Several of the books could be purchased from a G. He published five or more books on dreams and policy – an early (and illegal) lottery in the black community – along with revised editions of some of the books. I learned that his real name was Herbert Gladstone Parris. Author Anthony Shafton mentioned him in his 2002 book “Dream-singers: The African American Way with Dreams.” There appears to be very little biographical information about the man. Parris Company, and lived in upstate New York. I found that he was a black man born in 1893, likely owned one of the major dream book publishing companies, G. With my auction dream book in hand, I decided to Google Prof. Me, I only play the big lotteries – Mega Millions and Powerball when the payout reaches more than $50 mil. I’m sure some of you have relatives who still believe that the right numbers in the right order will make them rich. And she isn’t the only one: A cousin in Ohio relies on a numbers book, too. My sister uses a similar book to choose the daily numbers for her lottery tickets in Georgia. I didn’t recognize the book, but I knew its purpose. What Did You Dream? 469.” It had a copyright date of 19, and the author was Prof. Its front cover was missing and its back cover had been slid inside the book. I was going through a box lot of items from Sunday’s auction when I came across an old softcover book tucked inside a clear plastic bag. Please Google “dream book” to find an online store that sells the books. That way, you’ll have the numbers at our fingertips when you have that spectacular dream. I get a lot of requests from readers wanting to know where to buy a dream book and asking me to look up numbers for them.
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