Bottoms Part 41
Uh, yeah... right away with that suggestion Astro . I used all my processed cheese food making the fudge though :mock.
Ro...We saw Mr. Magorium's Magical whatchamacallit. It was cute for young kids. No cursing or innuendo. Drat! It was either that or shopping or something, but the teen was still sick after all, so the movie was doable for her. She's back to school today.
Ro...We saw Mr. Magorium's Magical whatchamacallit. It was cute for young kids. No cursing or innuendo. Drat! It was either that or shopping or something, but the teen was still sick after all, so the movie was doable for her. She's back to school today.
no, I'll have to ask my husband. Maybe he remembers.
Pray for my kitty everyone. I'm taking her to the vet on Fri. I hope she's alright. I worried I'll have to put her down. She's old and almost 16 years old, and crying all the time at the water bowl. I hope its just a behavior problem. She's drinking OK, and eating good. She's acts normal except at the water bowl upstairs in the bathroom. Downstairs she doesn't cry at all. So if she was in pain it seems like she'd cry all over.
Pray for my kitty everyone. I'm taking her to the vet on Fri. I hope she's alright. I worried I'll have to put her down. She's old and almost 16 years old, and crying all the time at the water bowl. I hope its just a behavior problem. She's drinking OK, and eating good. She's acts normal except at the water bowl upstairs in the bathroom. Downstairs she doesn't cry at all. So if she was in pain it seems like she'd cry all over.
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Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 12,136
Well - maybe mine is the Canadian version of the song!
In a steaming pile of hay! Hey!
So sorry that your kitty is acting up Barb. Considering she's eating and drinking well, and assuming her bathroom habits are the same, yes it sounds behavioural. And yet -its only when she is upstairs? That's unusual.
I'll pray for your kitty. My animals are everything to me. What is your kitty cat's name? You have four, right?
In a steaming pile of hay! Hey!
So sorry that your kitty is acting up Barb. Considering she's eating and drinking well, and assuming her bathroom habits are the same, yes it sounds behavioural. And yet -its only when she is upstairs? That's unusual.
I'll pray for your kitty. My animals are everything to me. What is your kitty cat's name? You have four, right?
So sorry that your kitty is acting up Barb. Considering she's eating and drinking well, and assuming her bathroom habits are the same, yes it sounds behavioural. And yet -its only when she is upstairs? That's unusual.
I'll pray for your kitty. My animals are everything to me. What is your kitty cat's name? You have four, right?
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Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 12,136
Are you talking about Ontario as in where I LIVE? Jingle bells on sleighs? On the highway? When was that written? 1854?
I drive a Honda, not a horse-driven sleigh. Mind you, I so did want to be Laura Ingalls - you ever read her books when she grew up and became a teacher but before she married Almanzo? She used to take a sleigh for her winter job as a teacher, and she had hot potatoes to warm her feet, and fur wraps to keep her warm in the frosty temps. Sigh. I would have LOVED that. AND Almanzo. So doable! Especially his jingle bells
I drive a Honda, not a horse-driven sleigh. Mind you, I so did want to be Laura Ingalls - you ever read her books when she grew up and became a teacher but before she married Almanzo? She used to take a sleigh for her winter job as a teacher, and she had hot potatoes to warm her feet, and fur wraps to keep her warm in the frosty temps. Sigh. I would have LOVED that. AND Almanzo. So doable! Especially his jingle bells
Various stories of the song's origins give the place of composition as Savannah, Georgia, Boston or Medford, Massachusetts.[1] An oft-repeated story is that he wrote it to be sung at a Thanksgiving program at his church in Savannah or Boston, but because of its instant popularity, it was sung again at the Christmas program. The copyright was granted in 1857, when Pierpont was serving as the organist for a Unitarian congregation in Savannah
Ontario (IPA: /ɒnˈtɛərioʊ/) is a province located in the east-central part of Canada, the largest by population[4] and second largest, after Quebec, (Nunavut and the Northwest Territories are larger but are not provinces) in total area.[1] Ontario is bordered by the provinces of Manitoba to the west, Quebec to the east, and the American states of Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Minnesota. Most of Ontario's borders with the United States are natural, starting at the Lake of the Woods and continuing through the four Great Lakes: Superior, Huron (which includes Georgian Bay), Erie, and Ontario (for which the province is named), then along the Saint Lawrence River near Cornwall. Ontario is the only Canadian Province that borders the Great Lakes.
The capital of Ontario is Toronto, the largest city in Canada.[5] Ottawa, the capital of Canada, is located in Ontario as well. The 2006 Census counted 12,160,282 residents in Ontario, which accounted for 38.5% of the national population.[6]
The province takes its name from Lake Ontario, which is thought to be derived from ontarĂ*:io, a Huron word meaning "great lake",[7] or possibly skanadario which means "beautiful water" in Iroquoian.[8] Along with New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Quebec, Ontario is one of the four original provinces of Canada when the nation was formed on July 1, 1867 by the British North America Act.[9]
Ontario is Canada's leading manufacturing province accounting for 52 per cent of the total national manufacturing shipments in 2004.[10]
The capital of Ontario is Toronto, the largest city in Canada.[5] Ottawa, the capital of Canada, is located in Ontario as well. The 2006 Census counted 12,160,282 residents in Ontario, which accounted for 38.5% of the national population.[6]
The province takes its name from Lake Ontario, which is thought to be derived from ontarĂ*:io, a Huron word meaning "great lake",[7] or possibly skanadario which means "beautiful water" in Iroquoian.[8] Along with New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Quebec, Ontario is one of the four original provinces of Canada when the nation was formed on July 1, 1867 by the British North America Act.[9]
Ontario is Canada's leading manufacturing province accounting for 52 per cent of the total national manufacturing shipments in 2004.[10]
Are you talking about Ontario as in where I LIVE? Jingle bells on sleighs? On the highway? When was that written? 1854?
I drive a Honda, not a horse-driven sleigh. Mind you, I so did want to be Laura Ingalls - you ever read her books when she grew up and became a teacher but before she married Almanzo? She used to take a sleigh for her winter job as a teacher, and she had hot potatoes to warm her feet, and fur wraps to keep her warm in the frosty temps. Sigh. I would have LOVED that. AND Almanzo. So doable! Especially his jingle bells
I drive a Honda, not a horse-driven sleigh. Mind you, I so did want to be Laura Ingalls - you ever read her books when she grew up and became a teacher but before she married Almanzo? She used to take a sleigh for her winter job as a teacher, and she had hot potatoes to warm her feet, and fur wraps to keep her warm in the frosty temps. Sigh. I would have LOVED that. AND Almanzo. So doable! Especially his jingle bells
Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 12,136
And I used to love when Pa would go buy their christmas gifts. Such simple times.
Except that brat Nellie. She wanted everything, the little biatch.
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