What more can HE say?
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Jan 12, 2013 | 5029 views |  0 comments | 18 18 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

I begin this article with some measure of trepidation.  You see, I'm not sure how you, the reader, will perceive it.  I know what I am about to try to communicate, but in all things written, you the reader will read into this article from your own personal perceptions, experiences, and backgrounds.  So, let me state from the beginning that it is not my desire to offend, but to inform.  It is my hope that some will recognize the truth in this article and enjoy the benefits, while for others more inclined to be offended, I merely hope that you will consider with a thoughtful heart what is written, and to try to understand.

I remember a time, back in my college years, when I thought I would never get married.  I was a very outgoing person, but when it came to talking with girls, I seemed to go mute.  To put it bluntly, I was socially clumsy when it came to talking with girls.  I had little success with dating, and in anguish I prayed for God to give me a wife while secretly thinking there is no way it would ever happen.  I opened up my feelings on the matter to a close mentor who simply told me, "When the right girl comes along, you'll know it."

My question was: "But how?!?!?!

Answer: "You just will."

He smiled, gave a few more words of encouragement that I don't remember, and I walked off feeling no more comforted or assured of getting married one day than I did before the conversation.

A few years later, God put me in some very special circumstances.  It is a story in itself in which I will not go into here, but suffice it to say my path crossed with a young lady who seemed to light up my world when I first laid eyes on her.  Suddenly, I just knew.  That very night I walked into my dorm room, and I knew I would marry this girl I had met just this very day.  A year later exactly to the day, on August 22nd, she became my wife.

Now, my question to you is this: How does God speak to you?

(For the rest of this article please visit MenRising)

The Secret of Happiness
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Dec 30, 2012 | 4564 views |  0 comments | 40 40 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

I once heard someone say, "I'd rather be happy than right."  While I can't remember who said it or in what context, it stuck with me.  I've seen too many arguments between people who were both equally convinced they were right and the other person was completely wrong.  Even if one of them happens to be right, I doubt there would be much happiness in the relationship between the two of them.

If the secret to happiness were a single or several verses in the Bible, then I believe there would be a lot more happy people in this world.  However, the opposite is true.  I see people from all walks of life, rich and poor alike who are and are not happy.  The "secret" isn't the presence or absence of money.  We all know that, and so I conclude we've missed something somewhere along the way in the pursuit of happiness.

In truth, I believe the real secret to happiness is no secret at all.  Being happy is just plain common sense and so obvious, that I believe there was no need to write it down in the form of instruction.  Happiness just happens, if the right elements are in place.

Look at a child playing.  Are they happy?  Has anyone instructed them in such a way as "First, do this.  Second, do that.  Third, you must . . ." and so on?  Nope.  Children play.  In case you haven't noticed before, as soon as adults interfere with rules and things, it kind of kills the fun the kids were having.  Even without real toys, children find creative ways to play.

Just last week after I unpacked a box, there were these long pieces of styrofoam left over on the floor.  Within minutes, these had been commandeered by my two little girls who had placed small toy animals in all the little crevices and were pushing them down the hallway.  When I asked what they were doing, they explained to me that the animals were on a cruise.  Huh?  Styrofoam packing boards as cruise ships?  Yet, there they were, playing away, and quite happy.  No rules.  No instructions.  Just living from their hearts and imaginations.

As we grow into adults, we are actually taught to do the opposite of the very thing God programmed into us.  We are taught to ignore the pleadings and desires of our hearts, and we are taught to follow rules, be responsible, and above all, ignore the imaginations and pleadings of your heart.

Without Christ in your life, maybe this is actually pretty good advice.  However, as Christians, God has said that if we will delight in Him, then He will give us the desires of our HEART. (Psalm 37:4)  Problem is, there is too much "Bible teaching" that you must do this and do that, wear this not that, act this way not that way, and then maybe, just maybe, God will be pleased with you and bless you.

That's all backwards!  God wants us to delight in Him, recognize our kinship and relationship with Him, and as His children, our hearts desires will be fulfilled.

As a child lives from their heart and finds happiness in the discarded things of life, so we may as Christians find happiness living from our hearts.  Not the heart of the old flesh that is "deceitful and desperately wicked" or the "heart of stone" that was part of the old man, but out of our new heart; the new heart God has given us to replace the heart of stone. (Eze 36:26)  The heart God gave us when we were born again is not "deceitful and desperately wicked" but rather a new heart.  Our new heart is a treasure to be guarded (Prov. 4:23) as something precious and valuable, because out of that new heart we may live a happy life.

The secret to happiness then, is to follow that new heart.

