Philip went to the Tivoli and saw Mildred with her companion, a smooth-faced young man with sleek hair and the spruce look of a
commercial traveller, sitting in the second row of the stalls.
himself said frequently that although well educated in the neighbourhood of Blackheath at as high as eighty guineas which is a good deal for parents and the plate kept back too on going away but that is more a meanness than its value that he had learnt more in his first years as a
commercial traveller with a large commission on the sale of an article that nobody would hear of much less buy which preceded the wine trade a long time than in the whole six years in that academy conducted by a college Bachelor, though why a Bachelor more clever than a married man I do not see and never did but pray excuse me that is not the point.'
The copy was given me by a French
commercial traveller. It is founded on the English, but the downstrokes are a little blacker, and more marked.
The Boys' Home was the best hotel on our branch of the Burlington, and all the
commercial travellers in that territory tried to get into Black Hawk for Sunday.
Come, too.' Needless to say, I refused such an unsuitable invitation, and she had the impertinence to tell me that it would broaden my ideas, and said that she had four brothers, all University men, except one who was in the army, who always made a point of talking to
commercial travellers."
His parents, who were dead, had been in trade; his sisters had married
commercial travellers; his brother was a lay-reader.
"Ludbury is a sleepy, grassy little hole in the Eastern Counties, and the only kind of people who ever came to the `Red Fish' were occasional
commercial travellers, and for the rest, the most awful people you can see, only you've never seen them.
"Everyone wants me to go abroad," said Wilde, seeing no use, "unless one is a missionary...or a
commercial traveller".
L/Cpl Hawdon, who late father was Mr CA Hawdon,
commercial traveller, was well known through his connection with Stirling Boating Club.
Kept two households ALBERT Evan Dodd, 50,
commercial traveller, was said to have lost two sons in the war.
The boat trip to New York put thousands of miles between her and her husband,
commercial traveller William Gordon, the man she had married in a Glasgow registry office in 1908.