1 posted on
01/08/2019 8:54:17 PM PST by
Theoria
To: SunkenCiv
Pretty cool.
‘Local historian Frank McHugh, a member of the Boho Heritage Group, said little has been written about the Boho cure, but the tradition dates back to the Reverend James McGirr, the parish priest on Boho in 1803.
“He must obviously have had the facility to cure people and people must have thought very highly of him.
“What he said was, ‘after I die, the clay that covers me will cure anything that I cured when I was with you’.’
2 posted on
01/08/2019 8:54:33 PM PST by
Theoria
(I should never have surrendered. I should have fought until I was the last man alive)
To: Theoria
DNA is wild stuff, with Powers.
3 posted on
01/08/2019 8:59:01 PM PST by
Paladin2
To: Theoria
4 posted on
01/08/2019 9:08:38 PM PST by
Pelham
(Secure Voter ID. Mexico has it, because unlike us they take voting seriously)
To: Theoria
See. Those old wives lnew
5 posted on
01/08/2019 9:08:58 PM PST by
Nifster
(II see puppy dogs in the clouds)
To: Theoria
Who, or what, was buried there?
7 posted on
01/08/2019 9:25:54 PM PST by
BenLurkin
(The above is not a statement of fact. It is either satire or opinion. Or both.)
To: Theoria

"You rang? What?
Oh, never mind."
9 posted on
01/08/2019 9:38:36 PM PST by
sparklite2
(Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
To: Theoria
Irish dirt. It’s just better.
To: Theoria
“According to local belief, the soil from a churchyard in Boho can cure infections.”
In the neighboring Counties, locals say that whiskey is good for what ails you.
11 posted on
01/08/2019 10:30:43 PM PST by
BeauBo
To: Theoria
There must be a vampire buried there.
14 posted on
01/09/2019 4:42:54 AM PST by
fruser1
To: Theoria
16 posted on
01/09/2019 6:09:25 AM PST by
kalee
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