SPRING 2022
Seeds On The Farm: A Local Author’s
Life
EASTER DEVOTIONAL Ron Lowery’s MAGIC CARPET
Monroe LOCAL MUSICIAN DOYLE TALLENT’S Brush With Death
Ingles Table
SPRING RECIPES
Gladiolus The National Garden Bureau Selects The Gladiolus To Showcase In 2022
FINEST QUALITY FURNITURE
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YEARS IN BUSINESS
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Bruce McCamish PHOTOGRAPHY GALLERY Every First Friday from March through December Open Gallery, 7th Floor of the Sunsphere 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Private showings available upon request. Stop by, enjoy the view, and say hello.
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Come shop the all new Sweetwater Flower Shop and indulge in delicious foods from Upstairs at the Mansion. Sweetwater Flower Shop Monday-Friday: 9am-5pm Saturday: 10am-3pm 423.337.6623 Upstairs at the Mansion Monday-Friday: 11am-4pm *Available for Private Parties 423.807.0541
118 W NORTH STREET, SWEETWATER, TN 37874 • 423.337.6623
MASTER GARDENER CRAPE MURDER & SOOTY MOLD
18 & 20
GLADIOLUS
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Contents features
DOYLE TALLENT Singer Songwriter and His Near Death Experience
Ingles Table Recipes
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LIGHTHOUSE COMMUNITY LIFE CENTER
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2 Bruce McCamish Opens Gallery In The Sunsphere
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MONROE LIFE SPRING 2022
40th Anniversary Of The 1982 World’s Fair
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RON
LOWERY’S
MAGIC
CARPE T
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departments 6 From The Publisher 58 East Tennessee Vein Clinic 68 East Tennessee Foundation Names New Leaders 69 Monroe Tourism 70 Tellico Plains
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8 Straightway Ministry
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Sarah Philpott Mom, Farmer’s Wife, Christian Writer, Dreamer, Schemer
SPRING 2022
MONROE LIFE
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EVEN FUN LOCAL FAMIL FOR YOUR
eT Our Favorittmas The Best of Chris
Ingles TaE GREAT RECIP
PUBLICATIONS: REACHING MORE HOMEOWNERS THAN ANY PUBLISHER IN ET
Two Hea Adoption
“THEN THE AND “CHR ADOPTION
From thePublisher We hope you’re having a wonderful spring! In this issue, we bring you seven delicious recipes from Ingles—like pineapple pulled pork tacos and deep fried chocolate Easter eggs. Expert gardener Gayle Fisher offers tips for crape myrtles and gladioli, and read her advice on how to protect your plants from sooty mold. Sharon Davis explains how she’s transforming a former drug den into a community life center called The Lighthouse—turning a place of darkness into a place of light. We also share the amazing story of my high school classmate, Bobby Hampton and Straightway Ministry.
REGIONAL MEDIA EXPERIENCE • MONROE LIFE BALLOON FESTIVAL
25 YEARS OF IN-HOUSE TELEVISION PRODUCTION: DOCUMENTARIES: KIPPY
We also feature the breathtaking photography of Ron Lowery, who flew a homemade plane along Lewis & Clark’s route across the country. We also show some of his wonderful pictures of Tennessee. Everyone knows spring is a wonderful time of the year for many reasons—but the most important reason is that we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ. In this issue, we share a beautiful devotional on the resurrection from very talented local author Sarah Philpott. We hope you enjoy the magazine! Whether an agency project or a magazine story we thank you for letting us love what we do!
TOURISM EXPERIENCE: ANAKEESTA • RIPLEY’S • ANDERSON COUNTY
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The Bingham Group Multi Media Campaign #2 Domestic Violence Campaign TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF SAFETY AND HOMELAND SECURITY 312 Rosa L. Parks Ave, Wm. R. Snodgrass TN Tower, 25th Floor, Nashville, TN 37243 Contract Number: 34901-00191 Contract Term: April 3, 2014 – April 2, 2019 Procuring state agency: Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security Megan Buell 615-251-8587 Megan.Buell@tn.gov The Bingham Group has a five-year contract with the State of Tennessee to create a domestic violence awareness campaign to include radio, television, visual print media, social media and other forms of non-traditional media.
TWENTY FIVE STATE CONTRACTS: ANTI-METH • DOMESTIC VIOLENCE • DON’T
Lisa Atkins-Bingham 6
MONROE LIFE SPRING 2022
Hard to watch, isn’t it? Make The Call, 1-800-356-6767 If you or someone you know is in an abusive relationship, make the call. www.pcat.org/programs/domestic-violence-helpline
This project is funded under an agreement with the State of Tennessee, Department of Finance and Administration, Office of Criminal Justice Programs a supported by Award #_2015-MU-BX-0042 awarded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, USDOJ.
R HOLIDAY / WINTE
2022
HOLIDAY / WINTER 2022
EVENTS FUN LOCAL FAMILY FOR YOUR
e Things Our Favorittmas Gifting The Best of Chris
FUN LOCAL EVENTS FOR YOUR FAMILY
Our Favorite Things
Life
The Best of Christmas Gifting
HOLID AY / WIN TER 202 2
FUN FOR LOCAL EV YOUR TS FAMEN ILY
Our
Life
Monro e Fa The Be vorite Th st of Ch ristmas ings Gifting Two
Heart Adopt warm ion St ing
“THEN or AND “CTHERE W ies ERE TH HRIST ADOPT ION STMAS IS AN REE” ORY”
Ingles Table
GREAT RECIPES TO TRY
Two Heartwarming Adoption Stories
le Ingles Tab ES TO TRY GREAT RECIP
ET
arming Two Heartw ries AdoptionRESto WERE THREE”
“THEN THERE WERE THREE” AND “CHRISTMAS IS AN ADOPTION STORY”
“THEN THE AS IS AN AND “CHRISTM RY” ADOPTION STO
Ingles Table
GREAT RECIPES TO
TRY
PUBLISHER
The Bingham Group President Lisa Atkins Bingham
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DI S PL A Y GR A PHI CS • E VE N T S • T RA DES HOWS • WEB S ITES
Graphic Designers Lisa Bingham Jason Bowers Cris Littleton Laura Woodson Contributing Writers Dr. Robert Allen Blaina Best Gayle Fisher Matt Hollingsworth Sarah Philpott
Y
BROWN • THE SEAHAWKS • GATLINBURG STRONG • SOCIAL MEDIA
Contributing Photographers Ron Lowery Bruce McCamish Advertising Sales Mignonne Alman Tel: 865.523.5999 mignonne@binghamgroup.com Subscription or Editorial Inquiries Tel: 865.523.5999 www.monroelife.com
TY
ON’T
BR A N D I N G : B R Y A N T B O A T S • E D F I N A N C I A L • C L A Y T O N
The Bingham Group, Inc. 11921 Kingston Pike, Suite 201 Knoxville, Tennessee 37934 www.binghamgroup.com
TEXT & DRIVE • ANTI-TOBACCO • DIABETES • TDOT • TRANSIT AGENCIES
SPRING 2022
MONROE LIFE
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Seeds on the Farm
a blanket of dirt. Deep in the ground. Away from the sunshine. Nestled in the darkness. This excerpt is from The Growing Season: A Year of Down-on-the-Farm Devotions by Sarah Philpott. Sarah resides on a farm that is set in McMinn and Monroe counties. You can find her book at all major retailers, including Amazon.
JOHN 3:16 God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. Seeds. They’re smooth and come in all different shapes and sizes. We grasp a packet of them, carefully chosen by the variety, and have a mindset of glorious expectation. MANIFOLD INCREASE. In your imagination, take a seed packet, pour the contents into the palm of your hand, and gaze at the handful of husks. Run your fingers across the hulls. These seeds are worthy—not necessarily for their present state (although many of us do enjoy eating sunflower and pumpkin seeds), but for the future. These individual seed casings hold life inside them. They are capsules of life just waiting to be placed into the soil, where they will sit for a bit of time and then grow into a new form.
A CREATION ANEW. Remember that field I love to gaze at while sitting at my farmhouse table? Right now, seeds are going into it. The temperature is just right—not too cold. The ground is just right—not too wet, and not too hard. The weather has been monitored, and conditions have been judged to be just right. The farmer knows the sun is gifting glorious spring rays to the land for just enough hours each day to warm the soil, so that come June we will have a crop of sweet corn. One of the farm guys is out on that old red Massey Ferguson, pulling a Ford two-row mechanical corn planter, planting seeds right into the rows of tilled soil. DROP. DROP. DROP. The seeds drop into the earth, one at a time. The blade on the corn planter opens the ground, creating a notch just big enough for a solitary seed to be buried into the ground, and the drive wheel covers the seed with
INTO THE DARK. BUT SOON INTO THE LIGHT. The seed will be altered from its original form. Leaving behind its old self in the ground. Emerging afresh. The life within each seed spends much time just waiting, patiently, for soil with the right temperature and the right level of moisture to awaken it from its slumber. The seed begins to swell as it absorbs the moisture surrounding the casing. Then, what is inside that casing begins the process of growth. The process of germination. We learned about it in school, right? The life form inside that casing divides. The roots burrow deep into the soil and the sprout rises, rises, rises until it bursts through the soil. That tiny sprout will eventually become a stalk of corn— housing multiple ears. Ready to be eaten. The solitary multiplied. Perfectly amazing, right? How the seed goes into the dark ground, where the old self is left behind—ceasing to be—so new life can rise.
