I GREW UP ON AMELIA STREET, COORPAROO, AN INNER SOUTHERN SUBURB OF BRISBANE. MY BROTHER AND I ENJOYED SATURDAY ‘MATINEE’ MOVIES IN THE ‘50’s AT THE LOCAL THEATRE, THE ROXY, LOCATED ON THE CORNER OF OLD CLEVELAND ROAD AND HARRIES ROAD, COORPAROO. THIS WAS JUST A FIVE MINUTE WALK FROM OUR HOME.
BELOW IS A PHOTO OF THE FACADE OF THE ROXY AS IT WAS IN THOSE DAYS AND AS I REMEMBER IT DURING THE 1950’S.
A CLOSE LOOK ABOVE WILL REVEAL A SMALL SHOP-FRONT WITH DOORWAY AND DISPLAY WINDOW JUST TO THE RIGHT OF THE THEATRE'S PORTICO AND MAIN ENTRANCE DOORS. THIS WAS FOR MANY YEARS A SMALL TOY SHOP OPERATED BY AN ELDERLY WOMAN AND HER TWO DAUGHTERS, BEING THE 'WOOD' FAMILY BUSINESS. THE ONE MOST INVOLVED WAS THE DAUGHTER GRACE, AND BECAUSE OF THIS IT WAS ALWAYS REFERRED TO LOCALLY AS 'GRACIE'S SHOP.'
THE PHOTO BELOW FROM ANOTHER SUBURBAN THEATRE OF THE PERIOD SHOWS THE SAME STYLE OF CANVAS SEATS PROVIDED FOR PATRONS AT THE ROXY. THERE WERE ALSO A FEW ROWS OF MORE FORMAL STALLS CHAIRS AT THE BACK, BEING WOODEN FRAMED WITH LEATHER BACK AND SEAT UPHOLSTERY.
BY 1960 THE ROXY THEATRE HAD FALLEN ON HARD TIMES, DUE TO THE INTRODUCTION OF TV IN 1956, AND THE PROPERTY WAS SOLD INTO THE HANDS OF DEVELOPERS. IT WAS SOON DEMOLISHED AND ITS PLACE WAS TAKEN BY A RETAIL PRECINCT KNOWN TODAY AS THE 'COORPAROO MALL.' I HAVE INDICATED BELOW, IN BLACK OUTLINE, APPROXIMATELY WHERE THE ROXY STOOD IN RELATION TO THE BUILDINGS OF TODAY, FIFTY YEARS AFTER ITS DEMOLITION.
OF COURSE WHEN THIS OCCURRED THE WOOD FAMILY LOST THEIR BUSINESS PREMISES. HOWEVER IT WASN'T LONG BEFORE THEY RE-EMERGED, FROM MEMORY AROUND 1962, BIGGER AND BRIGHTER THAN EVER IN A NEWLY BUILT AND QUITE SPACIOUS BRICK-FRONT SHOP JUST AROUND THE CORNER.
THIS WAS AT 194 CAVENDISH ROAD COORPAROO. A CURRENT 2011 PHOTO OF THIS LOCATION APPEARS BELOW....
THE NEW 'GRACIE'S SHOP' OCCUPIED THE AREA BEHIND THE FACADE NOW PAINTED IN BLUE AND WHITE BUT WHICH WAS NATURAL BRICK COLOUR BACK THEN. THE PREMISES INCORPORATED AN ATTACHED REAR RESIDENCE WHICH WAS THE FAMILY HOME TO THE THREE VERY QUIET AND WELL RESPECTED WOMEN MEMBERS OF THE WOOD FAMILY.
IN EARLY 1964 I BOUGHT A BRITISH RACING GREEN TRIUMPH TR4 SPORTS CAR WHICH WAS IMMEDIATELY MY PRIDE AND JOY. I PREFERRED BEING BEHIND THE WHEEL OF THAT CAR THAN DOING ANYTHING ELSE BACK THEN. A PHOTO OF ME IN THE CAR IN 1964 APPEARS BELOW....
I DEVELOPED A HABIT OF TAKING THE LONG WAY AROUND WHEN COMING HOME AT NIGHT (USUALLY LATE) SO I COULD ENJOY THE SOUND OF THE CAR'S EXHAUST NOTE REVERBERATING OFF THE SHOP-FRONTS AS I TURNED INTO AND GUNNED IT UP CAVENDISH ROAD IN A SOUTHERLY DIRECTION FROM OLD CLEVELAND ROAD. I’D THEN TURN RIGHT INTO NOELA STREET WHICH TOOK ME DOWN TO AMELIA STREET.
