Which preposition to use with cookies
With what care she sits down so that she may not crush the cookies in her ample pocket; with what meek prideif there is such a thing as meek prideshe looks up at the Scotch Preacher as he stands sturdily in his pulpit announcing the first hymn!
Some bars of sweetened chocolate, a bag of cookies with stale frosting in pink and white, a diminutive tin of sardines, and two bottles of soda-water.
Charlie came into the kitchen, hunted a cookie out of the tin box where such things were kept, and sat swinging one leg over a corner of the table, eying her critically while he munched.
"Yes, take some cookies to the fairy.
" "Let's go in and get some cookies from her," said the other boy.
" Tippy Toes said, "Oh Pa, may I go with you to town to-morrow?" Papa Cotton-Tail said, "Who will roll out the cookies for Mother Cotton-Tail?
But he was not a little disgusted to note presently that Christina and Macgregor enjoyed their cream cookies without the slightest mishap.
"I say, Pheeb, can I have a cookie?" "Does Gerald let you have cookies between meals, Olly?" "Yes," answered Olly, unhesitatingly.
Mary's old nurse was overjoyed to see her, and pressed the two girls to stay and eat big soft ginger cookies on the shady back porch, and quench their thirst with glasses of cool milk, while she inquired minutely after the health of Mary's "ma" and "pa." "Mrs. Simmons is the best old nurse that ever was," said Mary to Agony, as they took their way back to the woods an hour later.
Aunty Moravec divided rolls and cookies among all.