RISE TO BEAR FRUIT. RISE TO PROSPER. Are you feeling a parallel yet? To our spiritual selves. And to the very foundation of our Christianity: the crucifixion, the burial, the rising. As Easter draws near, the time when we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus, let’s reflect on the miraculous act God ordained—and the miraculous sacrifice Jesus made so each and every one of us can have new life. If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come (2 Corinthians 5:17). Christ’s death and resurrection took place at a time ordained by God. The time was just right according to our Maker. And we celebrate His death and resurrection in the spring, the time of year when we reflect on the death of the old so the new can thrive. It all does seem a bit strange and counterintuitive—death and then life? Even in farm talk it sounds mystical. Imagine an unknowing person watching the farmer plant seeds into the darkness of the ground. It would seem to be a hopeless situation to an observer unlearned in scientific ways. Why would something be buried in order to be born again? Why would we anticipate life from death? And yet...God. The story of Easter. The ultimate death-to-life story. Following the crucifixion of Jesus, Joseph of Arimathea took the bloodstained body— now seemingly just the hull of a man—and wrapped it in a clean linen cloth. He placed the body of Jesus into the darkness of a tomb. A tomb cut into the side of a rock, with a boulder covering the entrance (see Matthew 27:57-60).
JESUS LAID TO REST IN TOTAL DARKNESS. Final. Story over. It seemed Jesus would stay in that darkness for eternity. But on the third day, early in the morning, Mary Magdalene, along with others, went to the tomb where Jesus was buried. Expecting nothing more than death—but finding life. An angel of the Lord appeared and said, “Do not be afraid, for I know that you seek Jesus who was crucified. He is not here, for he has risen, as he said. Come, see the place where he lay” (Matthew 28:5-6). From the darkness He arose, bringing to us the most beautiful, bountiful blessing of all—eternal life. He died so our sins could be forgiven. And He rose so life could continue.
The Loved Baby book is all about women feeling less alone after miscarriage, stillbirth, and ectopic pregnancy loss. It is filled with Christ-centered compassion + real talk. Sarah experienced two miscarriages & was completely unprepared for the physical and emotional turmoil. She created this book as a place for women like us to mourn and cherish the lovely little life that took root in our wombs, but now blooms in heaven. Others care for physical needs, but Loved Baby is to cradle the needs of our souls.
Farm gal, when we surrender ourselves to Christ, our God delights us with the expectation of what our growth can do to magnify His kingdom. On our farm, when those seeds are dropped into the soil, we have expectations for growth. For increase. For harvest. And our seeds do, most often, bring forth life. But it is the mighty and true farmer—God—who arranged for His Son, Jesus, to be buried so that the most glorious increase of all could emerge: everlasting life. FOR US. FOR OUR FUTURE GENERATIONS. MANIFOLD INCREASE. Thank You, Father, for so loving the world that You gave us Your only Son—so that all of us who believe will not perish but have everlasting life with You. I pray that as I scoop up seeds this spring and place them into the earth, I will be reminded of the holiness and magnificence symbolized in this simple, yet groundbreaking act. And may I be reminded each day that I must die to self in order to live in Christ. Amen.
Christian women who have known the unfathomable pain of pregnancy loss at any stage need this devotional. The writer Sarah Philpott is with you on your journey, and through her transparency regarding her own loss, recovery, and faith walk, she offers guidance on healing for mothers post-loss. —Autumn L. Carusillo, PHD, LCSW
THESE RECIPES ARE BROUGHT TO YOU BY INGLES, STARTED IN 1963 BY ROBERT P. INGLE AND COMMITTED TO THE COMMUNITIES THEY SERVE.
FARM TO TABLE n order to bring the freshest produce available to his customers Elmer Ingle used to visit local farmers in the early mornings, picking up only the best. Today, the store and the people look a little different but the produce doesn’t… everywhere you look the Ingles produce department has the freshest and the tastiest produce available, from local farmers just like Elmer and from around the world. Making sure you have the less traveled – best selection. We have an excellent variety of organic selections and a fresh produce prep area where we can core a pineapple, cut watermelon or put together the perfect combination of fresh vegetables for you, all with knowledgeable and friendly associates ready to help. Next time you visit your neighborhood Ingles, take a little more time to notice how much the tradition of the highest standards still remains with every fruit and vegetable.
INGLES….EXPECT MORE FROM YOUR LOCAL STORE. 10
MONROE LIFE SPRING 2022
RAVISHING RADISH SALAD Abby J
Shopping List 24 radishes, cut into quarters 6 green onions, sliced 2 garlic cloves, chopped 1/2 cup fennel, sliced thin 1/4 cup fresh dill, chopped
Instructions Place radishes in a large bowl and sprinkle with salt and pepper, toss to coat.
6 fresh basil leaves, chopped 2 tbsp. honey 1 tsp. pepper 1 tsp. salt 2 tbsp. champagne vinegar 1/4 cup olive oil 3/4 cup walnut pieces, toasted
Add onions, fennel, basil, and dill. In a small bowl, whisk oil, vinegar, honey, and garlic. Pour over salad, toss to coat. Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour. Sprinkle with walnuts just before serving.
www.ingles-markets.com/recipes/spring-radish-salad
SPRING 2022
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PINEAPPLE PULLED PORK TACOS Smokin’ Joe Lasher
For those of you “on the go”, here’s a delicious and impressive recipe for your next “Taco Tuesday”, or any night of the week. Enjoy! Instructions
Serves: 8 people Shopping List PULLED PORK TACOS 2 1/2 lb. pork tenderloin 1 (28 oz.) can pineapple chunks with juice 1/4 cup soy sauce 2 tbsp. apricot preserves 1/2 tsp. garlic powder 1/2 tsp. pepper 10 6” corn tortillas 1/4 cup fresh cilantro, chopped 8 oz. goat cheese 1/2 cup green onions, chopped 1/2 cup fresh pineapple, diced 1/2 cup fresh raspberries, diced
Place pork tenderloin in large crockpot Combine pineapple juice from can, soy sauce, preserves, garlic powder and pepper in a mixing bowl and mix thoroughly. Pour over the pork tenderloin and add all but ¾ cup pineapple chunks. Set crockpot on low and let cook for 6-7 hours. Pork must reach an internal temp of 150ºF, but for this recipe, I like to let go well past for tenderness. During the last 30 minutes, shred pork and let cook in juices the remaining time. Heat corn tortillas prior to serving. Add shredded pork to tortillas then spoon pineapple BBQ sauce over the pork.
Shopping List PINEAPPLE BBQ SAUCE 3/4 cup tomato sauce 3/4 cup reserved pineapple chunks 3 tbsp. apricot preserves 3 tbsp. brown sugar 1 tbsp. white wine vinegar 2 tbsp. lime juice Instructions Combine all ingredients in a blender or food processor and puree until smooth. Pour into a small saucepan and simmer over medium heat until sauce thickens.
www.ingles-markets.com/recipes/pineapple-pulled-pork-tacos
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DEREK’S DECADENT SMORES Chef Derek St. Romain This is a great recipe that provides an easy way to make intentional memories with family and friends! Everyone will love to get involved, and there is no wrong way to create your own delicious treat!
Shopping List
DEEP FRIED CHOCOLATE EASTER EGGS Chef Mark Keady Use a deep fryer if you have one. Do not use an air fryer. Make sure that the egg is completely coated before frying to avoid a meltoff in the fryer. The children won’t mind you raiding their Easter baskets if you turn their chocolate into these beauties! It’s fair food - at Easter! Shopping List
Whisk together the baking powder, 1 cup of flour and salt in a medium bowl. Put the remaining 1 cup of flour in a small bowl. 3. Pour the egg mixture into the flour mixture and whisk until combined. Cover and set aside for 15 minutes while the oil heats.
1. Be sure to freeze the eggs for at least two hours or overnight before starting this recipe!
4. Attach a deep fat fry thermometer to a large heavy-bottomed pot (see cook’s note). Add the 6 cups of oil and heat to 375°F over medium-high heat. Using two forks (or your hands) dredge an egg in the flour, then coat in the batter, dredge in the flour again and then coat in the batter. (This double batter creates a thicker coating to keep the egg from leaking when fried.) Gently put it into the oil, turn it almost immediately with a slotted spoon, so that it does not stick to the bottom. Repeat with remaining eggs. Cook, turning frequently until the crust is a light golden, about 2 minutes. Remove the eggs to a paper towel-lined plate, let sit for 5 minutes before serving.
