Benadryl Itch Relief contains diphenhydramine in different dosage forms, such as zinc acetate solution, zinc acetate cream, or zinc acetate spray, to
Benadryl Itch Relief contains diphenhydramine in different dosage forms, such as zinc acetate solution, zinc acetate cream, or zinc acetate spray, to
Benadryl Itch Relief contains diphenhydramine in different dosage forms, such as zinc acetate solution, zinc acetate cream, or zinc acetate spray, to
Benadryl Itch Relief contains diphenhydramine in different dosage forms, such as zinc acetate solution, zinc acetate cream, or zinc acetate spray, to relieve
Benadryl ReadyMist Spray (containing Diphenhydramine, Zinc Acetate). Benadryl Itch Relief Stick (containing Diphenhydramine, Zinc Acetate)
diphenhydramine breastfeeding information; zinc acetate (lactation information not available). More about diphenhydramine / zinc acetate topical. Check
diphenhydramine breastfeeding information; zinc acetate (lactation information not available). More about diphenhydramine / zinc acetate topical. Check
diphenhydramine breastfeeding information; zinc acetate (lactation information not available). More about diphenhydramine / zinc acetate topical. Check
Benadryl Itch Relief contains diphenhydramine in different dosage forms, such as zinc acetate solution, zinc acetate cream, or zinc acetate spray, to
Comments
Steel is not the same, it is a solid metal and stainless is actually fairly brittle. A direct hit should penetrate and do at least some damage to his chest. Worse would be a glancing hit, which would likely slow the bullet very little and then direct it to an arra around the medallion that was unprotected.
As far as the rest of the commentary excusing the writer from the glaring errors using examples such as 'even Shakespeare made mistakes', I submit to you that google didn't exist at the time. The multiple mistakes made could have easily been researched and corrected, something I hope my criticism encourages the author to do before the next chapter. If he does so, I will score accordingly in his favor.
But good to have a take on it. Still gonna break a lot of ideas about reality in my stories. Also, as a fun little thing, there are these sort of regimens guys can do to have bigger loads. Usually by taking supplements. Might love to hear a comment on why zinc can make them blow some outrageous loads. Seriously, I've seen some vids where guys with average equipment can fill a couple of shot glasses.
05/30/08 by Anonymous in Kablagofuckyourselfstan
Oh my God! I got so thirsty, I had to drink a gallon of milk after reading this. Yum! One little critique, if I'm permitted, you should have let him eat your asshole. I hear there are LOADS of vitamins in that. And why didn't you let Larry get in on the action? That would've made a great threeway: baby dick, breasty brother, and deformed-titee auntie! Gimme! My most bonorific moment was when your crackwhore mother told you about the many vitamins in goo soup. Hydrogen, zinc, copper, herpes, vitamin shit, peanut butter, keep going, please, I'm almost there! Oh, sorry, I got a little carried away. Please write many more like this with lots of boobjuice, creamy goodness, fart face, vaginal belching, and poo! Kisses! -Phantom Peewee LOL!!! I don't know who this Phantom Peewee is I don't think. Hey, maybe it's scouries or BOSTONFICTIONWRITER jerking my chain. Those two dudes are so funny!!! Just check out their stories if you don't believe me.
With any topic in a large forum there are bound to be people who are knowledgeable. With regard to old records in this forum, that would be me.
What we call 78s did not have a standardized speed before roughly 1929. Before then the speeds varied by manufacturer and could range between 72 minus and 80 plus. They were pressed using a compound containing shellac (not wax) and indeed were and are very brittle. Vinyl replaced shellac when 45s and LPs came along starting in the late 1940s.
Wax was the medium for early Edison cylinders. Some Edison cylinder players also could record on blank wax cylinders. It was common, especially in the 1950s and 1960s, for records to be nicknamed wax (e.g., lets put that on wax) or for the word to be used as a verb (e.g., let's wax a record), but actual wax for recordings went away with the cylinders.
It was possible for disc recordings to be made on fixed or portable record cutters (such as the blank label record in the story). Before wire or tape recorders became available, this was the primary way personal recordings or demo recordings were made. The blank discs were made of aluminum or glass and coated with a layer of lacquer or rarely acetate. The lacquer was the medium in which the cutter made the groove with the sound.
Probably more than you wanted to know, but when a record collector reads a story about records, well... you know...