Ancestry Weekly Digest dated 10/8/2005 included this notice regarding the National Archives. ================================================= MICROFILM CHANGES AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES Washington, DC . . . The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) announces two major changes in microfilm policies: online ordering and price increases. ORDER ONLINE! EXPANDED TO INCLUDE MICROFILM For the first time, researchers can now order NARA microfilm online. On September 12, NARA's microfilm publications catalog was added to Order Online!, vastly expanding online reference and ordering capabilities. Researchers now can search this microfilm catalog online to (1) Obtain full descriptions, (2) Review and download descriptive pamphlets and roll lists, (3) Find out if an item is available for sale and/or rent, (4) Find viewing locations, and (5) Purchase rolls with a credit card. NARA's Order Online! is a secure, "one-stop" way to research and request reproductions of microfilm (and certain other types of records), and pay for these materials with most major credit cards. Additional records available include Census pages, Land Records, Compiled Military Service and Pension Records, Passenger Arrival Records, and Eastern Cherokee Applications. For more information, see: http://www.archives.gov/research/order/orderonline.html. MICROFILM PRICE INCREASE To keep up with ever-increasing costs, the National Archives will raise prices for the first time since 1996. Effective October 1, 2005, the price of National Archives black-and-white microfilm will be $65 per roll ($68 per roll for foreign orders). The new price for color microfilm will be $82 per roll ($85 per roll for foreign orders). Microfiche prices are not affected. NARA has 19 regional records facilities across the country, from Anchorage to Alaska, in addition to 11 Presidential libraries (and 1 Presidential Materials Project). Research Room hours vary at different locations. Please call or check www.archives.gov for specific information. __________________________________ Start your day with Yahoo! - Make it your home page! http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
Maybe someone on this email list will recognize Cassius and help Paddi. Paddi wrote on the Howell County, MO email list: > > > I need a obit lookup for Cassius Kimes (6 Apr 1901 - Jan 1992) in West > Plains, Howell County, Missouri. > > Any help would really be appreciated. Thanks > Paddi <[email protected]> > __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
----- Original Message ----- From: "Arleigh Birchler" <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, October 25, 2005 5:20 PM > Source: [email protected] > Subject: Quacker Hinshaw's in North Carolina and Central Illinois > > > Gil, > > Just a few weeks ago I visited the Cane Creek Meeting House Cemetery. It > is just west of Kimesville, which is on the South Prong of Stinking > Quarters. Just North of it is Rock Creek. I am pretty sure that in > Colonial Days it was called Little Creek. Phillip Kime, Peggy Reitzel, > and their son, Henry Kime, lived on what I render as "Little Stinking > Quarters". > > The cemetery at the Cane Creek Meeting House if rather large, with many > graves dating to before the Revolution. I saw at least one Hinshaw grave, > but did not take the time to search all of it. I do not know if William > and Mary Hinshaw stayed there after the Revolution, or where they are > buried. A few of their children went to Central Illinois, and were active > in the Illinois General Assembly with Abe Lincoln and the Long Nine. > > But going back, William Hinshaw, and some of his wife's brothers, fought > with the Regulators at the Battle on the Alamance, which is actually just > a few miles away on the North Prong of Stinking Quarters. This is all > just a bit southwest of Greensboro, in Guilford County. Goldsboro is very > near the coast in East Carolina. > > Hope some of this helps. I am only related to Mary and William Hinshaw's > descendants by marriage of the Benson/Musick's with the Hinshaw's in > McLean County, Illinois. Mary and William were cousins, and were both > named Hinshaw, so she is often listed as Mary Hinshaw Hinshaw. My > ancestors include the Kime's, whose grand-kids also married into the > Musick Family in Central Illinois. Hope some of this helps. > > Arleigh > > ************************ > > The revolution of 1848 was a failure. The socialists managed to obtain > some minor concessions from the nobility. The one major outcome was the > abolition of slavery in Europe. The word slave comes from the east > European tribe, Slav. Emigration from Europe declined markedly. About a > century earlier Henry Kimeâ?Ts mother, Peggy Reitzel, had been the wife of > a minor German Nobleman. On their way across the Atlantic he was swept > overboard and lost. When she arrived in South Carolina she was sold on > the auction block. She escaped from an abusive owner and fled from slave > catchers through the swamps until she reached the religious radical > settlements on the Alamance and married Phillip Kime. > > ************************ > > The Hinshaw's were Quaker. Their ancestors are listed in Fox's Book of > Martyrs. They fled England for freedom in Northern Ireland. From that > island they sailed to the New World. Mary Hinshawâ?Ts family moved to > Pennsylvania. She later married her cousin, William Hinshaw, in northwest > North Carolina, which was still part of Virginia. Mary's brothers and her > husband, William, joined the Regulators. They fought the British on the > Alamance on May 16, 1771. They lost. Mary's brothers were â?oput out of > the Meeting Houseâ? for bearing arms. William later joined the > Continental Army. > > ************************ > > Abraham Lincoln and John Musick joined the volunteers, as did Sally > Bensonâ?Ts sons. Lincoln said: â?oThe only charges I ever led were > against wild onion beds.â? Black Hawk retreated to Wisconsin where he > was taken prisoner by a Winnebago named Chaeter. Colonel Zachary Taylor > assigned the young lieutenants, Robert Anderson and Jefferson Davis, to > take Black Hawk to Jefferson Barracks in St Louis. The Bensonâ?Ts went > back to McLean County, where their parents had moved, and kept marrying > Hinshawâ?Ts. Logan County was a hotbed of Whigs; McLean County was a > stronghold of the Democracy. > > ************************ > > After the Black Hawk War Jeff Davisâ?T friends talked him out of > challenging Colonel Taylor to a duel. Instead he resigned his commission > and eloped with Taylorâ?Ts sixteen year old daughter, Knox. His older > brother, Joseph, sold them a plantation and slaves on the Mississippi, > below Vicksburg. They soon got ague. Knox Taylor died singing Fairie > Bells three months after her wedding. The doctors said Jeff would follow > her, but he recovered and went into politics. George Hinshaw Sr was > elected to the Illinois Tenth General Assembly in 1836. He made all his > trips to Vandalia and Springfield on foot. The Assembly convened a > special assembly on July 10, 1837. There they debated the > Internal-Improvement Bill, a special project of Abraham Lincoln and the > Long Nine. George Hinshaw Sr strongly opposed the measure. When it > passed he asked permission to sign his name in red ink as a protest and so > that the public might better know how he voted. > > ************************ > > Abe Carlock had a big house in White Oak Grove, Illinois. His son, John G > Carlock, married Robert and Sarahâ?Ts daughter, Lucinda Musick. Abe was a > Universalist. He put up traveling ministers of any denomination, as long > as they were willing to stay up to two in the morning discussing doctrine. > For all others he had one question: â?oAre you a Democrat?â? Judge > Davis stayed with Abe Carlock; Abe Lincoln had to sleep down the road at > James Benson and Polly Ann Hinshawâ?Ts. In 1847 the County Seat was moved > to Mt Pulaski. A new court house was built. David Davis was the > presiding judge. Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A Douglas were among the > most frequent attorneys appearing. > > ************************ > > > [email protected] wrote: > Sir: > > Thanks for your reply...I guess I too misunderstood your family claims. > Just for the record, I might point out that in NE NC somewhere there is a > Hinshaw cemetery. I know it comes down from Quaker times, but don't know > exactly where it is. I think it is near Goldsboro. Thanks for your reply. > > --Gil Hinshaw > > > > > Arleigh Birchler, MDiv, BSN > c/o Helaina Hinson Burton > 69 Gray Ghost Lane > Benson NC 27504 > (919) 934-6323 > > (Ali Sengaree - Allah'ka cli here chaya) > > > Musick/Porter Fan Club > Pleasure, Pain, Power, and Love > > > > > > > > > > > > >
