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James Kranckenhoos and his prize-winning colt. It took Best-Of-Show at the Miskatonic County Fair. |
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The Gigglemelon Family can be seen in the windows of Jarvis and Jarvis Taxidermy. The inhabitants of Arkham regard this as a singular work of art, and each year they deposit chocolate bunnies on the grave of Mrs. Jarvis, in memory of her episode. |
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Spud, Arwyn and Vivyan Jarvis in front of the family business, before they were stuffed. They were fast, but not fast enough. |
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Lotti Nüßknacker was an orphan. She constructed her parents from wax, and set them in her living room, to hold her current reading material and crack walnuts. Later, she converted her father into a nightstand, and her mother into a footrest. |
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The Discovery at Innsmouth was ignored by the scientific establishment. The petrified remains of a humanoid with squid-like features did not surprise us at all. |
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Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery A. Scott and their pet, Booga, who was a favorite with the children of Arkham in 1894. The slowest child would get eaten. There are no slow children in Arkham. |
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Mavis Rodriguez didn't believe her sister was serious. Then the sulfuric acid hit. All four sisters later married Mr. Project. |
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Winifred Ralston's prize-winning cow, "Boo-Boo." Boo-Boo took Bovine Best-of-Show from 1973 to 1981 at the Miskatonic County Fair. |
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Ann Marie Winston was a straight-A student, active in sports and an all around popular little girl. On October 21st, 1935, she poisoned her entire family, including the parakeet, and then took the fatal cookies to school, where she accounted for 37 students, seven teachers and the custodian. After serving her sentence in the Arkham Asylum, she took a job at Bert's Diner, where she became famous for her Bitter Almond Biscotti. |
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George and Frank Chiçnôç were the only one-legged ballet dancers in the world. Their jeté was a thing to see, and their pirouettes were exquisite. They developed their unique talents after their "Alligator Ballet" did not work out. |
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Alexandria Tyne was an eccentric artist in Arkham's Bohemian section. Her major works, "Fear by the River," "Loathesome Joy," and "Morning After Spring Calling," may be seen displayed at Arkham City Hall, in the lobby. Art students still try to duplicate her style of mold, mud and bits of string, feathers and skin, but have never reached the heights of artistic creativity that Ms. Tyne achieved. |
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Laurie, Veronica, Samuel, Annie and little Demetrius Kerpivnick before the fire. |
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Gilda Mae Molieré was a well known Temple Dancer in the early 1930s. Her interpetation of the "Interrogation of the Prisoner" has never been surpassed, and her "Dance of the Awakening" was felt to be an evocation never before seen. She is pictured here forming the letters "CIP," in the "Interrogation of the Prisoner." |
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