Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 30 Aug 1894, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

LOVE REASONS NOT. cil Uil'KR II. "WHAT, MAUIO a FABMKR On* can imagine the sensation that a brig hi, beautiful eagle woold produce in a dove's Met ; the preMDoe of that beautiful, imperioui child at the farm wat very much the Mine. People looked at her in wonder; her beauty dauled them ; her defiance aaiufeii them. They asked each other where all her pride came from. Uncle Robert of ten said in bii flow fash- ion that he retired from business when Ione was s*ven At that early age he gave the management of everything into her baby hands. From the chiokene in the yard to the bine and white pigeon* on tiie roof She oould manage him, big M he wae, with one etamp of lier little foot, oue flaeh "I her bright eyes ; he was powerless at enoe, like a great big giant bound hand and foot . 8he wae a triage child, fall [of eome wonderful power that eke hardly understood hereelf a child quite out of the oommoa groove of life, quite above the people who t urroooded her. They understood her beauty, her defiance, her pride, bat Dot the diematic inetmct mi poweir that innat in her, made every word and action teem strange. Boneet, etolid Robert Noel wae bewilder- ed by her ; he did hie beat in every way, bi he bad an uneasy oonecioiuneas that hit beet waa but a poor attempt. He eeot her to eohool, the beat in Raehleigh, bat ehe learned anything and everything esoept obedienoe. Hfce looked out of place even there, thie dark-eyed Speniih girl, among the pretty pink and white children with fair hair and blue oysa. She bewildered even the chil- dren : they obeyed her, and the had the greatest influence over them. Shu taught them imitation! and plays, the tired their imaginations by wonderful stories ; she wu a new, bulliant, wonderful element in their live*. Kven the school mistress, meek through the long suffering of yearf, even she worshipped and feared her the brilliant, tiresome girl, who was like a flash of light among the others. She had a face to grand and a voice to thrilling it waf no unutual thing when the wae read- j consolingly, though the fire from those I dark eyes ttartled him, and her scarlet lipe I trembled with angar. " I shall have a tweetheart, you think, like Jennie Barnes or Lily Coke. A sweet- heart. 1'ray, whom will it be, do you think ?" I know several of the young farmers about here who would each give his right hand to be a sweetheart of yourt." She laughed a low, contemptuous laugh '.hat made him winoe. What, marry a farmer ' Do you think the life of a farmer's wife would tuit me ? I shall go unmarried to my grave, unleas I u marry as I choose." Then she seemed to repent, of the passi- onate words, and flung her beautiful arms round his neck and kitsed hit face. ' I hate myself," the said, " when I speak in that way to you, who have been so good to me." I do not mind it," said Robert N'oel, honestly. " Never hate yourself for me, my lady lass." She turned one glance from her beautiful eyes on him ' When I seem to be angrateful to you do remember that I am not, Uncle Robert ; I am always sorry. I cannot help myself, I cannot explain myself ; but I feel always at though my mind and son! wsrs cramp- ed." ' Cramp is a very bad thing," said the stolid farmer." She looked at him, but did not speak ; her irritation was too great ; ha never un- derstood her ; it was not likely be ever would. "I will go down to the mill-stream," she said. With an impatient gesture t'.te hastened cut of the house. The mill-stream was certainly the pretti- est feature ol the farm a broad, beautiful stream that run between great rows of aldertr*ea and turned the wheel by the force with which it leaped into the broad, ieepkasin; it was the lovelieci and muat her silence, "I have forgotten your direc- tions ; may I ask you to repeat them '" She did so, and looking at btr face he taw there was no auger, nothing hut proud, calm content He said to himtelMie need Dot go just yet, he could stay a few mioutet longer. " Do you know that beautiful old German ballad," he said. " ' In sheltered vale a mil! wheel Still tunes Its tuneful lay'f" 'No; I never heard or read it," she answered. "Say it (or me." " ' In sheltered vale a mill- wheel Still tuna* iu tuneful lay. Mi darling onoe did dwell there. But now she's far away. A ring in pledge I gave her Ana vow* of love we spoke Thooe vows are all forgotten. The ring asunder broke. " "Hash," she said, holding up one wbita hand ; "hush, it it too tad. Do you not see that the moonlight hat grown dim, and the sound of the falling waters is the sound of falling tears?" He did not seem to understand her words. "That song his haunted me," he said, "ever sino I heard it. I mutt say the last verse ; it must havs baen of this very mill wheel it was written. But while I hear the mill-wheel My nnins will never oeaee ; I would the grave could hide me. For there alone U peace.' " " It it a love story ?" she asked, pleased at the pathos and rhythm of the words. "Yes it it the usual story the whole love of a man's heart given to one not worthy of it, the vows forgotten, the ring broken Then be oria* out for the grave to hide himself and his unhappy love. She looked up at him with dark, lustrous, gleaming ayes. " Does all love end in sorrow "' tba asked, simply. He looked musingly at thi moonlit waters, musingly at the ttarlit tky. "I cannot tell," ha replied, "but it seems to me that_it ends more in sorrow than in joy. 1 should say," be continued. " that wben truth meets truth, where loyalty meets loyalty, the ending is good ; but where a true heart finds a falsa one, where loyalty and honor meet lightness than I care to count: and 1 have idled my time." "Then you are studying '" she said. "Vet, that is it. I am trying to .nake up for lost time. I have tome examinations to pass; and my father hat sent me down to Dr. Hervey becauae he it known every- where as the cleverest coach in Kngland. " A cloud came for just one half minute across the face of tha moon; the soft, tweet i lark n eat startled Laonr. "1 mutt go now," the said; "it it not only getting late, but growing dark." "I shall tee you again," he cried, "do promise me." "Nay, you have little faith in promises," the replied; and ba watched her at the vaninhed from among the alder trees. It was an unexpected meeting; and itanga and startling consequence* soon followed. (TO U CO.TTIHPID. ) picturesque tpot that could be imsgined, | and falsehood, ihen the end mutt ba bad." and now as the waUrt rushed ar,d foamed Leone aeemed suddenly to remember that in the moonlight they were gorgrous to be hold. Leone loved the spot; the restless, gleam- ing waters suited her: it seamed ta> have something akin to herself something rest- lees, full of force and vitality. She tat there for hours; it was her usual refuge when the world went wrong with her. Round and round went the wheel; on sunlight days the son glinted on the sullen waters until they resembled a sheet of gold covered with wnite, thining foam. Green reads and flowers that love both land and ing aloud in the school-room for the othere I wa-.er fringed the edges of the clear, dimp- to suspend ell work, thrilled to the heart by tae sound ot her voice. She soon learn- ed all that the Kashleigh governess oould teach bar she Uught hertelf even more. She had little tasu lor drawing, much for music, but her whole heart and soul were in books. Young as ths was, it wss grand to hear her trilling out the pretty love speeches of luliet,decUriu(j the wrong of Constance or Katharine, moaning nut the woee of Detde- nicina. Sh had Shakespeare almost by heart, and "beloved t h grand old dramatist. When she was six teen her uucle took her from schoil, and then the perplexities of his honest life began. He wanted her to Uke her place as mistress of the house, to supermini.! the farm and the dairy, to uke affectionate interest in the poultry and birds, to sea that the butter was of a deep yellow, and the new laid eggs tent to market. From the moment he intrusted those matters in her handt, hit life became a hurden to him, for they were entirely neleoteii. Farmer Noel would go into hit dairy and rlml every thing wrong, the cream spilled, ths butter spoiled: but when he looked at the dark -eyed young princess with the Spanish face hs dared not say a word to I.er. He would tuggeat to her meekly that things might be different. She would rr- taliau with some sarcasm that would ru dace him to silence for two days at least. Yet shi loved, afUr a fashion of her own, this traat. solid man who admired her with all his heart, and lovad her with his whols soul. Ho time psssed until she was seventeen, and tha quiet farm life was unendurable to her. "Uncle, "she would say, "let me go out into the world. I want to see it. I want film-thing to do. I ofun think I must have two lives and two souls, I long so in- Untely for more than I havs to fill them." Me could not understand her. She had the farm and the dairy. "Be content," he would answer, "beonn- teat, my lady lass, with ths home iod has given you." "I want something