2. Whisk together the milk, egg and 1 tbsp. oil in a small bowl or measuring cup.
5. Top with sifted powdered sugar, chocolate syrup or syrup of choice.
8 foil wrapped chocolate easter eggs (use any flavor you like) 6 cups canola oil and 1 tbsp. 2 cups all purpose flour 1 tsp. baking powder 1 cup of milk 1 egg pinch of kosher salt 1/2 cup powdered sugar, for garnish chocolate syrup, for garnish Instructions
www.ingles-markets.com/recipes/deep-fried-chocolate-easter-eggs
1 bag marshmallows 6 bars milk chocolate 1 box Honey Maid Graham Crackers 1 package premade Ingles brownies Toppings sea salt caramel sauce chocolate sauce butterscotch sauce mini chocolate chips fresh berries mint leaves Instructions Preheat oven 350°F. Cover a baking sheet with aluminum foil for an easy clean up. Break each honey graham in half and place on sheet, you can also use a large cookie to use as the base. Add a brownie and 1/3 a bar of chocolate to each graham cracker, and top with a marshmallow. Cook in oven for 3-5 minutes or until marshmallow is brown on top. Top each S’more with your choice of decadent toppings and serve immediately. Notes: Feel free to mix the chocolate bars up with sea salt chocolate, mint chocolate, or even raspberry chocolate for a fun twist. www.ingles-markets.com/recipes/ derek-s-decadent-s-mores
SPRING 2022
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GLAZED SMOKED SALMON BAGEL BITES Clark and Suzy Neal with Unicoi Preserves
Instructions:
Shopping List 1 bag everything bagel crisps 2 cups baby arugula, plus additional for garnish 4 oz. log plain goat cheese 4 oz. smoke-roasted wild sockeye salmon Zest of 1 Meyer lemon, for garnish 2 tablespoons Unicoi Preserves Apple Cider Pepper Spread 2 tablespoons Meyer lemon juice Zest of 1 Meyer lemon 2 tablespoons Laura Lynn olive oil 1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
Place apple cider pepper spread in a microwave-safe bowl and microwave 10 seconds to liquefy. Remove skin from salmon, then use a basting brush to glaze apple cider pepper spread over salmon. Cut into bite-size pieces. Make the dressing by whisking all dressing ingredients together in a small bowl. Toss in arugula, set aside. Top bagel crisp with a few leaves of dressed arugula, a 1/4 inch slice of goat cheese, and a piece of salmon. Garnish with a small pinch of Meyer lemon zest and serve on a platter garnished with reserved arugula.
www.ingles-markets.com/recipes/glazed-smoked-salmon-bagel-bites
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SWEET MEMORIE’S HOMEMADE SOFT PRETZELS Author: Sweet Memories
Shopping List 1 pound (1 loaf) white frozen dough 1 tbsp vegetable oil, (for bowl) 2/3 cup baking soda 2 Eggs, beaten with 1 tbsp water Coarse Salt Instructions
SUZY’S FUZZY GREYHOUND COCKTAIL Author: Clark and Suzy Neal with Unicoi Preserves
Shopping List 2 oz. ruby red grapefruit vodka 2 oz. grapefruit juice, freshly squeezed 1 oz. simple syrup 1 tbsp. aquafaba 2 ice cubes 2 grates of grapefruit zest Instructions 1. Place vodka, grapefruit juice, simple syrup, aquafaba and ice cubes into a cocktail shaker, secure lid firmly. 2. Shake 1 minute. 3. Strain drink into a cocktail coupe 4. Finish with a few grates of grapefruit zest
Notes: To make simple syrup, mix 1 cup granulated sugar with 1 cup water. Bring to a boil to dissolve sugar. Cool and refrigerate in a jar. What the heck is aquafaba?! It’s the brine drained from a can of chickpeas that’s virtually flavorless. Aquafaba is vegan and can replace egg whites in cocktails to give them froth and a nice mouth feel. I created this cocktail in memory of all the rescued greyhounds Clark and I adopted over the years. As greyhounds age, their sleek coat gets thicker and fuzzier. Cheers to you, Fox!
www.ingles-markets.com/recipes/suzys-fuzzy-greyhound-cocktail
Defrost the bread dough by placing it in a large bowl that has been wiped down with oil. Cover with plastic wrap and leave in a warm place to rise for about 2 hours. When dough has risen, knead into a ball, and cover again while you preheat the oven to 450°F. Cut dough into 8 pieces and roll them out into thin ropes, twisting the two ends to form a pretzel shape. Add baking soda to a large pot of water and bring to a rolling boil. Boil each pretzel for 30 seconds per side. Transfer pretzels to a baking sheet, brush with egg wash, and sprinkle with salt. Bake for 10-15 minutes, until golden brown. www.ingles-markets.com/recipes/sweetmemories-s-homemade-soft-pretzels
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Children’s Festival of Reading May 21st from 10 am to 5pm World’s Fair Park festival lawn
From 10 am to 5pm that same day, May 21st, you can take your kids to the Children’s Festival of Reading on the World’s Fair Park festival lawn. The event is free, and there are several popular writers scheduled to attend. Bumpas said, “The World’s Fair in 1982 ran from May to October, so this is just the kickoff.” All of Knoxville’s annual events during that part of the year will also follow this theme, celebrating the World’s Fair. Finally, there will be an ending event in October. “You Should Have Been
There” Exhibition March 19 through October 9 Museum of East Tennessee History
The Museum of East Tennessee History will show an exhibition on the event called “You Should Have Been There.” Check it out between now and October 9.
Knoxville Celebrates the 40th Anniversary of the 1982 World’s Fair KICKOFF MAY 21st Throughout 2022, Knoxville plans to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the World’s Fair it hosted in 1982. The anniversary kicks off with a celebration on May 21st from 10am to 9pm at World’s Fair Park. Kim Bumpas, President of Visit Knoxville, described it as, “our commemoration and celebration of the 40th anniversary of the 1982 World’s Fair.”
Learn more about the celebration at worldsfairknoxville.com.
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Kim explained that the 1982 World’s Fair “put Knoxville on the map… It celebrated everything that was Knoxville.” Knoxville’s iconic Sunsphere was built for the event. The Fair was also one of the first premiers of a technology that you probably use every day—touchscreens.
“We live our dreams. We make them come true. Our ideas and energies combine in a dynamic force—the kind of force that made the developments and breakthroughs and discoveries in this building possible.” –President Ronald Reagan, Dedication of the US Pavilion
BUTCHER SHOP Taste the Difference
No Steroids No Hormones ALL NATURAL
865-229-5000 | www.HydeFarms.net 7431 Highway 411 S., Greenback, TN Monday - Friday 9am-6pm Saturday 9am-5pm
SPRING 2022 MONROE LIFE
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PROTECT YOUR CRAPE MYRTLE FROM
“Crape Murder”
Crape myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica) is one of the most useful flowering shrubs/trees grown in Tennessee. It provides abundant summer color with a minimum of mainentance. Crape myrtle is ideally suited for community plantings since unlike the Bradford pear it is long-lived, withstands droughts after becoming established and is relatively free of disease and insects.
They need to be planted in full sun for abundant flowering and strong growth. Water your new myrtles thoroughly at planting time and once a week, in the absence of rainfall, for the first two months after planting. Watering also enhances flower production during dry periods. Crape myrtles will also tolerate adverse soil conditions, but as with most plants you’ll have better success if you have fertile rich soil. Mulching around the myrtle will prevent weed growth and help to retain moisture. Colors range from red and pink to lavender and white. Sizes vary from the dwarf (3 to 5 feet) mid-size (5 to 10 feet) standard (10 to 20 feet) and tree (20 feet or more). This is an excellent plant for gardeners that want a low-maintenance landscape. The sculptural form of the myrtle can be appreciated in the winter as well as its handsome bark. Because the bloom colors are so vivid it is a good idea to choose one color in a cluster and use it exclusively. This plant flowers on new stems of the season so you can prune plants any time during the late winter or early spring before growth begins without loss of flower buds.
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Avoid pruning in early fall before the first frost, because pruning forces new growth and keeps the plant from going dormant. Pruning however is not essential for flowering. Some of the most spectacular floral displays can be seen on old, unpruned trees along the roadside. If you want a bush shape you need to prune the stems back to about 6 inches above the ground in February each year. Severe pruning will not kill or injure a healthy plant. My friend, Sally, planted four white Crape Myrtles. They are at the entrance of her driveway. The trees were all planted at the same time. The ones on the right are about 10 feet tall with a lively spray of blooms. The ones on the left have been constantly pruned to look like a bush with no blooms at all. Landscapers call this butchering of crape myrtles as “crape murder,” whacking the plant without any consideration of shape, flower or form. The natural grace of the tree has been spoiled. Her reasoning for pruning so severely was “they blocked her view when pulling into traffic.” She should have chosen a low growing plant. It makes me sad that we don’t have landscape police to prevent the ‘Crape Murder’ problem. I would be in favor of supporting a field officer except when they police my yard, I would end up in barberry prison. By Gayle Fisher MASTERGARDNER
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By Gayle Fisher MASTER GARDNER
NEW KNOX GALLERY GALLERY Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts launches a new gallery in downtown Knoxville. The Arrowmont Gallery is the first permanent off-campus exhibition space for the School.
