Friday, June 01, 2012

Scouting: Lifestyle Choice

Ed_scoutmaster_person

No one gets into Scouting halfway. 

You either are or you aren't, involved in Scouting.  There is no "Scouting is skirting the fringes of my life" thing.  You may not be an active participant in scouting at some periods of your life, but the fabric of your life has blue and gold threads running through it: you know the lingo:

"Arrow of Light"

"Order of the Arrow"

"Eagle Scout"

"Woodbadge"

"Merit Badge"

"Little Philmont"


Just a few weeks ago, my stepson attended "Little Philmont".  Attended is probably too mild of a word.  It's a learning experience, a test of your patience and skills, a primer for Leadership-ness.  Mark is a grownup man with three jobs and a family, but he has chosen to make Scouting a part of his life.  The ranks of Scoutmasters, Committee Members, and Merit Badge Counselors are filled with just tha kind of dedicated people.   People who carve out a little time each week to develop and carry on a successful Scout program are people just like you and me--they are special because of their volunteership spirit, because they enjoy helping boys and girls be productive and engage. 

You primarily remember the "bad" campouts.  The ones that were held with the rain pouring down, with cars getting stuck in the sand, the ones when things didn't go perfectly.  Scouting mimics life.  If you can get through scouting, you are better prepared for the challenges ahead.  Even if you think you were a half-hearted Scout, try attending an Eagle Court of Honor.  The memories will flood back and a lot of them will be positive. 

I'm the mother of Scouts (all grown up Scouts); my husband was a Scout Master and I was a den leader and committee member.  I remember the night that I sat in a forest of trees at EucheeAnna Scout Camp.  There was a blazing bonfire.  There were whispers mingled with rowdy interruptions of restless Scouts.  But when the ceremony began, you had better take it seriously.  There was a solemnity about the occasion.  Afterwards, jubilation and relief.  Relief that another year was under your belt, sadness that tomorrow would be going-home day.  The crickets are chiming in, the bonfire wanes, and the parents and other visitors are getting in their cars, laughing, talking, hugging their sons goodbye. 

Img00080-20110611-0852

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

House rejects bill penalizing doctors for sex-selective abortions - The Hill's Floor Action

The House on Thursday rejected a Republican bill that would impose fines and prison terms on doctors who perform abortions for the sole purpose of controlling the gender of the child, a practice known as sex-selective abortion.

The Prenatal Nondiscrimination Act (PRENDA), H.R. 3541, was defeated in a 246-168 vote. While that's a clear majority of the House, Republicans called up the bill under a suspension of House rules, which limits debate and requires a two-thirds majority vote to pass. In this case, it would have required more support from Democrats.

Twenty Democrats voted for the bill, while seven Republicans opposed it. The bill would have needed 30 more yeas to pass.

Suspension votes are normally used for noncontroversial bills, but the GOP-backed measure was clearly controversial. Republicans have occasionally put controversial bills on the suspension calendar in order to highlight that Democrats oppose certain policies.

In some cases, Republicans have rescheduled these bills for regular consideration after they have failed, allowing for passage by a simple majority. But Republicans gave no sign that they would try again with PRENDA.

Earlier in the day, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) indicated that the issue of stopping sex-selective abortion is important enough that they would try again, but he was not specific.

More from The Hill:
♦ President Bush returns to White House
♦ Pelosi defends $1M tax-cut threshold against liberal critics
♦ Romney makes surprise campaign stop at Solyndra factory
♦ Romney supporters shout down Axelrod at Obama event
♦ Obama to donors: Get off sidelines and send cash now
♦ Bill Clinton to campaign against Scott Walker in Wisconsin
♦ Warren: I told Harvard I was Native American after hiring
♦ Obama official: UN proposals could lead to Internet censorship

"This is an important issue to the American people," Boehner said to reporters off the floor. "This type of sex selection most Americans find pretty repulsive, and our members feel strongly about it. That's why it is being brought to the floor."

During debate on the bill Wednesday, Republicans said the bill is consistent with the broader U.S. position that sex-selective abortion should be condemned around the world.