to do. If I did all the werk on tms and twenly other farms t would not lourh my heart and w They are quite empty. People say it it a battlefield. If it l m one, 1 am sitting by with folded hands. Inactivity means death to me." "Mr lady lass, ycu can find plenty to do, be answered, solemnly. "ll'ii not of the kind I want." She paced up and down the large kitchen, where everything was polish. .! and linght ; the fire- light glowed nn the splendid face and figure the face with iu unutterable beauty, iu restless longing, iu troubled desires. .Some fear for the future of th beautiful, restless, passionaU girl cairm over the man, who wau>h*d her with anxious eyas. It, began to dawn upon him, ih.it if he were to to thin a bright eyed eagle up in a cage, it would never be happy, and it wat very much tha same kind of thing to thut this lovtly, gifted girl in a quiet farmhouse, " You will be married toon," ha taid, with a clumsy attempt at comfort, "and then you will be more content." She (lashed one look of scorn from those dark, liiitroin eyea that should have annihilated him. She stopped tmti.ru him, and throw baok her head with the getture of an injured queen. "May I ask, "the said, "whom you suppose I will marry ?" He looked rather frightened, tor he began to perceive he hid made some mistake, tho'igh h could not tell what) he thought all young girls liked to ba teased about tweethiiarU >nd marriage; still he came valiantly to the front. " I mean that you will surely hafs a twssthaart soms day, or other," hs said, ling pool; tha aider-trace dipped their branches in it; the great gray stones, covered with green moss, lay here and there. It was a h.tle poem in itaelf, and the beauli'ul girl who sat in the moonlight read it aright. CHAPTKR III. THk MKkTIXll AT THg Mil. I. In the depths of the water the saw the reflection of the shining stars ; shs watched them intently ; the pure, pale golden eyea. A voice aroused her a voice with tone and accent quite unlike any other voice. " I beg your pardon," it said, "could you show ma the way to Rasbleigli ? I have lost myself in the wood." Raiting her ryes she saw the gentleman who hail raised hit bat at he passed her in the morning. She knew that he reoogm.-'.l her by the light thai suddenly overspread his face. " Kashleigh liet over there,'' the replied. " You have but to cross the Held ana pass the church." " Kven that," said the stranger, with i careless laugh, "even that I am not inch n ed '.o do now. It is strange. I am afraid you will think me half mad, but it seems to me that I have just supped into fairy-land. Two minutes since I was on the bare high way, now I sea the prettiest picture earth hat to offer." " It Is pretty," she replied, her , shs was talking to a stranger, and, of all suhjects, they h*d fallen on love. ' I mint no," she said, hurriedly. "You will remember the way." " Pray do not go jutr this minute," hs i.l. " History may repeat itself ; life never does. There can never be a night half to fair at thit again ; the water will never fall vith so sweet a ripple ; tha stars will never shins with so bright a light ; lite may pass, and we may never meet again. You have a face like a poem. Stay a few minutes longer." "A face hit a poem. 1 ' Did he really think so? The words pleased her. "Strange things happen in real life," he atii! ; "things that, lold in novels and storms, make pe>ple laugh and cry out tnat they are exaggerated, too romantic to be real. How straugx that I should have met you here thit avemag by the aids of the null- I stream a place always haunud by poetry and 1 0111*11 ce. You will think it atranyer still when I Ull you your face has haunud me a) I day." She looked at him in surprise. The proud, WHERE THE OOLD IS. aw II Is wlrMetl 4is.it; Ikw Mwerent Cemlrlas arine War 14. Tha visible supply of gold coin in tha world U 83,500,000,000, against $4,000,000, 000 of silver coin. According to the vary Ulaat rsports of an authentic character, about four-sevenths of the gold currency is held in bank vaulu or Government treasur- ies or depositories, and ths balance is in the hands of private individuals or in ac- tual circulation, either in tha countries where minted or elsewhere. Country. Gold stored. Franca ,, United States 287,400,000 Kngland 888, 200.000 Rnmia 264.800,000 Germany 211,000,000 Austro-Hungary 147,800,000 Italy 1IV>,200.00 Australia 101,400,1100 Spain 39,800.000 Holland 22,800,000 Belgium I5,'JH),000 Switzerland 15,^10,000 Denmark 14,000,000 Sweden and Norway 13,00 ),'JOO Roumania 10,800,000 Portugal 3,400,000 Bulgaria 