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Updated: June 26, 2025


"We saw the governor," said Mr. Fyshe. "Indeed he was good enough to lunch with us at the Pocahontas Club. He tells us that what we are doing is being done in every city and town of the state. He says that the days of the old-fashioned city council are numbered. They are setting up boards everywhere." "Excellent!" said Mr. Newberry. "The governor assures us that what we want will be done.

Lucullus Fyshe in an interview, that Mayor McGrath himself would favour clean government, and would become the official nominee of the league itself. This certainly was strange. But it would perhaps have been less mystifying to the public at large, had they been able to listen to certain of the intimate conversations of Mr. Fyshe and Mr. Boulder. "You say then," said Mr.

"The truth is I didn't feel sure in my own mind just what was meant by a 'Board, and 'getting them to give us government by a Board. I know I'm speaking like an ignoramus. I've really not paid as much attention in the past to civic politics as I ought to have. But what is the difference between a council and a board?" "The difference between a council and a board?" repeated Mr. Fyshe.

So also does the chairman of the Republican State Committee, who was kind enough to be our guest in a box at the Lincoln Theatre. It is most gratifying," concluded Mr. Fyshe, "to feel that the legislature will give us such a hearty, such a thoroughly American support." "You are sure of this, are you?" questioned Mr. Newberry. "You have actually seen the members of the legislature?"

And it was just at that moment that a telegram was handed to the Duke from Mr. Lucullus Fyshe, praying him, as he was reported to be visiting the next day the City where the Mausoleum Club stands, to make acquaintance with him by dining at that institution. And the Duke, being as I say a literal man, decided that just as soon as Mr.

"And could you not get three or four men to come and address it so as to stir us up?" asked Mrs. Buncomhearst anxiously. "Oh, certainly," said Mr. Fyshe. So it was known after this that the women were working side by side with the men. The tea rooms of the Grand Palaver and the other hotels were filled with them every day, busy for the cause.

Indeed, there was even better reason not to introduce Mr. Boulder to the Duke. Mr. Fyshe had made that sort of mistake once, and never intended to make it again. It was only a year ago, on the occasion of the visit of young Viscount FitzThistle to the Mausoleum Club, that Mr. Fyshe had introduced Mr. Boulder to the Viscount and had suffered grievously thereby. For Mr.

"What is your good news, may I ask?" said Grace. "You know I have an Aunt Margaret commonly called Aunt Meg out at Riversdale, don't you? There never was such a dear, sweet, jolly aunty in the world. I had a letter from her tonight. Listen, I'll read you what she says." I want you to spend your holidays with me, my dear. Mary Fairweather and Louise Fyshe and Lily Dennis are coming, too.

Certainly a head which had brought peace out of civil war in the hardware business by amalgamating ten rival stores and had saved the very lives of five hundred employees by reducing their wages fourteen per cent, was capable of it. At any rate it was Mr. Fyshe who first gave the idea a definite utterance. "It's the only thing, Furlong," he said, across the lunch table at the Mausoleum Club.

May I just run in and use your telephone? I want to call up Boulder for a moment." Two minutes later Mr. Fyshe was saying into the telephone, "Oh, is that you, Boulder? I was looking for you in vain today wanted you to meet the Duke of Dulham, who came in quite unexpectedly from New York; felt sure you'd like to meet him.

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