Another Suicide EXAITIAS LIABILITY … This time I put 35CHRONOS END TO LIFE in Heraklion of Crete, LIABILITY DUE TO BANKS …

New York Stock Exchange Cleveland & Stevenson Club Secretary Ribbon, 1892 Politics
Image by Cornell University Library

(Title)  NEW Blight of U.S. EPOHI answers to the name AFTOKTONIES AND IS SNEAKY AND MORE DANGEROUS THAN EVER … AS WELL NOT EXIST OR TREATMENT OR AND NOTHING ELSE …
U.S. reached the point … EXAITIAS OF OUR LIABILITY OF BANKS AND THIRD PARTIES .. . DO NOT WANT TO OWN OR OUR LIFE AND ONLY BY DIEXODOS torture Experiencing BE DEATH …

suicide led a 35-year old debt free trader and father of three minor children from Heraklion. The new tragic incident added to the suicides of businessmen island, whose numbers, according to the authorities, over the last 20mino 15 people.
The 35 year-old ended his life with a shotgun in a rural area outside the Heraklion. Earlier, according to police, the suicide had sent messages from his mobile phone to relatives and friends about what he proposed to do, while asking them to go to this spot to get his car.
As stated the family environment, was facing serious financial problems at work and had many debts to banks, but also others, who could not repay.

The funeral was held yesterday afternoon in the village Stavrakos Heraklion , from which it came.

pinch TV
25-8-2010

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Landon-Knox and Philander Knox Campaign Items, ca. 1908-1936 Politics
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Type: Documentary Rating: NR Running Time: 60 Minutes Starring: Directed by: Peter Tetteroo, Raymond Feddema PLOT DESCRIPTION The winner of the 2001 International Emmy award for Best Documentary, Welcome to North Korea is a grotesquely surreal look at the all -too-real conditions in modern-day North Korea. Dutch filmmaker Peter Tetteroo and his associate Raymond Feddema spent a week in and around the North Korean capital of Pyongyang – ample time to produce this outstanding film. Creative Commons license: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs; from www.archive.org. Video Rating: 4 / 5

The Golden Age or How to Restore Public Credit Politics
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