ARIZARD-L Archives

Archiver > ARIZARD > 2006-09 > 1158937771


From: Ilene Stevenson <>
Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] ARIZARD Digest, Vol 1, Issue 133
Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 10:09:31 -0500
References: <mailman.4315.1158601151.18240.arizard@rootsweb.com>


Anyone researching Frederick Benton Talbert Born Mar. 24,1771 in Va. Died
Jan.22, 1842 in Marion Co, Ar?

----- Original Message -----
From: <>
To: <>
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 12:39 PM
Subject: ARIZARD Digest, Vol 1, Issue 133


>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. The North South Question Again ()
> 2. Mason Dixon Line Again ()
> 3. Re: The North South Question Again (Pat Miller)
> 4. Re: WAY Off Subject - Bernie (candyandrick)
> 5. Re: Byler and Coffman ([Leither-Edgmon])
> 6. Zelma Billingsley's sister (Liz Neal)
> 7. Re: The North South Question Again (candyandrick)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 03:51:26 EDT
> From:
> Subject: [ARIZARD] The North South Question Again
> To:
> Message-ID: <>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>
> Hello List,
>
> I am sorry to repeat myself. I was aware of the Mason Dixon Line being
> some
> kind of property line surveyed that showed the southern portion of
> Pennsylvania and the line between the "North" and the "South". Didn't
> this also have
> to do with which states from that point forward would be admitted as
> slave
> states and some as compromise states and some as free states. I know
> Missouri
> was a slave state all the way to the Iowa line. I also know that the
> underground railroad helped slaves escape into Kansas to freedom. So was
> Kansas a
> completely free state or just partially or what was the true status of
> it. I
> know they call it the Border War between Missouri and Kansas. I drive
> down
> into Westport where all the famous hangouts are nowadays, and I am sure
> nobody
> besides me if any even know Westport was an inportant battleground at one
> time that hang out there on a weekend. Kansas City had several battles,
> didn't
> it? Major ones? The Blue River, wasn't that part of a battle. The
> reason
> I ask when I first moved here I used to live right by the Blue River, and
> it
> even tried to flood into my basement one time. I know Kentucky was a
> compromise state. What was southern Illinois? Was it Confederate at
> all? It is
> not that I am wanting these places to be Confederate, but I just want to
> know
> out of curiosity so I can be better informed at our round table meetings
> monthly.
>
> If anyone knows the history of KC in the Civil War, could you let me
> know?
> I know of Bleeding Kansas in like 1854 which was the cause of the Civil
> War.
> Did Kansas have actual slaves before the Civil War and before it became a
> state from a territory in 1858, I believe. Ironically, the town my
> address is
> in, Spring Hill, was founded in 1858. Kansas must have had slaves at one
> point for it to be called Bleeding Kansas.
>
>
> Another thing, I am an avid arrowhead collector. I know in Izard County
> growing up, I could walk down Dad's cattle trail in his field and pick up
> arrow
> heads. I would also go down past the Nelson Road on over the Gilstrap
> land
> into the Pearson land and over close to the Sue and Jimmy Owens place and
> gather arrowheads usually along trails and usually near creeks.I have
> heard
> before the Wideman Road was blacktopped, that arrowheads could be found
> right in
> the middle of the gravel road. They may still can on past the blacktop.
> I
> know my oldest brother, Rick Blevins when they lived on the Wideman Road
> located several Indian Burial Grounds. I think he said they were usually
> just big
> mounds of dirt. He got some kind of permission from the government to
> dig
> one or two up, so he says, and they buried their treasures with them. I
> have
> also come across several places where there would be a mound of rocks.
> Could
> this have been an Indian grave, especially when there were several
> together?
