Also in your original question Mother-In-Law has uppercase letters that need to be lowercase unless that is her given name. For example "Mother said..." is the way the writer addresses his mother. But "my mother said..." is just one of perhaps several mothers. Census records have come a long way but my god they are slow. In 1840 only the head of the household was named and then 100 years later they were still using longhand cursive writing. The forms we filled out in 2010 had almost no place for writing. Future genealogists will have it easy. Of course by then I imagine we'll all be in a DNA database so a computer can quickly spit out a tree. Gale Gorman Houston On Apr 21, 2012, at 8:49 AM, Jim Tarbet wrote: Thank you everybody who answered my question. My only disappointment is.. I wanted to be right!! LOL Jim