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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Edward Payson
Success with Small Fruits
Edward Payson Roe
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2015
nidottu
He Fell in Love with His Wife
Edward Payson Roe
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2017
nidottu
"... He who makes his choice from these selections will not meet with much disappointment. I am aware, however, that the enjoyment of fruit depends much upon the taste of the individual; and who has a better right to gratify his taste than the man who buys, sets out, and cares for the trees? Some familiar kind not in favor with the fruit critics, an old variety that has become a dear memory of boyhood, may be the best one of all for him-perhaps for the reason that it recalls the loved faces that gathered about the wide, quaint fireplace of his childhood's home..."
Nullification and Secession in the United States
Edward Payson Powell
Lawbook Exchange, Ltd.
2017
sidottu
He Fell In Love With His Wife
Edward Payson Roe
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2017
nidottu
Barriers Burned Away By Edward Payson Roe
When Madge Alden was seventeen years of age an event occurred which promised to be the misfortune of her life. At first she was almost overwhelmed and knew not what to do. She was but a young and inexperienced girl, and for a year or more had been regarded as an invalid. Madge Alden was an orphan. Four years prior to the opening of our story she had lost her mother, her surviving parent, and since had resided with her elder sister Mary, who was several years her senior, and had married Henry Muir, a merchant of New York City. This gentleman had cordially united with his wife in offering Madge a home, and his manner toward the young girl, as far as his absorbed and busy life permitted, had been almost paternal. He was a quiet, reticent man, who had apparently concentrated every faculty of soul and body on the problem of commercial success. Trained to business from boyhood, he had allowed it to become his life, and he took it very seriously.
..". He who makes his choice from these selections will not meet with much disappointment. I am aware, however, that the enjoyment of fruit depends much upon the taste of the individual; and who has a better right to gratify his taste than the man who buys, sets out, and cares for the trees? Some familiar kind not in favor with the fruit critics, an old variety that has become a dear memory of boyhood, may be the best one of all for him-perhaps for the reason that it recalls the loved faces that gathered about the wide, quaint fireplace of his childhood's home..."