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    25 juli

    Prayer request ..............

    Prayer request ..............

    According to the weather reports, it is my understanding that it is 122 degrees in Afghanistan right now -- and the low will be 111! Our troops need our prayers for strength, endurance, and safety. If it be God's will, give these men and women the strength they need to prevail.

    I am sorry, but I am not breaking this one.....Let us pray.

    Prayer chain for our Military..please don't break it...
    Please send this on after a short prayer.
    Pray for our soldiers...



    Prayer

    "Lord, please hold our troops in your loving hands. Protect them as they protect us. Bless them and their families for the selfless acts they perform for us in our time of need. Amen."

    Prayer Request: When you receive this, please stop for a moment and say a prayer for our troops around the world.

    There is nothing attached... . Just send this to all the people in your address book. Do not let it stop with you, please....Of all the gifts you could give a Canadian Soldier, Sailor, Airman, deployed in harm's way, Prayer is the very best one


    13 juli

    Thank U Everyone

    Hello everyone.Sorry I haven't been online,been busy.I just wanted to let u all know that all the prezzies,poems & the simple greetings for Canada Day & Independence Day were all greatly noticed & I love them all.
     
     
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    More Prezzies

     
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    Myta
     
     
    Dear Freinds,
    Wish You A Very
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    Proud To Be Canadian

    Myta

     

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    skipper12383 

    http://powerclips.spaces.msn.com/

    Happy Guestbook signing Day !! Happy 4th of July to you and your family, Hope you have a blast of weekend !!!!!

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    Cutie-Pie =)

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    Canada Day & 4th of July Prezzies

     

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    TO THE WILD AND BACK

    http://countrylifeleeebert.spaces.msn.com/

    Just A Little Something From To The Wild And Back/The Dreamer Happy Independents To All !!

     
     

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    Queen Of The Castle
     
     
    Happy Guestbook signing Day !! Happy 4th of July to you and your family, Hope you have a blast of weekend !!!!! 4th of July word scrammble : Icnednpnedee Oidayhl pesesrt toitiontnusc mariolme falg tneidu raaceim stsase nohro emyrom rctnyou ipcnci ytlalyo As red as a fire, As blue as the sky, As white as the snow-- See our flag fly! Three pretty colors Wave at the sky, Red, white and blue On the Fourth of July! Red, white and blue Those colors are, And every state has its very own star. Hold up the flag Hold it up high, And then say, "Hurrah, For the Fourth of July!"
    From the Queen and the Royal Family !!  
     
     

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    ๑۩۞۩๑ Carolyn ๑۩۞۩๑

    http://sunshinescookie.spaces.msn.com/

        DO A LITTLE JIG
    HAVE A GREAT DAY
    WISHING YOU HAPPY CANADA DAY
    FROM THE USA
    SUNSHINECOOKIE
     
    01 juli

    Canada Day & 4th of July Prezzies

     

     

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    Lori*lams*

    http://lamsmith.spaces.msn.com/

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    Happy Canada Day and Happy Guest Book signing event!
     
    Here is a poem for you:
     
    HI THERE!
    Hi there, I'm a smile.
    Mind if I jump into your heart for awhile?
    Maybe your day hasn't been going just right.
    You're way behind schedule and all uptight.
    Or perhaps it's an unhappy time for you.
    You're feeling alone and so very blue.
    Sit back, put up your feet and relax awhle.
    Remember, I'm there with you...
    I'm that smile.
    Can you feel me, are you gonna smile back?
    Be careful, your face is starting to crack!
    There, doesn't it seem great to be all aglow?
    And now you've got your own smile...
           so I have to go.
    By - N. Gayle Wade 
     
    Enthusiasm is contagious.
    Start an epidemic.
     
