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I have decided to order a DNA test for my husband so as to put his Carpenter
family together. I have checked thru my info and cannot find instructions as
to how to order, can you help me?
Also we will be changing to a cable internet next week so in the near future
I need to change my email address, to unsubscribe do I put that in the subject
or the main body of email.
Thanks, Linda Carpenter
>From the New Jersey Calendar of Wills
08 Jan 1713 Hope Carpenter of Jamaica, Queens Co., N. Y, will of. Wife Mary. Children--Hope, Aimon (Asmun), Hezekiah, John, Hannah (under age). Farm and land in Hopewell, Burlington Co., [now Mercer Co.], and land in Jamaica Township; personal property. Executors--the wife, sons Asmon, Hezekiah, John, with Samuel Firl and Thos. Burrows as assistants. Witnesses: Deborah Wood, Daniel Woolsey, Nehemiah Smith.
16 Aug 1713 Administration of the estate granted to John Muirhead, [husband of his daughter Hannah born in 1696] of Hopewell, who has purchased from the widow, Mary, and the three younger sons, Ashman, Hezekiah and John Carpenter, their several rights in the estate under the will.
13 Oct 1713 Hezekiah Carpenter, Hopewell, Burlington Co. [now Mercer Co.], blacksmith; will of. Wife Abigail and an expected child to inherit "All my estate." Executors: the wife, Thos. Byris and Jonathan Roberts. Witnesses: James Fitch, Edward Hart, Alexander Lockart. Proved 09 Dec 1713.
Hope Carpenter, Jr., settled in Elizabethtown, NJ. He had a daughter named Hannah or Nancy (both variations of Anne) born about 1741. The other family members all settled in Hopewell. Neither John nor Asmun appear to have had a daughter, Nancy. I think Nancy Carpenter, wife of William Updike, was the "expected" child of Hezekiah and Abigail Carpenter. William was born in Maidenhead, NJ, near Hopewell. William and Nancy Carpenter Updike had a son named Hope.
Can anyone confirm this theory?
Thanks for your help.
Mike Morrissey
> Hi everyone,
Know this is not the purpose of this list but...........,
> Just in case all have not seen this.............!
>
> BTY, I can now FINALLY SEND MAIL!!!!!!!
>
> Much to answer.
>
> Barb
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "DW Woodland Hills, CA" <computerguy(a)seiu99.net>
> To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;>
> Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2004 1:22 AM
> Subject: Fw: New Virus
>
>
> >
> >
> > Sent: Monday, January 26, 2004 9:56 PM
> > Subject: New Virus
> >
> >
> > > 'MyDoom' Floods the Net With Bad E-Mails
> > >
> > > Updated 11:04 PM ET January 26, 2004
> > >
> > > - Computer security experts are warning that a new virulent computer
bug
> > is
> > > beginning to thread its way around the global Internet.
> > >
> > > The bug is a mass e-mailing worm that has been dubbed myDoom. It's
also
> > been
> > > given various other names, including Novarg, by different computer
> > security
> > > companies.
> > >
> > > Despite the naming confusion, experts agree that the malicious program
> has
> > > the potential to flood the Internet with more bogus e-mail messages
than
> > > last year's "SoBig" virus attack.
> > >
> > >
> > > How It Works
> > >
> > > MyDoom, which affects only Windows-using PCs, arrives in unsuspecting
> > e-mail
> > > inboxes with a one of a few random subject lines such as "Test" or
> > "Status"
> > > or "Message Undeliverable."
> > >
> > > The body of the message also contains an attachment - typically a
small,
> > 22
> > > KB file disguised as a program file or a screensaver - along a short
> > message
> > > such as "Mail transaction failed. Partial message is available," or
"The
> > > message cannot be represented in 7-bit ASCII encoding and has been
sent
> as
> > a
> > > binary attachment."
> > >
> > > The message, which also contains a faked or "spoofed" address in the
> > > "sender's" field, tricks people into believing that the e-mail is an
> > > automated response to a previous e-mail, says Vincent Gulloto, vice
> > > president of Network Associates' Anti-Virus Emergency Response Center,
> or
> > > AVERT.
> > >
> > > But if recipients click on or open the infected attachment, the virus
> > scans
> > > the PC for valid e-mail addresses. Variations of these individual
> > addresses
> > > are then used in the "from" field for new bogus e-mails that are
> generated
> > > and then sent out using the infected PC's connection to the Internet.
> > >
> > >
> > > An Internet Flood in the Making?
> > >
> > > Since the discovery of the myDoom mass e-mail worm early this
afternoon,
> > > computer security companies such as AVERT have seen a record number of
> > > infected e-mails crossing the Internet.
> > >
> > > "We heard from one company that had received 19,000 to 20,000 infected
> > > e-mails from over 3,400 [mail] servers," says Gulloto. Another client,
> he
> > > notes, was receiving about 1,000 bogus messages every minute.
> > >
> > > "We could see hundreds of thousands of computers affected, generating
> well
> > > into the millions [the number of] infected e-mail messages," says
> Gulloto.
> > >
> > > Anti-virus makers have released updates to counter the threat of
myDoom
> > and
> > > experts say several large corporate organizations are isolating
infected
> > > mail servers in an attempt to stem the message traffic.
> > >
> > > But experts worry that home users who may not have the latest
anti-virus
> > > programs installed may keep the infection alive and spreading.
> > >
> > > They are urging all e-mailers to follow the standard safety
precautions:
> > Do
> > > not open unsuspected e-mail attachments from unknown senders, and
> install
> > > the latest security patches from anti-virus makers.
> > >
> > > Although it seems the bug doesn't do any malicious damage aside from
> > > flooding the Net with bogus traffic, security firms are still
> > investigating
> > > whether myDoom affects data on infected computers.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > Incoming mail is certified Virus Free.
> > > Checked by AVG Anti-Virus (http://www.grisoft.com).
> > > Version: 7.0.211 / Virus Database: 261.7.6 - Release Date: 1/26/2004
> > >
> > >
> >
>
Information
This is the Carpenter Cousins Rootsweb. Since many Zimmermans became Carpenters, Both are discussed here along with related DNA information.