In all the rural district near about, and even in the town of Marshall, a mile away, not one person of unbiased mind entertains a doubt of it; incredulity is confined to those opinionated persons who will be called "cranks" as soon as the useful word shall have penetrated the intellectual demesne of the Marshall Advance.
It stands a little way off the loneliest reach of the Marshall and Harriston road, in an opening which was once a farm and is still disfigured with strips of rotting fence and half covered with brambles overrunning a stony and sterile soil long unacquainted with the plow.
A few minutes afterward a belated farmer's boy met a light wagon which was being driven furiously toward the town of Marshall. He declared that behind the two figures on the front seat stood a third, with its hands upon the bowed shoulders of the others, who appeared to struggle vainly to free themselves from its grasp.
"That's Marshall Elliott--a mighty fine man with jest one streak of foolishness in him.
Marshall's brother Alexander had a dog he set great store by, and when it died the man actilly wanted to have it buried in the graveyard, `along with the other Christians,' he said.
Marshall Field's man, Anson Kirkpatrick, played the piano and sang all the latest sentimental songs.
In his later years, at different times, he was secretary of the Santo Domingo Commission,
marshall and recorder of deeds of the District of Columbia, and United States Minister to Haiti.
Marshall, the Treasurer of the Hampton Institute, putting the situation before him and beseeching him to lend me the two hundred and fifty dollars on my own personal responsibility.
Up to that time I never had had in my possession so much money as one hundred dollars at a time, and the loan which I had asked General Marshall for seemed a tremendously large sum to me.
I found people in the town quite secure again in the presence of the military, and I heard for the first time from
Marshall, the tobacconist, that his son was among the dead on the common.
Then he found a "Bowditch" and books by Lecky and
Marshall. There it was; he would teach himself navigation.
Court documents allege that Emmit
Marshall, 52, owner of the Alliance School of Trucking (AST), along with his co-defendant Robert Waggoner, 56, who served as the school's director, recruited eligible veterans under the Post-9/11 GI Bill.