• Calling all Veteran business owners! Check out my Veteran owned business and let me know if you’re interested in saving some money.

    https://cfg.solutions/About

    Calling all Veteran business owners! Check out my Veteran owned business and let me know if you’re interested in saving some money. https://cfg.solutions/About
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 10893 Views
  • It is my number 1 mission to help other Veteran owned companies compete in the industry. Here is a quick bio about myself and my company.

    https://cfg.solutions/About
    It is my number 1 mission to help other Veteran owned companies compete in the industry. Here is a quick bio about myself and my company. https://cfg.solutions/About
    Cooper Financial Group > About
    Cooper Financial Group
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 8149 Views
  • It is my time to give back.
    It is my time to give back.
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2796 Views
  • If you are a veteran and you own a business can I get a
    If you are a veteran and you own a business can I get a 👍
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 11985 Views
  • I'm a homeless but still employed veteran in Reno Nevada and I'm in desperate need of assistance.bANYBONEVPLEASE HELP
    I'm a homeless but still employed veteran in Reno Nevada and I'm in desperate need of assistance.bANYBONEVPLEASE HELP
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 7943 Views
  • 0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2561 Views
  • COL Ernest “Wayne” Underwood - A Life Worthy of Imitation
    Colonel (Retired) Ernest Wayne Underwood, 79, of Oxford, Georgia, passed away on the 12th of March, 2024 shortly after contracting COVID.   Wayne was born on November 30th, 1944 to Ernest and Frances Underwood at their family home in Porterdale, Georgia.  After Wayne graduated from Newton County High School in 1962, he married his high school sweetheart Peggie Parker in...
    Sad
    1
    4 Reacties 1 aandelen 55842 Views
  • "The Overhill Cherokees had the best guns and used them better than any part of the nation."
    ~ Nadia Dean, A Demand of Blood.
    "The Overhill Cherokees had the best guns and used them better than any part of the nation." ~ Nadia Dean, A Demand of Blood.
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 7751 Views
  • via: Beloved Children of the Holocaust
    ·
    Ida and Louise might best be described as “frumpy” - English spinsters, dressed in homemade clothes. They were nervous types, a little flustered, a little foolish, the kind of women that were easily dismissed… or so it appeared. In reality, however, Ida and Louise were something quite different. You see these two clever women had developed their own secret scheme for aiding Jewish refugees.

    It happened this way: Both sisters loved opera, and before the war they had developed a network of friends in the European opera community. Not surprisingly the community wanted to help their Jewish friends in danger from the Nazis. Louise was a secretary in London, but Ida was a writer of popular serial romances whose vocation provided a little extra traveling money. And so Friday evenings would find the sisters, without so much as a ring on their fingers, traveling to Germany or Austria, and Sundays would find them gaudily decked out in earrings, necklaces, brooches and pins as they returned. Of course, they traveled back by a different route so that no one would recognize them as the plain ladies of two nights past.

    Why the jewelry, you ask? Well, family jewels were often the only hope of escaping Jews trying to satisfy financial requirements for immigration to England. So Ida and Louise wore expensive jewels right out of Germany in plain sight of Nazi guards who assumed that these dowdy women must be wearing cheap, dime-store fakes! The sisters then arranged transport to get people out of danger and safely housed in England where their jewels and a new life awaited. All by themselves, these frumpy spinsters, a rescue committee of two, saved the lives of 29 people!

    Well done ladies!

    Ida and Louise Cook were recognized as Righteous Among the Nations in 1964.
    via: Beloved Children of the Holocaust · Ida and Louise might best be described as “frumpy” - English spinsters, dressed in homemade clothes. They were nervous types, a little flustered, a little foolish, the kind of women that were easily dismissed… or so it appeared. In reality, however, Ida and Louise were something quite different. You see these two clever women had developed their own secret scheme for aiding Jewish refugees. It happened this way: Both sisters loved opera, and before the war they had developed a network of friends in the European opera community. Not surprisingly the community wanted to help their Jewish friends in danger from the Nazis. Louise was a secretary in London, but Ida was a writer of popular serial romances whose vocation provided a little extra traveling money. And so Friday evenings would find the sisters, without so much as a ring on their fingers, traveling to Germany or Austria, and Sundays would find them gaudily decked out in earrings, necklaces, brooches and pins as they returned. Of course, they traveled back by a different route so that no one would recognize them as the plain ladies of two nights past. Why the jewelry, you ask? Well, family jewels were often the only hope of escaping Jews trying to satisfy financial requirements for immigration to England. So Ida and Louise wore expensive jewels right out of Germany in plain sight of Nazi guards who assumed that these dowdy women must be wearing cheap, dime-store fakes! The sisters then arranged transport to get people out of danger and safely housed in England where their jewels and a new life awaited. All by themselves, these frumpy spinsters, a rescue committee of two, saved the lives of 29 people! Well done ladies! Ida and Louise Cook were recognized as Righteous Among the Nations in 1964. ❤️
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 14340 Views
  • https://youtu.be/JNEplaYZtpI?si=EjVMYViCXb-BjjQy
    https://youtu.be/JNEplaYZtpI?si=EjVMYViCXb-BjjQy
    0 Reacties 0 aandelen 1669 Views
G-D3M06PHS7Z