Hey, The trees they took out between the Down Under Bar and the Shadowbrook Inn are being replaced by yet another theater in town. This time, it's for the Lennon Brothers and the "50s At the Hop" show, both of which already have venues, but decided to join forces in a new theater. V
Alan Trimble's dtr, Lucinda married John Walker, son of my William Walker and Sarah Wyatt from Taney Co. John and Lucinda went to Marion Co. AR. Terry ----- Original Message ----- From: "pfrommer" <pfrommer@webound.com> To: <MOTANEY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, April 13, 2003 6:19 AM Subject: Re: [MOTANEY] Howard > Terry, which Trimble line are you working on? > Adrienne
I found this on the South Carolina Confederate Relic Room and Museum website: http://www.state.sc.us/crr/ It seems like something worthwhile to share. If any of you are active in local or state historical or genealogical societies, a similar program might be worth considering. Nancy, researching: Carmichael; Garrett; Dawkins; Osborne; Baldridge; Warren; Doty; McCormick; Garmon; Jackson; Matthews; Cain; Stringer Website: http://www.geocities.com/twincousin2334 List Administrator: USCW-SEVEN_PINES List Administrator: CARMICHAEL Mar. 10, 2003 Preserving Heartfelt E-Mails from the Front Confederate Relic Room and Museum Spearheads Plan to Save Pieces of War History By JOEY HOLLEMAN Imagine Ken Burns' documentary "The Civil War" without the letters from the front. Or Andrew Carroll's book "War Letters" if sweethearts didn't save missives from soldiers inside Nazi Germany. Historians fret that those uncensored, heartfelt word snapshots could be lost in a communications environment dominated by e-mail and instant messaging. To head that off, the Confederate Relic Room and Museum, depository of war history in South Carolina, is asking people to forward their e-mails from overseas to the state agency so the words can be archived for future historians. The program is called "Write From The Front" (The e-mail address is WriteFromtheFront@sc.gov ) The program isn't designed to save these words for your personal use. "We want that history," said Allen Roberson, director of the Relic Room. The e-mails will be archived for future researchers. Of course, your grandson or granddaughter could be that future researcher. Anybody is welcome to use the archives. Through the Washington, D.C.-based Legacy Project, "War Letters" author Carroll encourages people to save whatever communication they get from service members overseas. "They're so modest," he said. "They can't imagine that anyone would be interested in what they're doing. "I tell them, 'What you write is the most important thing to come out of this.''" The Legacy Project has set up an e-mail address similar to the one by the Confederate Relic Room. You can forward e-mails to warletterproject@aol.com The difference from the Relic Room site is that only Carroll will read the items submitted to the Legacy Project. If he finds them especially compelling, he will contact the sender to ask whether the e-mail can be included in future editions of his book. CHANGING TECHNOLOGY The folks who keep track of our history see e-mail as a two-edged sword. Because e-mailing is easier than taking a pen to paper, more communication might be coming home from the possible confrontation in the Persian Gulf. People with children away at college have noticed that trend in recent years. But how many parents thought to save those e-mails from their college children for their grandchildren to read? Roy Tryon thinks the answer is "not many." He should know. He's the father of a college-age child and deputy director of the S.C. Archives and History Department. "E-mail is something we've talked about for many years," Tryon said of archivists. "And it's even worse when you talk about instant messaging. That's just lost in the ether." Remembering to save e-mail from soldiers is only a first step. Then you have to decide how to store it. You could keep it on a diskette or a CD-ROM, but those formats might not last forever. Say you stored some correspondence on a big floppy disk 10 years ago and tossed it in a shoe box in the closet. Now it's hard to find a computer that will read those old floppy disks. "Unless people become really conscious of preserving them, (the e-mails) won't survive," Tryon said. "It takes more forethought than paper and pen did. With those old letters, you could just push it off to the side, throw it in a box, and later it surfaced in an attic." Experts say the best way to ensure the words will last might be the old-fashioned technology -- ink on paper. Hit the print button. Then treat the e-mail printout like a letter. File it away. STORAGE TIPS Some service families are trying to preserve their correspondence. Debbie used to print out her frequent e-mails from her husband, Andy, on his overseas assignments out of Shaw Air Force Base in Sumter. "I'm sentimental," she said. "I save everything." (The armed forces have asked that last names of family members not be used in newspaper stories for safety reasons.) Debbie said the expense of paper and ink forced her to stop printing the e-mails. Now, she transfers each e-mail to a folder on her computer hard drive. Some were saved on a computer now used by her daughter. Amanda, whose Shaw-based husband, Scott, also is overseas, said she saves his e-mails on disks. "It's a scary time," she said. "If something happens, I want to have something." But experts warn that computers can crash, information can be lost. They suggest storing e-mails on your computer hard drive, downloading them onto backup disks every week or two. And, eventually, you should print out the most poignant ones. Carroll, who included e-mail correspondences in the most recent edition of his book, said e-mails are better for historians than are other electronic media, such as satellite phone technology. At least e-mails can be saved. Phone calls, like instant messaging, disappear. "I've talked with servicemen and women (from recent action in Afghanistan) who said, 'I called home. I never really wrote,'" Carroll said. Historians aren't worried about the survival of military details from future wars. The government uses expensive record-keeping software that will archive military e-mails for future generations. The Relic Room wants to do that on a smaller scale and a more personal level. They ask for S.C. residents to forward e-mail from overseas with brief explanations of where it's from and who wrote it. They want personal observations, not military details. Roberson noted letters from the Civil War through the Gulf War have dealt with similar topics -- what's going on at home, wish I was there, things stink here. The good thing about "Write From The Front" is that if the e-mails get too intimate, you just don't forward them. In that case, however, you might want to hit the print button.
Terry, which Trimble line are you working on? Adrienne ----- Original Message ----- From: "Terry Walker" <imanokie@cox.net> To: <MOTANEY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, April 12, 2003 9:14 PM Subject: [MOTANEY] Howard > I went "Googling" and came up with mention of this person who was briefly in Taney Co. If anyone is on the Montgomery Co. list, you might wish to pass to them as well. Mr. Howard is not my family, but thought it might be helpful to someone here. > > Terry Walker > researching: Blevins, Coulter, Helm, Page, Ruble, Trimble, Walker, Woody > > > > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~iavanbur/bio_vanburen.htm > 1878 Van Buren Twp., Van Buren County, IA > Biographical Directory of Citizens > > Howard, Samuel, dealer in dry goods and general merchandise, Mt. Zion; born Jan. 13, 1836, in Montgomery Co., Mo.; parents moved to Taney Co. in 1845; left there in 1848 and came to Decatur Co., Iowa, where he made his home mostly till 1866; during that time, however, he spent a couple of years in Oregon, Idaho and Montana; also spent three summers in Kansas; came to this county in 1866, and commenced his present business in 1873. Married Miss Margaret J. Kisling Jan. 6, 1859; she was born in 1839 in Indiana; have six children -- George F., Florence M., William C., Adolphus, Leonard and an infant. Independent in politics. > > > ==== MOTANEY Mailing List ==== > "All change represents loss of some kind; that's why some of us resist it so strongly."--Jacob M. Braude > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237
I went "Googling" and came up with mention of this person who was briefly in Taney Co. If anyone is on the Montgomery Co. list, you might wish to pass to them as well. Mr. Howard is not my family, but thought it might be helpful to someone here. Terry Walker researching: Blevins, Coulter, Helm, Page, Ruble, Trimble, Walker, Woody http://www.rootsweb.com/~iavanbur/bio_vanburen.htm 1878 Van Buren Twp., Van Buren County, IA Biographical Directory of Citizens Howard, Samuel, dealer in dry goods and general merchandise, Mt. Zion; born Jan. 13, 1836, in Montgomery Co., Mo.; parents moved to Taney Co. in 1845; left there in 1848 and came to Decatur Co., Iowa, where he made his home mostly till 1866; during that time, however, he spent a couple of years in Oregon, Idaho and Montana; also spent three summers in Kansas; came to this county in 1866, and commenced his present business in 1873. Married Miss Margaret J. Kisling Jan. 6, 1859; she was born in 1839 in Indiana; have six children -- George F., Florence M., William C., Adolphus, Leonard and an infant. Independent in politics.
