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Please help make this newsletter a success by submitting your Family History questions, tips, favorite websites, surname queries, quotes and stories to share with others. Submit.
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Announcements
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The Tour of Utah American pro cycling event will begin at 138 North 100 East (1/2 block from the Tabernacle) on Monday, August 3. With the anticipated traffic and congestion for this event we feel it is best to close the FamilySearch Library that day. Normal operation will resume on Tuesday, August 4.
Thursday, July 23 the Library will close at 5:00 pm. We will also be closed on Friday July 24 and Saturday, July 25th for Pioneer days celebration. We will reopen on Monday, July 27 at 9:30 for normal operation
The General Session of the Quarterly Family History Consultant Training will be in the Tabernacle chapel at 7:30, Wednesday, July 29. .New consultants and High Priest Group Leaders will meet in the Library at 6:30 pm.
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Whats New in Family Search? |
Place Research Tool Place Research Tool is the new way to search the huge database of geographical information at FamilySearch. Place Research Tool helps you find standardized information for place names with links to GPS-generated maps, variant spellings, and dates when names were in effect. In addition to helping genealogists search for exact spellings and locations, FamilySearch indexers also use this database.
http://www.sassyjanegenealogy.com/place-research-tool/
RootsMagic Update 7.0.6.0 Required to Interact With FamilySearch Family Tree
Important RootsMagic Update (7.0.6.0) Available
We have released a new update for RootsMagic 7 users, version 7.0.6.0. If you use RootsMagic to work with FamilySearch Family Tree, you must install this update to continue working with it after July 30, 2015. FamilySearch will be making breaking changes to their API on July 30, 2015, and this update adds code to deal with those changes.
To see a list of what is new and fixed, visit:
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Help Desk |
Footnotes and Related Agonies
While the add stories feature is highly commendable in most instances, it is extremely frustrating when trying to upload a document containing footnotes. Add to this, when footnotes are loaded manually, there is no way to use superscript in their notation. I was recently sent by e.mail a marvelous letter from an immigrant ancestor to the family back in Germany about 150 years ago. It had been translated by a cousin in a distant state, and further enhanced by footnotes which explained the things the letter discussed which would be known only to the German family... not really understood by those of us American born and bred. We tried every conceivable way of importing that document to no avail. I finally had to invent a private code for footnote notation added manually. Ugh! Please help. Thanks!
Answer:
One option for a complex document such as you describe would be to create it beautifully in a word processing program with properly formatted footnotes, extra illustrations, appropriate fonts, then export it as a PDF file. You could even scan the original letter, if you have access to it, and include it in the word processing file. You can upload the final product as a document instead of a story and preserve its appearance. Another advantage to posting it as a PDF is that PDF's cannot be changed by other people whereas stories are open for editing by others. Another approach is to simply take a photograph of the document and upload that picture.
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Favorite Websites |

Ten Keys for Telling Your Best Stories
By Alison Taylor
From our keynote speech at the Riverton Family Search Center today: we are talking about ten of the most common obstacles people have when it comes to writing their life stories, and how to get around them! Click here to read on.
alison=picturesandstories.com@mail78.atl11.rsgsv.net
When you unearth a family secret, be careful what you do with it "If you've ever explored genealogy, you've probably uncovered a family secret or two. Some sociologists warn that if you dig too deep, you may get more than you bargained for. When we discover a family secret, we need to be prepared and decide how to handle the information. Read more here.
http://spittalstreet.com/?p=9368
10 Important Characteristics of a Good Genealogist
We all want to be good genealogists, don't we. We want to know that we did our best to find our ancestors and that what we found is accurate. We don't want to spend time searching an individual's ancestors and adding them to our family tree only to find out it was the wrong person! Read this list of the 10 most important characteristics that will tell you if you're on the right track to being a good genealogist.
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Favorite Websites |

When you unearth a family secret, be careful what you do with it
"If you've ever explored genealogy, you've probably uncovered a family secret or two. Some sociologists warn that if you dig too deep, you may get more than you bargained for. When we discover a family secret, we need to be prepared and decide how to handle the information. Read more here.
http://spittalstreet.com/?p=9368
10 Important Characteristics of a Good Genealogist
We all want to be good genealogists, don't we. We want to know that we did our best to find our ancestors and that what we found is accurate. We don't want to spend time searching an individual's ancestors and adding them to our family tree only to find out it was the wrong person! Read this list of the 10 most important characteristics that will tell you if you're on the right track to being a good genealogist.
Read more:
10 Important Characteristics of a Good Genealogist
We all want to be good genealogists, don't we. We want to know that we did our best to find our ancestors and that what we found is accurate. We don't want to spend time searching an individual's ancestors and adding them to our family tree only to find out it was the wrong person! I've come up with a list of the 10 most important characteristics that will tell you if you're on the right track to being a good genealogist. Read more-click here.
http://olivetreegenealogy.blogspot.com/2015/07/10-important-characteristics-of-good.html
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Family History Research Help |
Scottish Wills and Testaments
Before the 19th century, Inheritance Law in Scotland was unique in that all unmoveable property was inheritable by succession (automatically going to eldest son). Only moveable property could be dispersed as the dead wished. And then, only one third of the moveables. Read how the
African-American Research
RELATIVELY CURIOUS, I have added 49 websites to my Pinterest board for African-American genealogy research. As far as I could tell, they are all free sites, without subscription necessary to use. While the new sites are listed and linked below, I encourage you to check out the Pinterest board. I really like using Pinterest for genealogy, because of the visual effect of the pictures used as a display rather than mere words. See the websites- click here.
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Suggestion for Weekly Bulletin Thought | "No work is more of a protection to this Church than temple work and the family history research that supports it. No work is more spiritually refining. No work we do gives us more power. No work requires a higher standard of righteousness." Boyd K. Packer
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Remember...
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Actions Speak Loudest
Vincent Van Gogh was not always an artist. In fact, he wanted to be a church pastor and was even sent to the Belgian mining community of Borinage in 1879. He discovered that the miners there endured deplorable working conditions and poverty-level wages. Their families were malnourished and struggled simply to survive. He felt concerned that the small stipend he received from the church allowed him a moderate life- style, which, in contrast, seemed to him unfair.
One cold February evening, while he watched the miners trudging home, he spotted an old man staggering toward him across the fields, wrapped in a burlap sack for warmth. Van Gogh laid his own clothing out on the bed, set aside enough for one change, and decided to give the rest away. He gave the old man a suit of clothes and he gave his overcoat to a pregnant woman whose husband had been killed in a cave-in.
He lived on starvation rations and spent his stipend on food for the miners. When children in one family contracted typhoid fever, though feverish himself, he packed up his bed and took it to them.
A prosperous family in the community offered him free room and board. Van Gogh declined the offer, stating that it was the final temptation he must reject if he was to faithfully serve his community of poor miners.
He believed that if he wanted them to trust him, he must become one of them. And if they were to learn of the love of God through him, he must love them enough to share with them.
He was acutely aware of the wide chasm between words and actions. He knew that our lives always speak louder and clearer than our words. Maybe that is why Francis of Assisi often said to his monks, "Wherever you go, preach. Use words if necessary."
Others are "listening" carefully to your actions. What are you saying to them?
Author Unknown
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Upcoming Classes
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Classes are closed for the summer during July and August.
If you have a group and would like to arrange instruction on a specific subject, please call the Library at (435) 755-5594. We will schedule a time and arrange for our staff to be available to instruct you.
Watch for our new class schedule-it will be published in early August.
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Billy K. Jones
Director of Training Logan Utah FamilySearch Library
Phone: (435) 755-5594 |
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