    Happy Independence Day!
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    Princess Pout Alot

    http://myroyallife.spaces.msn.com/

     

    Happy Canada Day & Guest Book Signing :)

    Happy 4th of July, Hope you have a sparkling week-end

    Stars and Stripes Forever

    “We take the stars from heaven, the red from our mother country, separating it by white stripes, thus showing that we have separated from her, and the white stripes shall go down to posterity representing liberty.”  — George Washington

    Red white & Blue Slaw Salad INGREDIENTS:

    ·            12 slices bacon

    ·            6 cups shredded cabbage

    ·            1 cup cole slaw dressing

    ·            1/2 cup blue cheese, crumbled

    ·            1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved

    DIRECTIONS:

    1.  Place bacon in a large, deep skillet. Cook over medium high heat until evenly brown. Crumble and set aside.

    2.  In a large bowl, combine the bacon, cabbage and dressing. Mix well. Sprinkle with sliced cherry tomatoes and blue cheese.   

    3.  Refrigerate and serve chilled.

    Myspace Glitters
    Myspace Glitters

    Myspace Glitter

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    Nisey

    http://anitablakedevotees.spaces.msn.com/

    Happy Fourth of July!  Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 

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      Diana

    http://babyandboospace.spaces.msn.com/

    Happy 4th of July Here are some gifts from me to u!!!

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    I hope yr safe & happy!  

      

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      Lynn

    http://snoogins31.spaces.msn.com/

     

    http://www50.123greetings.com/card/07/01/04/14/

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    Laksha

    http://realmofeternallight.spaces.msn.com/

     

    Happy World Wide Independence Day !!
    Happy 4th of July to you and your family.

    Here is a poem I am sharing for this special occasion:

    FOURTH OF JULY NIGHT


    The little boat at anchor in black water sat murmuring to the tall black sky
    A white sky bomb fizzed on a black line.
    A rocket hissed it's red signature into the west.
    Now a shower of Chinese fire alphabets,
    A cry of flower pots broken in flames,
    A long curve to a purple spray, three violet balloons---
    Drips of seaweed tangled in gold, shimmering symbols of mixed numbers,
    Tremulous arrangements of cream gold folds of a bride's wedding gown---
    A few sky bombs spoke their pieces, then velvet dark.
    The little boat at anchor in black water sat murmuring to the tall black sky.
    ( Carl Sandburg )

    Hope you have a
    blast of a weekend !!!!!

    From a

    Lovable

    Amazingly  

    Kind

    Seriously

    Humble

    Artist

    And the Night Gallery of the USA!!!

    Myspace Layouts
    Myspace Layouts

     

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      Cindy

    http://upnorthcindy.spaces.msn.com/

     

    Happy Fourth of July! Happy Canada Day! Happy Weekend! Woo Hoo Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting  

    July 4th Over The Years

     

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    JULY 4TH OVER THE YEARS

    Today, Americans from coast to coast spend July 4th celebrating our nation's independence and the freedoms we enjoy as a result. Over the years, many important events have occurred on this day. The following are some of the most historic.

    1778 – From his headquarters in Brunswick, New Jersey, General George Washington directs his army to put "green boughs" in their hats, issues them a double allowance of rum and orders a Fourth of July artillery salute.

    1781 – The first official state celebration occurs in Massachusetts.

    1787 – John Quincy Adams celebrates the Fourth in Boston, where he hears an oration delivered at the Old Brick Meeting House.

    1788 – Fourth celebrations first become political as factions fight over the adoption of the Federal Constitution.

    1791 – The only Fourth of July address ever made by George Washington takes place at Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

    1798 – George Washington attends the celebration in Alexandria, Virginia, and dines with a large group of citizens and military officers of Fairfax County. In Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the keel of the 20-gun sloop of the war vessel Portsmouth is laid.

    1800 – In New York City, the first local advertisements for fireworks appear. At the Mount Vernon Garden there, a display of "a model of General Washington's Mount Vernon home, 20 feet long by 24 feet high, illuminated by several hundred lamps" is presented. In Hanover, New Hampshire, Dartmouth College student Daniel Webster gives his first Fourth of July oration in the town's meeting house.