I HAD BEEN OUT ON SATURDAY NIGHT 21 MARCH 1964 AND RETURNED HOME FAIRLY LATE AS USUAL SWINGING INTO CAVENDISH ROAD FROM MEMORY AROUND 1.30am. AS I ACCELERATED HARD I WAS QUICKLY NEAR THE FRONT OF GRACIE'S SHOP AND TO MY GREAT SURPRISE I CLEARLY SAW A YOUNG MAN IN A LIGHT COLOURED SUIT LOOKING DOWN THE ROAD TOWARDS OLD CLEVELAND ROAD. HE WAS STANDING QUITE STATIONARY ON THE FOOTPATH VERY CLOSE TO THE POSITION OF THE ANONYMOUS WOMAN PASSER-BY IN THE PHOTO OF THE SHOP ABOVE. AS I WENT BY HE CASUALLY WATCHED ME UNTIL I NO LONGER HAD HIM IN VIEW. THIS OCCURRED IN A DEATHLY QUIET AND DESERTED LITTLE SHOPPING PRECINCT IN THE STILL OF THE NIGHT AND I KNEW THAT IT WAS ABNORMAL FOR ANYONE TO BE LOITERING IN THE AREA AT THAT TIME.
I GOT HOME AND THOUGHT LITTLE MORE OF IT AND WENT TO BED. AS SOON AS I AWOKE MY MUM URGENTLY INFORMED ME THAT GRACIE AND HER MUM AND SISTER HAD BEEN MURDERED DURING THE NIGHT. I TOLD HER WHAT I'D SEEN ON MY WAY HOME AND I CALLED THE WOOLLOONGABBA CIB WHO ASKED THAT I GO THERE TO MAKE A STATEMENT. I WISHED I HADN'T BECAUSE I ENDED UP BEING GRILLED THERE FOR AT LEAST THREE HOURS ON THAT SUNDAY. HOWEVER AFTER THEY AT LAST ALLOWED ME TO LEAVE, I WAS TO HEAR NO MORE FROM THE POLICE, AND IT WASN'T LONG BEFORE WE HEARD THEY HAD APPREHENDED THE CULPRIT.
BELOW IS A COPY OF ONE NEWSPAPER ACCOUNT OF WHAT HAPPENED...
TO THIS DAY I CAN CLEARLY RECALL MY MIND'S EYE IMAGE OF HIM STANDING MOTIONLESS IN FRONT OF THE SHOP, WATCHING ME DRIVE BY. IT SEEMED AS CREEPY THEN AS IT IS IN RECOLLECTION TODAY.
UNFORTUNATELY META WOOD DIED OF HER INJURIES LATER IN HOSPITAL....
OVER THE MANY YEARS SINCE THIS OCCURRED I HAVE GRADUALLY FORMED THE IMPRESSION THAT THESE GENTLE WOMEN AND THEIR MODEST INFLUENCE UPON THIS FORMATIVE PERIOD OF COORPAROO’S HISTORY HAVE BEEN COMPLETELY FORGOTTEN. THEIRS TURNED OUT TO BE A TRAGIC STORY BUT BECAUSE I KNEW THEM, AND RESPECTED THEM, ALBEIT AS A YOUNG BOY, I NOW FEEL A COMPELLING NEED TO ENSURE THAT THEIR MODEST PART IN THE HISTORY OF THE AREA IS RECORDED AND WILL NOT BE FORGOTTEN.
I ALSO WISH TO ENSURE THAT THE PERPETRATOR OF THE HEINOUS CRIME AGAINST THEM IS NOT FORGOTTEN EITHER. HE WAS CONVICTED AND SENTENCED TO A MINIMUM 20 YEARS JAIL. IN OTHER WORDS HE WAS LIKELY RELEASED BACK INTO SOCIETY IN 1984 AT 38 YEARS OF AGE AND HAS LIKELY ENJOYED THE PAST 27 YEARS AS A FREE MAN. IF STILL ALIVE HE WOULD BE 65 YEARS OF AGE TODAY.
REST IN PEACE ROSE, META AND GRACE.
Great article.However,Meta didn't die of her injuries,although she took many months to recover.Jack Sim's 'Bloody Brisbane' has a comprehensive chapter on the crime and mentions that she was released from hospital and identifed the killer in a police line-up.
ReplyDeleteI think she must have rebuilt the shop and ran it alone for a few more years or someone else bought the business and kept it going for a while.I was a child who attended the nearby Coorparoo Primary in the 1970s,when it was still running as a sweet/toy shop.It was still referred to as 'Gracie's Shop' and the woman behind the counter allowed the children to call her Gracie.I believe this may have been Meta,but I'm not entirely sure.
My mother told me about it's terrible history and it still baffles me that a man could do that to three gentle elderly ladies.Goes to show that the 'good Old Days' weren't always that good.
Horrible postscript:when the store closed down in the mid/late 70s,I distinctly remember it was replaced by a GUN shop.I am not kidding.Even at 11 years of age,I thought that in light of its history,and being near a school,that to allow that business to operate on that site was dangerous and in very bad taste.Thankfully it was turned into a real estate office a few years later.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThanks for this blog Glen and your comments Lise. We are covering this murder today on 4BC in our Crime Corner segment. I would love to talk to you about it. Please contact me cmcgeorge@fairfaxmedia.com.au thanks
ReplyDeletehi Catherine
DeleteI tried to put an account of my recollection of this terrible event on before but I don't think I was successful.
I went to 'Gracies' shop everyday to buy my lunch while I was at Coorparoo school, and from memory went there on the night of the murders with my mum to buy a birthday card for my big sister. That was 21 March 1964.
I remember them so well, with mum up the back in her wheelchair looking down into the shop. Her white hair was always in little plaits. Such a lovely family.
We could smell the smoke from the fire at school after it happened, it was so sad.
Please contact me if you want more information
Pam Mullens
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI think the murderer comitted suicide in prison (Boggo Road).
ReplyDeleteOh I hope so. If I can remember corectly the police caught him very quickly at his home at Coorparoo. I missed out on hearing the police sirens but my friend in the next street heard them. I went to Coorparoo School and we children gazed in horror at the burnt out remains of the shop knowing what had happened there. How we missed them and it was never quite the same after it reopened.
DeleteHe got out in the late 80's and married. Died in 2007 in a car accident.
DeleteHe was paroled in 1991.
DeleteThanks for that info Darren.
ReplyDeleteSeems like a fitting end to the story ......
Glenn.
Meta and Grace were two of 5 children of Ernest Frederick Glynn Wood, originally from South Australia and Rosina 'Rose' (nee Johnstone).
ReplyDeleteMeta and Grace were my mother in laws 1st cousins (once removed). Their father Ernest died in Bundaberg in 1917 so Rose raised their surviving 4 children by herself.
I have spent a few years trying to find out more of what happened on that terrible night..(Ever since I found a copy of the news report you have posted above).. There is no record of Meta's death in QLD records which has me baffled. Thank you for clarifying she passed away not long after the fire.
Her possibly surviving siblings (Hilda and Lionel) are also a mystery to me, They would have passed away by now, and obviously were not known to the locals in Coorparoo at the time.
Anything anyone can help me with regarding Rosina and her family and that night would be greatly appreciated.
I can be contacted by email chelle63@tpg.com.au
Thank you for keeping the memory of this family alive
Coorparoo has a violent history; 15 years later a double murder occurred on 21 July 1979.
ReplyDeleteChristine Joan Holznagel and her boyfriend at the time John Kingston were murdered by Christine's ex husband John William Holznagel.
I can be contacted via email at ecodemedia@gmail.com if anyone can recollect the events of that fateful night; I'm currently writing a book on it.
Cheers
Neil
Hi Neil, just read your comment in relation to Christine Holznagel. I was wondering if you ever finished this book?
DeleteMy name is Paul Abel and Christine was my sister.
I would be very interested in it if you did.