Theresa Brush wrote on the Kime query board: Looking for decendents John B. Kime. My line is John B., Levi N., Henry Frank, Inez Viola Kime-Hoisington, Donna Jane Hoisngton-Gessleman, Theresa A. Gessleman-Brush. ===================================================================== See: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=message&r=rw&p=surnames.kime&m=130 __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
Friends, I've noted a discrepancy in information on one of John Christian Kime's children. Researchers from his branch list his daughter, Catherine Gauger, died in 1847. Rereading Christian's will, I note it is dated 15 February 1853 and refers to Catherine as being alive at that time. Can anyone explain? _______________________________________________ See John Christian Keim>Kime's will at: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=message&r=rw&p=surnames.kime&m=97 __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
----- Original Message ----- From: "Lori Chaffin" <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2005 1:22 AM > Source: [email protected] > Subject: RE:Talley,Morton > > > Hi Bill, > > I don't know if this will be of any help but I have a Harry L. Talley, I > don't know when or where he was born. He married Flora B. Keim on April > 18, 1898, they had three children > Russell E. b, April 15,1900 in Loveland OH > Harold W. b. September 13,1901 in Madisonville, OH > Mildred Mae b. November 4,1904 in Madisonville, OH > I have a little more info on these people if you are interested. > > Flora's had a sister Grace Marie Keim that is my great Grandmother. I went > to Laurel cemetery in Madisonville to her parents grave and while I was > there I saw a marker for Amanda 1855 - 1923 & Timothy W. 1850 - 1920 > Talley. I do have a picture of this marker if these are who you are > looking for. > > Lori Deible Chaffin > > Bill Allen wrote> > I'm looking for TALLEY and MORTON in Cincinnati, Hamilton Co., OH. > > Bill Allen <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
There's disagreement between researchers in my husband's line... some say our ancestor Peter Kimes was the son of John Christian Kime of Fayette, NY, but none of them have provided proof! Several researchers descended from John Christian Keim>Kime are of the opinion Christian's son, Peter, died at an early age (bef old enough to marry). Since nothing has been found by either line to verify or disprove the link, we keep looking. My question today is directed to the researchers descended from John Christian Keim>Kime... have ANY of you "found" him on either the 1800 or 1810 census. Consensus is he was in Turbut Twp, Northumberland Co, PA, but no one I've corresponded with has located him. Of the couple entries I checked, the family groups don't match Christian and Margaret! Shouldn't the census read: 1810 MALES 2 under 10 David and Jacob 2 10-16 John Jr and William 0 16-26 Peter (married or dead) 1 26-45 Christian 0 45+ FEMALES 1 under 10 Anna Maria 2 10-16 Elizabeth and Margaret 0 16-26 Catharine married 1 26-45 Margaret 0 45+ Anyone's thoughts appreciated. Cindy Kimes __________________________________ Yahoo! Music Unlimited Access over 1 million songs. Try it free. http://music.yahoo.com/unlimited/
PETER H. KEIM was born in Somerset Co, PA. He married MARY A. BEACHY ca 1859. Children of PETER KEIM and MARY BEACHY were: i. SARAH (Ella) KEIM, b. ca April 1870, NE. ii. GEORGE KEIM, b. March 1872, NE. iii. BERTHA KEIM, b. 1873, NE. iv. SUSAN KEIM, b. 1875, NE. v. HARVEY KEIM, b. June 1878, IL. vi. DORA B. KEIM, b. 07 June 1880, probably born in Lee Co, IL; d. 25 July 1962, Los Angeles Co, CA. Peter H. Keim is listed as the son of NICHOLAS KEIM and SUSANNA LIVENGOOD. Following obit posted to the KEIM boards on Ancestry: > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=surnames.keim > =================================================================== > > Independent Enterprise > Payette, Idaho > February 11, 1937 > > PETER H. KEIM > > Peter Keim died at his home in Payette, Friday afternoon, February > 5 > at four o'clock. > > Peter H. Keim was born Pennsylvania, July 23, 1849. At the age of > nineteen he was married to Mary A. Beachy. To this union were born > six children. His wife passed away October 31, 1909. > > On November 2, 1910 he was married to Mary Dohner of Beatrice, > Nebraska, who passed away May 28, 1918. > > In May 1919 he was married to Mrs. Eva Fuller of Sebetha, Kansas. > > He moved from Pennsylvania of Falls City, Nebraska when a young man > and resided for several years. From there he moved to Morrill, > Kansas, where he resided for twenty-five years. In 1910 he moved to > Payette where he had since made his home. > > He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Eva Keim of Payette and six > children, Ella Smith, Susie Tipton, and George Keim of Wichita, > Kansas, Bertha Maaco of Tacoma, Washington, Harvey Keim of Wallace, > Idaho and Dora Hibarger who lives in California. > > Funeral services in charge of Rev. John S. Curtis were held from > the > Pentacostal church Sunday. Interment was in the Parkview cemetery. > __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
Following obit posted to the KEIM boards on Ancestry: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec?htx=board&r=rw&p=surnames.keim =================================================================== Independent Enterprise Payette, Idaho February 11, 1937 PETER H. KEIM Peter Keim died at his home in Payette, Friday afternoon, February 5 at four o'clock. Peter H. Keim was born Pennsylvania, July 23, 1849. At the age of nineteen he was married to Mary A. Beachy. To this union were born six children. His wife passed away October 31, 1909. On November 2, 1910 he was married to Mary Dohner of Beatrice, Nebraska, who passed away May 28, 1918. In May 1919 he was married to Mrs. Eva Fuller of Sebetha, Kansas. He moved from Pennsylvania of Falls City, Nebraska when a young man and resided for several years. From there he moved to Morrill, Kansas, where he resided for twenty-five years. In 1910 he moved to Payette where he had since made his home. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Eva Keim of Payette and six children, Ella Smith, Susie Tipton, and George Keim of Wichita, Kansas, Bertha Maaco of Tacoma, Washington, Harvey Keim of Wallace, Idaho and Dora Hibarger who lives in California. Funeral services in charge of Rev. John S. Curtis were held from the Pentacostal church Sunday. Interment was in the Parkview cemetery. __________________________________ Yahoo! Music Unlimited Access over 1 million songs. Try it free. http://music.yahoo.com/unlimited/
Query posted to the KIMES Message Board on Ancestry. Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/yBn.2ACIB/89 ================================================================= There is a photo under U.S Family photo collection C. 1850-2000. It says Bethel Kimes 1905 in standing stone Tennessee. The baby in the picture is my grandfather Byrtle Kimes not Bethel Kimes. I was wondering if anyone know's who posted that picture, because it is the only photo my family has found so far of my grandfather and some of his family. There is also another picture of a man and a woman with no name of who they are? Please let me know any information! Kristyl Kimes __________________________________ Start your day with Yahoo! - Make it your home page! http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
FREE SEARCHING on a little known site. CastleGarden.org offers free access to an extraordinary database of information on 10 million immigrants from 1830 through 1892, the year Ellis Island opened. If your family came before the Ellis Island records, this site might be of assistance to you! Castle Garden http://www.castlegarden.org/ __________________________________ Start your day with Yahoo! - Make it your home page! http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
The following email was posted to the HINSHAW Mailing List on 2 Oct 2005 by Arleigh Birchler <[email protected]> ================================================================ This weekend I visited the Battlefield on the Alamance (North Carolina), where William Hinshaw and his brothers-in-law in the Regulators faced the Loyalist Militia on May 16, 1771. It is actually on a tributary of the Alamance named the North Prong of Stinking Quarters. A few miles east of the battlefield is Kimesville on the South Prong of Stinking Quarters. Just a mile or so down stream is Little Creek ("Little Stinking Quarters") the home of Peggy Reitzel and Phillip Kime. Their son, Henry Kime, later moved up to Pennsylvania where he joined the Chester County Militia and fought the British at