Vonda What are they building across from the Dixie Stampede Barb in OK >From: "Vonda Sheets" <vonda@peoplepc.com> >Reply-To: MOTANEY-L@rootsweb.com >To: MOTANEY-L@rootsweb.com >Subject: [MOTANEY] it's spring >Date: Thu, 10 Apr 2003 08:31:11 -0500 > >Good morning! > >Well, the Branson mayoral and alderman elections were held Tuesday. The >mayor and one alderman retained their seats; the other 3 aldermen up for >reelection lost theirs. The board is still mostly in favor of the Branson >Landing "World Class" entertainment/timeshare condo district and convention >center, but now the Springfield paper is leaning on the board to listen to >constituents. In all but Ward 3, voters were split pretty much down the >middle on the issue. Of course, they've destroyed all the buildings on the >lakefront, but the term "world class" offends me--people used to come here >for what was unique about us, not because we had the same attractions every >other tourist town has. > >The dogwoods began blooming Tuesday, when Greg and I went up to Swan on a >gallivant. The north central section of Taney County is one of my >favorites >at this time of the year, for the dogwood blooms are wisps of cream through >the still-gray hillsides full of the hardwood trees. Crocus, wild violet, >and wild Sweet William are all in bloom, and my yard is showing some >dandelion (yuck, time to mow already!) and clover blossoms. I don't have >one favorite season--I'm always ready for each one as it comes, for >watching >the changes through them is one of the best things about gallivants. Each >season has its own beauty, and I don't much like the idea of living >anywhere >else in the world (not that I'm a world traveler, by any means). > >I'm planting some ornamental corn, Cherokee corn, tomatoes, onions, and >echinacea (purple coneflower) this year. I had high hopes of getting other >veggies planted, but a lack of time and space may prohibit it. I really, >really, want to get some sunflowers planted, too. We had freeze warnings >the last 2 nights, but most of my seeds are in those little Jiffy starter >pots/peats, and so I'll be setting them out sometime soon. Now that I >think >on it, I also early-started some watermelon, and I'm going to throw some >canteloupe seeds out as well. (I learned last year that canteloupe will >grow anywhere--such as in a mulch pile!) > >There's other things to discuss, too. I'll send them in different emails. > >Everyone have a GREAT weekend! >Vonda > > > >==== MOTANEY Mailing List ==== >"Life is a culmination of the past, an awareness of the present, an >indication of a future beyond knowledge, the quality that gives a touch of >divinity to matter."-C. Lindbergh, "Is Civilization Prgress?" Jul 1964 > >============================== >To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, >go to: >http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 > _________________________________________________________________ Protect your PC - get McAfee.com VirusScan Online http://clinic.mcafee.com/clinic/ibuy/campaign.asp?cid=3963
So sorry to read about the Coffelt family. My sis-in-law was Dortha R. Coffelt Pulley who was raised by her grandparents Tom and Fannie Coffelt. They lived at Powersite when I married into the Pulley family. I don't know if Dot was related to this Coffelt family but I'm sure it is quite possible back along the line. My heart goes out to the family. Betty Pulley ----- Original Message ----- From: "Vonda Sheets" <vonda@peoplepc.com> To: <MOTANEY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2003 8:53 AM Subject: [MOTANEY] Coffelt memorial > On 31 Mar, 2003, a house fire in Ft. Worth TX killed 3 members of the Taney > Co./Fall Creek area Coffelt family. The memorial service was held 7 Apr > 2003. > > Gerald Lee Coffelt b 17 May 1933 Branson to Homer Lee Coffelt and Iva Treat. > Homer was the s/o Andrew Coffelt and America Edwards. I have no information > on Iva's parentage. They lived near the Lewallen Cemetery in Fall Creek > Valley. > > Cora Monette Stuart b 30 Oct 1938 Houston, TX. Monette's biological father > was a Battle. When her mother married Loren Stuart, he adopted Monette and > her 2 sisters, so she grew up a Stuart. They came to the Bee Creek area > north of Branson during the 1940s. My dad learned to ride a bike on their > long, long driveway (really a road) on the ridge now called Oak Bluff. At > the funeral, Loren read a poem he had written for Monette some