Guesting for the hosts was 28-year-old baker's
roundsman Lol Cottrell taking part in the BBC show The Big Time which placed amateur members of the public at the top of their chosen field.
While living here, John traded one of his paintings to pay a PS10 milk bill to the local
roundsman. If his descendants still have it,
The reason why his nice dairy
roundsman has substituted 500 ml glass bottles containing German milk for traditional British 568ml (pint) milk bottles is that the Liverpool processing plant for glass pint bottles closed down.
Edgar Wallace's story is in many ways, the ultimate rags to riches tale." Wallace worked as a printer's assistant, milk
roundsman, newspaper seller, plasterer's labourer, soldier, a ship's cook and captain's boy on a Grimsby fishing trawler, boot and shoe shop assistant, rubber factory worker, newspaper reporter, foreign correspondent, racing tipster, columnist, special constable, film producer and director.
Wilf's first job after leaving Dairy Lane School in Houghtonle-Spring at 14 was as a milk
roundsman, delivering daily pintas by horse and cart.
He signed-up as a
roundsman's assistant in 1945 when adults were rationed to one-and-a-half pints a week, with milk costing the princely sum of four-and-ahalf old pence.
After working for the Argus, the Sydney Sun (as parliamentary
roundsman in Canberra) and the Times in London, he was sacked from a junior position in the Daily Telegraph in 1939.
Starke refused to apply for a street trading consent for both vehicles, citing a legal argument he was operating as a
roundsman, which is considered a street trading activity legally exempt from the requirement to obtain prior consent.
Y., and also working as a
roundsman chef at Colgate Inn in Hamilton, N.
The former headteacher was also appointed youth cricket coordinator in 1998 and managed several of Ormskirk's junior sides then continued on as g
roundsman.
TFortunately my mother was not present as I had gone with a friend, but the head of the household looked at me over his spectacles and said coolly in the clipped, mannered tones of the English upper class which I came to marvel at: 'I cannot accept that.' I cringed, but managed, 'I'll eat it if you don't want it.' When I told my grandmother, she informed me that the speaker's father had begun life as a baker's
roundsman with a basket and a brown sack to cover his loaves and not two ha'pence to rub together.