T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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411.1 | Send in the clowns..... | POWDML::OCG_TEMP | | Fri Oct 12 1990 11:03 | 11 |
| I'm in the process of making my 2 1/2 month old his Halloween costume.
He's going to be a clown. I bought him one of those big red sponge
ball noses. He looks so cute with it on. He doesn't even try to pull
it off, he just gets cross eyed wondering what it is that's on his
nose. I'll only leave it on him just long enough to snap a few
pictures. His costume is going to be bright stripes and he'll have
orange hair and a clown hat. I'll just take him to the neighbors.
He's way too young to understand what's going on, but he can get the
candy so his dad and I can eat it! :-) :-)
Lori B.
|
411.2 | you mean halloween's for kids??? | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Oct 12 1990 11:25 | 29 |
| Steven's going to be Donatello, too. He wanted to be Leonardo,
but the costume only came in Donatello and Raphael. It has a foam
turtle shell and everything, really looks authentic. It doesn't
have a plastic mask, it has one of those scarves with the eyeholes
cut into it.
Steven wants David to dress up and go trick or treating too.
David would probably get a kick out of it, too, but we'll see.
Which parent goes trick or treating and which stays home depends
on the year and the inclination. Last year when David was only a
month old, I stayed home and Neil took Steven. When I go, I dress
up too (one year I was Boy George -- that was fun).
This year I'm thinking of staying home and decorating the house
like something only a little scary. I was thinking of a pirate
ship, or maybe a treasure cave.
Jack o'lanterns -- if you want to use the flesh to make pie, carve
them the same day, or the night before and keep them in the
freezer. If you don't want to use them, you can probably carve
them a week or so ahead of time and have them still be in decent
condition by Halloween, depending on the weather. They'll last
longer if you only leave them out in the evening and put them in
the fridge during the day.
Votive candles work very well for pumpkin lights.
--bonnie
|
411.3 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Fri Oct 12 1990 13:24 | 5 |
| Bonnie,
Doesn't the candle smoke foul the pumpkin?
Linda
(who would love to make a Thanksgiving pumpkin pie out
of the Halloween pumpkin, talk about recycling!)
|
411.4 | A tree and leaves? | ISTG::HOLMES | | Fri Oct 12 1990 14:04 | 14 |
| Last week Brian (3 1/2) had decided that he would be a doctor and that
Neil (4 months) should be a tree. I have no idea where he got that
idea from. This week though, he decided that *he* should be a tree,
Neil should be a bunny that could climb up the tree (no, I didn't know
bunnies could climb trees either!) and that his Mom and Dad should be
leaves on the tree. Could be interesting...
As far as who stays with the house and who goes trick-or-treating, so
far no-one's ever wanted to stay home and miss seeing Brian do his
trick-or-treating. So, we've been selfish and closed up the house and
all gone with him. We've only gone to 7 or 8 houses though so it hasn't
taken too long. I'm not sure what we'll do this year.
Tracy
|
411.5 | Of mice and sieves | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Fri Oct 12 1990 14:26 | 27 |
| Alex is going to be "A mouse. Not Mighty Mouse, Mummie, and not Mickey
Mouse. Just a mouse." We bought some charcoal-gray Polar Fleece (and
some dove gray for a tummy/hidden patch pocket) and a very simple
pattern to which I'm adding distinctive touches (like padded cheeks,
from which protrude pipe-cleaner whiskers).
re pumpkin pie: If you reeeeeaaaally want to make one, I'd get a couple
of little pumpkins specifically for the pie (I've found them thick-
walled and therefore hard to carve - but that gives you more "meat per
sphere" and the little ones might be sweeter). My take: about once a
decade a streak of culinary self-righteousness surfaces and I do something
REALLY dumb, like try to make a pie from a real pumpkin. I will never,
EVER, push a pumpkin through a sieve again!!! Yes it WAS already cut
up in pieces and steamed soft, like squash.... The proliferation of
food processors probably renders this warning null & void but if you
delude yourself, as I did, into thinking that getting back to the
basics should go all the way back to manually pureeing pumpkins--lemme
tell ya, it's a lot like WORK. It tasted great but I could barely
summon the strength in both arms to get the fork to my face.
