Originally posted by Graham
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Acquiring A Victorian Diary
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Originally posted by Brenda View PostI feel bad for you. You MUST experience an Oreo cookie or you have not truly lived your life to the fullest.
Couldn't agree more, a damn fine sandwich!
Lets just hope a pic of Mike eating an oreo materialises, or a dusty old receipt from Co-op!
That'll surely put the final nail in the coffin!
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I just Googled 'oreo cookie'. Nothing special about them - we have very similar things here, but as I don't normally eat such junk I can't comment any further.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Graham View PostI just Googled 'oreo cookie'. Nothing special about them - we have very similar things here, but as I don't normally eat such junk I can't comment any further.
Graham
But I'm a sandwich short of a picnic (apperently) so please take my opinion with a pinch of salt (or bone black or arsenic if you're all out of salt)
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Originally posted by Brenda View PostI feel bad for you. You MUST experience an Oreo cookie or you have not truly lived your life to the fullest.
I would prefer a jammie dodger.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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These days I just make a big effort to limit my intake of sugar, which is now loaded into virtually every commercially-produced foodstuff you can think of.
Anyway....back to the black powder.
It was actually discovered in the spine of the book by Dr Eastaugh who thought it was possibly purified animal charcoal a.k.a. bone black. Whether he analysed it or not I don't know. At any rate, Shirley Harrison did a bit of background, and found that in the 1886 edition of Squire's Companion To The British Pharmacoepia bone black has, quote, 'the property of counteracting the effects of morphine, strychnine and aconite (arsenic)'. And 'these poisons may be swallowed with impunity if due proportion with purified animal charcoal'. I'm sure that bone black had various domestic and medicinal applications in those days, but given James Maybrick well-known taste for arsenic, I just thought it sounded...er...interesting.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by caz View PostCharmed, I'm sure.
But where is your evidence that Mike ever bought or borrowed 'a load of books on James Maybrick', or even on JtR for that matter?
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by caz View PostI don't know about such people, John. I can't open my own mind to what I find a completely idiotic attachment to Mike's equally idiotic, drunken forgery claims. Only if he could have pinched someone else's creation without their knowledge or approval, might I then be open to the possibility that the writing is more recent than the 'prior to 1970' date which the Rendell team finally settled on.
I do know I have a leg to stand on, however. In fact I have two. I used them to dance with less than a week ago.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by caz View PostIf it was ever thrown into a skip. That claim IMHO was only made by Eddie Lyons to distance himself from allegations that he had taken the diary away from the house.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Observer View PostPick and choose to your hearts content, In fairness though your honest opinion means zilch to me. It was stated that it had been thrown into a skip.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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