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Hobby Forum Index » Auto » How to find a place to park.
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| curteye |
Posted: Sat May 12, 2007 10:26 am |
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How to find a place to park.
Supposedly true, this is the way I understood the story.
While on her deathbed the much
loved Sister Mary Francis asked the people
around her that if it were possible, what most they
would like her to help them with when she
reached the other side.
They said ³ Help with finding Parking Spaces².
She said she would try and they all agreed
that the more people that knew about this story,
the more ability she would have to help.
Now that you know this story, the next time
you need help parking, ask Sister Mary Francis.
Also, I believe the more people that know about
this story the better our chances of receiving help.
Thank you Sister Mary Francis.
Please pass it on.
‹c |
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| curteye |
Posted: Mon Jan 21, 2008 10:54 pm |
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that led the Chinese
to go forward so boldly in their business of buying and kidnaping
children. Even when women were brought into court for keeping
unregistered brothels, and although they were keeping them, yet if
they could show that they were "protected women," they had a fair show
of being acquitted.
Legislative enactments directed to the object of making the practice
of vice healthy for men are called, in popular language, "Contagious
Diseases Acts," because that was the first name given them. But of
late years all such laws have met with such bitter opposition, that,
like an old criminal, the measures seek to hide themselves under all
sorts of _aliases_. Mrs. Josephine Butler describes such legislation
in general in the following simple, lucid manner:
"By this law, policemen,--not the local police, but special
Government police, in plain clothes,--are employed to look after
all the poor women and girls in a town and its neighborhood. These
police spies have power to take up any woman they please, on
_suspicion_ that she is not a moral woman, and to register her
name on a shameful register as a prostitute. She is then forced to
submit to the horrible ordeal of a personal examination of a kind
which cannot be described here. It is an act on the part of the
Government doctor such as would be called an indecent or criminal
assault if any other man were to force it upon a woman. And it is
the _State_ which forces this indecent assault on the persons of
the helpless daughters of the poor.
"If a woman refuses to submit to it, she is punished by
imprisonment, with or without hard labor, _until_ she does submit.
"If, after she has endur |
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| curteye |
Posted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 1:53 pm |
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piety of my
venerable and honored grandfather Stoddard. I suppose we have been the
freest of any part of the land from unhappy divisions and quarrels in
our ecclesiastical and religious affairs, till the late lamentable
Springfield contention. [The Springfield Contention relates to the
settlement of a minister there, which occasioned too warm debates
between some, both pastors and people, that were for it, and others that
were against it, on account of their different apprehensions about his
principles, and about some steps that were taken to procure his
ordination.]
Being much separated from other parts of the province and having
comparatively but little intercourse with them, we have always managed
our ecclesiastical affairs within ourselves. It is the way in which the
country, from its infancy, has gone on, by the practical agreement of
all; and the way in which our peace and good order has hitherto been
maintained.
The town of Northampton is of about 82 years standing, and has now about
200 families; which mostly dwell more compactly toget |
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