    1801 – The first public Fourth of July reception at the White House occurs.

    1804 – The first Fourth of July celebration west of the Mississippi happens at Independence Creek, Idaho, and is celebrated by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark.

    1805 – Boston has its first fireworks display.

    1819 – An early and rare example of an Independence Day oration is presented (to a group of women) by a woman ("Mrs. Mead") on July 3 at Mossy Spring in Kentucky.

    1821 – President James Monroe is ill, and the Executive Mansion is closed to the public. John Quincy Adams reads an original copy of the Declaration of Independence at a ceremony at the Capitol.

    1825 – President John Q. Adams marches to the Capitol from the White House in a parade that includes a stage mounted on wheels, representing 24 states.

    1826 – The 50th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence is celebrated (referred to as the "Jubilee of Freedom" event). Two signers of the document, Presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, both die on this July 4.

    1827 – The State of New York emancipates its slaves.

    1828 – Charles Carroll, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, participates in a Baltimore, Maryland celebration and assists in the laying of the "first stone" of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.

    1831 – Former President James Monroe dies on July 4.

    1832 – New York has a subdued Fourth of July celebration due to a cholera epidemic.

    1835 – In Boston, George Robert Twelves Hewes, a shoemaker, is honored at a celebration as the last survivor of the Boston Tea Party. The National Intelligencer prints the text of "Washington's Farewell Address."

    1848 – In Washington, D.C., the laying of the cornerstone of the Washington Monument takes place with the President James Madison, First Lady Dolly Madison and other VIPs in attendance.

    1851 – In Washington, D.C., President Millard Fillmore assists in the laying of the "cornerstone of the new Capitol edifice," while Senator Daniel Webster gives his last Fourth of July oration there.

    1852 – In Rochester, New York, on July 5, abolitionist Frederick Douglass presents his famous speech, "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?"

    1861 – President Abraham Lincoln sends an address to both houses of Congress regarding the suspension of Federal government functions by secessionists in the South.

    1866 – General George G. Meade watches 10,000 war veterans parade in Philadelphia. General William T. Sherman gives an address in Salem, Illinois.

    1868 – President Andrew Johnson issues his Third Amnesty Proclamation in Washington, D.C. directed to those who participated in the Civil War.

    1873 – Mark Twain gives a Fourth of July address in London.

    1876 – Centennial celebrations are held throughout the United States and abroad.

    1879 – Frederick Douglass addresses the citizens of Frederick, Maryland.

    1880 – General James A. Garfield is guest speaker at the dedication of the Soldiers' Monument in Painesville, Ohio. In Boston, a statue of Revolutionary War patriot Samuel Adams is unveiled. In San Francisco, the first daytime fireworks ever exhibited in the country takes place at Woodward's Gardens.

    1881 – In Washington, D.C., the Chief of Police issues an order banning all fireworks due to the shooting of President Garfield; at the same time, prayer meetings for the President's recovery are held in lieu of Fourth celebrations throughout the country.

    1884 – The formal presentation of the Statue of Liberty takes place in the Gauthier workshop in Paris.

    1889 – President William Henry Harrison gives a speech in Woodstock, Connecticut; he is the third President to be in Woodstock on July 4.

    1899 – Governor Theodore Roosevelt gives a speech at his home town, Oyster Bay, New York, as other speakers predict he will be the next President. In Plymouth, England, all British warships are decorated with flags and a 21-gun salute is fired. Mark Twain addresses the American Society at a dinner in London.

    1902 – Two hundred thousand people hear President Theodore Roosevelt give a speech in Schenley Park in Pittsburgh.

    1910 – A bronze statue of George Washington is unveiled at Independence Hall in Philadelphia.

    1912 – The new national flag with 48 stars is "formally and officially endowed."

    1915 – Orator and former Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan gives a speech on "Universal Peace" in Philadelphia.

    1916 – In Washington, D.C., President Woodrow Wilson gives a speech at the dedication of the new American Federation of Labor building.

