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Why, that four-flusher wouldn't have the guts to take a job like this in a million years.
He had been made to look like a four-flusher.
"Shot off at the battle of Gettysburg, which he nearly lost for us, the four-flusher."
Anyone who wonders how this can be does not understand incumbents' temptation to play the four-flusher's hand in the political card game.
That old four-flusher's stacking his deck with your cards.
According to this book, Bert Hall was a four-flusher, a liar, and a deserter.
She's the solid stuff, Jake, all the way through, and you were never anything but a cheatin' tin-horn four-flusher."
"Go on with your act, your trickery, you faker, you four-flusher!"
"If I had that four-flusher here in this room, I'd give him a lacing that he would never forget!
"I've heard a lot of fool talk about this four-flusher they call The Shadow," said Flash, in an even tone.
He would announce that a character was a "real four-flusher"-followed by the sound of a toilet, flushing four times.
"You ain't got a cent, you four-flusher," he cried.
"A four-flusher - and a snooper, too.
"Just another four-flusher."
"That four-flusher shoot himself?
"You was always a four-flusher!'
But the disaffected Babbitt grumbled, "Four-flusher!
"Four-flusher!"
No, sir; Cyrus Vandergelt is no four-flusher."
He had long entertained the idea that Johnny Sutton was an overrated four-flusher, an impression he was determined to substantiate.
Mr. Coston called Mr. Dawson a pie-faced rubber-necked four-flusher.
Maybe you don't know how the creek turned out to be a four-flusher; but the prospects were good at the time, and Dave proceeded to build his cabin and hers.
Foley was later interviewed by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and claimed that Patrolman Stapleton was a liar and a "four-flusher".
"As it is," said Daugherty, "once we were in, that four-flusher Harvey and some of the others started talking about the smoke-filled room, pretending that they were the bosses.
McLendon especially attracted attention for his stern denunciations of French president Charles De Gaulle, whom he described as "an ungrateful four-flusher" who could "go straight to hell."