Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 30 Dec 1909, p. 6

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

j ' d"-! ' .m i«' ," f/*~ f JiMi liigy Hints for Busy Housekeepers. Recipes aad Other Valuable Informatloa of PariicuUr laterest to Women PolkA Fig PUDDINGS. Pudding. â€" Three-fourthh |ng and roll thinner than when bak- ing right after mixing. XVhen Baiting. â€" When creaming butter and sugar for cakes and cookies, add two tableepoonfuls of boiling water, then deduct this amount from other liquid used. Beat hard with a spoon and mix- ture will become a light creamy mass in one-third the time it would otherwise take. Pie Crust.â€" To have fluffy, light pound of hretad (stale preforrod) cboppw! fine, one-half pound of best 1 figs chapped fine, six ounces brorn sugar, one cup milk, ono- ^ hdu i,-*-n>e«, six ounoee of beef BU*t chopp^H fine (beef suet when cold will chop .easier). Mix bread ! and suet, thea fig. . sugar, and nut- ' meg, oo« egg \v«M bcp.ten, then add milk, two ounces of sweet al- monds chopped fine and grated rind of one lemon. Put in a pan or dish and steam four hours. Serve with the following hard sauce : One cup- ful of granulated sugar, one-half cupful of butter, two tablespoons- ful of water. Stir to a cream with tlie yolk of one egg. Add the white of the egg beaten to a froth just bo fore Perving. Flavor with vanilla. Prune Pudding. â€" One pound well cooked prunes; remove pits, niasli prunes thoroughly with fork. Beat â€"One-half cuplul of sugar, two , , . ,. toblespoonfuls of flour, pinch of P'« •'"'s*, to each cup of lard add salt, one and one-half cupfuls boil ing water, two tablcspoonfuls but ter, one tablespoonful lemon juice ENGLAND'S NAVAL LORD SIB ABinUR KNY7ET WILSOM IS A FIGflTEB. Ho Won the Tictoria Cross at the Battle of El Teb on the Bed Sea. grated rind of one 1 alf a lemon, or one teaspoonful of vanilla. Mix dry laateriah and pour in boiling water, stirring constantly. Boil three to four minutes. Remove from the fcro and add the butter and flavoriii^. unbeaten white of one egg; use ice water; mix name as usual. Cleaning Silver. â€" Place the forks, .spoons, etc. in a deep pan ori,,,. , , c-- u . v i. i j t kettle and cover well with warm (^'â- - .^J-hn Fisher) as First Lord of water. Add a bowlful of canned ^^ Admiralty has been hailed with tomatoes; let stand an hour if con- general Batibfaction in Grea,t Brit The selection of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Arthur Knyvet Wilson to succeed Lord Fisher of Kilvcrstone SEASONABLE DISHES. Macaroni. â€" Break macaroni into short lengths and add two onions cut fine. Boil twenty minutes in boiling salted salted water. Drain, add milk, u lump of butter the size of a walnut, and a little pepper. Thicken with flour, nring to a boil, and serve hot. Mint Jelly.â€" Two tablespoonfuh |"'" , f-.. ..1, «..i ,.r IJ urtu venient; then boil all together ten minutes; remove and drain the sil- ver, then rub each piece with a dry flannel cloth dipped in whiting powder. _. *_. BREEDING THE DAIRY COW. It has been a macter of question. ain, where it is regarded as herald- ing the oessation ot the disputes and bickerings tiiat have kept Brit ish navai circles in a turmoil for several years. Sir Arthur had rftfired from ac- tive service, and it was on the King's own initiative that 'â- â- '"e ap- pointment was offered him. He is I r »» Christ Belongs to Universal Humanity In Its Love and Sympathy. That disciple whom Jesus loved said unto Peter: "It is the Lord." â€"John xxi. 7. A young man, a stranger, comes to a home that has lost its child. Some trick of manner, a flash of the eye, seizes the sorrowing mo- ther's heart. She cries with tears, "It is my boy!" A like beauty of recognition, raised to the divine power, lies in the simple story of the text. The Lord was once a little human child. How was the Christmas baby greet- ed ? He came into a world of love. said to enjoy the confidence of the i home, nurture, growth. A world of foreboding, of peril, of as a writer in Town aLd v^ountry ! „„ ^^^ ^f ^.^e British puolic as Journal says, whether the produce ^«n. Ab a strategist, tactician and of developed or undeveloped am- handler of the fleets the new mals were more likely to reproduce pirst Lord is regarded as the high- the qualities for which they were ^st authority in the British navy. It 18, however, now con- , j^Uf hi.s nrpd«.