Above all, it is a call to resist complacency.
Category: Dun Maylock
Food Thief Revealed – 2024 Fulton Scribe Article Regarding Combs’ Dun Maylock Conspiracy
maybe, just maybe, if folks spent less time looking for monsters in every shadow, they’d see the people who actually need help standing right in front of them.
Food Thefts – 2024 Fulton County Advisor Article on the Dun Maylock
Now, the so-called “authorities” will try to brush this off, chalk it up to “desperate times” or “an opportunistic thief.” But let’s not forget that the Dun Maylock have a long history of sending messages through the most mundain of crimes.
Huxley Drake Responds to CWH – Fulton Scribe Article on the Dun Maylock
“Someone must drag his arguments out of the murky depths of melodrama and into the cold, hard light of reality.”
CWH Respose to Huxley Drake – Daily Futon Article on the Dun Maylock
Evil does not announce itself with trumpets and banners. It works quietly, in the margins, relying on skeptics to dismiss it and cynics to ignore it.
Really? A Cult? – Fulton Scribe Article on the Dun Maylock
“It’s all very dramatic—perfect fodder for those inclined to see patterns in shadows and menace where there’s only mischief.”
Deception – 1896 Fulton Express Article on the Dun Maylock
Recent incidents involving the group’s infamous calling card have taken a shocking turn, revealing a cunning scheme by an opportunistic criminal—one who ultimately paid the price for his charade
Mail Pranks Pt 3 – 1924 Fulton Gazette Article on Dun Maylock
The town of Fulton is left reeling from the resolution of the Amos Bellamy affair, which began with a bloody handprint and a cryptic letter and has ended in tragedy.
Mail Pranks Pt 2 – 1924 Fulton Gazette Article on Dun Maylock
“I swear, it isn’t me!” he declared at a town meeting last Thursday. “I would never wear that ridiculous fedora they had on!”
Mail Pranks Pt 1 – 1924 Fulton Gazette Article on Dun Maylock
Other reports followed: a bundle of twigs left for Mr. Clayton Hargrove, an empty box addressed to “The Honorable Dog of this Residence” at the Warner household, and, most curiously, a hand-painted postcard of a rooster sent to the Widow Abernathy, who keeps no poultry.