When one ball moves into a pocket 22, another ball quickly moves into the receptacle, taking its position at the rear thereof.
The fellow had his hand in his pocket and his face was rather hard, but he did not show surprise or alarm.
He must get up, for all that, and reached the top, where he sat down with his lips firmly set, and after putting on the coat felt in the pocket for a cigarette.
He went out before he opened the envelopes, and then glancing at the letters put them in his pocket with a thrill of satisfaction, meaning to read them carefully after breakfast.
He folded the piece of delicate kid carefully and put it in a pocket where it rested upon his heart.
Foster, putting his hand in his pocket as if to feel for matches, touched the small Browning pistol he had brought.
Rather a formidable sort," he murmured, and as he spoke his hand went to his outer coat pocket as though to assure himself that the squat, black pistol was still there.
Selecting the one which struck his fancy, he slipped it into his pocketand prepared to go out.
They evidently carried a pocket torch, which accounts for the library being dark when Warwick entered.
Ashton-Kirk nodded; placing the sheets of paper in his coat pocket he closed the desk.
He took a note-book from his pocket and turning over the leaves, said: "Here I have the main points of the affair of Dr.
For the second time that night his hand went into the outside coat pocket in search of the pistol.
Suppose," doubted Fuller, "that the paper wanted was in this pocket case.
Karkowsky seemed to read the look; and what it told him, apparently, agreed well with his own inclinations at the moment, for his hand stole to his pocket and he took a forward step.
He took from his purse a silver coin, bargained about the price, counted a score of nuts from the right-hand pocket to the left, and the play began all over again.
But he at once jumped up again, greatly confused; and he caught hold of the back pocket of his long coat, just as if he had lost a purse of money.
Another said the money had been stolen out of his pocket the previous night.
I puts a fresh one into my pocket every day we stops.
He took his knife from his pocket and began to peel one of the onions, when their host placed the little vessel of salt close to his hand.
Lookye here," and he thrust his hand into his pocket and brought it out again full of little pebbles.
At the End of the Alley It is a long narrow pocket opening on a little street which runs like a tortuous seam up and down the city, over there.
But when a fourth dawned hopelessly grey, with rain pattering on the windows, she resolved to pocket her pride and petition Leo, through the medium of grandmamma, for horse and carriage.
He did not skip one of the childish wishes, from the lead soldiers to the pocket inkstand and the sweets.
He simply put his hand in his pocket and produced the letter.
Not the soldiers and the cannons, and the pocket inkstand, and all the things that he had wanted so badly, and which mamma had promised him?
Whipping the two coins into the pocket of his knickerbockers, he ran from the room and into the garden.
Then, as if unwittingly, his fingers strayed to the pocket in which were the proceeds of the cheque he had cashed while Gladys, without in the cab, had supposed him to have gone into the bank for his letter-case.
Stopping, Mr. Patterson thrust his handkerchief into the outer breast-pocket of his coat in such a fashion that the hem protruded.
Rodney took from his waistcoat pocket what might have passed as a silver needle-case or receptacle for pins.
Taking an envelope out of an inner pocket of his jacket, he tore off a corner.
It was so dear a letter that he kissed it as he folded it, and slipped it into the inside pocket of his coat.
The lawyer, with his dark eyes fixed on the lady's face, raised the hand in which was the envelope which contained the letter with the intention of slipping it into an inner pocket of his coat.
At Herald Island, due north of Bering Strait, in 1886, a whale was caught who carried round in his inside pocket of blubber the head of a harpoon marked Ansell Gibbs.
Charles Dickens used to carry a note-book in his vest-pocket in which he jotted down names that tickled his fancy.
When the walrus was passed round and conversation became general, the boots were slipped off quietly and one foot at a time was thrust for a resting spell into the pocket provided on the opposite trouser-leg.
You had not the courage to attack her openly when she was a widow, but must shamble and crouch behind a hireling advocate--a creature who would pocket as clean the gold of any one even more leprous than himself.
He had supped pleasantly with a few friends at his club, the Robin Hood, and earlier in the day finished, a very agreeable transaction with his solicitor, and now had in his pocket a handsome bundle of notes.
The other leaf of the pocket-book had been found in the waistcoat-pocket of deceased.
He took his pencil and notebook from his pocket and drew a sketch of our Hadley space ship.
From the breast pocket of the trim blue and silver uniform of our Service he drew a long, crackling paper.
He drew from hispocket a sheet of parchment and the stub of his last remaining pencil.
I've got a good-sized pocket notebook I can carry them in.
Drake pulled a tiny black volume from the pocket of his coat and dropped it on the table before me.
And just put a five in a locked pocket 'for keeps,' please; I owe it to you.
From a pocket of her blouse she drew forth a few blue beads that yet remained.
But as young ladies do not generally depend on their skill with cards to earn their pocket money, I'm afraid Overton would have a lecture ready for you, if he learned of your skill.
But that was not exactly what I brought you out to tell you, either," and he drew from his pocket the letter he had carried for three weeks, waiting until she appeared strong enough to accept surprises.
He took a sealed envelope from an inner pocket and gave it to the young fellow.
And with seven shillings more in his pocket than when he entered, the Rev.
In the quality of the work they will do, Pocket Kodaks equal the best cameras on the market.
The Pocket Kodaks are covered with fine leather, and the trimmings are handsomely finished and lacquered.
In a little pocket inside the bosom of her gown, sir--it looked as if it had been made for it.
A man going about with a dagger in his pocket usually means to use it.
He remembered his father, and how his grandmother, in '61, had put a Bible into one pocket and a housewife into another, and had sent him off to war.
She squeezed them into her pocket nervously, and began to clear away the things, with abrupt movements, looking askance every now and then at the overcast handsome face.
With a smothered oath Lancelot caught up the fiery little spaniel and rammed him into the pocket of his dressing-gown, where he quivered into silence like a struck gong.
She had transferred it to the pocket of her theatrical gown, but had not as yet found time to finish it.
And then there must be a Trunk furnisht, with all manner of linnen and cloaths, with other toys and sweet meats, and mony in his pocket to boot.
We have a ducat here that wants an owner; I fancy it will fit your pocket as well as another's.
I like to pocket my prize-money first and sport on it afterward.
Clip, his eyes still burning and with a strange look crossing his face, hid the paper deftly in the pocket of his coat.
The sheriff reached into his pocket and drew out a yellow slip.
Shoeblossom heard his visitor utter an exclamation of annoyance, and fumble in his pocket for matches.
Trevor felt in his pocket for the note, and flung it at him.
Next day, while the form was wrestling with the moderately exciting account of Caesar's doings in Gaul, Master Cook produced from his pocket a newspaper cutting.
Before the threat could be put into execution, O'Hara, who had been fumbling all this while in his pocket for a match, found one loose, and struck a light.
It was her own coral bracelet, which had traveled round in Mother Winch's pocket until it came to a hole in the bottom, and quietly slipping out, and down her skirts to the pavement, lay waiting for its little mistress to pick it up.
She took a little note from her pocket as she spoke, and, unfolding it, looked anxiously at the delicate letters.
The paper and picture he found lying upon his desk, and hastily put in his pocket without remark or question.
Aneroid barometers are now made of pocket size, compensated for temperature, and with double scales, one reading the height of the barometer column, the other the elevation obtained.