with those in 1876? |
42766 | How did the troops march out-- in good order? |
42766 | How did their wages compare with the wages of your men? |
42766 | How did these men of this side? |
42766 | How did these people define a strike? |
42766 | How did they come and take possession of the switches, and stop trains from running? |
42766 | How did they come out? |
42766 | How did they get there? |
42766 | How did they have their arms when the order to charge bayonets was given? |
42766 | How did they march up-- company front-- in line of battle? |
42766 | How did they reach you? |
42766 | How did they talk then? |
42766 | How did this price range in 1877, as compared with 1873, at the time of the panic? |
42766 | How did you accomplish that? |
42766 | How did you account for the absence of the names of your men? |
42766 | How did you arm them? |
42766 | How did you expect to know that these men went to their homes, if you did not follow them or have them watched? |
42766 | How did you get that idea? |
42766 | How did you get that information? |
42766 | How did you get your notice? |
42766 | How did you go out? |
42766 | How did you happen to be here? |
42766 | How did you introduce him? |
42766 | How did you know he had run away? |
42766 | How did you know the order was given by Pearson? |
42766 | How did you learn his name? |
42766 | How did you learn it? |
42766 | How did you learn of the fact? |
42766 | How did you march? |
42766 | How did you obtain that information? |
42766 | How did you obtain this information? |
42766 | How do the brakemen get paid, and the conductors? |
42766 | How do you account for the apathy or cowardice that existed in the city about going out to take steps to stop this? |
42766 | How do you know he was sun- struck? |
42766 | How do you know it was Sheriff Fife? |
42766 | How do you know that he had? |
42766 | How do you know that? |
42766 | How do you know who gave that command? |
42766 | How do you know? |
42766 | How do you mean? |
42766 | How do you mean? |
42766 | How early in the evening did the General adopt that as a plan of action? |
42766 | How extensive is that disposition? |
42766 | How extensive was that sympathy-- to what extent was it carried among the people? |
42766 | How extensive was the arrangement-- how wide did it extend? |
42766 | How extensive was the fire in and about the round- house at the time you went out? |
42766 | How extensive was the fire then in the round- house? |
42766 | How far away from his command? |
42766 | How far away were you? |
42766 | How far back do you want I should go? |
42766 | How far beyond the silk- factory? |
42766 | How far did he march after you met him? |
42766 | How far did he march with your command before he stopped? |
42766 | How far did it pass until it got to those officers that did give the command? |
42766 | How far did you go before receiving intelligence of the trouble? |
42766 | How far did you march to the rear? |
42766 | How far distant from you was that first firing by the troops? |
42766 | How far do you live from Union depot? |
42766 | How far down towards the city did the crowd come? |
42766 | How far from Scranton is it? |
42766 | How far from here? |
42766 | How far from the Union depot? |
42766 | How far from the house? |
42766 | How far from the men? |
42766 | How far from the mob? |
42766 | How far from the tracks? |
42766 | How far from them? |
42766 | How far had the fire approached towards the city at that time? |
42766 | How far had the fire progressed towards the depot when you got there? |
42766 | How far is Wilkensburg from Pittsburgh? |
42766 | How far is it from Sharpsburg to Claremont? |
42766 | How far is it from there to Pitcairn''s office? |
42766 | How far is that from the destruction of the property? |
42766 | How far was General Pearson out from the military when this command to fire was given? |
42766 | How far was that from where you stood when the command was given? |
42766 | How far was this cannon stationed from the position you held? |
42766 | How far were the guards out on the side towards Philadelphia? |
42766 | How far were the other cars that were burning from this one? |
42766 | How far were they run back? |
42766 | How far were you from him? |
42766 | How far were you from him? |
42766 | How far were you from that watch- house? |
42766 | How far were you from the engine? |
42766 | How far were you from the police when you heard the shot fired? |
42766 | How far were you from them at the time the order to charge bayonets was given? |
42766 | How far were you-- was it from the city of Scranton where you worked in July? |
42766 | How far? |
42766 | How far? |
42766 | How had it been there during the night? |
42766 | How happened there to be such a large crowd on the crossing at the time the Philadelphia troops marched up? |
42766 | How interview them? |
42766 | How is it? |
42766 | How large a crowd did they find to contend with? |
42766 | How large a crowd did you encounter when you left the round- house? |
42766 | How large a crowd did you find there? |
42766 | How large a crowd of men was there gathered about there during Thursday? |
42766 | How large a crowd of strikers was together at any one time? |
42766 | How large a crowd ran in that direction, about? |
42766 | How large a crowd was assembled there? |
42766 | How large a crowd was at Twenty- eighth street that morning-- Friday morning? |
42766 | How large a crowd was at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | How large a crowd was engaged in burning and plundering? |
42766 | How large a crowd was gathered there? |
42766 | How large a crowd was on Seventh avenue? |
42766 | How large a crowd was surrounding the soldiers? |
42766 | How large a crowd was that? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there at any one time during the day, Thursday? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there during the day Monday, or was there any? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there during the day on Monday? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there or around there when they marched out? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there, when you got there Sunday? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there? |
42766 | How large a crowd was there? |
42766 | How large a crowd went through? |
42766 | How large a crowd? |
42766 | How large a force was assembled there of the rioters when you got there? |
42766 | How large a force was organized? |
42766 | How large a number assembled? |
42766 | How large a police force do you have? |
42766 | How large a police force had you at the time? |
42766 | How large a police force have you? |
42766 | How large a posse could you have raised in the city to go out there and restore order, if the mayor had made a call, or a demand for a posse? |
42766 | How large about? |
42766 | How large was it Saturday? |
42766 | How large was it in the morning early? |
42766 | How large was it on Friday morning? |
42766 | How large was it on Saturday morning? |
42766 | How large was it then? |
42766 | How large was that crowd? |
42766 | How large was the crowd at that time? |
42766 | How large was the crowd at that time? |
42766 | How large was the crowd at that time? |
42766 | How large was the crowd at that time? |
42766 | How large was the crowd during Saturday night? |
42766 | How large was the crowd during Saturday-- and what was their-- were they demonstrative or not? |
42766 | How large was the crowd of half grown boys around them? |
42766 | How large was the crowd on Friday afternoon, when Mayor Phillips was at the depot? |
42766 | How large was the crowd on Sunday morning? |
42766 | How large was the crowd that night? |
42766 | How large was the crowd there during the night-- take an average.--I mean the crowd engaged in burning or pillaging or plundering? |
42766 | How large was the crowd there; about how many? |
42766 | How large was the crowd when the troops came out? |
42766 | How large was the crowd? |
42766 | How large was the crowd? |
42766 | How large was the gathering of the citizens at the meeting? |
42766 | How large was the mob during Sunday? |
42766 | How large was the number of actual strikers collected together there during Friday and Saturday and Sunday-- taking in those days? |
42766 | How large was the response-- was the meeting in response to the mayor''s call? |
42766 | How large was the vigilance committee that was organized-- that you were at the head of? |
42766 | How large were the fines? |
42766 | How large? |
42766 | How long after Lieutenant Ash was brought into the hospital was it before Doctor Robinson arrived? |
42766 | How long after that fire did the troops commence firing that were standing to their right, facing up the hill? |
42766 | How long after that was that order given to fire? |
42766 | How long after the command to fire was given do you discharge your piece? |
42766 | How long after the command was given did you hear the firing? |
42766 | How long after the command was given to charge bayonets before the firing commenced? |
42766 | How long after the military left did you go to the round- house? |
42766 | How long after the railroad employés struck? |
42766 | How long after you got to the oil- house, did you hear the firing? |
42766 | How long after you had left the round- house? |
42766 | How long after you heard the command given to fire did the firing take place? |
42766 | How long after you heard the command to fire did this shooting commence? |
42766 | How long after you made that call on the mayor was it that they broke into the store? |
42766 | How long afterwards? |
42766 | How long before General Brinton''s command left the ground there? |
42766 | How long before that had he been lieutenant of police? |
42766 | How long before that morning was it known to the men that the order had been issued to run double- headers? |
42766 | How long before that was it talked about? |
42766 | How long before that was the order issued to run double- headers? |
42766 | How long before the burning was it that you speak about? |
42766 | How long before the fire began did you see General Pearson? |
42766 | How long before the firing did you give the command to load? |
42766 | How long before the firing? |
42766 | How long before the mob came down had you made this call upon the mayor? |
42766 | How long before the round- house was consumed by fire? |
42766 | How long before this strike? |
42766 | How long before was the other reduction? |
42766 | How long did Brown keep that position? |
42766 | How long did he go prior to your starting? |
42766 | How long did he remain at the hotel? |
42766 | How long did he remain there? |
42766 | How long did it take you to raise that force of yours? |
42766 | How long did that crowd continue there at the outer depot-- of strikers? |
42766 | How long did that crowd you speak of in Allegheny City, that you ran into on Saturday nights-- how long had that crowd remained in force there? |
42766 | How long did the militia stand fire from the mob? |
42766 | How long did the riotous proceedings continue-- in other words, when did the mob disperse and cease their burning and destruction of property? |
42766 | How long did the troops remain in the city, then? |
42766 | How long did the troops remain stationed as you have described? |
42766 | How long did this firing last? |
42766 | How long did you continue up this organization of citizens? |
42766 | How long did you halt at the arsenal? |
42766 | How long did you keep them in your possession? |
42766 | How long did you keep those policemen there in the Twelfth ward? |
42766 | How long did you know that before the assemblage? |
42766 | How long did you occupy that position? |
42766 | How long did you remain at Major Evans''? |
42766 | How long did you remain at Union depot? |
42766 | How long did you remain at the Union depot with your command? |
42766 | How long did you remain at the Union depot, Saturday? |
42766 | How long did you remain at the city hall? |
42766 | How long did you remain at the crossing? |
42766 | How long did you remain at work playing on the fire? |
42766 | How long did you remain in service? |
42766 | How long did you remain in that position before you moved into the round- house? |
42766 | How long did you remain inside of the grounds? |
42766 | How long did you remain standing there in conversation? |
42766 | How long did you remain there? |
42766 | How long did you remain there? |
42766 | How long did you remain there? |
42766 | How long did you remain up at the top of the hill? |
42766 | How long did you stay there? |
42766 | How long did you stay? |
42766 | How long had they been discharged before that? |
42766 | How long had you been acting as a freight brakeman? |
42766 | How long had you been mayor previous to that time? |
42766 | How long had you been railroading? |
42766 | How long had you been there? |
42766 | How long had you occupied that position? |
42766 | How long has he resided in the city of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | How long have you been employed in that capacity? |
42766 | How long have you been in their employ, and in what capacity? |
42766 | How long have you been married? |
42766 | How long have you been running on trains that run in that way? |
42766 | How long have you been sheriff? |
42766 | How long have you been there? |
42766 | How long have you been working on the railroad? |
42766 | How long have you filled that position? |
42766 | How long have you held that position? |
42766 | How long have you held that position? |
42766 | How long have you held that position? |
42766 | How long have you held that position? |
42766 | How long have you known him? |
42766 | How long have you occupied that position? |
42766 | How long have you occupied that position? |
42766 | How long have you resided there? |
42766 | How long have you resided there? |
42766 | How long is this cut? |
42766 | How long previous had they made this arrangement? |
42766 | How long previous to the Philadelphia troops coming up there had you fallen back? |
42766 | How long was Marshall sent to the penitentiary for? |
42766 | How long was it after the troops left until you got playing upon the fire at the round- house? |
42766 | How long was it before Doctor Lemoyne arrived? |
42766 | How long was it before the mob re- assembled? |
42766 | How long was it before your men resumed their work after the strike? |
42766 | How long was it kept open? |
42766 | How long was that kept up? |
42766 | How long was the crowd gone before they returned with the soldiers? |
42766 | How long was the regiment here? |
42766 | How long was you idle? |
42766 | How long were they kept by the policemen? |
42766 | How long were they kept closed? |
42766 | How long were those men on duty there? |
42766 | How long were you in the army? |
42766 | How long were you in the service? |
42766 | How long were you on the road? |
42766 | How long were you out? |
42766 | How long were you railroading? |
42766 | How long were you there on Friday? |
42766 | How long were you there? |
42766 | How long? |
42766 | How long? |
42766 | How long? |
42766 | How many actual strikers were there? |
42766 | How many came towards the steel- works on the flat? |
42766 | How many came up on the train from the Ninth ward of Allegheny City with you? |
42766 | How many cannon had you that they could have taken and moved off? |
42766 | How many cars and engines did you lose? |
42766 | How many cars can you put out to- day? |
42766 | How many citizens were there in arms that night do you think? |
42766 | How many citizens? |
42766 | How many companies are there in this Sixth regiment? |
42766 | How many companies came on the ground at that time? |
42766 | How many companies were there of your regiment at one time? |
42766 | How many composed the crowd at that time? |
42766 | How many could you have got to go out there at that time, do you think? |
42766 | How many crews had you ready then? |
42766 | How many days could you average per week? |
42766 | How many days did you make in any month? |
42766 | How many days did you make in any one month? |
42766 | How many days was it before the road was opened so that the detachment could have gone to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | How many did he say he had? |
42766 | How many did that posse number? |
42766 | How many did they arrest? |
42766 | How many did you get? |
42766 | How many did you get? |
42766 | How many did you have on Saturday afternoon when you went out to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | How many did you have on duty during the day-- Monday? |
42766 | How many did you hold for court? |
42766 | How many did you say there were of you that went ahead of the military? |
42766 | How many did you see surrender their arms? |
42766 | How many did you succeed in getting? |
42766 | How many dispatches were received? |
42766 | How many during the day? |
42766 | How many engines had you? |
42766 | How many engines were in there at that time? |
42766 | How many guns and pistols were taken out of your store? |
42766 | How many guns? |
42766 | How many have been tried? |
42766 | How many hours had you been in active service and on duty? |
42766 | How many hours? |
42766 | How many hundred men do you think there were there that were riotous or disposed to be lawless? |
42766 | How many less men did you have at night? |
42766 | How many lodges do you know of, or did you, at that time? |
42766 | How many members belonged to the division you were connected with? |
42766 | How many men about in the regiment? |
42766 | How many men came from the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern? |
42766 | How many men composed your company? |
42766 | How many men did he have on arrival? |
42766 | How many men did you get that afternoon on actual duty-- the night force? |
42766 | How many men did you have as trainmen for one train? |
42766 | How many men did you have control of? |
42766 | How many men did you have when you left for Scranton? |
42766 | How many men did you have? |
42766 | How many men did your company employ? |
42766 | How many men do the American iron works employ, do you know? |
42766 | How many men fired after that? |
42766 | How many men from Beaver county came up? |
42766 | How many men got in front? |
42766 | How many men had he? |
42766 | How many men had you at night, or about how many, when you dismissed the regiment? |
42766 | How many men had you at that time? |
42766 | How many men had you in your company? |
42766 | How many men had you, who had agreed to strike? |
42766 | How many men have you in all the regiment? |
42766 | How many men in a company? |
42766 | How many men went with you to the Duquesne depot? |
42766 | How many men were arrested in that crowd on Thursday in the vicinity of the trouble? |
42766 | How many men were discharged from the day force? |
42766 | How many men were discharged from the fire department? |
42766 | How many men were engaged in burning and running down the cars then? |
42766 | How many men were engaged in burning cars, or in the actual destruction of property there, during Sunday? |
42766 | How many men were engaged in that? |
42766 | How many men were in that company? |
42766 | How many men were inside of the grounds? |
42766 | How many men were killed there? |
42766 | How many men were on the track in front, and waved and signaled to stop? |
42766 | How many men were regularly stationed in that district? |
42766 | How many men were there in a squad? |
42766 | How many men were there in the company, when they represented one hundred and fifty- one years? |
42766 | How many men were there that broke into the store? |
42766 | How many men were there when you left to go to dinner? |
42766 | How many men were there with you? |
42766 | How many men were together on Monday? |
42766 | How many men were with officer White? |
42766 | How many men were wounded in going out? |
42766 | How many men would it have taken to have stopped that that night? |
42766 | How many men would it have taken to protect you sufficiently? |
42766 | How many men would it have taken to protect you? |
42766 | How many men, do you judge, were engaged in this burning? |
42766 | How many miles of railroad had this trouble? |
42766 | How many of Colonel Gray''s regiment was in sympathy with the strikers? |
42766 | How many of his staff officers were present at the time this conversation occurred? |
42766 | How many of the Black Hussars were with you? |
42766 | How many of the soldiers fired at that time-- at the first command? |
42766 | How many of the soldiers were there? |
42766 | How many of them denied it? |
42766 | How many of them did he fine? |
42766 | How many of them did you meet there? |
42766 | How many of them had been suspended? |
42766 | How many of them? |
42766 | How many of them? |
42766 | How many of them? |
42766 | How many of them? |
42766 | How many of them? |
42766 | How many of these were there in the city of Reading? |
42766 | How many of those discharged policemen were at the city hall on Thursday when those ten men went out? |
42766 | How many of those men came back to your assistance? |
42766 | How many of those men met you? |
42766 | How many of those men were there then? |
42766 | How many of you went out together? |
42766 | How many of you? |
42766 | How many of your deputies did you take with you that night? |
42766 | How many of your men remained there on the ground? |
42766 | How many of your posse were tried? |
42766 | How many officers and men does the night force consist of? |
42766 | How many officers did you hear give this command to fire? |
42766 | How many officers were among them? |
42766 | How many on Friday? |
42766 | How many on Friday? |
42766 | How many people were engaged in this throwing? |
42766 | How many people were killed and wounded upon the hill- side? |
42766 | How many people were there along Diamond street when you took these clothes out? |
42766 | How many persons were killed? |
42766 | How many pieces? |
42766 | How many pistol shots were fired before this shot? |
42766 | How many police officers were there at any one time? |
42766 | How many police were on duty at the time in the city? |
42766 | How many police were on the engines? |
42766 | How many police were there at that time? |
42766 | How many police were there engaged in that battle? |
42766 | How many policemen came up? |
42766 | How many policemen did you see around the vicinity at that time? |
42766 | How many policemen do you think you could have gathered up that afternoon for duty? |
42766 | How many policemen had been discharged prior to Thursday? |
42766 | How many policemen were there? |
42766 | How many policemen would it have taken to have driven them away at that time? |
42766 | How many policemen? |
42766 | How many prisoners did you have arrested up there? |
42766 | How many railroad men did you converse with, do you think, that led you to form your conclusions? |
42766 | How many railroad men were there? |
42766 | How many reports did you get? |
42766 | How many responded on Monday? |
42766 | How many rods or feet from the mob? |
42766 | How many rooms were there down stairs? |
42766 | How many rounds did General Brinton have with him in the round- house? |
42766 | How many rounds of ammunition had you? |
42766 | How many rows of buttons had he on his coat? |
42766 | How many shots did you see him fire? |
42766 | How many shots were fired at first? |
42766 | How many shots were fired before the militia fired? |
42766 | How many shots were fired by the crowd before the militia began to fire? |
42766 | How many shots were fired by the mob, before there was any firing from the soldiers? |
42766 | How many shots were fired from that crowd? |
42766 | How many shots were fired? |
42766 | How many shots? |
42766 | How many soldiers were there? |
42766 | How many soldiers? |
42766 | How many stones were there thrown? |
42766 | How many trains were to go out at that hour-- eight- forty? |
42766 | How many trips do you make between these points a day? |
42766 | How many troops had you then? |
42766 | How many was there, do you suppose, altogether? |
42766 | How many went out at four o''clock? |
42766 | How many went to jail? |
42766 | How many were actually engaged in the arson and rioting at that time? |
42766 | How many were actually engaged in the burning and riot, when you were out at the scene of the riot? |
42766 | How many were actually engaged in the riot at that time? |
42766 | How many were arrested by that constable? |
42766 | How many were arrested of the posse and tried? |
42766 | How many were assembled there at the silk- works? |
42766 | How many were at Twenty- eighth street on Saturday? |
42766 | How many were at their posts? |
42766 | How many were engaged in actual riot and arson out at Twenty- eighth street, when you were there with the bishop? |
42766 | How many were engaged in firing the cars during the day-- Sunday? |
42766 | How many were engaged in the riotous proceedings? |
42766 | How many were engaged in the strike? |
42766 | How many were fined? |
42766 | How many were indicted for murder? |
42766 | How many were killed in the conflict that took place that evening? |
42766 | How many were killed? |
42766 | How many were reported as going to throw down their arms? |
42766 | How many were standing there then? |
42766 | How many were there in your posse that were firing? |
42766 | How many were there? |
42766 | How many were there? |
42766 | How many were there? |
42766 | How many were there? |
42766 | How many were to get aboard the train there? |
42766 | How many were with this fellow that made this remark to you? |
42766 | How many were with you? |
42766 | How many were wounded in the conflict? |
42766 | How many would it number in your opinion? |
42766 | How many would you judge were there at that time? |
42766 | How many would you judge? |
42766 | How many wounded were brought to the Union depot? |
42766 | How many wounded? |
42766 | How many, and who were they-- what organization? |
42766 | How many? |
42766 | How many? |
42766 | How many? |
42766 | How many? |
42766 | How many? |
42766 | How many? |
42766 | How much could you make a day? |
42766 | How much did you average? |
42766 | How much did you get a day when they drove you out of the shop? |
42766 | How much did you make? |
42766 | How much did you reduce the wages? |
42766 | How much ground was covered by each one of these patrolmen? |
42766 | How much ground would a man have to cover taking in all the side streets? |
42766 | How much of a reduction was made then? |
42766 | How much of a shower of stones was it? |
42766 | How much of that was expended in the operation? |
42766 | How much they were getting? |
42766 | How much was it after the reduction in March? |
42766 | How much was that reduction? |
42766 | How much were they getting before the last reduction? |
42766 | How much were they getting before the reduction in March? |
42766 | How much were they getting before the reduction? |
42766 | How much were you making per day at the time you had to quit work? |
42766 | How much were you paid by the car? |
42766 | How much would they puddle per day, on an average? |
42766 | How much? |
42766 | How near did you go? |
42766 | How near were you to this body of men-- the Philadelphia troops? |
42766 | How near were you to where General Pearson stood when this command was given? |
42766 | How often do you make your trips? |
42766 | How old a man is he? |
42766 | How old a man was he? |
42766 | How soon after the firing did you go down to this telegraph office? |
42766 | How soon after the soldiers were in did they begin to attack them? |
42766 | How soon after you came back was it before the citizens began to organize into companies for the purpose of protection? |
42766 | How soon did you get to the round- house, after the troops left? |
42766 | How soon did you get up there after the troops went out? |
42766 | How soon were you up to the round- house after the troops vacated it? |
42766 | How was General Pearson dressed that afternoon? |
42766 | How was General Pearson dressed that day-- could you see? |
42766 | How was General Pearson dressed? |
42766 | How was General Pearson dressed? |
42766 | How was he dressed in the morning that you saw him? |
42766 | How was he dressed that day? |
42766 | How was he dressed that day? |
42766 | How was he dressed when he came out? |
42766 | How was he dressed? |
42766 | How was he dressed? |
42766 | How was he dressed? |
42766 | How was he dressed? |
42766 | How was he dressed? |
42766 | How was he dressed? |
42766 | How was he dressed? |
42766 | How was he when he returned? |
42766 | How was it after the riot? |
42766 | How was it as to being demonstrative or boisterous? |
42766 | How was it at the railroad depot, and about the railroad offices? |
42766 | How was it before the reduction? |
42766 | How was it fired? |
42766 | How was it in regard to any boisterous or noisy demonstrations? |
42766 | How was it throughout the country? |
42766 | How was the crowd on Friday morning? |
42766 | How was the feeling outside the city, so far as you know? |
42766 | How was the letter signed? |
42766 | How was the other man-- what kind of a character or reputation had he? |
42766 | How were freights after the strike was over? |
42766 | How were the different men wounded? |
42766 | How were they dressed? |
42766 | How were they dressed? |
42766 | How were they marching, in order? |
42766 | How were they stopped? |
42766 | How were they uniformed? |
42766 | How were you dressed when you met Major Buffington? |
42766 | How were you traveling? |
42766 | How were your troops supplied with ammunition? |
42766 | How wide was it to extend over the country? |
42766 | How would you distinguish an officer? |
42766 | How; were they on good terms-- the crowd and the troops? |
42766 | How? |
42766 | How? |
42766 | How? |
42766 | I am speaking of the city and county officials? |
42766 | I believe you said that you were about the last man leaving it, did n''t you? |
42766 | I desire to know whether the citizens were not in sympathy with the strikers? |
42766 | I do not claim to be a newspaper man, but it would keep me pretty busy to make that out? |
42766 | I do not know anything about the present force? |
42766 | I have understood that there was considerable grumbling and growling about the expense for that thing-- how much was that? |
42766 | I judge it was-- perhaps it was a little after that-- what was the date of that? |
42766 | I know we used every effort-- do you want me to explain why? |
42766 | I said to him, when did you hear that firing-- when that firing began, did you see anything in the streets? |
42766 | I said to him:"Are you a railroader?" |
42766 | I said, I do n''t see many of our Allegheny boys, where are they? |
42766 | I said, boys are you not going out? |
42766 | I said,"how long are you going to stay here?" |
42766 | I said,"were there any shots fired after you heard that?" |
42766 | I said:"Where do you live?" |
42766 | I stepped aside to converse with him, and while we were talking, men would come up and say:"What shall we do now, Bob?" |
42766 | I think Mr. Pitcairn was the man I heard make the statement that he had the crews? |
42766 | I think it is hardly proper? |
42766 | I walked up to the gate, too-- the gate is armed with open pickets-- they stopped their noise, and I said,"Boys, what is the matter?" |
42766 | I want to know if the military had been deployed with two skirmish lines, why they could n''t have kept the crowd away? |
42766 | I want to know whether there was any suggestion of that kind on the part of Norris or any one else? |
42766 | I want to know why you considered yourself superseded? |
42766 | I was not in the city on Friday night? |
42766 | I wish you would state what you know about that, and who the troops were? |
42766 | I would like to know who it was from? |
42766 | I would like to know why you considered yourself superseded by any other authorities here in the city, the disturbance having commenced? |
42766 | I would say I do not know a thing about it, and I did not believe there was anything of the sort-- work together in harmony? |
42766 | If General Pearson had been in the hollow square, would n''t you have seen him? |
42766 | If I am not? |
42766 | If I understand you, the military fired on the party, not knowing who they were firing on? |
42766 | If I understand you, there was no act of violence really committed by the railroad employés? |
42766 | If a determined effort had been made on Thursday by the mayor with the police force that he had at hand, could he have dispersed the crowd? |
42766 | If a dispatch was received at your office, notifying you of a disturbance in one part of the city, and you are in another part of the city? |
42766 | If a man is sick or out of work or in distress, then he is helped? |
42766 | If a man loses his employment from any cause, he receives assistance? |
42766 | If a man strikes, he is helped quicker than if he is taken sick; was he not? |
42766 | If he had communicated any orders to General Brinton, you would have heard them? |
42766 | If he had his orders from the Governor or the commander- in- chief, then you would have obeyed his orders and dispersed? |
42766 | If he was not molested by the mob at that time, he wanted no further assistance? |
42766 | If it had not been that, as a disciplinarian and a military man, you would have considered it your duty to obey? |
42766 | If it was in danger of being destroyed? |
42766 | If not armed, they would not have been of much use? |
42766 | If so, could they have done so? |
42766 | If so, state all the circumstances that took place at that time? |
42766 | If so, will I go to the Monongahela house?" |
42766 | If struck with a brick, you would have fired? |
42766 | If the Adjutant General had gone to the scene of the riot, would he have been disturbed? |
42766 | If the committee insists upon an answer you certainly will have to answer, because you have sworn to tell the truth? |
42766 | If the company wanted you to? |
42766 | If the firing was done in the other direction how could this man be shot upon that? |
42766 | If the mayor had made a call for policemen on Thursday afternoon, how many men could he have raised? |
42766 | If the soldiers undertook to disperse the crowd assembled there, did the strikers intend to resist? |
42766 | If there are any statements you wish to make, please make them? |
42766 | If there had been a command given by the officers to fire, you think you would have heard it? |
42766 | If there had been a command given you would have heard it? |
42766 | If there had been active measures taken on Friday or Saturday, could not that mob have been dispersed and the rioting suppressed? |
42766 | If there is anything else you can enlighten us on state it? |
42766 | If there was, you would know it? |
42766 | If there were a number of men there, how did you distinguish it was General Pearson gave the command? |
42766 | If there would have been an assault made, would not the troops have been exposed without entrenchments? |
42766 | If these orders had been given, do you think that General Brinton would have obeyed them and communicated the fact to you? |
42766 | If they are dissatisfied with regard to wages, is it a part of the intent of the society to organize? |
42766 | If they had had a guide? |
42766 | If they had made the effort? |
42766 | If they had misconducted themselves you would have had them court- martialed? |
42766 | If they had played on the burning cars could they have prevented those buildings from getting on fire? |
42766 | If you can get both of those dispatches we would like to have them? |
42766 | If you had been acting on your own judgment, should you have gone there? |
42766 | If you had been protected by the police, could you have cut the fire and stopped it? |
42766 | If you had had a bold, deliberate leader, and been well armed, could you have accomplished anything in the way of driving away the crowd? |
42766 | If you had had the warrants on Thursday night, could you have arrested those parties? |
42766 | If you have anything that has not been testified, that is of any importance to our committee, make a brief statement of it? |
42766 | If you know anything of the origin or the cause of the strike, I wish you to state it to us fully? |
42766 | If you know the reasons that induced that verdict you may state them? |
42766 | If you were present at any of the efforts made by the railroad company to start their trains, you might state what occurred on Friday and Saturday? |
42766 | If you were present at that time, however, you may state what you saw? |
42766 | If you will just give us a statement of the facts that came under your observation of the riots here? |
42766 | If your fire department had been protected by the police, could you have controlled the fire? |
42766 | Immediately after the firing? |
42766 | In Allegheny City? |
42766 | In July last what were you? |
42766 | In Pittsburgh? |
42766 | In a day? |
42766 | In a party? |
42766 | In addition to these that are published in the message-- in the appendix? |
42766 | In addition to what you have stated? |
42766 | In all this confusion, you could see General Pearson give the command to fire? |
42766 | In all? |
42766 | In any communication that you had with Bob, did he assure you, or say to you, that he would not allow any property to be destroyed? |
42766 | In any way? |
42766 | In arranging for a strike, what did the railroad men propose to do-- stop all trains-- just simply quit work? |
42766 | In asking for me? |
42766 | In brief? |
42766 | In calling out the troops? |
42766 | In case of a... occurring in any part of the city, did you regard it as your duty to visit the point and ascertain? |
42766 | In case the fire department needs protection, to whom ought you to look for that protection? |
42766 | In case they are delayed on the trip, are the men not paid extra for the time they are delayed? |
42766 | In citizen''s clothes? |
42766 | In citizens dress? |
42766 | In command of his regiment? |
42766 | In communicating that to him, did you tell him that General Latta had requested you to communicate the order to him? |
42766 | In communicating to him that an officer had been sent out with an order, you communicated to him the substance of the order you saw? |
42766 | In company with some other gentlemen, did you call on the mayor during the disturbance in July last; and, if so, give us the circumstances? |
42766 | In concert with the other operator? |
42766 | In consequence of that strike, did you blow out your furnaces? |
42766 | In consequence of the riot that existed there? |
42766 | In conversation with them? |
42766 | In conversation with these men did they mention, or did you find out from them, that there was any organization among them? |
42766 | In endeavoring to suppress the riot? |
42766 | In fatigue uniform? |
42766 | In front of the elevator? |
42766 | In front of the militia? |
42766 | In front of the rank? |
42766 | In front of you? |
42766 | In full view of what was going on? |
42766 | In getting the paid police that you spoke of first, what was the reason-- what objections did they have in serving that way? |
42766 | In going out to Torrens, were you interfered with on the route? |
42766 | In his absence, would you have full command yourself? |
42766 | In his failure to return, would you not be justifiable in acting on your own judgment? |
42766 | In his retreat or march from the city to Blairsville, how far did he pass from you, from the stock- yards, how near? |
42766 | In marching out Penn street, after you left the round- house, at what gait did the troops march? |
42766 | In open order, one facing to the rear and the other to the front? |
42766 | In other words, public sentiment sympathized with the rioters? |
42766 | In other words, the police were demoralized as well as the citizens? |
42766 | In other words, you really had not any organization of the police force? |
42766 | In other words, you regarded him incapacitated for his position in consequence of his illness and mental distress? |
42766 | In plain words, they said that the strikers were doing right? |
42766 | In reference to the outbreak? |
42766 | In regard to the situation? |
42766 | In relation to General Brown-- whose duty would it be to investigate the conduct of General Brown there at that time? |
42766 | In short, those telegrams were to the effect that the rioters had possession of the railroad property at the city of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | In short, was the conduct of your troops commendable? |
42766 | In some little time he came me-- he forced himself through the lines of the military and came to me-- and said, what had I against him? |
42766 | In that arrangement to strike on the 27th of June-- how extensive was that strike to be-- how far was it to extend-- what roads was it to include? |
42766 | In that order, did he tell you to hold your position? |
42766 | In the Union depot? |
42766 | In the Union depot? |
42766 | In the absence of General Pearson, you were the highest in rank, or the senior general, were you not? |
42766 | In the absence of any superior officer, did you consider yourself chief in command of your troops, or the brigade? |
42766 | In the absence of the Governor from the State is there any one that could call out the troops? |
42766 | In the absence of the commander- in- chief, who is the senior? |
42766 | In the afternoon? |
42766 | In the afternoon? |
42766 | In the afternoon? |
42766 | In the business that you are engaged in you employed a large number of laborers? |
42766 | In the case of an outbreak, such as existed there, to whom would you apply for help? |
42766 | In the charge bayonets, did the crowd stand until your men came close to them? |
42766 | In the conversation that you had with James Park, junior, do you remember which day it was-- whether it was Friday or Saturday? |
42766 | In the conversations that you had with the men who went out in the Twelfth ward, did they give you any reasons for the outbreak and the strike? |
42766 | In the crowd of men that were assembled there when you went down to the Lackawanna office-- Delaware and Lackawanna was it? |
42766 | In the crowd? |
42766 | In the destruction of property? |
42766 | In the different strikes, in your works, was there ever any violence used by the strikers, to prevent men from working, you put in there? |
42766 | In the evening, at the Lochiel hotel, what was the nature of that call? |
42766 | In the evening? |
42766 | In the first place, where did the stones appear to come from and the pistol shots, before your men fired? |
42766 | In the forenoon of Saturday, while at work, did you hear any of the men say that they were going over there in the afternoon after they quit work? |
42766 | In the form of a demand by you, or request? |
42766 | In the interview with you, did the committee of eighteen state what their purposes or objects were for the future? |
42766 | In the interview you had with this committee, they stated their views on the reduction of ten per cent.? |
42766 | In the morning? |
42766 | In the practice of your profession, have you become acquainted, more or less, with the laboring men about the city? |
42766 | In the round- house? |
42766 | In the round- house? |
42766 | In the same building? |
42766 | In the vicinity of Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | In the vicinity where the riot was going on, or down in the city? |
42766 | In the way of suppressing the riot? |
42766 | In this direction,[ indicating?] |
42766 | In this direction? |
42766 | In this telegraph office, adjoining the round- house? |
42766 | In this vicinity? |
42766 | In what business were those men before they went out with you, as a general thing? |
42766 | In what capacity did you serve in the army? |
42766 | In what capacity did you serve in the army? |
42766 | In what capacity were you employed in July last? |
42766 | In what capacity were you employed? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what capacity? |
42766 | In what direction did the crowd go? |
42766 | In what direction did they retire? |
42766 | In what direction did you retire? |
42766 | In what direction was he facing, then? |
42766 | In what direction? |
42766 | In what direction? |
42766 | In what direction? |
42766 | In what direction? |
42766 | In what kind of mercantile business are you engaged? |
42766 | In what manner did the mob interfere with your men? |
42766 | In what order was your company drawn up-- in two lines? |
42766 | In what regiment were you? |
42766 | In what respect? |
42766 | In what way did they manifest or express sympathy with the rioters? |
42766 | In what way did they propose to protect themselves? |
42766 | In what way did they supersede you? |
42766 | In what way or what efforts did they make? |
42766 | In what way? |
42766 | In what way? |
42766 | In what words was the command given? |
42766 | In what words-- was there more than one command? |
42766 | In what words? |
42766 | In which direction? |
42766 | In which regiment? |
42766 | In whose employ was he at that time? |
42766 | In whose employ were you at that time? |
42766 | In whose employ were you in July last? |
42766 | In whose employ were you? |
42766 | In whose hands were the warrants placed? |
42766 | In whose hands were those warrants placed to execute? |
42766 | In whose handwriting are they? |
42766 | In your conversation with railroad men of the Pennsylvania Central, did you learn what their grievances were? |
42766 | In your conversation with the Governor, was there anything about the probability of a strike on the Pennsylvania railroad? |
42766 | In your duties as a roundsman, had you noticed any unusual influx of strangers into the town? |
42766 | In your efforts to keep the crossing clear, what course did you pursue? |
42766 | In your estimation, did your editorial give a representation of the general sentiment of the citizens here as a reflex of the sentiment of the people? |
42766 | In your estimation, would it require special instructions from the Governor to call out the troops? |
42766 | In your evidence, you have said that they attempted or asked you to take your gun-- who was the party that done that? |
42766 | In your examination, you have stated that you went to the round- house as soon as you could, after the troops left? |
42766 | In your experience as a detective in this city, you have gained an extensive knowledge of the people? |
42766 | In your intimate acquaintance with the people, you would take them to be people from elsewhere? |
42766 | In your judgment, did you think it was useless to attempt to drive away the mob? |
42766 | In your judgment, was this trouble here precipitated by the news of the rioting at other places? |
42766 | In your lodge? |
42766 | In your negotiations, mingling with the strikers and endeavoring to adjust matters, did you ascertain the reason or the cause of the strike? |
42766 | In your official duties, did you inquire into the causes and origin of the riots, to ascertain what were the causes and grievances complained of? |
42766 | In your opinion, could these sixteen men have cut their way out with their sabers? |
42766 | In your opinion, did that lead to the strike and trouble here? |
42766 | In your opinion, had the sheriff then exhausted his powers and resources to cope with the mob? |
42766 | In your opinion, it is bad policy to keep men working on half time? |
42766 | In your opinion, were those men that made these threats in your employ? |
42766 | In your presence? |
42766 | Including conductors and brakemen? |
42766 | Iron mill? |
42766 | Is General Pearson your senior? |
42766 | Is Reynolds living in Pittsburgh now? |
42766 | Is a ton a day all that two men can puddle? |
42766 | Is he a member of the National Guard? |
42766 | Is he in your employ now? |
42766 | Is he still here, this man, superintendent of the furnace? |
42766 | Is he subject to the order of the mayor? |
42766 | Is he the one you directed to move the division to Rochester? |
42766 | Is he the president of that road? |
42766 | Is it a part of the objects of the association to organize in strikes case they think it is best in order to get their wages raised? |
