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We've had a taste this Rummer of how the other side can be expected to operate.
He rattled the neck of the champagne bottle into a Georgian rummer.
He went under the stairs, and produced a bottle of cider-wine, of which they drank a rummer each.
Rummer jumped to his feet, and his strong, nervous fist struck his friend in the mouth.
Local talent is displayed by Dutch silver and a rummer, or wineglass, with a cherub holding a cornucopia at its base.
It was composed by my pet baboon, Juniper, over a rummer of Hollands and water, 'hot, without sugar.'"
Prunts are a common stylistic element in German glassware, such as the rummer and Berkemeyer styles of drinking glass.
To achieve this a Werwolf group around 100 strong was sent and they stormed the town hall, arrested and shot Rummer and seven fellows.
The first Berni Inn was at The Rummer, a historic public house in central Bristol.
The cousin, Lauri Rummer, and her husband, Loni, said they had been able to salvage "crystals, pictures and knick-knacks" from the gutted home.
'There's rummer things than women in this world though, mind you,' said the man with the black eye, slowly filling a large Dutch pipe, with a most capacious bowl.
These were the Goose and Gridiron, the Crown, the Apple Tree, and the Rummer and Grapes.
Miserably, Annie watched as two English sailors struck the Merrye Laurie's flag- a Jolly Roger with a dagger in one bony hand and a rummer in the other.
Heathcote was a member of the Masonic Lodge at the Rummer Tavern, Charing Cross and was known as the wealthiest commoner in England when he died in 1768.
William Hogarth's famous print of Night shows a drunken Mason being helped home by the Tyler, from one of the four original Lodges in 1717 at the Rummer & Grapes tavern.
His first recorded theft was in Spring 1723, when he engaged in petty shoplifting, stealing two silver spoons while on an errand for his master to Rummer Tavern in Charing Cross.
While the three London lodges were mainly operative lodges, the Rummer and Grapes, by the Palace of Westminster, appears to have been primarily a lodge of accepted and speculative gentlemen masons.
Masonic lodges met in both taverns during the 1730s, and the Lodge at the Rummer and Grapes in nearby Channel Row was the smartest of the four founders of the Grand Lodge.
In 2005 the club had a bad year mean while their hometown rival Tigres won the league title which Fleur up rummer about the clubs future weather if the city could sustain 2 baseball clubs having each club average a low attendance that year.
The Earl of Cardigan tavern is on one side of the street, and opposite is the Rummer, whose sign shows a rummer (a short wide-brimmed glass) with a bunch of grapes on the pole.
At a meeting in the Rummer Tavern (which still exists in rebuilt form a few doors from Cottle's former bookshop) he was persuaded by 'sundry Philanthropists' and opponents of the war to begin publication of a periodical to be called the Watchman.
He remained in the post until 1980, when he was succeeded by Christopher Denys, who retired in the summer of 2007 to be replaced by Paul Rummer as Principal and Sue Wilson in the newly created post of Artistic Director.
In particular, a group of peers, gentlemen and citizens organised an elaborate festival at a bonfire outside the "Three Tuns and Rummer" in Gracechurch Street, giving beer "to the Mobb" to pledge healths to "the Queen, the House of Hanover, and the memory of King William".
The publican is adulterating a hogshead of wine, a practice recalled in the poetry of Matthew Prior who lived with his uncle Samuel Prior, the Landlord successively of both the Rummer and Grapes and the Rummer";.