Many thanks,
Paul N. Abel
abelpaul@hotmail.com
Thank you Glenn, and others, for the story and the additional information. I remember "Gracie's" well as it was our local lolly shop when I was at school at Coorparoo State School (1960-66). I also remember the Roxy which I thought closed about Grade 1 (1960). I think Gracie's may have opened in 1961 rather than 1962 as my Grade 2 teacher Miss Clatworthy used to send me up there with either 10 pence for a round pie of 11 pence for a square pie for her lunch about ten minutes before lunch each school day : ) I also had Miss Clatworthy in Grade 3 so it could have been 1962, but my memory leans more towards Grade 2 in 1961. I remember the ladies' mum in her wheelchair I think always with her white hair in little plaits and usually in her nightie and dressing gown holding a dolly (we were told she was "in her second childhood"). I never knew which of the ladies was which, one had white hair in a bun and the other dark straight shorter hair. One of them would usually be working the "lolly" line at the end of the counter nearest Cav Rd where the lollies were in the window (1d for a cobber, 3 a penny for raspberries, 2 a penny for milk bottles, 8 a penny for chocolate bullets : )), and the other lady on the hot foods and drinks counter closer to the back door.
ReplyDeleteI remember the horrifying morning after the break-in and murder as we drove to Sunday School along Cav Rd around a quarter to nine and saw the burnt out shop and then later heard what had happened
Shortly after, the "Library" shop a little way down on the right towards Old Cleveland Rd opened up and had its own lolly shop in competition but they couldn't really match Gracie's. And in fact really did the dirty on us little kids in 1965 when decimal currency came out and both currencies were still in operation in our pockets. Lollies that had been 1 penny each were now 1 cent each. This was only equal to 1.2 pennies but if you didn't have an actual cent in the new currency to give them, they would make you give them TWO pennies for your purchase. Gracie would never have done that, hey. Thank you again for your thoughtful and thorough story. May they rest in peace, along with our childhood innocence.
Cherie Basile (former resident of Gladstone St, Coorparoo).
Hi Cherie, with your permission please, I would like to use a few lines of your recollections in our local history book – "Grave Tales: Brisbane". One of our 16 stories features the Wood family. Is that okay with you? You can check out our books here - www.gravetales.com.au and email me at gravetales@outlook.com Many thanks and best wishes, Helen
DeleteRe Gracie, she was of slim build and had the shorter dark hair.
DeleteI did some digging and Meta lived until well past 1985. She is on the QLD electoral rolls right up until the last ones available online (1980), living on Cavendish Road. There is no death record online which means she did not die before 1985.
ReplyDeleteStrange how stories get altered in the re-telling. I remember hearing that the murders were committed by two teenage girls. That was way off, obviously.
ReplyDeleteThat "other suburban theatre of the period" would likely have been the Alhambra, at Stones Corner, I think?
Just curious, Glenn, are you still maintaining this blog, or if you have other blogs about the modern history of Coorparoo?
No I'm not developing this blog any further.
ReplyDeleteHowever I'm now writing a book about the interstate passenger bus business that my father established in Coorparoo immediately after WW2.
This was on the lower corner at the intersection of Amelia and Noela Streets. (39 Amelia Street) where the bus depot gradually grew until we moved that facility to larger premises in 1960... (and then to even larger in 1964)
The Coorparoo property now comprises a single story block of four flats. (The current concrete formed front and side fence is the original from the '40's, and I once fell off it and broke my wrist!)
My dad also built a grand prix race car under the house there and competed in it at the 1949 Australian Grand Prix at Leyburn Qld.
The business was known as Redline Coaches, and grew to operate the largest route network of touring and express services in the country.
My book will likely be titled:
Rex Law's REDLINE....
The Biggest Little Bus Company in Australia.
You'll find a number of references to my dad and the company if you Google "Rex Law / Redline"
His is a story that also needs to be told and memorialized....
Cheers,
Glenn
Thanks, I'll check it out. I'm developing a site myself, about Coorparoo in the 50s. That is, my participation in it. Being a pupil of the Coorparoo State School in the 50s, and living not that far away from there, I recall many things about the area. I enjoy reading other people's reminiscences, so I thought I'd do my own. One question, if I may; how do you ensure that your site is findable in a Web search?
ReplyDeleteI believe you must try to identify the most likely search term that browsers who are seeking the kind of information you will be providing will type into Google....
ReplyDeleteThis would then be the title of your blog.
Logically this title could possibly be: "Coorparoo Stories"
And your sub-heading could be "Recollections of Growing Up in Coorparoo in the 1950's"
Of course the main thing is to include the main keyword "Coorparoo" wherever you can.
Good luck with your project....
Thanks, I'll try that.
ReplyDeleteAnd if you'd care to let me know when your blog's up and running, I'd like to maybe contribute one or two anecdotes.....
