West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 9 Dec 1897, p. 2

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

We "ll tho seein' “nation " Poe - I and "bstrriber.to the following " - of the newn-npnhwu; l, If any you“ on!"- his pip" disco: “and. In In.“ [my all menu. or the publisher any commas to send it mm) pt) It!!!" Judo, 3nd "tleetthe whole “town! whether it be “in from the ottiee " not Than on be no legal (lineman-nu and ”Hummus“. I hay ponon who “in . pup" "on the poet on“, whether dun-zed to in: I... or number. or whom" be In! Sub "eibed or not in tuponuiblo tor the pr. I. " I Inburibu orders bu pup" to be, no?“ n n "rtttin tint. and the publinbec m "on to "nd,tho Inburihu'u haunt v y for it If In “in it out ot tho pos '.il2l Thin prooudl upon In [mum in . Inn In" "rtor what he nut. Of a, Best Quality (‘heapor THAN EVER. Low and insurance Agent, Con- veyancer, Oommiuloner ac. Lon. 1".an union! deny. Collection. prompt y nude, lnonnnoo “looted. - " LOAN ”Iowan "totrotintqrggt I N'M' ou door no"): od . loof- lton nudism BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ~01" If Pl‘IlJl‘. (‘0-mlu!o-cr,uc.. Phat-Class Hearqe. “County of any. In!“ “and“ to "on. I“ u mun-No gm“. J. P. TELFORD, “mum, souclm ill swam count FOR SALE The EDGE PROPERTY. 'UB-l-DEETAIUNG Promptly attended to. JAKE HESS. Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building Iota, will be sold in one or more bu Also lot No. 60. con. 2, w, G. R., town-hip of Bentlnck. 100 acres adjoin- ing Town plot Durham. In the Town of Durham, County of Grey. including "Ruble Wnter Power W. L. MCKENZIE, _ MONEY TO LOAN, Fire Insurance secured. ”MCI. ovun and. no". Loan Tm ALLAN MCFARLANE Hand-made Waggons JAMES LOCKIE, 'utsldemuar--airtt, M., Hanover. In the old stand. All hand, made shoes. Also Horse Shoeing Shop, 850 ER of Murine Lieu-on. Ano- uoueu for Counties of Bruce and any. Hurtgage taken for M purchase ‘ICENSED AUCTIONEEB, for th JAKE KBESS Bu opened out a f1rst-elass Furniture HUGH McKAY. "ll who found in bin Old Stand opposite the Dawn Bauer. MISCELLANEOUS. N ewepuper Laws. Jobbing of ill kinds promptly ALLAN MoFARLANE, WOODWORK Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge mu, Ont, in connection. A flrgt-olast, lot of DURHAM- for sale cheap. LEGAL W moo Duh.- 0M D FALL PLOWING. Fall plowing has its advantages tn disadvantages. It often expedite: work in the spring by having so much (- your ground plowed when spring work begins. The plowing can be don: when the weather is cool Ind th, ground in good condition. l have plo"- at my I writer. as late as Christmas and got a large crop of outs put on early, whereas if I had waited til spring the teams would have had a lot of extra hard work, and no doubt momr of the ground would have been plowed too wet. I think fall plowing for oata is more desirable than for corn, for oats want 3 firm bottom. with a fine, mellow surface. while corn requires a deep, mellow seed lied. This latter can be had roost easily by spring plow- ing. There is one particular disadvan- tage in fall plowing clay ground, and that is where it has a tendency to run together or puddle, thereby becoming very hard, so that it is difficult I'l get it in good shape with the toolsl and implements used by a majority of farmers. On such land it requires more than a spike-tooth barrow to loosen these hard plat-es. “her: they are soft enough to work up easily the other parts of the field are too wet. Nothing but a sharp cultivator or a disk barrow or some such tools will make any Impression on such hard spots. On sand or sandy loam this trouble does not wear and fall plowing can always be done at an advantage. But with proper tools fall plowing on clay ground van be done with 3 great saving and rrops can he got in earlier. 