CRAPE MYRTLE
SOOTY MOLD Yuck, what is this nasty black slime on my plant? Sorry, lady you’re dealing with Sooty Mold, which is caused by pest infestations. Small sucking insects with piercing mouths, including aphids, whiteflies, mealybugs, and scale. The insects secrete a sweet, sticky substance called honeydew, which coats the leaves and stems, or branches. The honeydew coating attracts fungal spores, which adhere to the honeydew left by the insects. Once a few sooty mold fungal spores are present, the fungus quickly spreads and affects the whole plant, making it appear as if it is covered in grime and soot. Now that you know what it is, how do you get rid of it? Get started early this spring. If you had it last year, it will return. Not only is it ugly, the dark color and the thickness of the fungal growth blocks photosynthesis, which keeps the chlorophyll from functioning properly. This can eventually cause the leaves to wither and die. Though the leaves of affected plants are sometimes casualties of sooty mold fungus, the plants, shrubs, and trees live on long after the fungal growth has come and gone. Soot can be removed, leaves can be regrown, and plants that have
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been the victims of major infestations can make miraculous recoveries with proper treatment. Spray the plant with neem oil, which disrupts the hormones of the insects preventing them from molting and growing through their various stages. It also disrupts their ability to lay eggs, therefore reproducing. I have also read that it messes with their digestion, so they are sucking less on your plants. Also, you can prune the most affected leaves and branches, but do not put them into compost pile. This is a fungus so a systemic fungicide, like Bonide, can be applied to the base of the plant. If you have roses, you are probably already using this product. Spread it on the ground under the plant, so that the roots can take the fungicide throughout the plant. My daughter had this problem and since the plant was small and close to her house she used a hose to wet the plant, then hand washed each leaf with a rag and a bucket of warm water and Dawn dish detergent. (She had seen the commercials where it was used to wash animals caught in oil spills.) She said she had to wash both sides of the leaf. It was harder than expected but she had success.
INAUGURAL EXHIBITION ARTISTS Jonathan Adams Jennifer Allen Erin Anfinson Adam Atkinson Tina Curry Chandra DeBuse Bill Griffith Dani Guillen Chris Hoehle Everett Hoffman Jeana Eve Klein Maia Leppo Ashton Ludden John Polly Justin Rothshank Joshua Shorey Mary Welch Thompson Katherine Wagner Kimberly Winkle
110 South Gay Street Knoxville, Tennessee 37902 865-436-5860 arrowmont.org/arrowmont-gallery
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E
Gladiolus
ach year, the National Garden Bureau selects plants to showcase. These plants are chosen because they are popular, easy-to-grow, widely adaptable, genetically diverse, and versatile. The 2022 year’s plant list includes the Gladiolus.
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flower farmers, and home gardeners are finding new and creative ways to put these flowers front and center.
Generations of gardeners, from Maine to California, have planted these summerblooming bulbs into their gardens in spring and been delighted by the gorgeous flower spikes that appear just a few months later.
Named for the shape of their leaves, gladioli are from the Latin word “gladius,” meaning sword. Two of the common name are “sword lilies” or “Glads,” they are relatively easy to grow and ideal for summer cut flower arrangements. Gladioli are also easy to divide and replant, making them a perfect flower for sharing with fellow gardeners.
Buckets of long-stemmed Glads are a late-summer tradition, and they can be found at almost any county fair or farmer’s market. Gladioli are exotic. Most are native to Africa and other arid countries around the Mediterranean. Plant breeders didn’t begin working with gladioli until the late 1800s, but they have had great success. Today’s bulbs are far showier than those that grow in the wild and the color options are simply incredible. No wonder floral designers,
All varieties are well known for their height and showy summer blooms. With varieties ranging from 2 to 6 feet tall, all presenting neatly tiered blossoms. Color varieties of gladioli range from soft pastels to bold jewel tones in both solids and bi-colors, making the gladiolus a versatile addition to any design. I have three colors in my garden. One is a pink and white bi-color, a beautiful red and one a pure white. I love my red; it is sizzling. I used the white for my daughter’s wedding
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in June. They made beautiful arrangement that held up under the hot sun. Glads prefer full sun, but will accept partial shade. These bulbs are tolerant of clay, loam, and sand, and thrive in any well-drained soil enhanced with a little mulch. Start planting in the middle of the spring season and continue to plant every two weeks until the middle of July for blooming flowers throughout the summer. I plant mine 6 inches deep and find that rarely do they need staking. Since they are bulbs they come with a first year food source stored inside. This allows you to plant anywhere the first year and they will bloom. If you want to treat them as annuals, they can be pulled up and discarded after blooming. If you need them to return they need sunshine and the blades cannot be cut down till fall after a frost.
By Gayle Fisher MASTERGARDNER
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LIGHTHOUSE COMMUNITY LIFE CENTER
JOURNEY OF RESTORATION It was almost six years ago when Monroe County native Sharon Davis had a vision of restoration, of bringing life back to a place that was once a shining anchor in the community on the south side of Madisonville, located on the Hwy 411 corridor. The former Holiday Motor Lodge caught the eye and broke the heart of Ms. Davis. This heartbreak took her down a path she could never have imagined. She remembers pulling over and observing the open drug activity in the parking lot, thinking there was so much more opportunity and potential for this motel, and most importantly, for the people living there. It has been an amazing journey that she and many others have been on... Some might refer to it as a labor of love! Sharon—a graduate of Tellico Plains High School—was raised in the Mt. Vernon community and has driven by this motel for as long as she can remember. Prior to relocating back to Monroe County, Sharon was a Vice President of Human Resources and was also a flight attendant. Throughout her life, Sharon has always looked through the lens of what could be versus what is not. She would describe herself as a visionary, looking beyond what most people would discard. She admits she tried to move on from what she had seen at the Motor Lodge but could not.
THIS IS HER STORY.
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Behind each story, there is always an inspiration, and this is how the story begins... I (Sharon Davis) remember driving by and thinking, “There, but for the grace of God go I.” That could be me living there. Individuals would be in the parking lot openly doing things that were very destructive to themselves and their families, especially the children that were living there, and that was when my heart began to break.
I told my mother that I didn’t understand why no one had addressed these issues and why we as a community would allow this to go on. So later that week, when my mother finally responded, I will never forget her words. As she was sitting in her chair reading her Bible and devotional, she looked up at me and said in her gentle voice, “Sharon, maybe God wants you to do something about it.”
For some reason, I could not get those images out of my mind. So, during that week, I would talk to my mother about what I was seeing. My mother, Doris Davis, has such a sweet, gentle spirit. She would listen to me but never responded until later that week.
It was at that very moment I felt an overwhelming sense of conviction that broke my heart and propelled me into action. I thought, why should I expect someone else to do something that I was not willing to do myself. I began to pray and seek God’s guidance and wisdom on how to respond
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to what he was showing me. Immediately, I began to cross paths with people who had like-minded hearts and a desire to serve the broken in our community. The Recovery Group, which was an outreach ministry of the Englewood Church of God, along with other members in the Monroe and McMinn communities, came together with one heart and one vision to form Restoration Place Ministries. We began working on this old motel, which had formerly been a place of darkness for many and would then take on a new name—the Lighthouse—which was chosen to symbolize a beacon of hope and restoration to transform lives and also to honor my precious mother, who collects lighthouses, as she was the original inspiration behind this project.
Before restoration.
Picture 2: Middle - Restoration begins...All 20 rooms demoed out. Front clips removed to begin renovations with grant funding. Bottom: The Lighthouse begins to offer hope with exterior renovations to include new windows, doors, vinyl siding, stairs, banister, and new reception area. New metal roof completed for the office area made possible by donations and volunteer support.