    1919 – One of the peaks in the Black Hills near Deadwood, South Dakota is renamed Mt. Theodore Roosevelt in honor of the former President. Panama celebrates its first official Fourth of July.

    1921 – A large anti-prohibition parade takes place in New York, and British music and jazz are forbidden as 50 bands march in an American Association for the Recognition of the Irish Republic parade.

    1923 – President Warren G. Harding addresses citizens of Portland, Oregon, and is initiated into the Cayuse Tribe at the Oregon Trail Celebration.

    1926 – The 150th Anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence takes place throughout the nation.

    1930 – Gutzon Borgium's 60-foot face of George Washington is carved on Mount Rushmore in Keystone, South Dakota.

    1940 – President Franklin D. Roosevelt officially turns over to the federal government the library bearing his name.

    1942 – Fireworks in most cities are canceled due to war blackouts.

    1946 – Americans observe the first peacetime Fourth of July in five years, as occupation troops celebrate with parades and artillery salutes in Germany and Japan.

    1947 – In Washington, D.C., the Fourth ceremony at the Monument Grounds is televised for the first time.

    1959 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower gives a speech and lays the third cornerstone in the 166-year history of the U.S. Capitol. The 49-star American flag waves for the first time as Alaska achieves statehood.

    1960 – The 50-star American flag waves for the first time as Hawaii is granted statehood.

    1961 – In Philadelphia, the flag that flies continuously over the grave of Betsy Ross (this country's first American flag-maker) is stolen.

    1964 – A recorded reading of the Declaration of Independence by slain President John F. Kennedy is broadcast over radio airwaves. In Prescott, Arizona, Senator Barry Goldwater rides a horse in the annual Frontier Days Rodeo parade.

    1966 – The Freedom of Information Act is signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson.

    1968 – Anti-war demonstrations mar speeches given by Vice President Hubert Humphrey in Philadelphia and Governor George Wallace in Minneapolis.

    1974 – A reenactment of the Frederick Douglass speech "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?" takes place at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.

    1976 –The nation's Bicentennial is celebrated across America. At 2:00 pm Eastern time, the time the Declaration of Independence was originally approved, churches and citizens throughout the nation ring bells to mark the occasion. "Operation Sail" takes place in New York City harbor, where millions watch hundreds of ships, representing 22 nations, parade. In Boston, the USS Constitution fires her cannons for the first time in 95 years. Over the course of the day, the largest number of American flags (10,471) ever flown at one time, fly over the U.S. Capitol. President Gerald Ford gives a speech at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.

    1980 – Throughout the country, the Fourth is observed amid somber recognition of the 53 American citizens held hostage in Iran; residents in Cleveland plant 53 trees in the hostages' memory.

    1981 – President Reagan, recovering from an assassin's bullet, leaves George Washington Hospital in Washington, D.C. for the first time to view the fireworks at the Mall.

    1982 – President Reagan gives a welcome speech for astronauts Thomas K. Mattingly and Henry W. Hartsfield as they land the space shuttle Columbia at Edwards Air Force Base in California.

    1992 – The seven astronauts on the shuttle Columbia unfurl the Stars and Stripes and chant "Happy Birthday, America" from space. The Navy unveils a new aircraft carrier, the USS George Washington, with Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney giving a speech.

    1993 – Johnny Cash recites his patriotic poem "Rugged Old Flag" in Washington, D.C. while citizens there hold flags in honor of prisoners of war and servicemen missing in action from the Vietnam War.

    1996 – Fourth of July greetings are sent by astronauts on the shuttle Columbia in space.

    1999 – In Philadelphia, 112 people, all born on the Fourth of July since 1900, gather in front of Independence Hall for a "Photo of the Century."

    2000 – "Operation Sail 2000," the largest assemblage of ships ever at one event, takes place in New York City. It includes some 150 tall sailing ships from more than 20 nations and an 11-mile line of more than two dozen naval ships from around the world.

