Chapter
1 II | well-known club in Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U. S. A.
2 II | president, well known in Philadelphia was the famous Uncle Prudent,
3 II | tone to the best society in Philadelphia.~It followed, then, on the
4 III | hand. In the Turner yard at Philadelphia there reposed an enormous
5 IV | fanfares on to the assembly. Philadelphia might well think that a
6 V | neighborhood of Walnut Street. Philadelphia was able to sink again into
7 V | excitement next morning in Philadelphia Very early was it known
8 V | Useless! The newspapers of Philadelphia, the newspapers of Pennsylvania,
9 VI | remained in the streets of Philadelphia there would have been none
10 VI | latitude that the horizon of Philadelphia is tinged by the first rays
11 VIII | hidden. And if he had come to Philadelphia and presented himself at
12 VIII | right did you attack us in Philadelphia in Fairmount Park? By what
13 X | I am Uncle Prudent of Philadelphia!” And the secretary followed
14 XIV | of the Weldon Institute, Philadelphia, have been carried off in
15 XVIII| the earth since she left Philadelphia.~
16 XXI | excitement of all classes of the Philadelphia population, black or white,
17 XXI | people are the authorities of Philadelphia!~Then the newspapers were
18 XXI | Prudent and Phil Evans, of Philadelphia!~It need hardly be said
19 XXI | engineer, come expressly to Philadelphia to destroy in its egg the
20 XXI | it. Ten minutes later all Philadelphia received the news through
21 XXI | such a thing be done in Philadelphia, and so secretly, too? How
22 XXI | all haste from New York to Philadelphia.~It was indeed the snuff-box
23 XXI | 28th a rumor spread through Philadelphia that Uncle Prudent and Phil
24 XXI | September, they arrived at Philadelphia, That is the compendious
25 XXII | Prudent and Phil Evans, Philadelphia was in a state of unwonted
26 XXIII| was going to start from Philadelphia on the 29th of April.~Here
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