Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: May 6, 2025
Dean was so completely obsessed with the subject that he could not divert his mind to anything else for any length of time. "I cannot help it," he said at length. "All my switches run the same way." They had almost finished when Professor Schaefer came into the dining hall, spied them and hastened over to them. "Here's this German beast," said Dean. "Steady, Dean.
"If I return to Germany I resume the rights of my German citizenship, of course." "Beautiful, beautiful!" exclaimed Meyer. "Look here, Schaefer. Be frank about this. Which are you to-day, a citizen of Germany or of America?" "Both, I tell you," exclaimed Schaefer proudly. "That is the beauty of the arrangement." "Ah, a beautiful arrangement!" said Meyer. "What?
Colonel Schaefer, of the Second Missouri Infantry, had been absent on sick-leave during the Kentucky campaign, but about this date he returned to duty, and by seniority fell in command of the second brigade. He was of German birth, having come from Baden, where, prior to 1848, he had been a non-commissioned officer in the service of his State.
"Why were you so angry when you had to go with father tonight?" asked Bob. "Where was your engagement?" "I was going with Lena to twelve eighty-two Elm Street, where Schaefer lived. You see Lena was already a member of the gang, so they thought, and I was to join too, so we both could watch them better." "Somebody telephoned Lena about meeting them there this evening." "Yes, it was Mueller.
The loss of my brigade commanders Sill, Roberts, Schaefer, and Harrington-and a large number of regimental and battery officers, with so many of their men, struck deep into my heart: My thinned ranks told the woeful tale of the fierce struggles, indescribable by words, through which my division had passed since 7 o'clock in the morning; and this, added to our hungry and exhausted condition, was naturally disheartening.
Thus, under the third division, comprising the eighteenth century until Herder and Goethe, we find the following articles following each other: "State of Literature in the Eighteenth Century"; "Johann Christian Gottsched," by F.C. Schlosser; "Gottsched's Attempts at Dramatic Reform," by R. Prutz; "Hagedorn and Haller," by J.W. Schaefer; "Bodmer and Breitinger," by A. Koberstein; "The Leipsic Association of Poets and the Bremen Contributions," by Chr.
They all gathered to bid Sergeant Schaefer good-bye, for he was to rejoin them no more. June pressed upon him a paper-bag of fudge, which she had prepared the day before as a surprise against this event. The sergeant stowed it away in the side pocket of his coat, blushing a great deal when he accepted it.
"I am not so sure of that, Professor Schaefer," said Hugo Raeder. "I was in Germany when that law was passed. It aroused a great deal of interest. I have not looked into it myself, but on the face of it I should say it possesses certain rather objectionable features." "Not at all, not at all, I assure you," exclaimed Professor Schaefer.
His sturdy Americanism resented this bigamous citizenship. "What of France or Britain?" "Ah," said Professor Schaefer with a sharpening of his tone. "That is quite easy." "You would be a German, eh?" said Raeder. "You ask me," exclaimed Professor Schaefer, "you ask me as between Germany and France, or between Germany and Britain?
Let me tell you, Professor Schaefer," shaking his finger in the professor's face. "To her last man and her last dollar Canada would be with the Empire." "Hear, hear!" shouted Hugo Raeder. The professor looked incredulous. "And yet," he said with a sneer, "one-half of your people voted for Reciprocity with the United States." "Reciprocity!
Word Of The Day
Others Looking