years ago, > and it was beautiful. > > Their daughter, Cora Layne Coffelt DeMilio b 16 Jun 1958 Branson, also died > in the fire. Layne's daughter, and son escaped uninjured from the fire. > Layne's son-in-law was seriously injured trying to rescue the others. > > I don't know that there are any Coffelt descendants on the lists, but they > are seriously intermarried with many Taney county families; Edwards, > Compton, Fausett/Faucett...well, you get the drift. If you're researching > the western side of Taney county (I know many of you are), these folks were > part of the backbone of Taney county genealogy. > > Gerald and Monette's granddaughter, Ashlynn, was a good friend of my > daughter Victoria's before her family moved to South Carolina last summer. > They were good people, and will be missed. Gerald had been seriously ill > for the past year or so, which I suspect was why they were in their > daughter's home--she was a hospice triage nurse. > > Vonda > > > > ==== MOTANEY Mailing List ==== > "My future is in my past and my past is my present. I must now make the present my future."--Vladimir Horowitz, "NY Times," 17 Mar 1965 > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >
Hey Vonda, Thanks for the Coffelt news, sad tho' it is. What a tragedy. What is it with fire this year? Seems there are just more than you usually hear about..... Gerald was a fine man. A farrier by trade with an excellent reputation. As I recall, he worked the race tracks in Florida for several years coming home every now and then for a good visit... and Homer would put him to work shoeing horses with "problem feet". Homer had the stables at the Shepherd of the Hills Farm for many, many years, not only operating the Trail Rides but supplying the wagons, buggies and stock for the Play. I know they still have family in the area and this must be a real blow to them. Prayers and good thoughts to them in this difficult time. Adrienne ----- Original Message ----- From: "Vonda Sheets" <vonda@peoplepc.com> To: <MOTANEY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2003 8:53 AM Subject: [MOTANEY] Coffelt memorial > On 31 Mar, 2003, a house fire in Ft. Worth TX killed 3 members of the Taney > Co./Fall Creek area Coffelt family. The memorial service was held 7 Apr > 2003. > > Gerald Lee Coffelt b 17 May 1933 Branson to Homer Lee Coffelt and Iva Treat. > Homer was the s/o Andrew Coffelt and America Edwards. I have no information > on Iva's parentage. They lived near the Lewallen Cemetery in Fall Creek > Valley. > > Cora Monette Stuart b 30 Oct 1938 Houston, TX. Monette's biological father > was a Battle. When her mother married Loren Stuart, he adopted Monette and > her 2 sisters, so she grew up a Stuart. They came to the Bee Creek area > north of Branson during the 1940s. My dad learned to ride a bike on their > long, long driveway (really a road) on the ridge now called Oak Bluff. At > the funeral, Loren read a poem he had written for Monette some years ago, > and it was beautiful. > > Their daughter, Cora Layne Coffelt DeMilio b 16 Jun 1958 Branson, also died > in the fire. Layne's daughter, and son escaped uninjured from the fire. > Layne's son-in-law was seriously injured trying to rescue the others. > > I don't know that there are any Coffelt descendants on the lists, but they > are seriously intermarried with many Taney county families; Edwards, > Compton, Fausett/Faucett...well, you get the drift. If you're researching > the western side of Taney county (I know many of you are), these folks were > part of the backbone of Taney county genealogy. > > Gerald and Monette's granddaughter, Ashlynn, was a good friend of my > daughter Victoria's before her family moved to South Carolina last summer. > They were good people, and will be missed. Gerald had been seriously ill > for the past year or so, which I suspect was why they were in their > daughter's home--she was a hospice triage nurse. > > Vonda > > > > ==== MOTANEY Mailing List ==== > "My future is in my past and my past is my present. I must now make the present my future."--Vladimir Horowitz, "NY Times," 17 Mar 1965 > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237