«.ssnr 1... w», a.ad- of gelatin, one-fourth cupful of cold "X", . ",/'*'. however, now con- uke his predecessor he was gi- water, one cupful of vinegar very â„¢' X^ *" intelligent breeders, ! ^^ted in the torpedo school, and ! hot, one cupful of sugar, one-fourth ;.^f^ ^f« ""^'y <r«"«*^t "-"^ ^^^ <^ , is the inventor of several apf he pplli- use of whites of three eggs, add one-half ...„,., v,,..^, v.., ..>..... „..^c»., >-..v, .«-• v., , • * i i i cup of sugar, and ^iix with prunes. I teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth tea- J:°"'^s® ^o pursue is to breed oti.y ] ancea connected with the Make a boiled custard of one quart 'spoonful of cayenne pepper and !u° „ ^^'^P^f ammals. In faU, ^ torpedoes. Wilk, yolks of three eggs well beat- I three-fourths cupful of cut dried «.« more highly developed the am- By those who know him he la en, one-half cupful of sugar, one mint leaves. Pour cold water over ""^^ ".""<= /^^t'«'"> »"«"»« ""o^^ characterized as "taciturn, secre I chopped nuts to custard if ^lesired. jjell. When it begins to stiffen turn Mock Charlotte. â€" Two table [into a mold. By using one-half of Bpooafulc corn starch, one-third ' the tablet that comes with gelatin enpfnl of himt, grat»d rind and ia pretty dark green color is given juiM! «f eA«-hiA to«s*B, 00* cnpful ' Easily prepared any time of year, of WoSkag ifwter ; oeak a«d l«t oool 8*rved with leg of lamb or lamb It was only recently that Admiral Lord Charles Bcresford, who is England's most active naval critic and often her severest, announced wliHe y«u b«at Mm vfldUs of two ePRi, ifew rtJr together. Berve ict cold wfth this dpesaiog; Yolks of two eggs, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, one-half pint milk ; cook and add one teaspoonful of vanilla. Set on ice. Fig Pudding.â€" Chop a half-pound of beef suet and then rub until rre.amy with the hands, then add half a pound of figs, finely chopped and again rub with the hands. Souk two and a half cupfuls of stah bread crumbs in a half cupful of milk throe minutes, add three eggs well beaten, one cupful of sugar, a little salt, heat vigorously, and turn into a mold. Steam three hours, remove from the mold, and servo with sherry sauce. Lemon Foam Pudding.â€" Two tea spoonfuls of water, one tcacupful of sugar, two largo tablcsiKjonfuIs of cornstarch ; dissolve in a littl i water. Boil this well, then wld tha juice of two lemons or oranges chops. Oraaberry Help. ily than when it appears only at rare intervals. "The bull is not developed lik<. the oihor animals mentioned, he ac- , ^..„v.^^ he inheriU his development, he ac- j to the electors of Port'bmoutVthat quires it through his dan, and bis ; i^e-re was no organization of the •ire's dam, and his feaal* tMcet- Brltiah fleet for war. Sir Charles „.. J „...^. Allow one to". Although the good milking : pi-ononncod the battleship pro- pint sugar and one pint water to Hiiality of a cow is not transmilteu | praHune inodeqnate, the fleet short one quart cranberries. Put sugar t" ^^^ ^"".' ^" ^^''â- ^ ^'^ E>'^«« niilk, it i of medium cruisers and torpedo and water in large kettle and bring '^ traiiMnitted through the son to | craft, stores insuflicient and dang- to boil. Then put in cranberries, <^'>« son's daughters uninfluenced in ; erously depleted ; said the dock ac- cover, and remove from fire an! Quality by the fact that the son did i commodatdon was deficient for let stand five minutes. Place on ""' «xerciB6 it. The sire's dam Is heavy sliips already afloat and that therefore, as cloce to the sn-e'a i there was no proper provision for daughter n« is the sire's own dam j heavy ships under construction, no Reference is made to the opinion ' adequate war reserve of ooal and a of nn experionewl breeder a . 