From Newsgroup: comp.lang.mumps
<div>How the hell do you get gold/money? Am I missing something? I played through the tutorial and it seems fun but after starting my own game I ran out of gold extremely fast and the taxes were never enough to get my gold back up.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>download townsmen unlimited money</div><div></div><div>Download File:
https://t.co/YJIrSWdkCK </div><div></div><div></div><div>Good day guys, does anyone know and played townsmen here before? So I just stumbled to this game and for me it is really enjoyable. However, for anyone that played this game, can you guys give advice on how to earn thaler/money more and solve the problem about the costly repairs on all of the buildings. tyvm.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The Visit tells of the return of an old and rich woman to the impoverished German town where she was born. The townsmen have known great poverty all their lives, and they hope that her lover of 50 years ago--Alfred Ill, played by Christopher Medearis--can persuade the old lady to give them some money. The old lady agrees to help--she will contribute the phenomenal sum of "one billion"--on one condition. It seems her former boyfriend had made her pregnant, and then denied before a court of law that he was responsible. As a result she was forced to leave town, 17 years old and seven months pregnant. Starting as a prostitute, she married nine rich men in a row to become the richest woman in the world. Now, Claire Zachanassian, nee Washer, has returned to the little town to buy justice and revenge: she offers the one billion in return for her childhood lover's life.</div><div></div><div></div><div>At first the townsmen spurn the offer and stand behind their popular fellow-townsman, Ill. By the end of play they will accept it. Ill himself is terrified at the beginning that he will eventually be killed for the money. He forgets his fear, however, and calmly awaits the death he is cynically certain will come.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Andreas Teuber, rapidly becoming one of the grand old men of Harvard undergraduate theatre, has turned in another superb performance as the town's old schoolmaster. Teuber plays a crucial part, for the old schoolmaster is the only one of the townsmen other than Alfred Ill himself who realizes the power of the temptation they face. Seduced by the money, he is conscious of what is happening to the townspeople to the end.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>"We have used Townsmen Properties as our management company for over 3 years. When they took over our reserve account was near zero and our aged receivables were outrageous. Within a year our receivables were nearly up to date. Townsmen Properties also saved us a substantial amount of money on our insurance and other services. It is without hesitation that I highly recommend them"</div><div></div><div></div><div>There are quests to complete during the different scenarios and maps, such as making 30 planks of wood or supplying 20 bunches of wheat, or building special entertainment places that your Townsmen and women like to visit. Completing the quests earns you XP and money (Thaler) or crowns. Crowns can then be used to instantly construct a building or level it up for more production.</div><div></div><div></div><div>In Exeter, as in most of New England in the 1600s, the most important man in town was the minister. The Rev. John Wheelwright had organized Exeter in 1638, but had been forced to leave when the townsmen voted to align themselves with the Massachusetts Bay Colony just five years later. Some of Wheelwright's followers left with him, but many remained and quietly absorbed newcomers who arrived after Wheelwright's departure. Although the town was able to govern itself with elders and selectmen, not having a spiritual leader weighed heavily on the inhabitants.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Wheelwright had hoped that his friend Thomas Rashleigh would accept the job, but Rashleigh refused for his own reasons. A substitute, the Rev. Hatevil Nutter of Dover, was asked to fill-in while the town searched for a new permanent minister. It was a time when money was in short supply, and so the Rev. Nutter was paid not with cash but with service. He owned a tract of land on the Lamprey River and it needed fencing. Every year, the townsmen of Exeter were required to donate time and materials to enclose the property. After five years, the job was done, the Rev. Nutter signed the town book acknowledging the work was done and his services were no longer needed. Fortunately, by that time, June of 1650, the search committee had located a new preacher when the Rev. Samuel Dudley accepted the call to come to Exeter.</div><div></div><div></div><div>To properly resolve this situation and help the country and its people stay safe, you need to spend a lot of the national budget on building a brave fighting army. Not only creating but also continuously injecting more money, increasing the number of troops, and supporting weapons and salaries for its ever-expanding army.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Don Miguel Guti|-rrez is originally from the town of San Diego de Alejandr|!a. There, from his father's own words, the townsmen, and his friends, Don Miguel learned everything that was necessary to take advantage of the migrant experience. But his father, a bracero and migrant worker for many years, did not want his son to follow that same road. If he had spent his life in el Norte, it was precisely so that his children would not have to do the same. He could do little in this respect, his three children travelled up North. The only one thing that he managed to instill in them was an obsession, the need to return.