> I know of several on Dad's property. I used to have quite a collection
> of
> arrowheads, but they were destrooyed in the fire of 82. Also, my antique
> coin
> collection was burned. I found my old stamps the other day. I used to
> love
> to collect Buffalo nickels. I used to always be in the habit of looking
> at
> the date of every coin I came in possession of, but quit. I am going to
> do
> it again. Can't you go to the Post Office and chance your luck in buying
> rolls of coins with your money, and see if you can find old coins. How
> do you
> determine how much a coin is worth> I know I have a lot of questions,
> but I am
> wanting to seriously get back into my own hobbies. Any answers would be
> appreciated.
>
> On the U.S. saddle that I asked about yesaterday, so that was a real Civil
> War saddle. I just happened to find it in Dad's real old barn - no
> telling
> how old, and it had the emblem the United States on it. It looks like it
> would
> have to be a military saddle, and what other war would have used horses
> except the Civil War?
>
> Again, any answers appreciated, and please tell me where I find the worth
> of
> the date of certain coins - I know there is or used to be a little book
> that
> gave the worth of coins like a book for the price of cars.
>
> In Izard County, please tell me some good places to arrowhead hunt if you
> know of any. They might as well be found instead of just laying there.
> Would
> creek banks be a good place?
>
> Thank you,
>
> Mike Walker
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 04:11:20 EDT
> From:
> Subject: [ARIZARD] Mason Dixon Line Again
> To:
> Message-ID: <>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>
> Hey Guys and Gals,
>
> It seems like when I studied some about the Mason Dixon Line in
> Pennsylvania
> that it followed a 142 degree latitude line or something of that nature -
> whatever that line was I was told was the actual North South line across
> the
> U.S. For instance if the latitude line at the southern part of
> Pennsylvania
> was 142 degrees latitude, then you followed 142 degrees across to what
> was the
> end of the country which was Missouri, and I tried to follow it and it
> coordinated pretty much with the Missouri River. I know I may be way off
> base. I
> am just thirst for knowledge on this, and I know you all answered me, but
> maybe it just didn't sink in right or something. I know both sides were
> evil
> during the war. Were the ones who raided the Southern homes called
> Jayhawkers
> and the ones who raided Northern homes called Bushwhackers. Please set
> me
> straight on this. I am the type that doesn't like to guess my through.
> I want
> to find out the right answers, and I know you all gave me the right
> answers,
> but if you help me understand them better. Maybe I have been up too long
> and just too tired and can't think. I also would like to know if there
> was a
> connection between Izard County and Christian and Taney Counties,
> Missouri,
> even up as far as Greene County, Missouri. I know I had 3 or 5 branches
> of
> relatives of no relation who made their way back back and forth between
> Izard
> County and this part of Missouri before, during, and just shortly after
> the
> Civil War. One set, the Landers side actually were a member of a Melitia
> in
> 1866 after the war to keep the peace in the area from bushwhackers,
> jayhawkers,
> or whatever. One was my gr gr grandfather Anderson Simmie Landers and
> his
> brother Nathaniel. So the effects of the war went on for years after it
> was
> over - the bushwhacking and so on. Just like the hanging of Asa Jones on
> his
> fireplace between Melbourne and Brockwell in 1874, close to the Tom
> Edmonston place or the Faye Jones place. Some thought his wife had
> something to do
> with it with because she supposedly married one of thje bushwhackers.
> Strange
> story - close to the 7 graves beside hwy 9 north of Melbourne past that
> first bridge where the big barn is.
>
> Aomebody p[lease answer me with some of the questions.
>
> Mike Walker - I really appreciate it.
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 3
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 08:22:34 -0500
> From: Pat Miller <>
> Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] The North South Question Again
> To:
> Message-ID: <>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
>
> Mike,
> It sounds like you need to make a trip too your local library to get
> Civil War history about Kansas. Maybe you can find some pictures of
> your saddle that way.
> Pat Miller
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 4
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 11:33:34 -0500
> From: "candyandrick" <>
> Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] WAY Off Subject - Bernie
> To: <>
> Message-ID: <00b101c6db40$30b891b0$>
> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
> reply-type=original
>
> Hey! I was born March 55!!!!
