• Wide screen resolution
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
JA slide show

Welcome to our Family Web Site

Families are like fudge - mostly sweet with a few nuts.

~Author Unknown

 

Stock Quotes
 
 CENTPETMCYNSPCCAT
Time 4:00pm ET4:00pm ET4:00pm ET4:00pm ET4:01pm ET
Trade 11.0331.1052.2411.2858.78
Change -0.040.891.910.01-0.40
% Chg -0.36%2.95%3.79%0.08%-0.68%
Open 11.0930.1850.2511.2859.11
High 11.1831.1452.5311.2959.50
Low 10.8530.0850.2511.1858.43
Volume 79,6342,196,472564,4464,2006,531,417
Intraday 
Powered by JoomlaGadgets
 
God's Pharmacy

A friend sent this to me. It's been said that God first separated the salt water from the fresh, made dry land, planted a garden, made animals and fish... all before making a human. He made and provided what we'd need before we were born. These are best & more powerful when eaten raw. We're such slow learners...

God left us a great clue as to what foods help what part of our body!


Carrot Slice A sliced Carrot looks like the human eye. The pupil, iris and radiating lines look just like the human eye... and YES, science now shows carrots greatly enhance blood flow to and function of the eyes.

 

 

 

Read more...
 

NASA Image Of The Day

Snapshot of the International Space Station
NASA Image Of The Day
On March 13, 2008, the International Space Station passed across the field-of-view of Germany's remote sensing satellite, TerraSAR-X, at a distance of 195 kilometers, or 122 miles, and at a relative speed of 34,540 kilometers per hour, or more than 22,000 mph. In contrast to optical cameras, radar does not 'see' surfaces. Instead, it is much more aware of the edges and corners which bounce back the microwave signal it transmits. Smooth surfaces such as those on the station's solar generators or the radiator panels used to dissipate excess heat, unless directly facing the radar antenna, tend to deflect rather than reflect the radar beam, causing these features to appear on the radar image as dark areas. The radar image of the station therefore looks like a dense collection of bright spots from which the outlines of the space station can be clearly identified. The central element on the station, to which all the modules are docked, has a grid structure that presents a multiplicity of reflecting surfaces to the radar beam, making it readily identifiable. This image has a resolution of about one meter (about 39 inches). In other words, objects can be depicted as discrete units--that is, shown separately--provided that they are at least one meter apart. If they are closer together than that, they tend to merge into a single block on a radar image. Since this image was taken, the station has expanded and is more than 90 percent complete, including a full complement of solar arrays. Image Credit: DLR...
09 Mar 2010
Click for Mount Auburn, Illinois Forecast  
  Click for San Marcos, California Forecast