I would imagine that the candle smoke *would* lend a distinctive taste
;'P though I'm not sure it would "foul" it. What I want to know is,
how would you wrestle a still-perfectly-marvelous jack o'lantern away
from your kids??? Our pumpkins have to collapse in on themselves
before Alex will concede spoilage.
Leslie
|
411.6 | AJ wants to be A firefighter...like Dad! | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Fri Oct 12 1990 17:20 | 19 |
| This year AJ wants to be a Firefighter. Now since dad's a *real*
firefighter this costume will not be allowed to be anything but
*authentic*. I plan on hitting the fabric store on the way home and
making a yellow coat, his snowsuit from last year had black bib type
pants (just like dad's) and I'll put reflective tape on the sleeves and
bottom of the coat, for more reason's than looks. The helmet is up for
debate right now, dad's helmet is a bit heavy for a 3.5yr old, and the
plastic ones look so fake. I'll smudge a little "smoke" on his face
instead of a mask. (I found that Scotch brand makes a 2" reflective
tape great for costumes. Bought it at Ziff Paperworld in Worcester)
Our town has specified Trick or Treat hours, I think it's 6pm to 8pm.
It's good from the point that you can at least get a snack into the
kids before going out, and you haven't got the kids hounding you at
9:30pm!
Lyn
|
411.7 | hahahaha | POWDML::OCG_TEMP | | Fri Oct 12 1990 17:21 | 1 |
| re: .5 hahahaha I can't stop laughing.
|
411.8 | Ideas for Grownup parties??? | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Fri Oct 12 1990 17:23 | 11 |
| Can I add a twist to this? What do the ADULTS do for costumes? We've
been invited to the fire chief's home for a combination Halloween, and
surprise birthday party. Not having much experience dressing up
adults, How about some ideas??
BTW, the Chief is an ordinary type guy, it's a fairly small town and
most of the people invited will be the firefighters, EMT's and their
spouses.
Lyn
|
411.9 | Just a mask | MCIS2::WALTON | | Sun Oct 14 1990 21:00 | 8 |
| Just get a mask, rather than a whole costume.
I found a really pretty bird mask, with green feathers all over it and
a yellow beak, for about 3:00.
I am wearing it to work on Halloween!
|
411.10 | Fun and more fun | CIVIC::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Mon Oct 15 1990 10:27 | 15 |
| Sally wants to be a fairy for Halloween and she has (or we can make)
evrything except wings. Does anyone know how to make easy wings?
There's some method with stockings and hangers - any clues? Last year
she was Little Red Riding Hood and collected candy in her basket.
Kathleen wants to be a clown AND a fairy, so I guess one is for school
and one is for trick-or-treating. Does anyone know where I can get a
sponge-type clown nose, in NH? Last year she was an orange crayon!
Our town (Goffstown, NH) declares trick-or-treating on a Sunday
afternoon. I used to think that that was very un-Halloween, but with
small children I appreciate it! We do our neighborhood as a family,
then scurry home to hand out candy to everyone else.
I really enjoy Halloween.
|
411.11 | Kmart for Noses | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Mon Oct 15 1990 10:35 | 7 |
| re .10
Saw sponge type clown noses at K-mart yesterday. Not sure of the
proximity for Goffstown to Manchester, but I know there's a Kmart in
Manchester (the road connecting Hookset to Manchester what ever it is)
How about just painting her nose red, just like the circus clowns do?
|
411.12 | Adult Costumes For Pego Mom | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Mon Oct 15 1990 12:34 | 23 |
|
HELP!
We are going to a "Make Believe Ball" at the Groton Country Club on
October 27th. My husband is going to go as "Phantom of the Opera." He
has a tuxedo and just needs a half-mask.
The problem is moi. I am pregnant--starting my 2nd trimester and what,
oh what, do I wear? I don't want to look out of synch with hubby--but
let's face it--my waist is going, going, gone and I definetly can't get
away with acting the ingenue to his Phantom.
Also, I don't have time to make myself a costume. Whatever I get, has
to be either creatively quick--or store bought.
Where do I go to get a costume that will fit my prego bod? Who carries
adult costumes and what size do I get?