>
> Rick Lawrence - Tulsa
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Vera Reeves" <>
> To: <>
> Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2006 11:04 PM
> Subject: [ARIZARD] WAY Off Subject - Bernie
>
>
>>> My age?
>>> I was born in April of 1955 - and that makes me 51.
>>> Will I go to back to school?
>> ======================
>> Hey folks, there she goes bragging about her age again.
>> When some of us on this list have been married longer than that.
>> Young lady, next April we'll have to celebrate our birthdays together.
>> I think it's great you haven't given up your dream entirely.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -------------------------------
>> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to
>> with the word 'unsubscribe' without the
>> quotes in the subject and the body of the message
>>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 5
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 11:47:16 -0500
> From: "[Leither-Edgmon]" <>
> Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] Byler and Coffman
> To: <>
> Message-ID: <006101c6db42$19b19230$>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> Dear Wilma,
> For the two Byler children that you asked about...
>
> (1) From personnel knowledge and research on family; birth year for James
> Collins Byler was 1905, he was born at Pearidge in Benton County,
> Arkansas. Mary Adeline Coffman was known as Mollie...she was daughter of
> Elijah Collins Coffman and Sarah Randol. Mollie was wife of Monroe Lee
> Byler, who was son of James Harper Byler and Catherine Faylor...James
> Harper Byler was son of Joseph Byler and second wife, Rachel Harper.
> A picture of James Harper Byler and wife Catherine is online here:
> http://www.arfamilies.info/mtalbum4.htm; the picture is Item #91, also
> found in index at Item #91 is link to images from James Harper Byler's
> Bible.
> http://www.arfamilies.info/mtalbum1.htm Item #24 is Byler family group
> picture: Monroe, Mollie and children...James Collins Byler is baby on his
> mother's lap. Family knew him as Jim...also known as J. C. Byler in
> community where he worked...appears as J. C. Byler in SSDI...
>
> (2) Florence Byler was born Izard County, Arkansas, a child of John Love
> Byler and Margaret Cheatham; John Love Byler was son of Jacob M. Byler and
> second wife, Rachel R. Smith...from Roger L. Byler's book ==> Jacob Byler
> of North Carolina...Florence Byler married Ora Carrie...nothing more on
> Florence Byler in Roger's book.
>
> Take Care, Judy Tate
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Wilma Norton" <>
> To: "ARIZARD-L" <>
> Sent: Friday, September 15, 2006 8:01 PM
> Subject: [ARIZARD] Byler and Coffman
>
>
>>I recently received the Arkansas Prior Birth Index cd and did a search on
>>Byler. There are a couple children I cannot identify.
>>
>> Mother: Mary Adaline Coffman - child: James Collins Byler, b. 2 May
>> 2005 in Benton Co. AR
>>
>> Mother: Margaret Cheatham - child: Florence Byler, b. 20 Oct. 1894 in
>> Izard Co. AR
>>
>> Any help??
>>
>> Wilma
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 6
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 12:33:43 -0500
> From: Liz Neal <>
> Subject: [ARIZARD] Zelma Billingsley's sister
> To:
> Message-ID: <>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed
>
> Yes, Mike they still brought dead family members back to their homes at
> that time......one of the last people moved back home in the Byron area
> was my husband's Neal grandfather, that was Jan 1964 and then his uncle
> in 1967 but they brought his body back from IL to bury in Fulton Co. I
> remember they used to move all the furniture out of the room and the
> funeral home set up lights behind the casket. It would seem strange to
> younger folks now but was the only acceptable method to deal with death
> at that time...anyone have interesting stories about this practice? My
> mother said they used to use silver dollars to close the eyes of the
> corpse. Liz
>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>------------------------------
>>
>>Message: 2
>>Date: Sun, 17 Sep 2006 23:38:26 EDT
>>From:
>>Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] Home place with storm cellar
>>To:
>>Message-ID: <>
>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>>
>>Liz,
>>
>>
>>Yes, that house with the storm cellar just north of my county road, Nelson
>>Road that goes to my house at the end of it probably a mile - my
>>grandmother
>>Ether Barnes Taylor died in that house in 1963 at age 46 just 5 months
>>after
>>being diagnosed with colon cancer. They must have kept their corpses and
>>caskets in the house back then because we have several old pictures in the
>>house
>>in her casket. Aunt Zelma Billingsley was her sister, just two years
>>older.
