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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- We've just come up from Paisley
Drive
Ti di dum di di dum didi doo dum day. Aunt Nan's own cakes and chocolate
treats
Ti di dum di di dum didi doo dum day. O'er tae Australia he did go
Ti di dum di di dum didi doo dum day. Now he's Seventy but dinnae fret
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The Magic o' Uncle Peter
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We've just come up from Paisley Drive
And we can remember when we were five.
Coins and cards went up in the sky
Wi' the magic o' Uncle Peter.
Ti di dum di di dum didi doo dum day.
Aunt Nan's own cakes and chocolate treats
Were such a joy and delight to eat
But nothing held us in our seats
Like the Magic o' Uncle Peter
Ti di dum di di dum didi doo dum day.
O'er tae Australia he did go
'Cause he likes the sun but no' the snow
Now, just watch the koalas go, go, go
Wi' the Magic o' Uncle Peter.
Ti di dum di di dum didi doo dum day.
Now he's Seventy but dinnae fret
There's mony a year left in him yet
So let's hear you shout yer loudest yet
For the Magic o' Uncle Peter
POETRY
& MIRTH
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Dallas Morning News
Scotland launches website to help
families follow ancestors' footsteps
02/02/2002
Uncle Sam a Scot?
It looks that way.
Samuel Wilson, an inspector of army supplies during the War of 1812, carried
the
nickname "Uncle Sam." Workmen stenciled "U.S." on barrels of provisions
and are
said to have joked that it stood for Mr. Wilson's moniker. The usage spread,
and
"Uncle Sam" quickly became the personification of the federal government.
A
famous World War I military recruitment poster gave him an unforgettable
face.
And Mr. Wilson? His roots were in the heather, organizers of a new website say.
The national tourism organization VisitScotland, wanting you to visit the
highlands
and lowlands to search for your Scottish kin, has devised www.ancestralscotland.com,
to help you follow in those ancestral footsteps.
Launched Jan. 25, the easy-to-use site allows searching by surname, place
name or
parish. The surname search, for example, provides a list of places where
the name
is found, plus maps. Drill for more about the place, and you're carried
to its tourism
site and information about visiting.
A Scot-out-of-country without any of the search keys can begin researching
them
with a visit to the archives at New Register House in Edinburgh or by accessing
indexes at www.o rigins.net.
All search results at the new website are based on data from the 1881 census.
The
site hopes to provide an online mapping facility soon to enable users to
pinpoint
the Scottish area where their ancestors' parish was, with direct access
to online
genealogical resources and tourism information. Users may register for
e-mail
updates.
With 28 million people worldwide claiming Scots heritage, VisitScotland
(www.visitscotland.com) hopes the website will inspire many to come "home"
for a
vacation or genealogical research.
As sprouts of the Scottish family tree, they're in good company. Other
red-white-and-blue relatives include Samuel Morse, inventor of the Morse
code;
Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee, blue and gray generals in the Civil
War; Neil
Armstrong, the first man on the moon; and computer wizard Bill Gates.
Mary Ellen Botter
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