1 shortage of men. Admiral of the widely known writer, who says: I Fleet Sir Edwid Ilobart Seymour, "My experience of over forty [ who was over here for the Hudson' bearing. Mary, grasping Him to her heart and picturing his future, cries, "It is my dear one I It is luy promised blessing!" Could anyone, even the virgin mother, foreknow that future? Could any- one see the Lord in the infant ? God was most human in the manger, ON THE CROSS. fire again and cook five minutes, and then allow to cool, still cover- ed. They will look like candied cherries and are delicious. Sauerkraut and Frankfurters. â€" Boil sauerkraut one hour, with on ions, fine black pepper, on apple .vears as a breeder clearly dem>>n ! Fulton celebration, on the Con- or two, some beef of bacon fat, a si rates to me that the get of any ' trary, in u sp(>ech in London a few little water, then add the sausages ^ire, whether equine of bovine, ha? \ days ago afTirmed that the state of and boil about fiftcn minutes, or a tendency to generally resombl.? the navy was completely satisfac- until you discover that one has ^"^ characteristics of the dmn of tory. It is now up to Sir Arthur burst. t-bat sire more than that of any ! Wilson to determine which is right. Potato Salad Dressing. â€" One other ancestry back of its own par- 1 .Born on March 4, 1842. the new tcacupful of granulated sugar, one *!"*''' consequently, in breed'uB First Lord has an enviable record teasponful of salt, a dash of pep- <'a'i*y cows of differcne classes I and he has achieved about all the per, a piece of butter the size of an j'"')''' always endeavored to obtain a honors and decorations that can be egg, one egg with one teaspoonful "'"'' .*" ''^"^ "'V bcrd from the besi hoped for by British naval officer I of corn starch, ,'ind a tea.spoonful "I'lking or butter cows tjj be oh- Besides having have the whites of three -ggs ireat' H ""'[^"'^ mixed togrl her. Add to tain^d and generally with the be3. - - - - '^'' 'the other and cook until thick, stir- results. It is an untrue temptation to find Him in marvels. Put another text by the side of ours, the words, "Ye have done it unto me." Both are Christmas texts, if wc be able to see it: "It is the Lord" ; "Ye have done it un- to me."" The first note t)f Chnstmas is a note of joy, an illuminated picture. BoagB of cncels. shepherds with flocks, a star leading wise men. All that story we believe, we follow with them, v.c find Him and wor- ship. But He comes again in another gui:;o. The beautiful German myth of the Christ Child is true. In the darkness and the c'>'d, in the driv- ing wintry storm, a cry. a knock from without our sheltered comfort, Wc open to a r.igged, weary, hag- gard child. "It is the Lord," the Lord of Man's common need and common devotion. The glory of the ChristmaB timtt is a two-fold glory. Have you caught both its notes 1 There is a rearer trrth these Christmas days. We find Him to be Lord as we strive to climb to the heights where Ho lives, rather than ai He comes down to us. We find Him in the child, the carpenter, tho teacher, the healjr, the friend, so burden^ i revealing what it is to be divine. ' We find Him in the least of His brethren, whom He loved, whom we serve as our trust from Him. WE FIND HIM IN OURSELVES. Looking at our own lives, we may share again the joy and wonder and hope of Mary, may bring to b:rth the divino. There is something worth redeem- ing- in men. The stranger whocn we dimly see on the shore of life'* cloud bank speaks: "Cast the net 'on the right side of the ship." ' Keep at it ! Be brave, be steadj a; your work, whether it be teach- ing or study ; whether outside la- bor or homekceping. Let it not b« a. hard done duty, but a willing use. the homage of a life that is a trust from OD high. Living oas never be as if there had been na Christmas in the world. Ob the shore, in the mist, by the fire, in labor and doubt and monotony, we minister to no stran- ger, no tyrant. Everywhere "It is the Lord," glory and peace, Igva and good will. REV. H. P. NICHOLS. AFTER SOLOMON'S GOLD DIGGING AT POOL OF SILOAM, KEAU JEKl SALEM. the boiled part Yolks of thr en stiff and aA4 slowly. Sauce : Yolks of three eggs, two cups of Btilk, three table- spoonfuls of fugart cook in double boiler until ft thickens. English Plum Pudding.