The Little Gingerbread Man
Written and Illustrated by Carol Moore
Once upon a time there was an old woman who loved baking gingerbread. She would bake gingerbread cookies, cakes, houses and gingerbread people, all decorated with chocolate and peppermint, caramel candies and colored frosting.
She lived with her husband on a farm at the edge of town. The sweet spicy smell of gingerbread brought children skipping and running to see what would be offered that day.
Unfortunately the children gobbled up the treats so fast that the old woman had a hard time keeping her supply of flour and spices to continue making the batches of gingerbread. Sometimes she suspected little hands of having reached through her kitchen window because gingerbread pieces and cookies would disappear. One time a whole gingerbread house vanished mysteriously. She told her husband, "Those naughty children are at it again. They don't understand all they have to do is knock on the door and I'll give them my gingerbread treats."
One day she made a special batch of gingerbread men because they were extra big. Unfortunately for the last gingerbread man she ran out of batter and he was half the size of the others.
She decorated the gingerbread men with care, each having socks, shirt and pants of different colors. When it came to the little gingerbread man she felt sorry for him and gave him more color than the others. "It doesn't matter he's small," she thought, "He'll still be tasty."
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The Little Gingerbread Man
Written and Illustrated by Carol Moore
Once upon a time there was an old woman who loved baking gingerbread. She would bake gingerbread cookies, cakes, houses and gingerbread people, all decorated with chocolate and peppermint, caramel candies and colored frosting.
She lived with her husband on a farm at the edge of town. The sweet spicy smell of gingerbread brought children skipping and running to see what would be offered that day.
Unfortunately the children gobbled up the treats so fast that the old woman had a hard time keeping her supply of flour and spices to continue making the batches of gingerbread. Sometimes she suspected little hands of having reached through her kitchen window because gingerbread pieces and cookies would disappear. One time a whole gingerbread house vanished mysteriously. She told her husband, "Those naughty children are at it again. They don't understand all they have to do is knock on the door and I'll give them my gingerbread treats."
One day she made a special batch of gingerbread men because they were extra big. Unfortunately for the last gingerbread man she ran out of batter and he was half the size of the others.
She decorated the gingerbread men with care, each having socks, shirt and pants of different colors. When it came to the little gingerbread man she felt sorry for him and gave him more color than the others. "It doesn't matter he's small," she thought, "He'll still be tasty."
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The Little Gingerbread Man
Written and Illustrated by Carol Moore
Once upon a time there was an old woman who loved baking gingerbread. She would bake gingerbread cookies, cakes, houses and gingerbread people, all decorated with chocolate and peppermint, caramel candies and colored frosting.
She lived with her husband on a farm at the edge of town. The sweet spicy smell of gingerbread brought children skipping and running to see what would be offered that day.
Unfortunately the children gobbled up the treats so fast that the old woman had a hard time keeping her supply of flour and spices to continue making the batches of gingerbread. Sometimes she suspected little hands of having reached through her kitchen window because gingerbread pieces and cookies would disappear. One time a whole gingerbread house vanished mysteriously. She told her husband, "Those naughty children are at it again. They don't understand all they have to do is knock on the door and I'll give them my gingerbread treats."
One day she made a special batch of gingerbread men because they were extra big. Unfortunately for the last gingerbread man she ran out of batter and he was half the size of the others.
She decorated the gingerbread men with care, each having socks, shirt and pants of different colors. When it came to the little gingerbread man she felt sorry for him and gave him more color than the others. "It doesn't matter he's small," she thought, "He'll still be tasty."
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A printed circuit board (PCB) mechanically supports and electrically
connects electroniccomponents usingconductive tracks, pads and other featuresetched from
coppersheetslaminated onto a non-conductivesubstrate. PCBs can be single sided (one copperlayer), double sided (to copper layers) or multi-layer (outer and inner layers). !ulti-layerPCBs allo for much higher component density. Conductors on different layers areconnected ith plated-through holes called vias. Advanced PCBs may contain components -capacitors, resistors or active devices - embedded in the substrate."#-$ glass epo%y is the primary insulating substrate upon hich the vast ma&ority of rigidPCBs are produced. A thin layer of copper foil is laminated to one or both sides of an "#-$ panel. Circuitry interconnections are etched into copper layers to produce printed circuit boards. Comple% circuits are produced in multiple layers.Printed circuit boards are used in all but the simplest electronic products. Alternatives toPCBs include ire rap and point-to-point construction. PCBs re'uire the additional designeffort to lay out the circuit, but manufacturing and assembly can be automated.!anufacturing circuits ith PCBs is cheaper and faster than ith other iring methods ascomponents are mounted and ired ith one single part. "urthermore, operator iring errorsare eliminated.hen the board has only copper connections and no embedded components, it is morecorrectly called a printed iring board (PB) or etched iring board. Although moreaccurate, the term printed iring board has fallen into disuse. A PCB populated ithelectronic components is called a printed circuit assembly (PCA), printed circuit boardassembly or PCB assembly (PCBA). he*PC preferred term for assembled boards is circuitcard assembly (CCA), and for assembled backplanes it is backplane assemblies. he termPCB is used informally both for bare and assembled boards .
The Little Gingerbread Man Written and Illustrated by Carol Moore
Once upon a time there was an old woman who
loved baking gingerbread. She would bake gingerbread cookies, cakes, houses and gingerbread people, all decorated with chocolate and peppermint, caramel candies and colored frosting. She lived with her husband on a farm at the edge of town. The sweet spicy smell of gingerbread brought children skipping and running to see what would be offered that day. Unfortunately the children gobbled up the treats so fast that the old woman had a hard time keeping her supply of flour and spices to continue making the batches of gingerbread. Sometimes she suspected little hands of having reached through her kitchen window because gingerbread pieces and cookies would disappear. One time a whole gingerbread house vanished mysteriously. She told her husband, "Those naughty children are at it again. They don't understand all they have to do is knock on the door and I'll give them my gingerbread treats."
One day she made a special batch of gingerbread
men because they were extra big. Unfortunately for the last gingerbread man she ran out of batter and he was half the size of the others. She decorated the gingerbread men with care, each having socks, shirt and pants of different colors. When it came to the little gingerbread man she felt sorry for him and gave him more color than the others. "It doesn't matter he's small," she thought, "He'll still be tasty."
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