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Australian Weekly Newsletter

Hello Readers ,


Welcome to Australian Monthly News (Oz Ezine)!


***************


Contents


1. Today's Motivation.


2. Inspirational quote.


3. Useful Sites.


4. This week's sponsors message.


5. Editors notes.


6. Article


7. A little humour.


8. Ezineadnet advertisements.


9. Disclaimer


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1. Today's Motivation


"Don't concentrate on making a lot of money, but rather on

becoming the type of person people want to do business with."


- Patricia Fripp


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2. Inspirational quote.


"No one is born hating another person because of the color of

his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must

learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be

taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human

heart than its opposite."


-- Nelson Mandela


*******************



3. Today's Useful Sites.


Top Databases & Web Sites for Australian Genealogy


http://genealogy.about.com/od/australia/tp/top_databases.-9b1.htm


*******************



4. This week's sponsors message.


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account at Insomnia-ads.


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Extra Signup Bonus


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Value more than $280!


Join, login and click on "Your Signup Gift" Go for it!


http://www.insomnia-ads.com/index.php?referid=elphick


*******************



5 Editors notes


Hi Friends


Welcome to the coming spring!


That is in the Southern Hemisphere, of course up North

in the recession they are even talking about green shoots!


On the weekend I went down to Perth and had the pleasure

of meeting with my children, drinking beer, watching the

grand-children play football and generally having a good

time. Also I attended a seminar at the Sheraton Hotel.

It was a free/seminar, put on by Michael Domeyko Rowland€™s,

a writer and filmmaker who has just finished his first

feature film titled "A Day in Heaven."


Michael teaches us how to access our "super conscious"

mind in order to access inspiration for our "story." He

claims that the conscious mind is totally unsuitable for

creating story, the subconscious is fine for breathing,

digestion and the other bodily functions we don€™t think

about, like heart beat etc. However it is in the "super

conscious" that we can access ideas and thoughts beyond

the scope of our limited knowledge, even glimpse far off

into the unknown, where our other two minds would never

dare enter!


Maybe you have been there when you were dreaming? Did

you, on waking, write down your dream? Do you remember

in the bible the story of Joseph in Egypt, interpreting

Pharaoh€™s dreams?


Are dreams a vision of the future that our ordinary minds

are not able to access in our daily world?


€œSuper conscious" thought, dreams and visions are always

ridiculed by the schizophrenic press, shock jocks and

the conditioned masses.


They cannot bear us to unveil the naked lies and

manipulation of our lives that is daily taking place.

Similar I suppose to the days of Joseph and the

Pharaohs, during the subjection of the children of Israel.

There are scriptures in the Bible that come to my memory

that say €œthey will hate you without a cause€

and €œthey will gnash on you with their teeth!€


There is a conflict of sorts here in Australia between

the indigenous Aborigines and the European settlers that

is escalating. Land rights were granted to them through

the Mabo decision of the high courts. Now movements are

claiming more things are owed, apologies, ownership of

sacred sites, etc.

These claims along with an unwritten claim that as they

own the land, they should be kept by us, the invaders.


The mystery surrounding the Aboriginal race in Australia

is supported in their dreamtime belief, in myths that

circulate around rivers, mountains, certain food, creatures

and plants. The other curious feature is that they are

actually a stone age people who were suddenly confronted

with Western Civilization. Neither group knew how to act

in this strange circumstance, so we did not conquer them

in the sense of wars. But considered them more of a

curiosity. Hence the muddle through into a dysfunctional

relationship


As I have talked today about dreams and the 'Super

conscious" then our Australian Aborigines have a distinct

advantage over us in that they were in touch with that as

it was essential for their survival. Whereas, we have

developed our way of being by the force of our conscious

mind and have lost the art of interactive communication

with the spiritual world of the super conscious.


Just maybe there will be a resurgence of deep thought and

meditation, bringing peace, harmony and justice to the

human race?


In articles this week I am continuing working on my life

story put together for the benefit of later family

generations.


Have you ever considered doing that?


If so, go for it.


Kind regards


Stan Maley


Australia 61428230029


http://www.ozfamilyezine.com


*************



6. Article


Chapter 1.


Womarden....a story back in the 1940's.


Womarden, the property of CC Maley, lies about three miles

North East of the township of Three Springs.  Seventeen

thousand acres of Mallee, Gimlet and York Gum, rising to

sand plain in the West. Watered by windmills off shallow

bores and two dams, salt lakes skirt the Eastern boundary.