If time and money were no object, what would you do?  First, discard the temporal things that may spring to mind like buying a new car, a new house, or traveling somewhere (that's the old heart speaking); for these are temporary.  In your new heart, when you were born again, you were given a desire to do something special, something that would make the world a better place, something that would help others.  If you could do anything in the world, when your new heart speaks, what is it you hear?

When we listen to the new heart God has given us, and begin to live in a way that fulfills the desires of that new heart, we not only find purpose and meaning in life, we find happiness.  As a child finds happiness in discarded things that would be thrown away simply by following their own heart, so we as adults can find happiness in this life by following the desires of our new hearts.  What are the desires of your new heart?

The Little Things
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Dec 22, 2012 | 5338 views |  0 comments | 62 62 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

"Little things." 

These words have been used in such phrases as: "It's the little things that matter"; "Little things mean a lot."  We've also heard that "It's the small details that matter"; and "There are no small/little jobs."

While we understand the meaning behind these words because they ring true, most men want to slay the giants of the world while leaving the small details and "little things" to other people.  Even though we as men know that "little things" matter, we do not really want to concern ourselves with them if we don't absolutely have to.  I've seen some men, and you have probably met or know one or two, who seem to act with the belief that they are above "little things" and their talent is wasted on trivial matters.

The problem with that perception is this:

Someday,

little things,

will become big things.

Think about it.

When I look back on my life, I sincerely appreciate the big things done on my behalf.  In reality, there are very few.  However, my mind is filled with memory after memory of small things this person or that person may have done that sent my mind thinking in a different direction.  Sometimes it was a small kindness of word or deed that turned a bad day into something more bearable, or even put a smile on my face in the midst of some storm.

As a man, I understand the mindset that wants to look for the great challenges.  We want to have the determination of a Pioneer or great Explorer, traveling into uncharted places, to find some place no man has ever stood and plant our own feet as we survey some wild, untamed landscape.  To be sure, it is this mindset that is fueling a desire to put mankind on Mars some day.  It will probably happen in my lifetime, too.

As a father, none of this kind of thinking has changed.  I have a family with a wife and two daughters, and still there is the desire to find a purpose and do something really great with my life.

That's when a voice whispered to my heart,

"Little things become big things."

At first I wondered what it meant.  My mind recalled all the sayings I mentioned before, but to me, little things were still little things.  While important in their own way, they just helped accomplish some greater purpose where someone else eventually claimed credit.  I understand little things are still needed in their own way, but I must admit, something within me wanted to know that my life would matter in some greater way, somehow.

Coming home late from work one night this week from my second job, the thought that "little things become big things" was still clanging around in my head.  Then I thought of my two daughters.  They are growing up fast, and the thought that my oldest is going to turn 10 years old soon brought the realization that my time with her in my home is growing smaller.  Then I understood.

I called my wife.  Both girls were already headed to bed, they were just waiting up to say goodnight to me.  I asked my wife to tell our oldest daughter to get dressed and get ready to go somewhere.  When I came home, I changed clothes, and drove off with my oldest daughter.  She started asking question after question about where we were going, what we were doing, and why.  We stopped at a tiny little restaurant and I said, "Here we are!"

She was a little confused.

We went inside, asked for a small order of fried cheese sticks, and a couple of small sodas, and just talked for a little while.

It was dark outside.  It was very late at night.  The restaurant was virtually empty.  We had the place almost completely to ourselves, but best of all, we just sat and talked.  Mostly I just listened.

Then, as we talked she sighed a little bit.  I could tell something was bothering her.  I decided a little prodding was needed here as I asked, "What is it?"  She looked up at me with something of a serious look in hers eyes and replied, "Are you sure you want to hear this?"

The rest of that conversation will remain between us.

It was a little conversation, in a little restaurant, with a little girl, but as we talked I realized that someday, little things really will become big things.  Little kids will grow up to be big adults, and with them all their "little things" whether good or bad, will become "big things" in their adult life.

If you really want to do something really big and great with your life, just look to your children.

Those little things, someday, will become big things.

A TON of Bricks
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Dec 16, 2012 | 5034 views |  0 comments | 23 23 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

I woke up Friday, still feeling worn out from a very long road trip that saw me crossing into six states outside of Alabama.  I started my day like everyone else I suppose, but it was hectic and busy.  A news alert crossed my phone.  Something about a shooting.  I swiped it away and continued working.  Dove into the batch of folders that needed my attention and began working on numbers for job quotes.  My phone kept buzzing with the same alert.  The words I recognized were "Conn." (for Connecticut) and "shooting" as in someone somewhere had apparently shot a gun, probably at someone.  I swiped the news alert away again.