On 31 Mar, 2003, a house fire in Ft. Worth TX killed 3 members of the Taney Co./Fall Creek area Coffelt family. The memorial service was held 7 Apr 2003. Gerald Lee Coffelt b 17 May 1933 Branson to Homer Lee Coffelt and Iva Treat. Homer was the s/o Andrew Coffelt and America Edwards. I have no information on Iva's parentage. They lived near the Lewallen Cemetery in Fall Creek Valley. Cora Monette Stuart b 30 Oct 1938 Houston, TX. Monette's biological father was a Battle. When her mother married Loren Stuart, he adopted Monette and her 2 sisters, so she grew up a Stuart. They came to the Bee Creek area north of Branson during the 1940s. My dad learned to ride a bike on their long, long driveway (really a road) on the ridge now called Oak Bluff. At the funeral, Loren read a poem he had written for Monette some years ago, and it was beautiful. Their daughter, Cora Layne Coffelt DeMilio b 16 Jun 1958 Branson, also died in the fire. Layne's daughter, and son escaped uninjured from the fire. Layne's son-in-law was seriously injured trying to rescue the others. I don't know that there are any Coffelt descendants on the lists, but they are seriously intermarried with many Taney county families; Edwards, Compton, Fausett/Faucett...well, you get the drift. If you're researching the western side of Taney county (I know many of you are), these folks were part of the backbone of Taney county genealogy. Gerald and Monette's granddaughter, Ashlynn, was a good friend of my daughter Victoria's before her family moved to South Carolina last summer. They were good people, and will be missed. Gerald had been seriously ill for the past year or so, which I suspect was why they were in their daughter's home--she was a hospice triage nurse. Vonda
Okay, It's not the 3rd Saturday, but the weather looks to be nice this Saturday, and we need to hop. I'm going to be at Bob Evans in Branson between 7 & 7:30 Saturday morning, leaving around 8, to go to Seaton Cemetery (unless Jeff steps in and says the other side of the county) on Bear Creek. It is located in the middle of a pasture, and I'd like to get to it before the weeds grow up too high. It is fenced off within the pasture. If you can go, I'll see you Saturday. V
Good morning! Well, the Branson mayoral and alderman elections were held Tuesday. The mayor and one alderman retained their seats; the other 3 aldermen up for reelection lost theirs. The board is still mostly in favor of the Branson Landing "World Class" entertainment/timeshare condo district and convention center, but now the Springfield paper is leaning on the board to listen to constituents. In all but Ward 3, voters were split pretty much down the middle on the issue. Of course, they've destroyed all the buildings on the lakefront, but the term "world class" offends me--people used to come here for what was unique about us, not because we had the same attractions every other tourist town has. The dogwoods began blooming Tuesday, when Greg and I went up to Swan on a gallivant. The north central section of Taney County is one of my favorites at this time of the year, for the dogwood blooms are wisps of cream through the still-gray hillsides full of the hardwood trees. Crocus, wild violet, and wild Sweet William are all in bloom, and my yard is showing some dandelion (yuck, time to mow already!) and clover blossoms. I don't have one favorite season--I'm always ready for each one as it comes, for watching the changes through them is one of the best things about gallivants. Each season has its own beauty, and I don't much like the idea of living anywhere else in the world (not that I'm a world traveler, by any means). I'm planting some ornamental corn, Cherokee corn, tomatoes, onions, and echinacea (purple coneflower) this year. I had high hopes of getting other veggies planted, but a lack of time and space may prohibit it. I really, really, want to get some sunflowers planted, too. We had freeze warnings the last 2 nights, but most of my seeds are in those little Jiffy starter pots/peats, and so I'll be setting them out sometime soon. Now that I think on it, I also early-started some watermelon, and I'm going to throw some canteloupe seeds out as well. (I learned last year that canteloupe will grow anywhere--such as in a mulch pile!) There's other things to discuss, too. I'll send them in different emails. Everyone have a GREAT weekend! Vonda
For those of you with Scottish ancestry, happy Tartan Day! http://www.geocities.com/twincousin2334/Declaration_of_Arbroath_Tartan_Day Nancy Website: http://www.geocities.com/twincousin2334 List Administrator: USCW-SEVEN_PINES List Administrator: CARMICHAEL Life may not be the party we hoped for, but as long as we're here, we might as well dance.