1,400.000 Her G The two countries which 1,'JJO,000 400,000 haw of lau been absorbing large amounU of gild coin for treasury purposes are Austria and Ros- tia, and the drain has been chiefly, though indirectly, in the United Stataa. France has for many years stood at the head of the countries, having a large accumulation of gold coinage. Takee beautiful face grieved at the words. "How it that 1 " the asked. "i saw you thit morning wben I was eyae "pret shines looking at the clear, dimpling pool ; tier now even than when the tun on it and the wheel turns." She had told him the way to Rashleigh, and he should havs passed on with a bow, but this was his excuse. The moon waa shi.nng bright as day, the wind murmured in the alder-trees, the light lay oo tha clear, tweet, fresh waUr; ths music of ths water as it ff'l waa tweet to hear. Away iu the woods some night-bird was tinning; tha odor of the sleeping flowers filled the air; and there on the green bank, at tha water's edge, tat the meet beautiful girl he had ever en in hit life. The moonlight fell on her exquisite south- ern lace; it seamed to find its home in tne lustrous depths of her dark eyes; it kissed the dark ripplet of her hair, worn with the simple grace of a Creek goddess; it lay an the whiu hands that played with the tuft- ed gram. Hs was young and loved all things beau- tiful, and therefore did not. go away. Hit mind was tilli'd with wonder. Who wan ths this girl, so like a young Spanish princess? Why waa the sitting here by the mill-stream! He mutt know, and to know he mull ask. "I am inclined," he taid, "to lie down here by thit pretty stream, and sleep all night under the turt; 1 am so lirnd." She looked at him with a quick, warm glow of sympathy. " What has tired you?" she asked. He sal down on ona of the great gray stones that lay half in tha water, half on the lind. " I have lost myself in the Leigh woods" he said, " I have been there many hours. I had no idea what Leigh woods were like, or 1 should not have gone for the first time alone." " They are very large and intrioat*,"she said ; " I oan nsver find the right paths." " .->. une one told me I should see the finest oak trees in Kngland there," hs taid, "and I have a passion for grand old oaks, 1 would go anywhere to see them. I went to the .ilt and had very soon involved myself in the greatest difficulties. I should never have found the way out had 1 not met one of the keepers." She liked to listen to him ; (.he clear, refined accent, the musical tons ; as she lisuned a longing came over her that his . might go on speaking to her and of her. Now," he continued, embarrawed by going to Kathleigh with my friend, Su Frank Huston. You were standing againtt a while gau, and i thought-well, 1 roust not tall you what I thought." "Why?" the asked briefly. "Because it might offend you," he replied. He began to perceive that there was no coquetry in this beautiful girl. She wat pruud.with a calm, serene, half-tragio pride. There would be no flirtation by the side of the mill-stream. She looked as far above oouquetryatshe was above affectation. He liked the proud calm of her manner. She might have been a duchess holding court rather than a country girt titling by a mill- wheel. The idea occurred to him; and then hit wonder increased who was she? and what was she doing here' "Do you live near here," he asked. "Yea," she said, "behind tha trass there you can see the chimneys of a farm- house; it is called Rashlsigh Farm; my uncle, Robert Noel, livaa there, and I am his niece." "His niece,'' repeated the young man, in an incredulous voice She waa a farm* sr't niaoa, then, after all; and yet shs looked like a Spanish princess. "You do not look like an English girl," he said gravely. "My father was English and my mother BITTEN BY A RATTLER. I'ror. Brier. at* Hew t)rieatia. *%anres in law Interest r Prof. George Brier, curator of Tulane University museum in New Orleans, suo- jecttyl himself to a dwigerout experiment. He allowed himself to be bitten by a rattlesnake in order to determine if a poison oan be inoculated with the venom of PURELY CANADIAB NEWS, INTERESTING ITEMS ABOUT OWN COUNTRY. OUI b.,., mi From bit he selected a a Spanish lady; and I well, 1 fear I have of the face more of the hot fire of Spain than ohill of England in my nature; my Spanish, so is my heart." " A Spaniard is quiok to love, quick to hale ; forgives grandly and revenges merer Irsslj," he ttid. " That it my character," the said ; " you have described it exactly." " I do not believe it ; neither hate nor revenge could exist