1 am now speaking of such crops as oats. barley. upring wheat or peas. My land isrlay loam and will run togeth- er by freezing and thawing and become hard in spots. This I avoid somewhat by plowing in narrow lands and drain- ing out well hy opening out. furrows ohm» ter' needed to worry off the wa- ter in the spring. This also enables me to get the spring rrops sown earlier. I van always get on this ground lo ”lurk Mug before the land will do to than... In tact the crops can be sewn. ter in the spring. This also enahlvs we to get the spring crops sown 1",11"r') 1 run always get on this ground to work long hefora the land will do to plow. ln tart the crops can be sown. it proper :ittt-nt ion to draining is had, by the time. the ground would he int gum! condition to plow. l I run a utrong advocate of fall plow- ing for everything but corn and pota- toeq, and I don't doubt it would he n well in a good many instances to fall plow for those two crops. But I hare never yet. done so. Much depends on the mature of the soil-its liability to become parked and hard, requiring use much work to fit it as it would to plow it. I have never yet dared to try it on my Soil. A sandy soil or any soil that will not become hard will do, hut l would not advise it on a clay soil. It might do for my neighbor, huggpot at all for me. So you see that no: fartrr- er would judge for himself and not tall plow everything he has got from read- ing! some article in favor of it without first, studying the conditions of his own soil. Another thing you must take into ronsideration, and that is the lent-hing of the soil by lying bare all winter. A great deal of fertility is, sometimes lost in this way. Where the Soil is covered' with snow, or re- ‘Utllin‘i frozen. the loss is not so great. lhut where it remains bare and subject to falling rains, that wash and leach, a. great, amount is lost. Corn ground in this country is usually put to oats, land the loss in this respect would be last great. without plowing in it would ..:.i. f.- Hm artinnri remains bare in PRACHCAL FARMING I DRYIVH OFF COWS. Nearly every "ne has doubtless read animated discussions on the subject of drying off cows, and no doubt has won- cered why there is such a diversity ot opinion about it. Some of our cows that came in [Mt tall and gave from twelve to sixteen pounds of butter I week are still jogging along, giv- ing about seven pounds a week, says e writer in Farm. Stock and mane,' while others that came in about the lame time have been dry fot several weeks. 30 it will be seen that cow. differ very much as to their period of lactation. Now, it one farmer has rows all of the first-mentioned kind, tad another farmer's herd is composc l lion. In some cases it is not an easy ‘umlter to control the conditions. In [Sinking a site for this purpose a high _ piece of ground should he selected and this should be well drained. In the vast majority of cases. the root. cellar (is made by staking out apiece of ground 12x24 feet, or the size that Inlay he desired, removing the earth In ithis anlmure to the depth ot from fthree and one-half to tour feet. After the earth is removed a four-invh tile is run thrnugh the middle and this t'tttie neyts with a larger tile in the usual "uy. The Mirth that is taken nut of the arm: may he ""terwards used to voter the roof, and cheaply constrnctml by using ordinary cedar posts and boarding up on hath outside and in, _aud afterwards connecting in a gable roof on top. 'he germ of this controversy is found Hi the tact that one man is milking rude Shorthorns. or cows similar in "rnformation. that have the meat- making habit. and consequently when he stops milking them they gradually slop elaborating milk and commence -onvertirut their food into meat. The other is milking the lean, Jiairs-rredl, low that has never wquired the hab-; it of converting food into meat, so that whatever she eats over and above her food of support she persistently' puts into her udder, and if milked only wave a day she will give twice as much in the one milking as she would if she. were milked twice a day. And if three milkings are allowed to accumu- late in her udder inflammation will set, in and the mischief he to pay. So a little judgment should be used in this matter, and each cow be treat- ed according to her individual charac- teristics. If the cow is of the general purpose type. and one thinks she has uiven milk long enough, and needs a few ueeks' rest before coming in, dry her off by first milking only once. a day. and in the course of ten or twelve days skip two milkings. and don't milk clean, and in this way she will gradu- ally change from milk to meat produc- tion. But with the spare cow. eSpeci- ally if she is a hardy feeder, one should he very careful