. Biographical history of Massachusetts : biographies and autobiographies of the leading men in the state . f William Stanley, how deep down in our hearts is establishedour regard for his work, our affection for his personality, our re-spect for his achievement, and our love for his character. A letter from Sir Hiram Maxim says: — Mr. Stanley was talland thin, but what he lacked in bulk he made up in activity. Hewas boiling over with enthusiasm. I believe that he preferred eachweek should contain about ten days and each day should be forty-eight hours long. Whatever was given him to do, he lai


. Biographical history of Massachusetts : biographies and autobiographies of the leading men in the state . f William Stanley, how deep down in our hearts is establishedour regard for his work, our affection for his personality, our re-spect for his achievement, and our love for his character. A letter from Sir Hiram Maxim says: — Mr. Stanley was talland thin, but what he lacked in bulk he made up in activity. Hewas boiling over with enthusiasm. I believe that he preferred eachweek should contain about ten days and each day should be forty-eight hours long. Whatever was given him to do, he laid himselfout to do in the most thorough manner. Professor EHhu Thomson, himself one of the masters in thefield of electrical invention, said: — There is one thing that hehas accompHshed that even he did not thoroughly reahze. Heput a heat coil around all our hearts and kept it warm with warmth of our affection is hkely to grow. I want to testify tohis character as a man; I have always found him most honest,most generous, possessed of all those quaHties which mark the per-fect fc> L. i ^ d ^^^£-f^-^^ ^^o/t^ ^<y


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidbiographical, bookyear1913