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The musician hopped down from the barrel and shook hands. He was a dapper little person, and had a trick of punctuating every sentence with a snigger. "Cheer-o," he said genially. "Is this your first visit?" I said it was. "Then sit on the barrel. We are the only club in London who can offer you the privilege."

Everybody knew Mr Philp and his propensities. As Mr Toy the barber was wont to say, "Philp don't mean any harm: he just makes mischief like a bee makes honey." So Cai said, "Cheer-o, 'Bias!" his usual greeting hoped he saw Mrs Bosenna well, and fell in on the other side of her by the breast-rail.

It's a square deal and a square divide, so far's I'm concerned; if we stick together there'll be profit enough for all concerned. Sit down, Mul, and have another slug of the captain's bum rum." Although Mulready consented to be pacified, Kirkwood got the impression that the man was far gone in drink. A moment later he heard him growl "Chin-chin!" antiphonal to the captain's "Cheer-o!"

Well, good luck. Write to me in the hols; I'll look you up if I'm in town. If not, cheer-o!" He was gone in a second. "'So some time token the last of all our evenings Crowneth memorially the last of all our days ..." Gordon murmured to himself as he walked slowly down to the dining hall....

It made a semicircular sweep, scattering a group of people, and two young gentlemen of the Royal Naval Air Service sprang down and shouted "What-ho!" very cheerily to two other young gentlemen in naval uniforms who shouted back "Cheer-o!" from the table under my balcony.

He had a wicked hope, at the beginning, that the Senior Surgical Interne had been shut out, but at nine o'clock that evening that young gentleman showed up at the door of his room, said "Cheer-o," came in, helped himself to a cigarette, gave a professional glance at Twenty-two's toes, which were all that was un-plastered of the leg, and departing threw back over his shoulder his sole conversational effort: "Hell of a mess, isn't it?"

You can do all the dumka stuff in private, the way Anna Czarnik does, but it's up to you to make them laugh twice a day for twenty minutes." "It's all very well for you to talk that cheer-o stuff. It hasn't come home to you, I can see that." Martha Foote smiled. "If you don't mind my saying it, Miss McCoy, you're too worn out from lack of sleep to see anything clearly.

I've got to stick round here till six in the morning," grinned the policeman. "Well, cheer-o, mate." "Cheer-o." Bates looked in on his master before retiring for the night. "What time shall I call you, sir?" he said. Theydon was in the pipe and book stage, having exchanged his dress coat for a smoking jacket.

"No quarter for Joebags! Let the punishment fit the crime." "Well, you chaps, I've got to sheer off," said Whitney. "It's nearly eleven and I've got an essay on the stocks. Cheer-o Priapus, I've had a ripping time." "'Arf a mo," cried Forbes. "Who's to do the next chapter, and where do we meet next week?" "Falstaff!" cried several voices. "Why not do two chapters a week," said Carter.

The bluff brought no result. "That bluff promised chickens if ever a bluff did," said Kathleen in a disappointed voice. "We'll get them further down, and then again in the stubble." "Cheer-o," cried Jack. "The day is fine and we are having a ripping time, at least I am." "And I, too," cried the girl. "I love this, the open fields, and the sport, too." "And good company," said Jack boldly.