>>She would cry over her till the day she died in 1997. She wrote so many
>>poems that I have copies of about her dear little sister that she loved
>>so much.
>>
>>I mentioned recently that I saw one of those old fast moving pictures of
>>my
>>Grandma on her front porch smiling and waving at everybody just 2 weeks
>>before
>> she died on her 46th birthday. She looked nothing like I remember her in
>>the still pictures. I wasn't born until 1967 so I did not know her. My
>>grandpa married his second wife while living in that house, too. They
>>moved from
>>there to a house south of there in the early 70s.. Then whoever bought
>>it,
>>let the house burn down. We have lots of pictures of the old house.
>>
>>Mike Walker
>>
>>
>>------------------------------
>>
>>Message: 3
>>Date: Sun, 17 Sep 2006 23:04:04 -0500
>>From: "Vera Reeves" <>
>>Subject: [ARIZARD] WAY Off Subject - Bernie
>>To: <>
>>Message-ID: <000f01c6dad7$7b4ac7c0$>
>>Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
>> reply-type=original
>>
>>
>>
>>>My age?
>>>I was born in April of 1955 - and that makes me 51.
>>>Will I go to back to school?
>>>
>>>
>>======================
>>Hey folks, there she goes bragging about her age again.
>>When some of us on this list have been married longer than that.
>>Young lady, next April we'll have to celebrate our birthdays together.
>>I think it's great you haven't given up your dream entirely.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>------------------------------
>>
>>Message: 4
>>Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 00:39:08 EDT
>>From:
>>Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] Aunt Millie Cooper Barnes _Joyce
>>To:
>>Message-ID: <>
>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>>
>>In a message dated 9/17/2006 3:59:02 PM Central Daylight Time,
>> writes:
>>
>>
>>>Hi Jim...No, William Monroe Cooper was born in 1826 in Bedford County Tn.
>>>He was the son of Zacheus Cooper born about 1779. I have this line back
>>>to the
>>>late 1580's in 'Our Coopers from Yorkshire England, 1580's to The Present
>>>Times in the America's '...
>>>
>>>William Moses Cooper was the son of Benjamin Franklin Cooper and the
>>>grandson of Wm. Monroe Cooper.
>>>
>>>Later...Joyce
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>Thanks Joyce,
>>
>>Jim S
>>
>>
>>------------------------------
>>
>>Message: 5
>>Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 01:21:14 EDT
>>From:
>>Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] Off subject totally, guys - Michael Walker
>>To:
>>Message-ID: <>
>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>>
>>Bernie,
>>
>>That is great that we have the same dream - going to law school. I just
>>don't proofread when I write on the list and have to squint so my writing
>>can be
>>atrocious on here, but actually and not meaning to brag, I have always
>>loved
>>to write. I have represented myself in court a few times in a few civil
>>cases and won easily. I found that when I had an attorney, I always had
>>to jot
>>down every note for him to do - every move for him to make and to even
>>put me
>>back on the witness stand to make rebuttal statements. So if I had cases
>>again, and I have had very few, I just represented myself. I am
>>representing
>>myself in one right now that will be coming up and some more that have to
>>do
>>with road rights, discrimination on my job by the higher ups following my
>>carjacking. My school district is a mafia. Don't get me wrong, I am not
>>sue
>>happy at all. I just stick up for what is legally right for me and am
>>not gonna
>>let anybody run over me. That is much better than what one person I know
>>did. She took the law into her own hands and shot at her enemies. That
>>was a
>>wrong chess move.