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As the project continued to move forward, the group would later partner with True Purpose Ministries, based in Blount County, to transition this old motel into a community life center to serve Monroe County and the surrounding area. I believe we are all in a position in life to inspire and to create value in others. Likewise, we should keep our hearts and minds open to allow others to inspire us. In the beginning, there were several challenges to overcome, but my faith and persistence, along with support from others, kept me focused on the right thing to do. As I started spending time at the motel and getting to know the residents living there, I quickly learned that most of them were in a very dark, sad place. I distinctly remember being surrounded one day by a group of people who were actively using drugs, and they were not very happy that this lady had shown up to restore the motel. One of them got in my face, trying to intimidate me to leave, and the first words that came out of my mouth were, “I love you, and God loves you. What you are doing to yourself and your family needs to stop. I will be your biggest supporter if you are ready for change, but you will not continue to do what you are doing at this motel. This is going to become a place of hope and restoration, not destruction and darkness.” From that point on, I’d earned the nickname “That Lady.” Although I had been given a vision, I lacked the resources to take on such a large project, but God sent those in his own time. I learned God was not checking my bank account; he was checking my faith account. As the transition was taking place, there were people who were very mean and intimidating to me, but God had a plan for that also. Serving others can sometimes involve suffering, but I kept being persistent
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and not taking this experience personally, knowing that loving others would be the only way to create positive change. I even received many threats telling me to stop the work I was doing. With some of the initial challenges I was facing, I wondered how this vision would come to fruition. Soon, God crossed my path with a man who had spent 40 years in prison and knew how to stand up to bullies. This man had restored his life in prison when he began a personal relationship with God, and he wanted to be a part of this project to help others restore their lives. After being released from prison, he was homeless, but he wanted to use the skills he had learned while in prison to help with this project. So, with very few resources, we started working. Almost six years later, he continues to give of his time and talent as a volunteer every day. There are many examples of God’s hand moving and sending his provision with this project. One example involves the roof of the office area. Early on in our work, we received a lot of rain, and the leaks were so bad in the office area that we had to keep buckets under the drips and empty them hourly. The rain poured month after month, and volunteers repeatedly told me, “Sharon, we need a new roof.” My response was always prayer, as I knew we lacked the funds for a new roof. At this point, all I had was my faith, but I knew God would provide eventually. I have often heard that when something is God’s will, it is also his bill. While we were waiting on a financial miracle, I kept pushing forward with things that were within my control. I began to research what was needed for the roof repair and to get quotes for the materials. Eventually, an owner of a metal company called me back and scheduled a time to come out to give
me a quote. The day he came out to the motel, we shared with him the vision, and I could tell by his response he was intrigued. He measured the roof, and we discussed the materials needed. As the meeting concluded, he told me something I was not expecting. He said, “Ms. Sharon, I’ll tell you what I am going to do. I am going to donate the material for the roof. Also, here is some money to go buy some tools.” I was speechless. This job would have cost thousands of dollars! But God wasn’t finished with this man yet, because what happened next was even more amazing. As he was leaving and getting ready to open his truck door, he stopped, turned around, and said, “Oh, Ms. Sharon, I am going to send you the roofers too.” UNBELIEVABLE... As the project progressed, I realized we needed the support and leadership of a more established organization. I was introduced to Pastor Jeremy Graham and his wife Lynsey, the founders of True Purpose Ministries. Mr. Graham and I started collaborating and praying about working together on the motel. In the meantime, I worked with TPM to open a pregnant women’s center in Vonore called True Purpose Ministries Restoration Place for pregnant mothers struggling with addiction. I worked on this project while simultaneously working on the motel.
Did You Know? TRUE PURPOSE MINISTRIES RESTORATION PLACE At the Restoration Place, you can share your new beginning with your children because we treat the family as a whole!
Every 15 minutes a baby is born who is impacted by Opiates. Since opening in August of 2018, 22 babies have been born drug free. In 2020, I wrote my first grant application for True Purpose Ministries to purchase the motel and continue moving forward with renovations to transform it into the Lighthouse Community Life Center. Twenty-seven applications were submitted to the State of Tennessee, and the Lighthouse was one of seven chosen, receiving $325,000. This funding gave us the momentum to fasttrack the project towards completion. However, another unexpected delay later in 2020, the Covid pandemic, created material and labor shortages and supply chain delays. Since receiving my first grant, I, as Community Outreach Director for TPM, have continued to seek funding from grants and other sources. I was awarded a second grant to assist with the operational expenses to bring the project to completion, which has been extremely challenging with the unanticipated increase cost of materials. The Lighthouse is part of a three phase model to offer various services to those in need. The second phase will include a Homeless
Service Center, and the third phase will be a Business Center to offer employment. Most recently, TPM received funding from the Monroe County Commission and a private donor to relocate a triple wide mobile unit donated by Chota to serve as an emergency resource for people experiencing sudden homelessness. Despite the many challenges faced on this project, I continue to push forward to identify best practices and the support system needed to fulfill this vision. Once the Lighthouse is operational, TPM has received notification that a third grant will be made available to assist with ongoing operational costs to provide services to the community. TPM anticipates opening the Lighthouse Community Life Center in July of 2022, notwithstanding any additional delays with materials, with continued efforts focused on phase two and three. A formal ceremony will be scheduled to publicly recognize and thank all of the individuals who have been a part of this amazing journey of restoration...and in all things, “To God Be The Glory!”
If you would like to help: Main Office: 2628 Morganton Road, Maryville, TN 37801 Office: 865.681.4861 Email: tpmact@gmail.com
Tennessee State-Licensed Treatment
Our services include an initial “Bio-Psychosocial” Assessment that will equip our trained Staff to implement an Individual Treatment Plan for each Client. Our Curriculum with Individual and Group Therapy Sessions give each Woman the capabilities to live a long, drug free life. Bringing the Spiritual Back to Recovery Our Higher Power is that of Jesus Christ, who is presented to everyone that enrolls into our program with love and in a non-discriminatory fashion. Our model is 12-months long, where each student will have the opportunity to become free from the chains of addiction through Pastoral Discipleship and long-term accountability. Job Training and Readiness Our Job Training model prepares women to learn and refine certain skills to equip them for future job placement. Our Vision True Purpose Ministries Restoration Place is a faith-based, long term addiction recovery program providing Evidence-Based treatment and housing to Pregnant Women and their Children in a Therapeutic Community Environment. Our Mission Is to Rehabilitate expecting Mothers struggling with Substance Abuse by providing a Jesus-Christ Centered, Residential Program that offers hope, healing, education and life skills necessary to lead a life of lasting sobriety and fulfill their God-given True Purpose to become the Mother that God created them to be. SPRING 2022
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Shop for Spring! We have many new styles to refresh your wardrobe and home, or for gift giving. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram for updates.
Tuesday-Saturday 10:30am-5:30pm 423-536-7046 | 107 E. Morris St, Sweetwater facebook.com/DogwoodLaneBoutique
Mayor:Glenn Augusta Davis Mayor: Moser CityRecorder Recorder: Sherri McCrary : Sherri McCrary Alderman: James Bledsoe, Board Members: Fred Cagle
Mayor
Glenn Moser
Recorder
Sherri Anderson
Board Members
Fred Cagle Augusta Davis Edward Dawson Linda Hensley Scott Hunt
Fred Cagle, Augusta Edward Dawson, Linda Davis, Hensley, Scott Hunt, Charlie McDonald Linda Hensley and Susan Saunders
CITY HALL: HALL: 423.442.9416 423.442.9416 CITY
Visit energyright.com for many home energy resources
Join us on Sat., Oct. 1 for our 82nd Annual Meeting
More details will be released at a later time. Follow us on social media or visit www.flec.org for updates.
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Real Estate Closings through Tellico Title Services
e s i u r C -in
EVERY 2ND FRIDAY NIGHT APRIL-OCTOBER
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By Matt Hollingsworth
Straightway Ministry GOD TRANSFORMED BOB HAMPTON FROM A DRUG ADDICT INTO A LEADER WHO HAS HELPED CHANGE MANY LIVES FOR THE BETTER.
B
ob Hampton is a well-dressed, friendly man with graying hair and a soft voice. Speaking with a slight Southern accent, he welcomes me to the home. Looking at him, I would have never guessed that he had spent 35 years as a drug addict and had been to jail for armed robbery. I have just arrived at StraightWay Ministry, a two-story brick home where men go to recover from the devastation of drug addiction. Bob Hampton, smiling, greets me at the front. He and his wife, Lisa, live in the home, not as students, but as founders and owners.
Bob has been clean for over 11 years. Five years ago, in 2016, he founded StraightWay to help recovering addicts. He’s a man whose life has been completely turned around. He bids me through the front door, and we find a quiet spot where he can share his story.
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As a teenager, Bob wasn’t someone who would fit the stereotype of a drug user. “Growing up, I loved sports… It’s what I lived for back in those days,” he tells me. “I’m from a good family. I was raised right, and I knew right from wrong.” Despite his upbringing, Bob was already using drugs by the time he was in high school. I ask him how he first fell into addiction, and he says, “I started out like most people did in the 70’s… experimenting with different things… trying new things out.” He got married and had his first son when he was only 17. This marriage, however, wouldn’t last long. In high school, he had only used drugs occasionally, but his addiction grew worse when he went to college. During this time, he got divorced, and he committed his first felony. Some fellow college students owed him money for drugs, so he kicked their door in and took what they owed him.
He had barely gone down the road when he was arrested by a SWAT team. Bob got lucky and was only given probation, but he couldn’t stay out of trouble. A few years later, he was arrested for armed robbery, and since he was still on probation, he was potentially facing 56 years in prison. Now in his early 20’s, Bob sat in his cell, the horrifying specter of lifelong imprisonment looming overhead. Not knowing what else to do, he decided to take his own life. But before he did so, he sat down to read a Bible that was in his cell. The book would change his life. Bob recalls, “I just kept reading, and then I would stop, and I would pray.” He remembered family members telling him not to put God to the test. Nevertheless, as he was reading, he prayed, “God, I really want to believe in you… If you would just show me that you were real, I would believe, and I would just follow you the rest of my life.” Later, as Bob slept, God gave him a vision of him and his brother driving in the mountains. They were surrounded by demons, but a shield around the car protected them. In the vision, Bob’s brother was frightened, but Bob just said, “Don’t worry about all this stuff. We’re of the Lord. They aren’t going to hurt us.” His brother responded, “Are you sure?”
That question was all it took. Bob’s faith wavered, and the shield began to puncture. The demons were starting to get through, but Bob said, “No, my faith is strong,” and the shield became solid again. When Bob woke, he said, “Lord, I asked you to show me something, and you showed me that it’s all about faith… I’ve got to believe. I’ve got to trust you.” Bob put this lesson into action—he asked the Lord to save him. He experienced many blessings during the next few years. He says, “The Lord showed all kinds of miracles and grace with the court system.” He’d been facing 56 years in prison but was released after just three. It seems like a perfect story, yet things don’t always work out so cleanly. When Bob got out of prison, instead of relying on God to change his life, he forgot the Lord and turned away. “It just kept getting worse from that time on,” he says. What kept him from turning back to God? Bob explains, “I was so ashamed because [God] had shown me all this stuff when I was younger, and I turned away from him… I was ashamed to ask him for help again… I think that’s a lie that the devil tells all of us: ‘You’re not worthy to ask for help.’” Bob spent a total of twelve years in prison. During this time, he lost relationship after relationship. He would try to get better sometimes and would beat his addiction for a while, yet the craving would always return, and he would inevitably fall back into old patterns. At some point Bob realized that the problem wasn’t society or anybody else—the problem was him. When he was 45, after more than three decades of addiction, Bob grew sick and tired of being sick and tired. He’d run from God
for so long, but finally, he repented, asking for God’s help and saying, “Whatever you want me to do, I’ll do.” After that day, Bob has never looked back. He entered a rehab program, graduating in 2011. While there, God gave Bob the idea for StraightWay, so after graduating, he got a job and began saving money. Finally in 2016, now seven years clean, Bob bought a building in Madisonville and founded the ministry to help men recovering from addiction. Recently, they’ve moved to a larger facility in Athens, and now they are the largest rehab home in the 10th Judicial District.
When people thank him for what StraightWay does, Bob simply smiles and responds, “It ain’t me. It’s Jesus.” If you want to help, you can donate over their website or reach out to them about volunteering. Their web address is
straightwayministry.com, Phone: 423-371-0269
Bob explains, “I wanted everyone who wanted help to get it because I knew personally how hard it was to get started once you’ve been to prison or jail…” He explains the difficulty such people face when trying to find jobs or homes even if they are genuinely trying to turn their lives around. People don’t want to hire former drug addicts, and without a job, it’s harder for them to stay out of trouble. After a new student’s first week in the home, Bob will help him find a job which will give him structure. Bob wants students to have the skills to be financially independent, so the ministry provides students with classes on money management, life skills, time management, and parenting. Most of all, however, Bob wants to help his students spiritually. “I tell them upfront what [the program] is all about, and it’s about them getting a personal relationship with Jesus Christ,” he says. Jesus was the only one who could break Bob’s addiction, so now Bob wants to see his students come to know Christ. To this end, they go to church services and attend Bible studies 4 times a week. Bob has seen countless students get saved and be baptized, their lives forever changed.
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Isaac Anderson organized the first congregation of Madisonville Presbyterian Church in 1822. He is also the founder of Maryville College. 34
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Historic Narrative By
DR. ROBERT ALLEN The oldest church building in Madisonville is the Presbyterian Church. It sits directly across Warren Street from what is called the Kefauver House–a building owned in the 1850s by an elder in that church. The Church was first organized by Rev Isaac Anderson, in 1822 who was the founding president of Maryville College. This year the Church will celebrate its two hundredth anniversary with events throughout 2022. The present building was dedicated in 1897. It’s a Neo-Romanesque brick structure, noted for its stained glass windows and twin bell-towers. The bell that hangs in its eastern tower has a long, long history. The history of the bell of Madisonville Presbyterian Church begins with the birth of Jessie Melville in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1840, the daughter of Oliver H. Melville and Mary Anne Lauriston, his wife. Oliver was very likely caught up in the Foreclosures that forced so many Scots off their land in the late 18th and early 19th centuries and was forced to leave his home in central Scotland to seek work elsewhere. It appears that Jessie’s mother died soon after her birth. Her father, who had become a ship’s captain, left her in the care of his unmarried sister, Cathrine M. Melville, a music teacher in Edinburgh. Making a living teaching music, however, was not easy in Scotland at the time. The tradition of the Reform Church, the Presbyterian Kirk of Scotland, limited church music to unaccompanied singing.
The only public instrumental music that young Jessie was likely to have heard was the church bells of St Giles Cathedral. That 13th century cathedral had at the time a 23 bell carillon, a clock that struck the hours and quarters. When Jessie was six, a great bell to toll the hours was added to the church clock. The great church bells of the ancient capital made a deep impression on the child, as did her aunt’s music lessons. Jessie’s nickname, “Little Star” probably comes from the song “Twinkle, twinkle Little Star.” which was popular in a setting by Mozart. In the spring of 1850, sailing with her brother, Cathrine M. Melville immigrated to the United States and Jessie went with them. Oliver Melville returned to his career at sea, and Cathrine soon found work, teaching music at Bolivar Academy in Madisonville, her niece traveling there with her. Things did not go well for Jessie however. She had contracted tuberculosis, a contagious disease that in the 19th century was almost always fatal. In February of the following year, Little Star died of that disease at the age of 11. Attended by her aunt who had taken temporary leave from her job at Bolivar Academy to tend to her niece, and delirious with fever in her last moments, Jessie said she wished to hear again the bells of Edinburgh. She was buried in what was then the burying ground of Madisonville Presbyterian Church and is now known as Madisonville’s City Cemetery (on Warren St. past the public library) where her lonely tombstone remains. Saving her money, over a year later, her aunt Catherine ordered a church bell cast in memory of her young niece who so loved the music of church bells. It was cast by the firm of Jones and Hitchock, of Troy, New York. The bell was presented to Madisonville Presbyterian Church when the building was near the Cemetery on the east side of town. Little Star’s Bell hangs now in the east tower of the present church, across town. It was first rung officially on Easter of 1853. The inscription on the bell, written by Jessie’s aunt reads:
Little Star, The sweetness of music Will find you No matter how far. One is reminded of the dying words of perhaps the greatest musician who ever lived, Johan Sebastian Bach. Surrounded by his numerous children, all crying, Bach said, “Do not weep for me. I go to where the music comes from.”
JESSIE’S SONG I hear the bells of old St Giles So deep, so solemn ringing. The saints are singing, we must go Join in the joyous singing. We sing the psalms that David sang We sing them sweet and clear, The little voice, among those bells– The child I am will disappear. He lost a child, King David did, His little son, not grown to three. He wept to God, and David’s tears Fell salt into the salty sea. We’ve sailed the sea, and in a storm Heard shore-bells warning us of shoals. As Jesus saved his friends from harm When winds would snuff their flickering souls. Aunt Catherine dear, tonight my chest Burns like a lanthorn full of fire That lights me on my way to church, Where bells will sing as God’s sweet choir This breath of pain will just last me, Through Edinburgh’s maze of streets Where golden angels from the spire Tred fearful storms with golden feet. The sun is setting. Blood and gold. Fill up the sky like St Giles’ bells. Come meet me where the music rolls Beyond all time and place and death. Poem: Dr. Robert Allen
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100th Anniversary Of The Existing Church Building, Built In 1897.
200th Anniversary SCHEDULE OF EVENTS: Established in 1822, Madisonville Presbyterian Church (MPC) was the first church organized in Monroe County. In commemoration of its bicentennial, MPC will be presenting several special events which are free and open to the public throughout the year. All activities take place at the Madisonville Presbyterian Church, 201 W. Main Street, Madisonville.
June 11
May 15
Pianist Pamela Madden, a cancer survivor, will perform a Gratitude Concert at the Church on Sunday, May 15, 1:30 p.m. The concert is free and open to the public.
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Knoxville Pipes and Drums ensemble. The Knoxville Pipes and Drums is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to foster and promote Scottish bagpiping and drumming, and related Celtic arts. The band competes at both Grade 4 and Grade 5 levels in Highland Games throughout the southeast. For more information: knoxvillepipesanddrums.org
The sound of the Madisonville Presbyterian Church bell still rings out to call townspeople to Sunday morning worship. The bell was presented to the church in memory of 11-yearold Jessie Melville, an immigrant who was born in Edinburgh, Scotland and died in Madisonville in 1851. Pictured, left to right, are Erica Murphy, Eva Murphy, Mia Burchell, Layla Burchell, and Jack Evans.
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Out Available Meetings
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o Avenue TN 37331
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FATHER, SOLDIER, SILVERSMITH,BLACKSMITH, STATESMAN, AND CREATOR OF THE CHEROKEE SYLLABARY. NEW 2.7 MILLION DOLLAR EXHIBIT
Advanced media technologies and electronics enhance visitors’ enjoyment of this all new exhibit. It portrays the Cherokee life and the legacy of Sequoyah in an all new multi-million dollar museum. Open Year Round Mon - Sat: 9am - 5pm Sunday: Noon - 5pm 423-884-6246 seqmus@tds.net Highway 360, Vonore, Tennessee Owned and Operated by the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians
Sundays: 7am - 3pm Mon-Wed: 8am - 3pm Thurs-Sat: 7am - 8pm
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Doyle Tallent By Matt Hollingsworth
When Doyle Tallent woke in a hospital bed that morning, the doctor told him he only had an hour to live. “You have one hour if we don’t do surgery,” the doctor said. “If we operate now, you’ll have a 20% chance of surviving.” Twenty percent. A four out of five chance of death. To the side, Doyle’s son looked like he was about to pass out. “It’s going to be okay, son,” Doyle said. “God will take care of it.” Doyle Tallent—yes, that’s his real name—is a successful Christian singer and songwriter living in Madisonville, Tennessee. He has been singing for as long as he can remember. As a child, he and his family performed together as The Tallents. Award-winning Christian songwriter, Kirk Talley, produced the family’s first two records for which Doyle wrote some songs. The Tallents performed together for many years. When Doyle was 21, he ventured into the contemporary Christian genre. He soon met two successful songwriters, Geoff and Becky Thurman, who had written for everyone from Glen Campbell to Michael English to Ricky Skaggs. Doyle began writing and singing with the Thurmans. Geoff and Becky introduced Doyle to music publisher Randy Cox who signed him, and Doyle got his first big cut writing for the band Point of Grace. He wrote the song “What’s He Gonna Say About Me” which went gold and then platinum.
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Doyle wrote many other songs, including “Reaching With His Love” for singer Cindy Morgan and “Hold On” for The Greenes which was in the top 40 Southern Gospel songs of 2004. Many of Doyle’s songs are based on his life experiences. He explained, “When I wrote ‘Hold On,’ I was actually going through a very challenging time with my faith—had a lot of questions and doubts. And I rode to the mountains of Tellico Plains, and I just started singing the chorus… and I began to pen the lyrics.” “Hold on, hold on. Through every storm, hold on. Even in the darkest night, Walk by faith not sight. Hold on, hold on.” —Hold On
Another of his songs, called “The Least of These,” was inspired by a time when he met a man named Chuck while working at a convenience store while in college. “[Chuck] wandered from town to town, and he didn’t have anywhere to stay,” Doyle said. “His feet were bloody from walking on the roads.” Doyle called a local pastor and they found Chuck a hotel room for the night. When he left, Chuck hugged Doyle and kissed him on the forehead. It smelled like Jack Daniel’s.
When Doyle went to work the next day, Chuck had left him a note saying, “Thank you for showing me the love of Jesus one more time.” In the note, Chuck asked Doyle to always pray for him, and now, years later, Doyle still prays for him every night. He has never seen the man again. When he was around 30, Doyle started exploring the pop genre where he worked with Phil Driscoll. During this time, Doyle had the solemn honor of helping commemorate the victims of the Columbine High School shooting. Just days after the tragedy, Vice President Al Gore called Driscoll, asking him to write a song for the memorial service that Sunday. Driscoll and Doyle started writing it that Thursday night and finished it on Friday at 3AM. They recorded and mastered it in just a few days; they had to call in quite a few favors to get it finished that quickly. That Sunday, copies of the song were flown to the memorial service on Air Force Two then given to the families, and Phil Driscoll sang it as part of the service. Later on, Doyle met Mark Schulman, a drummer who has played with artists and groups like Beyoncé, Velvet Revolver, Stevie Nicks, Journey, and others. At this time, Schulman was starting a music production company with Cher. Doyle auditioned for Mark, who immediately wanted to do a record with him. With Mark’s help, Doyle recorded his first solo project, a pop record called “Eyes Wide Open.”
Me, my father Jimmy Tallent, my mother Sandra Tallent, my sister Angela Tallent Yates and 1st cousin Scott Harold
After this, Doyle went through a divorce and took custody of his children. He put his music on hold in order to be a single parent to his son and daughter. “They were my first priority,” Doyle said. “I learned to be Daddy and Momma.” Both kids share their father’s talent for music—his son, Devyn, is a drummer, and his daughter, Chloe, is a singer. Now that they’re older, Doyle has started writing songs again.
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“[Hell] was not anything like I had thought it would be,” he said. He described seeing it from above. It looked like rolling hills made of patchwork quilt, yet as he approached, he realized that each of these patches was a holding cell with a person in it. He heard their agonized groans.
The Sweetwater Hospital Team that saved Doyle’s life. Left to right: Jessica Barton, Brandi Markowicz, Dr Ballay, Sasha Creagan, Trey Howard, and Shannon Anthony Peters.
Recently, Doyle’s life was saved by Sweetwater Hospital after complications in a surgery. He had just returned home from a hernia repair and didn’t feel right. His blood sugar rose to 500, and he was in pain. At 10 or 11pm, Doyle still wasn’t able to get comfortable, so his friend called for an ambulance. The ambulance came, and the medical attendants checked on him, but Doyle decided not to go to the hospital. They told his friend to keep an eye on him. As the night progressed, Doyle grew worse and worse. He recalls, “At one o’clock in the morning, I couldn’t take it anymore, so the ambulance was called back.” He was taken to Sweetwater Hospital, and the next thing he remembers is waking up that morning and being told he had an hour to live if he didn’t undergo surgery. His bowel and a major artery had been nicked, and he had gone septic. Doyle agreed to the surgery, and the doctors got started, removing five liters of feces and old blood as well as nine inches of his small intestine. But during the surgery, something happened that would make a profound impression on the singer.
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“I think I had two near-death experiences,” Doyle said. He said that God showed him Heaven and Hell. He described Heaven like a golden mist. Doyle said, “I didn’t see anyone because I wasn’t there very long, but I knew someone was observing me, and I felt love and peace… I felt like God was watching me. I wasn’t seeing him, but I could feel him.” He explained, “the gold mist was the presence of God and I knew it was him because of the love and peace and acceptance I felt… I knew I was in his presence just like I knew I couldn’t stay… I had no concern for the things of earth.” Later, a friend would ask him what this experience was like. He would say, “do you remember that perfect summer day when you were a kid…no cares, no worries or concerns about the future or anything for that matter just total freedom and euphoria, multiply that by a million… that’s how it felt to be in Heaven!” However, Doyle knew he couldn’t stay, knew this wasn’t his time. Yet instead of waking up at the hospital, he passed into another experience— this one horribly different.
Doyle was thrown into one of the cells by two androgynous beings wearing uniforms. In terror he prayed: “God, why am I here? I’ve lived for you. I’ve served you.” There was no answer. The creatures told Doyle not to move, and whenever he did, he would feel intense pain. He pushed against the bars of his cell but couldn’t break free. They almost felt like spiderwebs to his touch. He recalled, “I went into despair then because I thought, this is my eternity…” Time seemed to become meaningless. Every moment of his existence from now till forever would be identical to this one, unchanging and unrelenting torment. He would spend endless years separated from God, wishing he had never been born, asking God “Why?” “I learned then, it might not be safe to die if you don’t know God,” Doyle said. “It was as real as you and I here.” Suddenly, after what felt like a long time of waiting, he saw his father appear to him saying, “Fight, Doyle. You don’t belong here.” Next, Doyle’s son spoke: “Fight, Daddy. You don’t belong here.” After that, he saw his daughter and then his mother, both telling him to fight. And suddenly, he was awake, back in the hospital. At the beginning of the surgery, the doctor had given him a 20% chance of survival, yet against the odds, Doyle had become stable.
They removed the ventilator from his mouth. His first words were, “I was in Hell.” “It was real,” Doyle said, “and I feel like God showed me both Heaven and Hell because he knows I have a big mouth, and I’m not afraid to share it.” Doyle lost consciousness after this and remained asleep for days after his surgery. When he finally woke, he knew he was going to live. God had spared him. He spent two more weeks in hospitals where he grappled with the enormity of what he’d experienced during the surgery. He wanted to warn people that for those who don’t know Jesus, it isn’t safe to die. “[The experience made] me rethink everything about my life,” Doyle said. The recovery was grueling. “I was so swollen that my hands looked like hooves,” Doyle said. “And my wound had come open because of all the infection.” At one point, a doctor said to him, “You know you’re in a special fraternity now?” “What do you mean?” Doyle asked. The doctor responded, “Very few people survive sepsis.” Eventually, he was moved to a rehab facility in Knoxville called Select Specialty. While he’d survived the surgery, he still struggled with even basic tasks because of the severity of the sepsis. He couldn’t walk. He couldn’t even brush his teeth or go to the bathroom by himself when he first arrived at the rehab facility. “Any little thing that we take for granted, that comes so easy, I could not do,” he said. Despite the severity of his condition, the doctor told him, “If you’ll meet me right here and you do what I say, I’ll have you out of here in two weeks.” That would be a lot of progress for just two weeks, but Doyle took him up on the offer.