about compelling her to dry off; it she keeps up her normal flow, in spite of milking once a day, you had better not attempt to let two milking periods pass without carefully examining her udder. and then he gov- erned by the symptoms it shows. -d of the other kind, their experiences ~0uld be radically.different, and both, mowing by experience that they are firm. will be very likely to dispute -.er the question. Both will agree mat a cow should have a couple of .lunths' rest. but one will say: "My ow refuses to go dry:" The other will ay: "Stop milking her.'" The first me will say: "I cant, for fear of in- jurirur>tydder." _Thn other_§h‘il_l Irs..") will do nothing of the kind. t have done it a thousand times, and mac never had I single case where any Injury was donei” . _ . In well regulated farm prartir'e the root, cellar is Indispensable. It is a well-knownfact that, when roots, vege- tables and tubers are stored away they are liable to undergo decomposi- The boards used for this purpose should be thnroughly soaked in mine disint'ettnnt, preferably in a solution of hi-chloride of mercury or vorrosive sult- limale. Lime is much cheaper. but is not, nearly so strong a disinfectant as hi-vhloride of morvut‘y. If the precau- tion of soaking the timbers and, boards in lri-Hilorrle uf ttiHrt'Ur.h' is not taken it is more than likely that the struc- ture will not last it great length of time. The top of the roof should be covered over with sixteen int-hes u soil. The ventilator is placed at the further end and consists of a Irrick chimney 4xitineheu, but it should he pussiMe to regulate. the opening. For the opening in the front end a brick wall may be erected “ith stairs and " trap door toihe outside, thus prevent- ing sudden changes of air. If one de- aires to spend more money the struc- ture may be huiit of hrick and arched, but if it is "ruled it “ill require walls of ('unsitlnruhlt- "thicknvss. Such a vel., Far will last for a great many years. Frank 'titter or m. Lottin Ila: " In"! Damon "" Catirinrttttem. Frank Ritter, one of tho oldest and best-known saloon-keepers in St. Louis. Mo., is turning slowly into rhnlk. His remarkable case “as brought to the attention of the Southern Surgit-al and G.vnecolosrival Association in van- vention in that vify, and he has hum Five years ago doctors told him he would die slowly. Mrwe then they have out off his left leg in eight chalky sections, and now part of the right. leg is like that of n statue, and the time is coming when that limb, too, must he taken away. Both of the hands are so affected that their use- fulness is nearly gone. ___ _ _ The disease is called calcification by? Dr Elisha Gregory, who pronounres Ritter's case the nuest perfect type of gout knodn to tne savants. Hitler realizes he is half dead, lrut viewsthe situation with rare good nature. He has amassed a fortune, and every day sits in his saloon watching the rrowds pass and teasing his pemsise acquaint- ances for their lack of good humor. Dr. Gregory's diagnosis is that the valcifieation is caused by the lime salts of the body entering into the gouty limhs, which are perfectly passive, and therefore. unable to throw off the accumulation. so that the lime drift is converted Into chalk, the vitality in the passive limbs being so low there is no resistance. I Yeast-Were you ever up in the morning to up t_h_e sup rise? Bl'rLD A GOOD ROOT CELLAR ""'""iiiGi.l'uyaboair--Yes, but I was only up twice as late u that. THE REASON WHY. Qatzzesr--Baa Jones a happy home life! Guyer-Yas; he's away most of the ONI .Y TWICE GUILTY. -q_------ ROUND IHE Ell WORM). WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE POUR CORNERS OF THE GLOBE. OM and New World Event. of Intern! Chron- Iclcd Brtefty-taterestm. Naomi-u ot Recent Dan. The Duke of Argyle has held his title for fifty years. Liverboél has voted $22.M.000 for the further extension of its dock sys- tem. Havre's Chamber of Commerce has petitioned the French Parliament to make the town and harbour a free port. Naples University is to have new buildings. The Prince and Princess of Naples have just laid the corner atone: of them. The French executioner, Deihler, who recently retired from his position at the age of 63. had been in service forty years and disposed