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Updated: May 31, 2025
One can only say, you seem to know something." "I'll say I know something! A sight more than Whit Monk dreams I know as he'll find out to his sorrow before he's finished with Tom Mussey." "But" obliquely Lanyard struck again at the heart of the mystery which he found so baffling "you seem so well satisfied with the bona fides of your informant?"
Fischer, however, relates the case of a lion-tamer whose whole left arm was torn from the shoulder by a lion; the loss of blood being very slight and the patient so little affected by shock that he was able to walk to the hospital. Mussey describes a boy of sixteen who had his left arm and shoulder-blade completely torn from his body by machinery.
Mussey breathed heavily in the stillness: the breathing of a cautious man loath to commit himself. "No," he said at length, in the clearest enunciation he had thus far used. "No. If you're not Lanyard, I'd rather say nothing more I'll just ask you to pardon me for intruding and clear out." "But you say there is some gossip. And where there is smoke, there must be fire.
There was also discussion of bills before Congress of special interest to women and the association supported those for the protection of neglected and delinquent children, compulsory education and restriction of child labor. A bill to raise the salaries of public school teachers was strongly pressed. Among those especially active were Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey, Dr. Emily Young O'Brien and Mrs.
Holme and Miss Maddox. Music was furnished by the Cecilian quartette of women's voices. The State convention of 1906 was held in the Friends' Meeting House, addressed by Ellen Spencer Mussey of Washington. In 1907 the convention met in Arundell Hall November 21 and in the Hampden Methodist Church the 22nd. The afternoon program included interesting talks by six Baltimore men Henry White, Dr.
Mussey was beginning to comprehend that there was in this world one woman at least who could take an intelligent interest in machinery. Mr. Collison succumbed without a struggle. True to the tradition of Southern chivalry, he ambled up to the block, laid his head upon it, and asked for the axe. Nor was he kept long waiting...
Mussey reports several cases of congenitally deficient or absent aural appendages. One case was that in which there was congenital absence of the external auditory meatus of both ears without much impairment of hearing. In neither ear of N. W. Goddard, aged twenty-seven, of Vermont, reported in 1834, was there a vestige of an opening or passage in the external ear, and not even an indentation.
He could not remember that Liane had ever before called him by that name. "Do I? Sorry...." His tone was listless. "But does it matter?" "You know that to me nothing else matters." Lanyard checked off on his fingers: "Swain, Collison, Mussey. Who next? Why not I, as well as another?" "Do you imagine for an instant that I class you with such riffraff?"
But in the same breath he heard a whisper, or rather a mutter, a voice he could not place in its present pitch. "Awake, Monsieur Delorme?" it said. "Hush! Don't make a row, and never mind the light." His astonishment was so overpowering that instinctively his tensed muscles relaxed and his hand fell back upon the bedding. "Who the deuce ?" "Not so loud. It's me Mussey."
Liane Delorme had made much of the chief engineer; though she seemed less likely to talk too much than anyone of the ship's company but Lanyard himself. "And what, Mr. Mussey, if I should admit I am Michael Lanyard?" "Then I'll have something to say to you, something I think'll interest you." "Why not run the risk of interesting me, whoever I may be?"
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