8/18/2023 0 Comments Ghost ezra telegram![]() ![]() The most notable of those is the Capote nod in his essay “ Brooklyn Heights: A Personal Memoir,” published in February of 1959 in Holiday magazine. Most are stories repeated by area residents who either lived near or in 13 Pineapple Street. The stories that do emerge - a connection to a ship captain, a ghostly presence, a 1790 construction date, a wife insisting on the size of the house being doubled, and a tale of it being moved from another location - all seem to have begun, or at least begun to appear consistently in print, after 1930. Few contemporary accounts from the 19th century have emerged, nor even many stories from the early 20th century, when so much history was being delightfully embroidered. What is intriguing about 13 Pineapple Street is that much of the folklore surrounding the house dates from the 1930s to the 1960s. Photo by Susan De VriesĪ house with some colorful tales attached to it is not unusual in fact, it’s expected in a building that has almost 200 years of history behind it. In the case of 13 Pineapple Street, some of that folklore was enshrined into the collective consciousness by none other than Truman Capote. Each dive into a Brooklyn Heights building involves complicated research and sorting through endlessly entertaining folklore. With a neighborhood that has been documented over the centuries by writers, artists and historians, and was even the first historic district designated in New York City, it might be safe to assume that each Brooklyn Heights house has a well-traced story charting its architectural and social history. Located on one of the charming fruit streets of northern Brooklyn Heights, 13 Pineapple stands apart from its brick and brownstone neighbors, a wood-frame, Federal-style reminder of an earlier time in the neighborhood. ![]() Even in a neighborhood filled with architectural delights, the generously wide, gray-shingled facade seems to hint at an interesting past. The following creams they sell contain aborted fetal cells, but we need to boycott all their products.It’s a house that invites a second look from the passerby. ![]() The following products are manufactured using aborted fetal cells: PEPSI BEVERAGES: – All Pepsi soft drinks – Sierra Mist soft drinks – Mountain Dew soft drinks – Mug root beer and other soft drinks – No Fear beverages – Ocean Spray beverages – Seattle’s Best Coffee – Tazo beverages – AMP Energy beverages – Aquafina water – Aquafina flavored beverages – DoubleShot energy beverages – Frappuccino beverages – Lipton tea and other beverages – Propel beverages – SoBe beverages – Gatorade beverages – Fiesta Miranda beverages – Tropicana juices and beverages NESTLE PRODUCTS: – All coffee creamers – Maggi Brand instant soups, bouillon cubes, ketchups, sauces, seasoning, instant noodles KRAFT – CADBURY ADAMS PRODUCTS: – Black Jack chewing gum – Bubbaloo bubble gum – Bubblicious bubble gum – Chiclets – Clorets – Dentyne – Freshen Up Gum – Sour Cherry Gum (Limited) – Sour Apple Gum (Limited) – Stride – Trident CADBURY ADAMS CANDIES: – Sour Cherry Blasters – Fruit Mania – Bassett’s Liquorice All sorts – Maynards Wine Gum – Swedish Fish – Swedish Berries – Juicy Squirts – Original Gummies – Fuzzy Peach – Sour Chillers – Sour Patch Kids – Mini Fruit Gums – Certs breath mints – Halls Cough Drops NEOCUTIS “BEAUTY” PRODUCTS: Neocutis uses aborted male baby cells after a 14 week gestation period in their anti-wrinkle creams. It’s time to say ‘no’ by never purchasing products made with dead babies again. ![]() □BQQQQQQQM □ Boycotting Cannibalism: Foods Containing Dead Fetal Cells Every time we eat any of the food sources listed below (and any time we eat the flesh and blood of another sentient being), we are participating in a satanic ritual. ![]()
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