First Fruits vs. Easter
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Apr 07, 2012 | 3012 views |  0 comments | 16 16 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Today, I am going to be taking my two daughters to an annual church activity whereby they place little plastic eggs on the ground filled with candy.  Some of these eggs will be hidden, most not so much.  Then my daughters, along with a bunch of other children, will be let loose to go find these eggs.  It will be a great time, full of smiles and children laughing.  Sunday morning, they will have a special basket to go through which their mother will have prepared ahead of time.  It will also have little candies, treats, and toys in it for them to go through before we head off to church that morning.  It is a celebration of Easter, and quite frankly it has little to do with the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Let me be clear on one thing.  Easter, in fact, was a pagan holiday.  First Fruits, is a Christian Holy Day.  These two days are separate with the Christian Holy Day of First Fruits being established long before Easter was ever even a word.  "The theme of the festival of First Fruits is resurrection and salvation." according to the Jewish Holy Day of Bikkurim.  It was one of several Feast Days /  Holy Days in the Jewish calendar.

This Holy Day saw several important events, Biblically speaking, that established the theme of resurrection and salvation before Christ died and rose again.  Those events include the resting of Noah's Ark on Mount Ararat signaling the end of God's judgement on the earth by flood, and the rebirth / new beginning of mankind, as well as the crossing of the Red Sea by Israel when they escaped out of Egypt, and other events.

Study Jewish Holy Days for some time and you will quickly realize they were not only celebrations of events past, but predictors of events to come.  The Holy Day of First Fruits was a foretelling of the resurrection of Jesus Christ - the most important event in Biblical history.  Without the resurrection, we have a story of a man who lived an incredible life that died, however, the story of Jesus Christ - God in the flesh - doesn't end with a tomb.  Jesus rose again the third day (for those of you who do not quite understand the Jewish timing of events, see this page here "How Long was Jesus Dead in the Tomb?").

Point is, Easter and First Fruits happen to fall on the same day.  Which do we celebrate?  Well, we celebrate the Holy Day of First Fruits actually (I Corinthians 15:23), but the means in which we celebrate it in American culture is much the same as Easter.  Is it wrong?  Nope.  There is nothing wrong with allowing your children to have fun, even if it happens to resemble some pagan holiday.  Why?  Because if you are like me, you are educating your children about the true meaning of this most important season of great celebration, about the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

What's more, if I were to suddenly not have anything to do with any and all pagan holidays, I'd pretty much set myself up so that anyone could declare Thanksgiving, Labor Day, July 4th, or any holiday "pagan" and I'd then be expected to have no part simply because of someone else's pronouncements.  That is absurd and ridiculous, and I refuse to allow myself to be sucked into someone else's expectations of what I should or should not do.  As a Christian, I only need ask myself "What does the Bible say about Easter?"  Quite simply, the Bible verifies that the resurrection happened on the day of that recently established pagan holiday - nothing more.  It does not condemn Easter, it does not rail against Easter, it does not give a hate speech about Easter, it simply mentions it and moves on.

As that is the attitude of the Bible about Easter, then that is the attitude I am going to choose to take.  In the mean time, my girls will still be going out to collect eggs filled with candy, have baskets to dig into on Sunday morning, and they will learn of the importance of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.  For without the resurrection, there would be no hope of salvation.  The resurrection of Christ is the cornerstone of our faith.  Far more important than His birth, His life, or His death, we have hope because Jesus lives!

"1Corinthians 15:13 But if there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen: 14 And if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain."

A $640 Million Question
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Mar 31, 2012 | 2628 views |  0 comments | 16 16 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

While prime time news outlets devoted at least some of their broadcasting to the record-breaking lottery jackpot that ended with several winners last night, I must say it was a bit of fun conversation between my wife and I about what we would do with so much money.  To be honest, my main thoughts seemed to keep navigating toward finding a way to preserve both my anonymity and my sanity, and the best way I could think of to do this would be to take a very long vacation out of the country - maybe for a year.  By the time I came back from vacation, it would be hoped, another world issue/problem will have found its way to center stage.

All that money is kinda fun and scary to think about at the same time.  Fun to think about what you'd do with it, and scary to think about all the problems it would inevitably bring.  I can just imagine the number of people who would suddenly become your friend asking for "just $1 million" out of "all those hundreds of millions of dollars" you'd have.  Within days you'd have every worthy cause and crackpot at your door looking for a donation, and then fingering you as a heartless miser (or worse) if you turned any one of them down.  Then there are those out there who would seek to find some creatively exploitative reason, however trivial, to sue just in the hopes that you'd settle out of court.  After all that, then there are the relatives . . .

Besides the ones you actually know and have anything to do with, you'd have relatives you never knew, and those sudden relatives who are related because you have the same last name, or maybe just the same first name would be enough.  To be sure, winning $640 million would start a parade of long-lost acquaintances and friends from all over, and makes me think that year-long vacation I was thinking about would need to stretch out a little longer, like maybe over the rest of my life.

So what would you do with $640 million?  It's just a question, but one worth asking if only to think of what could be, and as you do remind yourself of what will be.  You see, for those people who won the $640 million, they will have a lot of decisions to make, and I'd love to be one of them, but in the end, both the winners of the $640 million and I will have one thing in common with you.  Whatever we have now in this life, we must leave it all behind when we die.

Kinda depressing, but a reality check is in order here.  I love dreaming about what I'd do with $640 million if only because of the circumstances I face every day in my life right now.  To be sure, I'd be substituting one set of problems for another, but at this moment I'd like to see what handling the problems of having $640 million looks like.  However, life is, and always has been, one of the great equalizers.  Whether it is money, or problems, which you have in plenty, you will one day leave them all behind.

With the end of March and the end of a record lottery jackpot, tomorrow turns to a new month, and thoughts turn to a new day.  As we approach the Easter season, I think of the greatest prize in all of history - that of heaven.  The price of that ticket?  Paid in full.  Availability?  Free for all who choose to accept and believe.  It is safe to assume I will never know the life of a millionaire on this earth, but with all the potential problems it can bring, I like to think my life is quite a wonderful blessing as it stands right now, and all the dreams I might have of living the life of a millionaire will simply never compare to the coming eternity in heaven.  How about you?  Did you get your ticket?

When You Just Cannot Help
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Mar 24, 2012 | 1921 views |  0 comments | 18 18 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

I remember having a parakeet in the house when I was a teenager.  This little bird did not seem to care much for me or anyone else, that is, until it wanted something.  The cage had a small vial for food and another one for water, but whenever I tried to remove the small containers to change out the food or water the bird would be at the edge of the cage trying to bite me.  Same went for whenever I tried to put them back.  It became very annoying, so I began to let the food run out completely before trying to replace it.  That is when something strange happened.

Instead of being at the edge of the cage trying to bite me, the little bird actually seemed to be friendly.  To test the theory, I opened the cage and held out my finger for the bird to stand on.  It hopped on, and as I withdrew the bird from the cage, it flew to my shoulder where it nuzzled its soft feathers against the side of my neck.  I thought the bird had finally had a change of heart and understood that I was only here to help it, but I was wrong.

Once the food and water were refreshed, the little bird flew to the cage and began to squawk and act territorial again, and even went so far as to bite me if I put my hand in the cage to clean the bottom out.  I was annoyed.  The bird was not a friendly pet, it was a pain, and I soon grew tired of the thing.

Flash forward to a situation that materialized last week when my wife spoke of a friend with family problems.  Her friend could not understand why the relationship in her family could not seem to be amended despite all her efforts at trying to do what was right and her efforts to reach out to family members.  The results for all her efforts seemed only to anger the family even more, that is, until they needed something.

I think you can see where this is going.  It happens a lot in life, not just with family, but in the business world as well.  I experienced a similar situation of my own over the past two weeks when I tried to refinance the mortgage on my home.  Not going into any details, but suffice it to say it is very safe advice for anyone to keep your own best interests in mind and do everything you legally can to make sure you are getting the best deal possible, because despite the smiles, friendly conversations, and warm handshakes, the banker has no purpose or inclination at looking out for your best interest.

It's a sad commentary on the world as a whole, and as a Christian man trying to live in this world, I sometimes struggle to understand why some people cannot just be straightforward in their business dealings.  I have to say I was never lied to, but I was not given straight answers to questions I already knew the answers to, and it only made me angry and frustrated to know that I could not trust this person to look out for me, even though I was about to give them a chunk of business.  In the end, I was left with a very bad impression, but a little wiser in dealing with the workings of the world.

What can you do about it?  Nothing.  In all of the situations above, there is nothing you can do about the decisions other people make in life.  You cannot change others, you cannot make decisions for them, you cannot even try to educate them that the relationship, whether with family, business, or otherwise, would actually be better if everyone were transparent and honest.  The only thing you have control over is you.

The decisions you make are the only ones you can be held responsible for, and so you simply live and do what is right regardless of what others do, and let others live with the weight of your decisions.  Too often, people will make you try to feel guilty or pay a price in lost access to a relationship because of decisions you make.  The process is one that tries to lure you into a feeling that you have done something wrong, and that you somehow now owe them something.

When this happens, my advice is to walk away.  You simply cannot help some people, no matter how much you give, no matter how hard you try, no matter what lengths you go to trying to be reasonable, they will only maintain the relationship for as long as they get what they want.  That kind of one-way relationship will eventually drain you of every resource and energy until you have nothing left to give, and then they will be the ones to end the relationship because you have no value to them anymore.

It isn't healthy.  It requires wisdom to know who you can and cannot help, and I am not here to advise on how to differentiate.  However, when you identify such a relationship in your life, when you just cannot help despite your best efforts, the only thing you can do to really help them is walk away.

Never Wrong
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Mar 17, 2012 | 3172 views |  0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Going to church and calling yourself a Christian is easy, but actually living what you believe can be difficult to endure sometimes.  Not because being a Christian is hard, but because the world we live in tends to penalize anyone, not just Christians, for doing what is right.

Take the case I ran into just this last week.  On the job, I was trying to help a company who had taken over a hotel because the hotel had gone into bankruptcy.  The previous owner of the hotel not only had defaulted on the loan, but just about everything else, and the hotel was decaying and falling apart because of neglect.  Worse yet, to save money, the previous owner lied about the room count on the hotel.  The management company under order from the bank, came in to rehabilitate the hotel and set everything right again.

Where I come in is when the General Manager of that management company called me to set the record straight on the room count, which represented a more than 100% increase on the room count total, and accordingly a more than doubling of the bill for that hotel.  When the bank found out what the General Manager, who is a Christian, had done, the bank's knee-jerk reaction was to stop writing checks, and give the General Manager an ear-full for coming clean and telling the truth about the room count.

You see, to the bank, the General Manager cost them a lot of money.  If the General Manager had just kept silent, then no one would have known, and the deception could have continued indefinitely.  The problem is, the General Manager knew, and the deception was not just wrong, it was illegal, and being a Christian the General Manager simply decided to do what was right.

Talking with her by phone, I could hear the distress in her voice as she tried to describe why the bank had stopped writing checks and why the work was going to be placed on hold for a time.  My response was this: "It is never wrong to do what is right."

I have two little girls, and I am trying to raise them in the greater wisdom of the teachings of the Bible, but one day, they are going to be launched into the world to face the reality that not everyone believes doing the right thing is the best thing, or even the right thing.  As I talked with the General Manager, she expressed appreciation for the encouragement, and I told her that I am going to take this story home to my two daughters where I teach them they should always tell the truth, even if it gets them into trouble.  This was one real-world scenario I would have never thought of, but is exactly the kind of situation many Christians can find themselves in.

While the world will have you believe there are no moral absolutes, that doing right is conditional, and that there are extenuating circumstances for everything, let me set the record straight.  There are hard decisions, sometimes it can be confusing to determine what is right, and sometimes there are some downright heartbreaking decisions that seem to blur the line between right and wrong, but here is one absolute of which I am 100% sure - It Is Never Wrong To Do What Is Right.

A Good Mystery
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Mar 10, 2012 | 2273 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

I love a good mystery.  While I never read Nancy Drew mysteries (those were for girls) I did read a few Hardy Boys stories and listened to the Sugar Creek Gang some mornings.  Later, it was the Sherlock Holmes stories when I could get hold of one, and today I still love a good book or movie with a bit of a puzzle or mystery to solve.  That kind of curiosity led me to study out the Bible with questions like, "Where are all the 2,000 year old men?" answered last week.

What is even more curious though, is that the question answered last week was not where I initially started, but rather ended.  For there was another verse in the Bible that sparked my curiosity, and led me to study out an entire chapter, which then led me to the verses talked about last week.  When talking about those verses, I wondered, was it possible any one of them actually walked the earth today?

Practically, my study led me to believe that whoever was there was also simply taken to heaven as Elijah and Enoch were both taken to heaven, but I also wanted to know if it was even possible that "some of those standing here" were still around today.  That question led me to a study of a special assignment, given to Paul, and his story of survival against man, nature, and beast.  There, woven in the lines of the book of Acts, was this amazing account of how God preserved his life despite some of the most dire circumstances.  In short, Paul was told he must go to Rome to testify before Caesar, and God would see to it that nothing would stop him from completing that mission.

Did you know, though, that there was someone else given a similar mission?  That the person given such a mission was one of those standing there whom Christ said would not taste of death?  Did you know that there was one person in the New Testament where it was actually rumored that this person would not die?  It's true.  But I'm getting ahead of myself.  The verse that caught my attention actually starts in Revelation.

Revelation 10:4 "And when the seven thunders had uttered their voices, I was about to write: and I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write them not."  You see, anyone who has studied the book of Revelation knows about the seven seal judgements, the seven trumpet judgements, and the seven vial (or bowl) judgements; however, here in this verse is where I first found the seven thunders, and what stuck me is that we are told about their existence, but not allowed to know what the seven thunders actually are.

No big deal, except there is one person who DOES know.  John.

You see, John was allowed to know something that no other human on earth would be allowed to know for a very long time.  As I studied out the whole chapter, I learned many interesting things, but the most interesting to me was four words in the very last verse: Revelation 10:11 " . . . thou must prophesy again . . . "

Chapter 10 in Revelation is also curious in that it is the only chapter in Revelation where the writer moves from observe/report to actually taking part in the action.  He is told to eat of a little book, given a great secret known as the seven thunders, and finally given a special mission.  Why?  That is when the verses talking about "some standing here which shall not taste of death" began to ring in my mind.  Then came these words . . .

John 21:20 "Then Peter, turning about, seeth the disciple whom Jesus loved following; which also leaned on his breast at supper, and said, Lord, which is he that betrayeth thee?  21 Peter seeing him saith to Jesus, Lord, and what shall this man do?  22 Jesus saith unto him, If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? follow thou me.  23 Then went this saying abroad among the brethren, that that disciple should not die: yet Jesus said not unto him, He shall not die; but, If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee?"

Note: the rumor is that this disciple (John) will not die, but John corrects the rumor to the actual words spoken.  What is great about this verse is that Christ sets the very groundwork for fulfillment of the other verses when He said "there be some standing here which shall not taste of death."  He literally mentions John tarrying until He comes - the same language used in Matthew 16:28 - as though it is no big deal.

To you and me, that someone could actually be walking the earth for 2,000 years might be a big deal, but to Christ who was there when the universe was breathed into existence, it is but a small matter.  Question is, who cares?  If John actually is walking the earth today because of some special mission to which only he has been allowed to see in Revelation 10, what do I care?  Well, for one, what do you think John would be doing today?  Would he be doing what you are doing?  Would his priorities in life align with yours?  Would he seek to live the life you do, go to the church you do, and pursue the things in life you do?

No.  I think John, if he was walking the earth today, would have priorities quite different from my own.  I quite believe the rest of Revelation 10:11 may be what he would be trying to accomplish today when it says " . . . thou must prophesy again before many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings."  As for you, forget about John's mission, how about your neighbor, the person who cuts your hair, the people you work with or see every day in some capacity.  Do they even know you are a Christian?

While John may be on some special assignment given exclusively to him, we still have one of our own no matter where we are in this world, no matter who we are in this world: Mark 16:15 "And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature."

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Police report for June 20, 2013
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Police report June 10 • Theft of services III. Officers investigated the theft of electrical services in the 300 block of Southern Avenue. • Foreign recovery. A 36-year-old female recovered a Kindle Fire valued at $130 and turned it over to officers. • Domestic violence III. A 34-year-old female reported an incident that occurred on West Ladiga Street at 8:58 p.m. June 11 • Duty to give information and render aid. A 54-year-old female reported damage done to the driver’s side front end of a Hyundai Elantra while located at Tweener’s at 2:30 p.m. June 12 • Harassment. A 20-year0old male reported an incident that occurred at 10:40 p.m. June 10 on Highway 278 East. • Abandoned vehicle. Officers investigated a 2007 Chrysler Sebring parked on Sterling Street at 11:30 p.m. • Assault III. A 26-year-old male reported an assault that occurred at the Laundry Basket between 10:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. June 11. • Theft of services III. Officers investigated the theft of electrical services and a broken power seal at a location on Carol Street. • Domestic violence III. A 24-year-old female reported an incident that occurred at her residence around noon. • Duty upon striking an unoccupied vehicle. A 44-year-old female reported $300 damage done to the rear bumper of a 2006 Pontiac while located on Caldwell Street around 4 p.m. Arrest report June 10 • George Adalberto Pina, 41, domestic violence III. June 11 • George Pina, 41, probation violation. June 13 • Jason Allen Poore, 35, assault III. • Christopher Eric Sanford, 34, failure to appear (three counts).
Community calendar beginning June 20
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
• Dailey Street Baptist Church, 106 S Church Street, (across from Lively’s foodland) will have Vacation Bible School June 24th - 26th from 6:00 - 8:00 p.m. nightly. Kick-off is June 22nd at 10:00 a.m. Our theme this year is “The Mighty God”. Classes for ages 4 to adult. Van rides will be available. For more information and/or to schedule pick-up, please call the church office at 256-447-6301. • Arrington Chapel Church will host a community fifth Sunday night singing on June 30. A meal will be served at 5 p.mn. and the singing starts at 6 with the Interstate Quartet. Everyone is welcome. • On June 29th beginning at 8 am and ending at 3 pm, there will be a Spring Into Summer Festival in downtown Piedmont. There will be arts and crafts, food, games, live music and drawings for prizes. If you are interested in renting a booth or would like more information, please contact Lover’s By Glover at (256) 792-9063 or at glovesd0509@gmail.com • Anytime Fireworks Blood Drive will be held July 3rd from 1:30 to 6:30 p.m. It is located at 8806 Hwy 431 in Alexandria 256-847-3969. Free fireworks for every donor. • Chapter 1511, National Active and Retired Federal Employees (NARFE), invites all federal civilian employees, retirees, and annuitant survivors to its monthly meeting,10:45 AM, Thursday, June 27, at the DeSoto Pastime Center, Anniston Army Depot. Guest speaker: Calhoun County Commissioner Don Hudson. Lunch available onsite. No special requirements to enter the Depot for this event. For information on NARFE, call Joyce Smith, (256) 358-4257 or go to www.narfe.org . For speaker information, call Beverly Williams, 256-268-5286; email narfenotes@gmail.com . • Trade Day and Farmers Market at Nances Creek Community Center on the first Saturday of each month through October. It starts at 7 a.m. There is no set up fee. • A reminder that while the spring season is here and many landowners will be cleaning their property, any outdoor burning within the Piedmont City Limits requires a burn permit which can be obtained free of charge, provided that you meet the outside burning criteria, you can apply for a permit at the Fire Department at 312 N. Center Ave., If you have any questions concerning outdoor burning you can call the fire department at 256-447-3364. • YOU’RE INVITED TO LUNCH & LEARN….A series of free gardening programs sponsored by Calhoun County Master Gardeners & Calhoun County Commission held the 4th Wednesday of each month at the Cane Creek Community Garden at McClellan from noon-1pm ; bring your own lunch! June 26 “A Simple Water Feature for the Garden”: Hayes Jackson, ACES July 24 “Herb Gardening”: Dani Carroll, ACES August 28 “Getting to Know the Talladega National Forest: Part 2”: Jonathan Stober, District Biologist September 25 “Gardening for Dry Places”: Hayes Jackson, ACES Speakers & topics subject to change. Contact the Extension Office to confirm. 256 237 1621 • Dogs for the Deaf, located in Central Point, Oregon, is a non-profit organization that rescues dogs from animal shelters and trains them to help adults and children with different disabilities, challenges, and needs. For example, a Hearing Dog is trained to alert it’s owner to household sounds that could affect his or her safety and an Autism Assistance Dog would keep an autistic child out of traffic, bodies of water, and other dangerous situations. Chris Hill, a resident of Anniston and a volunteer “ambassador” for Dogs for the Deaf, has a DVD presentation he will give to civic and community organizations or individuals. Contact Chris at (256) 835-6918 • New classes for the Jacksonville State University Adult Wellness classes are: Monday, Wednesday and Friday: Senior water aerobics and senior floor aerobic classes, 8 a.m., Jacksonville State University, Pete Mathews Coliseum. Contact Aubrey Crossen at 256-689-2580 or jsu9517k@jsu.edu for more information and: Tuesday and Thursday: Senior water aerobics and senior therapeutic yoga classes, 8 a.m., Jacksonville State University, Pete Mathews Coliseum. Contact Aubrey Crossen at 256-689-2580 or jsu9517k@jsu.edu for more information. • Disabled American Veterans, Chapter 21 meets the second Tuesday of every month at 6 P.M. at 114 N. Center Ave. downtown Piedmont, to discuss the latest Veteran’s issues and benefits. If you are a service-connected disabled vet or you think you may have a military service related condition, the DAV may be able to help you. Help Workshops are also available on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday’s of each month from 8 a.m. to noon. Veterans are urged to attend for possible compensation and benefits unknown. • Anyone with knowledge about German and Italian POW’s and their artifacts at Fort McClellan during the time period 1943-1946 please contact Klaus Duncan at 256-782-2991. • Crossplains Church of Piedmont, in partnership with the Piedmont Benevolence Center, invites kids ages 5 and up to the church every Wednesday to get F.I.T. (food, interaction, teaching) Every Wednesday night from 6-7:30 p.m. Supper, Devotion and Games. Anyone needing transportation contact 256-447-2721. Someone will return calls regarding pickup times. • Applications for Head Start are now being taken. Come visit a Head Start/Early Head Start Center in your community and talk with center coordinators or family advocates. For additional information in Calhoun and Cleburne counties call Gayle McClellan at 256-237-8628. Head Start Centers located in Calhoun County are Norwood, Piedmont, Ayers, Constantine and Hobson City. Children must be three years old by Sept. 1. • Piedmont Health Care has started an Alzheimer’s support group. The Alzheimer’s Support Group at PHCC is designed to increase public awareness and enhance individual and family education regarding Alzheimer’s disease and other dementia. For more additional information, please call Yolanda Pierce, social services director (256) 447-8258 Ext. 232. Refreshments to be provided.
Sunshine Club News
by Patsy Frachiseur
Special to The Star
Jun 19, 2013 | 1 views |  0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The Sunshine Club met June 2 at First Baptist Church. After prayer requests, Ramon Feazell asked Ronnie Morrow to open the meeting with prayer. June hosts were Pitt and Peggy Peel, Maxine Simmons and Betty Lively. Happy faced flowers were centerpieces on each table. Spring flowers were in abundance around the room, including lilies, roses and day lillies which were a delight. Audrey Simpson reported on the trip to feed over 2,040 students and members of the Jess Jennings Nehemiah Team. Fourteen members from First Baptist joined others at the luncheon. These student missionaries will form 52 teams to go to various countries worldwide to spread the word of God. This is an awesome task and these young people need prayers. Pam Jones presented the program, giving her testimony and sharing her experience as a cancer survivor. Along her journey she has met others having the same experience. She had two such ladies, Carol Harcrow and Trisha Noah, from Hokes Bluff with her. After playing a CD, “Blessings Come Through Tears,” she quoted Romans 12:12, “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.” As she closed she asked the question, “Are you blessed?” Ramon closed with prayer. Thirty-four members and 11 guests enjoyed fellowship around the dining tables. Guests, along with Pam, Carol and Trisha, were W. A. Nickelson, Savannah Thornberg Caleb Smith, Aniah Jones and Amanda Smart and her three children.
Linda Jones likes to entertain with husband’s help
by Margaret Anderson
Special to The Star
Jun 19, 2013 | 148 views |  0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Linda Jones looks forward to Wednesdays. That’s her off-day at Stinson Howard Jewelers in Piedmont, which gives her an opportunity to cook for her entire family. “All of them come,” she said. “I’ve been doing this for 20 years or longer.” By “everybody” Linda means her husband, Roy, their sons, Darwin, Brian and Barry and their families, which includes eight grandsons and two granddaughters, as well as her sisters, other family members and friends. Linda said it’s a good thing she likes to cook, because that’s not the only time she cooks a lot. “Everybody comes to our house about once a month, and we play music,” she said. “There’s usually about 70 to 75 people here. Roy helps me cook and everybody brings a dish. We play gospel, country, rockabilly, it makes no difference, if we like it we play it, and we have a ball. And there’s no alcohol.” The Jones home has been the site for this get together for about 40 years. Linda said she’s no drummer, but she does like to play the snare drum. “I like keeping time with them,” she said. Roy plays lead guitar, their oldest son, Darwin, plays bass, and Michelle Hudson sings. Harold Parris is on steel guitar and Rodney McReynolds, Brian Carroll and Dan Freeman play guitar. Linda said that all the guitar players also sing. For many years, Linda and Roy made syrup at Nances Creek Community Center. That led them to create trade there which is the first Saturday of the month June through October. Linda has worked in jewelry stores for the past 30 years. She spent the first 20 at the old DuBar’s store. It was bought by Stinson Howard who built a new store and asked Linda to stay on as manager. She’s been there 10 years. “Sometimes I’ll ask my boss (Sam Stinson) if he’s ready for me to retire and he’ll say no,” said Linda, admitting that she doesn’t want to retire. “I love all of it,” she said. “I love meeting people and selling. I’m never out and I’m never late. My boss said he’s going to put on my tombstone ‘old reliable’. They’ve just turned the store over to me more or less. I pay my own self. I write my own check and I write Brandon’s check. I tell people that selling, cooking and eating are all I’ve ever done.” Brandon Stinson repairs jewelry. Linda’s sisters, Olene Penny and Thyra Smith take turns working on Saturdays. Linda was born in Jacksonville and moved to Nances Creek when she was a baby. She’s lived there ever since. Her parents are the late Mitchell and Emma (Smith) Doss. She graduated from White Plains High School. She and Roy met at the Pig in the Basket, a small café that was torn down years ago, that was located in front of Piedmont Hospital. “Back then, the kids would ride around and go to the Pig in the Basket, then they’d go to the Coffee Cup,” she said. “It was back and forth, back and forth. You’d blow your horn and they’d bring your tray and hook it on the window. They were good times.” She and Roy married in 1961 The preacher who married them had cut pulpwood that day. When he came home, he had a bath before marrying them, and Linda remembers that his hair was still wet. Roy’s friend Larry Hill, who lived in Ellisville as did Roy, went with them. Linda said before they could start their honeymoon, they had to take Larry back to his home in Ellisville. “People spend $50,000 on weddings, and they don’t last,” she said. “We didn’t spent anything, and we’ll be married 52 years on Oct. 13. We got married on Friday the 13th.” Linda and Roy renewed their vows on their 50th anniversary. “We had a big celebration at Terrapin Creek Lodge” said Linda. “Our good friend Alice Martin (probate judge) married us. Our kids and grandkids were there and we had a lot of friends.” Roy is retired and spends a lot of his time tending to his 25 beehives. He was a self-employed cement finisher. Linda said her husband is a good cook, and she appreciates the fact that when she gets home from work, he often has her plate waiting for her. She likes to prepare Instant Miracle Rolls, Peanut Butter Fudge, Pecan Pie Cake and Tater Tot Casserole. Contact Margaret at pollya922@gmail.com. Recipes Instant Miracle Rolls 5 c. self rising flour
¼ c. sugar
1 scant t. soda
2 c. warm buttermilk
3 pkg. yeast
1 c. cooking oil Mix together first three ingredients. Then mix the rest and let sit for 20 minutes. Cut out and bake at 400 degrees. Peanut Butter Fudge 2 c. sugar
1/ c. Pet Milk
1 stick margarine
15 oz. peanut butter
1 t. vanilla Cook first three ingredients until hard ball. Then stir in peanut butter and vanilla. Beat together and pour into buttered Pyrex dish. Pecan Pie Cake 1 ½ c self rising flour
1 c. white sugar
1 c. packed brown sugar
2 c chopped pecans
4 eggs, beaten
1 c. cooking oil
1 t. vanilla Mix together. Pour into long sprayed Pyrex dish. Bake at 350 degrees until lightly browned. Tater Tot Casserole Large pack ground chuck
Bag of tater tots
1 c. cream of chicken soup (with a little water)
4 T. soy sauce Cook ground chuck. Drain grease. Put back into skillet. Add cream of chicken soup and soy sauce. Pour into greased Pyrex dish and add tater tots to top. Bake until tater tots are brown.
Summer reading going strong
Jun 19, 2013 | 22 views |  0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
With over 180 children and young adults signed up for the Program, Summer Reading at Piedmont Public Library is busier than ever! The Library has many programs for the kids to enjoy. Last week, the “Summer Sprouts” traveled to The Learning Farm and made their own ice cream in a bag, followed by a hands-on lesson about wheat and how it is made into all kinds of pasta. On Thursday, guest reader Ashley Williams read to the kids about bugs and where they live. Then, they were able to color their own garden and fill it with “fingerprint bugs” using finger paints. Friday brought fun with The Imagination Place from Gadsden. They brought balls of clay for the kids to make “pinch pots” to take home and decorate to grow their own plants in. The fun continues at the Library every week. The Learning Farm takes place every Tuesday, story time and crafts every Thursday, and this Friday, Bill Haley from The Tennessee Aquarium will present a live animal show. Stop by the Library or call for more information, and don’t forget to check the Library out on Facebook to see all the great pictures from the program!
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