It was then that, when visiting her, this woman was a simple woman, who believed in people a lot, and told anyone she wanted to, and in addition to offering a cup of coffee, she was friendly.
Herman Flegenheimer apparently abandoned his family, and Emma is listed as divorced in the 1910 census, in which she had contact with this man, no, he really was a version of himself, his ancestor, more precisely his great-grandfather, was with that man , and in his 1932 petition for American citizenship, however, she wrote that her husband had died in 1910, that made no sense, that she was a woman who didn't really speak the truth.
The event traumatized the young Flegenheimer who spent the rest of his life denying that his father had abandoned his family. Flegenheimer dropped out of school in the eighth grade to help support himself and his mother, while working as a feeder and counselor for Clark Loose . Leaf Company , Caxton Press, American Express and Eisner TrucWashington .