ReplyDeleteMaybe you could post the link here, and this would help to publicize it via my visitors.
Cheers.....
Well, thanks, Glenn, I'll certainly do that! Nice of you to offer.
ReplyDeleteCheers.
Hello G. Gnome, I'd be really interested to read your blog too. And thank you, Glenn, and everyone who has contributed to this blog, for all your input and recollections.
ReplyDeleteHi Glenn, my partner and I are journalists writing a story about select cases. I would love to include your memory and the photo of you in your car. It would be properly attributed to your blog of course.
ReplyDeleteI would also welcome other memories and recollections from your readers. The production company is Atlas Productions (www.atlasproductions.com.au) and the email is atlasbooks@bigpond.com Thanks Glenn, I hope to hear from you. Best wishes, Helen
Hi Glenn, thank you again for taking part in our book. I'd love to send you a published copy. If you would like one, could you please email your mailing address? With thanks, Helen (Grave Tales - gravetales@outlook.com)
ReplyDeleteThe Red Group have faltered and it all looks pretty sad for the Australian book retailing business in general. Here's a full page advertisement. fence contractors in colorado springs
ReplyDeleteI lived at nearby Camp Hill. Our family often went to the Roxy Cinema in the 50's. We always went to the newsagent for 2 comics for myself and brother. And then close by to Gracie's shop, which I believe now sold lollies as my brother and myself were allowed 2 comics and a few lollies each Friday night movies. I believe that Gracie's shop was more central between the cinema and corner of Cavendish Rd. They were in an area of Old Cleveland Road that only had a few shops along that stretch. As the embankment dropped away beside the footpath. Gracie always complained to my parents about Myers interest in purchasing the land. She did not want to move but she said Myer threatened to build around her if she did not sell. I was very saddened to hear about the murders years later, as the ladies were very nice. However I believe that one of the sisters was injured but managed to crawl outside the premises. Of coarse that was years ago, but still disturbing even to this day.
ReplyDeleteI lived in Shire St up the road from the shop. I visited it every day after school after the walk from Villanova College. I recall the next morning vividly.
ReplyDeleteIs this blog still going ?
Hi, as a follower, I’m still receiving updates from it when there is a new comment. I lived in Gladstone Street, near the railway station, and still remember our shock and disbelief as we drove past their burnt out shop on the way to Sunday School the next morning. It was our local lolly and lunch shop, being on the corner of the lane up into our school at Coorparoo State School. From Cherie.
ReplyDeleteHi Davyck,
ReplyDeleteI'm still following any new messages which come through. This case interests me from a family history view.
Meta and Grace were two of 5 children of Ernest Frederick Glynn Wood, originally from South Australia and Rosina 'Rose' (nee Johnstone).
Meta and Grace were my late mother in laws 1st cousins (once removed). Their father Ernest died in Bundaberg in 1917 so Rose raised their surviving 4 children by herself.
At the time I first wrote the above paragraph a few years back, I had no idea what had happened to Meta, as she was apparently still alive in 1985 (even though early reports said she died just after the fire).
Anyhow, she passed away in January 1989 and is buried at Balmoral Cemetery with her mum Rosina and sister Grace, Location 8-403 Burial Date 18 Jan 1989.
The only sibling I have still been unable to trace is their brother Lionel.
Hi Michelle, such a terrible thing to happen to those innocent gentle women. We wrote the story in our book, 'Grave Tales: Brisbane' Vol.1 and in our podcast. As the anniversary of Grace and Rosina's death was this week, we also remembered them on our Facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/gravetalesAUS/ Take care, Helen.
DeleteThank you for letting me know Helen.
DeleteChecking it out now.. Small world though.. the entry before your current one on Grace and Rosina, is set in Geelong (that's where my husband was born and raised)
Lovely area and my footy team (AFL) :)
DeleteHi Michelle. I remember Meta and Grace well, one with short straight black hair and the other with long Grey hair in a bun (I don’t think we even knew which was actually Gracie �� ) and their mum in her little white plaits and dressing gown often in her wheel chair in the entrance from the shop to their lounge room. However we never saw any male relatives and I have never heard anything of their brother. I also remember when there was a toy (?) shop near the Roxy Picture Theatre that I think may have been the Woods’. We used to take our dolls there to have them mended if they got broken and my mum referred to it as “The Dolls Hospital” (this was about the mid 1950s). From Cherie.
