1 So they staggered on with the awful load.
2 I'd take ye in, only I've come a long ways an I'm loaded heavy.
3 No, there was no bearing the load of it, there was no living under it.
4 Soon he met a farmer driving a two-horse wagon loaded with straw, and he stopped him.
5 The truckmen were hard at work, loading the freshly packed boxes and barrels upon the cars.
6 Jonas pushed a truck loaded with hams from the smoke rooms on to an elevator, and thence to the packing rooms.
7 Once he got a chance to load a truck for half a day, and again he carried an old woman's valise and was given a quarter.
8 It used a carload of paper every week, and the mail trains would be hours loading up at the depot of the little Kansas town.
9 On one side of the grounds ran a railroad with a dozen tracks, and on the other side lay the lake, where steamers came to load.
10 The trucks were all of iron, and heavy, and they put about threescore hams on each of them, a load of more than a quarter of a ton.
11 He had lost his house but then the awful load of the rent and interest was off his shoulders, and when Marija was well again they could start over and save.
12 It was near to the east entrance that they stood, and all along this east side of the yards ran the railroad tracks, into which the cars were run, loaded with cattle.
13 Into this wild-beast tangle these men had been born without their consent, they had taken part in it because they could not help it; that they were in jail was no disgrace to them, for the game had never been fair, the dice were loaded.
14 From the doors of these rooms went men with loaded trucks, to the platform where freight cars were waiting to be filled; and one went out there and realized with a start that he had come at last to the ground floor of this enormous building.
15 Until she could find another bank there was nothing to do but sew them up in her clothes, and so Marija went about for a week or more, loaded down with bullion, and afraid to cross the street in front of the house, because Jurgis told her she would sink out of sight in the mud.
16 There was said to be two thousand dollars a week hush money from the tubercular steers alone; and as much again from the hogs which had died of cholera on the trains, and which you might see any day being loaded into boxcars and hauled away to a place called Globe, in Indiana, where they made a fancy grade of lard.
17 Then they would seek out the big lumber camps, where there was winter work; or failing in this, would drift to the cities, and live upon what they had managed to save, with the help of such transient work as was there the loading and unloading of steamships and drays, the digging of ditches and the shoveling of snow.
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