"In 2007, the United States spearheaded a U.N. resolution to condemn sex-selective abortion worldwide," said Rep. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.), the sponsor of the bill. "Yet, here in the land of the free and the home of the brave, we are the only advanced country left in the world that still doesn't restrict sex-selective abortion in any way."

While some Democrats made it clear that they oppose sex-selective abortion, they indicated that they oppose the bill's enforcement provisions, which they said would put in place an unacceptable limit on women's rights to choose abortion.

"We can all agree that women should not choose to terminate a pregnancy based solely on gender, but this bill criminalizes a legal procedure," Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.) said Thursday afternoon.

"The bill includes a provision that would allow a women's husband or parents, by merely alleging that an abortion is because of gender, to seek injunctive relief to prevent the doctor from performing abortion procedures, sending an incredibly private and personal decision into the courts," Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) added Thursday.

"It is another Republican intrusion into a woman's right to choose," said Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) of the GOP bill on Wednesday. "Women should be able to make such sensitive and private decisions with their families, their doctors and their god, free from the fear of the police."

Republicans voting against the bill were Reps. Justin Amash (Mich.), Charlie Bass (N.H.), Mary Bono Mack (Calif.), Robert Dold (Ill.), Richard Hanna (N.Y.), Nan Hayworth (N.Y.), and Ron Paul (Texas).

Democrats voting for it were Reps. Jason Altmire (Pa.), John Barrow (Ga.), Dan Boren (Okla.), Jim Cooper (Tenn.), Jerry Costello (Ill.), Mark Critz (Pa.), Henry Cuellar (Texas), Joe Donnelly (Ind.), John Garamendi (Calif.), Tim Holden (Pa.), Larry Kissell (N.C.), Daniel Lipinski (Ill.), Stephen Lynch (Mass.), Jim Matheson (Utah), Mike McIntyre (N.C.), Collin Peterson (Minn.), Nick Rahall (W.Va.), Silvestre Reyes (Texas), Mike Ross (Ark.) and Heath Shuler (N.C.).

back to top

House rejects bill penalizing doctors from performing sex selective abortions. (thehill.com).

How did this happen? Do we really think we can expect God to bless our country if this type of practice is coddled?!!

How can our congressmen and women (7 Republicans among them) vote no on this bill? When did it become an option in the USA to choose sex (gender) over a child's right to be born? I have looked to see who (which of the congress reps) voted not to support the bill. I haven't found a list, yet, so if anyone can tell me how to find that out, I would be very apprreciative.

I appreciate life. It's both beautiful and difficult. Sometime when we're not paying attention it can get pretty hum-drum. I'm so proud that my mother and father didn't say, "Whoops, it's gonna be a girl", and rush off to find a way to keep me from coming on board the bus whose destination was EARTH. What sacrifices did they make in their lives for the joy of having me? How do I know it was joy? Because they took a lot of pictures. Because they took the time to teach me stuff, to share themselves with me. I like being a girl and I like being alive.

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

[FLOKALOO] WFGS - Navigating Family Search

West Florida Genealogical Society
Date: June 2, 2012
Time:  10:00 AM
Place:  Asbury Place, 5725 N. 9th Ave., corner College Blvd.
Speaker:  Lee Scott.
Topic:  LDS Family Search.org update.

The   LDS Family Search.org  website has a new look and ever-expanding
content.  It takes a little practice to relearn to use it.  Lee is an
LDS member and has volunteered off and on at the Family History Center
since 1975.  There have been many changes in research techniques and
technology in the last 35 years.   Lee is constantly surfing to keep
abreast of the latest.  She is a past president of WFGS and past editor
of Footprints and the current newsletter editor.

2011 Footprints will be available at the meeting.
Escambia Co. FL new Marriage Records Index book 1910-1918 will be available.

Mark your Calendar:  Nov. 3 - Megan Smolenyak Seminar.  Outstanding
genealogist and
        speaker.  Google her name for more info on her.
        Topics Nov. 3:
http://www.honoringourancestors.com/schedule.html

Contact:  Cynthia Dean cgdean@bellsouth.net    850-432-7072


Allen Lawrence
List Admin
-------------------------------
To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to FLOKALOO-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Thursday, April 26, 2012

inauthor:"pete daniel" - Google Search


I was looking around at Google Books and found this author who writes about the South. Can't wait to see how he reads.

Quotes:

inauthor:"pete daniel" - Google Search


      This message was sent to you by Margaret Harris via Diigo

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Tuesday, April 17, 2012

      Keepsakes: What's worth keeping?

      I am at a crossroads in my life right now.  My husband is currently residing at the nursing home 13 miles away, my two youngest children are deciding which way and how soon they will fly the coop, and I need to downsize for financial and other reasons!

      So, what to do with all the stuff I have accumulated over the past years?  A lot of it falls into the category of keepsakes, memoirs material, relics, photographs, and so on.  I am sitting here, right now, looking at some of the mementos, just in my own bedroom!

      Wp_000212
        This is an old Christmas basket filled with sewing supplies, scrap pieces of lace, etc.  The next photo shows the same bookcase in a larger view; most of the "stuff" surrounding the basket is genealogy related: files, books, notebooks, etc.
       
      Wp_000211

      I confess to saving knick-knacks, also! 
      Wp_000210
        The first Valentine's day after my husband had his stroke, I went out and bought this little novelty item.  The mama bear is giving the papa bear some flowers.  For other pictures of my junk, beloved heirlooms, etc., check out my blog http://ancestorant.blogspot.com.

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Monday, April 16, 2012

      Inertness

      Finding myself in a quandary
      About what to do what to do
      My senses are inert
      They resist actions
      Like thinking
      Like planning

      All that it is left:
      A warm bed welcomes my being during the earliest hours of the night,
      I want to get an early start on dreams and on nothingness.
      Perhaps, in case I don't sleep well, I will have ample time to rest.

      Il_570xn

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Wednesday, March 21, 2012

      What's a Beat?

      Givens_family

      What's a beat?  When researching your ancestors in the census, you are apt to come across the physical location terminology, "beat". 

      We are familiar with the "cop's beat" and we have a general idea of what is being referred to.  Is a census "beat" the same thing?

      To get an intelligent or a more in-depth explanation/answer, I went first to the Free Census Project of USGenWeb.  Under the heading of Subdistricts and Enumeration Districts we find that different terms were used when the boundaries of the the county were indistinct or before they were even designated. 

      Boundaries of towns and other minor civil divisions, and in some cases of counties were ill defined, so enumerators were frequently uncertain whether a family resided in their own or an adjoining district. For this reason, it is not unusual to find individuals and families listed twice in the census and others missed entirely."

      And again:

      In a few states and territories, such as Arizona, Louisiana, Orleans, South Carolina, and others, the county divisions have been known by other names. In other places in some years, counties have not existed or have not been used, so other means of dividing up the state or territory have been used. Common examples of these names are Beat, Division, Judicial District, District, etc.

       
      And at another Internet source, we can review the instructions that were given to enumerators/census takers; it's a little lengthy, but since this was the 1880 Census and since the processes were of a federal nature, we will cite the whole paragraph:

      The supervisor of census is by law charged with the following duties:

      First. To propose to the Superintendent of the Census the apportionment of his district into subdivisions most convenient for the purpose of enumeration. These subdivisions are not allowed by law to exceed 4,000 inhabitants, according to the census of 1870, and can be made as much smaller as the good of the service may require. Administratively, the census office has favored the plan of small subdivisions; and of the 15,000 subdivisions reported up to the present date, the average estimate of population is not in excess of 2,000. Generally speaking, each existing civil division, whether a town, township, military district, "beat," or precinct, has been constituted one or more enumeration districts. In comparatively few cases two townships or more, of small population, have been constituted one enumeration district. It is anticipated that the total number of enumeration districts for all the States and Territories will be closely in the neighborhood of 28,000.

       
      We know that initially, the Enumeration District, and knowing which one to look at for our relatives, will become indispensable in searching the 1940 Census, but what about the Beat, the Beat, the Beat; are we any closer to knowing what it designates?  Chime in, will you, if you have any info on this!

       

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Saturday, March 03, 2012

      Valparaiso Community Library

      Valp_library

      http://www.fl-genweb.org/waok/okaloosa/valp-lib.htm
      Excellent article with photos of the Valparaiso Community Library, describes it as a "superb resource" for history and genealogy research. 

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Tuesday, February 28, 2012

      What we don't do for our students...

      Why do I think that I have to keep up with everything new under the sun that has to do with Family History, aka "Genealogy"?

      I used to read Dick Eastman's online genealogy newsletter, every single issue, till lately.  Now, I'm lucky if I can get through a couple of articles. 

      Why?  Because I'm too busy trying to keep up with Megan Smolenyak's adventures (in genealogy, what else?), the latest updates from RootsMagic, the software, reading genealogy blogs such as Genealogy's Star, and downloading George Morgan's podcast with Drew Smith (The Genealogy Guys) for my Smartphone.

      And somehow, I have to put in some time researching my ancestors, especially since I'm supposed to be teaching others how to do it.

      Yes, it's true that I have Legacy FamilyTree, the standard version on my computer, but I also have PAF, and GRAMPS, as well.  Just so I can listen intelligently when I talk about other people's programs. 

      Is it any wonder that I don't recognize myself when I look in the mirror, nowadays? 

      Think2

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Sunday, January 01, 2012

      Ten Physical Abilities I'm Grateful For:

      1. The Gift of Sound--I enjoy listening to wonderful music, to talented musicians, to my sweet husband's voice saying prayer, to young children playing, to the rain hitting my roof---this list could go on and on.  I am thankful for my ears and my ability to hear.
      2. The Gift of Sight--these are not in order of importance--just as I think of them.  How lovely is the sunset!  I love color and the sunset has some beautiful hues.  I love the faces of those in our family and friends, too.  I love animals, watching them, amazed at them and I love beauty in all of nature and in art, watching the ballet.  
      3.  I am thankful for the sense of touch.  There's nothing like a warm hug, a kiss on the cheek, someone massaging my back.  I like holding a baby and feeling its soft cheeks.  I like the warm water in a bath, the cool breeze on a summer's eve.
      4. I'm grateful for the wonder of this amazing piece of machinery that I call my body.  All of its parts work together and in tandem to perform the work of pumping blood, take a breath of fresh air, process the food that I take into my body and extracting the nutrients, while discarding the waste!  I love the mobility of a finely tuned body, or at least one that I'm taking care of (when I take care of myself).  At my age, I'm losing mobility, but I remember what it was like when I could do anything, go places, bend and pick pecans, and I miss it.  And best of all, my body houses my spirit (that which is the essence of me).
      5. I am thankful for the sense of taste, for the salty things, the sweetness of pecan pie, the refreshing taste of cantaloupe, and I even love the taste of some vegetables, especially if they're seasoned the Southern way.  
      6.  I am grateful for rhythm in my bones!  In my psyche I guess.  I love to dance, keep time to the music, sway to the music of The Sound of Music.  I love to sing, when I have the voice for it.  Mostly, I love to sing with others, with people on tv, or along with the music of a CD.  
      7. I am thankful for my hands.  I love using my hands; my mother never sat down without something to work on with her hands.  She crocheted throws out of colorful yarn; she made many of my dresses when I was growing up.  I learned to sew and make my own clothes.  I also learned to make bread, without a bread maker appliance.  I kneaded the bread and lathered it with butter when it came out of the oven (that makes the crust soft).  My mother taught me how to shell peas, pick blueberries, etc.  Using my hands has given me a deep satisfaction because it has to do with accomplishing something as opposed to accomplishing nothing.  With my hands I can play the piano, crack nuts, pat the earth over a newly planted seed, and best of all, my right hand can write using pencil and paper.  I love scrabble and sudoku, and sometimes do crosswords.  With two hands I can compose using a keyboard and computer.
      8. I am grateful for the sense of smell.  There are good smells, bad smells, and smells that define an item, warn us of impending danger, help find the garden.  I love the smell of Christmas trees and roses.
      9.  I am grateful for my brain.  It is a wonderful and very necessary part of my physical abilities.  It keeps my memories, helps me plan, and it soaks in tons of information, most of which I think important but could easily fall under the category of trivia.  
      10. I'm thankful for my feet and legs, the ability to walk and stand and do stuff (like dance).  Through the mechanics of walking, I can wait on my husband who no longer can walk.  My legs and feet support my body while I do a little bit of caregiving, along with the attendant duties. What a privilege it is to work and move around and help others.

      Saturday, November 12, 2011

      Data is the New Black

      I meant to just refer any readers out there to this article, but the linking of it to Blogger contained more than I thought it was going to.  I want you to know that I don't follow every bit of the article, but I can grasp a few things and from that I have concluded that this is the beginning of one very technology driven science fiction era in which are living.

      Data is the New Black:
      At our recent Preservation Storage Meeting, the word “data” was frequently mentioned. This was of some note to me, as cultural heritage organizations have, until recently, spoken of “collections” and “content” or even “files,” but not data. This is of course not the case at universities, where social science and observational datasets are very much a part of the custodial landscape. But most libraries, archives, and museums have not considered their collections to be data.

      Martha Anderson recently blogged on this topic very eloquently.

      I want to say this out loud: we all have data, from metadata to full-text collections to more formal datasets. We used to talk non-stop about metadata. Now we talk about data. Data is the new black.

      Linking Open Data cloud diagram, by Richard Cyganiak and Anja Jentzsch. http://lod-cloud.net/
      Linking Open Data cloud diagram, by Richard Cyganiak and Anja Jentzsch. http://lod-cloud.net/

      The Storage Meeting and a recent meeting with a software vendor have had me thinking specifically about what constitutes “Big Data.” The definition of Big Data is very fluid, as it is a moving target — what can be easily manipulated with common tools — and specific to the organization: what can be managed and stewarded by any one institution in its infrastructure. One researcher or organization’s concept of a large data set is small to another.

      In one conversation that I remember not too long ago, an organization was surprised to find that they would need 10 TB of storage for a large digital collection. I now know of collections that add that many TB in a single week.

      The Twitter archive has 10s of billions of tweets in it.

      The Chronicling America collection has over 4 million page images with OCR.

      Web Archives, such as the one at the Library of Congress, may be comprised of billions of files.

      And researchers may want to interact with a collection of artifacts, or they may want to work with a data corpus. Some may want to search for stories in historic newspapers. Some may want to mine newspaper OCR for trends across time periods and geographic areas. Some may want to see what a specific user tweeted. Some may want to look at the spread of an event hashtag across the world in a day.

      We still have collections. But what we also have is Big Data, which requires us to rethink the infrastructure that is needed to support Big Data services. Our community used to expect researchers to come to us, ask us questions about our collections, and use our digital collections in our environment. We transitioned into a partially self-serve model when we moved online. But can we support real-time querying of billions of full-text items? Can we provide tools for collection analysis and visualization? Can we support the frequent downloading by researchers of collections that may be over 200 TB each? These are among the questions that all of our institutions are grappling with as we build large digital collections and discover new ways in which they can be used.

      Sunday, November 06, 2011

      {FLPanhandle Genealogy} The Seven Steps of the Research Process | olinuris.library.cornell.edu - StumbleUpon

      Will this guide help us with genealogy research?   Read through the material and see what you think.  In addition, I did want to point out the feature, "Ask a Librarian".  Has anyone utilized that option?  If so, share a little bit about your experience.

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Wednesday, September 28, 2011

      VA-History-Exchange

      VA-History-Exchange

      Genealogy, the search for our ancestry, of necessity, encompasses history. As we become more involved in the strategy of research, we learn to look for clues in the pedigree chart: date and place. Developing a chronology (timeline) for our ancestor is not just something interesting to do; building a backdrop (a stage, a setting) for each leaf on the family tree provides direction for our research. See if you can detect (as in "detective") the why, the where, the when, the what and you will begin to discover clues that will lead you to the "rest of the story". Be sure to download the Power Point presentation, "Untold Stories from the Virginia Frontier" if you want to see how history and family members are intertwined.


      Tuesday, September 27, 2011

      Are your genealogy files in your will?

      Are your genealogy files in your will?  

      Like to read? If you've spent hours researching your family history, you will want to read this e-mail and the articles recommended by Leland K. Meitzler and Lee Everton, editors of the free "Genealogy Newsline".
      When
      Tuesday, Sep 27, 2011 GMT-05:00
      Where
      In your cozy chair...
      Who
      (Guest list has been hidden at organizer's request)

      Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

      Monday, September 12, 2011

      Misleading Genealogy Advice for Beginners – Free Guide to Tracing your Ancestry and Researching your Family Tree.


      "There’s a difference between knowing something and being able to explain it so someone else can understand it. Plus, an explanation that makes sense to an experienced person may be totally confusing to a novice. This is why so many people give up ancestor hunting before they really get started. So, what’s the answer?"

      Quotes:

      Misleading Genealogy Advice for Beginners – Free Guide to Tracing your Ancestry and Researching your Family Tree.

        • There’s a difference between knowing something and being able to explain it so someone else can understand it. Plus, an explanation that makes sense to an exper ienced person may be totally confusing to a novice. This is why so many people give up ancestor hunting before they really get started. So, what’s the answer?
          Read more »

          ( http://message.diigo.com/message/misleading-genealogy-advice-for-beginners-fr... )


          This message was sent to you by Margaret Harris via Diigo

          Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

          Sunday, September 11, 2011

          10 Steps to Writing Your Family History

          10 Steps to Writing Your Family History

          Kimberly Powell offers some thoughtful insights on a topic I've often considered: when and how can I produce a history of my family? She points out that there are several ways to accomplish this. One method that is kind of attractive to me is the idea of "publishing" a family cookbook. The great thing about projects of this type are that, in these days of desktop publishing, with Kinko's or Office Depot just an digital second away, we have the opportunity to be simple and straigtforward with our task. Other types of publishing offer an less expensive way to complete a more formal presentation that just wasn't available twenty or thirty years ago.

          So what will be the format be for our family history? Will we design a memoir or a pedigree? Will we collect and publish family recipes, then annotate it? A scrapbook is what many have chosen to put together, but I can't help but think that I need to do something that can be circulated among our family members and perhaps friends.

          Will 2012 be the year? Kimberly's article remind us to choose a deadline that will be realistic and manageable. This article covers several points that can help us make this goal a realistic objectiive.

          Friday, September 09, 2011

          Family Search and a Free Newsletter in Your E-Mail

          Area-Info.net is the pipeline for lots of good stuff!  It is through them that I receive the Genealogy Newsline,  a free genealogy newsletter that comes straight to my e-mail inbox.  The newsletter is a product of Family Roots Publishing and is written by Leland K. Meitzler.

          One article is massive good news:  FamilySearch has updated and posted the 1865 Illinois State Census, (Labor Day 2011); other record collections that were completed and posted on Labor Day have been integrated into the GenealogyBlog Online Database Links Files.

          What would we do without folks like Leland?!!  We'd be wandering around in the dark, I'm afraid. 

          Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

          Saturday, September 03, 2011

          Heritage Books Labor Day Sale







          To: la376@bellsouth.net

          HPC’s Giant Labor Day Sale!

          (Prices good while supplies last or until September 30, 2011)

           

          Buy One County Heritage Book at Regular Price & Get One of the following books at Half-Price! 

           

          * Plus FREE SHIPPING *

           

          For a list of all our products, go to <heritagepublishing.net>

           

          Go to our Website and select a book at regular price.

           

          Example: Hill County, TX, Vol. II @ $60.00. Go down the list below and select any of the listed books. Perhaps, Autauga, AL. You get both for $90.00 and no S&H charges. You save $30.00 on the 2nd book and $9.00 S&H.

           

          Alabama

          Autauga – $60

          Blount – $65

          Bullock - $60

          Butler – $60

          Calhoun – $55

          Choctaw – $65

          Clarke – $60

          Coffee – $60

          Colbert – $55

          Cullman – Vol. I – $55

          Cullman – Vol. II – $60

          Dallas – $55

          DeKalb – Vol. II – $60

          Elmore – $65

          Etowah – $55

          Houston – $60

          Jackson – $60

          Lauderdale - $60

          Lawrence – $65

          Lee – $60

          Lowndes – $60

          Mobile – $60

          Monroe – $55

          Perry – $55

          Pickens – $55

          Pike – $70

          Russell – $60

          St. Clair – $65

          Sumter – $60

          Tuscaloosa – $65

          Walker – $60

          Washington – $55

          Winston – Vol. II – $60

           

          Florida

          Bay – Vol. I – $60

          Escambia – Vol. I – $60

          Escambia – Vol. II – $60

          Holmes – $65

          Jackson – $60

          Liberty – $60

          Okaloosa – Vol. I – $60

          Okaloosa – Vol. II – $60

          Santa Rosa – Vol. II – $60

          Walton – $60

           

          Encyclopedia of Florida Sheriffs 2 volume set – $65  (counts as 1 Book)

           

          Others

          Folsom, LA $25

          Wayne Co., MS – Vol. II $55

          Terry Co., TX $65

           

          AL residents add 4% Sales Tax, KY residents add 6% Sales Tax

           

          Mail your check/MO to the address below or call and charge your order

          HPC or Heritage Publishing

          PO Box 22128

          Louisville, KY 40252   

           

          We accept phone orders for Visa/MC/Disc/AMX/Debit

           

          1-800-568-1611 or (502) 423-9016

          FAX (502) 423-9017

           

          We have sold out of Calhoun County, FL. However, we have reprinted Tallapoosa County, AL.

           

          If you do not wish to receive emails from us, please return this message with "Delete".

          Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

          Exhibit Opening Reception, Military Memories - Sat. SEPT. 3, 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. at the Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida





          From: Gina Marini <gmarini@co.okaloosa.fl.us>

          Dear Museum Members,

          Thank you for your continued support of our work at the Heritage Museum and for helping to keep history alive in our community.

          Because we value your membership, join us during the opening reception of Military Memories on Sept. 3, 10a-12p and receive a special gift while supplies last.

          Thank you!

          Unknownname
            

          Exhibit Opening Reception
          Military Memories – On the Home front & At War
          Saturday, September 3, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. at the
          Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida

          Valparaiso, FL - The Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida will hold the official opening reception with refreshments for their new exhibit, Military Memories – On the Home front & At War, sponsored by Pioneer Technologies, Inc. on Saturday, September 3 from 10 a.m.  – 12 p.m.  Military Memories features original artifacts from the Museum’s collection from the Civil War, WWI, WWII and the Vietnam War.  In addition, on loan from local POW Howard Hill, is the original uniform he wore during his 5 years as a Prisoner of War during the Vietnam conflict.   Historian, Michael Weech will be available to explain about the exhibit and discuss military history with an emphasis on the history of Eglin Air Force Base.  September 3rd is also the last day for active duty military and their families to take advantage of free admission as part of Blue Star Museums, a nationwide program in which the Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida is one of over 1400 museums participating. 

          Event:              Military Memories Exhibit Opening Reception

          Where:             Heritage Museum of Northwest Florida
                                  115 Westview Avenue, Valparaiso, FL

          When:              Saturday, September 3, 2011, 10 a.m. – 12 p.m.

          Contact:          (850) 678-2615
                                  www.heritage-museum.org

          Cost:               General museum admission applies
                                  Free for Active duty military and their families
                                 Free for Heritage Museum members

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          Posted via email from Margaret's posterous