Over and over again this same news alert kept popping up.  "Shooting" "Conn." were there with each alert that kept coming and I began to get annoyed.  I remember thinking to myself "Enough already!  I get it!  There's been a shooting!"  I made a mental note to myself to see if there were some way to reconfigure my phone to somehow reject incoming news alerts that repeated themselves over and over again.  Toward the end of my day, still busy trying to get things wrapped up, and laying aside those things that would have to be done later, my mind began to focus on the clock.  Soon as work was over I had to grab something quick to eat and leave to my second job.

My wife was out and about, so I called to see where she was and reminded her that I had to leave for my other job soon.  She said she'd bring in some fast-food.  Soon as she came home I grabbed a couple of the heavier bags of groceries and then began to eat while my wife and the girls unloaded the rest of the car.  My phone buzzed again, glancing at it I just saw the two words I've been noticing all day and swiped it away again.  I jumped in my car and barely made it to my second job on time.  Things there were already hectic, so I jumped right in and began working.

My phone kept buzzing still.

After work that night, I drove home physically and mentally just spent.  All I wanted was my nice cozy chair, something warm to eat and drink, and just to be around my family.  My wife had allowed the girls to stay up late so I could be there to tuck them in and kiss them goodnight.  As I walked in the front door, the girls were in the back room playing and my wife was glued to the news on TV.  "Not like her to say nothing when I walk in the door," I thought to myself.  "Is she mad at me or something?"

"Hey there!  I'm home," I said testing the waters.  "Glad you're home safe," my wife replied. "I've just now been able to watch the news about the shooting.  I had to send the girls out of the room for a while so I could get the latest details."  My response was to simply shrug it off and go to the refrigerator to see if there was anything leftover I could warm up and eat.  "So there's been another shooting.  Another idiot with a gun in Connecticut.  Why is this news?  I've been getting the alerts all day!"

That's when my wife unfolded the story for me as I sat next to her to watch the news.  The real tragedy was not of another random shooting, but the killing of innocents.  The stories of the first responders trained to handle horrific sights walking away shaken to their core.  The flurry of activity as parents flooded the scene, some tightly hugging their children close to their chest as they walked away from the school.  Some being sent to a volunteer firehouse to get the news they would never hold their children alive again.  My daughters are 5 and 9 years old.  It hit me like a ton of bricks.  For the first time in my life I cried as I watched the news.  Putting my children to bed that night was a very sobering, purposeful, and thankful moment.

Now, the story had my attention.  All day long it had the attention of most of the nation and even the world.  This morning I saw pictures of Pakistani children making a candlelight memorial for the slain children in America, and another of a row of black crosses on a beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  The inevitable question of "why" comes to everyone's mind.  To others, they will ask the same question of God; some with words of pleading and a desire to understand, some others with hate and disgust that a loving God could allow such a thing, if there was ever such a thing as God.

First, I will not pretend to know the mind of God.  Second, I truly believe God could have stopped and intervened if He had chosen to do so.  Why this event was allowed to unfold, I do not pretend to know, but there are two things I do know.  First, there is evil in this world, and that evil manifests itself in the hearts of men with the free will to choose to do good or evil.  Second, there was another great tragedy over 2,000 years ago.  One that God in heaven not only allowed to happen, but chose to look away.  As Jesus Christ hung on the cross, He too, cried out the word "why" and not just to the wind or the sky, but to his own Father in heaven.

Many people died by Roman crucifixion, but today the world only remembers the name of one of them.  It was a horrific act of great torture and suffering, a terrible sacrifice of One who was totally innocent, but it has arrested the attention of the world for over 2,000 years now.  Again, I do not pretend to have answers as to why God allowed the slaying of innocents in Connecticut, but I do know that it reminded me of One other innocent who died to save the souls of all mankind, and that we will be celebrating His birth around this time of year.  The birth of One, born to die.

Simple Respect
by JohnBagwell
 Faith & Family
Dec 01, 2012 | 4915 views |  0 comments | 34 34 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Respect is something we usually understand best when its missing.  When its missing, it is obvious because we feel, in our bones, disrespected.  You know what I mean.  Its usually a comment someone makes or maybe some action.  Its not the exact words they say, it is how they say them.  Its the attitude.  Condescending.  Sarcastic.  Biting.

On TV disrespect is what makes for good entertainment.  In real life, disrespect is what makes for volatile situations, bad morale, and sudden outbursts that can leave others wondering "Where did that come from?"  In talking with a business owner the other day about the issue of respect, he said he can hire people to do a job and train them to do it well, but he can't teach them respect.  That has to come from their parents.  I agree, and not only do I agree, to some degree it concerns me.

For the most part, I know I was raised to be respectful.  I say "Sir" and "Ma'am" appropriately to anyone regardless if they are older or younger than me.  It was kind of beat into me as a kid.  However, when I get that vibe that I've been disrespected, another side of me has been known to show.  A side I am sad to say I am less than proud of.  Usually afterward, I think to myself, "What if my kid had been here when that happened?"  Chances are, I'd have kept them in mind and my own actions and words would have remained guarded.  Such testing has happened on other occasions.

After my talk with the business owner about how it is the parent's responsibility to teach their kids, I imagined individuals in my life and how their upbringing might have contributed to the ways they treat others.  For some, they overcame huge challenges to become something different than the way they were raised.  Others, it seems, always want to use their upbringing as an excuse for their behavior.  I started to wonder how I would feel if someone treated my children with disrespect, and to be honest, the feelings that welled up in me just imagining such an event were not pleasant.  That is when another idea occurred to me.  We teach our kids by our example, yet there is another reason to show respect to others.  A bigger, much larger reason than "because you should."

My children are a product of my wife and I, and I know I could become very offended and defensive if I ever saw someone treating my child with disrespect.  Now, take that a step further.  There is a God in heaven who created us all.  While we all have different backgrounds, different parents, and come from various social and economic areas of life, we are all creations of God.  Ever wonder how God might feel when we disrespect one of His creations?  To show disrespect towards someone, or to show disrespect for some effort they have made, whether we realize it or not, our actions and words in those moments directly offend and disrespect God, and are born out of a thankless heart towards a creation of Almighty God.  OUCH!

People are people.  Some of them will frustrate us, as we will frustrate others.  However, even in frustration we can recognize the individual dignity of others, and show them some simple respect.  Not because they may personally deserve it, but because they are a creation of God.  As we would admire the beauty of a sunrise or sunset, or sit in wonder at the site of a full moon hanging in space above our earth, so we should understand that the same God that created those wonderful things created the wonder that is all mankind; each and every one of us.

Today's Events
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Wednesday, 19, 2013
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Pond Spring- The Gener... 3:50 PM
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Hip Hop Hope Vacation ... 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
$0 The Living by Faith Ministry will host Vac...
Community calendar beginning June 20
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 0 0 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 | 0 views |  0 comments | 0 0 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 | 144 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!
Piedmont City Schools offer Career Technical Education classes
Jun 19, 2013 | 28 views |  0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Alabama’s Career and Technical Education program is designed to empower students to meet the daily challenges of the twenty-first century with the work-readiness skills needed for success. This program provides a curriculum wherein students are actively engaged in learning through career-oriented activities. National affiliated student organizations such as FBLA and FFA are integral, co-curricular components of each career and technical education course. These organizations serve as a means to enhance classroom instruction while helping students develop leadership abilities, expand workplace-readiness skills and broaden opportunities for personal and professional growth. The focus is to help students develop an understanding of all aspects of industry and technology in the program area while learning teamwork and leadership skills. Piedmont City Schools currently offer Career and Technical Education classes at the middle and high school level. Piedmont High School offers classes through a 2-year rotation. During the 2013-2014 school year students will have the opportunity to take Agriscience, Construction Framing, Introduction to Metal Fabrication and Horticulture. In 2014-2015 students may choose to take Agriscience, Construction Finishing, Introduction to MIG Welding and Horticulture. • Agriscience is a course that provides students with a general overview of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources. • Construction Framing is designed to provide students with an understanding of the framing phase of a structure, including framing components. • Construction Finishing is designed to facilitate student understanding of the finishing phase of a structure. • Introduction to Metal Fabrication provides students with opportunities to examine safety and technical information in metal fabrication and to participate in hands-on activities in the laboratory. • Horticulture includes career opportunities, safety, plant physiology, growing media, greenhouse facilities, greenhouse and nursery crop production, plant identification and classification, pest management, hydroponics and vegetable gardening, and technological applications. • Introduction to MIG welding provides students with opportunities to examine safety and technical information in metal fabrication and participate in hands-on activities in the laboratory. The middle school offers Computer Essentials for eighth grade students who want to master basic skills in the areas of word processing, database management, spreadsheet applications, multimedia presentations, and Internet research. The Piedmont City School System does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability, or age in its programs and provides equal access to affiliated student organizations. In addition, arrangements can be made to ensure that the lack of English language proficiency is not a barrier to admission or participation. Inquiries regarding nondiscrimination policies should be directed to: Mike Hayes, Title II Coordinator 502 Hood Street West Piedmont, AL 36272 256-447-8831 Debra Ledbetter, 504 Coordinator 504 Hood Street Piedmont, AL 36272 256-447-7483 Revonda Pruitt, Title IX Coordinator 504 Hood Street Piedmont, AL 36272 256-447-7483 For more information contact Mark Mitchell at mmitchell@piedmont.k12.al.us regarding high school classes and Jennie Baer at jbaer@piedmont.k12.al.us.
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