From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #14517 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Friday, August 23 2024 Volume 14 : Number 14517 Today's Subjects: ----------------- The Plants That Will Disappear First in a Crisis ["Medicinal Garden Kit" ] Drink THIS to pee freely again ["Prostate Release" Subject: The Plants That Will Disappear First in a Crisis The Plants That Will Disappear First in a Crisis http://medicinalkit.shop/x9PEkdp5NaurMx-dkJhRehXUFXcPjzg113Dk5UMGjXZL8JhHsQ http://medicinalkit.shop/Vb1ahoHnlDTNeeWu-U8Ywhqp9n8VaCrNIHlwynE8c9s54bdNnw sociation football is one of a family of football codes that emerged from various ball games played worldwide since antiquity. Within the English-speaking world, the sport is now usually called "football" in Great Britain and most of Ulster in the north of Ireland, whereas people usually call it "soccer" in regions and countries where other codes of football are prevalent, such as Australia, Canada, South Africa, most of Ireland (excluding Ulster), and the United States. A notable exception is New Zealand, where in the first two decades of the 21st century, under the influence of international television, "football" has been gaining prevalence, despite the dominance of other codes of football, namely rugby union and rugby league. The term soccer comes from Oxford "-er" slang, which was prevalent at the University of Oxford in England from about 1875, and is thought to have been borrowed from the slang of Rugby School. Initially spelt assoccer (a shortening of "association"), it was later reduced to the modern spelling. This form of slang also gave rise to rugger for rugby football, fiver and tenner for five pound and ten pound notes, and the now-archaic footer that was also a name for association football. The word soccer arrived at its current form ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 23 Aug 2024 17:14:59 +0200 From: "Prostate Release" Subject: Drink THIS to pee freely again Drink THIS to pee freely again http://titanlow.best/MIJ4Cn51tRAQ1xFb0ts1AM0DqQziB_QpsqwN_5XTRZIFUy4GBg http://titanlow.best/I39b6rPI7zUg3IZdhq3Q9TjxQytPRURt08Ev_HOldeORNPJXOQ as born Norma Jeane Mortenson on June 1, 1926, at the Los Angeles General Hospital in Los Angeles, California. Her mother, Gladys Pearl Baker (nC)e Monroe; 1902b1984), was born in Piedras Negras, Coahuila, Mexico to a poor Midwestern family who migrated to California at the turn of the century. At age 15, Gladys had married John Newton Baker, an abusive man nine years her senior. They had two children together, Robert (1918b1933) and Berniece (1919b2014). She successfully filed for divorce and sole custody of her two oldest in 1923, but Baker kidnapped the children soon after and moved with them to his native Kentucky. Monroe was not told that she had a sister until she was 12, and they met for the first time in 1944 when Monroe was 17 or 18. Following the divorce, Gladys worked as a film negative cutter at Consolidated Film Industries. Her second marriage occurred in 1924 when she married Martin Edward Mortensen, but they separated just months later and divorced in 1928. In 2022, DNA testing indicated that Monroe's father was Charles Stanley Gifford (1898b1965), a co-worker of Gladys, with whom she had an affair in 1925, though until then, her father was thought to be Mortensen. Monroe also had two other half-siblings from Gifford's marriage with his first wife, a sister, Doris Elizabeth (1920b1933), and a brother, Charles Stanley (1922b2015). Monroe as an infant, wearing a white dress and sitting on a sheepskin rug Monroe as an infant, c.?1927 Although Gladys was mentally and financially unprepared for a child, Monroe's early childhood was stable and happy. Gladys placed her daughter with evangelical Christian foster parents Albert and Ida Bolender in th ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #14517 ***********************************************