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Poachers and by
Lilias Rider Haggard, daughter of the famous novelist, edited I walked by Night, being the life and history of the King of the Norfolk Poachers, published in 1935 by Nicholson and Watson, London.
Poachers are notable for having elongated bodies covered by scales modified into bony plates, and for using their large pectoral fins to move in short bursts.
There is a spring which feeds into the River Piddle at the particularly picturesque spot of Mourning Well, reached by a footpath from the Poachers Inn at the Alton Pancras end of the village.

Poachers and .
Black Poachers, White Hunters: A Social History of Hunting in Colonial Kenya.
The town's second club is Boston Town nicknamed The Poachers, who play in the United Counties Football League.
Textual Poachers.
Poachers also use these methods to target paddlefish in areas where paddlefish fishing is not legal.
One example is the Iowa DNR, and their Turn In Poachers ( TIP ) Program which was started in August 1985.
Poachers sometimes raided nests for the breast meat of young birds, a practice that could destroy an entire rookery.
Poachers find the pack and capture any wolves that are young enough to fight.
Poachers generally feed on small crustaceans and marine worms found on the bottom.
Poachers supply the black market with such substances, including tiger penis and rhinoceros horn.
Poachers often kill the mothers first, since siamang females are highly protective of their infants, and it is difficult to remove the infant without first killing the mother.
Poachers set traps outside the park during the dry season to snare bulls wandering outside the park in search of water.
At the Poachers Hotel it becomes Swineshead Road.
Poachers reduced their population from 500 to 15 in the 1970s and 1980s.
Poachers reduced their population from 500 to 15 in the 1970s and 1980s.
Textual Poachers Television Fans & Participatory Culture.
Poachers and food hunters, other animals and natural causes have let to the decline.

had and scraped
The letter, scraped on stone, had been a message home.
There were also cut marks on the skull indicating the flesh had been scraped off with a knife, and the skull had begun to decompose only after a recent submersion in water.
On 14 May 1796, Jenner tested his hypothesis by inoculating James Phipps, a boy eight years old ( the son of Jenner's gardener ), with pus scraped from the cowpox blisters on the hands of Sarah Nelmes, a milkmaid who had caught cowpox from a cow called Blossom, whose hide now hangs on the wall of the St George's medical school library ( now in Tooting ).
Ingres's pupil Amaury-Duval wrote of him: " With this facility of execution, one has trouble explaining why Ingres ' oeuvre is not still larger, but he scraped out work frequently, never being satisfied ... and perhaps this facility itself made him rework whatever dissatisfied him, certain that he had the power to repair the fault, and quickly, too.
It employed a strip of wax-covered paper that was coated by dipping it in a solution of beeswax and paraffin and then had one side scraped clean, with the other side allowed to harden.
The schools, which had already been operating in the red, scraped through by cutting programs and by the determined efforts of the PTA, which opened a thrift shop as a fundraiser.
Although he had scraped an income from painting, it was not until 1819 that Constable sold his first important canvas, The White Horse, which led to a series of " six footers ", as he called his large-scale paintings.
Some of the logs had their bark scraped off while other logs were used bark and all.
Baker Street, millions of buses going around ..." So, before anyone knew what it meant, I scraped Hey Jude out of the whitewash. A guy who had a delicatessen in Marylebone rang me up, and he was furious: " I'm going to send one of my sons round to beat you up.
In 1936 he traveled ( on a BSA motorbike he had scraped together enough money to buy ) to Paris to become a student of Kandinsky.
Holmes had scraped something from the mat and was closely examining it through his lens.
Often they had to lie on the bare snow, or on ground scraped bare of snow with a foot.
At the same time, the practice of coppering the submerged part of hulls, which had started in 1761, meant that British warships no longer had to return to port frequently to have their hulls scraped, and the additional time at sea significantly altered the rhythm and difficulty of seamen's work.
A final effort was aimed at the town of Amiens, a vital railway junction, but the advance had been halted at Villers-Bretonneux by the Australians supported by other units scraped together on a piecemeal basis on 4 April.
By 1922, the young couple had scraped together enough money to have her family flee Russia and join them in America.
The Hill Towns west of the valley had been nearly scraped clean of soil by glaciers and were less attractive for agricultural uses.
The petrol tank had ignited whilst being scraped along the track, and the car caught fire.
Nixon then read parts of a letter from the wife of a serviceman fighting in Korea, who despite her financial woes had scraped together $ 10 to donate to the campaign.
This corresponds with an area where overpass witnesses stated they observed gunsmoke and where footprints in the mud directly behind a station wagon backed up to the stockade fence that also had shoe-bottom mud scraped off onto the station wagon ’ s rear bumper, cigarette butts, and muddy footprints 2. 5 feet ( 0. 75 m ) up on a picket fence cross-beam support.
By the time of the German Grand Prix, Monteverdi had succeeded in changing the teams name to Monteverdi Onyx Formula One, but once again it meant nothing as although both cars scraped onto the grid, Foitek retired early and Lehto finished 6 laps behind and was unclassified.
Pang Juan had moved to Malingdao, and when he saw the warning message, he paid no attention, instead ordering the words to be scraped off.
The erosion scraped away the top layer of Upper Cretaceous sandstone ( which still exists as the top layer on the High Plains ), exposing the underlying layer of Pierre Shale, which had been formed during the Cretaceous, when a shallow sea covered present-day Colorado.

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