Now they have shut up their yawp about him, since he has proved to be no better than Talmage or Beecher. |
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Prof. Silliman now left Mr. Beecher to speak for the bid, and sat down to enjoy the occasion. |
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Dr. Beecher put it in his pocket and said nothing for the moment, but the next day asked Henry to help him saw wood. |
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Immediately on finishing his theological course, Mr. Beecher married and was settled in Lawrenceburg. |
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Mr. Beecher was soon invited from Lawrenceburg to Indianapolis, the capital of the State, where he labored for eight years. |
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I wanted to talk to you about Beecher and that haughty sister-in-law of his. |
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Beecher gazed on the precious volume as Aladdin might have done on the lamp. |
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Much as he disliked to admit it to himself, he feared the visit of Professor Beecher to Mary Nestor in Fayetteville had but one meaning. |
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Prior to joining EPIC, Woodhull served as managing director at broker Beecher Carlson in New York. |
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I mean what made you make up your mind so quickly to go on this expedition when you heard Beecher was going? |
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The only reason Tom doesn't want Beecher to get this idol or find the buried city is because Professor Bumper is after it. |
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Oh, Annesley Beecher, can you not see how you are damaging your own cause? |
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The barbaric chant of the native bearers ceased abruptly, and there was a look of surprise shown on the face of Professor Fenimore Beecher. |
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I tell you Harriet Beecher Stowe herself couldn't 'a' done it better justice. |
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Reverend Henry Ward Beecher was to have accompanied the expedition, but urgent duties obliged him to give up the idea. |
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It would be a great thing for a young archaeologist like Beecher to accomplish a mission of this sort, and beat Professor Bumper in the race. |
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Though from what Professor Bumper said I know he regards Professor Beecher as a perfectly honorable man, as well as a brilliant student. |
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Beecher says the gun carriage must be in proportion to the gun it carries. |
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Beecher turned away, with a stiff salutation, into the garden. |
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The truth of the matter was that he was still thinking deeply of the visit of Professor Beecher to Mary Nestor, and wondering what it portended. |
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And Beecher took the epistle from his pocket and ran his eye over it. |
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Must I pay you compliments on your agreeability, Mr. Beecher? |
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Your eyes turned across to the unframed portrait of Henry Ward Beecher which stands upon the top of your books. |
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He was here on a visit not long ago, young Beecher was, and he talked most entertainingly about his discoveries. |
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It must be something pretty important, don't you think, to cause Beecher to risk that delay in starting after the idol of gold? |
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How could Beecher have felt any other than veneration for one so gifted? |
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Somewhere, far beyond that mass, was the Beecher party, held prisoners in the cave that formed the entrance to the buried city. |
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They spoke freely of going with Beecher to some ancient city in Honduras, to look for an idol of gold. |
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Gershon Beecher, 18, from Coventry, joined the Grenadier Guards, while Craig Bone, 18, from Coventry, signed up for the Royal Artillery. |
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Do you mean that Beecher deliberately hired Jacinto to betray us? |
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As for the money I had from you, I deposit it to your credit, Professor Beecher having made me an allowance for steering rival parties on the wrong trail. |
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Tom demanded, a wild idea forming in his head that perhaps some one of the Beecher party had tried to kidnap the discoverer of the lost city of Pelone. |
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Professor Beecher, young and foolish, would not consent to delve into the riches of the ancient city, being too much chagrined over the loss of the idol. |
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And at their head was no less personage than Professor Beecher himself. |
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I think he is very much afraid this young Beecher will not only be first on the site of the underground city, but that he may be the first to discover the idol of gold. |
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Meanwhile the surprise occasioned by the unexpected meeting of their rivals seemed to have spread something like consternation among the white members of the Beecher party. |
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The uprooted trees lay on one side of the mountain trail, perhaps a mile from the mouth of the cave which had been covered over, entombing the Beecher party. |
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Then, too, the Beecher and Nestor families have been friends for years. |
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