42766 | Is it a thing of very frequent occurrence-- strikes among laboring men? |
42766 | Is it below the grade of the Allegheny Valley track? |
42766 | Is it beneficial? |
42766 | Is it customary, in railroad strikes, for the men who quit work, to stop others from working, by violence or otherwise? |
42766 | Is it lengthy? |
42766 | Is it near the church that stands out at Greenwood? |
42766 | Is it not a habit for the men, when their wages are reduced, to complain? |
42766 | Is it not more for assistance in case of a strike in distress than in case of sickness? |
42766 | Is it not your duty to take charge of your police and put down any riots or disturbance within the city limits, regardless of any power on earth? |
42766 | Is it not your duty to take charge? |
42766 | Is it published in the Adjutant General''s report? |
42766 | Is it the want of demand for coal? |
42766 | Is it their custom, when they quit work, to prevent other men from working? |
42766 | Is it their prerogative to dismiss the police, or have you got control of them? |
42766 | Is n''t there a telegraph office at the superintendent''s office? |
42766 | Is not it the duty of other head officers to coöperate with the sheriff? |
42766 | Is not that generally done? |
42766 | Is not that part of your duties as a constable? |
42766 | Is not that the rule? |
42766 | Is not the editor of a paper responsible for anything that is published in his paper, whether it is an advertisement or anything else? |
42766 | Is not the military always in subjection to the civil authorities? |
42766 | Is not your power as magistrate, within the city limits, identical with those of the sheriff? |
42766 | Is that a copy of the information? |
42766 | Is that a copy of your paper for that date? |
42766 | Is that a general act? |
42766 | Is that all he said about it? |
42766 | Is that all that you know in relation to what occurred between Colonel Norris and General Brinton? |
42766 | Is that all? |
42766 | Is that dangerous that he has that right? |
42766 | Is that dispatch lost? |
42766 | Is that for engineers especially? |
42766 | Is that not a big average of loss? |
42766 | Is that not characteristic of newspaper men? |
42766 | Is that on Liberty street? |
42766 | Is that on the Allegheny road? |
42766 | Is that tendency growing, so far as your observation is concerned? |
42766 | Is that the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers? |
42766 | Is that the only building standing between these two tracks-- the Allegheny Valley track and the Pennsylvania Central, in that vicinity? |
42766 | Is that the only place where you saw police? |
42766 | Is that the same thing as the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Is that the telegraph office? |
42766 | Is that the way of it? |
42766 | Is that what I understand you? |
42766 | Is that what we must infer? |
42766 | Is that your home? |
42766 | Is the carpenter- shop not one part of the round- house? |
42766 | Is the fire department a paid department? |
42766 | Is the pay of railroad employés less, as a general thing, than that of any other ordinary avocation? |
42766 | Is there a larger proportion of employés in the manufactories and mining in this vicinity than there is elsewhere in this State? |
42766 | Is there any law by which your city is made liable for damages done within your limits? |
42766 | Is there any other person except the Governor as commander- in- chief who has authority to call out the militia? |
42766 | Is there any other secret organization of railroad men, besides the Engineers''Brotherhood, that you know of? |
42766 | Is there anything else that you know in regard to the riots that would be of interest to us? |
42766 | Is there anything else you can enlighten us on in regard to the military movements of the mob that you can think of? |
42766 | Is there anything else you wish to state to this committee? |
42766 | Is there anything else? |
42766 | Is there no similarity between this riot, and the military force meeting the enemy in the field of battle? |
42766 | Is there such a thing as a Governor_ pro tem._ in the absence of the Governor? |
42766 | Is this article written by you? |
42766 | Is this association in existence now? |
42766 | Is this of a character to give directions to General Brown or asking him for aid? |
42766 | Is this the first dispatch you received? |
42766 | It appeared to be an orderly assemblage? |
42766 | It appeared to come from that direction? |
42766 | It applied to the general superintendent? |
42766 | It came from the right, next towards the hill? |
42766 | It certainly would be a bad fix if there was nobody else that could order out the military? |
42766 | It come to the master of the Firemen''s Brotherhood of this division? |
42766 | It commenced the 19th, but the destruction of property was on the 22d? |
42766 | It did n''t? |
42766 | It did not actually take place on the different roads on the same day? |
42766 | It dispersed the crowd, did it? |
42766 | It had no connection with it? |
42766 | It has been charged by some that the troops were ordered by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company in their movements? |
42766 | It is a little rough, mayor? |
42766 | It is a secret organization? |
42766 | It is below the grade of the railroad track? |
42766 | It is dangerous for anyone to have that power? |
42766 | It is not like meeting an enemy on the field to meet these people? |
42766 | It is only a matter of opinion? |
42766 | It looked as though he was trying to exasperate them? |
42766 | It may not be so very material, but I would like to have that question answered, yes or no? |
42766 | It must have been made in the vicinity of the fire? |
42766 | It seemed to be confined entirely to railroad property? |
42766 | It was General Pearson that gave the command? |
42766 | It was a mere request, then, and not a command? |
42766 | It was a military gun, you mean? |
42766 | It was a straw hat? |
42766 | It was a verbal order? |
42766 | It was a week after the Saturday? |
42766 | It was after you got back to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | It was an understood thing they were going to strike on Friday? |
42766 | It was apparently infectious? |
42766 | It was arranged then by your union that you would strike in case of a reduction? |
42766 | It was at Seventh and Penn, if I am rightly informed? |
42766 | It was attempted to carry it into effect? |
42766 | It was brought by a young man at the ticket office? |
42766 | It was buttoned up close? |
42766 | It was curiosity? |
42766 | It was done by outsiders and strangers? |
42766 | It was done by the lawless class? |
42766 | It was during that night? |
42766 | It was either the 17th or the 24th-- which was it now? |
42766 | It was every fellow for himself? |
42766 | It was in the shape of a request, was it not? |
42766 | It was in the through traffic that there was a falling off? |
42766 | It was more that, in your judgment, that caused the trouble than low wages? |
42766 | It was morocco? |
42766 | It was not a command such as would be a command under the laws of the Commonwealth? |
42766 | It was not a regular volley of musketry? |
42766 | It was not a telegraph office you carried this man to? |
42766 | It was not any of their command that surrendered? |
42766 | It was not done at your instance? |
42766 | It was not for that purpose, then, but it was for the purpose of protecting the city you acted on Saturday? |
42766 | It was not on railroads? |
42766 | It was not out of fear the desertion took place? |
42766 | It was not possible to keep them together? |
42766 | It was not possible to take them out where they were, and take them along by hand? |
42766 | It was not so much on the mob following, as people on the sidewalk, and in the doors and windows of the houses, firing with small pistols? |
42766 | It was not so much then the price that was paid per ton as it was as to the number of cars furnished? |
42766 | It was not somebody told you that that was Pearson? |
42766 | It was not the crowd that prevented that first train from leaving? |
42766 | It was not the first car burned? |
42766 | It was not the men that were marching up to clear the crowd-- I mean marching towards the crowd? |
42766 | It was not then for the purpose of protecting the railroad property that you acted on Saturday? |
42766 | It was not until after that that you heard talk of striking? |
42766 | It was on Saturday night you were ordered by General Pearson to enter the round- house? |
42766 | It was on the steps of the watch- box? |
42766 | It was only a supposition of yours? |
42766 | It was placed in the papers by your clerk? |
42766 | It was quiet there? |
42766 | It was run by the strikers themselves? |
42766 | It was said that they would very likely take your life if you did not go away? |
42766 | It was simply a call for volunteers to go out? |
42766 | It was simply a party bent on plunder? |
42766 | It was still in the cut? |
42766 | It was taken from the head of the column? |
42766 | It was talked of in the room? |
42766 | It was that of soldiers? |
42766 | It was the bystanders? |
42766 | It was the first firing from the troops? |
42766 | It was the only reduction made since 1873? |
42766 | It was the superintendent''s office, you say? |
42766 | It was the want of work? |
42766 | It was these officers gave the command to fire? |
42766 | It was under the general direction of General Pearson? |
42766 | It was under their protection that you felt safe? |
42766 | It was understood that they had the crews ready just as soon as the track was clear, and if protection was given them, they could run trains? |
42766 | It was when that man threw himself in front of the train? |
42766 | It was while you were_ en route_ to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | It was your posse that fired? |
42766 | It went over their line? |
42766 | It would be attended to without notifying you of the fact? |
42766 | Just about the time the fire was taking hold of the elevator? |
42766 | Just answer the question? |
42766 | Just by pressing back the crowd? |
42766 | Just come to the facts? |
42766 | Just commence and give us a statement in your own way, chronologically-- give us the facts? |
42766 | Just describe how he did it; where he got his fire; how it took place? |
42766 | Just explain what effort they made to disperse the mob? |
42766 | Just gave the command to fire? |
42766 | Just give the language of the policeman as near as you can? |
42766 | Just give us the reduction? |
42766 | Just go on and make a brief statement of what you saw in relation to the riots? |
42766 | Just local? |
42766 | Just reaching the street? |
42766 | Just select them in their order? |
42766 | Just signed"Working Man?" |
42766 | Just simply marched through and back? |
42766 | Just state how you found the city as to order and quietness when you arrived home? |
42766 | Just state in this connection what rations the troops had received from the time they left Philadelphia to the time that you reached Sharpsburg? |
42766 | Just state the fact whether he offered his services, and then whether you accepted or not, and then give the reason why you did n''t accept him? |
42766 | Just state to this committee what that citizen said to Mr. Ammon? |
42766 | Just state to us now what orders you received, and when you first received them, and from whom, in relation to the riot last summer? |
42766 | Just state what knowledge you have of the occurrences? |
42766 | Just state what the conduct of the troops was during the night? |
42766 | Just state what you know of the movements of the sheriff during the riots of July last? |
42766 | Just state what you know-- what came under your own observation? |
42766 | Just state whether the citizens of Pittsburgh showed sympathy with the strikers? |
42766 | Just state whether the wages were any lower in May, June, or July, of 1877, than they were in the same months of 1876? |
42766 | Just state your rank? |
42766 | Just what you know of your own personal knowledge? |
42766 | Keep hotel? |
42766 | Keep the troops and the mob separate? |
42766 | Killed by the cars? |
42766 | Knew nothing of his conduct but what was soldierly? |
42766 | Knew nothing of that until it was issued? |
42766 | Know nothing of that? |
42766 | Knowing him to be there, or believing him to be there? |
42766 | Laborers from the factories, and rolling- mills,& c.? |
42766 | Laborers in the mines work by the day or by the ton? |
42766 | Last summer? |
42766 | Layng?" |
42766 | Left in the depot? |
42766 | Left the transfer depot? |
42766 | Less from New York to San Francisco than from Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Let me ask you, what do you mean by discriminating? |
42766 | Living in the city of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Looked as if they had a place to put it? |
42766 | Looking at the matter from the experience you have, was that plan of retaining more men than you could give full work to a good one? |
42766 | Made by Mr. Miller himself? |
42766 | Made by Mr. Watt? |
42766 | Made by whom? |
42766 | Made no attempt to have any conference with them? |
42766 | Made no effort? |
42766 | Maintained order there, did you? |
42766 | Major Baugh? |
42766 | Major Evans you say went back with you? |
42766 | Making eleven in all? |
42766 | Making threats? |
42766 | Many of this crowd were there from curiosity? |
42766 | Many stones thrown? |
42766 | March across company front? |
42766 | Marched all the way down the track? |
42766 | Mayor McCarthy? |
42766 | Mayor Phillips said to them,"What do you mean by so organized?" |
42766 | Meanwhile, the crowd as they came out of the shops, did n''t seem to recognize him, and they said,"Who is he?" |
42766 | Member of the National Guard? |
42766 | Men accustomed to manual labor? |
42766 | Men engaged in interfering with the pumps? |
42766 | Men from the manufacturing establishments? |
42766 | Men in actual employment at that time? |
42766 | Men of mature years? |
42766 | Men that had been discharged, did you see any of that kind? |
42766 | Men then in the employ of the company, or who had been up to the morning of Thursday? |
42766 | Men, women, and children, that were spectators, crying to the mob to hold the fort? |
42766 | Merely curiosity? |
42766 | Might it not have been somebody else? |
42766 | Might not that command have come from one in the line, and not from the officer in command? |
42766 | Might not that command have come from one of the men in the ranks? |
42766 | Military officers? |
42766 | Mill men, or any particular class of people? |
42766 | Missiles had been thrown? |
42766 | Mixed in with the crowd? |
42766 | More particularly that following the heading? |
42766 | More than one lodge? |
42766 | Morning service-- that would be about twelve o''clock? |
42766 | Mr. Scranton came up and said"What will we do?" |
42766 | Mr. Stewart, in short, what arrangements did you make to furnish them with rations at all? |
42766 | Mutual protection? |
42766 | Name as many as you can? |
42766 | Name some of the places? |
42766 | Named Wilson? |
42766 | Near the corner of the square of troops, next to the hill? |
42766 | Near the round- house? |
42766 | Near what cross street? |
42766 | Neither verbal or written? |
42766 | Neither was the other company that you spoke of? |
42766 | Never applied to you for assistance at all? |
42766 | Never did report? |
42766 | Never was arrested? |
42766 | Never worked? |
42766 | Night? |
42766 | No effort made by the police to interfere with him? |
42766 | No effort was made to start the trains from that time until three o''clock? |
42766 | No horses were provided for those guns? |
42766 | No knowledge of that? |
42766 | No knowledge? |
42766 | No officer of your division there-- that is, General Brinton and his command were there? |
42766 | No officers then? |
42766 | No one directed their movements? |
42766 | No one seemed to be commanding this crowd or to lead the mob-- no one seemed to be leading the mob or controlling it? |
42766 | No one there at all? |
42766 | No one was holding it? |
42766 | No one went on with you to the house? |
42766 | No orders from any one to go to Torrens station during Sunday? |
42766 | No outsiders-- no mill men? |
42766 | No particular hard feeling by the crowd against your troops? |
42766 | No proclamation calling for a police force? |
42766 | No report has ever reached you officially that he did dismiss his troops? |
42766 | No responses were made to them? |
42766 | No threats made? |
42766 | No threats were made? |
42766 | No trimmings on his coat? |
42766 | No, sir; my question is, you did what he directed you to do? |
42766 | No, sir; that day-- on Friday? |
42766 | No; as I understood-- who commands the center district? |
42766 | No; but whether while the crowd was still accumulating the troops had their arms stacked? |
42766 | No; it was before the firing on the soldiers you mean? |
42766 | No; not a good deal to keep them away? |
42766 | No; not in that position? |
42766 | No; not justifying the attack on the troops in the round- house? |
42766 | Nobody seemed to be acting in concert with him? |
42766 | None at the crossing of the railroad, were there? |
42766 | None of them went to the scene of this disturbance? |
42766 | None of them were passing back and forth, between the round- house and outside? |
42766 | Nor Doctor Donnelly''s command? |
42766 | Nor Fort Wayne? |
42766 | Nor did he make any demand on the citizens? |
42766 | Nor how many men were engaged in the burning? |
42766 | Nor in Philadelphia? |
42766 | Nor no arrests made? |
42766 | Nor on Friday in that vicinity to your knowledge? |
42766 | Nor on Saturday? |
42766 | Nor since? |
42766 | Nor since? |
42766 | Not a very strong fortification? |
42766 | Not able to compete with the crowd? |
42766 | Not afraid of one superseding the other? |
42766 | Not among the miners? |
42766 | Not as a military officer ought to give a command? |
42766 | Not asked to quit pumping? |
42766 | Not at one and the same time? |
42766 | Not at the Monongahela house? |
42766 | Not charged to the State? |
42766 | Not engaged in the actual arson and riot? |
42766 | Not formally? |
42766 | Not from the crowd? |
42766 | Not from the railroad men? |
42766 | Not many of the crowd were there at that time? |
42766 | Not on Thursday and Friday, but after the firing occurred, how was the sympathy? |
42766 | Not outside of it? |
42766 | Not over seventy- five yards away from the crossing? |
42766 | Not railroaders? |
42766 | Not regular rations? |
42766 | Not sitting on a log? |
42766 | Not the amount paid? |
42766 | Not this way? |
42766 | Not to my knowledge? |
42766 | Not until after? |
42766 | Nothing but sabers? |
42766 | Nothing but simply"fire?" |
42766 | Nothing more? |
42766 | Nothing of the kind in the by- laws and constitution? |
42766 | Nothing of the kind? |
42766 | Notified by railroad employés? |
42766 | Now I want to know how you know that? |
42766 | Now how many soldiers fired when these officers repeated that command? |
42766 | Now in your judgment, as a military man, do you think that there was any necessity for calling on the military to quell this riot? |
42766 | Now we would like to have the names of those individuals? |
42766 | Now you may state what efforts were made by the sheriff on Tuesday-- Monday night and Tuesday to preserve the peace? |
42766 | Now, I would like to know what you mean by both sides? |
42766 | Now, can you give us the substance of the proclamation? |
42766 | Now, can you state to us who called for, or who sent for the militia-- who called upon the State Government? |
42766 | Now, did you consider you had power to order the movements of General Brinton, after General Pearson had left? |
42766 | Now, do you know that Colonel Guthrie had ammunition, and plenty of it? |
42766 | Now, give us the name of the man that had that advertisement put in? |
42766 | Now, granting that on one side or the other there must be suffering, which, is it equable, should suffer? |
42766 | Now, how many persons were wounded, so far as you could ascertain? |
42766 | Now, in not getting them, they called upon the sheriff? |
42766 | Now, in what way could General Brinton have made that connection with Colonel Guthrie? |
42766 | Now, starting with the Monday evening, you give a full history here in this evidence? |
42766 | Now, this mob gathered around in the vicinity of the round- house-- what was that mob composed of? |
42766 | Now, was there not some kind of a row when the mayor was struck; were they walking quietly then? |
42766 | Now, where did that letter come from? |
42766 | Nowhere in the vicinity? |
42766 | Occupation? |
42766 | Of 1876? |
42766 | Of 1877? |
42766 | Of Allegheny City? |
42766 | Of Allegheny? |
42766 | Of Colonel Brinton''s command? |
42766 | Of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Of Sharpsburg? |
42766 | Of Sunday? |
42766 | Of Sunday? |
42766 | Of What day? |
42766 | Of actual service? |
42766 | Of all the men-- then you call it a strike? |
42766 | Of all the orders? |
42766 | Of all the troops there then, including those of the Sixth division? |
42766 | Of artillery? |
42766 | Of course, if he was not there to go out, some one took his place? |
42766 | Of course, that expense has been paid by the county, and considered finally settled? |
42766 | Of good citizens? |
42766 | Of his troops? |
42766 | Of military? |
42766 | Of officers and men? |
42766 | Of the Baltimore and Ohio road? |
42766 | Of the National Guard? |
42766 | Of the Pennsylvania railroad? |
42766 | Of the Union depot? |
42766 | Of the city of Allegheny? |
42766 | Of the city of Scranton-- of the mayor? |
42766 | Of the city? |
42766 | Of the company you are working for? |
42766 | Of the first division? |
42766 | Of the force on duty? |
42766 | Of the machine shop? |
42766 | Of the militia? |
42766 | Of the mob going out to destroy property? |
42766 | Of the police? |
42766 | Of the regular force? |
42766 | Of the same purport? |
42766 | Of the soldiers? |
42766 | Of the troops of the State who would be? |
42766 | Of the two regiments? |
42766 | Of those Knights of Labor? |
42766 | Of what class of men were they-- what positions did they hold in life? |
42766 | Of what class of people was the crowd composed principally? |
42766 | Of what color was it? |
42766 | Of what command? |
42766 | Of what day? |
42766 | Of what day? |
42766 | Of what road were they employés? |
42766 | Of what road? |
42766 | Of what road? |
42766 | Of what train? |
42766 | Of which kind? |
42766 | Of whom was this crowd composed? |
42766 | Of your own knowledge you do not know whether it was a car that was first burned or a building? |
42766 | Of your own knowledge? |
42766 | Offered themselves? |
42766 | Offered to keep you all the time you were out on the strike? |
42766 | Officers had possession of the track? |
42766 | On Friday afternoon, when the attempt was made to start the train, will you tell us what occurred then? |
42766 | On Friday morning you had crews enough to start all the trains; did you give orders to start? |
42766 | On Friday morning? |
42766 | On Friday night how large was the crowd? |
42766 | On Friday, did you increase your police force any? |
42766 | On Friday, did you try to persuade any men not to go out? |
42766 | On Friday, do you think so? |
42766 | On Friday, what did you do? |
42766 | On Friday? |
42766 | On Friday? |
42766 | On Friday? |
42766 | On Friday? |
42766 | On Friday? |
42766 | On July 1, was there any reduction? |
42766 | On Monday morning was that crowd still in the streets? |
42766 | On Monday, the 23d day of July, state whether there was any crowd coming there to cross the bridge from the city? |
42766 | On Monday? |
42766 | On Monday? |
42766 | On Saturday afternoon, did you see these gentlemen? |
42766 | On Saturday afternoon, when the firing commenced-- where did it commence? |
42766 | On Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | On Saturday and Saturday night? |
42766 | On Saturday and Sunday morning, when you were there, were the police doing anything to prevent the pillaging? |
42766 | On Saturday evening, state where you were-- what your position was, on Saturday evening of the troubles at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | On Saturday had you the crews? |
42766 | On Saturday he wore this uniform? |
42766 | On Saturday morning? |
42766 | On Saturday night, what knowledge had you of the movements of the military? |
42766 | On Saturday night? |
42766 | On Saturday, I refer to particularly, but at any time during the progress of the riot? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Saturday? |
42766 | On Sunday he telegraphs: PHILADELPHIA,_ July 25--12.30, P.M._ To JAMES P. BARR,_ Pittsburgh_: What is the situation of affairs in Pittsburgh to- day? |
42766 | On Sunday morning? |
42766 | On Sunday night they had finished all the railroad property? |
42766 | On Sunday, were the saloons open? |
42766 | On Sunday, where were you? |
42766 | On Sunday? |
42766 | On Sunday? |
42766 | On Sunday? |
42766 | On Sunday? |
42766 | On Sunday? |
42766 | On Sunday? |
42766 | On Thursday morning or Friday morning? |
42766 | On Thursday morning? |
42766 | On Thursday or Friday was this crowd boisterous or destroying things? |
42766 | On Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, were your men all at work? |
42766 | On Thursday? |
42766 | On Thursday? |
42766 | On Tuesday? |
42766 | On a rock? |
42766 | On account of the strike? |
42766 | On business men? |
42766 | On freight trains? |
42766 | On purpose to see the riot? |
42766 | On the 19th? |
42766 | On the 19th? |
42766 | On the 1st day of August, state where you were? |
42766 | On the 20th of July? |
42766 | On the 23d of July, did the sheriff not throw a guard around the burned district? |
42766 | On the 25th? |
42766 | On the 27th day of June, you sent out forty men to notify all the lodges to get ready for a strike? |
42766 | On the Pennsylvania railroad? |
42766 | On the corner? |
42766 | On the freight cars could any of the iron be re- placed? |
42766 | On the ground or scene of the riots? |
42766 | On the left going east? |
42766 | On the left hand side as you go up? |
42766 | On the left hand side going up Lackawanna? |
42766 | On the line of the Fort Wayne and Chicago? |
42766 | On the morning of July 19th, were you disturbed in coming in or going out? |
42766 | On the railroad? |
42766 | On the railroads? |
42766 | On the right side of the road leading down through the grounds or the left? |
42766 | On the road? |
42766 | On the street? |
42766 | On this Sunday interview? |
42766 | On this side of the street? |
42766 | On to what street? |
42766 | On what charge? |
42766 | On what day was it that the disturbance took place in the streets here? |
42766 | On what day was this posse organized? |
42766 | On what day? |
42766 | On what day? |
42766 | On what did you base your opinion, if anything? |
42766 | On what railroad? |
42766 | On what road? |
42766 | On what streets? |
42766 | On what train? |
42766 | On which side of the track, going down towards the Union depot? |
42766 | On your arrival at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | On your retirement from the round- house, did you cover the retreat a part of the way? |
42766 | On your retreat from the round- house? |
42766 | On your road it was on account of reduction of wages, was it, that they struck? |
42766 | One case was made a test case? |
42766 | One dollar and ninety cents? |
42766 | One dollar and ten cents for a day for the six or seven cars? |
42766 | One dollar seventeen and a half cents per car? |
42766 | One man did all the shooting, you say? |
42766 | One man shot? |
42766 | One man was following them up? |
42766 | One of the rioters? |
42766 | One part of the head- lines says,"The worthy strikers arm themselves, and assemble thousands strong to compel their rights?" |
42766 | One question about this plundering and thieving: Were those parties discharged the same day that they were arrested-- on Sunday? |
42766 | One shot? |
42766 | Only General Brinton''s command went into the round- house? |
42766 | Only by persuasion? |
42766 | Only the crowd that was at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Only two or three stones thrown? |
42766 | Only what you know of your own personal knowledge what effort was made by the mayor and his subordinates to suppress the riots and disperse the mob? |
42766 | Opposite your house? |
42766 | Or Lieutenant Lyon? |
42766 | Or Saturday? |
42766 | Or any force? |
42766 | Or any interference with trains? |
42766 | Or any proclamation ordering the crowd to disperse? |
42766 | Or by Bob Ammon? |
42766 | Or carrying off plunder? |
42766 | Or during the day Friday, at any time? |
42766 | Or during the day Friday? |
42766 | Or from any one else? |
42766 | Or illegal assemblage of people? |
42766 | Or in an undertone that could not be heard by the others? |
42766 | Or in their retreat from the round- house? |
42766 | Or policemen? |
42766 | Or rank? |
42766 | Or rather on Sunday? |
42766 | Or special police? |
42766 | Or that he was authorized by the Adjutant General to convey orders? |
42766 | Or that you left an officer at the arsenal? |
42766 | Or the county officials? |
42766 | Or the strikers? |
42766 | Or to allay the excitement? |
42766 | Or to help them on to arrange the machinery for a strike, so that it will all come off together? |
42766 | Or to join Colonel Guthrie? |
42766 | Or was it from the crowd-- did you hear the crowd talk about firing? |
42766 | Or what class of men they were? |
42766 | Or what did they regard as an overt act? |
42766 | Or with any men belonging to the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Organized a force? |
42766 | Other cars were then on fire? |
42766 | Other classes of laboring men-- did it take any? |
42766 | Our shop boys? |
42766 | Over the heads of the other line? |
42766 | Over the length of the Fort Wayne and Chicago road? |
42766 | Over the whole length of the road? |
42766 | Pair of revolvers? |
42766 | Parallel with Lackawanna? |
42766 | Parallel with the railroad? |
42766 | Participated in by men belonging to this organization and others? |
42766 | Partly, you say? |
42766 | Passed them? |
42766 | Passed what? |
42766 | Passenger or freight? |
42766 | Pay in proportion to the amount of work done? |
42766 | Pennsylvania Central? |
42766 | Per day? |
42766 | Personally? |
42766 | Pick handle persuasion? |
42766 | Pistol shots? |
42766 | Placed in the hands of your policemen? |
42766 | Please give us a statement of the difficulty as it occurred in the city-- as it came under your observation-- in July last and the 1st day of August? |
42766 | Please state what you saw and heard of the riot, in a brief way? |
42766 | Please state where the Duquesne depot is? |
42766 | Please state where you reside? |
42766 | Please state your residence? |
42766 | Please state? |
42766 | Plenty of ammunition in Greenfield? |
42766 | Plenty of others were willing to go? |
42766 | Plunder and all? |
42766 | Practicing attorney? |
42766 | Practicing physician? |
42766 | Previous to that? |
42766 | Previous to the round- house being set on fire? |
42766 | Prior to that you had heard nothing that would lead you to believe there was an organization for the purpose? |
42766 | Prior to the breaking out of the riot, had you filled the places of all those men who had left your services? |
42766 | Private houses? |
42766 | Private police? |
42766 | Private property and railroad property? |
42766 | Private property? |
42766 | Proceed with the military movements? |
42766 | Proceed? |
42766 | Professional men? |
42766 | Proportionately? |
42766 | Put Allegheny city into the hands of Ammon? |
42766 | Put down the strikers? |
42766 | Q, They only complained about the orders for running double- headers? |
42766 | Q. Adjoining the round- house? |
42766 | Q. Adjutant, Sixth division? |
42766 | Q. Ammon applied to you for assistance? |
42766 | Q. Assessor of the township? |
42766 | Q. Belonging to the National Guard of Pennsylvania? |
42766 | Q. Belonging to the company? |
42766 | Q. Blacksmiths? |
42766 | Q. Bridge across the railroad? |
42766 | Q. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers? |
42766 | Q. Buttoned clear up? |
42766 | Q. Bystanders and lookers on? |
42766 | Q. Captain Aull did n''t reach you that day? |
42766 | Q. Captain Clines left the ammunition in the depot? |
42766 | Q. Captain McMunn? |
42766 | Q. Captain of a company? |
42766 | Q. Carpenters''work would not depend on that at all? |
42766 | Q. Carpenters? |
42766 | Q. Claremont hospital or the work- house? |
42766 | Q. Commence with the origin of it? |
42766 | Q. Conductors asked you to join it? |
42766 | Q. Conductors? |
42766 | Q. Conductors? |
42766 | Q. Coroner''s jury? |
42766 | Q. Coöperate with anybody that was peaceably inclined to assist you? |
42766 | Q. Dispatch came that they did not want any more officers? |
42766 | Q. Dispatcher, was n''t he? |
42766 | Q. Double- headers, as they were called? |
42766 | Q. Eighteen of the Black Hussars, do I understand you to say? |
42766 | Q. Eleven o''clock Saturday night? |
42766 | Q. Employés of the railroad? |
42766 | Q. Enumerate some of them? |
42766 | Q. Field- glass? |
42766 | Q. Fifty men on the different roads that you have mentioned before-- you mentioned the roads? |
42766 | Q. Flour dealers? |
42766 | Q. Forcibly? |
42766 | Q. Freights were lower than they had been? |
42766 | Q. Friday morning, the 20th? |
42766 | Q. Friday morning, the 20th? |
42766 | Q. Friday morning? |
42766 | Q. Friday morning? |
42766 | Q. Friday night, you said? |
42766 | Q. Friday night? |
42766 | Q. Friday night? |
42766 | Q. Friday, Saturday, or Sunday? |
42766 | Q. Grove? |
42766 | Q. I am asking whether yours stopped for want of cars? |
42766 | Q. I am speaking of the citizens? |
42766 | Q. I am speaking of the strikers-- of the railroad employés? |
42766 | Q. I ask the question, and I expect an answer plain, whether you did or did n''t? |
42766 | Q. I ask you the question, what reports you got from your officers? |
42766 | Q. I asked you how large the crowd was? |
42766 | Q. I believe you are called to give us some information as to what was done to suppress the riot on Sunday night? |
42766 | Q. I believe you can not state anything but what has already been stated? |
42766 | Q. I believe you find lawyers and doctors among the best citizens, as a general thing? |
42766 | Q. I believe you have identified this paper, and this editorial, entitled"Military Mob?" |
42766 | Q. I believe you testified to that? |
42766 | Q. I believe you were not here after the troops arrived? |
42766 | Q. I did n''t ask any question about the property being in danger? |
42766 | Q. I do n''t see hardly how that would be necessary, because he called upon the Governor as commander- in- chief to send troops? |
42766 | Q. I do n''t wish to be personal in this matter; I just wish to know of any parties that proposed to these strikers to give them support? |
42766 | Q. I do not know what point you are called to testify to, but you may go on and state? |
42766 | Q. I do not quite understand your statement, whether it was the original or a copy that was delivered? |
42766 | Q. I insist on it? |
42766 | Q. I insist upon an answer? |
42766 | Q. I insist upon it? |
42766 | Q. I just want this for information? |
42766 | Q. I mean a commissioned officer at that time? |
42766 | Q. I mean before this firing took place? |
42766 | Q. I mean by sight-- if you see General Pearson walking along? |
42766 | Q. I mean in the immediate vicinity of where the troubles were? |
42766 | Q. I mean the Friday morning when the trouble first commenced in Allegheny? |
42766 | Q. I presume that it is perhaps best to state to us what was done towards protecting the Duquesne depot? |
42766 | Q. I suppose all the private property burned caught from the heat of the railroad cars? |
42766 | Q. I suppose the Adjutant General''s book shows the number of the National Guard? |
42766 | Q. I suppose they would not call striking, quitting work, illegal means? |
42766 | Q. I suppose three fourths went there from mere curiosity, and that the other fourth went for some purpose? |
42766 | Q. I suppose you did n''t go out for a week or so then? |
42766 | Q. I think the question was asked you how many there was about there on Sunday? |
42766 | Q. I think we ought to have his name? |
42766 | Q. I think you had better give us a summary of it right along? |
42766 | Q. I understand the pumps were working at the time of the assemblage of this crowd, on the 1st of August? |
42766 | Q. I understand you one fellow got struck with a link? |
42766 | Q. I understand you to say in your testimony, that the round- house was on fire before General Brinton''s command left it? |
42766 | Q. I understand you to say it was the double- headers, or the order to run them, that caused the strike on the 16th, at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Q. I understand you to say this: of the killed there were only two who were actually engaged in the riots? |
42766 | Q. I understand your position, Mr. McCarthy, to be this: that you may be superseded by the sheriff of the county, but not by the military? |
42766 | Q. I understand, after you returned from the lock- up, you found the crowd still assembled at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Q. I understood that was the case, but the language might be construed otherwise? |
42766 | Q. I understood you to say that this bridge was on fire before you reached the place with your police? |
42766 | Q. I understood you to say that you called at Colonel Scott''s office, and was there shown the communication from General Latta? |
42766 | Q. I understood you to say that you left Pittsburgh the day before the strike? |
42766 | Q. I understood you to say that you put persons at the pumps before that interview? |
42766 | Q. I understood you to say you went to look for your friend? |
42766 | Q. I understood you to say, he said something about business was poor? |
42766 | Q. I want just what they said about-- the next that took place between you and the officers? |
42766 | Q. I want simply to ask you how you were dressed on that occasion? |
42766 | Q. I want to get at the reasons that actuated you? |
42766 | Q. I want to know if you think the military can supersede you? |
42766 | Q. I want to know that? |
42766 | Q. I want to know this: if you know the leader of that crowd? |
42766 | Q. I want to know what was your determination? |
42766 | Q. I want to know what you were informed of the situation of affairs-- what you know of your own knowledge? |
42766 | Q. I wish to ask you the question whether they interfered with you by any manner of means in the performance of your duties? |
42766 | Q. I wish you to state now, in your own way, what knowledge you have of the riots that occurred in July last, and the efforts made to suppress them? |
42766 | Q. I wish you to state where Sheriff Fife was on Sunday, during the riot, so far as you know? |
42766 | Q. I wish you would give us copies of them? |
42766 | Q. I wish you would give us the number of killed-- the number that was actually killed-- so far as you can? |
42766 | Q. I wish you would go on and state what you saw there? |
42766 | Q. I wish you would just state the facts that came under your observation in reference to the troubles-- the strike of July last? |
42766 | Q. I wish you would state when the first proclamation was issued? |
42766 | Q. I wish you would state, Mr. King, all the facts in relation to the riot here, that came under your observation-- that you know personally yourself? |
42766 | Q. I would like to know whether they were railroad engineers or engineers at the pumps? |
42766 | Q. I would not ask you any question that I did not think was a proper one? |
42766 | Q. Insignia of rank on shoulders? |
42766 | Q. Joseph? |
42766 | Q. Justifying the attack upon the troops in the round- house? |
42766 | Q. Laboring men? |
42766 | Q. Lackawanna avenue? |
42766 | Q. Lengthwise, down this street? |
42766 | Q. Milwaukee ale or beer? |
42766 | Q. Miners? |
42766 | Q. Miners? |
42766 | Q. Mingling with the crowd? |
42766 | Q. Monday evening was the 23d? |
42766 | Q. Monday morning did you return? |
42766 | Q. Monday night-- go on and describe the situation of affairs, if you will-- where the crowd was, and what took place on Monday night? |
42766 | Q. Monday night? |
42766 | Q. Monday? |
42766 | Q. Mow long did you remain there? |
42766 | Q. Mr. Cassatt is connected with what road? |
42766 | Q. Mr. Cassatt? |
42766 | Q. Mr. Edgar-- what is his first name? |
42766 | Q. Mr. Follensbee did? |
42766 | Q. Mr. McCollough, was it? |
42766 | Q. Mr. Pitcairn''s? |
42766 | Q. Musket? |
42766 | Q. Muskets? |
42766 | Q. Muskets? |
42766 | Q. Obeyed orders? |
42766 | Q. Patrolled by the railroad men? |
42766 | Q. Pennsylvania Central? |
42766 | Q. Pennsylvania Company-- not the Pennsylvania Central? |
42766 | Q. Pennsylvania railway? |
42766 | Q. Pennsylvania? |
42766 | Q. Pillage and plunder? |
42766 | Q. Pitcairn? |
42766 | Q. Policemen? |
42766 | Q. Policemen? |
42766 | Q. Refresh your memory and see whether he made that remark? |
42766 | Q. Relate it? |
42766 | Q. Relate the interview with the railroad authorities? |
42766 | Q. Relate what occurred when you went to the mayor? |
42766 | Q. Rifle of large caliber? |
42766 | Q. Rockville, did you say? |
42766 | Q. Sabers and carbines? |
42766 | Q. Saturday evening? |
42766 | Q. Saturday night? |
42766 | Q. Saturday night? |
42766 | Q. Saturday night? |
42766 | Q. Saturday night? |
42766 | Q. Saturday night? |
42766 | Q. Saturday night? |
42766 | Q. Saturday? |
42766 | Q. Saturday? |
42766 | Q. Shutters? |
42766 | Q. Smith was not a railroad man? |
42766 | Q. Strikers? |
42766 | Q. Sunday evening? |
42766 | Q. Sunday morning, what was done by the military or civil authorities, county or city? |
42766 | Q. Sunday morning, where were you? |
42766 | Q. Sunday morning? |
42766 | Q. Sunday morning? |
42766 | Q. Sunday morning? |
42766 | Q. Sunday morning? |
42766 | Q. Sunday morning? |
42766 | Q. Sunday night? |
42766 | Q. Sunday night? |
42766 | Q. Sunday? |
42766 | Q. Sunday? |
42766 | Q. Sympathized with the mob in their violence? |
42766 | Q. Thirty- five? |
42766 | Q. Thursday evening, then, after supper? |
42766 | Q. Thursday night? |
42766 | Q. Thursday or Friday afternoon? |
42766 | Q. Thursday the 19th? |
42766 | Q. Thursday? |
42766 | Q. Thursday? |
42766 | Q. Thursday? |
42766 | Q. Torrens station? |
42766 | Q. Tuesday, after the trouble at Pittsburgh, your railroad stopped? |
42766 | Q. Twelve o''clock Sunday night? |
42766 | Q. Twelve o''clock at night? |
42766 | Q. Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Q. Twenty- five engaged in it? |
42766 | Q. Verbal? |
42766 | Q. Wheeled out from the head of the column? |
42766 | Q. Wherein consisted the danger of running double- headers? |
42766 | Q: Did he report to you by telegraph? |
42766 | Quit of your own accord? |
42766 | Quite a volley? |
42766 | Railroad employés? |
42766 | Railroad men any of them? |
42766 | Railroad men seemed to know who they were? |
42766 | Railroad men? |
42766 | Railroad men? |
42766 | Railroad men? |
42766 | Railroad? |
42766 | Rank and file, do you think their conduct commendable as soldiers? |
42766 | Read that one[ indicating?] |
42766 | Ready to start? |
42766 | Ready to take out trains? |
42766 | Received by the same order? |
42766 | Reduce the force of train men, not engineers? |
42766 | Regardless of what effect it would have on the mob? |
42766 | Regardless of who it was that helped to protect the property? |
42766 | Regulation size? |
42766 | Remained at home during the night-- Sunday night? |
42766 | Reported, where? |
42766 | Restrained from coming by friends who were opposed to putting down the riot? |
42766 | Retain his position prior to strike-- receive or retain? |
42766 | Right then and there? |
42766 | Rolling mills, iron mills, and so forth? |
42766 | Running an engine? |
42766 | Said I,"who is the leader of the strikers?" |
42766 | Said nothing to the engineers? |
42766 | Said they were shooting up there? |
42766 | Saw no telegram from Mr. Layng to him? |
42766 | Says I,"Has the box been pulled?" |
42766 | Says I,"Mr. Quay, do you think I ought to leave this place?" |
42766 | Says I,"What do you want me to do? |
42766 | Says I,"When is this thing going to stop?" |
42766 | Says I,"Where is it? |
42766 | Says I,"Who are you?" |
42766 | Says I,"Will you take me to where they can be found?" |
42766 | Says I,"do you intend to burn this?" |
42766 | Says I,"do you want any assistance?" |
42766 | Says he,"Did you have any trouble?" |
42766 | Scattered? |
42766 | See any policemen around there? |
42766 | Send them to the scene of the riots? |
42766 | Sent by the strikers, were they? |
42766 | Served how long? |
42766 | Seven or eight of them, you say? |
42766 | Several in small squads? |
42766 | Shall I give you what I saw first? |
42766 | Shall I say how they said they came there? |
42766 | Sheriff, Allegheny county? |
42766 | Shot in this conflict that took place between the rioters and the troops? |
42766 | Shoulder straps? |
42766 | Signed by the men who carried on your works? |
42766 | Signed by the operator? |
42766 | Signing your name? |
42766 | Simply applied to mechanics? |
42766 | Simply because they took action to suppress the riot? |
42766 | Simply for their own benefit? |
42766 | Simply the actual property of the company? |
42766 | Since 1873--the time of the panic? |
42766 | Since that time, in your intercourse with the railroad officials of the State in any way, have you got information as to the causes of the outbreak? |
42766 | So as to pick him out? |
42766 | So far as your observation extends? |
42766 | So that they should be all alike? |
42766 | So that you would be known as a police officer? |
42766 | So they struck on you? |
42766 | Soldiers standing there? |
42766 | Solicitor for the sheriff, I believe? |
42766 | Some distance from Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Some for murder, and some for manslaughter? |
42766 | Some gentleman was there? |
42766 | Some of the best carpenters getting$ 2 50? |
42766 | Some of the crowd were gathered there out of curiosity? |
42766 | Some of them had turned out to be some of the rioters? |
42766 | Some of them said:"Why do n''t you fire? |
42766 | Some peculiar signal? |
42766 | Some space between that company and the flanks of the regiment? |
42766 | Some testify that the mob was mixed up with the troops there near the crossing, and on the side of the hill? |
42766 | Some time Sunday? |
42766 | Some time in September or October? |
42766 | Some were dismissed? |
42766 | Something over two hundred, then? |
42766 | Speaking then of your own knowledge, you simply speak of roads leading in and out of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Stand those stones and clubs before they fired? |
42766 | Standing there all day? |
42766 | State as briefly as you can when you came upon the scene, and what occurred? |
42766 | State as nearly as you can what the import of that dispatch was? |
42766 | State his name? |
42766 | State how many you know of having been wounded? |
42766 | State if you have any knowledge of the disturbances that occurred? |
42766 | State if you have been able to ascertain or to gather facts sufficient to form a judgment as to what produced the strike? |
42766 | State if you know where you got them? |
42766 | State in what kind of order the troops marched out? |
42766 | State in what way the demand was made? |
42766 | State it? |
42766 | State that? |
42766 | State the condition of the crowd during the day, whether it was increasing or not, and whether it was demonstrative and boisterous or not? |
42766 | State the extent of this strike as it was expected to take place on the 27th of June? |
42766 | State the facts? |
42766 | State the movements of the troops, and what you saw? |
42766 | State the number that were brought there wounded? |
42766 | State the occurrence as you saw it, just immediately preceding and including the firing on the mob? |
42766 | State the organization of that department last July? |
42766 | State to the committee where you reside? |
42766 | State to us just what connection you had with the riotous proceedings? |
42766 | State to us what knowledge you have of the disturbance, and when it commenced-- give us a statement of the facts? |
42766 | State what Colonel Norris said? |
42766 | State what Colonel Norris said? |
42766 | State what action the police officers took on Sunday to put down the riot, and burn, and break into the stores? |
42766 | State what advice you gave them? |
42766 | State what aid they rendered in putting out the fire? |
42766 | State what any one citizen said on the one side, and then on the other? |
42766 | State what came under your observation here on the morning of the 22d-- Sunday morning? |
42766 | State what came under your observation? |
42766 | State what conversation you had with him? |
42766 | State what day the first disturbance or assemblage of strikers in any considerable number occurred? |
42766 | State what efforts were made by the civil authorities to punish those that were engaged in rioting, so far as you know of your own knowledge? |
42766 | State what efforts were made to start trains that day? |
42766 | State what inquiries you made of the sheriff? |
42766 | State what it was? |
42766 | State what knowledge you have of any disturbance of the peace on that day? |
42766 | State what knowledge you have of the dispatches sent by General Brinton to General Latta during the night of Saturday? |
42766 | State what knowledge you have of the disturbance of the peace that commenced on the 19th of July last? |
42766 | State what knowledge you have of the late riots? |
42766 | State what knowledge you have of the riot, and what was done to suppress it? |
42766 | State what occurred from the time that they went away-- whether any report was made to you or not? |
42766 | State what occurred prior to the firing? |
42766 | State what occurred? |
42766 | State what orders you heard given by General Brown, at the transfer station, in reference to the regiments disbanding? |
42766 | State what part you took in putting out the fire that occurred on the night of the 21st-- Saturday night? |
42766 | State what passed between you and the chairman of that committee? |
42766 | State what that was? |
42766 | State what the action of the crowd was there, prior to the firing by the troops? |
42766 | State what the condition of the round- house was when you left it in the morning? |
42766 | State what the conduct of the men was in the round- house during the night? |
42766 | State what the conduct of the troops was during the night in the round- house? |
42766 | State what the conduct of the troops was during the night, as to discipline? |
42766 | State what the conference was on Friday-- that is, you mean Friday, the 21st of July? |
42766 | State what the discipline of the troops was-- taking the whole command of General Brinton during the night? |
42766 | State what they were? |
42766 | State what time Colonel Norris reached you on Sunday? |
42766 | State what time you arrived at Rochester? |
42766 | State what you know of the riot that began on the 19th of July? |
42766 | State what you saw and heard? |
42766 | State what you saw of the strike-- when it commenced there, and what information you had about it? |
42766 | State what you saw? |
42766 | State what your damage was? |
42766 | State what your official connection with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company is? |
42766 | State what your position was in the line in moving out Penn street in the morning? |
42766 | State what your rank was in the National Guard in July last? |
42766 | State when the first alarm of fire was given? |
42766 | State when you arrived at the fire, and how long you remained there? |
42766 | State when you first heard of the disturbance among the railroad employés, and your connection with it thereafter? |
42766 | State when you left the State, whether there was anything at all to induce you to believe that there was any liability of a disturbance of the peace? |
42766 | State when you received the orders calling you into service in July last-- what day it was and what time? |
42766 | State where you live, if you please? |
42766 | State where you overtook General Brinton? |
42766 | State where you reside and what your official connection with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company is? |
42766 | State where you reside and your business, if you please? |
42766 | State where you reside, Mr. Bennett? |
42766 | State where you reside, Mr. Bortree? |
42766 | State where you reside, if you please? |
42766 | State where you reside? |
42766 | State where you reside? |
42766 | State where you reside? |
42766 | State where you were last July-- on the 19th? |
42766 | State where you were on the morning of the 1st August, when the men came from the silk- works into the shops, driving the employés out of the shops? |
42766 | State where you were when the news of the troubles at Pittsburgh, on the Pennsylvania railroad, reached you, and what your movements were afterwards? |
42766 | State where your residence is, Mr. Farr? |
42766 | State where your residence is? |
42766 | State whether General Brinton received any orders from General Latta before leaving the round- house? |
42766 | State whether General Brinton received orders from General Latta to go to Torrens station; and, if so, when he received them? |
42766 | State whether at Twenty- eighth street you heard any command given to fire? |
42766 | State whether or not you recognized any of the train men among the crowd assembled at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | State whether or not you were coroner in July last, at the time of the difficulties here among the railroad employés? |
42766 | State whether the fire commissioners are subject to the control of any higher body? |
42766 | State whether the militia under the command of General Brinton came to the work- house, and what you saw and heard? |
42766 | State whether their testimony was substantially correct? |
42766 | State whether there was any firing from houses or from persons along the street? |
42766 | State whether there was any insubordination on the part of the troops during the night in the round- house? |
42766 | State whether there was any order given to fire at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | State whether this is evidence given by you before the coroner''s inquest? |
42766 | State whether this is the information made upon which the warrants were issued? |
42766 | State whether this is the testimony of Reverend B. R. Miller, as taken down by you, at the time? |
42766 | State whether this is the testimony of Sheriff George R. Yorgey, as taken down by you? |
42766 | State whether this is the testimony taken before you at the coroner''s inquest held here in July last? |
42766 | State whether you accompanied Colonel Norris on Sunday morning, the 22d, to General Brinton''s command? |
42766 | State whether you accompanied Sheriff Fife to Twenty- eighth street, on the night of Thursday, the 19th of July last, and what took place there? |
42766 | State whether you accompanied the command of General Brinton to Pittsburgh, and on what day? |
42766 | State whether you are a member of the National Guard now? |
42766 | State whether you are connected with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and if so, in what capacity? |
42766 | State whether you had any negotiations or any conference with the strikers during the riots of July last, and if so, what it was? |
42766 | State whether you had notice of the orders received by General Brinton from General Latta or from General Pearson? |
42766 | State whether you had reason to believe there would be any difficulty; and if so, what steps you took to prevent it? |
42766 | State whether you heard any orders given by General Latta to General Brinton? |
42766 | State whether you went out with his command to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | State whether you were a member of the National Guard, and if so, what position you held at the time of the riots? |
42766 | State whether you were at Twenty- eighth street on Saturday, the 21st, when the collision occurred between the troops and the mob? |
42766 | State whether you were at or in the vicinity of Twenty- eighth street, on Saturday the 21st day of July? |
42766 | State whether you were at or in the vicinity of the elevator on the 22d of July last, about the time it was burned? |
42766 | State whether you were at the Union hotel or not, and what time it was? |
42766 | State whether you were at the silk factory meeting? |
42766 | State whether you were connected with the fire department last July? |
42766 | State whether you were in Pittsburgh when the disturbances of last July first broke out? |
42766 | State whether you were interfered with on the morning of July 19? |
42766 | State whether you were led to believe that the people of Pittsburgh sympathized with the rioters? |
42766 | State whether you were present at the firing of the militia, on Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | State whether you were present when Colonel Norris overtook General Brinton? |
42766 | State whether you were with Doctor Donnelly on Sunday, the 22d of July? |
42766 | State whether you were with General Brinton''s command on Sunday morning on their retreat? |
42766 | State whether you were with him at any other time? |
42766 | State whether your store was broken open on the 1st day of August last? |
42766 | State your rank in the militia, in July last? |
42766 | State your residence and business? |
42766 | State your residence and official connection with the Reading Railroad Company? |
42766 | State your residence and what position you held in the National Guard in July last? |
42766 | State your residence and your business, if you please? |
42766 | State your residence and your official position in July last, and then go on and give us the facts? |
42766 | State your residence, and what official capacity you were acting in, in July last? |
42766 | State your residence, and what position you held in the National Guard in July last? |
42766 | State your residence? |
42766 | State your residence? |
42766 | State your residence? |
42766 | State your residence? |
42766 | State your residence? |
42766 | State, Mr. Jackson, whether you had any knowledge of any pre- arranged plan among the railroad employés to strike? |
42766 | State, Mr. Mumma, what knowledge you had of the conduct of the militia during the riots of last July? |
42766 | State, if you know, what efforts were made by the city authorities to get a force to suppress the riot and disperse the mob? |
42766 | State, if you please, whether the building was on fire or not when you left? |
42766 | Statement on my docket? |
42766 | Stayed there? |
42766 | Still holding that position? |
42766 | Still sheriff? |
42766 | Still working? |
42766 | Still you regarded the railroad company as superseding you when they dismissed your police? |
42766 | Stood well, up to this time, in the National Guard? |
42766 | Stopped because there were no cars to carry the coal away? |
42766 | Stopping of the train? |
42766 | Strangers? |
42766 | Strike, do you mean? |
42766 | Sufficient to attract the attention of the police authorities? |
42766 | Suppose he could not get the work? |
42766 | Suppose he had said he was there on authority from the Governor? |
42766 | Suppose that the railroad officials had agreed to comply with the request of the strikers-- is that what you mean? |
42766 | Suppose they had formed in line, at that time, and marched on the crowd what would have been the effect? |
42766 | Surprised at your being stopped in the round- house? |
42766 | Sword? |
42766 | Take any of the cars out yourself? |
42766 | Take from the 19th of July on, and take the editorials-- whether they were your articles? |
42766 | Take it in the whole shops-- what proportion were at work? |
42766 | Take it on an average? |
42766 | Take the company that you were working for-- the men that you were working with-- did they strike, or were you stopped for want of work to do? |
42766 | Taken a train to go out? |
42766 | Taken possession of it? |
42766 | Taken them off-- how? |
42766 | Taking Bob away? |
42766 | Taking in Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Talked with them? |
42766 | Telegraph came from the Erie? |
42766 | Tell me how you did that? |
42766 | Tell them that the troops were coming? |
42766 | Tell us now the movements of the troops, the Pittsburgh troops first, and then the Philadelphia troops? |
42766 | Tell us what occurred there? |
42766 | Tell us what that was? |
42766 | Tell us what took place? |
42766 | Tell us what you heard said there? |
42766 | Tell us what you saw on Sunday? |
42766 | Tell us what you saw them do? |
42766 | Tell us what you saw there? |
42766 | Tell what they propose to do when they go out for their rights-- propose to simply quit? |
42766 | Ten o''clock on what day? |
42766 | Ten or fifteen or twenty? |
42766 | Ten thousand dollars about covers the damage? |
42766 | Tended your engine? |
42766 | That Sunday evening? |
42766 | That Thomas A. Scott was at your house? |
42766 | That and the ten per cent.? |
42766 | That article was written before the burning took place, I suppose? |
42766 | That association was got up for protection-- a charitable institution for those that were connected with it? |
42766 | That could n''t be depended upon in case of an attack on the mob? |
42766 | That crowd had been accumulating all day I suppose? |
42766 | That crowd of men that went out there on Saturday and Sunday-- was the crowd composed of men about the city? |
42766 | That crowd of twenty was composed of men retained in the employ of the company? |
42766 | That feeling was expressed in the mob? |
42766 | That gave the word fire? |
42766 | That gave these commands? |
42766 | That gave this command I speak of? |
42766 | That had been done by advertisement in the Sunday morning papers, by the chief of police? |
42766 | That had been with him? |
42766 | That half a loaf was better than no bread? |
42766 | That has always been the rule adopted by you, as commander- in- chief? |
42766 | That he had left him in command? |
42766 | That he was called upon by some officer of your road? |
42766 | That he was going to read the riot act, or something of that kind? |
42766 | That he was there for the purpose of seeing that the peace was kept? |
42766 | That he would not allow it? |
42766 | That he would take care of the railroad property? |
42766 | That hillside is terraced with ravines and wash- outs, which would have given your men as much protection as the enemy? |
42766 | That includes the merchandise? |
42766 | That includes the miners? |
42766 | That information was communicated to you? |
42766 | That intimidated these men, did it? |
42766 | That is Friday evening? |
42766 | That is a good way to intimidate a person, is n''t it? |
42766 | That is after the burning? |
42766 | That is all he said? |
42766 | That is all the orders you heard given? |
42766 | That is all you know about what occurred? |
42766 | That is all you know in relation to the conversation that occurred between them, is it? |
42766 | That is hearsay, is n''t it? |
42766 | That is in the vicinity of the iron works? |
42766 | That is in the_ Critic_ of July 22? |
42766 | That is on the round- house side? |
42766 | That is separate from the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | That is the Weccacoe Legion, with the Gatling guns-- he left before that? |
42766 | That is the mayor of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | That is the mob? |
42766 | That is the old man? |
42766 | That is the one dated July 20, 1877, at one- fourteen, P.M.? |
42766 | That is the only report you made? |
42766 | That is the only way you know that? |
42766 | That is the report of the police to me? |
42766 | That is the time you received the volley? |
42766 | That is the troops took possession? |
42766 | That is the way you put it, I believe? |
42766 | That is what I mean? |
42766 | That is what I wanted to know-- if you believed that the firing was done in self- defense? |
42766 | That is what the committee desire? |
42766 | That is what we called you to find out about? |
42766 | That is where Guthrie was stationed? |
42766 | That is where the larger portion of the strikers were? |
42766 | That is where you were stationed, about two hundred yards from the round- house? |
42766 | That is, Birmingham? |
42766 | That is, addressing himself to you? |
42766 | That is, at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | That is, come in and offer his services to the railroad? |
42766 | That is, how far from his chin? |
42766 | That is, on the first page, and starts out with"Bread or Blood?" |
42766 | That is, on the left hand side, as you could see? |
42766 | That is, on the morning of the Thursday that this outbreak occurred? |
42766 | That is, one of the soldiers? |
42766 | That is, the mob? |
42766 | That is, the soldiers were away from their command? |
42766 | That is, the watch- box on the corner of the street, and the railroad toward the hill? |
42766 | That is, they got headed this way? |
42766 | That is, they were protecting themselves from something that was going to injure them? |
42766 | That is, to distinguish his rank? |
42766 | That is, to stop the trains having troops in? |
42766 | That is, when he is in good health? |
42766 | That is, when the sheriff takes possession that then there is no further call on you or any further duty for you to perform-- is that the position? |
42766 | That is, whether they were all standing solid in the strike? |
42766 | That is, you mean all the trainmen, and engineers as well? |
42766 | That it was an organization? |
42766 | That it was necessary for the railroad officials to get out of town-- that their lives were in jeopardy? |
42766 | That judgment could be expressed as a citizen, and would be formed from facts, I suppose, coming to your knowledge? |
42766 | That makes what you would call a day''s work? |
42766 | That morning, the order to run double- headers on all freight trains went into effect? |
42766 | That night? |
42766 | That night? |
42766 | That part of the city was placed in your care? |
42766 | That part you claim that you are not responsible for? |
42766 | That power you had by virtue of the instructions that the commander- in- chief had given you before he left? |
42766 | That proclamation was issued under general instructions from the department? |
42766 | That required the discharge of a number of men, did it not? |
42766 | That strike at that time was not under their auspices? |
42766 | That the services of the police would not be needed any longer, you say? |
42766 | That the troops were not to fire upon the mob that were following on? |
42766 | That there would be a strike at all on the railroad? |
42766 | That they brought with them? |
42766 | That they refused to run? |
42766 | That they sympathized with the rioters? |
42766 | That they were demoralized? |
42766 | That they were not cautioning their men not to fire on the crowd? |
42766 | That they would obey him? |
42766 | That took effect on the 1st of June? |
42766 | That was Sunday, the 22d? |
42766 | That was Thursday or Friday subsequent to the burning, that you met this other man? |
42766 | That was Thursday, was not it? |
42766 | That was a part of the grievances? |
42766 | That was a written order? |
42766 | That was after the Sunday? |
42766 | That was after the firing at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | That was after the riot? |
42766 | That was after the troops had fired? |
42766 | That was all? |
42766 | That was at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | That was at the silk- works? |
42766 | That was before this company was marched out to clear the crossing? |
42766 | That was before you passed Washington street? |
42766 | That was done, was it? |
42766 | That was fifteen minutes before the firing took place? |
42766 | That was from General Latta? |
42766 | That was in Sheriff Fife''s statement? |
42766 | That was in reply to your communication? |
42766 | That was left to be determined as circumstances might arise? |
42766 | That was not double- headers? |
42766 | That was not more than about one fourth of your command-- one hundred and fifty men? |
42766 | That was not signed by Griscom? |
42766 | That was not spoken of? |
42766 | That was not where they marched out Penn street before the fire? |
42766 | That was on Friday morning? |
42766 | That was on Friday, the 20th of July? |
42766 | That was on Saturday? |
42766 | That was on Sunday morning? |
42766 | That was on what date? |
42766 | That was our training in the army? |
42766 | That was paid for as an advertisement? |
42766 | That was prevented from leaving? |
42766 | That was the 19th-- Thursday evening, the 19th? |
42766 | That was the 19th? |
42766 | That was the charge contained in the affidavit, was it not? |
42766 | That was the crowd outside? |
42766 | That was the decision you came to? |
42766 | That was the detachment that attempted to put the crowd back off Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | That was the exact language? |
42766 | That was the first that called the attention of the men to it? |
42766 | That was the first you knew anything about it? |
42766 | That was the first you knew of General Brown''s order? |
42766 | That was the first? |
42766 | That was the next day? |
42766 | That was the officer? |
42766 | That was the only thing you had to complain of? |
42766 | That was the party that fired first? |
42766 | That was the policy adopted by the railroad company? |
42766 | That was the reason they struck, because the wages were not high enough? |
42766 | That was the request made, was it? |
42766 | That was the result of your consultation there at the depot? |
42766 | That was the subject of conversation, I suppose, among all classes-- to some extent? |
42766 | That was voted down? |
42766 | That was your Pittsburgh troops? |
42766 | That was your first appearance in the vicinity of the riots? |
42766 | That was your judgment at that time? |
42766 | That were missing-- some of those went off on their own account? |
42766 | That would be called, in railroad parlance, orders? |
42766 | That would be thirty- one cents a ton? |
42766 | That would make about one hundred and forty or one hundred and fifty men during Sunday night? |
42766 | That you presumed? |
42766 | That you said in reply that that was right, and for him to go ahead? |
42766 | That you think was the cause of it? |
42766 | That, of course, was a grievance? |
42766 | That, the news of what was going on at other places, stirred up the workingmen, and incited them to do as they did? |
42766 | The 19th of July? |
42766 | The 19th? |
42766 | The 21st? |
42766 | The 31st of July, was it not? |
42766 | The Black Hussars did? |
42766 | The E vein, how much? |
42766 | The Hussars? |
42766 | The Lieutenant Governor, would he exercise the functions of Governor in case of the death of the Governor? |
42766 | The Monongahela house was then the head- quarters of General Latta-- General Latta made his head- quarters there? |
42766 | The Nineteenth, I believe? |
42766 | The North East company, and the Erie company, and the Conneautville company were at Greenville? |
42766 | The Pennsylvania Company managed the road west of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | The Pennsylvania Railroad Company offering to pay the wages? |
42766 | The Philadelphia troops of the First division? |
42766 | The Saturday morning we were out? |
42766 | The Trainmen''s Union, at that time, was not in existence? |
42766 | The Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | The Twelfth ward takes in this district at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | The Union Depot? |
42766 | The action of your company, in this reduction, was solely by yourselves, without any understanding? |
42766 | The arrests then were mostly made by the chief of police on warrants issued by the mayor? |
42766 | The battery was near the crossing at that time? |
42766 | The brakemen, firemen, and conductors? |
42766 | The brass guns at the round- house-- whose command did they belong to? |
42766 | The bridge across the Susquehanna? |
42766 | The bridge then, I understand, was the first thing? |
42766 | The bridge was burned down before you returned? |
42766 | The business men and professional men? |
42766 | The call upon the mayor and on the sheriff was not made until after you returned? |
42766 | The captains of the companies had swords? |
42766 | The carpenter shop was connected with it? |
42766 | The cars are about how much? |
42766 | The cars that were run down, then, would stop somewhere near the round- house? |
42766 | The case that was contested-- was that submitted to a jury? |
42766 | The case you speak of now, as reviewing, is the one alluded to by one of the witnesses-- Colonel Benson? |
42766 | The cause of the strike upon the Fort Wayne road at that time was what? |
42766 | The causeway under the railroad? |
42766 | The chief of police was on the ground was he? |
42766 | The citizens you speak of along the street? |
42766 | The committee of eighteen was composed of who? |
42766 | The committee would like to know, or I would, at least, if you put Allegheny City into the hands of this man Ammon, and if so, what you told him? |
42766 | The companies that left lived in the rural districts; they took their arms with them to their homes? |
42766 | The company advancing towards the crossing? |
42766 | The company that wanted to lay down their arms? |
42766 | The condition in what respect? |
42766 | The conduct of those that remained was good as soldiers? |
42766 | The copy was delivered to you by Captain Aull, was it, colonel? |
42766 | The crowd did n''t attempt to attack the troops? |
42766 | The crowd dispersed in the direction of the machine shops? |
42766 | The crowd had? |
42766 | The crowd just stood there? |
42766 | The crowd of rioters and pillagers were ahead of you? |
42766 | The crowd of spectators was not interfering with property? |
42766 | The crowd resisted the soldiers, did they, when they attempted to clear the track? |
42766 | The crowd spiked the guns? |
42766 | The crowd that was burning? |
42766 | The crowd that was standing around, of whom were they composed? |
42766 | The crowd was boisterous, were they not? |
42766 | The crowd was composed of about twenty men? |
42766 | The crowd was there? |
42766 | The crowd? |
42766 | The day before? |
42766 | The day it commenced? |
42766 | The details we do n''t care for-- just simply the number of wounded, and if you heard the firing, and was with the command at the time? |
42766 | The discipline was good at the time you were in the round- house? |
42766 | The disposition of the troops was to maintain order? |
42766 | The druggist advised you not to stay there long-- that he did not want the strikers to know you were in his place of business? |
42766 | The engines would average what? |
42766 | The entire classes? |
42766 | The entire laboring class? |
42766 | The evening before? |
42766 | The evening the Governor arrived? |
42766 | The expression is not used to justify them so much as to allay further bloodshed? |
42766 | The extras were paid off by the Pennsylvania railroad? |
42766 | The faces of this crowd was familiar to you, were they, as men that you had seen in the vicinity? |
42766 | The fact that the railroad was not carrying away the coal, was not that the cause of the miners coming out of the mines? |
42766 | The fault of strikers, was not it? |
42766 | The fire alarm was sounded, was it? |
42766 | The fire commenced out beyond Twenty- eighth street and worked down this way? |
42766 | The fire department, you say, is under the control of a chief engineer? |
42766 | The firing did n''t commence until they got on to the cut? |
42766 | The firing is somewhat like the firing in a battle, after the first volley is fired? |
42766 | The firing of this car would communicate to others? |
42766 | The firing was something like the firing of a skirmish line? |
42766 | The first day you went out and met the crowd of several hundred, were they composed entirely of railroad employés? |
42766 | The first fire? |
42766 | The first fire? |
42766 | The first man lived in Pike street? |
42766 | The first proclamation that was issued? |
42766 | The first thing you saw was the firing after the stones were thrown? |
42766 | The floors were saturated with oil? |
42766 | The front rank would be facing towards the hillside and the rear rank facing towards Liberty street? |
42766 | The general did n''t make the order until after he arrived here and ordered the troops out? |
42766 | The important question then is, did General Brinton disobey the orders of General Latta? |
42766 | The instruments are in the adjoining office? |
42766 | The last month? |
42766 | The latter part of the week? |
42766 | The leaders of the rioters? |
42766 | The long strike was in what year? |
42766 | The majority of men being off, of course there was great travel on the streets? |
42766 | The man that was killed on the south side of Lackawanna avenue, was he near the corner? |
42766 | The man that was there always got his work? |
42766 | The man was one of the rioters-- this party that tried to take your gun? |
42766 | The mayor at the head of them? |
42766 | The mayor did not make any call on the night police to go out there at all on Thursday? |
42766 | The mayor''s clerk? |
42766 | The mayor''s office? |
42766 | The men on regular duty went out, did they? |
42766 | The men would not? |
42766 | The military orders of the commander in chief signed by the Adjutant General? |
42766 | The militia? |
42766 | The mill hands are generally at leisure on Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | The miner how much? |
42766 | The miners struck? |
42766 | The miners? |
42766 | The mob broke and ran towards the river? |
42766 | The mob did not go there? |
42766 | The mob following the men? |
42766 | The mob had it? |
42766 | The mob had kind of petered out then? |
42766 | The mob was there in opposition? |
42766 | The mob would not permit the firemen to work? |
42766 | The mob? |
42766 | The money did n''t come? |
42766 | The motive, at first, was not to destroy the railroad company''s property, but to burn out the soldiers? |
42766 | The new organization, I presume, the title is the Knights of Labor? |
42766 | The next dispatch was more encouraging? |
42766 | The next officer of the line, the senior officer? |
42766 | The night force numbered one hundred and twenty? |
42766 | The number of men that stayed here? |
42766 | The object is for the elevation of labor? |
42766 | The object of that association is not to control railroad companies, is it? |
42766 | The object of the brotherhood was to abolish this classification? |
42766 | The object of the order was to keep the mob of people from congregating on the hill side? |
42766 | The object was not to use force, but to try and press the crowd back? |
42766 | The officers I speak of giving the word"fire?" |
42766 | The officers reported to you, did they? |
42766 | The officers that gave the command? |
42766 | The officers were in front of them, was the ones you speak of? |
42766 | The officers were pretty thick, were they not? |
42766 | The old gentleman? |
42766 | The one hundred and one men were on service throughout the city proper? |
42766 | The one soldier would respect another? |
42766 | The only danger there was in not having the same number of brakesmen to the same number of cars as you do when you run the single train? |
42766 | The only object of the organization is men combined together to elevate labor? |
42766 | The only one you saw was on this bridge? |
42766 | The only question for us to settle is, did General Brinton disobey the order? |
42766 | The order you sent for Colonel Carpenter to go to Rochester-- do you know whether he received that order or not? |
42766 | The other man, was he a citizen of the city? |
42766 | The other rank would face towards the hill? |
42766 | The other way down, towards Liberty street? |
42766 | The other''s name you do not remember? |
42766 | The outer depot of the Fort Wayne road? |
42766 | The party facing down Liberty street? |
42766 | The persons that dug that trench, were they Allegheny railroad men or were they tramps? |
42766 | The police were ahead? |
42766 | The position you describe is, that they formed across Washington avenue, facing towards the shop? |
42766 | The posse had pluck enough to arrest them at once? |
42766 | The puddlers? |
42766 | The purpose in coming to Harrisburg was to collect more troops? |
42766 | The purpose of it was to secure uniformity of freights? |
42766 | The question I asked you was this: if the merchants of the city of Pittsburgh sympathized with the strikers? |
42766 | The question is a straight one? |
42766 | The question is this: Do you believe, as an officer, had you nothing to contend but the railroad employés, could you have kept the peace? |
42766 | The question of wages between the men and the company? |
42766 | The railroad also engages in mining? |
42766 | The railroad bridge? |
42766 | The railroad employés struck first, I understand you to say? |
42766 | The railroad men, although they were on a strike, did they show any disposition to be riotous or lawless, and destroy property? |
42766 | The railroad officials? |
42766 | The railroad shops? |
42766 | The reason for that would have been that the supplies were all at the Union depot? |
42766 | The regimental officers were there? |
42766 | The responsibility rested with your senior? |
42766 | The rich oppressing the poor? |
42766 | The rioters? |
42766 | The rooms close by these are used as offices? |
42766 | The round- house was on fire? |
42766 | The round- house? |
42766 | The saloons had been open out there until three or four o''clock on Saturday? |
42766 | The same crowd that had been burning cars? |
42766 | The same wages? |
42766 | The second mass meeting was at the silk- works? |
42766 | The seeming wealth had no substantial foundation, the re- growth having been too rapid to come from this source, and how stands that city to- day? |
42766 | The sheriff and the county authorities? |
42766 | The sheriff had not sufficient force to cope with it? |
42766 | The sheriff issued no proclamation? |
42766 | The sheriff made no attempt to disperse the crowd that night, did he? |
42766 | The sheriff or the railroad company? |
42766 | The sheriff resided in Reading-- the sheriff of the county? |
42766 | The sheriff said,"Well, what can I do?" |
42766 | The sheriff was going towards the depot then? |
42766 | The sheriff, you mean? |
42766 | The short thick- set man turned around to the other one and in a whisper made this remark to him,"Has the Pan Handle bridge been set fire to yet?" |
42766 | The soldiers and the crowd were on good terms? |
42766 | The soldiers did not use any more force than was necessary, at first? |
42766 | The soldiers had entire control of the track? |
42766 | The soldiers had no means of knowing that the crowd had become dispersed, or weakened, or drunken? |
42766 | The soldiers or the mayor''s posse? |
42766 | The stones came from the right and front of the military? |
42766 | The strikers had? |
42766 | The strikers had? |
42766 | The strikers? |
42766 | The strikes at Fort Wayne and Chicago and Altoona and Philadelphia that you have mentioned, were not until after the strike here-- were they? |
42766 | The substance of it? |
42766 | The superintendent of what road? |
42766 | The sympathy you spoke of-- was it general? |
42766 | The threats were not open and above board? |
42766 | The time from Thursday until Sunday? |
42766 | The track was clear at that time, so that the trains could have run through if they had allowed it? |
42766 | The trains were run on that day also? |
42766 | The transfer depot? |
42766 | The troops and the sheriff were trying to oppose the crowd by force and stop the riot, and you say you did not agree with their plan of action? |
42766 | The troops were mixed in the crowd? |
42766 | The troops were refused? |
42766 | The trouble was in one line cutting down freights? |
42766 | The two ranks-- the one in front facing to the right, and the rear facing to the left? |
42766 | The upper jaw? |
42766 | The whole brigade? |
42766 | The whole police of the city were there? |
42766 | The whole? |
42766 | The witnesses here were all sworn? |
42766 | The word passed along the line? |
42766 | The workmen came out peaceably and quiet? |
42766 | The wounds of how many men did you examine-- of the soldiers? |
42766 | The written order? |
42766 | The year around, or at that time? |
42766 | The_ Globe_ was a Sunday paper also? |
42766 | Their sympathies were with the strikers? |
42766 | Their testimony in that respect was correct? |
42766 | Their uniforms-- the buttons and straps were not cut off? |
42766 | Themselves only? |
42766 | Then General Pearson left before these troops marched down? |
42766 | Then I understand you to say that the sheriff superseded you, in your judgment? |
42766 | Then I understand you to say that you had no difficulty in securing plenty of engineers? |
42766 | Then after the last reduction it was one dollar and twelve cents? |
42766 | Then after you have struck you do n''t claim that you have the right to assemble there? |
42766 | Then by delegations from other lodges, you were appointed to organize lodges throughout the country? |
42766 | Then could you not have formed at Union depot and kept them back? |
42766 | Then he had no time to start? |
42766 | Then he wiped the blood out of his eyes and fired his piece afterwards? |
42766 | Then how do you know that they stood around there? |
42766 | Then if they proposed to maintain order, you proposed to resist them-- answer yes or no? |
42766 | Then in June you made another reduction? |
42766 | Then it did increase afterwards and extend? |
42766 | Then it was Saturday night you spoke of the coming there? |
42766 | Then it was afire when they came out? |
42766 | Then it was impossible for him to have given the order? |
42766 | Then it was three or four o''clock on Sunday afternoon when you sent the order to him to form? |
42766 | Then march back? |
42766 | Then no time was set? |
42766 | Then that was the beginning of it? |
42766 | Then the arrests amounted virtually to nothing? |
42766 | Then the crowd scattered after the firing? |
42766 | Then the fire had made considerable progress in the round- house? |
42766 | Then the firing commenced on the line that were on Twenty- eighth street-- lying parallel with Twenty- eighth street-- facing up the track? |
42766 | Then the first telegram, I understood you to say, received from General Latta was in the forenoon of Friday, the 20th? |
42766 | Then the men that came without any understanding? |
42766 | Then the sum and substance of it was, you did n''t succeed in furnishing them with rations? |
42766 | Then there was no definite plan by which the railroad companies were to be controlled or coerced into coming to terms with the union? |
42766 | Then there was no pre- arranged plan for that strike on the 19th? |
42766 | Then these stores were broken open before eight o''clock? |
42766 | Then they reduced you? |
42766 | Then was there a company marched up between these two? |
42766 | Then what did you do? |
42766 | Then what did you do? |
42766 | Then what was it you had reference to-- the citizens? |
42766 | Then when there is any interference, it is unauthorized by your organization? |
42766 | Then you and your party were to be the judges, whether or not General Latta had authority or not? |
42766 | Then you did not go up to arrest them when you got the warrants? |
42766 | Then you do n''t know who it was that gave the command? |
42766 | Then you do not know whether on or after the 23d day of July the railroad company could or could not have had entire control, if they had seen fit? |
42766 | Then you had no definite place that you expected to furnish these troops rations at? |
42766 | Then you had no preliminary hearing at all? |
42766 | Then you had not been at work for several weeks? |
42766 | Then you had not the means to cope-- arms or weapons to cope with the crowd? |
42766 | Then you had nothing to do with the proclamation? |
42766 | Then you heard no firing from the crowd until after the military fired? |
42766 | Then you intended to use your own judgment as to whether the militia were there lawfully or unlawfully? |
42766 | Then you intended, if the soldiers pretended to sustain good order, to resist them? |
42766 | Then you knew most of the men who were working on railroads leading out of Pittsburgh, did you not? |
42766 | Then you know nothing about the firing, any more than you heard the command given-- did it come from an officer? |
42766 | Then you never did dictate to the Governor, or to any one in his absence, what to do with the military? |
42766 | Then you retired into the round- house? |
42766 | Then you turned it over to the railroad company? |
42766 | Then you walked beside him for some little distance before he stopped? |
42766 | Then you would have resisted in that case? |
42766 | Then, I understand, prior to August 1, the mayor of Scranton did not desire troops to be sent? |
42766 | Then, at this regular meeting, what action did they take in regard to disturbances? |
42766 | Then, in your opinion, the sympathy of the people of Reading was with the employés of the Reading railroad in striking and destruction of property? |
42766 | Then, in your opinion, they could have sent out trains, so far as you had possession of the tracks? |
42766 | There appeared to be a number of simultaneous discharges of muskets? |
42766 | There appeared to be an organization? |
42766 | There appears to be a conflict of authority in this matter between the city and the county and the State authorities? |
42766 | There are men out of employment? |
42766 | There are offices in some of those buildings, are there not-- machine shops for instance? |
42766 | There did n''t seem to be any coercion there? |
42766 | There had been no pre- arranged plan for a strike to take place at that time? |
42766 | There had been none since? |
42766 | There had been strikes in other parts of the country before this trouble occurred here-- for instance, at Martinsburg? |
42766 | There is a kind of a platform there? |
42766 | There is a road that runs up there? |
42766 | There is no man left in the station- house at that time? |
42766 | There is no particular call by which you assemble your police? |
42766 | There is where the first shot was fired? |
42766 | There might have been an effort made, and you not have seen it? |
42766 | There never has been a time when the price charged from Pittsburgh was greater than from any point beyond? |
42766 | There never has been any strike before where there was an attempt to destroy property? |
42766 | There seemed to be a friendly feeling? |
42766 | There seemed to be no trouble? |
42766 | There was a crowd there? |
42766 | There was a man fired from a car? |
42766 | There was a mob following them at that time? |
42766 | There was a necessity? |
42766 | There was a space there? |
42766 | There was a warrant for some men who were supposed to be leaders? |
42766 | There was an effort made by the citizens generally, to suppress everything of that kind on Monday? |
42766 | There was no attempt made to arrest? |
42766 | There was no effort made then to prevent the crowd or mob from re- assembling? |
42766 | There was no effort made to keep the track clear at any place, except the crossing? |
42766 | There was no effort made to string out a line, so as to keep the crowd from the track? |
42766 | There was no effort made, that you know of, to get the night men out there? |
42766 | There was no effort made? |
42766 | There was no firing at all from that part of the crowd? |
42766 | There was no firing from the crowd or mob until after General Pearson had given the command to fire, and they had obeyed that command? |
42766 | There was no firing, as they passed through the cut? |
42766 | There was no force on Fifth street, was there-- running out Fifth avenue? |
42766 | There was no force there sufficient to make any impression on the crowd? |
42766 | There was no further disturbance nor breach of the peace? |
42766 | There was no further trouble here about the city? |
42766 | There was no interfering with the men that wanted to work? |
42766 | There was no organization of the regiment-- you received no orders from the colonel? |
42766 | There was no other communication from General Latta? |
42766 | There was no other danger? |
42766 | There was no specific sum at that time? |
42766 | There was no such proposal made in the union? |
42766 | There was no trouble in maintaining peace and order? |
42766 | There was not much until you reached the police station? |
42766 | There was nothing of any importance occurred? |
42766 | There was one man came up, and he was talking with me, and he says,"What is this coming down the street?" |
42766 | There was some complaint at the time? |
42766 | There was some person who permitted you to bring the wounded inside? |
42766 | There was sufficient provocation to justify the giving of that command? |
42766 | There were about sixteen of you? |
42766 | There were none active in trying to beat back the crowd? |
42766 | There were none of those Black Hussars, or of Colonel Howard''s, or of Colonel Gray''s brigade sent, were there? |
42766 | There were only three of them together, Sheriff Fife, General Pearson, and another man? |
42766 | There were only three of them? |
42766 | There were private detectives going through them, and they would ask,"Who is that man?" |
42766 | There were several of his staff officers? |
42766 | There were sixteen or seventeen? |
42766 | There were some railroad men that I saw at the shops around when I struck the crowd? |
42766 | There were some there? |
42766 | There were two arrested? |
42766 | There would have been no bodily injury? |
42766 | These Black Hussars are generally intended as cavalry, are they not? |
42766 | These are the ones you alluded to? |
42766 | These are without dates? |
42766 | These cartridges were not paper, buck, and ball? |
42766 | These double- headers were only confined to the Pennsylvania Central? |
42766 | These gentlemen will testify to that? |
42766 | These head lines are also yours? |
42766 | These men endeavoring to press back the crowd, did they fire? |
42766 | These men gave no reasons for refusing to allow you to go out again on Saturday night? |
42766 | These men had been armed by your committee, without knowing what class of men they were? |
42766 | These men intoxicated? |
42766 | These men that you knew were simply standing about? |
42766 | These men went out as volunteers? |
42766 | These men were both strangers to you, the short man and the large one? |
42766 | These men were men who would have been suspended under the orders to run double- headers? |
42766 | These men were not organized at all? |
42766 | These men you conversed with gave as a reason for their strike that the wages were so low they could not live? |
42766 | These men-- would you take them to be what is generally denominated tramps? |
42766 | These officers stood between the mob and their men? |
42766 | These parties that reported to you information from which this article was written, were they railroad men or were they citizens of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | These police were night watchmen then all of them? |
42766 | These railroad men? |
42766 | These railroad officials you called to see in Allegheny-- General McCullough and Thaw and Layng-- what railroad company are they connected with? |
42766 | These twenty- five men that you sent down in the afternoon at two o''clock-- who were they? |
42766 | These workingmen stated in the letter that that was what Mr. Scranton had said? |
42766 | They all seemed to be in sympathy with the strikers? |
42766 | They all seemed to have an idea of coming the same way? |
42766 | They allowed you to play on private property? |
42766 | They also had up the classification? |
42766 | They appeared to be strangers? |
42766 | They appeared to be the only ones on duty? |
42766 | They are a paid force, are they? |
42766 | They are all armed with maces, I suppose? |
42766 | They are all on file, are they? |
42766 | They are issued according to general instructions and custom? |
42766 | They are paid for all they make over, are they not? |
42766 | They are published in the Adjutant General''s report? |
42766 | They asked me,"How do you propose to do it?" |
42766 | They broke when they saw the troops? |
42766 | They came voluntarily, did they? |
42766 | They commenced throwing when the military got in reach? |
42766 | They commenced? |
42766 | They complained of the reduction? |
42766 | They considered this grading unjust? |
42766 | They considered your life in danger, if you remained? |
42766 | They could leave as soon as they wanted? |
42766 | They denied an arrangement? |
42766 | They did go to work on the following Tuesday? |
42766 | They did n''t break open the cars and pillage them until the fire started along? |
42766 | They did n''t bring the ammunition out with them? |
42766 | They did n''t extend over any other roads leading into Pittsburgh? |
42766 | They did n''t feel strong enough to cope with the mob without greater assistance? |
42766 | They did n''t lay down their arms, and obeyed orders afterwards? |
42766 | They did n''t make any attempt to commit any violence? |
42766 | They did n''t make any threats? |
42766 | They did n''t pretend to interfere with you-- did they? |
42766 | They did n''t throw down their arms? |
42766 | They did not appear to be anxious? |
42766 | They did not come specially for guns? |
42766 | They did not disperse? |
42766 | They did not go home? |
42766 | They did that systematically, did they? |
42766 | They fired at his command? |
42766 | They fired on the rear of the line? |
42766 | They fired pretty close to you? |
42766 | They gave them? |
42766 | They gave way so that you could march through? |
42766 | They got McCall? |
42766 | They got off on account of the threats? |
42766 | They got off-- no links were thrown and no assaults were made? |
42766 | They had a helper? |
42766 | They had all agreed on that? |
42766 | They had apparently an organization? |
42766 | They had broken ranks? |
42766 | They had every control of their railroad and their rolling stock without interference? |
42766 | They had no fire in the engine, and I said:"Where''s your fire?" |
42766 | They had no maces? |
42766 | They have control of the fire department? |
42766 | They have left the city entirely? |
42766 | They have not been tried yet? |
42766 | They joined the other men? |
42766 | They joined with the rioters after you returned? |
42766 | They just piled on the trains? |
42766 | They kept burning down towards the Union depot? |
42766 | They kept dropping those cars down all night? |
42766 | They loaded without orders? |
42766 | They made efforts to prevent the destruction of property? |
42766 | They marched in regular order-- the troops you saw? |
42766 | They marched out by companies? |
42766 | They marched regularly, did they? |
42766 | They meant to stay there in spite of the soldiers, was that the idea that you had-- to stay there in spite of the soldiers? |
42766 | They never got any further than Greenfield? |
42766 | They prevented the engines from connecting with your stock trains? |
42766 | They refused to disperse, did they? |
42766 | They refused to pay fare? |
42766 | They resisted the military before the firing? |
42766 | They resisted the military, when they came up? |
42766 | They responded whenever the calls were made? |
42766 | They said that some of them would be dismissed? |
42766 | They said there was no firing on the troops? |
42766 | They said they would n''t work unless you did advance? |
42766 | They scattered and left that neighborhood? |
42766 | They sent the engines back? |
42766 | They should have arrived, you say, at Rochester, at what time? |
42766 | They shut up because you told them the mayor had ordered them; it was not this Boss Ammon? |
42766 | They skulked, in military parlance? |
42766 | They still continued to gather around the bulletin boards? |
42766 | They stopped it? |
42766 | They stopped your men? |
42766 | They struck Mr. Watt? |
42766 | They told them to get off? |
42766 | They took no formal action in the matter? |
42766 | They volunteered to go? |
42766 | They wanted the boys to capture them? |
42766 | They went then? |
42766 | They were a little more tender of the people they were dealing with? |
42766 | They were all facing in the one direction when that command was given? |
42766 | They were all present at that time? |
42766 | They were asking the question, that there were one thousand five hundred Philadelphia soldiers coming, and what are you going to do with them? |
42766 | They were behind the men? |
42766 | They were blockading freight, or holding freight trains, at that time in Allegheny city? |
42766 | They were going on their way to join him? |
42766 | They were good soldiers, ready to obey orders at all times? |
42766 | They were goods taken out the cars? |
42766 | They were half- grown boys? |
42766 | They were hunting their quarters? |
42766 | They were in front of the rank? |
42766 | They were in front, were not they, when the troops came up? |
42766 | They were lookers- on? |
42766 | They were looking for them, were they not? |
42766 | They were men most of them, were they? |
42766 | They were not in charge of Colonel Carpenter? |
42766 | They were not on duty until eight o''clock, Saturday night? |
42766 | They were not on the brow of the hill? |
42766 | They were not taking part in the riot? |
42766 | They were on a strike? |
42766 | They were on duty regularly on Thursday evening, I suppose? |
42766 | They were persuaded away by military persuasion? |
42766 | They were pillaging and carrying the things away? |
42766 | They were placed in the Union depot to guard the ammunition, Captain Clines at the head? |
42766 | They were powerless to disperse the crowd? |
42766 | They were re- assembling? |
42766 | They were ready to do their duty? |
42766 | They were ready to do their duty? |
42766 | They were running things there themselves during the entire night? |
42766 | They were satisfied on that point? |
42766 | They were sent to Philadelphia? |
42766 | They were standing back by the cars, were they? |
42766 | They were standing still? |
42766 | They were still going on down with the burning and the pillaging? |
42766 | They were stopped by reports at Greenfield? |
42766 | They were stopped? |
42766 | They were the spokesmen for the crowd, were they? |
42766 | They were to fire off their pieces as a signal? |
42766 | They were to join Doctor Donnelly? |
42766 | They were to make a report? |
42766 | They wo n''t let it come down this far will they?" |
42766 | They would n''t acknowledge that they were engaged in striking, in the conversations you had with them? |
42766 | They would not have reached you? |
42766 | They would report to the lieutenant would they? |
42766 | Things were done systematically? |
42766 | Think they are, ai n''t they? |
42766 | This Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, was that the only organization that you knew of among the railroad men? |
42766 | This Sunday night and Monday morning was when you first began to regain some control there? |
42766 | This Trainmen''s Union was organized, you say, for the purpose of protecting yourself? |
42766 | This appointment of this committee was with a view of trying to stop the arson and riot by peaceable measures? |
42766 | This body of rioters, were they in force on Monday? |
42766 | This call of shoot, shoot, where did it come from? |
42766 | This coal and iron police you speak of, is that a police kept up by the company-- a private company? |
42766 | This company marched down between these two lines? |
42766 | This conversation took place while they were sitting there together? |
42766 | This crowd at Twenty- eighth street, did they resist when this detachment marched through the center and marched up against them? |
42766 | This crowd of people you saw there-- of what class was it composed? |
42766 | This crowd standing there-- what business did they have there? |
42766 | This crowd that swept through the shops was headed by a man who was a stranger? |
42766 | This crowd that was plundering was easily dispersed at any time? |
42766 | This crowd, when they started out-- you could tell something by the way in which they started, whether they were moving toward an objective point? |
42766 | This double- header, on Thursday, I believe, was thirty- six cars and two locomotives? |
42766 | This force you collected, did you swear them in as deputy sheriffs? |
42766 | This gate is east of the street, is n''t it-- Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | This intercourse you had with the men, and from talking, led you to be apprehensive of the results? |
42766 | This is Saturday night you speak of? |
42766 | This is dated the 28th? |
42766 | This is the note you sent to the mayor after the conversation with Cunningham? |
42766 | This is the testimony of John E. Wootten, as it was taken down by you? |
42766 | This is your evidence, given under oath? |
42766 | This man Marshall you spoke of, was entirely alone when you saw him fire the car? |
42766 | This man said,"What do you want?" |
42766 | This man that made these signals, was he on the track in front of the engine? |
42766 | This man that was wounded, is still here in the city working? |
42766 | This man who read this letter, did he make any remarks in regard to it after he had read it? |
42766 | This man you saw swinging on round there, trying to make an effort to exasperate them? |
42766 | This mob? |
42766 | This notice you placed in the papers was merely a request for the discharged police force to report at eleven o''clock? |
42766 | This one matter was all-- the business matter that you heard talked over between them? |
42766 | This party from Cumberland-- when did they come? |
42766 | This reduction was arrived at by yourselves without any understanding with other roads? |
42766 | This squad of soldiers that was taken down Market street-- did you find where the crowd left them? |
42766 | This suggestion of employing five hundred police was made to the mayor, was it? |
42766 | This train you speak of-- was that train from Erie? |
42766 | This trouble might just as well have fallen on some other portion of the State as it did on Pittsburgh, would it not? |
42766 | This was Thursday? |
42766 | This was done, Mr. Carson, on the spur of the moment? |
42766 | This was on Saturday? |
42766 | This was one of the causes, this doubling up, as I understood you to say, that created the dissatisfaction here at this point? |
42766 | This was the party that was captured by the boys? |
42766 | This whole machine appeared to have no head? |
42766 | Those I speak of? |
42766 | Those cars you saw the men in, were they regular freight cars or caboose cars? |
42766 | Those citizens you talked about who offered you arms, were not those men the ones who went with you to the meeting? |
42766 | Those companies are not full, I believe, now? |
42766 | Those do n''t come to you at all? |
42766 | Those drunken men, when daylight came, what became of them? |
42766 | Those goods-- what became of them? |
42766 | Those men that threatened to stone those that wanted to work, were they men that had formerly been in your employ? |
42766 | Those men were all participating in the riot as leaders when you first went out there? |
42766 | Those men you spoke to went with you willingly out of the crowd? |
42766 | Those officers had nothing to do with those companies? |
42766 | Those parties took away general plunder, did they? |
42766 | Those that deserted you or left, was their conduct commendable? |
42766 | Those that were arrested among the mob at the foot of Market street that night, were there any railroad men among them? |
42766 | Those that were engaged in the act of rioting and police? |
42766 | Those two men in the car? |
42766 | Those were all sent up in a body? |
42766 | Those were employés of what railroad? |
42766 | Those were men that had gathered in obedience to the call of their officers? |
42766 | Those were railroad men? |
42766 | Those were the orders you received from General Latta? |
42766 | Those were your brakemen? |
42766 | Those who broke up cars, did they appear to be citizens, too? |
42766 | Those who were arrested, what class of men were they? |
42766 | Thought there was too big a crowd to get through? |
42766 | Threatened with what? |
42766 | Threatening them? |
42766 | Three dollars a ton before the reduction? |
42766 | Three or four came out that knew me, and said,"Do n''t you go away;"says I,"Why?" |
42766 | Threw your companies across the street, and across the railroad track, and drawing them down Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Through the Fort Wayne depot? |
42766 | Through whom? |
42766 | Thrown by the police to the mob? |
42766 | To General Latta? |
42766 | To Pittsburgh? |
42766 | To Pittsburgh? |
42766 | To all the employés? |
42766 | To consult with the officers of the company? |
42766 | To do nothing but that-- to take out these trains? |
42766 | To dress any wounds? |
42766 | To go down to the Union depot? |
42766 | To go voluntarily? |
42766 | To guard railroad property? |
42766 | To have gone into the crowd? |
42766 | To hear some report? |
42766 | To man the train? |
42766 | To notify all the different lodges or divisions? |
42766 | To organize a lodge there before the strike? |
42766 | To patrol the streets? |
42766 | To pick off the gunners? |
42766 | To pool the entire earnings of the road? |
42766 | To preserve the peace? |
42766 | To protect them? |
42766 | To report your company in Pittsburgh? |
42766 | To resist, I understood you to say? |
42766 | To say nothing of incidental losses? |
42766 | To shippers, too? |
42766 | To take your regiments to the transfer depot, and to hold that? |
42766 | To that effect? |
42766 | To the Monongahela house? |
42766 | To the editor of the_ Eagle_? |
42766 | To the left? |
42766 | To the president of the company? |
42766 | To the same per centage? |
42766 | To what class of men did you go? |
42766 | To what classes of employés did that apply? |
42766 | To what extent did that feeling exist in the community? |
42766 | To what extent did you increase your force? |
42766 | To what extent were the missiles thrown? |
42766 | To what extent? |
42766 | To what extent? |
42766 | To what extent? |
42766 | To what number? |
42766 | To what point did the mob extend, coming towards the city? |
42766 | To what point? |
42766 | To what points were those men sent? |
42766 | To whom did you communicate these facts? |
42766 | To whom did you direct it? |
42766 | To whom did you first make application for protection to your property? |
42766 | To whom did you offer the assistance on Saturday night? |
42766 | To whom did you send it? |
42766 | To whom did you telegraph to Philadelphia? |
42766 | To whom do they report officially? |
42766 | To whom was it addressed? |
42766 | To whom was it addressed? |
42766 | To whom were those telegrams sent? |
42766 | To whom? |
42766 | To whom? |
42766 | To work at the pumps? |
42766 | To you or to any other officer of the road? |
42766 | To you? |
42766 | To your knowledge, do you know whether or not, the mayor of the city of Reading ordered out his police to suppress these rioters? |
42766 | Told whom? |
42766 | Told you to get down from there, and said they were going to burn that car? |
42766 | Took in railroad employés? |
42766 | Towards Scranton? |
42766 | Towards the arsenal? |
42766 | Towards the hill- side? |
42766 | Train master''s office? |
42766 | Treated you gentlemanly and kindly? |
42766 | Tried to push the crowd back quietly? |
42766 | Trying to press the crowd back? |
42766 | Two hundred over? |
42766 | Two or three hundred? |
42766 | Two or three years? |
42766 | Under general custom? |
42766 | Under the act of 1864, what have been the regulations-- I do not quite understand you on that point-- about calling out troops? |
42766 | Under the influence of spirits? |
42766 | Under the instruction of the court? |
42766 | Under the same title? |
42766 | Under what circumstances or condition of this order would you consider yourself justifiable in calling on the Governor to send you troops? |
42766 | Under what part of the round- house? |
42766 | Unemployed? |
42766 | Until Monday morning? |
42766 | Until Sunday morning? |
42766 | Until he got to it-- he received it before he crossed the river? |
42766 | Until the track was torn up to the point-- what track did he refer to? |
42766 | Until they got the wages they want? |
42766 | Until we are ordered off? |
42766 | Until what hour? |
42766 | Until what time? |
42766 | Up the tracks? |
42766 | Up to Saturday night, any train that could have been started would have gone through to its destination? |
42766 | Up to that time he was confident that the civil authorities could control it? |
42766 | Usually when you send out a squad, do n''t you arm them with maces? |
42766 | Usually, how many were kept on duty? |
42766 | Very soon afterward, I received another dispatch:"How soon can I expect troops?" |
42766 | Very well, go on with the history? |
42766 | Walking quietly, were they? |
42766 | Wanted him to realize the situation? |
42766 | Warning you mean? |
42766 | Warrants issued by the coroner? |
42766 | Warrants were immediately issued, were they? |
42766 | Was Brinton present? |
42766 | Was Captain Aull there, at the time? |
42766 | Was Captain Breck in the round- house during the night you were there? |
42766 | Was Cassatt and Pitcairn out at Twentieth street, at the time of the collision? |
42766 | Was Chittenden a member of the posse? |
42766 | Was Colonel Quay present when that remark was made? |
42766 | Was General Brinton marching at the time or was he walking along? |
42766 | Was General Pearson connected with the sheriff''s office at that time as a deputy? |
42766 | Was General Pearson facing towards Liberty street, or up the hill? |
42766 | Was General Pearson present when the firing took place? |
42766 | Was General Pearson relieved of his command for any time after the troubles on the 21st there? |
42766 | Was General Pearson there? |
42766 | Was Hice in the employ of the company at that time? |
42766 | Was Mr. Scott there? |
42766 | Was a volley of stones thrown in among the militia, or was it scattering? |
42766 | Was ammunition given to you in the same way? |
42766 | Was any actual violence used by the strikers to prevent the trains running on your road? |
42766 | Was any attack made on the military by the crowd? |
42766 | Was any attack made on them? |
42766 | Was any attack made upon the sheriff''s posse? |
42766 | Was any attack made upon you in the shops during the night? |
42766 | Was any attempt made by the Fourteenth and Nineteenth regiments during Saturday, to drive the crowd from the tracks? |
42766 | Was any attempt made during the entire day of Sunday to stop the men who were engaged in the burning? |
42766 | Was any attempt made to burn the house of the sheriff? |
42766 | Was any attempt made to destroy the Duquesne depot? |
42766 | Was any attempt made to interfere with your property or to burn your house? |
42766 | Was any attempt made to move any trains from that time up to four o''clock Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | Was any attempt made to move the ammunition while you were there? |
42766 | Was any attempt made to start trains? |
42766 | Was any burning going on at that time? |
42766 | Was any call made by you, or by any other officer of the Pennsylvania railroad, to your knowledge, upon the Governor directly? |
42766 | Was any command given to fire? |
42766 | Was any command given to the militia to fire? |
42766 | Was any crowd about Union depot there? |
42766 | Was any demand made on the night force that afternoon? |
42766 | Was any direction given to him as to what route he should take to reach General Brinton? |
42766 | Was any effort made at all to get control of this crowd at any time during the disturbance? |
42766 | Was any effort made by either of the commands to prevent their gathering there again? |
42766 | Was any effort made by either the police or the militia or any person to stop this gang who were firing the cars? |
42766 | Was any effort made by the civil authorities here to arrest the men that were threatening others and intimidating them? |
42766 | Was any effort made by the military to drive back that crowd when they commenced to reassemble? |
42766 | Was any effort made by the mob to set fire to private property, that you saw? |
42766 | Was any effort made by the police to disperse the crowd during the night? |
42766 | Was any effort made by the railroad company, during the night, to prevent the firing and destruction of property? |
42766 | Was any effort made by your brigade to rescue the Philadelphia troops while they were in the round- house? |
42766 | Was any effort made during Friday to run out trains? |
42766 | Was any effort made to increase the police force on Friday? |
42766 | Was any effort made to make any arrests, during this disturbance, of parties engaged in the riot? |
42766 | Was any further effort made during that night to start any trains? |
42766 | Was any motion made to adjourn? |
42766 | Was any of the property of the Allegheny Valley railroad destroyed? |
42766 | Was any one present when you communicated the substance of this order to General Brinton? |
42766 | Was any order given for the soldiers to shoot? |
42766 | Was any other person with you in the carriage, except Mr. Stewart? |
42766 | Was any record made of it? |
42766 | Was any report made to you of what occurred? |
42766 | Was any report of it made to the court? |
42766 | Was any threats made by any one? |
42766 | Was any threats made by yourself and other citizens to prevent a collision between the military and the people? |
42766 | Was any violence used that you know of to prevent trains from running on the Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad? |
42766 | Was any violence used towards those who were trying to take the train out? |
42766 | Was anybody firing on them? |
42766 | Was anybody shooting at them? |
42766 | Was anybody there when you got there? |
42766 | Was anybody with him? |
42766 | Was anything done by the miners here about a strike before the strike at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Was anything in the shape of ammunition or arms taken away? |
42766 | Was anything said about that? |
42766 | Was anything said between Mr. Watt and the mayor about the pay of the men? |
42766 | Was anything said or done by Colonel Gray about clearing the track before the arrival of General Brinton? |
42766 | Was anything said or done there about moving General Brinton or getting any word to General Brinton-- any communication in any other way? |
42766 | Was anything said to them, that they were suspended for a certain time, or were they just dropped? |
42766 | Was anything said, prior to this strike, by the citizens about furnishing you arms? |
42766 | Was he a Philadelphia soldier? |
42766 | Was he a business man? |
42766 | Was he a citizen of the place? |
42766 | Was he a non- commissioned officer, do you know? |
42766 | Was he a railroad man? |
42766 | Was he a railroad man? |
42766 | Was he a railroad official, or was he one of the strikers? |
42766 | Was he a soldier? |
42766 | Was he a staff officer? |
42766 | Was he actively engaged in the riot? |
42766 | Was he an employé of the railroad company? |
42766 | Was he an engineer? |
42766 | Was he an officer? |
42766 | Was he an old or a young man? |
42766 | Was he back of his command? |
42766 | Was he called on? |
42766 | Was he dressed the same as when he passed you? |
42766 | Was he driving when you left him? |
42766 | Was he fully dressed? |
42766 | Was he in the city during the time, or not? |
42766 | Was he in the employ of the railroad company at the time the strike broke out? |
42766 | Was he in the telegraph office or in Pitcairn''s-- that is above the telegraph office? |
42766 | Was he in uniform when you met him or saw him? |
42766 | Was he in uniform? |
42766 | Was he leading or giving directions in any way to the crowd? |
42766 | Was he lieutenant colonel? |
42766 | Was he making any demonstration towards the posse? |
42766 | Was he not a colonel in the Pennsylvania Reserves, during the war? |
42766 | Was he not appointed as one of your deputies? |
42766 | Was he not? |
42766 | Was he one that had refused to go out? |
42766 | Was he out there on Sunday when the fire was going on? |
42766 | Was he present during the time that this talk occurred between Colonel Norris and General Brinton? |
42766 | Was he present when you met General Brinton? |
42766 | Was he present? |
42766 | Was he relieved from command by General Latta at that time? |
42766 | Was he sitting down? |
42766 | Was he standing close to where the men commenced firing when he gave the order to those men? |
42766 | Was he standing in his command? |
42766 | Was he the man that issued these orders? |
42766 | Was he there on Saturday? |
42766 | Was he there with the military or with the Philadelphia troops when the firing took place? |
42766 | Was he there? |
42766 | Was he under your command? |
42766 | Was he up at the time? |
42766 | Was he willing to go? |
42766 | Was he with the crowd? |
42766 | Was his a gun- shot wound? |
42766 | Was his gun loaded? |
42766 | Was information made against you, as one of the posse, for murder? |
42766 | Was it General Brinton''s suggestion, or because you deemed it the best position, that you placed him in the round- house? |
42766 | Was it a Union regiment? |
42766 | Was it a complaint they made of the reduction of the wages-- that the wages had been reduced? |
42766 | Was it a larger company than the rest of them? |
42766 | Was it a month? |
42766 | Was it a railroad employé or was it railroad employés, or a citizen or citizens that advised you and Mr. Pitcairn to leave the city? |
42766 | Was it a rifle or a shot gun? |
42766 | Was it a scattering fire that lasted some little time? |
42766 | Was it a scattering fire, or did it appear to be a volley? |
42766 | Was it a simultaneous discharge of a good many pieces? |
42766 | Was it a subject of conversation at all at his head- quarters, during the night? |
42766 | Was it a subject of conversation at the Union hotel, between Latta and yourself, or any others that were in consultation there? |
42766 | Was it a telegraph office? |
42766 | Was it a volley or was it a scattering fire? |
42766 | Was it all railroad property? |
42766 | Was it an oath- bound association? |
42766 | Was it anticipated that the mob on the railroad tracks would resist the military, and bring on a collision? |
42766 | Was it any peculiar signal among the strikers different from other signals? |
42766 | Was it arranged among yourselves to let them come in? |
42766 | Was it arranged that they should prevent the trains from coming in? |
42766 | Was it at the end of the sheds connected with Union depot, or down in the yard further? |
42766 | Was it attached to the sheds? |
42766 | Was it before or after the Pittsburgh riots? |
42766 | Was it before or after the strike at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Was it before they had fired? |
42766 | Was it beneficial? |
42766 | Was it between the two tracks, between the Allegheny Valley and the Pennsylvania Central track? |
42766 | Was it burning before they came out? |
42766 | Was it commanding the citizens to join you as a posse, or was it a request? |
42766 | Was it confined entirely to miners? |
42766 | Was it deemed necessary on the part of the company to make that reduction? |
42766 | Was it directed to Colonel Scott or to you? |
42766 | Was it directed to colonel or to you? |
42766 | Was it fear of fire from the soldiers? |
42766 | Was it for remonstrating with him? |
42766 | Was it from lack of-- was it because they feared the result? |
42766 | Was it given by an officer? |
42766 | Was it in the crowd? |
42766 | Was it kept secret? |
42766 | Was it known then what men would be discharged under this order? |
42766 | Was it known through the city where General Latta was? |
42766 | Was it known to the business men-- I mean generally-- that your city was in such a condition, in regard to the police force? |
42766 | Was it known to the crowd that these Black Hussars were quartered in your house? |
42766 | Was it known to the men on any other roads that the men on the Pennsylvania Central were going to strike? |
42766 | Was it men there like yourself, or was it men there to resist the soldiers? |
42766 | Was it near the car? |
42766 | Was it necessary for the policemen to make any attack on the crowd? |
42766 | Was it necessary to have any guard to protect the first trains that started? |
42766 | Was it necessary to use any violence in doing that, any more than to make the arrests you have told us? |
42766 | Was it not agreed that no troops should be allowed to arrive? |
42766 | Was it not an assertion made here that that was the strikers this side, not the rioters? |
42766 | Was it not burned? |
42766 | Was it not on Saturday morning instead of on Friday morning? |
42766 | Was it not on Saturday morning that you considered the complaint withdrawn upon which the warrants were based? |
42766 | Was it not part of your duty to take charge yourself, as mayor? |
42766 | Was it not received at your office? |
42766 | Was it not your duty to disperse when the policemen requested you, having been instructed so to do by the officials of the railroad company? |
42766 | Was it of a beneficial character? |
42766 | Was it official? |
42766 | Was it on fire? |
42766 | Was it one of the railroad officials? |
42766 | Was it people there just out of curiosity? |
42766 | Was it possible for you to be mistaken in the man that gave the command"fire?" |
42766 | Was it published in the evening editions? |
42766 | Was it railroad men who flourished and displayed the revolvers and fire- arms? |
42766 | Was it regular? |
42766 | Was it safe to remain in the round- house any longer? |
42766 | Was it secret? |
42766 | Was it secret? |
42766 | Was it some time prior to this difficulty-- outbreak? |
42766 | Was it something that would attract attention-- conspicuous? |
42766 | Was it store goods, groceries, or was it iron? |
42766 | Was it sympathy with the strikers, or only prejudice against the railroad company? |
42766 | Was it talked of-- was it understood that you, as a body, would resist? |
42766 | Was it talked over? |
42766 | Was it the Sixth regiment? |
42766 | Was it the Tuesday after the fire at Pittsburg-- the burning at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Was it the engineers that had been discharged-- the idle employés of the railroad here that first started this disturbance? |
42766 | Was it the intention of the men to interfere with the movement of the trains? |
42766 | Was it the object of this organization to control the railroad companies, as to wages and running regulations? |
42766 | Was it the rioters that were talking about the burning? |
42766 | Was it the sheriff himself that you stopped? |
42766 | Was it the sheriff''s posse? |
42766 | Was it the subject of conversation when it became known? |
42766 | Was it understood by your lodges that this strike was to commence at Martinsburg? |
42766 | Was it understood or arranged between you for that strike on the 16th? |
42766 | Was it understood that there was to be a strike all over the country when the Pennsylvania Central men struck? |
42766 | Was it understood that when the order was given to run the double- headers that they would strike? |
42766 | Was it verbal notice? |
42766 | Was it verified after further investigation? |
42766 | Was it your impression that no other man in the State of Pennsylvania could order out the military? |
42766 | Was it your object, as strikers, to compel the railroad company to employ more men than they really needed? |
42766 | Was it your opinion that that was the way to disperse the mob, by the military disbanding? |
42766 | Was n''t it your duty to disperse that crowd there, as mayor of the city? |
42766 | Was not Mr. Cassatt and other railroad officials at the Union depot through Saturday afternoon and evening? |
42766 | Was not any attack made on the crowd by the policemen? |
42766 | Was not any portion of General Pearson''s command present? |
42766 | Was not anybody in front of the soldiers when they marched up the railroad track? |
42766 | Was not he in front of the soldiers? |
42766 | Was not that an unlawful assemblage of men? |
42766 | Was not that the arrangement-- to throw them off the track to prevent their arrival? |
42766 | Was not the conduct of those soldiers as good as could be expected from militia men? |
42766 | Was not the force that he organized in other parts of Allegheny City at the bridges? |
42766 | Was not the mob already dispersed? |
42766 | Was not the sheriff struck himself? |
42766 | Was not the train uncoupled? |
42766 | Was not there a large crowd of you went over there together? |
42766 | Was not there a large number of men from your mill went over there on Saturday just before the firing? |
42766 | Was not there some disturbance on Fifth avenue there that day? |
42766 | Was not there some disturbance on Monday on some of your streets here in the city? |
42766 | Was private property protected pretty generally? |
42766 | Was that a double- header? |
42766 | Was that agreed upon at that meeting in Chicago? |
42766 | Was that all that came there Saturday-- Saturday afternoon-- sixteen in number? |
42766 | Was that all the reason that was given? |
42766 | Was that all they did, waving their hands to the engineer? |
42766 | Was that ammunition for the troops? |
42766 | Was that before any firing? |
42766 | Was that detachment the one that marched on foot part of the way, and was escorted over the bridge at Harrisburg? |
42766 | Was that directed to the Governor? |
42766 | Was that discussed, or did that occur to you at the time to order him down to the Union depot? |
42766 | Was that dismissal anything more than a mere taking of those warrants from the hands of the police, and putting them in the hands of the sheriff? |
42766 | Was that formally communicated to your union here-- the strike that occurred there? |
42766 | Was that in relation to through and local freights, both? |
42766 | Was that man a railroader? |
42766 | Was that man an employé of the road? |
42766 | Was that matter discussed, or taken into consideration by the citizens at the time? |
42766 | Was that motion carried? |
42766 | Was that on Friday? |
42766 | Was that on the Allegheny Valley track? |
42766 | Was that one of the things complained of by the men? |
42766 | Was that paid for? |
42766 | Was that part of your division? |
42766 | Was that read in the pulpit of the churches pretty generally? |
42766 | Was that reduction general among the companies in Scranton? |
42766 | Was that remark made to General Brinton? |
42766 | Was that said to you by the mayor or by anybody else? |
42766 | Was that so far as the railroad company was concerned, or had they come down to private property? |
42766 | Was that soon after or before the firing? |
42766 | Was that strike in pursuance of an arrangement made in your union? |
42766 | Was that subject talked of? |
42766 | Was that the case? |
42766 | Was that the day the strike took place at Martinsburg? |
42766 | Was that the fact? |
42766 | Was that the first violence that was used? |
42766 | Was that the only reason that he gave for not accepting the proposition of Mr. Miller? |
42766 | Was that the reason why the trains did not start? |
42766 | Was that the reason why you did not? |
42766 | Was that the same crowd that had assembled about ten o''clock? |
42766 | Was that the same crowd that was fired on in the street? |
42766 | Was that the subject of conversation? |
42766 | Was that well guarded by citizens? |
42766 | Was that what encouraged the railroad employés to strike? |
42766 | Was that what induced the company to reduce the wages-- the falling off of business? |
42766 | Was that what the citizens gave you the arms for? |
42766 | Was that what your wages were about the time of the reduction or before? |
42766 | Was that your morning for going out as conductor of the train? |
42766 | Was that your occupation in July last, at the time of the riots? |
42766 | Was that your understanding before you left the head- quarters of General Latta? |
42766 | Was the Baltimore and Ohio not included? |
42766 | Was the carpenter shop burned afterwards? |
42766 | Was the carpenter shop on fire? |
42766 | Was the case ever submitted to a jury? |
42766 | Was the command given as though it was peremptory? |
42766 | Was the command to charge bayonets obeyed? |
42766 | Was the command to fire given by any of the officers? |
42766 | Was the crowd about the mayor trying to protect him? |
42766 | Was the crowd armed when they came there? |
42766 | Was the crowd attracted by curiosity to see what was going on? |
42766 | Was the crowd chasing any of them? |
42766 | Was the crowd mingling with the regiment-- mixed up with the regiment? |
42766 | Was the crowd noisy and boisterous? |
42766 | Was the crowd on Friday morning composed of the same men as on Thursday-- were the same men leading the crowd? |
42766 | Was the crowd resisting the soldiers? |
42766 | Was the crowd resisting the soldiers? |
42766 | Was the crowd throwing stones? |
42766 | Was the division all right when Colonel Norris and you overtook General Brinton? |
42766 | Was the elevator set on fire while you were there? |
42766 | Was the engineer threatened by the crowd? |
42766 | Was the entire command at rest when Colonel Norris reached there? |
42766 | Was the fact that there would be so large a number of unemployed men on Saturday afternoon, known to the railroad officers? |
42766 | Was the fire department near there-- some of them? |
42766 | Was the fire department protected by the police? |
42766 | Was the firing returned by your men? |
42766 | Was the first burning of cars or of buildings? |
42766 | Was the first door open on the left as you went in the hall? |
42766 | Was the intimation that Mr. Pitcairn''s life was in danger along with the rest? |
42766 | Was the man who was called Boss Ammon-- was he in command of that force? |
42766 | Was the mayor aware of those arms and that ammunition in the store? |
42766 | Was the mayor away all the time that you were there? |
42766 | Was the mayor in the city during all the time of the riots? |
42766 | Was the mayor making any effort to keep back the crowd? |
42766 | Was the mayor present when you offered protection to the firemen, at the fire engine, when they proposed to throw water on those burning cars? |
42766 | Was the message in the form of an order to Colonel Howard from Colonel Gray? |
42766 | Was the military at any time deployed on the railroad track, and any attempt made to drive them off the track in both directions? |
42766 | Was the mob dispersed by the firing that took place? |
42766 | Was the mob very demonstrative? |
42766 | Was the office connected with the round- house or the building you were in? |
42766 | Was the officer discharged from the service? |
42766 | Was the order issued on the 16th? |
42766 | Was the organization formally disbanded? |
42766 | Was the other on? |
42766 | Was the private property fired by the mob, or did it catch from the railroad company''s fire? |
42766 | Was the riot still progressing-- was the plundering and burning still going on? |
42766 | Was the round- house filled with smoke? |
42766 | Was the round- house on fire when you got there? |
42766 | Was the round- house on fire when you left it? |
42766 | Was the same order issued by your company that was issued by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, as to running double headers? |
42766 | Was the sheriff''s posse ahead of the line? |
42766 | Was the signal given? |
42766 | Was the sympathy of the people of the city of Reading with the strikers, the discharged employés of the Reading railroad? |
42766 | Was the track clear down to the Union depot? |
42766 | Was the upper round- house burning then? |
42766 | Was the volley fired by the whole command? |
42766 | Was the whole regiment there at any one time? |
42766 | Was there a company marched up between those two lines, after the open order? |
42766 | Was there a company marched up between those two ranks? |
42766 | Was there a considerable amount of men that followed you as you retired from the round- house out Penn avenue? |
42766 | Was there a consultation among the officers as to the position you should take after the firing took place? |
42766 | Was there a crowd of sympathizers around, immediately around these parties that were engaged in actual riot and arson? |
42766 | Was there a crowd there at that time? |
42766 | Was there a dispatch sent you, or communicated to you from Mr. Watt during the afternoon, that he wanted fifty more men? |
42766 | Was there a general disposition manifested on the part of the citizens to quiet the troubles? |
42766 | Was there a general dissatisfaction and complaint on the part of the railroad employés on account of this reduction of pay? |
42766 | Was there a general understanding of the miners throughout this region, before the strike took place, that there would be a strike? |
42766 | Was there a good deal of noise and confusion about at that time? |
42766 | Was there a large crowd of people then in that vicinity? |
42766 | Was there a large crowd? |
42766 | Was there a lodge here in Scranton? |
42766 | Was there a man by the name of Clarke who made that application to you personally? |
42766 | Was there a meeting at the silk- works that same morning? |
42766 | Was there a necessity to run double- headers on the Fort Wayne and Chicago road, if they want to do it? |
42766 | Was there a representative of your company present? |
42766 | Was there a rush made by the mob towards the troops before the firing began? |
42766 | Was there a strike among the other miners for higher pay? |
42766 | Was there a telegraph office adjourning this room where Mr. McKay carried the soldier? |
42766 | Was there an apparent organization among them? |
42766 | Was there an increase of duty or work placed upon the employés? |
42766 | Was there another class of men-- tramps or strangers-- who came there from a distance? |
42766 | Was there any ammunition in the store? |
42766 | Was there any amputation performed? |
42766 | Was there any antipathy on the part of the citizens against the railroad company? |
42766 | Was there any arrangement being made among the men for a strike to take place then or any other time? |
42766 | Was there any attack being made upon the round- house by the mob at that time? |
42766 | Was there any attack made upon this institution, or threatened? |
42766 | Was there any attempt made by any one, so far as you saw, to fire private property? |
42766 | Was there any attempt made to assist him? |
42766 | Was there any attempt made to prevent their gathering again there by any of the troops? |
42766 | Was there any attempt, at that time, to molest or disturb the property of the company? |
42766 | Was there any available position between the transfer station and the Union depot, where he could have entrenched himself and secured a position? |
42766 | Was there any burning going on at that time? |
42766 | Was there any call made for the militia to come out, by the sheriff, to preserve the peace? |
42766 | Was there any call made on the night force for it? |
42766 | Was there any call upon the sheriff during that day for assistance in putting down the disturbance at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Was there any class of men coöperating with your party, beside your party? |
42766 | Was there any command given to fire? |
42766 | Was there any command given to fire? |
42766 | Was there any complaint among the men about their not being able to work full time? |
42766 | Was there any concerted movement or action between you? |
42766 | Was there any considerable number of them with their arms where they were stacked? |
42766 | Was there any court- martial of those troops? |
42766 | Was there any coöperation or action between that association and the Trainmen''s Union at any time that you know of? |
42766 | Was there any coöperation or pre- arranged plan to strike for the purpose of securing this ten per cent.? |
42766 | Was there any day set for the strike by the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Was there any demand for coal? |
42766 | Was there any demonstration made by the crowd at all, before this firing? |
42766 | Was there any demonstration of that kind? |
42766 | Was there any demoralization discoverable? |
42766 | Was there any demoralization during the night in the round- house? |
42766 | Was there any difference existing at that time? |
42766 | Was there any difference in the local freights? |
42766 | Was there any difficulty in finding men? |
42766 | Was there any difficulty in getting men to serve in that way? |
42766 | Was there any difficulty, so far as you know, in reinforcing the police force? |
42766 | Was there any disobedience of orders on the part of the officers or men? |
42766 | Was there any disposition among your men to aid or sympathize with the strikers? |
42766 | Was there any disposition manifested on the part of your men, to go in to the furnaces and run them, if you would permit them? |
42766 | Was there any disposition on the part of either branch to employ all the force required in the city to suppress the riot? |
42766 | Was there any disposition on the part of these men expressed to destroy property? |
42766 | Was there any disposition, any offers made on the part of your men to go in and work? |
42766 | Was there any disturbance occurred after that Monday night? |
42766 | Was there any disturbance there Thursday? |
42766 | Was there any disturbance there, any noise or resisting of the soldiers? |
42766 | Was there any disturbance there? |
42766 | Was there any disturbance-- any overt act? |
42766 | Was there any division or separation between the rioters and the crowd that was looking on? |
42766 | Was there any effort made by any of the military to keep the track clear? |
42766 | Was there any effort made by the Fourteenth or Nineteenth regiment, after General Brinton left, to keep the crowd from the crossing? |
42766 | Was there any effort made by the police or any other parties to stop it there? |
42766 | Was there any effort made by the strikers, or the railroad employés, to compromise the differences between the railroad company and themselves? |
42766 | Was there any effort made by your regiment on the 19th to clear the crossing, or keep it clear that day? |
42766 | Was there any effort made that afternoon to start the trains? |
42766 | Was there any effort made to fire the round- house, that you saw? |
42766 | Was there any effort made to move any trains while you were there? |
42766 | Was there any effort made to run out trains during the afternoon of Thursday? |
42766 | Was there any effort made to stop the destruction of property during the night? |
42766 | Was there any expression of sympathy on the part of citizens with the mob that attacked the troops in the round- house before the burning took place? |
42766 | Was there any fire Friday night? |
42766 | Was there any firing after that? |
42766 | Was there any firing after the crowd started to run? |
42766 | Was there any firing along the line in the street? |
42766 | Was there any firing along the route? |
42766 | Was there any firing at that time from the mob outside on the troops? |
42766 | Was there any firing before the missiles were thrown? |
42766 | Was there any firing by the police or the troops as you passed? |
42766 | Was there any firing by your company? |
42766 | Was there any firing by your men? |
42766 | Was there any firing done from the crowd at all that you heard? |
42766 | Was there any firing from the troops before that? |
42766 | Was there any firing going out Penn street? |
42766 | Was there any firing there, after they had passed through? |
42766 | Was there any firing? |
42766 | Was there any formal demand made by any officer of the militia to be admitted, or request to be admitted here? |
42766 | Was there any further reduction after that time, and prior to the riot? |
42766 | Was there any general expression against the soldiery? |
42766 | Was there any general understanding that a strike would take place at the time the strike broke out at Martinsburg? |
42766 | Was there any haste at any point in the line of march? |
42766 | Was there any illegal assemblage? |
42766 | Was there any individual expression? |
42766 | Was there any insubordination or refusal to obey orders that came under your observation? |
42766 | Was there any insubordination? |
42766 | Was there any interference with it by any person? |
42766 | Was there any jeering of citizens from the houses as you passed along? |
42766 | Was there any larger number of idle men, discharged men, in the city at that time than usual? |
42766 | Was there any liquor there, or anything to inflame-- any drinking going on? |
42766 | Was there any loss in the vicinity? |
42766 | Was there any made after that time, or where did the crowd go, and what became of the inmates of the office? |
42766 | Was there any men taken by force? |
42766 | Was there any mob there at the depot? |
42766 | Was there any move by the citizens prior to Sunday morning? |
42766 | Was there any one else present there where you stood that heard and saw what you said, or was likely to see and hear? |
42766 | Was there any one giving commands to the mob? |
42766 | Was there any order on the Fort Wayne road for running double- headers? |
42766 | Was there any organization here known as the Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | Was there any other encouragement given to the strikers by the citizens, except what you have mentioned-- the giving of the arms? |
42766 | Was there any other threats made by citizens like yourself to prevent a collision? |
42766 | Was there any particular party to command it? |
42766 | Was there any pistol firing from the side of the hill? |
42766 | Was there any pistols fired by the crowd? |
42766 | Was there any plan before that time that the engineers should refuse to work and run the cars? |
42766 | Was there any positive order given to fire? |
42766 | Was there any pre- arranged plan among the railroad men for a strike? |
42766 | Was there any pre- arranged plan, by which any strike was to take place on the 19th of July? |
42766 | Was there any preliminary affidavit made? |
42766 | Was there any property beside railroad property destroyed? |
42766 | Was there any public call for this meeting in the papers or otherwise? |
42766 | Was there any question about your authority to call out a posse of citizens? |
42766 | Was there any reason you had for disobeying his orders or receiving orders from him? |
42766 | Was there any reduction after that? |
42766 | Was there any reduction in March, 1877, of ten per cent.? |
42766 | Was there any refusal to obey orders? |
42766 | Was there any request made by private citizens or corporations for troops? |
42766 | Was there any resistance in the city of Allegheny to your passage through the city? |
42766 | Was there any resistance made by the crowd? |
42766 | Was there any resistance to your attempt at clearing the track? |
42766 | Was there any riot organized in the city of Scranton? |
42766 | Was there any riot over there? |
42766 | Was there any serious opposition to those new men working there? |
42766 | Was there any strike in the city of Philadelphia among your employés? |
42766 | Was there any strike of the men that were working for that company? |
42766 | Was there any strike? |
42766 | Was there any sympathy expressed by the good portions of the citizens of this city after the burning and destruction of property had commenced? |
42766 | Was there any sympathy with the strikers manifested by any of your police force? |
42766 | Was there any talk about calling a meeting, and it would be necessary to take means to suppress any disturbance that might grow out of it? |
42766 | Was there any talk of resisting these soldiers in clearing the track, and preventing them from running trains? |
42766 | Was there any talk of striking among those men that gathered in crowds before the strike? |
42766 | Was there any talk of that kind in that organization that you know of-- of striking? |
42766 | Was there any time arranged afterwards for a strike? |
42766 | Was there any trouble in raising a company of citizens at that time? |
42766 | Was there any understanding among the men generally? |
42766 | Was there any understanding that that boat load should come? |
42766 | Was there any understanding, that if a strike took place then, that men from different points would collect at some one point? |
42766 | Was there any violence or assaulting of the engineer, or any train men of that train? |
42766 | Was there any violence resulting from them at all? |
42766 | Was there any violence used to prevent the running of trains that you know of? |
42766 | Was there anybody in the carriage with him? |
42766 | Was there anybody in the room at the time besides these two men? |
42766 | Was there anybody interfering with your duties by any manner of means? |
42766 | Was there anybody over there that had control of the strike there or who was looked up to as a leader or recognized as such? |
42766 | Was there anybody that offered violence to you? |
42766 | Was there anybody who refused, to your knowledge? |
42766 | Was there anything communicated from the Trainmen''s Union to the Engineers''Brotherhood of a strike? |
42766 | Was there anything condemning anything by the men? |
42766 | Was there anything said by the mob about the soldiers being quartered in the round- house? |
42766 | Was there anything talked of in that organization of strikes? |
42766 | Was there anything to prevent General Brinton from joining you at the stock- yards? |
42766 | Was there anything to prevent you from exercising your powers as mayor? |
42766 | Was there more of the hands left at that time? |
42766 | Was there much heat in the round- house when you got there, soon after the troops left? |
42766 | Was there much noise? |
42766 | Was there much of a crowd actively engaged? |
42766 | Was there no effort made during the day, Sunday, to stop the progress of those men in setting fire to the cars and the depot? |
42766 | Was there no effort made when they set the sheds on fire to tear the sheds down and stop the fire? |
42766 | Was there no evidence against them? |
42766 | Was there none made on Friday morning, to your knowledge? |
42766 | Was there not a crowd making an attack upon the soldiers, and that there was likely to be trouble? |
42766 | Was there not a meeting of representatives of the trunk lines in Chicago in May sometime, at which matters were talked over? |
42766 | Was there not a strike among other classes of men-- iron men and rolling- mill men? |
42766 | Was there not some such talk, that that would be the most effectual way of bringing the companies to terms? |
42766 | Was there nothing to distinguish them? |
42766 | Was there one or more sentinels at the gate when you reached the arsenal? |
42766 | Was there reduction there? |
42766 | Was there still a crowd about then? |
42766 | Was there such an organization here as the Trainmen''s Union that you knew of? |
42766 | Was there trouble talked of-- rumors in the street that there would be a resistance to the soldiers? |
42766 | Was there twenty? |
42766 | Was these grievances complained of? |
42766 | Was this W. W. Scranton employed in the works in which you were superintendent? |
42766 | Was this before the effort was made to clear the tracks with troops? |
42766 | Was this company far from the mob? |
42766 | Was this destruction of property caused by former employés of the road? |
42766 | Was this fellow intoxicated, did you think? |
42766 | Was this firing by orders? |
42766 | Was this firing confined entirely to railroad property? |
42766 | Was this food given to you because you were protecting the property, or was it given to you because you were strikers? |
42766 | Was this immediately before retiring from the round- house? |
42766 | Was this in the_ Critic_ or_ Globe_? |
42766 | Was this last reduction made in pursuance of any arrangement with any other road? |
42766 | Was this man Marshall a railroad man or an outsider? |
42766 | Was this meeting called by the mayor? |
42766 | Was this one employed by the railroad company at the time? |
42766 | Was this one of the posse? |
42766 | Was this picket line still out? |
42766 | Was this reduction of wages that was made in July general? |
42766 | Was this the conference with the Governor? |
42766 | Was this the line that was formed parallel with the railroad tracks, on the right towards the hill side? |
42766 | Was you present when the firing took place? |
42766 | Was you ready to take out your train? |
42766 | Was your command supplied with ammunition to hold out against a mob? |
42766 | Was your company the only company of your regiment at the crossing at Twenty- eighth street and the railroad? |
42766 | Was your organization notified of this strike that took place on Thursday, the 19th? |
42766 | Was your regiment on there? |
42766 | Was your road- way blocked up? |
42766 | We generally work there---- Q. I ai n''t asking you that? |
42766 | We had some work to do, to put some cars in or something, and I just remarked to the crowd that was on the other side, says I,"What''s going on here?" |
42766 | We had testimony that links and pins were thrown at engineers on their engines-- did you see anything of that kind? |
42766 | We have had Officer Coulson and his story? |
42766 | We have had a great many witnesses on that subject? |
42766 | We have testimony that the police offered to give protection to one engine? |
42766 | We want to get at what Colonel Norris said to General Brinton? |
42766 | We want to give a full hearing to all sides? |
42766 | We want to know it? |
42766 | We want to know where the responsibility should rest-- which of those authorities should have taken command? |
42766 | We were informed there would be delegates from different places? |
42766 | We will take the evidence of the military men? |
42766 | We wish you to state now whether there was any difficulty on the Reading railroad during the riots last July; and if so, give us the circumstances? |
42766 | We would like to have the list of killed from your docket? |
42766 | We would like to have the origin of it-- as much as you can give us-- the origin and causes that produced it? |
42766 | Wear a belt? |
42766 | Well, I should judge there was between five and seven thousand? |
42766 | Well, I think it is in the neighborhood-- you mean what property? |
42766 | Well, did you see him within a week? |
42766 | Well, he ordered his troops out? |
42766 | Well, then, Mr. Goodhart, in your opinion, what amount of men would it have taken to suppress this mob and restore order and peace? |
42766 | Well, then, Mr. Goodhart, were they simply discharged employés of the Reading road that participated in this destruction of property? |
42766 | Well, what has civilization done for us? |
42766 | Well? |
42766 | Well? |
42766 | Were all these roads reducing the wages of their employés? |
42766 | Were any arrests made by the sheriff? |
42766 | Were any arrests made that afternoon? |
42766 | Were any attacks made on the guards during the night by the mob? |
42766 | Were any buildings attached to the round- house on fire, or buildings near it? |
42766 | Were any business men among them? |
42766 | Were any committees appointed to wait on the officials? |
42766 | Were any engaged in burning and setting afire? |
42766 | Were any guards thrown out to guard the approaches to the round- house during the night? |
42766 | Were any guns or pistols fired at you? |
42766 | Were any made in your presence? |
42766 | Were any missiles thrown of any kind? |
42766 | Were any more of the rioters wounded? |
42766 | Were any of that class of men at the meeting? |
42766 | Were any of that number detailed to go to the depot or to that section of the city? |
42766 | Were any of the companies brought down here and disbanded? |
42766 | Were any of the discharged men among the crowd at Twenty- eighth street or at Torren''s station that morning? |
42766 | Were any of the employés of the road getting less than a dollar a day? |
42766 | Were any of the military injured before the firing took place? |
42766 | Were any of the military struck by pistol or rifle shots before they commenced firing on the mob? |
42766 | Were any of the military struck or injured before the firing on the mob? |
42766 | Were any of the militia brought in at any time? |
42766 | Were any of the officers of the railroad company at the Monongahela house? |
42766 | Were any of the posse wounded? |
42766 | Were any of the rioters arrested that were engaged in this riot here, on the streets, afterwards? |
42766 | Were any of the rioters tried, that were arrested? |
42766 | Were any of the sheriff''s posse hit? |
42766 | Were any of the soldiers hit and wounded at that time, before the firing-- before they attempted to fire? |
42766 | Were any of the soldiers hurt? |
42766 | Were any of the soldiers struck? |
42766 | Were any of the strikers, that is the railroad employés, who first struck, engaged in this arson, burning, and pillaging? |
42766 | Were any of the switches turned, at that time, at Torrens? |
42766 | Were any of them actually engaged, or were they citizens who had congregated there out of curiosity? |
42766 | Were any of them arrested? |
42766 | Were any of them at arms port? |
42766 | Were any of them getting less than a dollar a day-- trainmen? |
42766 | Were any of them in those companies among the rioters or part of the rioters? |
42766 | Were any of them injured? |
42766 | Were any of them laden with freight? |
42766 | Were any of them sent out there on Friday morning-- any of the night force? |
42766 | Were any of them wounded there? |
42766 | Were any of those buildings on fire? |
42766 | Were any of those dismissed? |
42766 | Were any of those engaged in riotous conduct that you knew? |
42766 | Were any of those men who were suspended or not retained in the employ of the company among that crowd of twenty that you spoke of? |
42766 | Were any of those men''s names included in those warrants? |
42766 | Were any of those new men you got men who had been discharged from other roads? |
42766 | Were any of those puddlers in the crowd that came up from the silk- works? |
42766 | Were any of those ten men you speak of, that left the mayor''s office, dressed in police uniform? |
42766 | Were any of your men among that crowd-- your employés? |
42766 | Were any of your posse arrested? |
42766 | Were any of your posse killed? |
42766 | Were any pistols fired? |
42766 | Were any policemen in the vicinity at the time? |
42766 | Were any policemen on duty throughout the city during the day, Friday? |
42766 | Were any railroad men among that party? |
42766 | Were any reports made to you during the night, from the policemen? |
42766 | Were any resolutions passed in your body to stop trains? |
42766 | Were any shots fired from the hill? |
42766 | Were any steps taken by the commander- in- chief to ascertain the cause of that delay? |
42766 | Were any stones or missiles thrown at the party to which you belonged? |
42766 | Were any threats made by those policemen to arrest any of those citizens or the crowd who were following you? |
42766 | Were any threats made that you heard? |
42766 | Were any threats made to the loyal men who were willing to work? |
42766 | Were any thrown at the troops before the command to fire was given? |
42766 | Were any troops left at Reading, at all? |
42766 | Were any wounded with stones or clubs? |
42766 | Were do you live? |
42766 | Were not shots fired from the crowd before the firing commenced? |
42766 | Were not your instructions to quietly take those men? |
42766 | Were ready to come at the signal? |
42766 | Were scattered all about there? |
42766 | Were similar remarks to those made by any of the persons who furnished you arms and ammunition? |
42766 | Were that class of men taking part in the disturbance? |
42766 | Were the burning cars around there? |
42766 | Were the burning cars below there? |
42766 | Were the business places open on Monday, throughout the city? |
42766 | Were the captains and lieutenants there? |
42766 | Were the citizens armed? |
42766 | Were the crowd generally disorderly? |
42766 | Were the crowd resisting these men? |
42766 | Were the day force placed back on duty on Sunday morning? |
42766 | Were the efforts of the officers directed in that way-- to keep it clear? |
42766 | Were the engineers and the firemen at their posts at the time the troops arrived? |
42766 | Were the engineers willing to go? |
42766 | Were the engines fired up? |
42766 | Were the freight trains run? |
42766 | Were the men all willing to unite in such a scheme of protection? |
42766 | Were the men discharged? |
42766 | Were the men obedient-- did they perform their duty? |
42766 | Were the men with their guns where they were stacked? |
42766 | Were the men working at that time-- that afternoon? |
42766 | Were the military deployed along the track of the railroad? |
42766 | Were the mill men and furnace men and the employés of the manufactories in and about the cities engaged in this riot as a general thing? |
42766 | Were the muskets wrenched from their hands? |
42766 | Were the new men you employed experienced engineers? |
42766 | Were the officers in possession of the track? |
42766 | Were the passenger trains interfered with by the mob? |
42766 | Were the people armed? |
42766 | Were the police drawn up in line as you passed them? |
42766 | Were the police officers obliged to use their maces in order to disperse the mob that night at the foot of Market street? |
42766 | Were the police there? |
42766 | Were the railroad employés the prime movers in this strike? |
42766 | Were the railroad men noisy and boisterous? |
42766 | Were the round- house and those shops very hot when you went in? |
42766 | Were the threats made about preventing the running of the trains by employés or others? |
42766 | Were the troops-- the soldiers of the Fourteenth and Nineteenth regiments-- mixed up with the crowd at that time? |
42766 | Were their arms stacked? |
42766 | Were there a large number of them suspended, and were without employ in and about the city of Reading? |
42766 | Were there any affidavits made before you against parties-- against any disorderly conduct? |
42766 | Were there any attacks made upon any property or persons, on Monday? |
42766 | Were there any business men who offered to do that? |
42766 | Were there any citizens who condemned the strikers-- any of them who ever said a word in rebuke of the strikers at any time? |
42766 | Were there any complaints from the men after the issuing of the order reducing the wages ten per cent.? |
42766 | Were there any deputies in advance of them? |
42766 | Were there any double- headers that succeeded in starting that morning of Thursday? |
42766 | Were there any efforts made to extinguish the fire by the fire companies or civil authorities of the city? |
42766 | Were there any efforts-- did you know on Sunday that Colonel Gray and Colonel Howard''s regiment had been dismissed on Saturday night? |
42766 | Were there any engineers? |
42766 | Were there any men from the shops within the city? |
42766 | Were there any men there at that time who had previously been discharged? |
42766 | Were there any men who came from other roads and assisted you there? |
42766 | Were there any men, under that reduction, that would make less than a dollar a day? |
42766 | Were there any of the men at these works that came up and remained and participated, to your knowledge? |
42766 | Were there any of the mob arrested? |
42766 | Were there any of your division that failed to report to you at Pittsburgh, after being ordered out, and if so, why? |
42766 | Were there any officers about, except General Pearson? |
42766 | Were there any officers among them? |
42766 | Were there any officers of the militia there when you went there with this man, except the one that helped? |
42766 | Were there any officers walking with General Brinton when you overtook him? |
42766 | Were there any other companies of your own regiment there? |
42766 | Were there any other complaints or grievances by the men of that road? |
42766 | Were there any other men about at that time? |
42766 | Were there any other officers in that hollow square, that you knew, besides General Pearson? |
42766 | Were there any other ones wounded? |
42766 | Were there any other stores broken into and robbed? |
42766 | Were there any other such vigilance committees organized? |
42766 | Were there any other troops here whose conduct was not as good as General Reeder''s? |
42766 | Were there any other troops within the reach of the city? |
42766 | Were there any police in the vicinity at the time you were stationed there? |
42766 | Were there any police there to arrest the crowd? |
42766 | Were there any policemen in the station when you passed? |
42766 | Were there any policemen on duty throughout the city on Sunday? |
42766 | Were there any policemen there at the time? |
42766 | Were there any railroad employés? |
42766 | Were there any railroad men among this crowd that assembled on the 1st day of August? |
42766 | Were there any railroad men engaged during the day Sunday? |
42766 | Were there any resolutions to interfere with the men who desired to work? |
42766 | Were there any rioters still around the store? |
42766 | Were there any riotous proceedings around the depot at that time? |
42766 | Were there any shots fired by the crowd before the command to fire was given? |
42766 | Were there any shots fired by the mob before there was any firing by the militia? |
42766 | Were there any soldiers there? |
42766 | Were there any strangers, tramps or strangers-- outside men entirely-- outside of this region? |
42766 | Were there any strangers? |
42766 | Were there any that had neither vests nor badges among them? |
42766 | Were there any threats made against the engineer or fireman? |
42766 | Were there any women and children among them in the crowd? |
42766 | Were there any women and children killed? |
42766 | Were there any women and children mixed up with the crowd? |
42766 | Were there engineers with them? |
42766 | Were there many of them-- more than two or three? |
42766 | Were there mill men and factory men and employés in the shops about Pittsburgh there? |
42766 | Were there more than the usual number of those tramps? |
42766 | Were there no railroad employés that were actually engaged in the arson and burning and riot? |
42766 | Were there not some stacks of muskets? |
42766 | Were there not stones being thrown, that led this man to think there would be trouble? |
42766 | Were there on Friday? |
42766 | Were there railroad employés there? |
42766 | Were these all citizens, or a portion of them soldiers? |
42766 | Were these business men, or were they laboring men, or what were they? |
42766 | Were these companies armed that night? |
42766 | Were these editorials, with the head- lines, intended to mollify and quiet the mob? |
42766 | Were these men in the employ of the railroad company or were they discharged men? |
42766 | Were these men laborers or men that you had ever seen in and about Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Were these orders addressed to you, or to the colonel? |
42766 | Were these people you spoke of, railroad men? |
42766 | Were these sent by wire-- by telegraph? |
42766 | Were these two men strangers? |
42766 | Were these two or three hundred that you speak of armed, so far as you could see? |
42766 | Were they Philadelphia soldiers? |
42766 | Were they Pittsburghers? |
42766 | Were they acquitted? |
42766 | Were they all men that were in that crowd? |
42766 | Were they all railroad employés? |
42766 | Were they all railroad employés? |
42766 | Were they all railroad employés? |
42766 | Were they all taking a part? |
42766 | Were they along the road, or across the road? |
42766 | Were they also your mines? |
42766 | Were they armed as usual with maces? |
42766 | Were they armed in any way? |
42766 | Were they armed? |
42766 | Were they assaulted by the mob? |
42766 | Were they at rest-- stacked arms? |
42766 | Were they attached to the round- house? |
42766 | Were they boisterous and noisy? |
42766 | Were they both on the right hand side of the street going up from here to Lackawanna avenue? |
42766 | Were they citizens of Pittsburgh, or were they strangers? |
42766 | Were they citizens of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Were they citizens of the city of Pittsburgh, or strangers? |
42766 | Were they citizens? |
42766 | Were they closed at all? |
42766 | Were they composed entirely of miners? |
42766 | Were they conspicuous enough to be noticed? |
42766 | Were they discharged men, principally, that came from the other roads? |
42766 | Were they discharged then when they refused to obey orders? |
42766 | Were they drawn across the street in a line, or how were they placed? |
42766 | Were they drawn up in line across the street? |
42766 | Were they dressed in uniform? |
42766 | Were they ever paid any fees? |
42766 | Were they faced in a straight line across this avenue? |
42766 | Were they fired upon? |
42766 | Were they in front of the men? |
42766 | Were they in front of their men when they gave the order? |
42766 | Were they in uniform? |
42766 | Were they in uniform? |
42766 | Were they interfering with the trains that were passing? |
42766 | Were they kept on duty both day and night? |
42766 | Were they laboring men, or were they professional men? |
42766 | Were they making an effort to keep the crowd back, and keep them orderly? |
42766 | Were they making threats? |
42766 | Were they marching in good order? |
42766 | Were they men from these shops, formerly? |
42766 | Were they men who had been in the employ of the company? |
42766 | Were they mill men? |
42766 | Were they miners on a strike? |
42766 | Were they miners, or mill men, or tramps, or railroad men? |
42766 | Were they missing? |
42766 | Were they new men, or old employés? |
42766 | Were they noisy and boisterous? |
42766 | Were they noisy and boisterous? |
42766 | Were they noisy? |
42766 | Were they noisy? |
42766 | Were they not a little disgusted, like yourself? |
42766 | Were they not hit accidentally? |
42766 | Were they not running helter- skelter? |
42766 | Were they officers or men? |
42766 | Were they on a strike? |
42766 | Were they on the tracks? |
42766 | Were they overpowered by the mob? |
42766 | Were they part of the crowd-- the strikers? |
42766 | Were they part of your posse? |
42766 | Were they permitted to run? |
42766 | Were they placed on duty during Sunday? |
42766 | Were they practicing attorneys at the bar? |
42766 | Were they provisioned regularly? |
42766 | Were they railroad employés or stragglers in general, or were there any other persons in the vicinity mixed with the crowd to any extent? |
42766 | Were they railroad employés too? |
42766 | Were they railroad employés, were they colliers, or what were they? |
42766 | Were they railroad men on Friday night? |
42766 | Were they railroad men that were standing about-- railroad employés? |
42766 | Were they railroad men, in their appearance? |
42766 | Were they railroad men-- employés? |
42766 | Were they railroad men? |
42766 | Were they railroad men? |
42766 | Were they railroaders? |
42766 | Were they ready to go to work at all times when you wanted them? |
42766 | Were they sent on duty again? |
42766 | Were they setting the cars on fire with torches and fire brands? |
42766 | Were they sober or not? |
42766 | Were they stationed with a skirmish line? |
42766 | Were they stopping the trains? |
42766 | Were they stopping trains? |
42766 | Were they stopping trains? |
42766 | Were they telegraphic dispatches? |
42766 | Were they the first that struck? |
42766 | Were they the men that undertook to protect you? |
42766 | Were they the ones who telegraphed to you to come to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Were they to act in conjunction with Doctor Donnelly and his armed force? |
42766 | Were they train men? |
42766 | Were they tried by the county courts or police courts? |
42766 | Were they tried? |
42766 | Were they uniformed men? |
42766 | Were they up and down the street-- I mean, for instance, facing that side-- lengthwise? |
42766 | Were they veterans as a general thing-- had seen service? |
42766 | Were they well handled and marching orderly, or were they demoralized? |
42766 | Were they with you at the time you had the conversation with that man? |
42766 | Were they written by Mr. Scott, the solicitor? |
42766 | Were those arrests made by the mayor? |
42766 | Were those brakemen who had refused to go out with you among them? |
42766 | Were those directed against the railroad officers or any of their employés? |
42766 | Were those men armed? |
42766 | Were those men members of the Trainmen''s union? |
42766 | Were those men sworn in by you men as special police? |
42766 | Were those men that were killed strangers? |
42766 | Were those men that you took to Twenty- eighth street dressed in uniform? |
42766 | Were those shots fired before there was any firing? |
42766 | Were those shots pistol shots or musket shots? |
42766 | Were those six or seven thousand that assembled there composed of laboring men of this section-- Scranton and surroundings-- here principally? |
42766 | Were those stones thrown at the sheriff''s posse or at the militia? |
42766 | Were those telegrams? |
42766 | Were those threats made by the crowd or by this one man? |
42766 | Were those your mines? |
42766 | Were you a conductor in July last? |
42766 | Were you a member of any of the military companies? |
42766 | Were you a member of any organization? |
42766 | Were you a member of the National Guard at that time? |
42766 | Were you a member of the National Guard of Pennsylvania in July last? |
42766 | Were you a member of the National Guard of the State of Pennsylvania in July last? |
42766 | Were you a member of the National Guard? |
42766 | Were you a member of the National Guards in July last? |
42766 | Were you a member of the body? |
42766 | Were you a member of the citizens''committee waiting on Mr. Cassatt at that time? |
42766 | Were you a member of the fire department last July? |
42766 | Were you a member of the sheriff''s posse? |
42766 | Were you a witness before the grand jury? |
42766 | Were you able to take any trains out on Friday, or if not, what hindered them from going out? |
42766 | Were you able to take any trains out on Friday? |
42766 | Were you about on Thursday or Friday? |
42766 | Were you about the Fort Wayne depot during Saturday or Sunday? |
42766 | Were you about the shops when the men were driving the workmen out-- when the crowd was? |
42766 | Were you acquainted with the Mayor? |
42766 | Were you acquainted with them? |
42766 | Were you among the crowd during Saturday night? |
42766 | Were you among them there Thursday or Friday-- have you any knowledge? |
42766 | Were you an engineer of that road in July last? |
42766 | Were you an officer in command of a regiment or brigade-- a field officer or commissioned officer? |
42766 | Were you armed? |
42766 | Were you armed? |
42766 | Were you armed? |
42766 | Were you arrested? |
42766 | Were you arrested? |
42766 | Were you assisted at any time during the fire by the police? |
42766 | Were you assisted by the police force at any time? |
42766 | Were you at Martinsburg, Virginia? |
42766 | Were you at Reading during the riots? |
42766 | Were you at Torrens station on Thursday? |
42766 | Were you at Twenty- eighth street during the firing on the troops? |
42766 | Were you at Twenty- eighth street during the firing? |
42766 | Were you at Twenty- eighth street on Saturday, the 21st July, the time of the firing? |
42766 | Were you at Twenty- eighth street when the collision occurred with the troops? |
42766 | Were you at home in July last, or August the 1st? |
42766 | Were you at the Union depot at any time during the riots of July last-- first you may state where you reside? |
42766 | Were you at the Union depot at the time the firing took place? |
42766 | Were you at the Union depot on Thursday morning, the 19th? |
42766 | Were you at the Union depot when it was set on fire? |
42766 | Were you at the arsenal grounds? |
42766 | Were you at the citizen''s meeting on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you at the city hall that day or any other day? |
42766 | Were you at the coroner''s inquest? |
42766 | Were you at the depot or about the depot on the morning of the 19th-- Thursday morning? |
42766 | Were you at the round- house after they left? |
42766 | Were you at the scene of the disturbance at any time during the trouble? |
42766 | Were you at the scene of the riots at any time during their progress? |
42766 | Were you at the scene of the riots, near the Union depot, on Saturday? |
42766 | Were you at work for them last July? |
42766 | Were you at work on the 1st day of August? |
42766 | Were you at your home? |
42766 | Were you at your office on the 19th-- Thursday, 19th of July last? |
42766 | Were you aware of that? |
42766 | Were you aware that the rolling mills and manufacturing establishments in Pittsburgh closed at noon on Saturday? |
42766 | Were you called on by the railroad officials? |
42766 | Were you called on first by the railroad officials? |
42766 | Were you called out during the late disturbance? |
42766 | Were you called upon at any time to exert your authority to keep the peace? |
42766 | Were you called-- did you call your men together after that? |
42766 | Were you chairman of the committee? |
42766 | Were you charged with murder? |
42766 | Were you chief of that lodge? |
42766 | Were you close enough to hear any command given by the officers? |
42766 | Were you close enough to tell who gave the order, or whether it was an order to fire? |
42766 | Were you close to the military when the firing commenced? |
42766 | Were you close? |
42766 | Were you coming in or going out? |
42766 | Were you connected with it? |
42766 | Were you connected with the fire department in July last? |
42766 | Were you connected with the fire department of the city of Pittsburgh last July? |
42766 | Were you connected with the police officers of the city of Reading in July last? |
42766 | Were you discharged before you organized Trainmen''s Union lodges on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad in Virginia? |
42766 | Were you down near the track when you followed the firing along? |
42766 | Were you dressed in uniform when you went to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Were you dressed in uniform? |
42766 | Were you dressed in uniform? |
42766 | Were you editor from the 19th to the 24th July? |
42766 | Were you editor of the_ Leader_ at the time of the railroad strike in July last? |
42766 | Were you employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | Were you employed by the mayor as a special detective? |
42766 | Were you here at its birth? |
42766 | Were you here in July last, when the difficulty occurred? |
42766 | Were you in Allegheny City at the time? |
42766 | Were you in July last, the 19th of July? |
42766 | Were you in July last? |
42766 | Were you in July last? |
42766 | Were you in July, 1877? |
42766 | Were you in a position where you could have heard the command to fire if there had been one given? |
42766 | Were you in citizen''s dress during the time you were in command? |
42766 | Were you in consultation with citizens on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you in military uniform? |
42766 | Were you in position to see the stones when they were thrown? |
42766 | Were you in the army during the late war? |
42766 | Were you in the city during the riots of July last? |
42766 | Were you in the city of Pittsburgh in July last? |
42766 | Were you in the city on the 10th of July? |
42766 | Were you in the city on the 19th day of July? |
42766 | Were you in the city on the 19th of July last? |
42766 | Were you in the company detailed to clear away the crowd at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Were you in the immediate vicinity, when the firing took place? |
42766 | Were you in the late war of the rebellion? |
42766 | Were you in the late war, captain? |
42766 | Were you in the late war? |
42766 | Were you in the regular army during the late war? |
42766 | Were you in the round- house during that night? |
42766 | Were you in the round- house during the night? |
42766 | Were you in the round- house during the night? |
42766 | Were you in the round- house during the night? |
42766 | Were you in the round- house on Saturday night? |
42766 | Were you in the service during the late rebellion? |
42766 | Were you in the sheriff''s office on Thursday, the 19th of July? |
42766 | Were you in the telegraph office at any time after you carried this man down? |
42766 | Were you in the telegraph office or above? |
42766 | Were you in the telegraph office there? |
42766 | Were you in the vicinity of the crossing of Twenty- eighth street and the railroad, the scene of the riot, on Saturday? |
42766 | Were you in the vicinity of the disorders that occurred, commencing on the 19th day of July last-- that day or at any time following? |
42766 | Were you in the war of the late rebellion? |
42766 | Were you in uniform when you came down to the armory? |
42766 | Were you in uniform? |
42766 | Were you informed that the city authorities and the sheriff were not able to suppress the strike or the riot there? |
42766 | Were you informed, by either of those parties, that you were not needed? |
42766 | Were you inside of this hollow- square? |
42766 | Were you interfered with by the crowd? |
42766 | Were you interfered with by the mob? |
42766 | Were you interfered with in any way on Tuesday night when you went out? |
42766 | Were you interfered with in any way? |
42766 | Were you interfered with in any way? |
42766 | Were you interfered with in any way? |
42766 | Were you interfered with in going out? |
42766 | Were you interfered with in your pumping? |
42766 | Were you interfered with when you took up the gondolas? |
42766 | Were you interfered with? |
42766 | Were you joined by any other companies; if so, state what? |
42766 | Were you molested by the rioters? |
42766 | Were you molested during the night? |
42766 | Were you molested in any way? |
42766 | Were you molested in any way? |
42766 | Were you near Twenty- eighth street when you made that? |
42766 | Were you near the elevator? |
42766 | Were you near the round- house during the night? |
42766 | Were you near the scene of the riot? |
42766 | Were you near the scene of the riots any time during July last, in any of the days and nights? |
42766 | Were you not armed? |
42766 | Were you not around during the day, Thursday? |
42766 | Were you not called upon first by the railroad officials? |
42766 | Were you not on an engine, and were you not driven off? |
42766 | Were you notified by your clerks or subordinates that such a telegram had been received at your office? |
42766 | Were you on Saturday night? |
42766 | Were you on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you on duty Friday? |
42766 | Were you on duty at any time afterwards there? |
42766 | Were you on duty during the riots-- were you at work, or did you run your engines during the troubles? |
42766 | Were you on duty during the week prior to the riot? |
42766 | Were you on duty on Thursday and Thursday evening? |
42766 | Were you on duty on Thursday and Thursday night of July 19th? |
42766 | Were you on duty on Thursday and Thursday night, at the railroad? |
42766 | Were you on duty on Thursday night? |
42766 | Were you on duty on Thursday? |
42766 | Were you on duty on the 19th of July last? |
42766 | Were you on regular duty that day? |
42766 | Were you on that committee? |
42766 | Were you on the engine? |
42766 | Were you on the force at the time of the disturbance, in July? |
42766 | Were you on the force at the time of the riots, in July? |
42766 | Were you on the ground during the day of Friday? |
42766 | Were you on the ground of the Pennsylvania railroad, or on public ground? |
42766 | Were you on the ground on Friday? |
42766 | Were you on the ground where the firing took place, on Twenty- eight street, at the time? |
42766 | Were you on the ground, anywhere in the vicinity, on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you on the police force in July, at the time of the disturbance? |
42766 | Were you on the police force last July, at the time of the riots? |
42766 | Were you on the police force of the city of Pittsburgh, in last July? |
42766 | Were you on the police force on July 19? |
42766 | Were you on the police force on the 19th day of last July? |
42766 | Were you on the police force on the 19th of July last? |
42766 | Were you one of the discharged men? |
42766 | Were you one of the men that were indicted for murder? |
42766 | Were you one of the strikers? |
42766 | Were you ordered by the railroad officials in charge of you to go behind trees? |
42766 | Were you ordered off-- ordered to leave or disperse? |
42766 | Were you ordered to accompany him? |
42766 | Were you ordered to disperse by anybody? |
42766 | Were you out at Torrens on Thursday, the 19th of July? |
42766 | Were you out at Torrens, Mr. Davis, during Thursday? |
42766 | Were you out at Twenty- eighth street on the afternoon of the Twenty- first-- Saturday? |
42766 | Were you out during Sunday? |
42766 | Were you out during the night? |
42766 | Were you out on Saturday? |
42766 | Were you out that night on duty? |
42766 | Were you out there during the riots at any time? |
42766 | Were you out with him on Friday? |
42766 | Were you over Saturday to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Were you over at the fire during Sunday? |
42766 | Were you over in Allegheny at any time during the trouble? |
42766 | Were you over there on Thursday, when the strike first took place? |
42766 | Were you paid by the ton? |
42766 | Were you permitted to run the passenger trains without interference? |
42766 | Were you present Saturday afternoon, July 24, when the communication was received by General Latta from General Brinton? |
42766 | Were you present at Twenty- eighth street on Saturday, 21st July? |
42766 | Were you present at Twenty- eighth street on the 21st of July, Saturday, at the time of the firing? |
42766 | Were you present at Twenty- eighth street when the firing of the soldiers took place? |
42766 | Were you present at any of the disturbances after that? |
42766 | Were you present at any time during the destruction of the property of the railroad company by fire? |
42766 | Were you present at the disturbance that night? |
42766 | Were you present at the disturbances of the peace within the city of Pittsburgh in July last? |
42766 | Were you present at the fire that occurred by the troops on the Saturday, the 21st of July? |
42766 | Were you present at the scene of the riots during any of the days? |
42766 | Were you present at the time of the firing of the troops, at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Were you present at the time the troops were called out to quell the disturbance or strike? |
42766 | Were you present at this meeting out here at the silk- works? |
42766 | Were you present during Saturday, the 21st July, at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Were you present during the conversation between Mayor Phillips and Robert Ammon, or Boss Ammon, or Bob Ammon, or whatever his name is? |
42766 | Were you present during the disturbance last July? |
42766 | Were you present during the entire conversation? |
42766 | Were you present during the riotous conduct, on any of those days from Thursday morning? |
42766 | Were you present during the whole of the time that they were together? |
42766 | Were you present on Saturday, the 21st of July? |
42766 | Were you present on Saturday, the time the troops came in collision with the crowd? |
42766 | Were you present on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you present on the 19th of July, the breaking out or first commencement of the riot? |
42766 | Were you present on the day of the firing on the troops, on Saturday, the 21st of July? |
42766 | Were you present when Captain Aull received the orders from the Adjutant General? |
42766 | Were you present when Colonel Norris overtook General Brinton? |
42766 | Were you present when General Brinton met Major Buffington at the arsenal? |
42766 | Were you present when General Brinton met Major Buffington at the arsenal? |
42766 | Were you present when Major Norris met General Brinton? |
42766 | Were you present when Major Norris started to find General Brinton? |
42766 | Were you present when Mr. Watt came to consult with the mayor? |
42766 | Were you present when that effort was made? |
42766 | Were you present when the fire occurred and the first car was fired? |
42766 | Were you present when the firing occurred on Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | Were you present when the order was given to Captain Aull by General Latta? |
42766 | Were you present when the troops fired upon the crowd? |
42766 | Were you present when they went out of the round- house? |
42766 | Were you present, within hearing distance, during the time that Colonel Norris and General Brinton were together? |
42766 | Were you president of that lodge? |
42766 | Were you prior to that time? |
42766 | Were you proprietor of the hotel? |
42766 | Were you protected by the police? |
42766 | Were you protected? |
42766 | Were you put on Friday? |
42766 | Were you re- assembled the next morning? |
42766 | Were you ready at all times to take out your train? |
42766 | Were you ready to give protection then? |
42766 | Were you sent for to appear at the mayor''s office? |
42766 | Were you sheriff of Allegheny county last July? |
42766 | Were you so engaged during the riots in July? |
42766 | Were you solicited by other employés to join it? |
42766 | Were you still an employé? |
42766 | Were you struck before any firing? |
42766 | Were you talking about any other subject at the time? |
42766 | Were you the coroner at the time of the riots in July last? |
42766 | Were you there before the arrival of the Philadelphia troops? |
42766 | Were you there during Saturday morning? |
42766 | Were you there during Saturday night? |
42766 | Were you there during Thursday night? |
42766 | Were you there during that time? |
42766 | Were you there during the day, Sunday? |
42766 | Were you there during the day? |
42766 | Were you there during the riots of the 21st and 22d of July? |
42766 | Were you there during the time, Thursday or Friday, when the police force came out? |
42766 | Were you there for the purpose of organizing lodges? |
42766 | Were you there on Sunday morning? |
42766 | Were you there on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you there on Thursday or Friday previous to this? |
42766 | Were you there on Thursday? |
42766 | Were you there when General Pearson came in from the round- house? |
42766 | Were you there when any of the demonstrations were made by the crowd in firing or throwing stones? |
42766 | Were you there when the dispatch was sent for troops-- the first dispatch, when the sheriff made up his mind to call upon the military? |
42766 | Were you there when the first car was fired? |
42766 | Were you there when the sheriff came out? |
42766 | Were you threatened at any time if you did not leave the yard? |
42766 | Were you to take your regiments to the transfer depot? |
42766 | Were you trying all the time to find out where they were? |
42766 | Were you up about the railroad works any, during Monday? |
42766 | Were you up in the store when you saw the crowd coming up? |
42766 | Were you up there on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you up? |
42766 | Were you where you could see the movement of the rioters? |
42766 | Were you with General Brinton at Pittsburgh, in July last? |
42766 | Were you with General Brinton at Pittsburgh, in July last? |
42766 | Were you with General Brinton when Colonel Norris reached him on Sunday? |
42766 | Were you with General Brinton when Colonel Norris reached him? |
42766 | Were you with General Latta during Sunday evening? |
42766 | Were you with General Latta? |
42766 | Were you with him at Twenty- eighth street when the firing occurred? |
42766 | Were you with the mayor during those days? |
42766 | Were you with your brother at any time during the riots of July last? |
42766 | Were you with your command on the 21st of July? |
42766 | Were you within hearing distance all the time? |
42766 | Were you working for the same company that John Mucklow was? |
42766 | Were you working for your father or for yourself in the insurance business? |
42766 | Were you working in the mines in 1876? |
42766 | Were your instructions to the commanders to keep themselves subordinate to the civil authorities? |
42766 | Were your men sworn in as special policemen? |
42766 | Were your troops exhausted by want of food? |
42766 | What I mean by that question is, who wrote these head- lines? |
42766 | What I mean is, to occupy the vicinity of the track, so as to keep the crowd off from it? |
42766 | What I mean is, were the men willing to serve? |
42766 | What I subsequently learned? |
42766 | What I want to get at is this: If your regiment was disbanded at the Union depot; and after that, did you not have command of them as a regiment? |
42766 | What I want to know is, whether these officers could have arrested these men they had warrants for? |
42766 | What about? |
42766 | What about? |
42766 | What action did they take then? |
42766 | What appeared to be the disposition of the crowd surrounding that fire-- did they appear to be in sympathy with the rioters? |
42766 | What appeared to be the nature of the injuries of the soldiers that were killed? |
42766 | What are the charges made against you? |
42766 | What are the duties of the fire commissioners? |
42766 | What arrangement? |
42766 | What arrangements did you make-- put them on cars, or take them by wagons-- how did you intend to transport them over there? |
42766 | What arrangements, if any, were made by your organization for a strike? |
42766 | What assistance did you offer him? |
42766 | What attempts were made on Sunday night? |
42766 | What attracted your attention was something unusual in that particular command? |
42766 | What battery did they belong to? |
42766 | What became of General Pearson after he gave this order? |
42766 | What became of the crowd when the troops came out? |
42766 | What became of the gun after that? |
42766 | What became of the mob after that time? |
42766 | What became of the railroad officials? |
42766 | What became of the soldier''s then? |
42766 | What became of those men, sent out to notify the various divisions? |
42766 | What became of those men? |
42766 | What became of you? |
42766 | What become of the other wounded man that was brought in? |
42766 | What bridge? |
42766 | What broke off that arrangement to strike on the 27th of June? |
42766 | What brought him here? |
42766 | What bulletin boards? |
42766 | What business are you engaged in now? |
42766 | What business did they have to travel up to Allegheny City? |
42766 | What business have you been engaged in since the war? |
42766 | What business were you engaged in all that time? |
42766 | What business were you engaged in prior to the 19th day of July, 1877? |
42766 | What business were you engaged in? |
42766 | What business you had with them? |
42766 | What cause did they assign-- a reduction in wages? |
42766 | What caused it? |
42766 | What character of men were the balance of the troops composed of generally? |
42766 | What character of men were they? |
42766 | What citizens made those remarks? |
42766 | What citizens said that? |
42766 | What class and character of men was that posse composed of? |
42766 | What class getting$ 2 50? |
42766 | What class of citizens were they who gave the arms and the ammunition? |
42766 | What class of citizens were they? |
42766 | What class of citizens? |
42766 | What class of engineers? |
42766 | What class of men demanded the guns from the gathering soldiers? |
42766 | What class of men did they seem to be principally? |
42766 | What class of men did you ask to go? |
42766 | What class of men did you call on? |
42766 | What class of men did you call on? |
42766 | What class of men did you take into your organization? |
42766 | What class of men principally? |
42766 | What class of men said that they would sooner go out and help the rioters? |
42766 | What class of men struck first? |
42766 | What class of men undertook to influence you in that direction? |
42766 | What class of men were engaged in active arson and destruction of property-- burning? |
42766 | What class of men were engaged in the riot when it first broke out? |
42766 | What class of men were getting$ 1 50? |
42766 | What class of men were in the crowd? |
42766 | What class of men were there? |
42766 | What class of men were they? |
42766 | What class of men were they? |
42766 | What class of men were they? |
42766 | What class of men were they? |
42766 | What class of men were those that made these threats? |
42766 | What class of men were those that talked about driving the blacklegs out of the shops and mills? |
42766 | What class of men were those you organized into companies? |
42766 | What class of men, so far as you could judge, were engaged in the actual destruction of property, and burning of the bridge? |
42766 | What class of men-- railroad employés? |
42766 | What class of men? |
42766 | What class of men? |
42766 | What class of men? |
42766 | What class of men? |
42766 | What class of people generally gathered? |
42766 | What class of people were there? |
42766 | What class of people were there? |
42766 | What class of people were these rioters composed of? |
42766 | What class of people were they? |
42766 | What class of people? |
42766 | What class of people? |
42766 | What class of professional men? |
42766 | What class of railroad men? |
42766 | What class of women? |
42766 | What class seemed to be most dissatisfied with the reduction? |
42766 | What class was the crowd that was there composed of? |
42766 | What classes of men refused-- conductors and brakemen? |
42766 | What classes of men were about that day who appeared to be in sympathy with them? |
42766 | What color was it? |
42766 | What combination, if any, was there between railroad men and other laborers? |
42766 | What company of the Sixth regiment was it that wanted to lay down their arms? |
42766 | What company were you working for? |
42766 | What complaints did the men make in your conversations with them? |
42766 | What complaints did they make? |
42766 | What complaints did this committee make when they waited on you? |
42766 | What connection had you with the efforts to suppress the riot? |
42766 | What damage did they do? |
42766 | What damage was done before the police arrived? |
42766 | What date did you call upon the Governor to send you troops? |
42766 | What date was that dispatch? |
42766 | What date was that order to go into effect? |
42766 | What date? |
42766 | What day and what time of the day was it you got word that the Governor was coming to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | What day did they assemble at Greenville? |
42766 | What day did they first strike here in Harrisburg? |
42766 | What day did they hold that meeting and agree to join hands with the railroad employés? |
42766 | What day did they strike? |
42766 | What day did you say you received the call from the mayor for troops? |
42766 | What day did you start your trains here? |
42766 | What day do you think that was? |
42766 | What day first? |
42766 | What day was it they returned from Altoona? |
42766 | What day was that that you brought up this stuff? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was that? |
42766 | What day was the other property destroyed-- before or after the destruction of the bridge? |
42766 | What day was the railroad bridge across the Schuylkill burned? |
42766 | What day was this you were speaking of? |
42766 | What day was this? |
42766 | What day was this? |
42766 | What day? |
42766 | What days were you on? |
42766 | What days? |
42766 | What demand? |
42766 | What did General Latta say in reply? |
42766 | What did Mayor McCarthy say in reply to this note? |
42766 | What did Mr. Watt tell you that time in the presence of the mayor? |
42766 | What did he agree to do in the first place? |
42766 | What did he do after the firing? |
42766 | What did he do while he was following up? |
42766 | What did he do with them? |
42766 | What did he have on-- a hat? |
42766 | What did he leave for? |
42766 | What did he say about it? |
42766 | What did he say as to the extent of the disturbance up there? |
42766 | What did he say when he was shooting? |
42766 | What did he say? |
42766 | What did he say? |
42766 | What did he say? |
42766 | What did he say? |
42766 | What did he say? |
42766 | What did he say? |
42766 | What did he say? |
42766 | What did he state his mission was? |
42766 | What did he state to you when he came back? |
42766 | What did he strike him with? |
42766 | What did he strike with? |
42766 | What did he tell you to do? |
42766 | What did the crowd do when the troops marched out? |
42766 | What did the crowd say when they came up Washington avenue? |
42766 | What did the crowd seem to be aiming at, at that time-- was it the destruction of property? |
42766 | What did the letter advise the meeting to do? |
42766 | What did the mayor do in the way of assisting in this organization? |
42766 | What did the mayor say? |
42766 | What did the men themselves assign? |
42766 | What did the other fourth come there for? |
42766 | What did the others complain of? |
42766 | What did the sheriff and General Pearson report to you? |
42766 | What did the sheriff do? |
42766 | What did the sheriff say to the crowd? |
42766 | What did these two prominent citizens offer you the arms for? |
42766 | What did they appear to be doing? |
42766 | What did they appear to be saying? |
42766 | What did they appear to complain of-- set out as their grievance? |
42766 | What did they call the chief of that lodge-- what name? |
42766 | What did they complain of? |
42766 | What did they complain of? |
42766 | What did they consider as their grievances? |
42766 | What did they do with the cars after they set them on fire? |
42766 | What did they do with their arms, when you dismissed them? |
42766 | What did they do? |
42766 | What did they give as their object? |
42766 | What did they give as their reasons? |
42766 | What did they give you the arms for? |
42766 | What did they mean by holding the fort-- holding Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | What did they mean by sending for the Pan Handle roughs? |
42766 | What did they say about it? |
42766 | What did they say about the difficulties that had occurred here? |
42766 | What did they say their business was? |
42766 | What did they say they gave you the arms for? |
42766 | What did they say was the object of the union? |
42766 | What did they say was their object in taking possession of the railroad property? |
42766 | What did they say when they were asked to go? |
42766 | What did they say-- order them to cease firing? |
42766 | What did they say? |
42766 | What did they say? |
42766 | What did they say? |
42766 | What did they seem to be? |
42766 | What did they take out-- pretty much anything they could lay their hands on? |
42766 | What did they tell you they were going to do? |
42766 | What did those boys say? |
42766 | What did you advise them in the interview, Mr. McKune? |
42766 | What did you ascertain subsequent to the conflict of the 1st of August? |
42766 | What did you do Sunday night yourself? |
42766 | What did you do in relation to it? |
42766 | What did you do then? |
42766 | What did you do to prevent that? |
42766 | What did you do when you learned he had come in? |
42766 | What did you do with the warrants? |
42766 | What did you do with them? |
42766 | What did you do with them? |
42766 | What did you do? |
42766 | What did you do? |
42766 | What did you do? |
42766 | What did you expect of the Philadelphia men? |
42766 | What did you expect this report from? |
42766 | What did you find out about the cause that induced that assemblage at the silk- works? |
42766 | What did you find there? |
42766 | What did you go down-- you said you went down to hear what the sheriff would say? |
42766 | What did you hear? |
42766 | What did you intend to do in case the troops arrived? |
42766 | What did you intend to do, then, in case the troops came up to Strawberry lane? |
42766 | What did you learn about the assembling of this crowd, if anything, as to where they got together? |
42766 | What did you learn in relation to it? |
42766 | What did you learn then? |
42766 | What did you observe? |
42766 | What did you say that man''s name was? |
42766 | What did you see as General Brinton came up the track? |
42766 | What did you take the arms for? |
42766 | What did you, in connection with other railroad men, do to try and stop this? |
42766 | What did your committee do then? |
42766 | What did your posse-- or what did you find it necessary to do to disperse the crowd? |
42766 | What direction did they go? |
42766 | What distance from the Union depot? |
42766 | What distance was you from the crowd, where you stood, when the command was given, when the firing began? |
42766 | What distance would you suppose? |
42766 | What distinction do you make between a mob and an insurrection? |
42766 | What do you call a strike? |
42766 | What do you call during the riots? |
42766 | What do you do at the Western air brake? |
42766 | What do you do with the tramps who come into the city here? |
42766 | What do you know about the causes of the riot? |
42766 | What do you mean by Philadelphia roughs? |
42766 | What do you mean by a scab? |
42766 | What do you mean by a strike-- a railroad strike-- what is the usual custom-- what do you mean by it? |
42766 | What do you mean by bouncing you? |
42766 | What do you mean by boys? |
42766 | What do you mean by full uniform? |
42766 | What do you mean by kick? |
42766 | What do you mean by saying if the commanding officer had his orders from a railroad magnate, you intended to do thus and so? |
42766 | What do you mean by shops? |
42766 | What do you mean by some noise? |
42766 | What do you mean by storing things away? |
42766 | What do you mean by strictly private property, does that include furniture? |
42766 | What do you mean by summoned? |
42766 | What do you mean by sympathy? |
42766 | What do you mean by that-- the civil process had not been exhausted? |
42766 | What do you mean by that? |
42766 | What do you mean by that? |
42766 | What do you mean by that? |
42766 | What do you mean by the Round woods? |
42766 | What do you mean by the day? |
42766 | What do you mean by the entire command? |
42766 | What do you mean by the petted parties? |
42766 | What do you mean by the shops? |
42766 | What do you mean by through? |
42766 | What do you mean by"Not in those words?" |
42766 | What do you mean when you say that the"hated company discriminates against the interests of Pittsburgh and western Pennsylvania?" |
42766 | What do you mean? |
42766 | What do you suppose they were? |
42766 | What does the regiment number when all the men are present? |
42766 | What effect did that have on the crowd? |
42766 | What effect did the firing by the soldiers have upon the mob? |
42766 | What effect did the firing have upon the crowd? |
42766 | What effect did the firing have? |
42766 | What effect did the firing of the soldiers produce on the crowd? |
42766 | What effort did the policemen make to drive them back? |
42766 | What effort did you make to move the trains on Friday morning? |
42766 | What effort was made by the sheriff and his posse, or deputies, to clear the track before the military came up? |
42766 | What efforts did he make to get provisions and ammunition to the troops that night? |
42766 | What efforts did he make? |
42766 | What efforts did the mayor make, if any, to preserve the peace during the entire disturbance? |
42766 | What efforts did you make to secure protection during the riot? |
42766 | What efforts did you make? |
42766 | What efforts did you make? |
42766 | What efforts were you making to locate them? |
42766 | What else did you hear said there? |
42766 | What errand had Colonel Norris-- what specific reasons, if any, did he make known that he came for? |
42766 | What evening? |
42766 | What excuse did he make, if any, for refusing you admission? |
42766 | What excuse did they make? |
42766 | What experience had you in active military service during the last war, or any other war? |
42766 | What explanation did you have from General Brown for disbanding the regiment or dismissing the regiment at that time? |
42766 | What facts have led you to that conclusions? |
42766 | What facts have you that lead you to believe it was a concerted movement or agreed upon? |
42766 | What facts have you to say that it was a matter or organization? |
42766 | What finally became of them? |
42766 | What firemen did you see? |
42766 | What firm are you at work for-- Jones& Laughlin? |
42766 | What for a dressed man was he? |
42766 | What gate? |
42766 | What grievance did the railroad men complain of when they did strike? |
42766 | What had become of the balance of your troops? |
42766 | What had become of those that were not there? |
42766 | What had been your business before that? |
42766 | What had you to complain of at the time of organizing the union? |
42766 | What has become of Mr. Marshall? |
42766 | What has been the custom, generally, when they went out on a strike? |
42766 | What has been your avocation for the last eight or ten years? |
42766 | What have you learned since? |
42766 | What hindered you from acting then? |
42766 | What hour did you get the orders to remain at rest until morning? |
42766 | What hour did you leave? |
42766 | What hour did you receive that? |
42766 | What hour is that dispatch dated? |
42766 | What hour was that? |
42766 | What hour was this? |
42766 | What hour? |
42766 | What in your judgment was the actual cause of the riot here? |
42766 | What induced the men to arrange for a strike on the 27th of June? |
42766 | What induced you to leave the round- house on Saturday morning? |
42766 | What information led you to believe that this proclamation had been written by the Pennsylvania railroad officials? |
42766 | What instructions did you give him about that? |
42766 | What is Carrigan''s name? |
42766 | What is Crosby''s first name? |
42766 | What is Mr. Aitchison''s first name? |
42766 | What is Mr. Butler''s first name? |
42766 | What is Mr. Garrett''s first name? |
42766 | What is Mr. Griscom''s position? |
42766 | What is Mr. McCollough''s first name? |
42766 | What is Mr. Thaw''s first name? |
42766 | What is a strike? |
42766 | What is generally understood by railroad men, or what did the Trainmen''s Union understand by a strike? |
42766 | What is he doing here?" |
42766 | What is he doing there?" |
42766 | What is his first name? |
42766 | What is his first name? |
42766 | What is his first name? |
42766 | What is his name? |
42766 | What is his name? |
42766 | What is his name? |
42766 | What is his name? |
42766 | What is his official position? |
42766 | What is it? |
42766 | What is that hour? |
42766 | What is that society for? |
42766 | What is the amount of it? |
42766 | What is the bridge- keepers name-- give it in full if you can? |
42766 | What is the cause of the want of cars now? |
42766 | What is the date of the order-- can you give that? |
42766 | What is the difference between the firing in a new regiment and an old one? |
42766 | What is the distance of Torrens station from Twenty- eight street? |
42766 | What is the distance of Walls from Pittsburgh? |
42766 | What is the general custom of the men that strike? |
42766 | What is the general policy of your company in such cases-- cases of disagreement or dissatisfaction between you and the men? |
42766 | What is the name of that society? |
42766 | What is the name of the sergeant that brought you the information? |
42766 | What is the object of that? |
42766 | What is the object of that? |
42766 | What is the object of the men, and what means would be resorted to, to prevent other men from working? |
42766 | What is the question? |
42766 | What is the sheriff''s name? |
42766 | What is you business? |
42766 | What is you occupation? |
42766 | What is your age? |
42766 | What is your answer? |
42766 | What is your avocation now? |
42766 | What is your business at the present time? |
42766 | What is your business here? |
42766 | What is your business, and where is your place of business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your business? |
42766 | What is your connection with the National Guard-- what is your rank? |
42766 | What is your connection with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | What is your firm name? |
42766 | What is your first name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your full name? |
42766 | What is your name? |
42766 | What is your name? |
42766 | What is your occupation, Mr. Jones? |
42766 | What is your occupation, sir? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your occupation? |
42766 | What is your official business? |
42766 | What is your official connection with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | What is your official position in the National Guard? |
42766 | What is your official relation to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | What is your opinion about his having been able to march down to Union depot, and cut his way to Union depot at that time? |
42766 | What is your opinion as to how large the crowd was-- a thousand men or five thousand or ten thousand? |
42766 | What is your profession now? |
42766 | What is your profession? |
42766 | What is your profession? |
42766 | What is your profession? |
42766 | What is your profession? |
42766 | What is your profession? |
42766 | What is your rank in the National Guard? |
42766 | What is your rank? |
42766 | What is your residence? |
42766 | What is your time for leaving? |
42766 | What it was estimated at, including the bridge and the burning cars? |
42766 | What kind of a breech- loading gun did he have? |
42766 | What kind of a citizen is he-- what is his business standing? |
42766 | What kind of a crowd was it? |
42766 | What kind of a disturbance was it? |
42766 | What kind of a hat did he wear? |
42766 | What kind of a hat did he wear? |
42766 | What kind of a looking cartridge- box was it? |
42766 | What kind of a man was this Langon? |
42766 | What kind of a meeting was this? |
42766 | What kind of an order was it? |
42766 | What kind of assistance was the committee of public safety rendering at that time? |
42766 | What kind of business do you carry on? |
42766 | What kind of discipline were the troops under while in the round- house? |
42766 | What kind of goods? |
42766 | What kind of goods? |
42766 | What kind of men were they? |
42766 | What kind of men were those? |
42766 | What kind of music did they have? |
42766 | What kind of people appeared to be engaged in this riot? |
42766 | What kind of people were engaged? |
42766 | What kind of property? |
42766 | What kind of service did you render during the day? |
42766 | What kind of stores? |
42766 | What kind of talk was it? |
42766 | What kind of things were they dragging off-- merchandise from the cars? |
42766 | What kind of work were they doing? |
42766 | What knowledge had you on Thursday of any disturbance among the railroad employés? |
42766 | What led him to say that? |
42766 | What led the men to talk about it at that time? |
42766 | What led to immediate troubles here? |
42766 | What led you to that conclusion? |
42766 | What led you to understand that you had their sympathy? |
42766 | What made the engineers leave their engines? |
42766 | What man do you mean? |
42766 | What mayor? |
42766 | What means did they take to stop those trains? |
42766 | What means did you take Sunday to try to stop the burning? |
42766 | What means did you take to enforce your orders after they struck on you? |
42766 | What means were resorted to prevent men from working that wished to work? |
42766 | What men were coming in? |
42766 | What military men? |
42766 | What mill are you working at? |
42766 | What morning was that? |
42766 | What morning? |
42766 | What motives actuated them, after dispersing the crowd, in retiring their troops to the flat position of the street? |
42766 | What name did you say it was? |
42766 | What nationality seemed to hold on the longest? |
42766 | What necessity was there for retiring to the round house? |
42766 | What night was it that the conflict took place between Reeder''s troops and the rioters? |
42766 | What night was this? |
42766 | What number of policemen were there in force, at any time, to protect you? |
42766 | What occurred next? |
42766 | What occurred on Friday morning? |
42766 | What occurred on Friday? |
42766 | What occurred then? |
42766 | What occurred then? |
42766 | What occurred there in regard to the riots, that you have any knowledge of? |
42766 | What occurred-- did the crowd stand still, or were they making a noise-- and did they interfere with the soldiers? |
42766 | What office did you fill at the time of the trouble? |
42766 | What office did you go to? |
42766 | What office was he carried to? |
42766 | What office? |
42766 | What officer had charge of that part of the city near Twenty- eighth street-- what police officer? |
42766 | What officers gave the order to charge bayonets? |
42766 | What official position did you hold in the city last July? |
42766 | What official position did you hold in this city last July? |
42766 | What ones were standing there? |
42766 | What ones? |
42766 | What order did you hear given by any of the commanding officers there? |
42766 | What orders did he give General Brinton about matters while he was absent? |
42766 | What orders did he give, if any? |
42766 | What orders did you get? |
42766 | What orders did you receive from him? |
42766 | What other classes of men belonged? |
42766 | What other demonstrations were made by the crowd, before the firing took place on the soldiers? |
42766 | What other men were there, besides railroad employés? |
42766 | What other property was destroyed beside the destruction of the bridge? |
42766 | What other roads? |
42766 | What page is that on? |
42766 | What people were they that came to you and expostulated? |
42766 | What people? |
42766 | What per centage of the men of the First division were soldiers of the late war? |
42766 | What persons were they who were arrested? |
42766 | What persons? |
42766 | What place did he refer to? |
42766 | What police had had the set- to with the crowd at the Fort Wayne depot? |
42766 | What police was on the train? |
42766 | What police was on the train? |
42766 | What position did Colonel Norris occupy? |
42766 | What position did he hold on the road? |
42766 | What position did they hold on the railroad? |
42766 | What position did you hold at the time of the riot? |
42766 | What position did you hold in Trainmen''s Union? |
42766 | What position did you hold in this organization? |
42766 | What position did you hold on the railroad before that? |
42766 | What position did you hold there? |
42766 | What position did you hold? |
42766 | What position did you hold? |
42766 | What position did you hold? |
42766 | What position did you hold? |
42766 | What position did you occupy in the militia at the time of the disturbance in July? |
42766 | What position did you occupy on that road? |
42766 | What position did you take next? |
42766 | What position in the army did you hold during the late war? |
42766 | What position were the men in when the firing took place? |
42766 | What position were they in during the day? |
42766 | What position? |
42766 | What powers are given you as mayor by the city charter or organization? |
42766 | What preparations did you make to meet them? |
42766 | What preparations were made by the city authorities of Allegheny City, to protect themselves and to keep down the riot? |
42766 | What prevented the carrying of the arrangement into effect? |
42766 | What prevented you from moving out your trains at that time? |
42766 | What proportion of that crowd were disposed to be riotous or lawless? |
42766 | What proportion of the number of men that you had employed, was at work on that day-- the 1st day of August? |
42766 | What proportion of them? |
42766 | What proportion of your company has seen service? |
42766 | What proposition did they make? |
42766 | What rank did his uniform indicate? |
42766 | What rank did you hold when you left? |
42766 | What rank did you hold? |
42766 | What rank did you occupy? |
42766 | What rank? |
42766 | What rank? |
42766 | What reason did Mr. Scranton give? |
42766 | What reason did he give? |
42766 | What reason did he give? |
42766 | What reason did they give for going on a strike at that time? |
42766 | What reason did they give for not throwing the water? |
42766 | What reason did they give? |
42766 | What reason had you for saying that"seventeen citizens shot in cold blood by the roughs of Philadelphia?" |
42766 | What reason had you for writing that? |
42766 | What reason have you to believe, Mr. Carson, that the strikers would have gone to work had the railroad officials not raised their wages? |
42766 | What reason was given by the officer for not serving the warrants? |
42766 | What reasons did they give for surrendering? |
42766 | What reasons did they give for turning back? |
42766 | What reasons did they give-- what inducements did they hold out for your joining it? |
42766 | What reasons did they give? |
42766 | What reasons did they give? |
42766 | What regiment did Colonel Gray command? |
42766 | What regiment did he name? |
42766 | What regiment? |
42766 | What regiment? |
42766 | What regiment? |
42766 | What regiments were they? |
42766 | What regiments were under your command? |
42766 | What replies did you get from the men when admonishing them to desist? |
42766 | What replies did you get? |
42766 | What reply did he make to that? |
42766 | What reply did he make? |
42766 | What reply did the Governor make? |
42766 | What reply did the mayor make to the telegram that was sent calling for fifty more policemen? |
42766 | What reply did the sheriff make to that offer? |
42766 | What request did you make of Major Buffington when you went there? |
42766 | What resolutions were passed there? |
42766 | What response did they make? |
42766 | What response did they make? |
42766 | What response did those men make to the sheriff''s admonitions? |
42766 | What response did you get-- reply? |
42766 | What response was made? |
42766 | What responses did you get usually? |
42766 | What road is the depot on? |
42766 | What road were those men working on at that time? |
42766 | What roads are they? |
42766 | What roads? |
42766 | What room was that? |
42766 | What seemed to animate these men among this crowd? |
42766 | What seemed to be the disposition of the mob? |
42766 | What seemed to be their object? |
42766 | What shop was that he alluded to? |
42766 | What society do you belong to? |
42766 | What steps did this armed force take to prevent trains from coming from Erie to assist the military? |
42766 | What steps did you take for protection here? |
42766 | What steps were taken at that time to control it by the company? |
42766 | What steps were taken by the company to punish the rioters at Reading? |
42766 | What stopped the crowd from plundering and burning? |
42766 | What stopped you then? |
42766 | What stores of ammunition were here at that time that the mob could have got if they had entered? |
42766 | What street did they come out on, in passing through the cut? |
42766 | What street is that? |
42766 | What street was it? |
42766 | What street were they on on Sunday? |
42766 | What street? |
42766 | What street? |
42766 | What style of hat did General Pearson wear? |
42766 | What success did you meet with in trying to organize a force on Sunday morning? |
42766 | What sympathy did the rioters seem to get from the surrounding crowds of spectators? |
42766 | What the boys used to call a rattling fire in the army? |
42766 | What the captain wishes to get at is, did your men break ranks there at the Union depot? |
42766 | What then did they make per day, on an average? |
42766 | What then occurred? |
42766 | What then took place? |
42766 | What time did General Huidekoper get to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | What time did General Pearson leave you? |
42766 | What time did Mr. Stewart return to you? |
42766 | What time did Pearson reach you at the Union depot that evening? |
42766 | What time did he arrive? |
42766 | What time did he get there? |
42766 | What time did he leave General Latta? |
42766 | What time did he leave you with that uniform on? |
42766 | What time did he receive that dispatch from General Latta? |
42766 | What time did it arrive? |
42766 | What time did that organization first show itself in Allegheny to stop trains with troops? |
42766 | What time did that train go out? |
42766 | What time did the burning commence? |
42766 | What time did the fire commence on Saturday night? |
42766 | What time did the firing of cars commence by the mob? |
42766 | What time did the first burning commence? |
42766 | What time did the first burning or destruction of property by fire commence? |
42766 | What time did the first firing occur? |
42766 | What time did the mayor return from Castle Shannon? |
42766 | What time did the military come up? |
42766 | What time did the mob begin to fire the cars? |
42766 | What time did the shopmen quit work on Saturday? |
42766 | What time did the troops come out of the round- house? |
42766 | What time did the troops get out of the round- house? |
42766 | What time did these officers come to the Monongahela house? |
42766 | What time did they begin to fire the cars? |
42766 | What time did they leave the silk- works and come to the city? |
42766 | What time did they quit work? |
42766 | What time did this firing occur? |
42766 | What time did this occur-- this firing? |
42766 | What time did you arrive at Beaver? |
42766 | What time did you arrive at Harrisburg? |
42766 | What time did you arrive at Pittsburgh in the morning? |
42766 | What time did you arrive at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | What time did you arrive at that place? |
42766 | What time did you arrive at the Union depot? |
42766 | What time did you arrive at the stock- yards? |
42766 | What time did you arrive there? |
42766 | What time did you arrive there? |
42766 | What time did you arrive there? |
42766 | What time did you come over to the depot? |
42766 | What time did you expect him? |
42766 | What time did you forward it to the Adjutant General? |
42766 | What time did you get home? |
42766 | What time did you get on the ground? |
42766 | What time did you get that information? |
42766 | What time did you get that notice into the papers? |
42766 | What time did you get that proposition? |
42766 | What time did you get there? |
42766 | What time did you get those orders from General Latta? |
42766 | What time did you get up? |
42766 | What time did you give that order? |
42766 | What time did you go back to the Union Depot hotel? |
42766 | What time did you go out? |
42766 | What time did you go to the scene of the fire? |
42766 | What time did you learn of that? |
42766 | What time did you learn of their exit from the round- house? |
42766 | What time did you leave the Monongahela house, and where did you go from there? |
42766 | What time did you leave the Union depot-- just go on from that point? |
42766 | What time did you leave the depot or elevator? |
42766 | What time did you leave the mill? |
42766 | What time did you meet General Latta? |
42766 | What time did you meet him at the Union depot? |
42766 | What time did you meet the mayor on Fifth avenue? |
42766 | What time did you present it? |
42766 | What time did you receive orders to close the saloons? |
42766 | What time did you receive that dispatch? |
42766 | What time did you receive that dispatch? |
42766 | What time did you receive that note? |
42766 | What time did you receive that? |
42766 | What time did you return on Sunday to the scene of the riot? |
42766 | What time did you return to the scene of the riot? |
42766 | What time did you send that telegram? |
42766 | What time did you send them? |
42766 | What time did you send this to him? |
42766 | What time did you send those despatches? |
42766 | What time did you take that to General Brinton and deliver it to him? |
42766 | What time did you visit the scene of the riot? |
42766 | What time do you get to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | What time had you this conversation with them? |
42766 | What time in the morning? |
42766 | What time in the night was that? |
42766 | What time in the night? |
42766 | What time of day was it you met him? |
42766 | What time of day? |
42766 | What time of night was this? |
42766 | What time of the day was it? |
42766 | What time of the day was it? |
42766 | What time was Colonel Norris and General Brinton talking this matter over? |
42766 | What time was it organized? |
42766 | What time was it that Mr. Pitcairn stated to you that he had fifteen crews to move trains? |
42766 | What time was it that you visited the scene of the riot? |
42766 | What time was it when Colonel Norris arrived? |
42766 | What time was it you met him? |
42766 | What time was it you started? |
42766 | What time was it? |
42766 | What time was that dispatch received? |
42766 | What time was that done? |
42766 | What time was that in the evening? |
42766 | What time was that meeting at the silk- works held? |
42766 | What time was that meeting? |
42766 | What time was that order given to General Brinton? |
42766 | What time was that received? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was that? |
42766 | What time was the first received? |
42766 | What time was the first train regularly to start? |
42766 | What time was the information made by Mr. Watt before you on which the warrants were issued for these nine or ten men? |
42766 | What time was the message received at the office? |
42766 | What time was the pay day of the railroad company? |
42766 | What time was the round- house set on fire? |
42766 | What time was the telegraphic communication between the Union Depot hotel and General Brinton cut off? |
42766 | What time was this? |
42766 | What time was this? |
42766 | What time was this? |
42766 | What time were the engineers suspended by the railroad company? |
42766 | What time were these orders given? |
42766 | What time were those warrants placed in your hands for the arrest of those parties? |
42766 | What time were you at the city hall? |
42766 | What time? |
42766 | What time? |
42766 | What time? |
42766 | What took place after that? |
42766 | What took place at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | What took place between them? |
42766 | What took place during the day of Sunday-- how large was the crowd Sunday morning? |
42766 | What took place? |
42766 | What train had that reference to? |
42766 | What train? |
42766 | What trains were first prevented from leaving regularly on time? |
42766 | What troops did General Brown have under his control? |
42766 | What troops stayed there? |
42766 | What troops were on the ground at that time? |
42766 | What troops were on the hill when General Pearson gave the orders to keep the hillside clear? |
42766 | What troops were those? |
42766 | What troops were those? |
42766 | What trouble was there anticipated? |
42766 | What wages did you get the last month that you worked? |
42766 | What wages in the shops? |
42766 | What wages were you getting at the time of the strike? |
42766 | What wages were you getting, running the engine? |
42766 | What was Ammon''s reply to you when you told him he would be arrested? |
42766 | What was Captain Aull doing at the arsenal? |
42766 | What was Hunt''s business? |
42766 | What was done Friday night after you reported at the Union depot? |
42766 | What was done about them? |
42766 | What was done by the court- martial? |
42766 | What was done by the fire department during the riot for the purpose of protecting the city or railroad companies''property from fire? |
42766 | What was done by the mayor and his subordinates prior to the citizens''meeting in Allegheny City-- Mayor Philips? |
42766 | What was done by you and by the balance of the regiment as to re- assembling? |
42766 | What was done next? |
42766 | What was done then, after you arrived at the transfer? |
42766 | What was done with that? |
42766 | What was done with the parties arrested? |
42766 | What was done with the parties that you arrested? |
42766 | What was done with these men? |
42766 | What was done with those men that refused? |
42766 | What was done with those persons who were arrested? |
42766 | What was done with those persons? |
42766 | What was done with those policemen for that act? |
42766 | What was he doing there? |
42766 | What was he doing? |
42766 | What was he doing? |
42766 | What was his business? |
42766 | What was his name? |
42766 | What was his name? |
42766 | What was his name? |
42766 | What was his position at that time? |
42766 | What was his purpose in coming there, or did he express any purpose? |
42766 | What was his rank? |
42766 | What was his situation on the railroad; do you know? |
42766 | What was it composed of-- boys? |
42766 | What was it composed of-- this crowd running about the streets? |
42766 | What was it he fired? |
42766 | What was it in July last? |
42766 | What was it in July last? |
42766 | What was it made of-- the blue cap? |
42766 | What was it that alarmed you on Saturday and made you apprehensive of the future on Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | What was it that caused that crowd to be scattered? |
42766 | What was it that led to the disturbance? |
42766 | What was it? |
42766 | What was it? |
42766 | What was referred to by the word"point?" |
42766 | What was reluctantly done? |
42766 | What was said about these men being paid? |
42766 | What was said and done to get the men to resume work? |
42766 | What was said by the rioters? |
42766 | What was said to the strikers that you found, and what did the strikers say? |
42766 | What was set on fire? |
42766 | What was that report, then, as near as you state it? |
42766 | What was that? |
42766 | What was that? |
42766 | What was that? |
42766 | What was the Colonel''s name? |
42766 | What was the amount of losses adjusted by the two commissions? |
42766 | What was the amount of that? |
42766 | What was the appearance of the class of men that threw the stones? |
42766 | What was the captain''s name of that company you sent off? |
42766 | What was the cause of this want of cars? |
42766 | What was the cause? |
42766 | What was the character of that? |
42766 | What was the character of the crowd immediately in front of the military, or near the military? |
42766 | What was the character of the crowd, as being demonstrative? |
42766 | What was the classification of engineers? |
42766 | What was the condition of the crowd at that time? |
42766 | What was the condition of the crowd there from one o''clock up to three o''clock? |
42766 | What was the condition of the round- house when you left in the morning? |
42766 | What was the condition of your command, in regard to rest and want of food? |
42766 | What was the conduct of the balance of the men in the division, so far as you could judge? |
42766 | What was the conduct of the crowd at five or six o''clock, when you went there first? |
42766 | What was the conduct of the people? |
42766 | What was the conduct of the soldiers during the night? |
42766 | What was the conduct of the troops as they retired from the round- house? |
42766 | What was the conduct of the troops out at East Liberty, those that come under your observation? |
42766 | What was the conduct of the troops there under General Brinton, taking them all, during Saturday in the round- house? |
42766 | What was the conversation about-- in what connection did he offer you those arms? |
42766 | What was the conversation then? |
42766 | What was the crowd doing then? |
42766 | What was the crowd doing? |
42766 | What was the crowd-- boys? |
42766 | What was the crowd? |
42766 | What was the damage? |
42766 | What was the date of that order? |
42766 | What was the date of that? |
42766 | What was the difference about in wages between 1875 and 1876, causing this dissatisfaction? |
42766 | What was the difficulty with the passenger trains on Saturday night? |
42766 | What was the distance he marched with General Brinton? |
42766 | What was the effect of the firing of the stones among the militia-- was there any damage done to life or limb? |
42766 | What was the effect of the firing-- what was the result? |
42766 | What was the effect of the firing? |
42766 | What was the effect of the firing? |
42766 | What was the effect of the speech upon the crowd? |
42766 | What was the feasibility of General Brinton himself preventing it? |
42766 | What was the feelings in the crowd? |
42766 | What was the first day you noticed more tramps than usual? |
42766 | What was the first riotous occurrence showing that the men were dissatisfied after the issuing of that order? |
42766 | What was the general conduct of the division as a whole? |
42766 | What was the general conduct of the whole command? |
42766 | What was the grievance of the miners then? |
42766 | What was the immediate cause? |
42766 | What was the import of those telegrams? |
42766 | What was the language used by Colonel Norris at that time to General Brinton? |
42766 | What was the manner of the crowd at that time as to their being boisterous or demonstrative? |
42766 | What was the messenger''s name in the carriage with you-- that rode in the carriage with you? |
42766 | What was the mob doing at that time on Tuesday night? |
42766 | What was the name of that man? |
42766 | What was the nature of it? |
42766 | What was the nature of that editorial in the_ Globe_--was it inflammatory? |
42766 | What was the nature of that insult? |
42766 | What was the nature of that? |
42766 | What was the nature of the conversation? |
42766 | What was the nature of those telegrams? |
42766 | What was the nature of your proclamation, was it calling for citizens to join? |
42766 | What was the new organization? |
42766 | What was the next incident that occurred that came under your observation? |
42766 | What was the object of that meeting? |
42766 | What was the object of that? |
42766 | What was the object of the men assembling at that point? |
42766 | What was the object of this delegation calling on the mayor and making this statement? |
42766 | What was the objection to running double- headers? |
42766 | What was the organization of the fire department? |
42766 | What was the pay of the brakesman? |
42766 | What was the purpose and object of that union? |
42766 | What was the purpose of the troops in going out to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | What was the purpose-- what were the objects of that Union? |
42766 | What was the purposes or the objects of the coming there? |
42766 | What was the reason given for you sending this portion of the regiment-- it was not sent anywhere, was it-- to the Union depot? |
42766 | What was the reason they gave for doing this, if they gave any? |
42766 | What was the reason you could not get these men to go out? |
42766 | What was the result of his interview with Major Buffington? |
42766 | What was the result of the interview with Cassatt and McCullough and Thaw? |
42766 | What was the result of the kindling of the fire? |
42766 | What was the result of the volley? |
42766 | What was the second communication-- the one you received and replied to from General Latta? |
42766 | What was the spirit of that mob? |
42766 | What was the strength of your regiment about that time? |
42766 | What was the tenor of his speech? |
42766 | What was the tenor of that article in the_ Critic_--to excite? |
42766 | What was their manner as to being boisterous or demonstrative? |
42766 | What was this conductor''s name? |
42766 | What was this crowd composed of, railroad men? |
42766 | What was this office used for that you carried the man to? |
42766 | What was this signal that was used on the Pennsylvania railroad to stop trains? |
42766 | What was thrown? |
42766 | What was your business before that? |
42766 | What was your business during last July? |
42766 | What was your business in July last? |
42766 | What was your business in July last? |
42766 | What was your business then? |
42766 | What was your connection with the fire department in July last? |
42766 | What was your duty there? |
42766 | What was your object in coming up Lackawanna avenue at that time? |
42766 | What was your object in going to the armory? |
42766 | What was your occupation in July last? |
42766 | What was your occupation? |
42766 | What was your official connection with the fire department in July last? |
42766 | What was your particular duty? |
42766 | What was your rank? |
42766 | What was your rank? |
42766 | What was your time for going out? |
42766 | What was your understanding of the nature of the business that you pursued Brinton? |
42766 | What was? |
42766 | What were engineers getting in the works where you were at that time? |
42766 | What were his directions to you? |
42766 | What were the boys to do? |
42766 | What were the causes leading to the strike? |
42766 | What were the citizens doing? |
42766 | What were the complaints? |
42766 | What were the men, generally, getting? |
42766 | What were the objects of the organization? |
42766 | What were the occupations of those men that were killed? |
42766 | What were the officers doing? |
42766 | What were the others? |
42766 | What were the police doing all this time? |
42766 | What were the wages of the brakemen? |
42766 | What were their names? |
42766 | What were they arrested for? |
42766 | What were they arrested for? |
42766 | What were they doing at that time? |
42766 | What were they doing at that time? |
42766 | What were they doing when the soldiers came up? |
42766 | What were they doing? |
42766 | What were they doing? |
42766 | What were they doing? |
42766 | What were they doing? |
42766 | What were they saying? |
42766 | What were they stationed along there for? |
42766 | What were they there for? |
42766 | What were they to report about? |
42766 | What were they to watch-- what instructions were they given? |
42766 | What were they, and who communicated them? |
42766 | What were they, railroad men? |
42766 | What were they? |
42766 | What were they? |
42766 | What were they? |
42766 | What were they? |
42766 | What were those first cars loaded with? |
42766 | What were those mill hands doing when you went there? |
42766 | What were those reasons? |
42766 | What were those telegrams? |
42766 | What were those-- citizens? |
42766 | What were you doing in July last? |
42766 | What were you doing on the 1st August last? |
42766 | What were you doing there-- what led you to go there? |
42766 | What were you doing, trying to keep it off? |
42766 | What were you paying these men? |
42766 | What were you staying there for? |
42766 | What were your movements from that time? |
42766 | What with? |
42766 | What would be your plan in such a case? |
42766 | What would the wages average? |
42766 | What year? |
42766 | What you know of your own professional knowledge of the conduct of the military? |
42766 | What you would call knock down arguments? |
42766 | What-- to General Latta? |
42766 | What? |
42766 | What? |
42766 | When General Brinton and Colonel Norris met, was there any considerable excitement in the party? |
42766 | When General Pearson left, at ten o''clock, you did practically relieve him from command? |
42766 | When I ask the question as to the responsibility, I do not mean legal responsibility? |
42766 | When I first got to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | When Major Baugh came to the hotel in the evening, did you learn the object of his mission? |
42766 | When Major Baugh came to the hotel on Sunday, was anything said to him by you about whether Captain Aull had reached the command or not? |
42766 | When Pearson gave the command, what became of him? |
42766 | When an attack is made upon your troops with clubs and stones, and firing into your troops, are you not justified in killing? |
42766 | When any men wanted to become members of the organization, did they have to pay any initiation fees or dues? |
42766 | When did General Brinton''s command arrive there? |
42766 | When did he die? |
42766 | When did he do it? |
42766 | When did he send that dispatch? |
42766 | When did that first break out? |
42766 | When did that restlessness begin to show itself among the men? |
42766 | When did that take effect? |
42766 | When did the crowd begin to get demonstrative or boisterous, at what time in the day? |
42766 | When did the first strike occur on your road? |
42766 | When did the mayor put on any day force, or was there any day force on Sunday? |
42766 | When did the mob begin to reassemble after that? |
42766 | When did the sheriff call on the Governor to furnish him with troops? |
42766 | When did these men come into the city first? |
42766 | When did they make that proposition? |
42766 | When did they report to you at Blairsville? |
42766 | When did this union start, to your knowledge? |
42766 | When did you arrive at Blairsville? |
42766 | When did you first get control of your road and property at this point? |
42766 | When did you first get the warrants for the arrest of those men-- what day was it? |
42766 | When did you first learn of any difficulty or any strike? |
42766 | When did you first learn of any disturbance among the railroad employés? |
42766 | When did you first learn of any disturbance at the Pennsylvania railroad? |
42766 | When did you first learn of the disturbance? |
42766 | When did you first learn of the strike on Thursday, July 19? |
42766 | When did you first learn that any men had refused to go out on their trains? |
42766 | When did you first learn that they had ordered the troops out-- when the Adjutant General had ordered them out? |
42766 | When did you first learn there was any disturbance among the men? |
42766 | When did you get the next information? |
42766 | When did you go after that? |
42766 | When did you go out? |
42766 | When did you go there in the crowd? |
42766 | When did you inform the Governor that you had issued a proclamation? |
42766 | When did you learn of the store being broken open? |
42766 | When did you leave Pittsburgh? |
42766 | When did you leave it? |
42766 | When did you miss them? |
42766 | When did you re- join the command? |
42766 | When did you receive the last communication from him? |
42766 | When did you return to the city? |
42766 | When did you see Colonel Norris next after leaving him at the arsenal? |
42766 | When did you see General Brinton after that? |
42766 | When did you send for him? |
42766 | When did you tell this to General Brinton? |
42766 | When did your term expire? |
42766 | When he gave the command fire, did he speak it distinctly as though he meant exactly what he said? |
42766 | When he said,"our boys came home tired out from last night''s work,"what work did he allude to? |
42766 | When he went out? |
42766 | When he went to the hospital he was lying on a bed, and I said,"what is the matter with you?" |
42766 | When it came down to individual property, then what? |
42766 | When men go on a strike, and others will undertake to work in their stead, and they are interrupted by violence and threats of violence? |
42766 | When ordered off by an official of the railroad company? |
42766 | When our mechanics went to work after the strike? |
42766 | When that committee waited upon you, did they say to you, or did they intimate to you, that they would force you into measures? |
42766 | When that concluded, then you turned about and left? |
42766 | When the Philadelphia soldiers fired? |
42766 | When the Philadelphia troops arrived? |
42766 | When the burning commenced, was there any efforts made by the military in any way to stop the burning so far as you know? |
42766 | When the crowd began to throw stones, was it at you or the militia? |
42766 | When the crowd came up-- after the vigilants came up the street-- did the crowd say what they were going to do? |
42766 | When the firing commenced, you ran? |
42766 | When the firing occurred? |
42766 | When the firing took place, were they facing? |
42766 | When the firing took place? |
42766 | When the firing was done, where were they formed? |
42766 | When the first dispatch was brought in? |
42766 | When the hollow square was formed, where was the sheriff''s posse? |
42766 | When the mayor was not here, was there any person in authority? |
42766 | When the military came at the crowd? |
42766 | When the military marched up the track, what led you to go down to hear the proclamation? |
42766 | When the military marched up? |
42766 | When the resistance was made there, was it a combined resistance of all the men, or did only two or three seem to be leading the others? |
42766 | When the sheriff and General Pearson went to the mob, was the mayor of the city, at that time, acting in conjunction with them? |
42766 | When the sheriff came up, what did the crowd-- did they say anything or do anything? |
42766 | When the soldiers came out of the round- house, did they come out in ranks? |
42766 | When the soldiers marched up, what did the crowd do? |
42766 | When the soldiers went up they did not attempt to injure the crowd? |
42766 | When the telegram came to you calling for fifty policemen, what effort did you make to get them? |
42766 | When there were no policemen on duty? |
42766 | When they attempted to start that train, did n''t they rush on and uncouple the cars? |
42766 | When they came out? |
42766 | When they commenced firing how far were you from General Brinton? |
42766 | When they got up, did n''t the crowd resist them? |
42766 | When they reached Union depot, how many did the mob number, that were actually engaged in the burning? |
42766 | When they stood before the court- house? |
42766 | When they went over the bridge in going out, how large a crowd was there? |
42766 | When they were first ordered out? |
42766 | When they were ordered to charge bayonets, what was the command given to charge bayonets? |
42766 | When this firing began, was it a volley, or was it a scattering fire? |
42766 | When this meeting adjourned, what was the general understanding of what was to be done? |
42766 | When those cars came down, where did they stop after they were started? |
42766 | When those messages were brought in and read to the crowd as coming from other parties, were there any messages sent out to them in reply? |
42766 | When those stones were fired, you were among the military? |
42766 | When two of them were brought in? |
42766 | When was it abandoned? |
42766 | When was it posted? |
42766 | When was it that you received that word? |
42766 | When was it you made application to the citizen''s protective committee? |
42766 | When was it you saw this policeman? |
42766 | When was it? |
42766 | When was that done? |
42766 | When was that done? |
42766 | When was that meeting called? |
42766 | When was that order first promulgated or known to the men? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was that? |
42766 | When was the Trainmen''s Union organized? |
42766 | When was the first effort made to start the trains, to your knowledge? |
42766 | When was the first freight train stopped? |
42766 | When was the first reduction made? |
42766 | When was the first reduction? |
42766 | When was the last reduction? |
42766 | When was the reduction before the 1st of July? |
42766 | When was this committee organized? |
42766 | When was this? |
42766 | When was this? |
42766 | When was this? |
42766 | When were the discharged men placed back on the police force? |
42766 | When were the next trains to start? |
42766 | When were they reduced? |
42766 | When were those arms offered? |
42766 | When were you called upon-- called out? |
42766 | When were you disbanded? |
42766 | When were you there next? |
42766 | When you arrived at Pittsburgh, state whether you were met by any committee of citizens or not? |
42766 | When you arrived at the arsenal, did you enter at the gate? |
42766 | When you arrived at the arsenal, did you go into the grounds? |
42766 | When you arrived at the elevator, did you have any conversation with anybody there? |
42766 | When you arrived at the scene of the riot, how large a crowd was there? |
42766 | When you attempted to make the connection, were you interfered with in any way? |
42766 | When you broke ranks down by the Union depot, did you have orders to re- assemble at any time? |
42766 | When you came back did you see this same gang? |
42766 | When you came in from Altoona did you notice the disturbance at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | When you found a man who was boisterous, and rather of an ugly disposition, you did not wait until the next day to arrest him? |
42766 | When you gave the order to Major Baugh, you had no knowledge whatever of whether Captain Aull had reached General Brinton with the first order or not? |
42766 | When you got back to Allegheny City, you said they were organized there-- how large was the crowd there? |
42766 | When you got fifty policemen, did you make any effort with those policemen to drive the crowd from the cars that were burning? |
42766 | When you got there how much of a crowd did you find there? |
42766 | When you got there who did you find there? |
42766 | When you got this train, could you not have run that train out? |
42766 | When you got to Bown''s store, had the rabble been in and ransacked things? |
42766 | When you got to Twenty- eighth street, how many men were engaged there then in preventing the trains from moving? |
42766 | When you got to Washington avenue? |
42766 | When you got to a certain point, the crowd resisted your further progress? |
42766 | When you got to the corner, what did you do? |
42766 | When you heard the command given to charge bayonets, how close were those two companies to the mob? |
42766 | When you intended to transport the rations to these troops, and how you intended to get them there, and if you intended to get them there at all? |
42766 | When you joined the troops and met General Brinton, did he say anything about having received any orders from Colonel Norris? |
42766 | When you learned he had made the call, did you take any steps to see him? |
42766 | When you left the carriage, did Stewart leave the carriage with you? |
42766 | When you left the transfer depot, did your men go in a body, together, or did they strike out? |
42766 | When you left, on Monday morning, was everything quiet? |
42766 | When you left, was there anybody guarding it? |
42766 | When you overtook Captain Aull, at the arsenal, did you have any conversation with him, as to where he was going then? |
42766 | When you overtook General Brinton, state what conversation took place between Colonel Norris and General Brinton? |
42766 | When you placed the warrants in his hands, what instructions did you give him? |
42766 | When you reached General Brinton''s force, did the driver drive you to General Brinton? |
42766 | When you reached General Brinton, what reason did he give for not returning to the city of Pittsburgh or Sharpsburg? |
42766 | When you reached the crowd, how large a crowd did you find assembled? |
42766 | When you refer to the crowd of five thousand, do you mean to say that all of that crowd were riotous or engaged in riotous conduct? |
42766 | When you returned from the oil country, you say you met some railroad men who belonged to the Baltimore and Ohio railroad? |
42766 | When you saw them they were inadequate to the emergency? |
42766 | When you speak of running cars down, where were they running them from? |
42766 | When you summoned those men to go out, you did not provide them with maces and equipments as you usually do? |
42766 | When you told those persons to stop setting fire, did they obey your orders? |
42766 | When you undertook to arrest McCall, how many men took his part? |
42766 | When you undertook to stop the rolling down of barrels, what seemed to be the feeling in the crowd? |
42766 | When you went by the station- house? |
42766 | When you went for Doctor Robinson, did you see any of the mob? |
42766 | When you went into the tobacco store, and told this man he had better be moving, what reply did he make? |
42766 | When you went out there on Thursday afternoon, what class of men were there? |
42766 | When you went to the scene of the riot on Saturday night, did you use efforts yourself to suppress the riot or stop it? |
42766 | When you were telegraphed at Oil City, were you there for the purpose of organizing lodges? |
42766 | When you were wounded? |
42766 | When you wrote this article, you were fully of the opinion and believed that the mob had not shown any violence towards the troops? |
42766 | When? |
42766 | When? |
42766 | Where abouts was the Fourteenth regiment then? |
42766 | Where are the Round woods? |
42766 | Where are their works located? |
42766 | Where are you doing business now? |
42766 | Where are your works located? |
42766 | Where can we telegraph next? |
42766 | Where did Brinton say he was going to when he was asked to return, and refused to? |
42766 | Where did Colonel Norris overtake your command? |
42766 | Where did he go with his command after you left the round- house? |
42766 | Where did he go? |
42766 | Where did he live? |
42766 | Where did he remain during the balance of the night? |
42766 | Where did he remain during the night? |
42766 | Where did he reside? |
42766 | Where did he sit? |
42766 | Where did it come from? |
42766 | Where did it come from? |
42766 | Where did it originate? |
42766 | Where did that union originate? |
42766 | Where did the balance of the party go to? |
42766 | Where did the fire break out first? |
42766 | Where did the firing come from? |
42766 | Where did the firing come from? |
42766 | Where did the firing commence? |
42766 | Where did the first fire come from? |
42766 | Where did the mayor spend the day-- Sunday? |
42766 | Where did the reply,"the mayor,"come from? |
42766 | Where did the shot come from-- this first shot you heard? |
42766 | Where did the troops come out of the round- house? |
42766 | Where did the troops stay during the night? |
42766 | Where did these men go when they refused to go out on the train? |
42766 | Where did these stones and missiles come from? |
42766 | Where did they assemble afterwards? |
42766 | Where did they come from? |
42766 | Where did they come out? |
42766 | Where did they come out? |
42766 | Where did they deliver their first fire-- the men on that north side of the track? |
42766 | Where did they get the food? |
42766 | Where did they go to? |
42766 | Where did they join you? |
42766 | Where did they leave the ammunition when they came out? |
42766 | Where did this fire come from-- those men standing by the cars? |
42766 | Where did this firing come from, parties on the sidewalks or from houses? |
42766 | Where did this firing come from-- the front rank, facing the hill? |
42766 | Where did this man come from that struck the mayor-- that you think struck the mayor? |
42766 | Where did this policeman fire? |
42766 | Where did those men belong to-- the Baltimore and Ohio or the Pennsylvania Central? |
42766 | Where did those soldiers come from? |
42766 | Where did you carry this man that was sick? |
42766 | Where did you commence work? |
42766 | Where did you find General Latta? |
42766 | Where did you find General Pearson? |
42766 | Where did you find him on Monday morning? |
42766 | Where did you get them? |
42766 | Where did you get your arms? |
42766 | Where did you get your first provisions? |
42766 | Where did you get your information in regard to Mr. Mullin having proffered his services to the sheriff? |
42766 | Where did you go Friday night? |
42766 | Where did you go from Union depot? |
42766 | Where did you go then? |
42766 | Where did you go then? |
42766 | Where did you go to raise a posse? |
42766 | Where did you go when you left there? |
42766 | Where did you go? |
42766 | Where did you go? |
42766 | Where did you go? |
42766 | Where did you instruct them to go-- to the Union depot or to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Where did you learn he was at the time? |
42766 | Where did you meet Captain Aull? |
42766 | Where did you meet Major Baugh? |
42766 | Where did you meet the Secretary of State first? |
42766 | Where did you meet them? |
42766 | Where did you remain after the firing? |
42766 | Where did you reside before going into the army? |
42766 | Where did you see Pearson? |
42766 | Where did you see them? |
42766 | Where did you stand during this time? |
42766 | Where did you tell them to go? |
42766 | Where did you try to raise a posse? |
42766 | Where do you live, Mr. Stewart? |
42766 | Where do you live? |
42766 | Where do you live? |
42766 | Where do you live? |
42766 | Where do you live? |
42766 | Where do you live? |
42766 | Where do you mean? |
42766 | Where do you reside, Colonel? |
42766 | Where do you reside, Mr. Carnahan? |
42766 | Where do you reside, Mr. Furlong? |
42766 | Where do you reside, Mr. Hastings? |
42766 | Where do you reside, Mr. Mannis? |
42766 | Where do you reside, Mr. Thomas? |
42766 | Where do you reside, sir? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where do you reside? |
42766 | Where had the crowd gone to? |
42766 | Where had there been any set- to where the mob had been licked-- at what place? |
42766 | Where had these people gone? |
42766 | Where had you noticed this extra influx of tramps? |
42766 | Where is Doud''s store? |
42766 | Where is Strawberry lane? |
42766 | Where is he? |
42766 | Where is he? |
42766 | Where is his residence? |
42766 | Where is it dated? |
42766 | Where is it? |
42766 | Where is that located-- the works of the company? |
42766 | Where is the battery room under the superintendent''s office? |
42766 | Where is the mayor at the present time? |
42766 | Where is this Conductor Meredith? |
42766 | Where is this William Johnson that you spoke of? |
42766 | Where is this transfer station? |
42766 | Where is your armory? |
42766 | Where is your business? |
42766 | Where is your office? |
42766 | Where is your office? |
42766 | Where is your place of business? |
42766 | Where is your place of business? |
42766 | Where is your residence and what is your occupation? |
42766 | Where is your residence, Mr. Kennedy? |
42766 | Where is your residence? |
42766 | Where is your residence? |
42766 | Where is your residence? |
42766 | Where is your residence? |
42766 | Where is your residence? |
42766 | Where is your residence? |
42766 | Where is your residence? |
42766 | Where men did n''t obey the advice of those men that threatened them, was it generally followed by violence? |
42766 | Where the mayor holds his court? |
42766 | Where the police were standing? |
42766 | Where they demonstrative? |
42766 | Where to? |
42766 | Where was Adjutant General Latta at that time? |
42766 | Where was Adjutant Latta during the day-- Sunday? |
42766 | Where was Cassatt? |
42766 | Where was General Pearson at the time the firing took place? |
42766 | Where was General Pearson? |
42766 | Where was Lieutenant Ash wounded? |
42766 | Where was Major Evans''house? |
42766 | Where was Mayor McCarthy at that time? |
42766 | Where was Pearson standing when he gave this command? |
42766 | Where was Pearson? |
42766 | Where was Stewart during that time? |
42766 | Where was he during Thursday night? |
42766 | Where was he during the day Friday? |
42766 | Where was he during the rest of that afternoon? |
42766 | Where was he on Saturday? |
42766 | Where was he standing? |
42766 | Where was he standing? |
42766 | Where was he stationed then? |
42766 | Where was he struck? |
42766 | Where was he when he gave the command? |
42766 | Where was he wounded? |
42766 | Where was he? |
42766 | Where was he? |
42766 | Where was he? |
42766 | Where was it on Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Where was it? |
42766 | Where was that car standing? |
42766 | Where was that drug store? |
42766 | Where was that? |
42766 | Where was that? |
42766 | Where was the Nineteenth regiment at that time? |
42766 | Where was the balance of your regiment? |
42766 | Where was the car standing? |
42766 | Where was the chief of police during the night? |
42766 | Where was the crowd assembled then? |
42766 | Where was the crowd when they came out? |
42766 | Where was the first one held? |
42766 | Where was the mayor Friday, during the day? |
42766 | Where was the mayor during Friday night? |
42766 | Where was the mayor during Thursday afternoon? |
42766 | Where was the mayor during the day Sunday? |
42766 | Where was the mayor during the night? |
42766 | Where was the mob? |
42766 | Where was this ammunition stored that you guarded during Saturday night? |
42766 | Where was this explosion-- at what point? |
42766 | Where was your battery? |
42766 | Where were the armories? |
42766 | Where were the balance of your police at that time? |
42766 | Where were the men during the time the works were standing? |
42766 | Where were the militia then? |
42766 | Where were the mob during Sunday night? |
42766 | Where were the mob when you marched down to the transfer depot? |
42766 | Where were the soldiers or troops? |
42766 | Where were the troops then? |
42766 | Where were the vigilant placed? |
42766 | Where were their guns? |
42766 | Where were they found? |
42766 | Where were they mostly during the day? |
42766 | Where were they when you disbanded, at eleven o''clock? |
42766 | Where were they? |
42766 | Where were they? |
42766 | Where were those men killed? |
42766 | Where were those shots fired from? |
42766 | Where were you at the time General Brinton''s troops came up there? |
42766 | Where were you at the time of the riots in July last? |
42766 | Where were you between eight- fifteen and twelve- five? |
42766 | Where were you during Saturday night, after the shooting? |
42766 | Where were you during Saturday? |
42766 | Where were you during Sunday, during the burning of the property there and rioting? |
42766 | Where were you during the day on Sunday? |
42766 | Where were you from eight o''clock Thursday night, during the balance of the night? |
42766 | Where were you in relation to where the troops stood-- explain the situation you occupied? |
42766 | Where were you in the line of march? |
42766 | Where were you on Friday? |
42766 | Where were you on Saturday? |
42766 | Where were you on Thursday morning? |
42766 | Where were you on Thursday? |
42766 | Where were you on the 19th day of July, when the first disturbance occurred at Pittsburgh among the railroad employés? |
42766 | Where were you on the 19th day of July-- Thursday? |
42766 | Where were you on the 1st day of August last? |
42766 | Where were you residing in July last? |
42766 | Where were you sent then-- on what duty? |
42766 | Where were you standing? |
42766 | Where were you stationed after you went to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | Where were you tried? |
42766 | Where were you when that conversation occurred? |
42766 | Where were you when the militia fired? |
42766 | Where were you when the news of the Pittsburgh riots reached you? |
42766 | Where were you when the train arrived? |
42766 | Where were you when you heard of it? |
42766 | Where were you when you received that telegram? |
42766 | Where were you working? |
42766 | Where were you yourself? |
42766 | Where were you-- what was your position? |
42766 | Where will you produce them? |
42766 | Where would you have stationed your men? |
42766 | Where-- on the track? |
42766 | Where-- what part of the city? |
42766 | Where? |
42766 | Where? |
42766 | Where? |
42766 | Where? |
42766 | Where? |
42766 | Where? |
42766 | Where? |
42766 | Whereabouts did the sheriff''s posse stand when the stones began to be thrown? |
42766 | Whereabouts did you meet him? |
42766 | Whereabouts did you work? |
42766 | Whereabouts does he live? |
42766 | Whereabouts is his house situated from the gate as you enter? |
42766 | Whereabouts was the crowd when the vigilantes fired? |
42766 | Whereabouts was the division head- quarters? |
42766 | Whereabouts were they standing when they were killed? |
42766 | Whereabouts were you in the column? |
42766 | Whether at that time the condition of affairs here was in a condition to warrant them in taking that action? |
42766 | Whether it was immediately preceding this strike or not? |
42766 | Whether the mob was composed of railroad employés or of others than those, and if of others, of what class? |
42766 | Whether we had sent any rations to them? |
42766 | Whether you did furnish them, and whether there was an arrangement made to get rations to them? |
42766 | Which bridge was it, the covered bridge? |
42766 | Which column do you mean? |
42766 | Which direction? |
42766 | Which men fired? |
42766 | Which men? |
42766 | Which officer was senior in command then, Colonel Gray or Colonel Howard? |
42766 | Which regiment? |
42766 | Which regiment? |
42766 | Which side? |
42766 | Which was the highest in rank, General Brinton or General Brown? |
42766 | Which way did they go? |
42766 | Which way which? |
42766 | Which, on Sunday? |
42766 | Which? |
42766 | While running that railroad as general manager, what would you have done if your men had struck? |
42766 | While standing there looking at the flames going on, I made a remark to some person:"Ai n''t they going to try to stop it?" |
42766 | While there, did you hear any demand made on the mayor for a force of police? |
42766 | While you had those warrants for the arrest of those ten men, could you not have arrested them? |
42766 | While you were acting as volunteer aid? |
42766 | While you were at the Monongahela house, did General Latta say anything about General Brinton having disobeyed his orders? |
42766 | While you were down at the round- house, guarding the trains that were to move out, was there any attack made upon your line by the rioters? |
42766 | While you were on the hill, during Saturday, did your soldiers mingle among the rioters, or did they preserve order? |
42766 | While you were stationed in line of battle, on the brow of the hill, where was the Nineteenth regiment stationed? |
42766 | While you were there, on Friday, did you see any effort made to take possession of the tracks? |
42766 | While you were yet at the Union Depot hotel? |
42766 | Who accompanied you? |
42766 | Who acted as dispatcher? |
42766 | Who addressed them? |
42766 | Who advised you this? |
42766 | Who appoints the fire commissioners? |
42766 | Who are you speaking of? |
42766 | Who asked you to join it? |
42766 | Who can give us the figures? |
42766 | Who can give us the probable loss? |
42766 | Who carried the arms? |
42766 | Who collected the men? |
42766 | Who commanded the Sixteenth regiment? |
42766 | Who commanded the first company that came? |
42766 | Who composed it? |
42766 | Who composed that crowd then-- what class of men? |
42766 | Who composed that crowd, so far as you observed? |
42766 | Who composed that crowd-- did you recognize any of them? |
42766 | Who composed that crowd? |
42766 | Who composed the balance of the crowd? |
42766 | Who composed the crowd at that time? |
42766 | Who delivered the line from Mr. Cassatt to you? |
42766 | Who did fire that? |
42766 | Who did he instruct? |
42766 | Who did that? |
42766 | Who did they report to? |
42766 | Who did they seem to blame for that state of things? |
42766 | Who did you ask-- anybody you met in the street? |
42766 | Who did you deliver it to? |
42766 | Who did you get this information from? |
42766 | Who did you talk with? |
42766 | Who did you understand that from? |
42766 | Who directed you to go out there first? |
42766 | Who dismissed these police? |
42766 | Who do you mean by Pearson? |
42766 | Who do you mean by"they?" |
42766 | Who else? |
42766 | Who else? |
42766 | Who explained the movements of the troops, as they advanced out to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | Who fired? |
42766 | Who first suggested the calling out of the militia in that conversation? |
42766 | Who gave that command? |
42766 | Who gave that command? |
42766 | Who gave that order? |
42766 | Who gave the order first to cease firing? |
42766 | Who gave the order to break ranks? |
42766 | Who gave the order to charge bayonets? |
42766 | Who gave the order? |
42766 | Who gave them orders to go there and occupy those positions? |
42766 | Who gave you those instructions? |
42766 | Who got on? |
42766 | Who had called the meeting that appointed you a committee? |
42766 | Who had charge of that district? |
42766 | Who had charge of the engine at that point? |
42766 | Who had command there? |
42766 | Who has? |
42766 | Who informed you of that fact? |
42766 | Who informed you? |
42766 | Who introduced that subject of pay? |
42766 | Who is Captain McMunn? |
42766 | Who is Clerk Davis? |
42766 | Who is Gallagher? |
42766 | Who is J. G. Parkin? |
42766 | Who is Mr. Gardner? |
42766 | Who is Mr. McCullough? |
42766 | Who is Mr. Ray? |
42766 | Who is Mr. Ross? |
42766 | Who is Mr. Stewart? |
42766 | Who is colonel of each of those regiments? |
42766 | Who is he-- what person would be the next? |
42766 | Who is he? |
42766 | Who is he? |
42766 | Who is responsible for these head- lines starting out with"Bread or Blood?" |
42766 | Who is the solicitor? |
42766 | Who is your controller? |
42766 | Who is"G. S. G."? |
42766 | Who made the arrest? |
42766 | Who made the information against those men? |
42766 | Who made the information? |
42766 | Who made the inquiries of you? |
42766 | Who made this proposition? |
42766 | Who made those threats? |
42766 | Who notified you of the meeting at the silk- works? |
42766 | Who organized the first lodge? |
42766 | Who paid your expenses going around? |
42766 | Who placed you there? |
42766 | Who put in the rifle pits? |
42766 | Who read the letter? |
42766 | Who reported that? |
42766 | Who seemed to be leading the crowd at Torrens? |
42766 | Who seemed to be the leaders of the crowd? |
42766 | Who seemed to be the leaders, at that time, of the crowd? |
42766 | Who sent for you to appear at the mayor''s office? |
42766 | Who sent them out? |
42766 | Who sent you the telegram? |
42766 | Who signed that dispatch? |
42766 | Who stationed them there? |
42766 | Who stationed those men along the road at Sewickley? |
42766 | Who stood by during that conversation with Mayor Phillips-- anybody? |
42766 | Who stopped you from running the trains? |
42766 | Who struck him? |
42766 | Who telegraphed you? |
42766 | Who thought so? |
42766 | Who threw those missiles? |
42766 | Who threw you back? |
42766 | Who told him that? |
42766 | Who told you that? |
42766 | Who told you that? |
42766 | Who told you that? |
42766 | Who told you? |
42766 | Who was Colonel Benson? |
42766 | Who was Mr. Paul? |
42766 | Who was Mr. Storrs? |
42766 | Who was Mr. Watt? |
42766 | Who was Shires? |
42766 | Who was at the head of the police? |
42766 | Who was breaking open the cars? |
42766 | Who was called first? |
42766 | Who was commanding that regiment? |
42766 | Who was engaged in firing the cars at that time? |
42766 | Who was given command of this posse? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was he? |
42766 | Who was in chief command during all this time of your troops? |
42766 | Who was in command of the troops that came up-- the Philadelphia troops-- at that time? |
42766 | Who was in command of this armed force you speak of that was on the other side of the river? |
42766 | Who was it signed by? |
42766 | Who was it signed by? |
42766 | Who was it that told this to Mr. Garrett? |
42766 | Who was it went down? |
42766 | Who was it you sent to the Adjutant General? |
42766 | Who was it-- an officer? |
42766 | Who was it? |
42766 | Who was it? |
42766 | Who was it?" |
42766 | Who was present and heard that dispatch read? |
42766 | Who was responsible for its delivery? |
42766 | Who was responsible for the delivery of that order, handed you by General Latta for General Brinton? |
42766 | Who was running in your place? |
42766 | Who was that company commanded by? |
42766 | Who was that conductor? |
42766 | Who was that dispatch received from? |
42766 | Who was that man? |
42766 | Who was that man? |
42766 | Who was that messenger? |
42766 | Who was that signed by? |
42766 | Who was that staff officer? |
42766 | Who was that? |
42766 | Who was the captain of that command? |
42766 | Who was the chief of detectives at that time? |
42766 | Who was the colonel commanding these troops that were on their way? |
42766 | Who was the dispatcher during the riots there? |
42766 | Who was the engineer? |
42766 | Who was the letter addressed to? |
42766 | Who was the man that demanded the warrants? |
42766 | Who was the man with him? |
42766 | Who was the man? |
42766 | Who was the railroad man? |
42766 | Who was the talk among? |
42766 | Who was their leader after he showed the white feather? |
42766 | Who was there? |
42766 | Who was there? |
42766 | Who was this from? |
42766 | Who was this gentleman? |
42766 | Who was to take command of the troops after he left? |
42766 | Who was with Colonel Norris? |
42766 | Who was your assistant adjutant general? |
42766 | Who was your reporter that reported the occurrences of the riot during Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday? |
42766 | Who went with you to the scene of the riot? |
42766 | Who were ahead-- the men with the torches or the plundering posse? |
42766 | Who were shooting? |
42766 | Who were the men engaged in this arson and burning? |
42766 | Who were the men that joined them? |
42766 | Who were the other parties? |
42766 | Who were the people to be afraid of? |
42766 | Who were the stones thrown at? |
42766 | Who were the two men that were arrested? |
42766 | Who were these men? |
42766 | Who were they? |
42766 | Who were they? |
42766 | Who were they? |
42766 | Who were they? |
42766 | Who were this crowd? |
42766 | Who were those gentlemen? |
42766 | Who were those men? |
42766 | Who were those men? |
42766 | Who were those parties that informed you they were leading the strike? |
42766 | Who were those parties, besides your officers-- I mean outside of the city authorities? |
42766 | Who were those people? |
42766 | Who were those persons who were throwing the stones? |
42766 | Who were your subordinate officers? |
42766 | Who would answer for the consequences, supposing that on the head of the hasty turn out of the military blood had been shed yesterday? |
42766 | Who? |
42766 | Who? |
42766 | Wholesale dealers? |
42766 | Whom did you offer assistance to? |
42766 | Whom did you offer assistance to? |
42766 | Whom did you receive it from? |
42766 | Whom did you report to when your men refused to go out? |
42766 | Whom did you see in the evening? |
42766 | Whom did you see there in this office, where you carried this soldier? |
42766 | Whom did you send? |
42766 | Whom do you refer to? |
42766 | Whose fault is it? |
42766 | Whose proclamation was that? |
42766 | Why I considered I had been superseded? |
42766 | Why could you not have held the position then? |
42766 | Why did he step down and out? |
42766 | Why did n''t they run it out? |
42766 | Why did n''t you consider it advisable to take them away, if they were in danger? |
42766 | Why did n''t you make a suggestion to the railroad officials sooner? |
42766 | Why did n''t you make some effort to stop the burning? |
42766 | Why did not you make this demand? |
42766 | Why did not you then assert your rights as peace officer? |
42766 | Why did they not throw the water? |
42766 | Why did they want to come to that place? |
42766 | Why did you consider yourself superseded? |
42766 | Why did you go back? |
42766 | Why did you leave? |
42766 | Why did you not keep control? |
42766 | Why did you select Pittsburgh for the strike? |
42766 | Why did you think it was best to disband your troops at that time-- what reasons? |
42766 | Why do n''t you shoot?" |
42766 | Why do you think there would not have been? |
42766 | Why not? |
42766 | Why not? |
42766 | Why not? |
42766 | Why not? |
42766 | Why was he discharged? |
42766 | Why was it called at the silk- works-- to meet at the silk- works? |
42766 | Why was it necessary for you to use this very strong language to him? |
42766 | Why was it necessary that you should scare him? |
42766 | Why was it? |
42766 | Why was there less objection to running double- headers? |
42766 | Why we pursued Brinton? |
42766 | Why were the blacksmiths and carpenters and other mechanics generally notified to meet there? |
42766 | Why were these men not arrested on Friday? |
42766 | Why were they assembled in force on the track? |
42766 | Why were those prisoners taken before Deputy Mayor Butler? |
42766 | Why were you afraid to ask this man his name? |
42766 | Why, then, did you assume command on Saturday evening? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Why? |
42766 | Wild? |
42766 | Will I commence with it at the commencement of the suspension? |
42766 | Will capital, then, rely on the United States army? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough just to make a statement, in your own way, of what you know of the occurrences of that day? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to make a statement of what you know in relation to the late riots? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to state any information that you have in regard to the causes leading to the riot? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to state to the committee the number of persons killed during those riots that came within your official knowledge? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to state what occurred there, and what efforts were made by the police to disperse the crowd? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to state what occurred, and what efforts were made by the police force to disperse the crowd? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to state what occurred? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to state what you observed? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to state what you saw? |
42766 | Will you be kind enough to tell what you saw? |
42766 | Will you describe the crowd? |
42766 | Will you give the names of those persons? |
42766 | Will you give us a statement of what you were paying your men at that time? |
42766 | Will you give us the names of some of the lawyers that were members of that company? |
42766 | Will you give us the time when Colonel Carpenter''s regiment reached Greenville? |
42766 | Will you go on and state what knowledge you have on the subject? |
42766 | Will you name some of those persons? |
42766 | Will you please define the term strike? |
42766 | Will you please describe that man that did that firing? |
42766 | Will you please give us your residence and business? |
42766 | Will you please state just here, if you had any difficulty in getting men to serve as police officers, that were citizens of this city? |
42766 | Will you please state what knowledge you have of misbehavior on the part of the officers? |
42766 | Will you please state whether you had any previous knowledge of the intention or existence of any disturbance, prior to that date? |
42766 | Will you please state who this R. A. Ammon is? |
42766 | Will you please tell me about how far it is from the transfer station to the round- house, where the Philadelphia troops were? |
42766 | Will you produce them? |
42766 | Will you read this, so the reporter can take it down? |
42766 | Will you state from whom, or by whom, the provisions were delivered to your troops, on the hill beyond Sharpsburg? |
42766 | Will you state whether there were any symptoms of any difficulty or uneasiness among the men here prior to the news having been received of trouble? |
42766 | Will you tell how many policemen you had in the city at that time? |
42766 | Will you tell us what you did in your own city-- tell us how you managed the trouble there? |
42766 | Will you tell us who they were? |
42766 | With Saturday night''s work, did he allude to? |
42766 | With a force? |
42766 | With a posse? |
42766 | With him on Saturday? |
42766 | With how many men? |
42766 | With how many men? |
42766 | With oil? |
42766 | With pistol shots? |
42766 | With pistols and guns? |
42766 | With safety? |
42766 | With that crowd-- those leaders? |
42766 | With that order? |
42766 | With the Governor? |
42766 | With the crowd? |
42766 | With the mob movement? |
42766 | With the other trunk lines? |
42766 | With the railroad strikers? |
42766 | With the rank of major? |
42766 | With their clubs? |
42766 | With troops? |
42766 | With twenty- five policemen? |
42766 | With what class of employés? |
42766 | With what kind of arms? |
42766 | With what rank? |
42766 | With what? |
42766 | With what? |
42766 | With what? |
42766 | With your fifteen or sixteen men, you mean? |
42766 | Without any ammunition? |
42766 | Without any provocation? |
42766 | Without assigning any reason? |
42766 | Without being molested? |
42766 | Without calling on the night police? |
42766 | Without the increase of wages? |
42766 | Women and children? |
42766 | Would it be on the road toward the silk- works? |
42766 | Would it have been any trouble for the crowd to get away when the soldiers came up to ask them to fall back? |
42766 | Would it have been impossible for a force of men to have stopped that? |
42766 | Would it have been possible for the police to have made any arrests at that time? |
42766 | Would it have been possible for your troops to have remained there? |
42766 | Would it have been possible that night for these men to get hold of these parties-- those officers that had the warrants? |
42766 | Would it have been prudent for the Adjutant General to have remained in the city during the day, Sunday? |
42766 | Would it have been prudent for the other State officials? |
42766 | Would it have excited them worse? |
42766 | Would it have required a large force to disperse the mob then? |
42766 | Would it not have been better to have made these arrests as soon as possible, before the arrival of the military? |
42766 | Would it not have been better to have retired the troops to the Union depot, inasmuch as there were no trains to be moved that night? |
42766 | Would it not have been natural, under military discipline, for the military to have held their position when they had obtained a position? |
42766 | Would it then have been possible to have arrested those men? |
42766 | Would it, in your judgment, be the duty of the sheriff to make an effort to obtain a posse before calling on the Governor? |
42766 | Would n''t you have been apt to notice? |
42766 | Would n''t you suppose this was a pretty bad place for an officer to stand? |
42766 | Would not it have had that effect, in your opinion? |
42766 | Would not that have caused great loss of life? |
42766 | Would not the commanding officer be justifiable in giving the command to fire? |
42766 | Would not there not have been a loss of perishable property that was in transit, too? |
42766 | Would not you call that a meeting? |
42766 | Would not your force have added to the strength of their force if you had re- inforced them? |
42766 | Would not your police force which you could have gathered together have been some assistance to them in keeping the peace? |
42766 | Would the cars run themselves? |
42766 | Would the crowd of people have interfered on that Saturday? |
42766 | Would the hurling of missiles into your men by the mob be a provocation sufficient to justify the commander giving an order to fire? |
42766 | Would the men have come from the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern to Pittsburgh, if a strike had taken place on the 27th of June? |
42766 | Would the mob have exhausted itself before there would have been great destruction of property? |
42766 | Would the presence of the railroad officials have tended to exasperate the crowd, do you think? |
42766 | Would there have been any difficulty in raising any number of policemen, do you think? |
42766 | Would these goods have been consumed by the fire, had they not been carried off? |
42766 | Would they permit anybody to work? |
42766 | Would this strike on the Fort Wayne and Chicago road have occurred if the strike on the Pennsylvania road had not occurred at that time? |
42766 | Would you call that an editorial? |
42766 | Would you consider it justifiable or legal to issue a proclamation in the absence of the Governor in emergencies of this kind? |
42766 | Would you have allowed yourself to have been superseded by the sheriff in authority or power? |
42766 | Would you know this man that fired at the soldiers if you were to see him? |
42766 | Would you not regard it the duty of both military and civil authorities to coöperate? |
42766 | Would you recognize the person now? |
42766 | Would you sweep the track the width of your company? |
42766 | Would you take them to be citizens of Harrisburg? |
42766 | Would your organization have any means of disciplining the members of it who interfered with the movements of the trains? |
42766 | Yes, and the place they were killed? |
42766 | Yes, sir; I had conversation-- at the time he had charge? |
42766 | Yes, sir? |
42766 | Yes, sir? |
42766 | Yes, sir? |
42766 | Yes; I would like to have you relate the interview with the city authorities? |
42766 | Yes; Thursday or Friday? |
42766 | Yes; can you be superseded by the military in your powers and duties? |
42766 | Yes; or if any? |
42766 | Yes; or on Friday or on Saturday? |
42766 | Yes; or remained in the city? |
42766 | Yes; that some of the strikers would-- the ones inclined peaceably? |
42766 | Yes; we had no trouble out there after we made that arrest? |
42766 | Yes; you? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yes? |
42766 | Yet he took these policemen away? |
42766 | You accompanied General Brinton to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You accompanied General Brinton to Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You accompanied General Brinton to the house? |
42766 | You accompanied the troops on their march out Penn avenue, did you? |
42766 | You allowed them to come in and go away when they choose? |
42766 | You allowed them to pass? |
42766 | You approved of what he had done? |
42766 | You are a detective, I understand? |
42766 | You are a manufacturer? |
42766 | You are a member of the National Guard of Pennsylvania? |
42766 | You are a member of the National Guard? |
42766 | You are a practicing physician in city? |
42766 | You are certain he gave no orders to go to any point from where he was then? |
42766 | You are county officer-- are you a county officer? |
42766 | You are in the employ of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company? |
42766 | You are intimately acquainted with him? |
42766 | You are not certain whether you named Captain Aull or you named an officer? |
42766 | You are not in the employ of the road now? |
42766 | You are officially connected with the Allegheny Valley Railroad-- in what capacity? |
42766 | You are positive about giving him your name? |
42766 | You are positive it was General Pearson? |
42766 | You are positive it was not the superintendent''s office? |
42766 | You are positive that the firing did not come from that side of the line next towards Liberty street first? |
42766 | You are positive you heard the words,"order your men?" |
42766 | You are pretty well acquainted with the laboring men in this vicinity, are you not? |
42766 | You are right certain of this? |
42766 | You are right sure he gave the command"fire?" |
42766 | You are secretary of the executive committee of what? |
42766 | You are still in the employment of the road? |
42766 | You are still out of employment? |
42766 | You are sure General Pearson was not pointed out to you? |
42766 | You are sure it was Pearson-- you could distinguish Pearson among the crowd of officers? |
42766 | You are sure of that? |
42766 | You are sure of that? |
42766 | You are sure they did n''t say not to fire, and you only heard the word"fire?" |
42766 | You are sure they were in front of the rank? |
42766 | You are sure you heard General Pearson give the command? |
42766 | You are sure you heard Pearson give the command? |
42766 | You are the private secretary of the Governor? |
42766 | You are the son of Sheriff Fife? |
42766 | You are very well acquainted about Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You arrive at that conclusion, then, from the existence of the strikes themselves, and their spreading over so large a territory? |
42766 | You arrived at Rochester at what time? |
42766 | You asked me about something on Friday? |
42766 | You asserted your authority as far you could? |
42766 | You assisted the railroad strikers, or they did so, in protecting the property? |
42766 | You being the chief of detectives, did you send any men out to spot those parties? |
42766 | You believe that with the force of the mayor, it would have been impossible to have taken these men? |
42766 | You believe, then, it was necessary to call out the military-- that the difficulty had got beyond the control of the civil authorities? |
42766 | You belong to the Engineers''Brotherhood? |
42766 | You belong to the National Guard? |
42766 | You better explain more fully the object of the organization? |
42766 | You brought it into the city and kept it in your possession all the time, until you delivered it to General Brinton? |
42766 | You call those scabs? |
42766 | You came from the transfer station to your armory in the city-- this was on Saturday night? |
42766 | You came in from the west on Friday evening? |
42766 | You can handle a train more readily? |
42766 | You can not give the street? |
42766 | You can not go to them and take their hands and say to them,''how are you, Jim?'' |
42766 | You can not state whether there was any reduction in 1877 or not? |
42766 | You can not tell whether General Pearson gave that command? |
42766 | You changed your uniform? |
42766 | You claim that they have the power to compel the Governor to furnish troops? |
42766 | You claimed no right then to interfere with those who desired to work? |
42766 | You communicated that to your acquaintances in the city? |
42766 | You consider there was no illegal assemblage, mob, or riot previous to the arrival of the military? |
42766 | You consider there was no riot or mob nor illegal assemblage at any time before the military arrived? |
42766 | You considered the meeting broken up at the time that motion to adjourn was carried? |
42766 | You considered yourself justified in exercising your own discretion in any military movement after that? |
42766 | You considered yourself supreme in command at that time? |
42766 | You consulted together? |
42766 | You continued to keep up the strike there, and hold possession of the railroad property, until the arrival of the Governor of the State, did you not? |
42766 | You controlled that yourself, as mayor of the city? |
42766 | You controlled the road at that time? |
42766 | You could have cleared the tracks at that time? |
42766 | You could have control of the force-- you are the peace officer of the city? |
42766 | You could have got more if you had wanted them? |
42766 | You could hear who gave the command? |
42766 | You could not judge anything from their actions? |
42766 | You could not put the boys away then? |
42766 | You could not tell whether there was any miners joined that crowd or not? |
42766 | You could only tell the direction in which the words came? |
42766 | You deemed it unsafe from that time on to start your trains, from the time you visited Twenty- eighth street and Torren''s station that morning? |
42766 | You delegated that power to them? |
42766 | You delegated the power to the railroad officials to have charge of these men? |
42766 | You desired to stop at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | You determined to make a fight before you called on the military? |
42766 | You did assemble at yard of the Fort Wayne and Chicago road, one hundred and fifty or two hundred of you? |
42766 | You did go to the scene on Saturday night? |
42766 | You did march to the depot, did you not, the Union depot? |
42766 | You did n''t ask strangers, did you? |
42766 | You did n''t call on any of the night force to go at that time? |
42766 | You did n''t deem it safe to undertake to attack the crowd during the night? |
42766 | You did n''t give them the officer they asked for? |
42766 | You did n''t hear them say it yourself? |
42766 | You did n''t know whether they were soldiers or part of the mob? |
42766 | You did n''t know who gave the orders to fire? |
42766 | You did n''t make any effort to get any greater number of policemen to send there? |
42766 | You did n''t recognize him? |
42766 | You did n''t see any one that from their uniform or any other emblem seemed to be officers? |
42766 | You did n''t see anything of that kind? |
42766 | You did n''t see but a couple of stones thrown at all? |
42766 | You did n''t see him fire? |
42766 | You did n''t see the conflict that occurred on the street? |
42766 | You did n''t see them driven off? |
42766 | You did n''t tell them that General Pearson was inspecting car wheels, did you? |
42766 | You did not assume to do anything on your own responsibility? |
42766 | You did not believe on the morning of the riot that they would do so? |
42766 | You did not call for any posse before telegraphing to the Governor? |
42766 | You did not care to have the assistance of that class of men? |
42766 | You did not consider it advisable? |
42766 | You did not consider that under your order? |
42766 | You did not do anything with those tramps who gathered and collected? |
42766 | You did not get the particulars? |
42766 | You did not get them until that evening or the next morning? |
42766 | You did not go up with the crowd to the shops? |
42766 | You did not hear any command given to fire, positively, by General Pearson? |
42766 | You did not hear anybody make such threats? |
42766 | You did not hear enough of the conversation between those men, to find out whether there was an organization? |
42766 | You did not know exactly what you were doing? |
42766 | You did not know them at that time? |
42766 | You did not know, at the time that this soldier approached you, that it was General Brinton? |
42766 | You did not meet them until Friday after you came back? |
42766 | You did not notice? |
42766 | You did not see any attack made on the mayor at all? |
42766 | You did not see any civilians in front of the military as they marched up? |
42766 | You did not see any soldiers, except the guard at the round- house? |
42766 | You did not see any stones come from the side of the hill? |
42766 | You did not see anything of this crowd that came out with clubs-- out of the shops? |
42766 | You did not see him after those other companies came up? |
42766 | You did not see him on the ground at any time? |
42766 | You did not see the crowd before it was fired into and dispersed by the military? |
42766 | You did not see the sheriff at all? |
42766 | You did not see them? |
42766 | You did not see what he was doing, before the shot was fired? |
42766 | You did not see what was in the carriage? |
42766 | You did not send them the fifty policemen? |
42766 | You did not succeed in getting anybody? |
42766 | You did not suffer from want of rations, however? |
42766 | You did not swear him in? |
42766 | You did not take advantage of the Governor''s absence, then? |
42766 | You did not take any pains to disperse that assemblage? |
42766 | You did not tell him to make the arrests? |
42766 | You did not try? |
42766 | You did receive an order from General Pearson? |
42766 | You did swear them in? |
42766 | You did testify as to the movements of the troops,& c, out at Twenty- eighth street, I think, Saturday afternoon? |
42766 | You did that instead of discharging them? |
42766 | You disbanded at the transfer depot? |
42766 | You do n''t know of any obstructions placed on the tracks that prevented them from running clear to the round house? |
42766 | You do n''t know of any reduction in the price for mining than that of last year? |
42766 | You do n''t know that they did fire? |
42766 | You do n''t know that this point was selected, then? |
42766 | You do n''t know the value of the goods they took? |
42766 | You do n''t know what arrangements-- as I understand it, the sheriff marched with a posse in front of the troops? |
42766 | You do n''t know where they were from? |
42766 | You do n''t know whether it came from an officer or who it came from? |
42766 | You do n''t know whether this question of wages was discussed at that meeting? |
42766 | You do n''t know who gave it? |
42766 | You do n''t know who gave this command, or was it an exclamation you heard in the crowd? |
42766 | You do n''t know who that was that fired, do you? |
42766 | You do n''t know, then, any particular man or Pittsburgh parties who offered aid and comfort? |
42766 | You do n''t mean took it forcibly? |
42766 | You do n''t pretend now, in our statement, to give the language? |
42766 | You do n''t think that they knew, or had any intention of firing on the police? |
42766 | You do n''t think they were as firm in their duty as they would have been in some other city? |
42766 | You do n''t want me to tell everything I know? |
42766 | You do not know how far he had been carried? |
42766 | You do not know of any others being arrested that day in that vicinity? |
42766 | You do not know that as a fact? |
42766 | You do not know what occurred from your own knowledge? |
42766 | You do not know what took place? |
42766 | You do not know whether he issued a proclamation or assisted in any way whatever? |
42766 | You do not know whether he said not allow the men to fire, or to fire? |
42766 | You do not know whether he took an active part in the matter of suppressing the riot? |
42766 | You do not know whether it was some of the men that wanted to notify him so that he would be on his guard or not who gave this information? |
42766 | You do not know whether they were armed or not? |
42766 | You do not know whether this other man on the left or rear was shot at the same time or not? |
42766 | You do not know who the boy was? |
42766 | You followed the mayor''s instructions? |
42766 | You formed one of the sheriff''s posse? |
42766 | You found after you had organized the troops, and had them out a few times that they were just as good as any soldiers? |
42766 | You found he had left? |
42766 | You gave them citizens''clothes? |
42766 | You got fifteen-- you say there was fifty or sixty policemen-- did you undertake to gather that body? |
42766 | You got such information? |
42766 | You got to the depot about one o''clock? |
42766 | You graded the men according to their time of service and efficiency? |
42766 | You had a good deal to do in raising the force of citizens to put down the riot? |
42766 | You had a signal to stop trains? |
42766 | You had a space sufficient cleared to enable you to get your cars out? |
42766 | You had charge of an engine? |
42766 | You had come out then to see? |
42766 | You had control of your police force, had n''t you? |
42766 | You had gone some distance before the firing commenced on your troops-- that firing from the house? |
42766 | You had heard nothing from them? |
42766 | You had no anticipation of any trouble on your road? |
42766 | You had no conversation with any other excepting the one who got on your engine? |
42766 | You had no guards on the street leading to Penn street? |
42766 | You had no intention of contributing any to the excitement by any inflammatory article? |
42766 | You had no knowledge of it? |
42766 | You had no men stationed about any of these gun stores before they broke into them? |
42766 | You had no other telegrams or communications to you or to the Executive Department? |
42766 | You had no participation at all in what was going on? |
42766 | You had no particular mission to go up there? |
42766 | You had no reason at all to anticipate anything of the kind? |
42766 | You had no report made to you by the representative of your road who was there? |
42766 | You had no talk with him? |
42766 | You had no trouble during the whole disturbance? |
42766 | You had no trouble in preserving the peace after Monday morning? |
42766 | You had no weapons in view? |
42766 | You had not sufficient police force here to cope with a mob of its extent and power? |
42766 | You had one company to relieve the other? |
42766 | You had plenty of ammunition at the Union depot? |
42766 | You had possession of the track-- and the officers did? |
42766 | You had promised to keep order? |
42766 | You had received news, then, that the sheriff of Allegheny county was shot, had you here? |
42766 | You had some army experience? |
42766 | You had something at the Union depot within twenty- four hours? |
42766 | You had the names of those parties? |
42766 | You had the power to give him a safe passage through? |
42766 | You have an organization among the engineers? |
42766 | You have arrangements at the station- house to receive reports from all parts of the city, have you not? |
42766 | You have forgotten what he told you? |
42766 | You have had some experience in the army? |
42766 | You have had strikes in the city where there have been a larger number engaged than in this? |
42766 | You have held that position for a number of years? |
42766 | You have n''t any particular charge of the details? |
42766 | You have never been able to ascertain who it was, so as to prove it, who wrote the letter? |
42766 | You have no copies of the papers that you could furnish us to retain? |
42766 | You have no personal knowledge about that? |
42766 | You have no regular file of your_ Globe_? |
42766 | You have no very heavy grades on the Fort Wayne road? |
42766 | You have not been able to find the dispatch you received from the sheriff? |
42766 | You have said you talked with one? |
42766 | You have seen service in the war? |
42766 | You have some muzzle loaders? |
42766 | You have stated in your evidence, that you had told this crowd to disperse and go to their homes-- what was their reply? |
42766 | You have stated that the strike was commenced by one man refusing to go out? |
42766 | You have stated that you were advised to go away for safety? |
42766 | You have stated the substance of the agreement? |
42766 | You have stated they sent for fifty policemen, and they did not get them? |
42766 | You have stated, I believe, that you did advise a crowd there and then to go to their respective homes? |
42766 | You have telegraphic communications to all parts of the city, I suppose-- stations? |
42766 | You have testified in regard to leaving before the firing? |
42766 | You have testified to what knowledge you had of the occurrences at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | You have that paper? |
42766 | You have the official report of the coroner in the files? |
42766 | You have the right to notify him under the act of 1864? |
42766 | You heard General Pearson? |
42766 | You heard Pearson give the command to fire? |
42766 | You heard a noise like a cap before the firing of the troops? |
42766 | You heard he had left? |
42766 | You heard it at the office? |
42766 | You heard no complaint about that order? |
42766 | You heard nothing but the word, fire? |
42766 | You heard nothing in any of these conversations of any fixed day after the 27th of June-- any date named? |
42766 | You heard nothing of what took place at the store during the night? |
42766 | You heard shots? |
42766 | You heard that distinctly? |
42766 | You heard the command given by the officers to charge bayonets? |
42766 | You heard the command given to fire? |
42766 | You heard the command given to fire? |
42766 | You heard the mayor''s reply? |
42766 | You heard them talk about that? |
42766 | You heard them talk so? |
42766 | You heard them yourself? |
42766 | You heard these commands? |
42766 | You held no inquest upon any children or women? |
42766 | You held the position you were commanded to hold? |
42766 | You hunted up as many as you could get to go willingly? |
42766 | You informed him about the dispatch calling for fifty men? |
42766 | You judge from the number of trains and the amount of stuff you hauled? |
42766 | You judge from the sound that the shot came from the police? |
42766 | You just heard the word? |
42766 | You just went around and hunted up the men that would go voluntarily of their own accord? |
42766 | You knew it was the sheriff afterwards? |
42766 | You knew nothing of the action of the sheriff at Pittsburgh, or the proclamation of the Governor, until you arrived at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You knew nothing of the command which General Brown gave? |
42766 | You knew of no pre- arranged plan for a strike? |
42766 | You knew some of the Pittsburghers? |
42766 | You knew that there were crowds there, did n''t you? |
42766 | You knew the command really came from him? |
42766 | You knew they could not stop it off? |
42766 | You knew they prevented freights from running? |
42766 | You knew what they came among you for, and what commands had been given to them by the officers of the railroad company? |
42766 | You knew what they were? |
42766 | You knew what was necessary for you, as sheriff, to do before calling the militia? |
42766 | You know how extensive it was? |
42766 | You know it is generally termed a strike? |
42766 | You know nothing about freight? |
42766 | You know nothing of any pre- arranged plan among the men for a strike? |
42766 | You know nothing of any such offer having been made on Friday, Saturday, or Sunday? |
42766 | You know nothing of the causes leading to the riot? |
42766 | You know nothing of the movement of the troops during Saturday night and Sunday morning? |
42766 | You know nothing of this organization being in existence at that time on any roads except those that ran out of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You know nothing of what occurred at the time the soldiers fired? |
42766 | You know nothing then as to what transpired at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | You know nothing whatever of the events occurring before that? |
42766 | You know nothing, I suppose, as to the wounded, except those that were brought to the West Penn Hospital? |
42766 | You know of no requisition being made on the sheriff, of your own personal knowledge? |
42766 | You know that there was an assemblage of men at or near Twenty- eighth street during the day, on Friday, do n''t you? |
42766 | You know that they prevented freight trains from going out? |
42766 | You laid out your plans the same as a military officer, and your men carried them out? |
42766 | You left then-- saw nothing of it? |
42766 | You live in Allegheny City? |
42766 | You looked upon that as the disposition manifested towards the Philadelphia soldiers? |
42766 | You made a show of force, and they dispersed? |
42766 | You made no effort to see them or converse with them, and had no conference with them? |
42766 | You made no effort, then, to disperse or suppress the riot? |
42766 | You made no report of that policeman to the mayor of his refusal to act? |
42766 | You marched with the right in front? |
42766 | You may give the substance of the order, as near as you can recollect? |
42766 | You may go on and give a statement of what occurred, beginning with Thursday morning? |
42766 | You may go on and state what you desire to on the subject? |
42766 | You may identify those papers, if you will state what they are? |
42766 | You may state now the character of it and where it first broke out? |
42766 | You may state the facts in relation to the conversation that occurred between General Brinton and Colonel Norris, or what you know in relation to it? |
42766 | You may state to what extent you supplied the citizens with ammunition? |
42766 | You may state what Colonel Norris stated to you on his return from General Brinton''s command, in relation to his conversation with General Brinton? |
42766 | You may state what conversation took place between General Latta and Colonel Norris? |
42766 | You may state what efforts you made in connection with others to suppress the riot on Sunday, and stop the pillaging and plundering? |
42766 | You may state what facts came under your own observation in relation to the railroad riots of last July? |
42766 | You may state what occurred when Mr. Watt came to your office, on Thursday, the 19th? |
42766 | You may tell us, if you please, where you were when the difficulties in July occurred? |
42766 | You mean December last? |
42766 | You mean Generals Pearson and Brinton? |
42766 | You mean Philadelphia military? |
42766 | You mean belong to a union and go back on the order? |
42766 | You mean by remonstrances? |
42766 | You mean by that that the civil authorities were able to cope with the mob, or with the strikers? |
42766 | You mean common rumor? |
42766 | You mean explosive shells, fired from a rifle? |
42766 | You mean from the position they occupied, they were company officers? |
42766 | You mean help you to prevent the destruction of the property? |
42766 | You mean if just one man quits work, he is on a strike, or when there is a combination of men all quit at once? |
42766 | You mean not living in this vicinity? |
42766 | You mean of the mob-- the crowd? |
42766 | You mean refuse to work? |
42766 | You mean repairing men-- truckmen? |
42766 | You mean that were about in the vicinity, and seemed to be taking part in the destruction of property? |
42766 | You mean the Adjutant General''s report? |
42766 | You mean the company marched up? |
42766 | You mean the entire article? |
42766 | You mean the laboring men? |
42766 | You mean the men who were setting things on fire? |
42766 | You mean the old soldiers in the crowd? |
42766 | You mean the policemen? |
42766 | You mean the railroad authorities? |
42766 | You mean the railroad ticket office? |
42766 | You mean the trainmen? |
42766 | You mean there were three times as many of the Philadelphia troops? |
42766 | You mean to say that the mob ran from the military, when they came out? |
42766 | You mean to say that there was a demonstration of that kind before the Philadelphia troops arrived? |
42766 | You mean what police district? |
42766 | You mean when it passed there? |
42766 | You met some of them there while on this trip? |
42766 | You might give us a description of that? |
42766 | You might state whether the mob went to your house in search of you? |
42766 | You need not name individuals? |
42766 | You never examined the record? |
42766 | You never got track where they went? |
42766 | You noticed it before the strike commenced? |
42766 | You obeyed orders? |
42766 | You only get that from the crowd? |
42766 | You only include those employed in collieries and about collieries in your organization? |
42766 | You ordered Colonel Gray and Colonel Howard to move their commands to the transfer station, I believe you said? |
42766 | You ordered to charge bayonets once or twice? |
42766 | You organized for protection? |
42766 | You placed him in the lock- up? |
42766 | You played on neither private property nor railroad property? |
42766 | You practice at the bar here in this city? |
42766 | You prefer that he should go scot- free? |
42766 | You put in your six days a week-- work a week at$ 1 40? |
42766 | You rallied your men on Sunday and went to the mayor''s office-- did you remain there during all of Sunday? |
42766 | You reached your command in safety? |
42766 | You received no intelligence of that fact from the railroad officials? |
42766 | You received notice that another call had been made by Mr. Watt, did n''t you? |
42766 | You recovered none of the guns? |
42766 | You reduced it to writing yourself? |
42766 | You refer to the number killed on the hill- side? |
42766 | You refused to go? |
42766 | You refused? |
42766 | You regard the military subordinate to the civil authorities? |
42766 | You regard yourself as superior within the limits of the city? |
42766 | You remained at the Union depot until one o''clock? |
42766 | You remained down there when they started from the shops? |
42766 | You remained here until the arrival of the Governor with troops from the east? |
42766 | You remained there until two o''clock Sunday, guarding it? |
42766 | You remained with this crowd until two o''clock, that you have spoken of? |
42766 | You reported that crowd to him? |
42766 | You required them to pay the police also? |
42766 | You reside in Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You reside where? |
42766 | You resisted this? |
42766 | You returned them to the mayor? |
42766 | You run your trains regularly up to Saturday night? |
42766 | You said if the soldiers fiddled, you proposed to dance? |
42766 | You said it was understood that if any man came in front of the engines, any engineers and firemen were all to get off? |
42766 | You said the officers were in front of the men, did you mean those men that were standing in line? |
42766 | You said there was no cellar under this round- house? |
42766 | You said they were willing to organize? |
42766 | You said three fourths of the men there were spectators? |
42766 | You said you considered yourself superior in command at that time? |
42766 | You said you had no difficulty in getting citizens to volunteer and organize into bodies to assist in suppressing the riot or keeping the peace? |
42766 | You said you saw Pearson, and nodded to him? |
42766 | You said you were discharged on account of being a union man? |
42766 | You said you were utterly hostile to all those parties in their efforts? |
42766 | You said you would not like to have attempted to get out with that train on Saturday? |
42766 | You said, a while ago, that this last meeting you spoke of was not regularly called? |
42766 | You said, awhile ago, that you were a member of that committee that waited upon Mr. Scranton? |
42766 | You saved the private property here by wetting down the buildings? |
42766 | You saw General Pearson when he gave this order? |
42766 | You saw an order from General Pearson to Colonel Glenn? |
42766 | You saw him before the firing, and after the firing with the same uniform on? |
42766 | You saw him when he gave the command? |
42766 | You saw no belt? |
42766 | You saw no citizens on Saturday night, I understand you to say? |
42766 | You saw no disturbance at all on Friday? |
42766 | You saw no efforts made? |
42766 | You saw nobody there? |
42766 | You saw none of the mob taking engines and running them on the track? |
42766 | You saw that dispatch? |
42766 | You saw the boy? |
42766 | You saw the order handed to him by General Latta, did you? |
42766 | You saw this yourself? |
42766 | You say General Pearson had a blouse on? |
42766 | You say General Pearson ordered you to take a portion of the regiment? |
42766 | You say General Pearson was in Pitcairn''s office? |
42766 | You say General Pearson wore a blouse and a cap? |
42766 | You say a sick soldier was in the telegraph office? |
42766 | You say against some ten parties? |
42766 | You say from a wagon? |
42766 | You say from other sections? |
42766 | You say he had a cartridge- box-- this man that fired? |
42766 | You say he has a grocery store? |
42766 | You say he wheeled around; those he gave the command to must have been behind him? |
42766 | You say he wore a white vest? |
42766 | You say it came from officers in command of a company? |
42766 | You say it started here? |
42766 | You say no posse was with him? |
42766 | You say on Thursday you sent police officers there, and they got on a train, and they attempted to run that train out? |
42766 | You say that a couple of hundred or one hundred and fifty policemen could have driven the crowd back? |
42766 | You say that a portion of them were lookers- on? |
42766 | You say that an old gentleman was killed? |
42766 | You say that pistol shots were fired from the mob? |
42766 | You say that some policemen came up there? |
42766 | You say that the citizens gave you those arms to resist the troops? |
42766 | You say that the main cause of the strike on the Pennsylvania road was the running of double- headers? |
42766 | You say that the round- house was on fire, but we have evidence that it was not? |
42766 | You say that the two shots fired by the tall man was before any firing done by the posse? |
42766 | You say that was on Tuesday? |
42766 | You say that you acted in attempting to keep and preserve the peace here and keep down violence until superseded by the military? |
42766 | You say that you were at Ocean Grove at the time you heard of the Pittsburgh riots? |
42766 | You say the community-- did your merchants give aid and abet in this strike? |
42766 | You say the live stock was moved? |
42766 | You say the mayor was there attending to his duties? |
42766 | You say the parties next to Twenty- eighth street were the last to fire? |
42766 | You say the police gave the fire department assistance and protection? |
42766 | You say the railroad company did not want you? |
42766 | You say the soldiers could have cleared the tracks and dispersed the mob, when they came out of the round- house? |
42766 | You say the sympathy of all those gathered around was with the strikers? |
42766 | You say the troops had hose, and kept the fire out until it got under them and drove them out? |
42766 | You say then that there was no signal? |
42766 | You say there was about twenty- five men fired? |
42766 | You say there was an article in the_ Globe_ newspaper published here? |
42766 | You say there was no necessity for calling the troops here? |
42766 | You say there was no one in this office at all, when you carried this soldier there? |
42766 | You say they asserted their right to stop the trains? |
42766 | You say they saved the city? |
42766 | You say they turned and fired the other way? |
42766 | You say they were facing down Washington avenue or in that direction-- facing to the right up Lackawanna avenue? |
42766 | You say they wheeled to clear the crowd off Twenty- eighth street; did they fire into this crowd? |
42766 | You say this man was killed? |
42766 | You say those carrying off the goods were mostly children? |
42766 | You say those members of the department that had been put off did n''t refuse to assist you? |
42766 | You say two- twenty? |
42766 | You say you came up Washington avenue, and sat down? |
42766 | You say you came up and stood on the corner? |
42766 | You say you can not tell who those men were, or where they resided? |
42766 | You say you did keep up your organization? |
42766 | You say you did n''t ascertain their reasons for wanting to lay down their arms? |
42766 | You say you found the command at Sharpsburg or Claremont? |
42766 | You say you got very few reports? |
42766 | You say you heard an order? |
42766 | You say you heard him give this command? |
42766 | You say you heard no command from any of the other officers? |
42766 | You say you heard somebody asking who it was? |
42766 | You say you heard the command to fire? |
42766 | You say you knew nothing of any pre- arranged plan for a strike? |
42766 | You say you met a thousand people making threats? |
42766 | You say you only saw one stone thrown? |
42766 | You say you refused to receive orders from General Brown on Monday? |
42766 | You say you sent about a dozen policemen there? |
42766 | You say you thought on Saturday morning the crowd could not have been dispersed without the militia? |
42766 | You say you went down to hear the sheriff''s proclamation? |
42766 | You say you went home? |
42766 | You say you were accompanied by Colonel Smith? |
42766 | You say you were not with General Brinton when Colonel Norris reached him? |
42766 | You say you wrote the balance of the article? |
42766 | You selected ten of them? |
42766 | You simply called for volunteers when you went out to hunt up those men? |
42766 | You speak here of Colonel Glenn? |
42766 | You speak now of Thursday night? |
42766 | You speak of this man Evans having made a deposition? |
42766 | You speak of those two or three, do you allude to the military now? |
42766 | You spoke about a mob-- you found the mob after you got back? |
42766 | You spoke about marching along the hill, or up the hill? |
42766 | You spoke about raising a_ posse comitatus_? |
42766 | You spoke about some armed men you saw going up the hill-- did you ascertain who they were? |
42766 | You spoke of about seventy- five or a hundred? |
42766 | You staid there until what hour? |
42766 | You started as soon as ever you heard the command to fire? |
42766 | You stated he was counsel for the sheriff? |
42766 | You stated one was from Wilkes- Barre? |
42766 | You stated that some cars were run between you and this gun? |
42766 | You stated that you saw pistol shots fired from the crowd? |
42766 | You stated you had sixteen policemen at Union depot? |
42766 | You stayed at the station- house? |
42766 | You stayed there during the night? |
42766 | You stood between the ranks? |
42766 | You subsequently armed them, did n''t you? |
42766 | You suppose that the troops fired in self- defense? |
42766 | You supposed from that that probably if the strike occurred it would probably occur pretty soon after they got their pay? |
42766 | You supposed it would, but you really do n''t know that it did? |
42766 | You surrendered the property to him? |
42766 | You then authorized him to employ as many police as he deemed necessary? |
42766 | You think it grew out of that? |
42766 | You think it started here and spread? |
42766 | You think it was ill advised, to undertake to move trains at the time? |
42766 | You think it was not until after the strike at Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You think that a small force of police there could have straightened things up? |
42766 | You think the men were principally from the south side who broke into the gun stores? |
42766 | You think the strike at Pittsburgh was the cause of the strike at Scranton? |
42766 | You think then that the police are the proper force to use on such occasions? |
42766 | You think there was a necessity for calling on the military? |
42766 | You think you examined those doors, do you? |
42766 | You think you were not behind the oil- house one minute before the firing began? |
42766 | You think, then, it was a sort of a fellow- feeling that animated the workingmen here? |
42766 | You thought it was necessary to use a show of force and resolution? |
42766 | You thought that you laid sufficient ground for calling on the Governor, did you? |
42766 | You thought they had an engine to start the cars? |
42766 | You told Ammon he would be arrested? |
42766 | You took the responsibility of disbanding them without orders from your superiors? |
42766 | You took these policemen, you say, to arrest men that were carrying off railroad property? |
42766 | You travel on the roads a great deal you say, and have a great deal of shipping? |
42766 | You understand that they are all to quit? |
42766 | You understand they gave them a formal dismissal, and told them their services were not needed to keep the peace any longer? |
42766 | You understand what I mean by my question? |
42766 | You understood that next day? |
42766 | You walked with him? |
42766 | You want the transaction of the 1st of August? |
42766 | You wanted to form your men in the arsenal grounds? |
42766 | You went back to the depot after supper? |
42766 | You went down there after the sheriff was pointed out to you? |
42766 | You went down to obey the order? |
42766 | You went in and saw him? |
42766 | You went out on the train, did you? |
42766 | You went over Saturday night, and stayed home the balance of the night? |
42766 | You went up there to help to take out the train-- a double- header? |
42766 | You went with the two men, and saw that your orders were executed? |
42766 | You were a conductor on trains that ran double- headers? |
42766 | You were a deputy sheriff in July last? |
42766 | You were a member of the National Guard in July last? |
42766 | You were a member of the militia? |
42766 | You were a private in the artillery corps, Washington Grays? |
42766 | You were about the city a good deal attending to your duties, and you know a large part of the population? |
42766 | You were acting independently? |
42766 | You were addressing General Pearson? |
42766 | You were along there just as the workmen were coming out? |
42766 | You were around through the crowd? |
42766 | You were asked to go to the scene of the disturbance? |
42766 | You were asked to go up to the scene of the disturbance, were you not? |
42766 | You were at Torrens station? |
42766 | You were at Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | You were at the hotel when the colonel arrived? |
42766 | You were at the meeting at the silk- works, and came up? |
42766 | You were at the office after the Thursday of that week? |
42766 | You were certain it was Mayor McCarthy? |
42766 | You were close enough to those shops below the steel- works to see distinctly that the men were being driven out? |
42766 | You were filling the place of Mr. Pitcairn on the Thursday before the riot occurred? |
42766 | You were here when the troops arrived from Philadelphia? |
42766 | You were in General Latta''s office? |
42766 | You were in a position to hear it? |
42766 | You were in active service during the last war, were you not? |
42766 | You were in citizen''s clothes? |
42766 | You were in communication with him up to that time? |
42766 | You were in sight of them? |
42766 | You were in sight so that you could see? |
42766 | You were in the crowd, were you? |
42766 | You were in the round- house? |
42766 | You were informed by your solicitor, Mr. Scott, what had been done in the way of calling for help on your arrival? |
42766 | You were marched down and marched back, and took your position with the regiment again? |
42766 | You were mayor of the city of Harrisburg, I believe, in July last? |
42766 | You were mayor of the city of Reading during the past summer? |
42766 | You were not about Twenty- eighth street then? |
42766 | You were not about then on Sunday? |
42766 | You were not at home? |
42766 | You were not at the rear of the train? |
42766 | You were not at your office, and did not receive that dispatch calling for fifty men? |
42766 | You were not down in the crowd? |
42766 | You were not in that party? |
42766 | You were not near enough to tell who ordered the firing? |
42766 | You were not on duty during the firing? |
42766 | You were not on duty on Thursday? |
42766 | You were not out with him? |
42766 | You were not present there? |
42766 | You were not present when the firing took place by the militia? |
42766 | You were not present when the firing took place? |
42766 | You were not present when the mayor made a speech to the crowd? |
42766 | You were not there when the firing took place? |
42766 | You were not there when the firing took place? |
42766 | You were not with the sheriff on Friday night when he went up to Twenty- eighth street? |
42766 | You were not working that day on Saturday? |
42766 | You were on duty that day? |
42766 | You were one of the deputy sheriffs in July last? |
42766 | You were one of the three officers? |
42766 | You were out again on Friday? |
42766 | You were out behind the crowd? |
42766 | You were present during the day-- Sunday? |
42766 | You were present when Mr. Watt asked the mayor to furnish him with the police? |
42766 | You were ready to go if the track was clear? |
42766 | You were right down the railroad among the soldiers? |
42766 | You were sheriff of Dauphin county in July last? |
42766 | You were shortly informed of what was going on-- made all efforts necessary to ascertain? |
42766 | You were standing upon the window? |
42766 | You were standing where? |
42766 | You were surgeon of the Fourteenth? |
42766 | You were talking with this friend of yours? |
42766 | You were the commissary of General Brinton''s staff? |
42766 | You were the leader of the party on the Fort Wayne and Chicago road? |
42766 | You were there at that time, if I am rightly informed, endeavoring to clear that track, and keep that cut open? |
42766 | You were there not over a minute before you heard the firing? |
42766 | You were there out of curiosity, were you? |
42766 | You were there until five o''clock in the morning? |
42766 | You were to preserve the peace at all hazards-- if necessary to preserve the peace to call, you are justifiable in doing it? |
42766 | You were tried, and the court sustained you? |
42766 | You were up on the hill? |
42766 | You were willing to be one of them? |
42766 | You were with the balance of the troops as they retired out Penn street? |
42766 | You were with the department? |
42766 | You were within five or six rods? |
42766 | You would be influenced by the magnitude of the disturbance, then, rather than by the efforts put forth by the sheriff to suppress it? |
42766 | You would depend on them just as soon? |
42766 | You would do your duty as long as anybody else would? |
42766 | You would have been the proper person to call it? |
42766 | You would have given the order? |
42766 | You would have noticed it if he had? |
42766 | You would n''t pretend to say what man it was gave the command, or pick out the man? |
42766 | You would take him then to be a citizen of Pittsburgh? |
42766 | You wrote that down yourself? |
42766 | You, as a business man, would have closed up all business at that time, under this state of excitement? |
42766 | You, as a military man, of course, felt aggrieved at that? |
42766 | Your effort was particularly confined to adjusting the compromise and difficulty between the strikers and the railroad? |
42766 | Your efforts were simply confined to arresting men that were carrying off plunder? |
42766 | Your head- quarters is here at the market- house, is n''t it? |
42766 | Your instructions were to wait until the excitement was allayed? |
42766 | Your intrenchments were there? |
42766 | Your men laid close by the arms? |
42766 | Your men? |
42766 | Your object was to preserve the military character of your regiment? |
42766 | Your own days? |
42766 | Your own men would never have given you any trouble, had not outsiders interfered? |
42766 | Your own understanding when you got to Pittsburgh was the civil authorities had lost all control, and were powerless? |
42766 | Your people took these men up, going away with goods? |
42766 | Your policemen armed? |
42766 | Your recollection of it is the same as that given by Mr. Brown this morning as to what occurred there on Lackawanna avenue? |
42766 | Your regiment was not brought there, then, as a regiment, and disbanded? |
42766 | Your residence? |
42766 | Your troops were as ready to do service as those in the United States army? |
42766 | Your troops were in active service all that time? |
42766 | Yourself and the Secretary of State with him? |
42766 | _ Posse comitatus?_ A. |
42766 | advance? |
42766 | being taken off? |
42766 | men? |
42766 | more? |
42766 | on the 1st of June? |
42766 | or''how are you, Tom''or''how is it with you, Patrick?'' |
42766 | reduction and the classification of engines that induced you to arrange that strike for the 27th of June? |
42766 | reduction apply to all the officers and employés of the railroad company? |
42766 | reduction apply to all the officers and employés of the road? |
42766 | reduction made on the 1st of June that induced the men to arrange for that strike? |
42766 | reduction made? |
42766 | reduction take place? |
42766 | reduction was made on the 1st of June? |
42766 | reduction, on the 1st of June, on your road? |
42766 | reduction, was it? |
42766 | reduction? |
42766 | reduction? |
42766 | reduction? |
42766 | reduction? |
42766 | reduction? |
42766 | reduction? |
42766 | should be restored before that? |
42766 | to run them following 37? |