london lottery 2009
london lottery 2009

Cool Shaggy Story
A Shaggy Dog Story
- My secretary hits me with a call from my second cousin, once removed, on my Mother’s side, Tommy the horseplayer.
- He is a deadbeat and a miscreant (evil) relative, and someone you should run away from like your behind was on fire.
- Tommy is broke again, and needs $150 to play a horse at Monticello racetrack where he is. Naturally the nag is a sure thing because as an insider, he knows the fix is in by the mob guys.
- He offers as collateral his pedigreed collie male, Jack London, professional breeding stud worth over Ten Grand. It was true, and his sole asset.
- He don’t know I would give him (Tommy) the $150 if he just signs a contract never to call me again. I say yeah for my dear departed mother’s sake.
- He needs the dinero wired to Monticello Raceway, upstate N.Y. He’ll deliver the collateral when he gets back to NYC.
- Tommy calls back later: two things: the horse loses, and Jack London the collie breeding champion – died. On behalf of both of them – very sorry.
- I say, “Tommy bring me Jack London’s corpse, I’m going to recoup my
$150.” He answers with the universal question – “But how?”
- “Not your problem, prove the collie exists and died, or get-out-of-town.”
- Here’s where you, dear reader come in. How did I take in $1,150 for my lost
$150? You figure it out and the first hand up wins $100 cash, tax-free.
- I read all your emails, but nobody got it. You want the answer?
- Hint: I control a 501 (c) (3), a not-for-profit, IRS approved charity.
- We can hold legal Raffles (lottery for a prize) anytime for any reason.
- Now, 258 folks each bought a $5 raffle to win the $10,000 breeding stud.
- You say, “But the dog was dead!”
- The raffle never mentioned the deceased nature of the collie Jack London.
- You say, “But didn’t you get complaints when they found out the
dog-was-dead?”
- I answer: – “Sure, but only one complaint, and that from the winner. I
show the raffle winner the corpse of Jack London and offered it to him, plus
I give him his $5 back.” He could have the dog stuffed in memorial, right?
19. That left my charity with a return of $1,145.
The non-profit gave me my $150 back and $490 for my fund raising efforts.
The charity earned $650 – found money they never would have seen.
- Yes, it’s IRS legal to pay a fund-raiser up to 60% of what they bring in.
- Tommy the horseplayer still calls me up with sure things. I tell him,
“No! – unless you got good collateral like before.”
- He is saving up to buy another stud breeding collie to be registered as Jack London, #2. I hope this time the dog lives. Aha! Moment? See ya, H
copyright 2009 H. Bernard Wechsler
hbw@speedlearning.org 1-877-567-2500
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About the Author
Author of Speed Reading For Professionals, published by Barrons; business partner of Evelyn Wood, creator of speed reading, graduating 2 million, including the White House staffs of four U.S. Presidents.
about lottery there i was select for the 1,00,000 dollar, are this is true?
Reverend. Dr. Jame Williams
Claim Agent and Verification Officer
Address: 125 Shaftesbury Avenue, London, WC2H 8AD
Sub: Claiming for the winning money of One Million dollars ($1,000,000.00USD) only in the YEAR 2008/2009
Dear Sir,
This is jahangir Alam would like to inform you that as per your expectation I am sending you my account details as bellow:
Batch number…………………YBM-EBS-390AF
Reff number…………………….YBM-EBS-719AF
Winning number……………YBM-EBS-798AF
I wasn’t even going to bother to answer this.
However, if you’re gullible enough to believe there might be a free million dollars floating around for you, then you might also be gullible enough to believe James.
James is joking. You get nothing for nothing. They are trying to steal your information so they can eventually steal your money.
2009 London Fantasy Baseball Draft Lottery
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