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Don Miguel 's story is peculiar without a doubt. His goal in life was to work professionally his own lands, yet he let pass what others considered to be magnificent opportunities to accomplish his goal. Initially, he was a teacher and a migrant worker until he managed to become a union leader and legalize his situation in the United States; then he became a university student and a teacher until he managed to complete his education as an agronomist. But the same day he received his diploma, he decided to go to el Norte and work, to save money and be able to buy land and a tractor. In the beginning he was the joke of the townsmen, but little by little they began to understand his aim. He had several jobs and then, when he finally managed to get a stable job and a good reputation, it was time to return.</div><div></div><div></div><div>They took them by train all the way to Wisconsin, but they arrived before the potato season was due, meanwhile they were sent to harvest cherry, in little buckets, narrow at the botton and wide on top, that were cashed at 25 cents each. My dad could barely make enough to eat, besides they didn't pay them until after they had finished the job for fear that they might desert. Since these were very remote states it was not that easy to find people to work in the ranches; they stayed there for several days but the potato season would not arrive, so my dad got in touch with a compadre that was working close by and had a sister in Chicago. Taking advantage of being close by, he made up his mind, because he was carrying money, he was spending little and at that time he hadn't gotten married to my mom.</div><div></div><div></div><div>My dad answered that he had not gone to el Norte to gather flowers; they gave him the position as a waterer. He used to work fourteen hours a day. He would start at six in the morning, when it was still dark, and he would get out when it was already dark; he didn't need to pay rent because he used to live in the ranch. He liked the job, he learned it well, and stayed to work there for twenty years doing the same activity. He would come and go: for six to eight months he would work in several ranches and then he would return to San Diego, where he would spend the rest of the year working his lands, 60 hectares that he bought back in 1964, thanks to el Norte, he managed to have up to fifty pigs and ten cows. In 1970 he, once again, went to Chicago, because back in town his friends were telling him that one could make more money and work less, but, in the end, the truth of the matter turned out of be very different. In Chicago he worked at a factory that paid him 2.5 dollars per hour, but they would only give him eight hours per day, the required forty hours per week, he would earn, at most, ninety dollars per week, because the newly arrived were not allowed to work over-time, while in California he would make less money, but he could work from twelve to fourteen hours a day, which would let him make more than 100 dollars per week. In Chicago he ended up working for the city, in Public Parks and Gardens, he used to earn three dollars per hour, the problem was that he never liked the weather.</div><div></div><div></div><div>We tried twice again to get in, we could not find those who had been caught. We were carrying some money because we were prepared, but those who had been caught were put on a plane and sent all the way to Le||n, Guanajuato. So, for them the adventure was over very soon.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I kept doing the same until I finished high-school, in 1977, and with the money I had saved from my job as a teacher in San Diego and as a day-laborer in the United States, I went to study agronomy at the University of Guadalajara. At the same time I tried to transfer my teacher's poition to Guadalajara, but it was not possible so, I asked for a leave of absence, but without going back to work.</div><div></div><div></div><div>But it so happened that my savings, which were 20 thousand pesos, vanished. I had no money to continue studying and besides, I already wanted to get married, so I stopped studying for a year. In 1978 I left, once again, to the United States, this time with a fixed goal in mind: save money to get married and continue studying. When I had saved some three or four thousand dollars I returned. Two months later I got married, I returned to work at the high-school in San Diego, without forgetting my plans to finish studying agronomy. Later I asked for my transfer to Ocotl|in and, at the same time, I planed my return to the second year at the university. To do this I first had to change my teacher's post to an evening shift in Jamay from where I would journey every day all the way to Guadalajara, to attend the University, in a little car I bought with the money I brought back from the United States.</div><div></div><div></div><div>In 1983 I graduated, at last, as an agronomist, and to my parents and friends surprise, I decided to return, once again, to work in the United States. I remember that everybody was against the idea, but I had my reasons: I never stopped thinking about the United States, because I had already proved that, in fact, it was possible to save money over there. The biggest problem for those who leave is that the idea of saving is very remote. They don't have a strong enough will, or the capacity, to save their earnings, because in general they earn a lot of money. I knew that, and my intention was to buy a tractor, because I've always known about agriculture, and I wanted to work in that area, here in my town, in my land.</div><div></div><div> 356178063d</div>
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