

play bingo
Aqua play bingo Tofana was a strong poison that was reputedly play bingo widely used in Naples and Rome, Italy.Aqua Tofana was either the creation of an Italian woman named Teofania di Adamo or play bingo her alleged daughter, Signoria Giulia Toffana, perhaps under the title, "Manna of St. Nicholas of Bari."The exact ingredients of the mixture are unknown, but it probably contained mostly arsenic and
possibly belladonna. It was a colorless, tasteless liquid. The poison was play bingo play bingo sold as a cosmetic or devotionary object in vials that had a picture of St. Nicholas. Legend holds that people used it to poison their unwanted spouses, relatives, and other enemies. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is attributed to have suspected that it had been used to poison him.Toffana play bingo was arrested play bingo in Naples circa 1719, tortured, and eventually executed by strangulation. She was held responsible for some 600 deaths. Many of the users and purveyors were also executed. Toxicology