Brandywine and the Paoli Massacre. Henry is buried just a few miles north of Lincoln, Illinois, in the Zion (Musick) Cemetery. Peggy, Phillip, and Henry are all my ancestors. Peggy Reitzel's husband (a minor German nobleman who gained his title in the Spanish Wars) was swept overboard on their passage to America. When they arrived in Charles Town, South Carolina, Peggy and her son were sold on the auction block. She later escaped from an abusive owner, and was pursued by slave catchers through the South Carolina swamps. At one point she hid her young son and left him behind to lead the hounds away. She later returned and found him. Eventually she got to the religious radical settlements in North Carolina, along the Alamance, where she married Phillip Kime. William Hinshaw was married to his cousin, Mary Hinshaw. After the Battle on the Alamance he joined the Virginia Militia, and served in the Revolution. Some of their sons moved to Central Illinois, where one of them served in the Illinois Assembly with Abe Lincoln. Their granddaughters married the sons of Sally Musick and John Benson. Sally Musick was the sister of Jesse Musick, who was mortally wounded at Tippecanoe. John Musick, the son of Jesse, and his widow, Hannah Gudgel, moved to Central Illinois, where he married Mary Johnson, the granddaughter of Henry Kime. (Henry Kime's grandchildren personally knew Abe Lincoln when he was a young man.) His great-grandchild, William Henry Musick, served in company C of the 106th Illinois Infantry. The great-grandchildren of William and Mary Hinshaw served in several other regiments formed in Central Illinois. I have never heard anything about Henry (or any other member of the Kime family) being involved in the Battle on the Alamance. They did, however, live a short walk from the battlegrounds. There home was actually very near the Cane Creek Friends (Quaker) Meeting House, where William and Mary Hinshaw were members (we also visited the building, and the cemetery that surrounds it.) The Benson's in Central Illinois, were also Quakers. I believe that Phillip Kime came from the Palatine region of Germany, and was a member of one of the persecuted radical protestant groups. Kime's and Hinshaw's clearly still live along Stinking Quarters. The guide at the Battlefield knew several folks by those names. http://www.ah.dcr.state.nc.us/sections/hs/alamance/alamanc.htm __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
Anyone know what SCOTT Sina married? The 1900 census does NOT list her as a widow, but no SCOTTs on the 1900 Lincoln Co. census "fit." Cindy Kimes <[email protected]> wrote: > Census records tell us Sina was married to a Mr. SCOTT before she > married GEORGE. Record lists she married ca 1889, but was > housekeeper > for N. W. George and his daughter when the census was taken. > Birthdate listed as Dec 1870. > __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
I should have listed the census year... it was 1900. Cindy Kimes wrote: > > Census records tell us Sina was married to a Mr. SCOTT before she > married GEORGE. Record lists she married ca 1889, but was housekeeper > for N. W. George and his daughter when the census was taken. > Birthdate listed as Dec 1870. > __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
Census records tell us Sina was married to a Mr. SCOTT before she married GEORGE. Record lists she married ca 1889, but was housekeeper for N. W. George and his daughter when the census was taken. Birthdate listed as Dec 1870. Cindy Kimes wrote: > > Sina Kimes of Lincoln Co, TN, was the daughter of John C. Kimes. > __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
Sina Kimes of Lincoln Co, TN, was the daughter of John C. Kimes. See her obituary online at http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/tn/lincoln/obits/g/george69nob.txt __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 6:44 PM > Source: [email protected] > Subject: Stella INSKEEP > > > I have a photo of Stella INSKEEP. It was found amongst some of our > great-aunt's, Fernande Godfirnon Keim, belongings. I've donated several > photos to the > Richardson Co Historical Society in Falls City but this photo wasn't > included. > I have no idea when this photo was taken but would assume late 1800s or > early > 1900s as she looks like a young adult or late teen. > Anyone connected to this lovely lady, please email me directly as she > deserves to be with her descendants. > Charlene > Richardson Co NE
