12 Metaphors for foster

Dr. Foster was the editor of the Minnesotian and was quite a power in the Republican party.

He may have given the breed its first impulse, but Mrs. M. A. Foster, of Bradford, was for many years the head and centre of all that pertained to the Yorkshire Terrier, and it was undoubtedly she who raised the variety to its highest point of perfection.

[Footnote 3: Editor's Note to Dover Edition: Abigail Kelley Foster (1811-1887), who married another Abolitionist, Stephen Foster, in 1845, was a Quaker orator and organizer on behalf of the abolition of slavery and for women's right to vote.]

Mind, your name is Jack Foster and hers is Betty.

Ford Foster is Dab's greatest crony.

Earle S. Goodrich, editor-in-chief of the Pioneer: Thomas Foster, editor of the Minnesotian; T.M. Newson, editor of the Times, and John P. Owens, first editor of the Minnesotian, were all printers.

"Jacob Foster was our old master and he sold my mother over in east Tennessee.

The character of these, by the way, at once convinced the village gossips that "lawyer Foster must be a good deal forehanded in money matters."

BY FRANK P. FOSTER, M.D. Stagnation was the state of medicine when the Nineteenth Century opened.

Dr. T. Campbell (Diary, p. 34) recorded in 1775, that 'when Mrs. Thrale quoted something from Foster's Sermons, Johnson flew in a passion, and said that Foster was a man of mean ability, and of no original thinking.'

* * * Foster was a very deep thinker.

George Foster was monkshood, a cambric robea "domino"serving to give the blue color note, and a very correct imitation of the flower's helmet answering the purpose of a head-dress.

12 Metaphors for  foster