This was home to the Maley family, Cecil, Jean and their

five children. Cecil Maley married Genevieve Howard  in the

summer of 1927 and moved to Womarden to manage the property

for his uncle.


I remember the gum trees as a kid, the twenty eight parrots,

pink and grey galahs in my favourite gum tree. It was a type

of river gum I think and it grew in the front yard near the

garage. Well it was a few sheets of corrugated iron nailed

to a timber frame, but we called it a garage.  I don€™t

remember much about our house except it was small and had

super bags sewn together on the walls of where us boys slept

in a row of steel shearers beds. You see, we were outside

most of the time. I loved the bush and the smell of

eucalyptus leaves, the shining bark of the sugar gums, the

rough coat of the jam trees.


My brother John was an expert shot with a shanghai and could

get twenty eights in the head. When he had a few we would

pluck them. Mum made a sort of a stew out of them. I never

got many with my ging.


Tony lived up in the shed near the blacksmiths shop and

horse yards. Tony came from Italy during the war. I think

he was a prisoner of the war but he lived in his own little

shed on our place and helped dad with the farm work.


My Dad used horses on the farm to sow the crops and harvest

them. Probably a lot of other work on the farm as well. He

broke in horses and I can remember a horse going around and

around a yard that had a pole in the centre, tied to the

pole was a rope and that was tied to the horses neck. My

Dad stood there with a whip and has the horse  got more

tired, he would keep it going until it didn€™t want to go any

more. Then he would put a halter on it in.


Fay and Gem, my sisters, used too ride horses to school before

bus's. Fay had a small brown horse called Dandy which she rode

everywhere. One day she was riding past the house and I was

hiding behind the outside of the kitchen chimney, holding onto

a black raincoat and when Dandy got close I jumped out and

waved the raincoat. Dandy freaked out and galloped off and

everyone yelled at me.


I remember playing in the sand at the back of the house; we

never had lawn, gardens or anything because Mum was always

too busy washing clothes in the copper, milking the cow or

chopping the wood for the Metters stove to make a garden.

Anyway she used to use dolly wooden pegs to peg out the

clothes and as they often broke in half. So I would collect

all these bits of pegs and put them in the ground like a

fence around a paddock and let the water from the windmill

pipe run through my little paddocks! So I guess I set in my

mind the plan for myself into the future, having a farm!


Christmas is a time of intense remembrance to me and to my

brothers, Mick, John and Fred. It was the only time of the

year we got toys. The night before Christmas we put a

pillowcase on the end of the bed and tried to keep awake long

enough to see. But sleep came on us little kids, just a

scuffle in the night, some muffled sounds our consciousness

tried desperately to comprehend, but sleep won out till daybreak.

Then we flew from our beds and grabbed the bulging pillowcases

to see the wonder of a shining red aeroplane, with silver

propellers that turned in the wind. A Lancaster Bomber!

A balsa wood glider.


Christmas in the bush.


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7. A little humour.


                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 1. Two antennas met on a roof, fell in love and got married.              

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 The ceremony wasn't much, but the reception was excellent.                

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

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p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

2. A set of jump leads walk into a

bar.                                &

nbsp;  

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 The bartender says, 'I'll serve you, but don't start anything.'           

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

3. Two peanuts walk into a bar, and one was a salted.                     

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;      

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

4. A man walks into a bar with a slab of asphalt under his arm, and says: 

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 'A beer please, and one for the

road.'                                

;    

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

5. Two cannibals are eating a clown. One says to the other:               

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 'Does this taste funny to you

?'                                &nb

sp;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

6. 'Doc, I can't stop singing 'The Green, Green Grass of Home.'           

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 'That sounds like Tom Jones

Syndrome.'                               &

nbsp;    

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 'Is it common

?'                                &nb

sp;                         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 'Well, It's Not

Unusual.'                               &n

bsp;                 

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

8. Two cows are standing next to each other in a field.                   

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 Daisy says to Dolly, 'I was artificially inseminated this morning.'       

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 'I don't believe you,' says

Dolly.                                

;        

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 'It's true; no bull!' exclaims

Daisy.                                

;     

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

9. An invisible man marries an invisible

woman.                           

                                 

;                                &nbs

p;         

 The kids were nothing to look at either.


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8. EzineAd Net Advertisements


Please visit the link to view your advertisements.

http://www.ozfamilyezine.com/opportunities.html 


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0 Comments
Posted on 02 Sep 2009 by Stan Maley
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