Help Help Help
Bonnie
|
411.13 | usually only the lid gets burned | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Oct 15 1990 13:01 | 19 |
| re: pumpkins and candles
Maybe it's because I trained my kids early, but they look forward
to the pumpkin pies almost as much as to the jack-o-lantern.
The candle generally only smokes up the inside of the top (the
lid), though if you have a large candle or a small pumpkin it can
sometimes cook the insides and spoil it.
The easiest way to mash pumpkin is with a potato masher -- I've
got the kind with a ring around the outside criss-crossed with
wires in a square pattern, but the kind with the back-and-forth
squiggle works just as well. It is work but I think the extra
taste is worth it.
I'll post the directions in the recipes note in case anyone's
interested.
--bonnie
|
411.14 | L'il Lion | SLSTRN::HAY | | Mon Oct 15 1990 14:28 | 20 |
| Samantha (9 months) is going to be a "L'il Lion", ordered from
Childcraft. It's got a brown sleeper pajama that she can wear plain
afterwards to bed; a button-on looooooong tail; and a removable hood
complete with little lion ears and a nice big fluffy mane made out of
fake fur fabric. We've only tried the hood on so far, and she looks so
cute! She grabbed big scoops of the mane, made a grrrrrrr noise, and
stuffed it in her mouth. Can't wait, can't wait!
We're having a "baby party" for the 5 kids in the neighborhood who
range in age from 10 weeks to 1 year, should be a cute photo-taking
opportunity if nothing else. This will be the Sunday afternoon before
Halloween. Then on Halloween night my husband and I plan to take her
around to a few houses, then run home and answer our own doorbell.
We both like Halloween so much we hate to miss _anything_. It's so fun
to see the kids, especially toddlers who are just beginning to
understand. I'm glad our neighborhood finally has a bunch of kids to
come to the door, last year was depressing!
|
411.15 | Funniest Video worth prize | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Mon Oct 15 1990 14:41 | 8 |
| Just wanted to add a note that the TV program "America's Funiest
Video's) Sunday 8pm eastern time, mentioned that they will award a
prize ($10K I think) for funniest Halloween video sent in. So when you
haul out the video camera for Halloween it might hold a prize for you...in
more ways than one!!
Lyn
|
411.16 | How about a pregnant BB player? | BSS::VANFLEET | Noting in tongues | Mon Oct 15 1990 15:15 | 9 |
| - a few
Bonnie -
A friend of mine was about to deliver on Halloween. She wore a midrift
top and painted a basketball on her belly, wore shorts and athletic
socks and high tops.
Nanci
|
411.17 | may not go with Phantom of Opera,it looked good | KAHALA::CAMPBELL_K | Looks like someday is here! | Mon Oct 15 1990 15:15 | 4 |
| I had a friend who dressed in a baggy clown costume when she was
eight months pregnant.
Kim
|
411.18 | Costume ideas | LEZAH::MINER | he who laughs - lasts. | Mon Oct 15 1990 15:35 | 28 |
| To .12 - Costume ideas:
You could be one of those wonderful Fairy Godmother types.
They are always a little plump and carry terrific wands and a sparkly
mask would be fun and in keeping with your husband's costume!
Or...how about the type of gown (like in Dangerous Liaisons) where
the gown hugs your upper body but is billowy with hoops and petticoats
from just below the diaphragm - you could wear one of those masks
with the feathers...
The previous suggestions do not take into consideration cost,
clearly...
For the cost conscious: how about being a musical note? That would be
in keeping with the "Phantom" theme. You could make yourself round
with pillows, dress in black and have a black stick with a "flag" or
two hanging off it going up in the air?! (removable of course when
the dancing begins...;-) )
You can see I'd rather be creative than work today!
Good luck,
Dorothy
|
411.19 | masher vs. sieve | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Mon Oct 15 1990 15:38 | 3 |
| I sieve'd it for finer texture - your mileage (preference) may vary.
L.W.
|
411.20 | | COGITO::FRYE | | Mon Oct 15 1990 18:17 | 7 |
| I had a friend who was very pregnant come to a party in her wedding
gown......
