#34 I had something similar with some branches, one had an almost perfect maple leaf shape inside. Cut little slices and and polished them, instant Christmas ornaments to give to my family that year.
Can we stop with the pictures of school lunches. We get it. The money comes from somewhere...you want fantastic school lunches then pay way more taxes. Otherwise, make and bring a lunch from home for what I guarantee you would cost less than what it’s costing someone.
one nation has 'social credits' the other is on their way to them, but hey, the lunches are tasty! At least, the people eating them would never dare say they weren't. Carry on, citizen.
#5 About 1/4 mile (that's 0.4 km for those of you who can't comprehend other systems of measurement) to mid-river, where the international boundary lies.
#12 Not to be a poindexter, but the the odds are greatly reduced when you consider the close proximity and the volume of cash flowing through a neighbourhood store. Cool coincidence and full points for sharp eyes tho...
Armena, You're right, it's not that unusual for my bank branch to receive uncirculated notes in our cash delivery. I have loaded bundles of 100, 500 or 1000 sequential notes into our ATM.
Louis, the view presented faces Northeast, with Windsor Ontario on the right, and Detroit Michigan to the left. Interesting that the river closest to Canada appears filthier. What are those Canadians up to, anyway?
#46 This is pretty common. The poster has probably never seen snow before. Dirt is a better isolator than stone, so the snow melts when it falls on the +1°C stone and stacks when it falls on the dirt between the stones
#34 I had something similar with some branches, one had an almost perfect maple leaf shape inside. Cut little slices and and polished them, instant Christmas ornaments to give to my family that year.
Can we stop with the pictures of school lunches. We get it. The money comes from somewhere...you want fantastic school lunches then pay way more taxes. Otherwise, make and bring a lunch from home for what I guarantee you would cost less than what it’s costing someone.
one nation has 'social credits' the other is on their way to them, but hey, the lunches are tasty! At least, the people eating them would never dare say they weren't. Carry on, citizen.
#5 About 1/4 mile (that's 0.4 km for those of you who can't comprehend other systems of measurement) to mid-river, where the international boundary lies.
#12 Not to be a poindexter, but the the odds are greatly reduced when you consider the close proximity and the volume of cash flowing through a neighbourhood store. Cool coincidence and full points for sharp eyes tho...
Armena, You're right, it's not that unusual for my bank branch to receive uncirculated notes in our cash delivery. I have loaded bundles of 100, 500 or 1000 sequential notes into our ATM.
Louis, the view presented faces Northeast, with Windsor Ontario on the right, and Detroit Michigan to the left. Interesting that the river closest to Canada appears filthier. What are those Canadians up to, anyway?
#46 This is pretty common. The poster has probably never seen snow before. Dirt is a better isolator than stone, so the snow melts when it falls on the +1°C stone and stacks when it falls on the dirt between the stones
I had something similar with some branches, one had an almost perfect maple leaf shape inside. Cut little slices and and polished them, instant Christmas ornaments to give to my family that year.
Too many cheap/lazy parents would rather use our tax dollars to pay for their kid's lunches than to make them at home. Pretty pathetic.
one nation has 'social credits' the other is on their way to them, but hey, the lunches are tasty! At least, the people eating them would never dare say they weren't. Carry on, citizen.
If people would prefer to trade their freedom and wealth for "awesome" school lunches, they are free to move to China.
You're right, it's not that unusual for my bank branch to receive uncirculated notes in our cash delivery. I have loaded bundles of 100, 500 or 1000 sequential notes into our ATM.
Interesting that the river closest to Canada appears filthier. What are those Canadians up to, anyway?