>>
>>No, you and I have similar backgrounds. I hold two undergraduate
>>degrees:
>>one in Elementaruy Education with an Emphasis in Middle School Business =
>>Bachelor of Science in Education and the other is a Bachelor of Arts in
>>History,
>>and I studied the American Indians, Mexican History, Black History, The
>>American West, and since I was also certified to teach high school Social
>>Studies
>>I took several Economics, Political Science, Geography, Government,
>>Arkansas
>>History, Constitutional Law, etc. I loved every minute of it. I got
>>this
>>degree because I was just a few hours shy of the second Bachelors anyway
>>and I
>>thought if I went to Law School history was supposed to be a good pre-law
>>major.
>>
>>I have done a tremendous amount of writing in my life, but I think my
>>fingers have about let me quit knowing how to write and knowing how to
>>write is a
>>prerequisite for law school. I really do want to be an attorney and as I
>>said
>>since I am so close to the same degree in Forensics Psychology, it would
>>be
>>wonderful to spend the second phase of my life as both a doctor of
>>Psychology
>>and Attorney. I would have a lot of options. I think I told you I
>>already
>>got this far by going past school counselor and becoming a private
>>practice
>>counselor/therapist with my own office. I will just have that built up
>>well
>>by the time of retirement I hope.
>>
>>Well, Bernie, I know you are sick of my bragging, but my eyebrows raIise
>>when someone I am acquainted and friends with like here on the list who
>>plans to
>>do the same as me in becoming a lawyer. That takes brains, and I really
>>don't know if I have the brains for it or not.But one thing that will help
>>me
>>ego, I will be one of the first attorneys with Dr. in front of his name.
>>
>>Mike
>>
>>
>>------------------------------
>>
>>Message: 6
>>Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 01:22:49 EDT
>>From:
>>Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] Off subject totally, guys - Michael Walker
>>To:
>>Message-ID: <>
>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
>>
>>By the way, I am 39 and will be about 48 - 50 when I begin my pursuit of
>>my
>>law degree. So we are in the same boat. I think it is great to want to
>>keep
>>working in our later years. My dad was 78 when he retired.
>>
>>Mike
>>
>>
>>------------------------------
>>
>>To contact the ARIZARD list administrator, send an email to
>>.
>>
>>To post a message to the ARIZARD mailing list, send an email to
>>.
>>
>>__________________________________________________________
>>To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to
>>
>>with the word "unsubscribe" without the quotes in the subject and the body
>>of the
>>email with no additional text.
>>
>>
>>End of ARIZARD Digest, Vol 1, Issue 132
>>***************************************
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 7
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 11:38:11 -0500
> From: "candyandrick" <>
> Subject: Re: [ARIZARD] The North South Question Again
> To: <>
> Message-ID: <00c801c6db40$d5f98fd0$>
> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
> reply-type=original
>
> I answered your questions on the saddle and gave you a brief synopsis of
> it's history...did you not read that part of my message? And while the
> tree
> "may" have been made in the Civil War, there were trees made afterwards.
> The chances of it being an actual Civil War saddle are slim...possible but
> slim.
>
> Rick Lawrence - Tulsa
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <>
> To: <>
> Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 2:51 AM
> Subject: [ARIZARD] The North South Question Again
>
>
>> Hello List,
>>
>> I am sorry to repeat myself. I was aware of the Mason Dixon Line being
>> some
>> kind of property line surveyed that showed the southern portion of
>> Pennsylvania and the line between the "North" and the "South". Didn't
>> this also have
>> to do with which states from that point forward would be admitted as
>> slave
>> states and some as compromise states and some as free states. I know
>> Missouri
>> was a slave state all the way to the Iowa line. I also know that the
>> underground railroad helped slaves escape into Kansas to freedom. So
>> was
>> Kansas a
>> completely free state or just partially or what was the true status of
>> it. I
>> know they call it the Border War between Missouri and Kansas. I drive
>> down
>> into Westport where all the famous hangouts are nowadays, and I am sure
>> nobody
>> besides me if any even know Westport was an inportant battleground at
>> one
>> time that hang out there on a weekend. Kansas City had several battles,
>> didn't
>> it? Major ones? The Blue River, wasn't that part of a battle. The
>> reason
>> I ask when I first moved here I used to live right by the Blue River,
>> and
>> it
>> even tried to flood into my basement one time. I know Kentucky was a
>> compromise state. What was southern Illinois? Was it Confederate at
>> all? It is
>> not that I am wanting these places to be Confederate, but I just want to
>> know
>> out of curiosity so I can be better informed at our round table meetings
>> monthly.