-Six well 1 iag all the time to keep it smooth VVill keep indefinitely, and is nice with a little sweet cream added just before sorving. Baked Beans FAKM ^OTES. People who are doing woll in the Soak throe cupfuls country frequently imagine they of beans over night in three quarts will hotter the condition of them- THE VICTORIA CROSS. ^^llf T**/' """^ ">'*'"«8' one tea- !of water, add one-halt teaspoonful selves and families by movin-T U> â„¢, ,' LT^a ''"\ r"""* A^ "f ^^-^ '" ^'''^ morning, and let town. In nine cases out of te^n it T^^^: one «md one-half pounds ,.„„c to a boil. Drain, wash, and proves a bitter and costly mastako. hitfMn* lT. ^ "^ i!**' T\ P''^'^" '" »» «P^" j"'- «i»h three- A farm that has been stocked to „ ,n^'^„If , f 1 7"'»b« soaked, quarters pound of salt pork, thre. its fullest capacity with dairy ani IVfonr.h .n& f^ft .""'k- tablespoonsfuls sugar,' onUhird mals for ten years, growing^or i one-fourth pound -uredded citron, !c„„ of tomatoes. Slice onions over and purchasing nit^gcneou/grains top, cover all with water, and boko will be producing twice the amount slowly five or s>ix hours, adding <>f fo<lder as at the beginning if the more water when needed ' ' ' ' ..... one and one-fourth pounds of dark- brown sugar, one -half cupful of wino or melted pelly, one pound of finely chopped suet, and one tea- spoonful of salt. Mix one pound of flour with raisins, currants, and suet, add other ingredicnt.s, anJ mix well. Boil tei. nours in floured pudding cloth or well buttered mold. If kept well covered in a cool place it will keep indefinitely and only needs reheating. Serve with hard or liquid saiioo. This recipe has hrcn used in one f.imily for more than sixty years. Bread Pudding. â€" Four slices of bread buttrrrd and laid in bottora of pudding di.sh, use one quart of milk, Bcalj a title less thun half, and pour over the bread, chop it up with u knife, till well mixed Make a custard with the rest of milk, yolk of two eggs, one tea spoonful of sugar. Pour all togoth er over bread and bake till hrni ; beat the whites of eggs and whip in gradually one cupful of sugar, »prr»d on top and brown lightly. Beit oaten with milk or cicam. Suet Pudding.â€" One cupful finely chopped suet, one cupful molasses, one cupful of milk, three cupful* flour, one teaspoonful nutmeg, ono and one-hulf cupfuls of raL-iins, two tablespoonfuls flour, one teaspoon ful cinnamon, one half teaspoonful clovcb, onerhal,f teaspoonful nut* meg, one and ono-half cupfuls of raisins, two tablcspoonfuls flour, one tcacpoonful of soda. Mix and sift dry Ingredients, odd molasses and milk to the suet ; combine mix- tures, and raisins, which have pre- nousiy been cut in small pieces and floured. Turn into buttere<l aol4a, Cfver, am] steam three Wtirs. If steamed in one-half or one pound baking powder cans two hours I* suflioient. Arrange neatl/ fcr serviag kod use ouc of th« fol- lowing aatioes : Hard sauceâ€" one- third cupful of butter, one cupful pulverized sugar, one tea.<»poonfui vanilla. Cream and butter, add the angar gradually, and flavor. The whit* of on egg may he added. Arrange neatly in a small dish and »ot away to eiiilJ or until ready to fcrve, For a yellow saure use the â- '• '^f an eag in place of the white â-  â- ". Lemon or Liijuid Sauce A decorat4«u given usually for signal brarery iu battle, he is a Gi-aad Cowmander of the Victorian I Order. He got his C. B. In 1897 and was inade a Xnigiit Command er " â-  a Wilson, won the baronetcy now held by Sir Arthur's brother dur- ing the Indion mutiny by capturing Sir Arthur is heir to hi Mystery Attends Excavation English Party at St. Mary's Well. ot LIVE STOCK NOTES. It is th© proper attention paid to Sfeniingly unimnortant dei. !â- ; thai spells success for the beekeeper, and the failure to attend to these things at the proper time accounts for the poor success in a vocation that is full of great possibilities. When selecting a pure-bred sire to grade up the stock of inferior ewes select one which is especially strong in those points in which the ewe are weak. This is usually a P''neral Isck of meatiness, especi- ally in the back and loins. We Delhi brtith' profes.sor of Under the supervision of two Turkish M.P.'s, an Kugli.sh syndi- cate is excavating at the Pool of want a broad back and square, full Siloara, near Jerusalem. It con- quajters. A ram must not only sists of Captain Montague B. Park- be thick and moaty in makeup, but er, Grcaadicr Guards, brother and he miret be bold, strong and active. h«»r-preeumptite oi Lord Morloy ; j A eeratehing-shed for fowls is Mr. Clarence Wilson, Mr, Duff, a ' as indispensable a a feeding floor scratching few olo The and the the excavators. The popular belief | south side should bo left open. Iv ! in that they are searching for the j this shed the fowls will githci crowns and treasures of David and I evv-'ry dav and dust themselves br,.thor. Sir K. K. Wilson,' who'fs ; ^Ihl'Z" """^ ""'^^ '''"^' "^ '^'''^''^' Indian law and his KITCHEN HELPS. Kitchen Rules.