In THE HOOSIER JOURNAL OF ANCESTRY (Clark Co.,IN) In a history of Clark County, shows that "Robert Wardel (sic) was appointed constable of Springhill Township" (no date given, though most information was about 1800+) It also showed John Wardell marrying Hannah Johnson, widow, on 11 Aug 1825. This was previously noted by Cindy. Diana http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=daviscollins
Checking the Indiana State Library Genealogy Database: Marriages through 1850 <http://199.8.200.229/db/marriages_search.asp> a search of the database lists: Last Name: Johnson First Name: Hannah (widow) Spouse Last Name: Wardell Spouse First Name: John County: Clark Date: 8-4-1825 --- Cindy Kimes <[email protected]> wrote: > Some new clues come from current correspondence w/another KIME > researcher: > _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ > <cut> > > Child 5 of Robert Fowler Wardell: John married Hanna Kime Johnson > > Aug. 8, 1825. This is continued from page 7. Hannah (Kime) > Johnson/Wardell was married to Jonathan Johnson and they had 4 > children which were listed on the other page (?)." > __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com
Some new clues come from current correspondence w/another KIME researcher: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ A bit of info came in a letter from a lady in NM. This is all quoted from her letter (dated 1973). "Several people have done research on the Kime family. One source wrote that the Keim family were originally from Nurnberg, Germany. They left Nurnburg because of religious persecution and settled in Wurttemburg, Germany. One John Keim left Wurttemburg and came to America when America was just beginning its history. This John Keim settled at Oley, PA in Berks Co. He is often called the founder of the Keim family in this country. The Keim family is mentioned as a well known Pennsylvania family in the book "German & Swiss Settlements of PA" by Kuhns. Also a minister, now deceased, in North Carolina gave his version of one Keim family, the first to settle in his region of North Carolina. He told of a young married woman named Peggy Reitzel, who lost her husband at sea while on their voyage to America. Mr. Reitzel was swept overboard and drowned. The widow, Peggy, landed at Charlestown, South Carolina and traveled to North Carolina where she met and married Phillip Keim. To Peggy and Philip Keim were born: Philip Kime Jr. who married Dolly Glass (daughter of Philip Glass); David Kime who married Dorothy Coble (daughter of George Coble), Christian Kime who married Margaret Brown (daughter of Michael Brown); and Henry Kime who married Hannah (we believe her maiden name was Rudolph). The minister only knew that Henry had owned a lot of property in North Carolina and sold out and moved west. Of Henry and Hannah Kime, originally of North Carolona, the next records of his are in Indiana. It is not known when he came or how, but it may be that he received land grants for service in the Revolutionary War. Henry and Hannah raised a family of eight or possible nine children. An old German Bible contained a sheet of paper with the births of eight of their known children. An old neighbor of the Kimes, remembers seven girls and the Bible has two sons mentioned, but only six daughters, so I can not be sure how many children, at this time. Children of Henry and Hannah Kimes, as shown in Bible: Maria Born, Oct 29, 1781; Anna Margarte Born June 20, 1784; Mahtelina born Jan 25, 1787; Henry born June 1, 1789 (my son) ; Barbara born May 8, 1792 (my daughter), Hannah born aug 26, 1794 (my daughter); John born July 14, 1797 (my son); Helen born Oct. 5, 1800 The Bible mentioned was published in Nurnberg, Germany in 1770 and is now in the possession of Mrs. Dorcas Boyer, of Nabb. [the email continues re: Hannah, born aug 26, 1794] Child 10 of Robert Fowler Wardell was Charles born 1811 Child 5 of Robert Fowler Wardell: John married Hanna Kime Johnson Aug. 8, 1825. This is continued from page 7. Hannah (Kime) Johnson/Wardell was married to Jonathan Johnson and they had 4 children which were listed on the other page (?)." _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Comments??? __________________________________ Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail.yahoo.com