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Updated: June 8, 2025


"It would take more than France, Spain, Italy and all the rest of the dago nations to do the job!" spluttered Harry Rattleton, who could not keep still longer. "Maurel," said the Frenchman, speaking to his companion, "t'row ze insolent dog ovareboard!" "Oui, monsieur!" Quick as thought the man sprang toward Harry, as if determined to execute the command of his master.

Take advice, Bill, an' kape on th' good side av um av ye can. He'll t'row ut into ye wid all manner av dhirty thricks, but howld ye're timper, an' maybe ye'll winter ut out an' maybe ye won't." "What is a bird's-eye game?" Fallon glanced at him sharply. "D'ye mane ye don't know about th' bird's-eye?" he asked. "Not a thing," replied Bill. "Thin listen to me.

You Cow Flat min, too, down wid 'em! Look it here the troopers is comin'. Shine have infor-rmed on us in Yarraman. Moind, now, this is jist a bit of divarsion we've been havin'. The Waddy men had dropped their weapons, so also had most of their foes, and all gathered closer about Devoy. 'T'row away thim shticks, he yelled. 'D'ye want tin years fer riot, an' murther, an' dish turbin' the peace?

"Jake could t'row such a stick as dat ober easy enough, massa no difficulty about dat; but me no see how a stick like dat balance massa's weight." "It would not balance it, Jake, but the pull would be a side pull and would not bring the stick over the wall. If it were only bamboo it would be heavy enough." "Bery well, Massa Harold; if you say so, dat's all right.

He had bread and meat, bought in a hurry at the tail of the village while Bill receded down the road. As soon as he laid it bare, Bill growled. "T'row heem some, queeck," cried the Signor. Bill caught the loaf and settled down to it with an appetite. Trotter stared at him with a gape. "Well, blow me!" he said. "'Ave we come to feedin' the bloomin' dog before we feeds ourselves?

In that case, Chippewa, you should outrun this Pottawatamie, and reach the post in time to let its men know the danger." "Start, as soon as eat breakfast. Can't go straight, nudder, or Pottawatamie see print of moccasin. Must t'row him off trail." "Very true; but I'll engage you're cunning enough to do that twice over, should it be necessary."

I guess I'll t'row dem away." He made as if to heave a bundle that he carried into the river, whereupon the children shrieked at him so shrilly that he laughed long and incontinently at the success of his sally.

Milray appeared in woman's dress contrary to her inveterate professional habit, and followed him with great acceptance in her favorite variety-stage song; and then her husband gave imitations of Sir Henry Irving, and of Miss Maggie Kline in "T'row him down, McCloskey," with a cockney accent.

"There bes some men in this harbor I wouldn't trust as far as I could t'row 'em over my back," said the skipper. Bill and Nick agreed with him. The skipper glanced up at the starless sky. "There'll be snow by sun-up," he said. "Aye, skipper, a desperate flurry out o' the nor'-west," replied Brennen. "D'ye mean wind, too?" "Aye, skipper, mark that!"

"Say," he asserted, with sublime inconsistency, "if Mamie Rodgers was like all de rest of dem, I'd t'row up me dukes before de gong rang." The Flopper went into the Patriarch's room, and took the chair beside the other that Helena had vacated. "Swipe me, if I wouldn't!" he added fervently, by way of confirmation.

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