- Strong fire for broiling. busineas has bec-ii properly handled. Here is a profit in the production of milk that is not always taken into account. The farmer lad now runs a mow- ing machine insteao of swinging the han<l scytlic, nnd if he gets $13 a month, he has his board and lodg- roasting. Clear fire for Wash vegetables iu three waters Boil fish quickly. Meat slowly. Shunming doors of oven mafcrs cnko of all. A few drops of Icmoa jiiico mokes frosting very white. Try sprinkling powdered cloves a.hout places infested with red ants. Salt in the oven under baking tins will prevent scorching on the bot- tom. Some of the modern up to dale articles which are needed in every kitchen are: A meat and vegetable cutter, a good supply ot peeling knives, a prelis for frnit /l"" ""''' , 'T-" '^"" ,'-*P andvegotbloB. 'AcoUinationdSlcater' '' ''^"''^ per only costs a quarter and is l>!iis some think are buried in region. But others believe ago while ascending the JRififelhorn in Switzerland The first experience of Sir Arthur was gained in tho Crimea War, when ho served oft Sebastopol as a twelve year-old midshipman, along tory in Cambridge University. An- i .v,„* tu â-  • i • i. • ^ other brother was killed forty years ' *-'^*' t^*"'' '.''«'» '>}')^'^. '^ .^. P'^ - . .„ one of the most useful things a woman can have. They can be used os a strainer, a funnel, a measuring cup and dipper. One can get a largo spoon, one with holes in, which can be ui«d aji a strainer or is fine for beating cake. One should certain- ly be supplied with good kettles and baking tins nnd plenty of good hraonv:* for sweeping, cleaning sinks, etc. Washing Windows â€"When wash ing windows put a few drops of turpentine in the water and you will bo able to dry them much quicker and they will be clear and bright. j llulea for Housewife. â€" Don't keep anything for the sake of keep- ing it. Don't be under tho tyranny of too many things. Don't allow a single box or drawer in your house uito which ftll sorts of things can fin<l their way for lack of attention and proper order. Have "a place DL7'''-'nir„^''r'7"^t'"?,'"''''i •â€"' â€" - tr^iuii to "sate" !%'"'"*,•''' K'^^ "P^ko about going away somewhere trying to save a few slices of, and starting a chicken farm. to save enough to purchase the clothing that his employers ex- pect him to wear at his business. Not only have tho experiment 8 edu- inany young men up to tho point where they can take good milk or good cream and mako good butter of it, uniform in qual- ity and flavor, but the yhav also taught many of them how t-o detect and reject such as will not make good butter, but if adde<l to the other will injure the good milk put with it. Some of them are so ex- pert that they can decide very quickly, when they find such milk, what may have been the cause of the trouble, odor, flavor or other causes which render it unfit for butter makinsr. It has offended some farmers to have their milk re- jected, but when the cause and the remedy are pointed out they arc usually giateful for the informa- tion. 4. A SIGN. "MacRaggles mu.st be about down and out." "What makes you think sot" I met bini yesterday and ho EVIDENCE OF PROSPERITY. ices stale bread. \ few things nicely cooked and daintily servetl from a spotlesR kitchen and pantry ^re far better and more appetir.ing than a! Mr. Bronson must get a terrible courst dinner under opposite condi- ! big salary." tionB. i "Why do you think so?" ('ooky Hint- Mix cooky dongh at "They have beet three times night and set where it is cold. In through the week and a roast near that way you can use moro skurtcn ly every Sunday." FOUGHT WITH HIS FISTS. It was at a critical moment when a corner of the British square had been torn asunder by a furious