with a face like yours. Thsn your name is NoeL " Yes, my name is Leone N'oel," shs re- plied. " Leone," he replied, " that it a beautifu name. 1 have never heard it before ; but I like it very much ; it it musical and rare two great things in a name." " ft it a German name, "the said. "My uncle Hoberi hataa it : he sayt it reminds him of Lion . but you know it it pronounced Leon. My mother read some Herman story that had that nm in it and gave it to me." " It suiU you," he said simply : " an. I I thould uot think there was another name iu the world that would. I wonder,' he added with a shy laugh, " if you would like my <k.. ... My friends had been, caught a few days ago. Teas* ing the make ne maddened it, ani in a few minutes it directed iu fangs towards Prof. Brier 'i little finger. Tha professor says he did not use any anti<lou and awaited developments. In the courts of a few hours the linger became swollen to twioa IU um 11.4! si/e. The professor said that during the week he would allow him self to be bitten again. He does not think tha biu will prove faul, because a young snake cannot emit at much p ton as an old one. The sensation was line the iting of a bee: the paiu became intense and the finger became swollen. Prof. Briar't object in experimenting is to try and establish that by the gradual absorption of a snake's venom the system will become inoculated, and a person in that condition can be bitten without the roaulu proving faUl. Tba profess. >r thinks his experiment will ba successful. It it Lancelot Chados. call me Lanoe. " Yes, I like that, tory of Sir Lancelot, I know all the his- I admire him ; but I think he was a weak man de not you!" ' Kor loving Quean Uuinevere ? I do not mow. Soms love isstrength, not weakness," is replied. Leone looked up at him again. " Are you the son of a great lord '" shs Mked ; "tome one told me to." Yea ; my father is Karl of Lantwell ; and people would call him a great earl. He rirh and powerful." "What hat brought you, the son of a great earl, down to Rashleigh f" she asked. 'My own idleness, to begin with," he said. "I have been at Oxford more years How Bad Money Is Passed. An ex-convict, writing in a London papar, says: In snide pitching i.e.. pass- ing bad money there are always two par- sons employed one to carry the poke i.e., tha stock and the other to pass it. Tha reason of that is, if the one who is trying to pass it is detected, he has only the one bad coin on him, and nine times out of Un ha is let go. His pal stands about a hund- red yards away from the shop he enters, and if hs is succeasful he touches the brim of hit hat with bis left hand, and his pal will join him : but if hs has baen unsuccess- ful he catches hold of his coat collar with his right hand, when his pal will walk on, and they will not join each other until quite a mils away. When a person who is passing the bad money enters a shop he (or she) at once makes h'mself chatty, to try and put the tradespeople off thair guard. He says. "Is your cloc* right V* "It has been very warm to-day." or windy, or calm, 4c. , Ac. , all the while tha tradespeople are serving him, and especially when they are just putting the bad innnr.v into the till. There are very few bad tixpenoee about, as it does not pay to pass them, as they cost as much as shillings to buy of the "emasheru," Le., makers. It is generally shilling!, florins, and half crowns that are worked and the ona who passes generally spends from Id to '2Jd out of a shilling up a 3d out of a florin, and id out of half a-orown. Shilling* cost 2s per dozen, rlorini 3s ltd per dozen, and half-crowns 4s ti 1 per dozen. Tha fol- lowing are the slang names for bad money: Sixpence,tixar : thilling.a daaner : florin, twoar ; half-crown, a half- wheel or half a tuaharoon ; and crown piece, a wheel or a tutharoon. A Rare Catch. Friend" You said yon didn't love him." Smart Girl" I don t." " You respect him perhaps ?" "Not particularly. ' "And yet you intend to marry him?" " I do. He told me that his mother always got her biaouiu at, tha baker's." Unlawretl frant Tarloeu relaM fraat tie Allaallr le the raelaV In July 713 immigranU enured Manitoba, The apple crop about Berlin is vary heavy. Pelos bland will have an abundant grape harvest. A great many visitors are at Lake Manitoba. A new PresbyUrian oharoh ruilt at Acton, A Port Dalhansis cow recently gave birth to triplet calves. The Indian patriarch Jim Lewis, ol P B. I . , is dead. James Keenan, of Danglaivilla. N. B.. was drowned recently. A new House of Refuge is to be) built is) Weatworth County. A lad named Terry berry died in HamilUd from eating green fruit. Tha town of Newmarket has 17 magis- trates an J 9 constable*. The Preabyteriaa church at Shediao. r. E.L, has been burned. Lady Thompson caught a baas at Sans Souoi weighing 7i pounds. Rar. R. T. Dixon has left Hamilton for his new parish at Harriston. London hat a new lodge of tha Brother- hood of Railroad Engineers. A Fergus butcher recently bought two $357,000,000 haifert weighing 2, 110 pounds. A largely attended colored camp-meet- ing near Hamilton has just closed. A thousand O. T. R Loop Line smplayea recently had a picnic at Harm. Ths Harrow cbeesa factory turned out 300 cheeses during ths month af July. Ths Albion Houl at Goderich has been sold to J W. Marsden. of logsrsolL There ia discord among Guslph policemen. and two cf them have been dismissed. A tarantula with four young ones waa found in some fruit shipped to Stratford. Burglars reoen-Jy secured a lot of provi- sums at VV'm. Shoebottom't house London. A Plympton to -toy gobbler hatched out brood of lurkeys and looks after them himself. Thirtv cattle in one herd suffering trom tuberculosis have been shot at. Vancouver, B C. One-tenth of the men enrolled in A bat- tery, stationed at Kingston, deserted dar- ing July. An old-fashioned 22-carat gold ring waa dug up recently at. Hamer's farm, near Brad ford. The business houses in Amherstburg will soon be lighted with the incandescent sys- tem. There, was recently a fat woman's excur- sion to Prince Edward Island, average -200 pounds. Rev. Fathers John Mahoney and ,'liidolph Lehman were ordained at Hamilton by Bishop Dowling. Mr. John Chapman, of Torquay, England, a noted Masonic author, hat been visiting tha North- Wast. Mr. Oeo. Mabea, of Simcoe, nas baen appointed classical master in the Part Hope Collegiats Institute. The new cable connecting Thousand Island and Westminster Parks with tha American shore it completed. Mr. Lemuel Mellett, Cliff House, Stan- hope, P. K I., was accidentally shot while gunning on the beach Francis C. Walker of St. John, N. B., has baen appointed classical master in Frederiuton high school. Rsv. a A. Ball, pastor of tha B. U. B. church, Amherstburg, will be succeeded by Rev. Dr. Oliver of Uuelph The carriage makers of Montreal have subscribed $100,000 to form an association to protect Canadian trade. The French treaty will not go into effect until it has been ratified by the Par- liament of France, and that bo iy has been prorogued for a lengthy period. On a farm in Guelph township last weak, ons day, 3'JO bushsls of wheat, 290 bushels of rye and 1&0 bushels of barley were threshed in 9$ hours. A young woman namsd Beatrice Recant, while working a loom in a Chatham mill Friday was oaught in the machinery and her right arm badly mangled. It ia estimated that wast of Toronto there are 73,OIK> boxes ot chaeae in cold storage, east of Toronto .10.000 boxes, and 100,000 to 1'jo.tmu boxet in Montreal. Thomas Taylor, of Gait, while pulling the trap at a -iub match received a charge of shot in ths head. Nine shoU were removed and ths lad is out of danger. The total production of tha Canadian farnceit is about-$500, 000,000, of which $80. OOO.OOO, it sent to the markau of the world and $4 j<>,000.00i> consumed at home Supplementary letter* paUot have been issued to the Hamilton Vinegar WorktCo., authorizing an increase in itt capital stock from $ !00,COO to $.100,000 and chai ths name to the Hamilton Distillery pany, limited. All crops give promise of biting unprece dently large in Nova Scotia. The hay crop averages 110 par cant., oats 101, and potatoes 98 par cent, of a full crop, whereas last year these staples were twenty-five per cent, below an average crop. Archbishop Cleary unveiled a status at the i.eneral Hospital grounds, Kingston, upon the mound marking the resting place of 1,300 fever victims of 1847. The statue was cut in Italy from a solid block of marble three tons in weight, and cost $1,500. The battalions of garrison artilUry at Halifax, Montreal and British Columbia are each to have a permanent regimental sergeant -major from the Royal Canadian Artillery. There is also to be a permanoat artillery force stationed iu Prince Edward Island. The grasshoppers in London township and in Westminster have dona much dam- age. Some of tha oat Helda are pearly ttrippad, and in others more than half the oaU are off tba straw. Tha turnips are being stripped by them, and in some uaru they are anting tha corn. large collection ot young rattler that | ing

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy