Tiffany Pendant on sale and Tiffany Ring on sale

Jul. 23--At the park before sunup, Harry Hoke, Jim Doolan and Tiffany Bracelet on sale Heaton were acting like three teens wrapped in the skin of retirees.Recently Hoke and Heaton found two identical 2001 class rings on separate hunts. Both rings belonged to Jon Sokoll of Fremont, who had lost the first at Fremont Lakes State Park, bought a replacement and subsequently lost the other in the same park.Sometimes they come up empty. In the short hours of the morning, Hoke had found two thin dimes and a recent set of military dog tags. Doolan found a silver hoop earing and a penny. Heaton found $4.51 in the sand at the playground.Jul. 23--At the park before sunup, Harry Hoke, Jim Doolan and Ken Heaton were acting like three teens wrapped in the skin of retirees.While Harry and Jim bickered good naturedly, Heaton mimicked a cat on the other side of the fence."Meooooow, meoooooow," he called.Then the park ranger at Lake Icaria, near Corning, Iowa, opened the gates and the boys gathered their things and headed for the beach.Excitement filled the air as the sun peeked over the concession stand.Hoke and Doolan went straight for the water. Heaton went to the playground.The three have shared friendship and the hobby of metal detecting for years. And they have taken it one step further by outfitting themselves with underwater gear."That's what we like about searching in the water in the summer; it's cool," Hoke said as the thermometer neared 100 degrees.But getting to the beach, in the water and finding lost Tiffany Bangle on sale is only half the fun for the trio.Turning from metal detectors to detectives, they find the loot and then go about trying to figure out how to return lost items.Recently Hoke and Heaton found two identical 2001 class rings on separate hunts. Both rings belonged to Jon Sokoll of Fremont, who had lost the first at Fremont Lakes State Park, bought a replacement and subsequently lost the other in the same park.

When they returned the rings, Sokoll was absolutely flabbergasted, Hoke said.Hoke, who is the president of the Midwest Historical Collectors club, has also returned a ring to a graduate that had given the ring to his girlfriend.The girl lost the ring and it stayed lost until Hoke found it 48 years later. When he returned the ring to the Bellevue man he found that his girlfriend had kept her promise, despite losing the ring, and they were still happily married."It gives you a great feeling of satisfaction when you can return a lost ring. To me, it's worth much more than the money I could have had by selling the ring," Hoke said.Hoke has spent years researching rings and yearbooks and countless hours on the road and Tiffany Ring on sale trying to find owners.Yet, not everything can be returned. Diamond rings, watches, jewelry, and coins are the usual. There is no possible way of locating an owner with most items. The trio has found everything from a half- carat diamond ring set in a gold band to gold teeth.Valuable and unusual items are rare, but each find renews the trio's excitement for their hobby.Sometimes they come up empty. In the short hours of the morning, Hoke had found two thin dimes and a recent set of military dog tags. Doolan found a silver hoop earing and a penny. Heaton found $4.51 in the sand at the playground."Some days we have to rely on camaraderie for reward because you've only found two cents," Hoke said

When I left the three men, they went right back in the lake seeking their treasure. But they had infected me with the fever.On the way back to the truck, soaked to the bone, I found a quarter in the grass. Suddenly the discomfort of soggy bottoms and biting flies went away. No, I am not searching for the owner.--Metal detector's etiquetteDon't trespass. Disrespecting private property gives the sport a bad name and can result in forfeiting your find, or worse.Fill in your holes and replace turf as you can. Try to leave your site as you found it.Check with local officials and park rangers for regulations on hunting on public land.Dispose of unwanted items properly. Throwing it back in the water can be a safety hazard and a pain for other detectors.--Midwest Historical DetectorsWhen: The group meets the second Wednesday of the month at 6:30 p.m.Where: The Omaha Tiffany Pendant on sale Library main branch at 215 S. 15th St.What to bring: The club has a display of items found each month by its members for help in identifying unusual items or for bragging rights.Contact: Call Harry Hoke, club president, at (402) 330-1055.The disturbing pan of this story for me is the fact that anti-gay groups, such as the ones placing these advertisements, have decided to use hate speech as a political tool to divide Minnesotans," [Satveer Chaudhary] asserted.The letter asked if Sen. Chaudhary spent his rime at the Capitol, "earing curry all day," and included a photo of the senator with what appears to be a bullet hole drawn on his forehead. The letter included a return address and name that was investigated by Capitol security and determined to be false, the release said.

 

Par tiffanynecklaces221 le lundi 03 janvier 2011

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