of 508 culprits. _0\ving to the failure of the grain crop there is a fodder famine in Rua- sia. and peasants are selling their oat- tle and horses for anything they can get. Irish donkeys are being cent out in large numbers to South Africa. Five thousand pounds has already been spent in three counties alone. At a meeting of the British and Foreign Bible Soviets at Birmingham the Bishop of Coventry found that his coat and umbrella hail been stolen. The thief turned out to be a local preacher . Hendrik Ibsen is going to Berlin next spring on invitation, for the celebra- tion of his 7lst birthday. It is expect- ed that this occasion will be made the opp'nrtunity for an important lbsenito demonstration Hansen the ongIm-er of the excur- sion train that “as wrecked nearCux» enhagen last Bummer. having been held responsible for the disaster. has been sentenced to four months' imprison- ment and to a fine of 44,875crowns, or $120,026.50. Lady Ernestine Brudenell-Brm-e, daughter of the Marquis of Ailesbury, wants to sell her own yacht. and has applied to the Hoard of Trade to he examined for a master's vertifivate. The board refuses m examine her be- cause she is a woman. A perfect skeleton of the extinct; Irish elk has been disvovered at, Bella- tough. in the Isle of Man. It was found in a standing pmiti in ten feet beneath the surface. The Irish elk was the contempnrary in Britain of the maul- moth and of the woolly rhinoceros. So great has been tho demand for Scotch whiskey of late that, according tothe Pall Mall Gazvtte,onlyt11elest houses have any matured spirits left. The Irish "ranutaeturers in t-onse- quence, are trying to revive the ling- lisn taste for old Irish whiskey. l new anaesthetic “hich relieves at once the pain of deep burns. of ulcers and of ram-er has been "iswovered by Drs. F.ichorn and Heinz. of Munich. It is a preparation of lenzumethylim-ther inthe form of a powder. to whieh the name orthoform has been given. According to the Westminster Ga- zette. the reason no biography has ever been written of Mr. Delano the late editor of the London Times, is that the proprietors of tho Times hawalunys forlridden it. Recently a fresh appeal was made to them Lat, it is said with- out success. When Prof. Virchow, of Beriin. was in Russia a few weeks ago a deputv. tion of women physicians visited him and thanked him for having thrown open his lecture mom and Ialortdory to a Russian “Oman when the Ger- man universities did not admit fe- male students. Ruhonic plague threatens all north- ern India now, the effort: to restrict it. to the Bombay diatrirt having proved unriuceessrul. It has broken out at Hurdwar, a map-e of prlgrirn- age on the Ganges. frequented by great crowds, among them many re- ligious mendieants. A new trade route between India and eastern Persia has been establish- ed. which runs for Lali’ the distance through the lands under British pro- tevtion and shortens the journey by a month. It runs frrm Quetta toMrtr. had. 1,032 miles. Wells have Leendug and posts established along the road. It has taken seven years to huildtho colt'ussnl mausoleum of Czar Alexander II. in the Kremlin at. Moscow. The sta- tue, by Opekouvhine is sixteen leet high: it stands on a pedestal of Fin- land granite, twenty-three feet high. and is surmounted by a granite cupola the gilt bronze roof of whivh rises to a height. of 100 feet. It has cost 1,500,000 roubles. An extraordinary motor var has been patented in Frame. It is vom- posed of two large wheels five feet in diameter. mounted on a common axle, the Indy being lit-tween the wheels. The motor revolves at high speed round a vertical axis. and, acting like a gyro- scope. keeps the vehicle from tipping over. The steering apparatus is very intricate. M. Casimir Parlor. late President of the French Republic, arrived at a vil- lage inn near Sens recently uith his son both on bicycles. They wanted meat for their lunch, but the landlady had none. She suggested. however, that if they would guto the butcher's in town for it thrsmselves sh; could col it, so the ex-President mounted his wheel and fetrhed his own steak. The London World reports that Rud- yard Kipling, who hue. been cycIimz m Dorsetshire with Thomas Hardy. is ne- gotiating for the purThase of a house and grounds at Rodwell. near Irorvhes,.. ter. An unpopular divinity professor at Mareschal Coll-ge of Aberdeen I'ni- varsity began his course of lectures ro- TORONTO has vently by . prayer. no , ed by the students wt lwgauded and cried ' beginning his lecture be pntil mother professor, mg that the students WI draw to" his manusvr and walked out of the r was bEADLY Most people have story of the deadly of which it was tbt ol WM (lr'lll.li, $hllf Yea, By If It is the cue that he who makes two blades of grass grow where only one had grown before is a benefactor of the race. what in the position to be accorded that man who by his know- ledge of the lawn ot life and health gives energy and strength where lan- guor, weakness and anticipation of an early death had before prevailed? in not he also I public benefactor? Let the” who have been down and are now up through the ule ot South Am- erican Nen'ino give their opinions on this subject. John Boyer, bunker. of K!ttcardlne, Ont., had made himself a hopeless lm and through years of over- work. At least he hit his case we. hopeless, tor the best phyliciuu had failed to do him good. He tried Nor- vino, and those are his word: '. " t glad- ly I" it: Nervlne cured me um] I 1 Hawaii Winesnmn am! Rlmttl In ll: 1lpi)lltilfiiii, The Same Verdict Come 4 From Old and Young, Mate dad Pettttti' Rich and Poor. and From All Corners of the Dominion. (m, to-6ny 18 gtronx and well as even": Funnel Ellyn, of Meoford. was curd n1. 'neumigia of the stomach end hon-Haj by three battles ot this medicine. Jas.' Sherwood. of Windsor, at 70 years oti use, suffered from an attack of paraly-‘ sis. His life, at that age. wu despair- ed ot. Hut tour bottles ot Newme gave him back his natural strength Al. tictirn ot indigestion. W. F. Bola-1". i" Renfrew. says: "Nervine cured me of my nutter-inc, which seemed incur-l able. and had baffled an torn- me-' thods and efforts.” Peter mason, of Paisley, lost flesh and rarely and A good night's sleep. because o' stomach trouble. He says: ., Ne:vine stopped the uonising pains in my stomach the first day I used it. I have now taken two bottles and I feel entirely relieved 'Ind can sleep like . top." A repre- sentative farmer. ot Western Ontario, is Mr. C. J. Curtis, residing near Wind- sor. His health was seemingly corn- pletoly destroyed through " grippe. No Int-divine did him any good. "To three bottles of Nervino," he lays. " attribute my restoration to health and strength." Neither man or woman can enjoy life when troubled with liver complaint. This we. the sentiment and feeling ot W. J. Hill, the well.. l known Milli! ot Bracebridge. "I we: l an had" ---- _ Where Other Medicines Have Failed and Doctors Have Pronounced the Cases Beyond Cure, This Great Discovery Has Proven a Genuine Elixir ot Life. so bad," says he. "tha median! attendants sat! dying. but. thank God, I yet. From the first In: of Nervine I commenced ter, and am to-dnv I‘Au'nl u. nervxne I commenced to ter, and am to-day restored t to my uaual health." A th the Maritime Provinces, In t n! A. Jones, of Sussex. N.B.. a twelve you: I was t warty nation. constipation and "Fe treatment of *PNrrsrtt1 l, did not he]. me. I J m iiiriiroi"fiIgiitrEc1l0 "i:jijNtil'ft ti0iRjllll))llt2 ', iFth8lliillliiill3,, l FOR TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS. ".%Pu+9". "Br-""" - LARGEIT SALE m CANADA. , appruuwu .. his story was treated as fable. but now it seems as actually some basis of 1 it. The upas tree is a', ,., ' In the By the Hundreds, Those Who Have Been Cured of Dire Disease By South American Nervine. th. [Wm v- 7, _ and evenluallv death. _________...1 THE VATICAN. :ndiswsition of the raised llm qua-Minn of naked the question of i--.-.n. a prohlem which, ‘er been satisfm'lorily re no teuer than ll,- Mo Papal Palaee, and new-r receive a ray of Laponi, the physician has tried by all the. ..-.. tra maintain 3 nor- It now .. my-.. lly some basis of real upaS tree is a real big one. In the old over an inch thick. __ a!“ n... m, [a was interrupt- who it the and “Encore!" On be was tidotedtt or, Uter find- would not with- ..-rint from him the Pore, An ar- med " plan for all through the p. (out was men- " .rw unset I took lenced to feat but. reutored oompletely t." A resident ot aces, In the person Tr. N.B.. an : "Fur I n martyr to Indt- e-r-r--"-"'"'?:".:"-'"-'"'-':",; _-----'" oys:,tintg,rue','li" l THE GREY “my "that ‘one of least heard the a tree of "at, time said, thet aid that I L I am not 'iew Gage. I I to health and an or woman tloled with liver the sentiment Hill. the well.. held-who. {II not l Phyrsicuatu, ' is cor [than u law ', cppuc sale by \TrFarlzma not dead rms: . ’01.”. cm “110' Bdite ”VIIW Head oeiiU" Toronto. OAPITAL. Authorized $1,000.00. " Paid x13 1,000,” RESERVE FUN 600.00. StandardBauk of Canada w. P. them. AGENTS in all Ontario. '3'...” and Indium. Annual Bulking bunt-cu tun-MM MS, sued And oulloottonl and. on I" when. - " wound Ind that.“ .iloar6d " Huron. - SAVINGS BANK. more“ “lowed on It brd upwudl. Promp -A_‘-A i.,,cLs- " " “l' " - -- _ ' - Mord“! o m toner- LICENSED AUCTIONEEB tor 00. of Gray. All oomnnniondon- ad. dressed to LAILAII P. o. will be prompt] umndod to. Ramona Lot Mr, Col. 'l Township of Bent"; " u ' n I. DAN. McLEAN. in). that l am a new man." A shwwd observer ot human new" hu laid: .. The hand that ruck! UN cradle moves the world." How in.- portant it ll. then, that health ad strength should be made the tot " the mothers ot thio country. The ww men of Ctnnda are many by emu-u ttt ‘teii of the benettttt that be " v-ame to ithem through the use of South Amati- can Serving. urn. R. Armstrong. " {Grimm wife of the oolporteur. ot tit. IBibie Society or that town, sum-red itor six years from nervous proatntton. int-dim! assistance did not halo. "ltt gall." she an. .. I hnve “ken - bottle! :0! Nervine. And can truttstttBr n! WI ii: the one medicine thtt bu effected c cure in my an." Mrs. John Lun- iwoody has been for w you. a. resident lot Pinherton. and he: “who“ the al- dotted three-Icon yen-o and ten '1"th 9'“?! on her "Item Dutchmen '. HW- fre shock through the dentin ot a iGlimmer. Nervtne m revomntev "d. She persever"mq1y took " botties ot medieine, with the result that she is to- day Ill!!! strong and hearty, tum- 'puietu of women suffer from [mpm' trtrcit- In Mien ot Nervine, S GREGISTBYUFFICE. Thom“ I Lamur,RNpure... John A, Munro, Deputy-Regina“. offioo beam from 10 Thursday Morning. "in.io4 will. Itake South American Nurvlm‘. must say I do believe that if f mot done lo I would not br alive 'duy.” ed blood and weakened nerves _. Alt vitality." sayl Mrs. J. "llis, " Brampton, "seemed to have fort-ah"! my system. I wa- unable to RM 1'3' ttef from my source until I cr-mmn ""1 taking South American Nervinu, t F 0 results are most tqbtittrat'tor.v---qrro' P far than I could have imp“ for." 't can. within the way of Mrr " 5‘1 I' - leton. of \Vinghun. to iron: undrr [ - bent physicians. both in Cumin Iv! Ensltnd. for heart dileaae arm ttora'- ‘ous debiUty, but she failed to not 4le “relief: " 1 W18 ndvised. ' she “VA . IO 'lt the nerve center: from “ml-h 17*. Hue lite brad of the whole systwr " H. not I medicine of patchwork "1 1" eomptete and comprehensive m in Prymeation . Newspaper "Nut " too vttlr:th'r' 90 permit of further additions to tl: " oarnut word! ot temimouy from l. ( " Who know Just what they av» ture 2 "rout. In the common rauqtrut 1 tin day, they have [wen there, at"! t'.e "revies. from the heart. Th" " 2m or more witneesel the here 5pm.; ',t mh i their counterparts by the hurrd:, l. not only in the province ot "mi -‘ " but In every other action ot the l‘w~~xv~.- ion. Sou." American Nervlne ite l ' , on a twentmc ptheiNe that nu-“v-I . cure I certainty, no maum. Luv: , - Nate the one may be. I; vi!' s DURHAM new“: omen. -/iir. a mum war a mum- J' KELLY, “on. Til-xii u A and cu: trumtuny bunt 405mm! u ot " ntlon 994 our, tum DAN. HOLE“. u, F NW ad ll ld In "but the had steadily "W. , m I oo" If" an npver star tt In ruin tor Na M on nddrw fr In I! DI hand ment end l There in th apt-cu some some know. I ' Iimply imp Um, with I dingy reeta to-morroxs I orion. h I matrllnonln wife tw?. Pl diet From No nu? " no that (In the ugline- off. sudden “mar Isa! He will!!! gonad on I "No one heard " he completely opened and ha! [creed drel to her; tl Ive urn I on! He ll) rt rely O , pitileaar um FO " Dr A I rue \\ ' ill " " ck M CRAP 50"]! in nu if tbe I VOIN " " or Cl ahoulA " "I! (in tre It My LN on for " 'l'l pm "

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy