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Updated: June 30, 2025
"I've only a couple of suitcases. My trunks went by rail to the border that is, they started." "How about you, Herrick? Afraid we can't take the piano." Herrick looked up in some surprise. "Me?" he said. "I am not going with you, my friend." "Not going with us? But, Victor, you can't stay here alone." Mrs. Conrad's voice had real solicitude in it. "Why not?
He could see, when he closed his eyes, the local photographers climbing to that cabin and later sending its pictures broadcast, and divers gentlemen of the press, eager to pit their wits against ten years of time and the ability of a once conspicuous man to hide from the law, packing their suitcases for Norada. No, he couldn't stop now.
Anne, who had very properly come over to say good-bye to her cousin, got in the back seat of the car and Alix took the seat beside her. "Take a picture of Peter and me with the suitcases!" she said. "We must look so domestic!" "Get in here, Cherry," Peter said, opening the door of the seat beside his own. "Doctor, we'll be back in about an hour "
The seven working-men from Leesville felt suddenly slouchy and disgraced, with their ill-fitting civilian clothes and their miscellaneous bundles and suitcases. The first thing they did with the new arrivals was to make them clean, to fumigate and vaccinate them.
"He was here ten minutes ago," said the clerk, and added particulars. "Oh, that's all right," replied the slightly-puzzled but quite unexcited lady; "he'll be back." And then, accompanied by bags and suitcases, she vanished aloft.
O'Mara, whom, in spite of her relation to Peggy, Marjorie was beginning to regard as a guardian angel. "Come upstairs to yer room, me dear." Marjorie rose, with Francis and Peggy hovering about her, carrying wraps and hats and suitcases; and Mrs. O'Mara led the way to a room on the floor above, reached by a stair suspiciously like a ladder. "Here ye'll be comfortable," said Mrs.
It was one of the night guard of Paris. On the following morning, we were at the Gare des Invalides with our luggage, a long half-hour before train-time. The luggage was absurdly bulky. Drew had two enormous suitcases and a bag, and I a steamer trunk and a family-size portmanteau.
Maurice, looking after suitcases and hand bags, said, absently, "Remember what?" She told him "what" and he said: "Yes. Where do you want this trunk put, Eleanor?" She sighed; to sentimentalize and receive no response in kind, is like sitting down on a chair which isn't there.
After a little more discussion it was decided that Scott and Polly should go, while the other two returned, after Hard had rested a bit, to the Soria place. Scott moved the suitcases which Clara had brought over to the little nook made by the cottonwoods, where they could be left until someone came with the Athens wagon, and helped Hard to hobble over there.
He lifted her bodily over the side of the car, jerked two suitcases from beneath the curtains, and rushed frantically to the shelter of the platform sheds. "I'll leave you here, dear," he was saying rapidly. "Wait a second; there is your railroad ticket and your drawing-room ticket, too. I'll wake Derby when I get on board. I have to run the automobile down to Henry's garage first.
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