Norma
P.s. Congrats, Bonnie!
|
411.21 | I love halloween!!!! | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Tue Oct 16 1990 07:09 | 33 |
| The funniest thing I find with Halloween is when the kids come to the
door and just ring the door bell and stand there with their bags open.
If the kids are old enough, I will reach in and take some candy out.
You should see the looks on their faces!! If you don't say "trick or
treat" you don't get anything!! I've asked kids what they want when
they are just standing there. They must think I'm crazy but I think
they can at least say "trick or treat" - pretty simple for getting
candy.
To avoid any "problems" with car loads of kids coming to our
neighborhood, I will have seperate bags for the neighborhood kids and
just give 1 or 2 pieces of candy to those I don't know. I will usually
include a candy apple or some cut-out cookies in the neighborhood bags
with a poem attached saying it is from us (or I will hand deliver if
I'm the parent walking around with our son or personally notify the
parents that they can expect some home-made goodie in there child's
bag in advance). The kids seem to get real excited about "odd" treats -
I guess even snickers bars can get to be old hat for a kid.
Every year our neighborhood has an adult halloween party. The first
year there were alot of people who rented costumes. They next year,
anyone with a rented costume was not admitted. They award a bottle of
champagne for the best costume and have started a plaque with the
annual winners on it. My husband has been the winner every year (with
much thanks to me and my incredible imagination and costumes made the
night before!!)
Halloween is for adults. We just have to use the kids to get the
candy!!
I think those 5-crayon sets are great as well for the little kids.
Andrea
|
411.22 | what night in Nashua? | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Oct 16 1990 10:52 | 4 |
| Does anyone know what the official trick or treat night is for
Nashua NH this year?
--bonnie
|
411.23 | Pictures for trick or treat | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Tue Oct 16 1990 16:59 | 13 |
| re .21 good ideas, it reminded me of something an older neighbor couple
always do, instead of giving candy to the kids, they take a polaroid
picture of each child and give it to them, plus a silver dollar. It
strikes me a VERY kind!
As for adult costumes, maybe *I* should dress up as the champagne
bottle :-) (reminds me that when I had my own apartment, my father
used to wait til most of the kids had come and gone, then he'd dress up
and ring my door bell and present me with a "beverage" glass to fill!!)
Lyn
(who's having a ball with this!!)
|
411.24 | wings... | SHIRE::DETOTH | | Thu Oct 18 1990 11:58 | 16 |
| If you still need it, here's my version of "wings"...
I had some white wrapping paper with little silver stars on it... the
opalescent cellophane should work too...
I took some stiff wire (coat hanger would do) and made the wing shapes
which I then glued to the paper. You need to "paper" both slides,
gluing the edges together... trim around the hanger.. I used a sturdy
safety pin to attach the wings to her dress... Another small "tip"
I let her wear a pretty party dress over which we put an "outfit" of
that above mentioned "opalescent cellophane" it was real easy I made a
sort of T-shirt and Skirt with this cellophane directly on the sewing
machine - and if you knew me you would know that I hardly can thread a
needle.. muchless make clothes that you could call clothes..
Good luck !
|
411.25 | ideas for preggy mom's | SHIRE::DETOTH | | Thu Oct 18 1990 12:01 | 7 |
| Not very "flattering", but how about "frosty the snowman" an old white
sheet, plenty of safety pins...
More in tune with your husband's disguise... an opera singer... I have
never ever seen a slim opera singer...!!!
|
411.26 | | NAVIER::SAISI | The Truth will set you free. | Thu Oct 18 1990 12:09 | 3 |
| How about Humpty Dumpty (a mans outfit, with a cone head hat)?
:-) :-) :-) :-)
Linda
|
411.27 | T-or-T in Nashua | ASD::HOWER | Helen Hower | Tue Oct 23 1990 11:16 | 4 |
| (amazingly?) is on Halloween itself, Oct 31, from 6 to 8 (at least according to
my son's school calendar for this month!)
Helen
|
411.28 | I never thought I'd live to see the day | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 24 1990 09:43 | 4 |
| Good heavens. We actually get to trick or treat on Halloween this
year??? That's great!