I broke the URL into 2 segments where the > is and brought both sections individually. Good luck. Shirley
Bob, Thanks for the information...However, the page cannot be found. Please check the URL address. Thank you. Di ----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob Doerr" <bdoerr@rollanet.org> To: <MOTANEY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, April 01, 2003 2:57 AM Subject: [MOTANEY] > > Hi > > > > A large source of leads to family-history data is now on line. It is > comprised of the Tables of Contents of the first 22 volumes of the Missouri > State Genealogical Association Journal, 1981-2002+. Importantly, below the > Tables of Contents, is an index. Reviewers find the whole page easily > navigated despite the great amount of data included. > > > > A few of the key words with which to search the index are county names, > directions (east, south, north, west), and family surnames (for Bible > records). Use your browsers search function. > > > > When you find interesting leads on the web page, you will probably want to > see actual copies of the Journal. Many libraries subscribe to the Journal. > There is also information, below the index on the web page, on how to > obtain copies of articles or issues. > > > > One can get an idea as to the length of an article in the Journal by noting > the page numbers where it begins and where the following article begins. > However, some articles are serialized over two to four issues. > > > > The URL is > <http://www.rollanet.org/~bdoerr/contents.htm>http://www.rollanet.org/~bdoer r/contents.htm > > > > > > > > > ==== MOTANEY Mailing List ==== > "Determine the things that can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way."--Abraham Lincoln > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 > >
Hi A large source of leads to family-history data is now on line. It is comprised of the Tables of Contents of the first 22 volumes of the Missouri State Genealogical Association Journal, 1981-2002+. Importantly, below the Tables of Contents, is an index. Reviewers find the whole page easily navigated despite the great amount of data included. A few of the key words with which to search the index are county names, directions (east, south, north, west), and family surnames (for Bible records). Use your browsers search function. When you find interesting leads on the web page, you will probably want to see actual copies of the Journal. Many libraries subscribe to the Journal. There is also information, below the index on the web page, on how to obtain copies of articles or issues. One can get an idea as to the length of an article in the Journal by noting the page numbers where it begins and where the following article begins. However, some articles are serialized over two to four issues. The URL is <http://www.rollanet.org/~bdoerr/contents.htm>http://www.rollanet.org/~bdoerr/contents.htm >
Happy St. Patrick's Day! All things Irish: http://www.censusdiggins.com/irishlinks.html Nancy, researching: Cain, Carmichael, Dawkins, Doty, Garmon, Garrett, Hanon, Jackson, McCormick, Matthews, Osborne, Robertson, Sharp, Stringer, Warren......and more! Website: http://www.geocities.com/twincousin2334 List Administrator: USCW-SEVEN_PINES List Administrator: CARMICHAEL
try this site http:www.arkansasfamilies.net. i was very impressed. Dolores ________________________________________________________________ Sign Up for Juno Platinum Internet Access Today Only $9.95 per month! Visit www.juno.com
Diane Saw your listing re Berry Cemetery, I am from the Berry Line and found the cemetery in Oct when we were back in MO, if you know where the Hooton Bridge is located, it is about 1/2 mile from the Bridge. not sure of the road, but it is a little dirt road and the Berry Cemetery sign is large but at the beginning of the road is a very small sign "Berry Cemetery" with an arrow pointing down the road. Wanda (Cook) King grnd5@aol.com
Any chance anyone out there can help this gentleman? Please read down below and write back to him at his address. Thanks! Jerry Johnston ----- Original Message ----- From: "John P. Collins" <jcollins@portsmouthgroup.com> To: <motaney-l@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, March 01, 2003 5:06 AM Subject: {not a subscriber} Collins Family - Taney Co MO > My name is John Patrick Collins. My father's name was Lewis Floyd Collins. > He was born in Kissee Mills, MO on March 14, 1929 to John and Cora Collins. > My father died when I was seven in New York City on January 1, 1963. After > his death at such a young age, we lost contact with his family. I found > your e-mail address on the Taney Co. MO roots web page. > Any of this match information you have about the Collins family in Taney > County? Hope so. > Thanks, > JC > >
Hi No my Maiden name was Raines. Dolores ________________________________________________________________ Sign Up for Juno Platinum Internet Access Today Only $9.95 per month! Visit www.juno.com