· John Jessi lahkunud vanaisa · Phil Jessi kasuisa ( Jessi geist isa mees.) · Horace Jessi isa kodustatud kajakas Sõbrad · Fred Parson Jessi poiss · Flora Jessi parimsõbranna (Üli abivalmis ja emalik) · Mackenzie Ben'i parim sõber · Noritsugu Nishizawa Jaapanlane, kes õppis Jessi ema juures · Rasputin Jessi kaisukaru · Marcus Dawson Beni sõber (jalgpallur) · Buster Beresford Fredi sõber Kool · Mr.Powell Tulevane kooli õppelajuhataja. Kooli direktor · Mrs.Forthergill Inglise kelle vanemõpetaja. Jessi tulevane klassijuhataja · Mrs.Thorn Jessi nö ajutine klassijuhataja. Inglise keele õpetaja · Mrs.Tomkins Kooli huvijuht · Mrs.Burton Grupi G1 matemaatika õpetaja · Ben Jones Jessi klassivend, kes talle enne Fredi väga meeldis · Edoward & Gerard Prantsuse vahetusõpilased
eighty novels and short-story collections, nineteen plays and five nonfiction books, including her autobiography. Her most popular characters are the ingenious Belgian Hercule Poirot and Miss Jane Marple. She achieved Britain's highest honor when she was made a Dame of the British Empire. The Book This book is a short-story collection about two characters who are not as popular as Poirot or Miss Marple. They are Tommy and Tuppence Beresford, a married couple. Tommy works for some kind of a agency which tells them to run a detective agency to catch a Russian spy. Tuppence was delighted because before that she was very bored and she had nothing to do. Before catching the spy they start working as real detectives. They are pretty good at solving mysterious cases because they are great fans of detective novels. Tommy and Tuppence like to role play. Every time they have a costumer they parody all kinds of
The points of the chocolate cat are identical for shows with those of the royal except body colour, but the imported chocolate is often dark chocolate, with blue eyes, stumpy tail with a marked kink, short legs, and heavy, thick body. There are not many chocolates exhibited, owing to the preference given to the royal variety. It must be understood that there is no definite royal breed as such, but the palace breed seems to have originated by selection." Lady Marcus Beresford wrote that Siamese imported from a Bangkok temple "differed from the royal Siamese, being darker and having a more pointed head and face, and their eyes were larger and fuller." According to Miss Forestier Walker "This breed is said to be kept very carefully in the palace in Bangkok - hence the title 'royal' - and is by no means the common cat of Siam. One gentleman (a missionary), who had lived there fifteen years, had during that time seen only three