KMFDM SUUUUUUUUUUUCKS
RABBIT VERIFIED
metal AF
me thinks cerberus doth bitch like a homo too much
when the p03try get's deep and can;t find the right meme
well
i was hoping to get it out of the way on tish ni biv
but no
everyone wanted their homotus
whah (you) yada yada yada bullshit faggot
these god damn fake italians are ruining the loaf pepe
you were chosen to be polar of the cathloic cuse i guess , all the money below you is thule and necromancy, loan a man a tool
HOW DID THEY RIG EASTEN STAR WITH JOBE'S DAUGHTERS AFTER THEY KILLED MILK
Secret Re-burial Of
Karl Marx In London
LONDON, Nov. 26 (A.A.P.).–Five gravediggers, working by
the light of oil lamps, on Wednesday night dug up the coffin of Karl
Marx, founder of Communism, from an obscure corner of Highgate
cemetery, North London, says the "Daily Express."
They moved it to a new
grave 200 yards away, on
the cemetery's main path-
way.
The gravediggers were
sworn to secrecy, so that for
the two days since then the
steady trickle of "pilgrims"
who always are visiting
Marx's grave, stood in fact
by an empty grave, says the
newspaper
No headstone marks the
new grave-only a stake and
a square of rope
The "Daily Express" says
that witl Marx's coffin were
moved the coffins of three
other people buried with him
They were his wife, Jenny
Marx, who died in 1881, his
five-year-old grandson, Harry
Longuet, who died in 1883,
and Helena Demuth. a ser-
vant, who died in 1890
Marx died on March 14,
1883, aged 65
The gravediggers met at
the cemetery gates at mid
night, silently rigged a can-
dis screen around the old
grave, and later carried the
coffin to the spot where a
cedar tree had been felled
to make room for it.
The "Daily Express" quotes
a Home Office official as say-
ing that the Home Secretary
granted a licence foi* the ex-
humation of Karl Marx to
a firm of solicitors.
KARL MARX Help
KARL MARX
I According to the "Daily
Express," the Marx Memorial
Committee, through its secre-
tary Mr. John W. Morgan,
ordered the exhumation.
Yesterday, in the quiet
Marx Memorial Library at
Clerkenwell Green, once
the office of Lenin, Marx's
greatest disciple, Mr. Morgan
said: "For 20 years I have
looked forward to the day
when a Marx memorial would
be raised. He was a simple
man and must be happy in
a simple grave."
The "Daily Express" com-
ments: "The not-so-simple
memorial will be in polished
black granite, with bronze
figures on a stepped base
lift square-three times the
area of Marx's old grave."
Ont craftsman who
tendered to build the
memorial told the paper: "It
will take six months to make
and could cost £5,000."
When the memorial is built
it will be known as "the
original resting place of Karl
Marx," although the old
grave, hidden among scores
of others and inscribed
"Karl Marx," will be retained.
;V