--bonnie
|
411.29 | A Green Halloween? | CIVIC::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Wed Oct 24 1990 10:14 | 10 |
| I've been asking people what their kids are going to be and I think
that, this year, Halloween should be renamed "Ninja Turtle Day"! I
expect about 30% of the trick-or-treaters to be turtles. Are you
hearing the same thing?
Do you remember other one-theme Halloweens? I don't.
Thanks to the tip here, I found clown noses at K-mart (74 cents) and
will plan on "painting" her nose red if we have trouble keeping that
on.
|
411.30 | Darth Vader | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 24 1990 10:18 | 6 |
| Steven's definitely going to be one of the Ninja Turtles.
The last one I can remember was, I think '82, when we had, I kid
you not, close to half Darth Vaders.
--bonnie
|
411.31 | Halloween Ideas?? | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Tue Oct 29 1991 13:22 | 22 |
| I wrote something similar to this in the Learning Disabilities notes,
but I know this will evoke a larger response.
Halloween is dangerously close, and I'm trying to think of non-sugar
ideas to give out. I also try to avoid nutrasweet items. He reacts to
nutrasweet violently; temper tantrums, kicking screaming, insomnia.
What I had in mind were the celophane packets of crayons, 3 or4 per
pack, or some other non edible, or non-sugared things. Last year I
think I had 30 visitors for halloween so I need to keep cost constraints
in mind too.
I know this is short notice, but I've never been one to plan in
advance.
Along these lines, who takes the child(ren) out, and who stays home to
pass out the treats in your homes?
Any other fun traditions associated with Halloween you would like to
share?
Lyn
|
411.32 | but i spose they're expensive | STAR::LEWIS | | Tue Oct 29 1991 13:48 | 5 |
| My sitter said she found mini-packs of kiddie decorated band-aids! I've
never known a kid that didn't like band-aids.
Sue
|
411.33 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Kwik-n-e-z! That's my motto! | Tue Oct 29 1991 14:29 | 7 |
| Just a few things come to mind...
Gift certificates from McDonalds, Friendly's etc.
Stickers, pencils, or other little trinkets.
-sandy
|
411.34 | | FSOA::DJANCAITIS | Que sera, sera | Tue Oct 29 1991 15:08 | 17 |
| a few more.....
some of the card/stationary stores carry rolls of stickers, so you
could get different kinds
I'm planning (if we're going to be home) to give out the mini boxes
of raisins - at least that way, if there are leftovers (which there
were last year) it will be something we can still eat, instead of
lots of candy bars which we generally avoid
Debbi J
|
411.35 | | CGHUB::OBRIEN | Yabba Dabba DOO | Tue Oct 29 1991 15:17 | 2 |
| At CVS they had Crayola crayons, 3 in a packet.
|
411.36 | Gold Fish | PCOJCT::HAMLEN | | Wed Oct 30 1991 09:15 | 6 |
| Little mini packs of Pepperidge Farm gold fish crackers. I picked up a
multi pack the other day in the grocery store, they are with the rest of
the Halloween candy. And as previous reply noted we can all enjoy the
leftovers!
Mary
|
411.37 | fruit chews or trinkets | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Wed Oct 30 1991 09:24 | 4 |
| I bought small bags of peanuts and raisins for older kids, and
stickers, colored pencils and crayons, and little mini pads of paper
for younger kids. Also bags of fruit chews or fruit roll-ups are a
good choice.
|
411.38 | its a shame | KAOFS::M_FETT | alias Mrs.Barney | Wed Oct 30 1991 09:43 | 11 |
| Often, when I see all these packaged candy in the stores, I
think that what a shame it is that a twisted few have destroyed
the trust we used to have in adults to give things to children
at Halloween that are safe and good to eat. As a person who
likes kids I'd be honoured to make or bake something personal for
the children, but thinking as a parent in this day and age, I'd be
very leary to let children eat things made by strangers.
What a crying shame.
Monica
|
411.39 | it IS a shame but | PROXY::HOPKINS | Volunteer of the month | Wed Oct 30 1991 11:39 | 6 |
| One year my kids got home baked cookies which I normally throw out
for just that reason. BUT, this time was different. The woman who
baked them put them in a plastic bag with her name and address written
on a paper inside the bag. She was a neighbor so I wasn't too leary
but I thought it was a great idea giving her name.
|
411.40 | Neighbor's horror chamber is bad! | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Wed Oct 30 1991 11:58 | 19 |
| I've got a neighbor who decorates his double garage into a "chamber or
Horrors" every year, and it looks like this year will be no different.
For the kids to get candy from these people, they have to go into the
garage, with things like animated monsters, real people lying in a home
built coffin, that jump up when you come near it, etc.
I'm not sure how to deal with it, except the obvious avoid that house.
But AJ won't even go up that side of our street to trick or treat at
the ajacent houses. (Our street is shaped like a horse shoe, this house
is in the center strip, with one more house next to it).
What should I do, there is no reasoning with my son, he's plain and
simply terrified of these people. Should I try to tell the neighbors,
whom I don't even know, what they're doing to the little kids. It's a
great idea for a private party, or the middle school age kids, but for
pre-schoolers it's a problem.
Ideas???
Lyn
|
411.41 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Wed Oct 30 1991 12:27 | 18 |
| re: .40
Lyn, I think that your obvious solution is the best one. There's no rule that
I know of that says you have to go to every house in the nieghborhood, and
trick or treating is supposed to be fun.
While I personally think that the razor_blade_in_the_apple bit is way
overdone, I discourage my kids from going to houses of people that we don't
know. What enjoyment is there in getting a treat from a total stranger, much
less one that scares you or you don't like?
As a "treat provider", I think it's kind of fun for kids I know to come
to the house, show off their costume, and get their treat (with the younger
kids, I may even get to chat with the parents). I don't particularly care for
some kid I don't know coming to the door, grabbing all s/he can (or that I
will let them have -- some of them are greedy beyond belief) and leaving.
Clay
|
411.42 | the stranger | KAOFS::M_FETT | alias Mrs.Barney | Wed Oct 30 1991 13:16 | 24 |
|
>>> I discourage my kids from going to houses of people that we don't
>>> know. What enjoyment is there in getting a treat from a total stranger
Clay, my husband and I have moved 5 time in the last year. We used
to live in a place, where, because of the disparate cultures
co-existing, many people kept to themselves, thus as a kid I *always*
ended up at strangers' houses at Halloween.
Also, because of this atmosphere we both grew up in, our present
neighborhood is a new place for us, we are still only starting to
make an effort to know our neighbors. It sounds strange, but I am
normally a VERY outgoing person, but you have to have had lived in
a place where YOU are the minority to understand this mentality.
Anyway, I am STARTING to recognise some of the kids, but not having
my own yet to go out and make friends, we are relatively unknown.
WE are the strangers. I hope the kids will come and see us this year.
I like the cookies with label idea. Maybe I'll save that when we
are more famous in our neighborhood.
Monica,
raised in the English Minority, still a stranger in town.
|
411.43 | Civil War Haunting!!!! | ODIXIE::WITMAN | THIS_SPACE_BEING_REFURBISED_FOR_YOUR_FUTURE_ENJOYMENT. | Thu Oct 31 1991 08:45 | 33 |
| This is year as for the last almost twenty we will have a haunted
"happening", I say "happening" becasue we do something different each
year, this year is Civil War soldiers -- Northereners and we live in
Florida, that should be pretty scaring in itself.
The point I want to speak to though is "frightening" kids so bad that
they don't want to come down the street. Since this is a "family"
affair on our part we do many things to adjust our actions based on the
"observed" reaction of the "trick or treater". You can learn from eye
contact or a head nod to the parents what reaction their child might
have. A "monster" with a pleasant "how are you?" or "are you having
fun?", brings enjoyment to most kids. You can even ask "did I scare
you?", they'll usually say "no!" but it breaks the ice and everyone has
a good time.
Oh, we've scared some kids but it's usually been "older" high school
age ones who are trying to show how macho they are, not realizing that
anyones innner fears can be triggered.
To the question of who stays home and who takes the kids out. When our
kids were "younger" my wife escorted them around the neighborhood and I
ran the show at how. Now we will all do the show, the "kids" -- 15-17
might hit a few houses with their friends.
We'll all have a good time
BOO!
Did I scare you?
General Stonecold Jackson
|