on- slaught of tho fanatical dervishes and through the gap the way seem- ed open for them to pour in and turn tho battle into absolute rout. \) ilson sprang into the breach and single handed as he was lay about him with his sword and absolutely held the enemy in check until some of the soldiers of the York and Lancaslure regiments rushed over to his assistance. When in his sav- age sword play his sword snapped off at the hilt, Wilson dropped the latter and began knocking over the dcrvishers with his fists. So full of admiration at his brav- <^ry were his fellow officers that they prer.ented to him a superb sword in place of the weapon he had UBe<J up, and tho V. C. was given him when he next reached England. Sir Arthur was Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty and Comptroller of the Navy from 189'' to 1901, and for two years there- after was commander of the Chan- nel .squadron. His home is at Swaffham, Norfolk. CONSOLATION. â€" Mrs. Knicker-Oh, Bridget, you have broken that dish in a dozen pieces I Bridget. Well, mun, bfa „so it jfor • picture puxzle. vido Jerusalem with the drinking water it sorely needs, of which there will be plenty and to spare should they tap tnt source of the â- spring. AN HISTORIC POOL. The scene of the excavations is tho spring known as St. Mary's Well, from a legend of the four- i toenth century that tlie Virgin once washed the swaddling c».thes of her Son there. It is probably identical with the pool Gihon, where David told Zadok, the priest, to appoint and annoint Solomon (I. King, ii, 33.) Numerous efforts were made to render the water available for the use of the inhabitants. Prob- ably one of the earliest is the chan- nel connecting it v.hh the Pool of Siloam, at the mouth of which wan found one of the earliest Hebrew inscriptions we possess, now at Coustantimple. which describes how the work of excavation was be- gun at both ends, ami how, by mis- calculation the two parties missed the true point of junction. SPENDING LARGE SUMS. Th<5 syndicate is working on its own atTount, and is not connected with either the Palestine Explora- tion Fund or with the American or German archaeological iustitutcs. Largo sums of money have already been expended in obtaining a per- mit, in purchasing land, and iu carrying on th© work. Over r.ixty men arc daily employed, and more than 84,600 is spent weekly in sal- aries and wages. This is the natural way for thein to protect themselves from lioe, t'leir streatest ficmv. Li(|uid Tee ! *^rs arc so vile-smelling as to render their use very unpleasant, and when applied in sufficient quanti- ties, will sometimes taint the eggs and even the flesh of fowls. WHEN THE SLEEPER WaKES. "John!" she exclaimed, jabbing her elbow into his ribs at 2.17 a.m., "did you lock the kitchen door?" And John, who is inner guard, and was just then dreaming over last evening's lodge meeting, sprang up in bed, m.ado the proper sign, and responded, "Worthy Ruler, our portals are guarded."' Oh, he hit the title right, even if he was asleep. A TRICKY PROBLEM. Ask your friends if they can write down five odd figures to add np and make fourteen. It is really astonishing how en- grossed most people will get, and how much time they will spend over this, at first sight, simple prob- lem. The questioner, however, must be careful to say figures, not numbers. Here is the answer; EXPERIENCE. Joyne.s-"I tell you, Singleton, you don t know the joys and feli- cities of a contented, married life, the happy flight of years, the long, restful calm ofâ€"" Singletonâ€" "How long have you been married?" Joynesâ€" "Just a month." Mr. W. B. Archfr, Postmaster U Campbcllford. is dead. -f. NO NOVELTY. " A tnniper.aiice lecturer h.ia proved that beer contains so much alcohol that it may be used as a» illuininant.'' " Nothing new in that, I cant drink three gla,sF<-3 of it without being all lit up. " -â€"4, EASIER TO NEGOTIATE. " You look down in the mouth. Now, don't be borrowiag trouble." "Will you lend me $6?" " Erâ€" wf 11, on second thought, perhaps you'd better go ahead anj borrow the trouble.' A pigeon coos without opcninc it? bill. Don't believe everything you host over a telephone wire. }

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy