Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 10, 2025
Carnegie's, those great proud buildings, would do well if they did not do one thing for six years but find that boy!
It was the stone Geoffry had raised in memory of his Elizabeth, and below her name his was inscribed, with the date of his death. The churchyard was all neatly kept this grave not more neatly than the others. Mrs. Carnegie's affections had flowed into other channels, and Bessie had no turn for meditation amongst the tombs. Mr.
"Who is that radiant-looking young creature coming down the Rose Walk?" she exclaimed. "See ah, my dear Frances, what a little beauty! What style! what exquisite bloom!" "Why, it is Fluff!" exclaimed Frances. She rushed from Mrs. Carnegie's side, and the next moment Miss Danvers's arms were round her neck. "Yes, I've come, Frances," she exclaimed. "I have really come back.
I never miss a ball for Louy if I can help it." Bessie briefly explained herself and her circumstances, and asked when her friend had last seen any of Mr. Carnegie's family. "I saw Mrs. Carnegie yesterday to inquire if I could do anything for her at Hampton. She looked very well." "And did she say nothing of me?" cried Bessie in consternation. "Not a word.
So it was that, on my journey to America, made necessary by the sudden death of my son, I accepted Mr. Carnegie's invitation to visit him at his castle of Skibo in the extreme north of Scotland. Very striking, during the two days' journey from London to Edinburgh, and from Edinburgh to Bonar, were the evidences of mourning for President McKinley in every city, village, and hamlet.
A few days later, when I began to do things at a closer range, I took a little trip to New York, and visited the Library; and I asked the man who seemed to have it in charge, who there was who was writing books for Mr. Carnegie's Libraries just now, or if there was any really adequate arrangement Mr.
Carnegie's chimneys, America which is the last newest experiment station of the world is a failure. It has occurred to me to try to express, for what it may be worth, a point of view toward Triumphant Democracy Mr. Carnegie may have inadvertently overlooked. If Mr.
Though he was only twenty-four years old he succeeded, by his intelligence and earnestness, in borrowing money to purchase certain Connellsville mines, then much depreciated in price. From that moment, coke became Frick's obsession, as steel had been Carnegie's.
From one you could look down and see nothing but the foliage of the den, with a gleam of water where the burn made a pool, and from the other you looked over a meadow with big trees to the Tochty sweeping round a bend, and across to the high opposite banks covered with brush-wood. First they visited Carnegie's room.
They were busy, very busy for some weeks, reading the friendly letters from so far, and answering them. I am sure they will forget many sad events of the war, but they never can forget this wonderful and surprising mail, which made for peace more than any of the costly commissions for the investigation of war cruelties, or any of Carnegie's empty, although wonderful, luxurious halls of peace.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking