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Updated: May 13, 2025
We had a run-in once, and it isn't likely I'd forget him." "Then be careful to keep out of his sight. He may be a rat, but he's as keen-eyed as a ferret. I'd rather put some one on him whom he didn't know, but we'll have to chance it. I wouldn't trust this to anyone but you, Guy."
"It may look a little up-stage for a girl who hasn't got a line to read in the piece, but these days one must get the spot-light, or be a dead one. It reminds me of a little run-in I had with Graddy he's our stage-director, you know." She paused, awaiting the invitation to proceed, and, having received it, went gaily forward.
Joe Mauser had assumed there would be some sort of reverberations as a result of his run-in with the Sov officers, but hadn't suspected the magnitude of them. The next morning he had hardly arrived at the small embassy office which had been assigned him, before his desk set lit up with General Armstrong's habitually worried face.
If I'm not here tomorrow leave the money with Skinner." "Mr. Skinner is the general manager, isn't he?" "Yes, and a mighty clever one, too. Don't you monkey with Skinner, young man. He doesn't like you and he doesn't bluff worth a cent; and if you ever have a run-in with him while I'm away and he fires you well, I guess I'd have to stand by Skinner, Matt. I can't afford to lose him.
Had an adventure, too." "You didn't meet any more of those men, did you? The men who are trying to get my invention?" asked Mr. Swift apprehensively. "No, indeed, dad. I simply had a little run-in with a chap named Eradicate Andrew Jackson Abraham Lincoln Sampson, otherwise known as Rad Sampson, and I engaged him to do some whitewashing for us. We do need some white washing done, don't we, dad?"
"I had a run-in with that feller the other night," he said. "What feller do you mean?" "Jedlick, dern him." "You did? I didn't notice any of your ears bit off." "No, we didn't come to licks. He tried to horn in while me and Alta was out on the porch." "What did you do?" "I didn't have a show to do anything but hand him a few words.
"That's right," he said; "I used to live at the New York end of the run-in a flat. But never again! No place for the boy to play but in the street. I found I could rent one of those old cottages over there for the same money I paid for the flat. So I cut out New York. My boy lives in a bathing suit now, and he can handle a catboat same as me.
What you doin' to that there Chink? He's cussin' scand'lous. Casey been up to some of his devilment?" "Come in and join us, Tom," said Casey. "Feng had a run-in with Fluff. Result, one bottle of claret and two glasses gone to glory." "Also one Chink on the warpath," McHale added. "If I was in the insurance business I wouldn't write no policy on that there hen.
I had just finished abusing poor old Pat till he went off and sulked too." "I thought probably you and Pat had just had a run-in, the way he acted." Starr went back to scanning that part of the mesa where he had glimpsed the rider. He could not afford to forget business in the pleasure of talking aimless, trivial things with Helen May. "What are you looking for?"
"They do?" said Y.D., laying down his cards. "Who says that?" "Well, Wilson, for instance " Y.D. sprang to his feet. "I've had one run-in with that ," he shouted, "an' I let him talk to me like a Sunday School super'ntendent. Here's where I talk to him!" "Well, finish the game first," the others protested. "The night's young."
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