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Updated: June 11, 2025
Begin with the eldest." "Lady Penarvon." "I know. Go on," she said. "Mrs. Hinckley." "Go on." "Miss Lois Champneyes." "Young?" the woman asked. "Yes!" "Pretty?" "Yes!" "A victim?" Saton frowned. "There was also," he continued, "my hostess, Lady Mary Rochester." "A silly, fluffy little woman," Madame declared. "Did she flirt?" "Not with me, at any rate," Saton answered.
The trust company's stock, he went on to explain, ignoring Antonia, seemed to be already oversubscribed. Our firm, Hinckley, and Jim's Chicago and New York friends, including Harper, all stood ready to take blocks of it, and there was no reason for requiring Hinckley to put much actual money in for this. He could pay for it out of his profits soon, and make a fortune without any outlay.
So one day, at a syndicate conference, I sought to ease my mind by asking where this thing was to stop, and when we could hope for a time when the town would not have to be held up by main strength. "Why, that's a very remarkable question!" said Mr. Hinckley. "We surely haven't reached the point where we can think of stopping.
Hinckley, the cashier of the bank, who came to see about some insurance matters. He was spare, aquiline, and white-mustached; and very courteously wished Lattimore the good fortune of securing so valuable an acquisition as ourselves. It would place Lattimore under additional obligations to Mr. Elkins, who was proving himself such an effective worker in all public matters. "Mr.
Samuel Angier, married Hannah, daughter of President Urian Oakes of Harvard College. Their son , Rev. John Angier, married Mary Bourne, granddaughter of Governor Hinckley. Their son , Oakes Angier, a law student of President John Adams, was the father of Susannah Angier. Children: We were changing cars about midnight at Rotterdam Junction, New York, for the Fitchburg Railroad connection.
Hinckley, their daughter, whom I recognized as the splendid blonde whose pacers had passed us when we were out driving, Mrs. Trescott and her daughter, and Captain and Mrs. Tolliver. Those present were plainly of several different sets and cliques. Mrs. Hinckley hoped that my wife would join the Equal Rights Club, and labor for the enfranchisement of women.
Sometimes they begin quite close to the settlements, like the destructive fire at Hinckley, Minnesota, in 1894, which burned quietly for a week, and could have been put out by a couple of men without any trouble; but sometimes they start in the far recesses of the forest and reach their full fury very quickly.
Hinckley went with them to their hotel, having proposed enough work in the way of investigation to keep them with us for several months. They were to leave on the evening of the next day. "But," said Jim, as we put on our overcoats to go home, "it shows our good will, you see." At that moment the steward, with an anxious look, asked Mr. Elkins for a word in private. "Ask Mr.
Many children made orphans by the flood are now being cared for. There are a hundred or more of them; just how many no one knows. "I have great difficulty," said Miss Hinckley to me to-day, "to persuade the people who have taken children to care for that our society can be trusted to take charge of what will surely be a burden to them. All my work now is to inspire confidence.
Barr-Smith, who listened absorbedly to the conversation of Mrs. Hinckley, filling every pause with a husky "Quite so!" On the other sat Josie Trescott, who was smiling upon a very tall and spare old man who wore a beautiful white mustache and imperial. I had never met him, but I knew him for General Lattimore.
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