Barbara, This is an answer to your question: "Is there a way to specify which paper you want to look through on a certain date?" I have found that it is often best to go directly to the appropriate date and page of the newspaper. Since you have the newspaper name, The Times-Picayune, and the date, simply put that information in the search box by doing this: 1. When you go to the opening page, skip the opening search box and under “Historical Family History Records,” click on “Historical Newspapers (1690 - 2007).” 2. Under “Historical Newspaper Archive,” a new search box comes up. In the box that says “Include keywords with search” enter just the one word “picayune” (no quote marks). This will sort for both The Daily Picayune and The Times-Picayune. In the date box, enter the date of the obituary. Click on “Begin Search.” 3. This will take you to that day’s newspaper. Check at the top to be sure you have the correct date and paper. Click on the first item that comes up. Don’t worry about what it is. 4. Once that comes up, on the left you will see “List all pages in this issue.” Click on that. 5. On the left, all of the page numbers will be displayed. Click on the page you want. Search that page for the obituary you are seeking using the column number. The entire page can be saved as a PDF image. You can later crop the PDF to save just the part you want as a JPG. Give this a try and see how it works for you. Someone else may have a quicker way, but this works for me. Norm --- On Tue, 1/25/11, Barbara Munson <[email protected]> wrote: > I'm trying the 30-day $10 > subscription, but I'm having trouble finding some things > that I know they're supposed to have - mainly obits from the > Times-Picayune that I found in the obituary index. I > figure it's because their print-recognition software just > isn't catching everything, but I was wondering - is > there a way to specify which paper you want to look through > on a certain date? I've searched on the site and I don't > think there is, but I figured I could be missing it. > > Thanks for any help! > > Barbara