ReplyDeleteHi Cherie. Gracie was definitely the one with the straight short black hair. I remember the ladies so well from their time in the little shop next to the Roxy Theatre....Glenn
DeleteHi Cherie,
ReplyDeleteSadly, even my mother in law apparently had no clue what had happened to the family in Brisbane. By the time I had traced as far as Ernest and Rosina, my MIL's memory was showing signs of more than just age.
My MIL's grandmother was Rose's sister in law. Whereas the siblings were all born in Adelaide, they spread out to different States..ie: My husbands branch to Victoria, another sibling to W.A. etc.,
My husband and I have lived in Brisbane for the last 20 years, sadly 10 years too late from Meta's passing, if we had known of her..
The last info I have on Lionel (nickname Chippy), was him living in Salisbury at the time of the 1980 electoral roll. His 2nd wife died at Labrador in 1989
I love reading the memories others had of them at the shop x
"Gracie's" shop was our own little corner lolly and kind of tuck shop as it was right on the small lane that led into our school, Coorparoo State Primary School, which I attended from Grade 1 to 7, 1960 to 1966. You could order your lunch there (a pie etc) in the morning and pick it up at lunchtime (ie, what we Queensland schoolchildren of the time called "Big Lunch") or you could just go down and buy something on the spot, a pie, a frozen orange Treat drink etc, or some lollies. You could buy an awful lot of lollies for sixpence in those days : )
ReplyDeleteRaspberries were three a penny, bullets eight a penny, cobbers a penny each, milk bottles two a penny. One of the ladies would be on the lolly aisle which ran parallel to Cav Road just inside the big glass windows of the shop that faced the footpath with views of all the lollies inside. The other lady (I never did know which one was Gracie in those days) would be busily looking after purchases at the other counter which was closer to the school side of the shop. Often the ladies' elderly mum could be seen in the space between the counters (which ran at right angles to each other) in her pyjamas and dressing gown in a sort of wheelchair I think and her little grey plaits, holding her doll, with a glimpse of their house behind her. They lived behind the house, which was burned in the fire that night. They were always nice, hard working and efficient lady and it stunned us all to find out what had happened and see it ourselves when we got to school on the Monday morning. If you have any particular questions that I may be able to remember answers about, please feel welcome to ask.
Hi Cherie, we are delighted to be speaking with Glenn (owner of this blog) in our forthcoming 'Grave Tales' podcast and hoped we could chat with you for a couple of minutes too, to get your memories. It is audio only done by computer (no vision). Would you be available for a quick chat - what you have said above is perfect. My email is enquiries [@] gravetales.com.au and the podcast is here: https://gravetales.podbean.com/ Many thanks, Helen.
DeleteHello Helen
ReplyDeleteI would love too.
I’ll email you my details.
Thanks very much,Cherie. I've emailed you. Please check your spam if I'm not there. We look forward to talking with you. Cheers and thanks, Helen.
DeleteFrom Helen at Grave Tales: Thank you to Glenn (owner of this blog) and Cherie for talking with us and sharing their memories of this dreadful murder. Live now on our podcast: https://gravetales.podbean.com/
ReplyDeleteGold!! I was at Coorparoo State School in grade 4 when Gracie was murdered. She used to patiently serve us lollies from her shop. The kids loved her. RIP girls..champions all!
ReplyDeleteMy 400 page softcover book referred to above, about my family's national passenger transport and tourism business that was founded just around the corner from Gracie's shop, is now published and available from Amazon under the title "Rex Law's Redline - The Biggest Little Bus Co In Australia."
ReplyDeleteHere's the link:
https://www.amazon.com.au/Rex-Laws-Redline-Biggest-Australia/dp/164718388X/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Rex+Law%27s+Redline&qid=1600129536&s=books&sr=1-1
And here's a little video slide show preview....be sure to go to full screen with sound on:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSQvoiHhixc&t=4s
Oh well done, Glenn. That is great!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Cherie....
DeleteI noted your profile, and I'm sure we're like minded souls.
Take care,
Glenn
Harrah's Las Vegas Casino - Dr. Maryland
ReplyDeleteInformation and Reviews about 광명 출장안마 Harrah's Las 상주 출장샵 Vegas Casino in Las Vegas, including Hotel Address: 천안 출장안마 3121 Las Vegas Blvd South Las 남양주 출장마사지 Vegas, NV 89109, 안양 출장샵 United States