    2001 – Public readings of the Declaration of Independence take place throughout the country, including the National Archives in Washington, D.C., the Art Museum in Philadelphia and the Old State House in Boston. From the International Space Station, astronauts proclaim "We give thanks to our ancestors ... to all Americans, Happy Independence Day."

    2002 – The most intense security precautions in the history of the Fourth of July take place across the country in light of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center Towers in September 11, 2001; Americans celebrate anyway, voicing their jubilation about freedoms enjoyed in this country.

     

    Happy 4th of July

     

     

     

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    At the time of the signing the US consisted of 13 colonies under the rule of England's King George III. Leading up to the signing, there had been growing unrest in the colonies surrounding the taxes that colonists were required to pay to England. The major objection was "Taxation without Representation" -- the colonists had no say in the decisions of English Parliament.
    Rather than negotiating, King George sent extra troops to the colonies to help control any rebellion that might be arising. The following timeline will give you a crash course in the history that lead to the signing of the Declaration of Independence and America's break from British rule.

    1774 - The 13 colonies send delegates to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to form the First Continental Congress. While unrest was brewing, the colonies were far from ready to declare war.

    April 1775 - King George's troops advance on Concord, Massachusetts, prompting Paul Revere's midnight ride that sounded the alarm "The British are coming, the British are coming." 
    The subsequent battle of Concord, famous for being the "shot heard round the world," would mark the unofficial beginning of the American Revolution. 

    May 1776 -
    After nearly a year of trying to work our their differences with England, the colonies again send delegates to the Second Continental Congress. 

    June 1776 -
    Admitting that their efforts were hopeless, a committee was formed to compose the formal Declaration of Independence. Headed by Thomas Jefferson, the committee also included John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Philip Livingston and Roger Sherman. 

    June 28, 1776 -
    Jefferson presents the first draft of the declaration to congress. 

    July 4, 1776 -
    After various changes to Jefferson's original draft, a vote was taken late in the afternoon of July 4th. Of the 13 colonies, 9 voted in favor of the Declaration; 2, Pennsylvania and South Carolina voted No; Delaware was undecided and New York abstained.
    John Hancock, President of the Continental Congress, was the first to sign the Declaration of Independence. It is said that he signed his name "with a great flourish" so "King George can read that without spectacles!" 

    July 6, 1776 -
    The Pennsylvania Evening Post is the first newspaper to print the Declaration of Independence. 

    July 8, 1776 -
    The first public reading of the declaration takes place in Philadelphia's Independence Square. The bell in Independence Hall, then known as the "Province Bell" would later be renamed the "Liberty Bell" after its inscription - "Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land Unto All the Inhabitants Thereof." 

    August 1776 -
    The task begun on July 4, the signing of the Declaration of Independence, was not actually completed until August. Nonetheless, the 4th of July has been accepted as the official anniversary of United States independence from Britain. 

    July 4, 1777 - The first Independence Day celebration takes place. It's interesting to speculate what those first 4th festivities were like. By the early 1800s the traditions of parades, picnics, and fireworks were firmly established as part of American Independence Day culture. 

     

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    Happy 4th of July my American friends.

     

     

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    INDEPENDENCE DAY, in the U.S., an annual holiday commemorating the formal adoption by the Continental Congress of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, in Philadelphia. Although the signing of the Declaration was not completed until August, the Fourth of July holiday has been accepted as the official anniversary of U.S. independence and is celebrated in all states and territories of the U.S.

    The holiday was first observed in Philadelphia on July 8, 1776, at which time the Declaration of Independence was read aloud, city bells rang, and bands played. It was not declared a legal holiday, however, until 1941. The Fourth is traditionally celebrated publicly with parades and pageants, patriotic speeches, and organized firing of guns and cannons and displays of fireworks; early in the 20th century public concern for a "safe and sane" holiday resulted in restrictions on general use of fireworks. Family picnics and outings are a feature of private Fourth of July celebrations.

     

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