[bksvol-discuss] Re: Question about BSO Reservations for Death (Duncan Mcclain Mystery #9

  • From: Christopher Zeigler <chrisallen032@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: Bookshare book discussion list <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 9 Oct 2015 15:12:28 -0400

Hello this is Chris
Does anyone know if Shelley L. Rhodes still volunteering with Bookshare?
Thanks and have a wonderful day
On Oct 4, 2015 10:51 AM, "Christopher Zeigler" <chrisallen032@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Thank You Judy s
On Oct 3, 2015 11:08 PM, "Judy s." <cherryjam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Chris, the » should be replaced with a period.

When I see that error show up in scans, it usually seems to indicate that
the OCRing program couldn't figure out a character so it put the » in sort
of as a place holder.

Hope that helps. smile.

Judy s.
Follow me on Twitter at QuackersNCheese
<https://twitter.com/QuackersNCheese>
On 10/3/2015 8:52 PM, Christopher Zeigler wrote:

Hello Judy S Thank you for answering my last question
Ok I have a question I am working has
I thank scan error what do you think » I put a star before the sentence.

75
Railroad tracks direct to his plant could carry his finished products to
the side of ocean-going ships at Jersey City or Hoboken. His mammoth trucks
could perform the same function, speeding over broad highways kept open all
year.
There was high-grade New Jersey iron ore right in Pasaic County, but the
mines had been neglected. Suffolk technicians developed improved methods of
mining and smelting and put them into production again.
*
Two adjacent woolen mills were bought and razed. Steadily the Suffolk
plant began to grow» The iron-ore storage yard was tripled in capacity.
More stacks appeared on the powerhouse. A coke plant bristled with
structures, looking like some skeleton nightmare city on its own. A pipe
and tube mill was built; a billet and bar mill; a rolling mill; soaking
pits; a stripper building and a water-treatment plant of most modern design.
So the title of Suffolk Roller Bearings had really become a misnomer. It
was a steel plant in toto, capable of making every kind of steel from the
ore itself-carbon steel, tool steel and alloy. In addition to the open
hearths, it had electric furnaces and Bessemer converters, and the even
more modern turbo-hearth furnaces developed after World War II. It could
turn out practically everything from an eighty-seven-inch-wide steel plate,
to be used as the skin of an ocean liner, to a bearing or a single nail.
Passaic is the Indian word for peaceful valley. There was nothing
peaceful about it to the captain's sensitive ears. Nor to his sense of
smell. Noise had assailed him when the Cadillac was still a half a mile
away from the high cyclone fence topped with barbed wire that completely
surrounded the company's property. The noise had



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