Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Worshipful Company of Grocers" ¶ 0
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Grocers and .
Grocers in test markets have said that the lettuce sells " very well ", and the farmers claim that their hydroponic lettuce uses 90 % less water than traditional soil farming .< ref > Murphy, Katie.
In 1944, he passed his eleven plus exam, winning a scholarship to Hackney Downs Grocers ' School.
Berry serves as headquarters for Stallion Trailers, Pittsburgh-Midway Chevron Mine, Berry Wood Products, and Piggly Wiggly Grocers.
* Frank Grimes, who founded the Independent Grocers Association in Sharon in 1926.
Grocery stores in the 1970s in the midwest ( Chicago – Jewel Grocers ) typically kept about 4 volumes in a rotation, dropping the last and adding the latest until all volumes could be acquired with the initial first volume being 99 cents.
Blaney later worked as an organiser with the Irish National Vintners and Grocers Association.
His first grocery business appears to be as ‘ Harrod & Co. Grocers ’ at 163 Upper Whitecross Street, Clerkenwell, E. C. 1., in 1832.
* A number of livery companies have rights of presentation, including the Ironmongers ' Company, the Cooks ' Company, the Drapers ' Company, the Grocers ' Company, the Fishmongers ' Company, the Skinners ' Company, the Mercers ' Company, the Master Mariners ' Company and others.
Loblaw's regional divisions include Westfair Foods Ltd. in Western Canada and Northern Ontario, National Grocers Co. Ltd. in Ontario, Provigo Inc. in Quebec, and Atlantic Wholesalers Ltd. in Atlantic Canada.
Chichele's occupation does not appear but his eldest son, William, is on the earliest extant list ( 1383 ) of the Grocers ' Company, London.
It is a unit of National Grocers, itself a unit of Loblaw Companies Limited, Canada's largest food distributor.
He founded Laxton Grammar School in 1556, administered by the Worshipful Company of Grocers, from which Oundle School evolved.
Grocers ' Hall, in Prince's Street, the home of the Worshipful Company of Grocers.
The Worshipful Company of Grocers is one of the 108 Livery Companies of the City of London.
The guild was known as the Company of Grossers from 1373 until 1376 when it was renamed the Company of Grocers of London.

coat and arms
Alfred Korzybski's family coat-of-arms ( List of Polish coats of arms Abdank coat of arms )
* Abatement ( heraldry ), a modification of the shield or coat of arms that supposedly can be imposed by authority ( in England supposedly by the Court of Chivalry ) for misconduct
The town has had a coat of arms since 1338, that of the Counts of Abensberg.
With the death of the last Count, Nicholas of Abensberg, in 1485, the estates fell to the Duchy of Bavaria-Munich, meaning that henceforth only the Bavarian coat of arms was ever used.
On 31 December 1809, a decree of King Maximilian of Bavaria granted the city a new coat of arms, as a recognition of their ( mainly humanitarian and logistic ) services in the Battle of Abensberg the same year.
The district of Offenstetten previously possessed its own coat of arms.
Alder coat of arms of Grossarl, Austria
Alder is illustrated in the coat of arms for the Austrian town of Grossarl.
* 2004 – The National Assembly of Serbia unanimously adopts new state symbols for Serbia: Bože pravde becomes the new anthem and the coat of arms is adopted for the whole country.
A very small number of his instruments survive, dated between the years of 1560 and 1574 and most bearing the coat of arms of Charles IX of France.
Alphonse's coat of arms was formed of those of France ( left ) and Castile ( right ), representing his father and mother respectively: Per pale azure semé-de-lis or dimidiating gules semé of castles or
In 1974, Acadia was granted a coat of arms designed by the College of Arms in London, England.
The coat of arms is two-tone, with the school's official colours, garnet and blue, on the shield.
Dürer's own woodcut of his coat of arms
The blazon of the coat of arms is Per pale, dexter: sable, a fess wavy argent, charged with two cotises wavy azure ; sinister: sky blue, three mullets of five argent.
The Non-Commissioned Officer insignia are the same up until Warrant Officer ranks, where they are stylised for Australia ( for example, using the Australian, rather than the British coat of arms ).
Folk etymology connects it to the German Bär, a bear, and a bear appears in the coat of arms of the city.
Even the symbols of Bosnian statehood ( flag, coat of arms ) have been chosen by the Highest Representative rather than by the Bosnian people.
In 2001, the National Guard unit was designated an official military unit of the Bulgarian army and one of the symbols of state authority, along with the flag, the coat of arms and the national anthem.
One form for the coat of arms of a Roman Catholic bishop.
The coat of arms of a Latin Rite Catholic bishop usually displays a galero with a cross and crosier behind the escutcheon ; the specifics differ by location and ecclesiastical rank ( see Ecclesiastical heraldry ).
An Eastern bishop's coat of arms will normally display an Eastern-style mitre, cross, eastern style crosier and a red and white ( or red and gold ) mantle.
Former coat of arms of Abella de la Conca, Lleida, Spain
The heraldic blazon for the coat of arms of the barony is: Or, a saltire gules, on a chief of the last a martlet of the field.

coat and .
Wilson brushed the dust from his coat.
She wiped it off with the sleeve of her coat.
He'd put on his old brown corduroy coat and it was already soaked.
He was puffing on a cigar, and he was turning up his coat collar against the rain.
They closed in fast, kept him from reaching inside his coat for his gun.
He lifted the skirt of Macklin's coat, took his gun from its holster, tossed it onto the desk.
She was still hugging the stained coat around her, so I said, `` Relax, let me take your things.
She stood up, pulled the coat from her shoulders and started to slide it off, then let out a high-pitched scream and I let out a low-pitched, wobbling sound like a muffler blowing out.
She was wearing nothing beneath the coat.
She jerked the coat back on and squeezed it around her again, but not soon enough.
There I got my Colt Special and shoulder harness, slipped my coat on, and went back into the front room.
Today the Negro must discover his role in an industrialized South, which indicates that the racial aspect of the Southern dilemma hasn't changed radically, but rather has gradually come to be reflected in this new context, this new coat of paint.
She was not an overnight guest in the White House, but Mr. Ike Hoover, the chief usher, had Mama check her fur coat when she came in, and take care of her needs.
Hearst hopped into a private railroad car with Max Ihmsen and made an arduous personal canvass for delegates in the western and southern states, always wearing a frock coat, listening intently to local politicians, and generally making a good impression.
His coat trimmed in sable, diamond stars of the Orders of Saints Andrew or George agleam, he was often prone to sit sulkily, eye downcast, in a Scheherazade trance.
The steeple leaned backward, while the church advanced like a headless creature in a long, shapeless coat.
The tweed coat, maybe.
`` This coat looks like a rag heap ''.
Then remove it and give the whole bottom a coat of resin.
Using a cheap brush, coat one side of the bottom with the resin and then apply the cloth.
When the cloth is smooth, apply another coat of resin, spreading it with a paint roller.
Use one coat of Firzite and one coat of marine paint.
But whenever a major purchase was contemplated forty years ago -- a new bedroom set or a winter coat, an Easter bonnet, a bicycle for Junior -- the family set off for the downtown department store, where the selection would be greatest.
It could be seen that both artists used a very thick final coat of plaster, one half inch, and that both followed the traditional Italian fresco technique as described by Cennino Cennini in the 14th Century, and current in Italy to this day.

0.104 seconds.