>>
>> If anyone knows the history of KC in the Civil War, could you let me
>> know?
>> I know of Bleeding Kansas in like 1854 which was the cause of the Civil
>> War.
>> Did Kansas have actual slaves before the Civil War and before it became
>> a
>> state from a territory in 1858, I believe. Ironically, the town my
>> address is
>> in, Spring Hill, was founded in 1858. Kansas must have had slaves at
>> one
>> point for it to be called Bleeding Kansas.
>>
>>
>> Another thing, I am an avid arrowhead collector. I know in Izard County
>> growing up, I could walk down Dad's cattle trail in his field and pick up
>> arrow
>> heads. I would also go down past the Nelson Road on over the Gilstrap
>> land
>> into the Pearson land and over close to the Sue and Jimmy Owens place
>> and
>> gather arrowheads usually along trails and usually near creeks.I have
>> heard
>> before the Wideman Road was blacktopped, that arrowheads could be found
>> right in
>> the middle of the gravel road. They may still can on past the blacktop.
>> I
>> know my oldest brother, Rick Blevins when they lived on the Wideman Road
>> located several Indian Burial Grounds. I think he said they were
>> usually
>> just big
>> mounds of dirt. He got some kind of permission from the government to
>> dig
>> one or two up, so he says, and they buried their treasures with them. I
>> have
>> also come across several places where there would be a mound of rocks.
>> Could
>> this have been an Indian grave, especially when there were several
>> together?
>> I know of several on Dad's property. I used to have quite a collection
>> of
>> arrowheads, but they were destrooyed in the fire of 82. Also, my
>> antique
>> coin
>> collection was burned. I found my old stamps the other day. I used to
>> love
>> to collect Buffalo nickels. I used to always be in the habit of looking
>> at
>> the date of every coin I came in possession of, but quit. I am going to
>> do
>> it again. Can't you go to the Post Office and chance your luck in
>> buying
>> rolls of coins with your money, and see if you can find old coins. How
>> do you
>> determine how much a coin is worth> I know I have a lot of questions,
>> but I am
>> wanting to seriously get back into my own hobbies. Any answers would be
>> appreciated.
>>
>> On the U.S. saddle that I asked about yesaterday, so that was a real
>> Civil
>> War saddle. I just happened to find it in Dad's real old barn - no
>> telling
>> how old, and it had the emblem the United States on it. It looks like it
>> would
>> have to be a military saddle, and what other war would have used horses
>> except the Civil War?
>>
>> Again, any answers appreciated, and please tell me where I find the worth
>> of
>> the date of certain coins - I know there is or used to be a little book
>> that
>> gave the worth of coins like a book for the price of cars.
>>
>> In Izard County, please tell me some good places to arrowhead hunt if you
>> know of any. They might as well be found instead of just laying there.
>> Would
>> creek banks be a good place?
>>
>> Thank you,
>>
>> Mike Walker
>>
>> -------------------------------
>> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to
>> with the word 'unsubscribe' without the
>> quotes in the subject and the body of the message
>>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> To contact the ARIZARD list administrator, send an email to
> .
>
> To post a message to the ARIZARD mailing list, send an email to
> .
>
> __________________________________________________________
> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to
>
> with the word "unsubscribe" without the quotes in the subject and the body
> of the
> email with no additional text.
>
>
> End of ARIZARD Digest, Vol 1, Issue 133
> ***************************************


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