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There is a hidden message on the Headstone Montreal

An epitaph on a Headstone Montreal in a cemetery in Montreal makes an unflattering acrostic.

They came from the images above.

Yes, there are pictures of the headstone that marked the spot where John Laird McCaffery, who died in 1995, was buried. He was buried in Section C, Plot #01369 of Montreal’s Mount Royal Cemetery, where he was buried as of this writing. Because it was unclear who wrote Mr. McCaffery’s unusual epitaph and why it was hard to figure out who did it. The Montreal Mirror was able to find the man who made the headstone, but they were only able to figure out that:

After the monument maker finished sandblasting it into stone,

he thought about what the message might be. “After I’m done, I look at it and I’m like, “Wow.” John, whose full name won’t be used because he’s a professional, says: “I saw it just like that.” This man’s ex-wife and mistress came into the store together and bought the stone together. They said the message was about him. In John’s words: “It was a thing between the three of them.” John points out that the only other hardy-har headstone he’s been hired to write says, “I’d rather be in Boston, but my wife buried me here.” Notre-Dame-des-Neiges. ( The headstone is not in Mount Royal Cemetery, as the message above said. Because it was unclear who wrote Mr. McCaffery’s unusual epitaph and why it was hard to figure out who did it.

After the monument maker finished sandblasting it into stone,

he thought about what the message might be. “After I’m done, I look at it and I’m like, “Wow.” John, whose full name won’t be used because he’s a professional, says: “I saw it just like that.” This man’s ex-wife and mistress came into the store together and bought the stone together. They said the message was about him. In John’s words: “It was a thing between the three of them.” John points out that the only other hardy-har headstone he’s been hired to write says, “I’d rather be in Boston, but my wife buried me here.” Notre-Dame-des-Neiges and Mount Royal Cemetery are next to each other, but they are not the same places. Notre-Dame-des-Neiges, like most cemeteries, has rules about what can and can’t be written on tombstones there. A pejorative sentiment like the one shown here could only have been written in a secret way:

Because it was unclear who wrote Mr. McCaffery’s unusual epitaph and why it was hard to figure out who did it. The Montreal Mirror was able to find the man who made the headstone, but they were only able to figure out that:

MONTREAL — This is the city where the Olympics are going to be. At least once a year, my father goes back to where he grew up. When he does, he always stops by the cemetery in the neighborhood. Not only to pay his respects to his family but also to put a flower on Charlie Murphy’s grave, which he did. more

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