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He handed another sheet of paper over his desk to the meat-packer.
Shaking the meat-packer's hand, the prince said, 'How kind of you to invite me to your home.
She recently met the son of a prominent Chicago meat-packer in Louisville.
'But bringing up the vegetarianism in the home of a meat-packer,' said Karen.
I hadn't expected you,' said Harrison, removing his hat, shaking hands, and sitting down across from the meat-packer.
Opening the door, he stared at the meat-packer. '
"She was the daughter of a Kansas City meat-packer.
'She's a meat-packer's widow, but he keeps better hours than you ever did.
I was a meat-packer once.
Harrison shook the meat-packer's hand again.
The meat-packer studied the official schedule.
'You mean the millionaire meat-packer?'
He sold the design in 1868 to George Hammond, a Chicago meat-packer, who built a set of cars to transport his products to Boston.
Samuel Wilson, meat-packer (1766-1854), namesake of "Uncle Sam"
Safety at Meat Processor The Government, a major meat-packer and labor leaders agreed on factory improvements that could revolutionize the industry.
He's a meat-packer.'
Episodes involved making over a fashion salesman into a meat-packer, a yoga instructor into a jock, and an entertainer into a suave "babe-magnet".
I'm Harold T. Armbruster, the meat-packer -' Harrison's hand tightened on Armbruster's.
One particular meat-packer was Mr. William Jacobs, who founded the Jacobs Packing Company in 1865.
'Your Highness, this is Harold T. Armbruster, the renowned Chicago meat-packer, who would very likely be pleased to become the next ambassador to Germany.
Mary Debra Winger, the youngest and third child of a Cleveland meat-packer and an office manager, moved with her family to California's San Fernando Valley when she was 6.
In numbers seven, 13 and 66 are a clothing-manufacturer, Leonard Prasniewski (who is said to fly to his summer home by helicopter); Mieczyslaw Wilczek, a meat-packer; and an ex-bureaucrat, Ireneusz Sekula.
Samuel Wilson (September 13, 1766 - July 31, 1854) was a meat-packer from Troy, New York whose name is purportedly the source of the personification of the United States known as "Uncle Sam".
A local butcher and meat-packer named Samuel Wilson supplied the military, and, according to an unprovable legend, barrels stamped "U.S." were jokingly taken by the troops to stand for "Uncle Sam" meaning Wilson.
But walking along beside him, sucking his cane, and looking ineffably bored as he escorted his new marchioness, née Miss Maybelle Foy, the meat-packer's heiress from Chicago, was none other than Havvie Blaine, of unblessed memory.