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Updated: June 24, 2025
"Say, wouldn't it be great if we could get one?" "One what?" asked Blake, who was reading over again certain parts of Mr. Hadley's letter. "A submarine. I mean film one as it sent a torpedo to blow us out of the water. Wouldn't it be great if we could get that?" "It would if the torpedo didn't get us first!" grimly replied Blake. "I guess I wouldn't try that if I were you."
But Harry it is one of his most noble qualities bore being laughed at well enough. What most annoyed him was Mr. Hadley's parade of a surly, austere virtue. He did not doubt that it was sincere. He could more easily have forgiven it if it had been hypocritical. A man had no business to be so mighty honest. Mr.
"You owed it to yourself to look deeper into the matter, Charles," said Geoffrey gravely. "Come, Mr. Boyce, your sentence too," Alison cried, wicked eyes intent upon him. He met them with bland meekness. "Indeed, ma'am, I can't tell. It's Mr. Hadley's affair." "From a virtuous woman, good Lord deliver us," Hadley groaned. "You would make a rare hanging judge, Alison.
Their watches and the clock in the plane were synchronized with Hadley's time, which was Eastern Standard, and as soon as the plane had reached eight thousand feet altitude, Jeter spoke into the radiophone and arranged for a connection with the office of Hadley. Hadley himself soon spoke into Jeter's ear. "Yes, Jeter?" "See that someone is always at your radiophone to listen to us.
"You will never have a wife, sir. God in His infinite mercy, will spare all my sex from such a fearful calamity." "Enough words for this time. To-morrow I will bring the witnesses of Hadley's death, as I promised you; and this day week I will receive your final answer to my last offer of a peaceable marriage." So saying, he left the room and the cave.
Beside, where is there another person of the same name?" "I frankly own there is a mystery connected with the subject which I cannot explain, but that mystery does not convince me of Hadley's guilt." "What incredulity! What stronger evidence do you want to convict him?" "I desire positive assurance that the letter was actually written to and for him; at present I do not believe that it was."
Hadley's face grew harder. "I vow I do my best to wish you well, Mr. Boyce. I should be glad to hear that you'll give up walking in the woods." There was a moment of silence. "I did not know that I had asked for your advice, sir." Harry said. "I am not grateful for it." "Damme, that's the first honest answer you have made," Hadley cried. "Look 'e, Mr. Boyce, I am as much your friend as I may be.
"I haven't actually made up my mind," went on Blake, who was, perhaps, a little more serious, and probably a deeper thinker than his chum. "But I went over it in my mind last night, and I didn't just see how we could refuse Mr. Hadley's request. "You know he started us in this business, and, only for him we might never have amounted to much.
In 1731 an account of the reflecting or Hadley's quadrant appeared in a paper given by a member of the Royal Society. After Dr Hadley's death, however, among his papers a description was found of an instrument not much dissimilar to Hadley's, written by Sir Isaac Newton, who may, therefore, be considered the first inventor of the reflecting quadrant.
He took the missive from his pocket, and again perused it. It contained references to other matters besides the projected Panama trip, and there was also enclosed a check for some work the moving picture boys had done. But as it is with the reference to the big canal that we are interested we shall confine ourselves to that part of Mr. Hadley's letter.
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