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Updated: May 5, 2025
"I hope monsieur your uncle is well?" "My uncle is well. It isn't necessary for me to inquire about madame your mother, for I have just seen her sitting on McClure's doorstep." "Oh," said Jenieve. The young man shook his cap in a restless hand. Though he spoke French easily, he was not dressed like an engagé, and he showed through the dark the white skin of the Saxon.
Photographed for McCLURE'S MAGAZINE from the original, now on file in the County Clerk's office, Springfield, Illinois. It was after he had read the Laws of Indiana that Lincoln had free access to the library of his admirer, Judge John Pitcher of Rockport, Indiana, where undoubtedly he examined many law-books.
Samuel Hopkins Adams in his article in McClure's Magazine, June, 1906, says of the beginning of this fight: "Eight years before, the mosquito-plague had infected the great, busy, joyous metropolis of the south.
Jack's brave fight to save his captain from the sea in the encounter with the floating mine, together with the experiences they had shared the last two weeks, had endeared these two to each other, and while there was a difference of some ten years in their ages, they were close friends. Commander McClure's surmises as to the disposition of the U-boat were correct, as subsequent events showed.
It is not peculiar to "EVERYBODY'S"; it is the rule with "COLLIER'S," "MCCLURE'S," the AMERICAN, and SUCCESS." This is all by way of introduction to the story of an article that was not written. About the time the Pittsburg flare-up began to show itself in the papers, it occurred to us that some exposition of the situation there would be of value and interest to our readers.
"There is no harm in Madame Lalotte." "You are right, monsieur. Jean Bati' McClure's wife puts all the mischief in her head. She would even learn to spin, if that woman would let her alone." "And I never heard any harm of Michel Pensonneau. He is a good enough fellow, and he has more to his credit on the Company's books than any other engagé now on the island."
It was McClure's idea to lie perfectly still in the water until one of the enemy warships swung right into the range glass of the Dewey and then give it a stab of steel -a sting in the dark from a hidden serpent! The waiting moments seemed like hours. Gradually, however, the leader of the silent ships drew nearer. There was no mistaking the telltale reports in the wireless room.
But all of them, and curious women peeping from their houses on the beach, particularly Jean Bati' McClure's wife, could see that Michel Pensonneau was walking with Mama Lalotte. This sight struck cold down Jenieve's spine. Mama Lalotte was really the heaviest charge she had.
In my article titled "What We Know About Cancer" in the August, 1909, issue of the ~Nature Cure Magazine~ I quote from an article by Burton J. Hendrick, the cancer expert, published in the July, 1909, number of ~McClure's Magazine,~ as follows: "Clinical observation long ago established the fact that any irritating interference with a cancer almost always stimulates its growth.
"Rapid Growth of Commission Government," Outlook, Vol. TURNER, G. K. "New American City Government," McClure's, Vol. "Organization of Municipal Government," American Government and Politics; pp. 598-602. Planning for a Definite Audience.
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