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From: "Woodworking Business Plan" <woodworkingbusiness@caleanac.us>
To: <christian.gabriel@shortnote.de>
Subject: *****SPAM***** Make money with your woodworking skills!
Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2018 08:23:29 -0500
Message-Id: <sj1swd6svdcv5keb-hor9q1v0w0bupbra-f0c46eeb@caleanac.us>
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Content preview: This email must be viewed in HTML mode. Hi, If you'd like
an easy way to earn part-time income by doing something FUN, go check this
out now: [...]
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Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2018 08:23:29 -0500
From: "Woodworking Business Plan" <woodworkingbusiness@caleanac.us>
Reply-To: "Woodworking Business" <woodworkingbusiness@caleanac.us>
Subject: Make money with your woodworking skills!
To: <christian.gabriel@shortnote.de>
Message-ID: <sj1swd6svdcv5keb-hor9q1v0w0bupbra-f0c46eeb@caleanac.us>
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<title></title>
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<body><a href="http://caleanac.us/EcAmmcnji3IGXRuVokgzwqUKjRanWfoJjEZFvjvkwY3QiImI"><img border="0" src="http://caleanac.us/D0l6Tv4-FMkohHJ6VVhvGsNTmahqkdL8jh3zISZksDrtm4iu" /> </a>
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<p>Hi,</p>
<p>If you'd like an easy way to earn part-time income by doing something FUN, <a href="http://caleanac.us/FvT0-QM-hL1XzKYVvRJkZnpiAO8p5WNj9_pMpwfsRRZyuYp1"> <b>go check this out now:</b></a></p>
<p>My friend Jim, has successfully run a HIGHLY profitable woodworking business from home and he has just released his step-by-step blueprint.</p>
<p><a href="http://caleanac.us/FvT0-QM-hL1XzKYVvRJkZnpiAO8p5WNj9_pMpwfsRRZyuYp1"><b>Read His Amazing Story:</b></a></p>
<p>It is a no-fluff step by step guide to create a part-time woodworking business, selling easy-to-build wood crafts, from HOME ...with NO capital or experience required.</p>
<p>He started out with little carpentry skills and run a business in a 10x20 feet space with ZERO capital....</p>
<p><a href="http://caleanac.us/FvT0-QM-hL1XzKYVvRJkZnpiAO8p5WNj9_pMpwfsRRZyuYp1"><img src="http://caleanac.us/89eaf9e0fe4cb19a19.gif" /></a></p>
<p>But managed to made $9000 per month as a one-person business within the FIRST year!</p>
<p>The cool thing is, you don't have to be an expert woodworker to start this business as it's packed with solid STEP-BY-STEP instructions and information on what to do to turn your *passion into profit*.</p>
<p><a href="http://caleanac.us/FvT0-QM-hL1XzKYVvRJkZnpiAO8p5WNj9_pMpwfsRRZyuYp1"><b>So check it out at:</b></a></p>
<p>Act on this quickly before the door shuts as the offer may be taken down very soon...</p>
<p>Hope this helps<br />
Justin</p>
<p>P.S: The *one-on-one* coaching Jim provides is worth much more than the entire package. I think he's crazy to offer that at the price but go check it out and judge for yourself:</p>
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<p style=" padding:0px; padding:0px;color:#ffffff; font-size:11px; line-height:-1px"><!--
A Spanish expedition from Peru under the command of Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira discovered the island in the year 1568. Mendaña's subordinate, Pedro de Ortega Valencia, named the island after his home town Guadalcanal in Andalusia, Spain. The name comes from the Arabic Wadi l-Khanat (???? ???????), which means "Valley of the Stalls" or "River of Stalls", referring to the refreshment stalls which were set up there during Muslim rule in Andalusia. In the years that followed the discovery, the island was variously referred to as Guadarcana, Guarcana, Guadalcana, and Guadalcanar, which reflected different pronunciations of its name in Andalusian Spanish.
European settlers and missionaries began to arrive in the 18th and 19th centuries, and in the year 1893, the British Solomon Islands Protectorate was proclaimed which included the island of Guadalcanal. In 1932, the British confirmed the name Guadalcanal in line with the town in Andalusia, Spain.
In the months following the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the Japanese drove the Americans out of the Philippines, the British out of British Malaya, and the Dutch out of the East Indies. The Japanese then began to expand into the Western Pacific, occupying many islands in an attempt to build a defensive ring around their conquests and threaten the lines of communication from the United States to Australia and New Zealand. The Japanese reached Guadalcanal in May 1942.
When an American reconnaissance mission spotted construction of a Japanese airfield at Lunga Point on the north coast of Guadalcanal, the situation became critical. This new Japanese airfield represented a threat to Australia itself, and so the United States as a matter of urgency, despite not being adequately prepared, conducted its first amphibious landing of the war. The initial landings of US Marines on 7 August 1942 secured the airfield without too much difficulty, but holding the airfield for the next six months was one of the most hotly contested campaigns in the entire war for the control of ground, sea and skies. Guadalcanal became a major turning point in the war as it stopped Japanese expansion. After six months of fighting, the Japanese ceased contesting the control of the island. They finally evacuated the island at Cape Esperance on the north west coast in February 1943.
Immediately after landing on the island, the US Navy Seabees began finishing the airfield begun by the Japanese. It was then named Henderson Field after a Marine aviator killed in combat during the Battle of Midway. Aircraft operating from Henderson Field during the campaign were a hodgepodge of Marine, Army, Navy and allied aircraft that became known as the Cactus Air Force. They defended the airfield and threatened any Japanese ships that ventured into the vicinity during daylight hours. However, at night, Japanese naval forces were able to shell the airfield and deliver troops with supplies, retiring before daylight. The Japanese used fast ships to make these runs, and this became known as the Tokyo Express. So many ships from both sides were sunk in the many engagements in and around the Solomon Island chain that the nearby waters were referred to as Ironbottom Sound.
Guadalcanal American Memorial
The Battle of Cape Esperance was fought on 11 October 1942 off the northwest coast of Guadalcanal. In the battle, United States Navy ships intercepted and defeated a Japanese formation of ships on their way down 'the Slot' to reinforce and resupply troops on the island, but suffered losses as well. The Naval Battle of Guadalcanal in November marked the turning point in which Allied Naval forces took on the extremely experienced Japanese surface forces at night and forced them to withdraw after sharp action. Some Japanese viewpoints consider these engagements, and the improving Allied surface capability to challenge their surface ships at night, to be just as significant as the Battle of Midway in turning the tide against them.
After six months of hard combat in and around Guadalcanal and dealing with jungle diseases that took a heavy toll of troops on both sides, Allied forces managed to halt the Japanese advance and dissuade them from contesting the control of the island by finally driving the last of the Japanese troops into the sea on 15 January 1943. American authorities declared Guadalcanal secure on 9 February 1943.
Two US Navy ships have been named for the battle:
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