The rehab was exhausting, but Doyle did what the occupational and physical therapists asked of him. All the while, he faced anxiety and stress, but when he felt this way, he responded by praising God. He said, “I would walk when they would get me up. I felt like I weighed a thousand pounds. It hurt so bad just to take the first step, but I was going to do it. I didn’t care how it hurt. I didn’t care what it felt like.” As Doyle walked, the therapists would follow him with a wheelchair in case he needed to sit down, but he just said, “No, I’m going to keep going.” Doyle stated that Select Specialty did a fantastic job helping him recover. “When I left there in two weeks, I could brush my teeth, I could partially bathe myself, and I could walk with a walker,” he said. “I made a lot of friends at Select Specialty… people that changed my life.” His first shower, weeks after surgery, felt wonderful. “We take so many things for granted,” said Doyle. “I will never take my health for granted again, because I never thought in a million years when I walked in for that simple procedure… that I would come close to losing my life, and had I not gone to the hospital when I did, I probably would have died. And it just lets me know that when God has a purpose for your life, he’ll move Heaven and Earth to make sure things go the way they should. And I’m not saying I’m special or anything, but I do believe God has an even greater purpose for me now.” Doyle was extremely grateful for the love and support of people in his community, at Sweetwater Hospital, and at Select Specialty.
Doyle wrote: “Got to visit the crew that God used to save my life at Sweetwater Hospital… there are no words to express my gratitude and love for these people.” Doyle also thanked Shannon Anthony Peters, Dr. Nicholas Ballay, Pastor Lon Shoopman, his parents, his children, and his sister. He explained how the people of his community brought him dinner every day for two months. Doyle wasn’t able to work for months, yet not one bill went unpaid because of the generosity and kindness of those around him. “There have been people that have come by and handed me an envelope with $200, $500,” he said. “I mean, it’s just amazing… I’ve not had to want for anything.” “I am blessed and proud to be a part of this community,” he said. Doyle Tallent’s recovery has been a struggle physically and spiritually, but God faithfully led him through it. He is thankful for his life and all he’s been given. Thinking back on what has happened, Doyle quoted a verse from the Bible: “his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning.” Doyle wants to pay forward all the kindness he’s been shown, and he wants to warn everybody he can about Heaven and Hell. When he thinks back on his near-death experiences, he remembers Jesus’s sacrifice for us on the cross, the precious gift that saves us from Hell. This comforts him and reminds him where he’s going when he finally leaves this life for good.
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ed fun We are old-fashion with modern ideas!
sweetwater general
yeah, we're not that kind of General Store
A Unique Mix of Antiques and Collectibles on Historic Main St. in Sweetwater.
OVER 10,000 sq ft Two Stores One Street Open Everyday 10am - 5pm 423-351-9480
423-271-6120
309 N Main Street 305 N Main Street Sweetwater, TN 37874 We Buy Antiques and Take Consignments. Layaway Plans are available.
Check out Sweetwater Antiques online at sweetwaterantiques.com Find us on
What distinguishes you from the other candidates?
I feel that I am uniquely qualified to be a commissioner in IDudon County. I've dealt with people my whole career-people and machines, ptimatily. I have a ve1y diverse background, so I will be able to look at things from the perspective of a poor person, a middle-class person, a minotity, an upper-middle-class person, an ex ma1ine, and a faithful person with a deep belief in God. I feel that the commission needs that kind of person.
What is the most pressing issue for the County?
Right now, the County is considering a tax break-a tax freeze-for folks over the age of 65. In addition, we are in the midst of a development pause that just got extended another 6 months. 1hat cannot be good in the long te1m, and I haven't gotten a straight answer as to why they are doing this. Additionally, I don't think they've dealt fairly with the public on the things they did for redisllicting.
What issue is not getting enough attention?
It's not a pa11icular issue-it's how the commission deals with issues. They generally tell the folks what they're going to do. They don't spend enough time getting input on their decisions. This is a political advertisement, paid for by each political candidate represented.
(800) 843-1663 ext. 404 (865) 531-6275 13125 El Camino Lane, Knoxville, TN 37932 Hours: M-F 7:30-5:00, Closed Weekends October–March 48
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Providing Solutions
We offer many beautiful items made from dedicated, talented artisans. This is just a sample of products available at our store and festivals. Browse and call! Feel free to call us to indicate your interests.
(423) 887-5048
We will provide you one-on-one customer service and then let you experience the variety for yourself.
Fair Trade means that your purchase does good, and you can feel good about that.
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Enjoy Lakefront Views This Summer!
SERVING BUYERS AND SELLERS IN THE TELLICO LAKE COMMUNITIES AND SURROUNDING AREAS.
Call Polly Harrison for all of your buying and selling needs! Cell: (865) 776-5588 Office: (423) 519-3258
Polly@LakefrontLiving.com LakefrontLiving.com/TN
Hot Pepper Red - Black Diamond Edition
Tickets go on sale April 15, 2022
ONLY 1300 TICKETS WILL BE SOLD
You do not have to be present to win! Tickets will be $100 each Winner will be drawn August 13, 2022
Tickets - $100 each Call Carly at 423-442-6770 x102 for more information
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Boutique & Tanning 4013 Hwy411 Madisonville, TN 37354
(423) 545-9700
Volunteer Boutique & Tanning offers a clean environment for all of your tanning needs and a cute boutique. Our friendly staff is here to answer any questions and help you choose the right products for you!
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@volunteerboutiqueandtanning
Hours Mon-Fri 10am to 7pm, Sat 10am to 5pm and Sun 1pm to 5pm
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Lumber Company
T
L LC
Lumber Company
he new year has arrived with new items to talk about with customers. Deborah and Danny McFalls, owners of Everhart Lumber Company, are pleased to note a large magnolia log has been purchased and is now being turned into furniture. The above picture features a dining table with a large magnolia wood top. We are adding new pieces of furniture
to our showroom including unique poplar and walnut tables. We are offering ready-made and custom-made furniture from wood with character to make dining, coffee, and sofa tables and other types of furniture. The teak wood furniture and related teak home décor items continue to arrive in the showroom including art vases, bowls, sofa tables and other type tables.
LLC Our inventory of home décor also includes newly arrived charcuterie boards (serving trays/cutting boards), lamps with hand painted shades, and antiques that blend well with new or vintage furniture. We continue to offer wood slabs for customers to make their own furniture. The building supplies include custom-made barn-wood style doors, additional display of mantels, and barnwood paneling.
STORE HOURS 877.857.8062C. | 423.253.2323O. Tuesday - Friday 9:00 - 5:00 911 HIGHWAY 165, TELLICO PLAINS, Saturday 9:00 - 2:00 TN 37385
www.everhart-lumber.com
Fireplace Mantles
Charcuterie Boards
Home Décor Items
Walnut Bar & Carved Eagle
We offer charcuterie boards, lamps, pictures, teak wood art vases, trays, carved bowls, and antiques.
Building Supply Needs
We provide specialized wood building products that includes mantels, wooden tops for kitchen islands, and stair treads from many difference wood species. For the interior walls, we offer paneling made from reclaimed barn wood. We also offer custom-made barn-wood style doors to meet our customers’ needs. Please visit our showroom to see how our wood products are used by our customers. FALL 2021 Barnwood Doors
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MEMBER BENEFITS
• Farm Bureau Insurance • Auto, Home & Life • Farm Bureau Health Plans • Farm Bureau Tax Service • Tennessee Livestock Producers • Identity Theft, Restoration & Consultation OTHER BENEFITS INCLUDE: • 20% discount at Choice Hotels • 10% discount on Enterprise car rentals* • Discounts at Dollywood, Splash Country and Biltmore* • Discounts on other major electronics, travel, health, security and apparel products • $500 Bonus Cash on Eligible Ford, Lincoln, Mercury Models
MADISONVILLE: 423- 442-2011
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June 13th - July 31st
Monday, June 13th at 6:00pm DOWNTOWN MADISONVILLE ASSOCIATION
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•
SWEETWATER: 423-337-9001
Blount Memorial Total Rehabilitation at Vonore
Convenient, comprehensive rehabilitation services close to home in Monroe County Our expert rehabilitation specialties include: ■ aquatic therapy ■ athletic training, including sports medicine ■ hand therapy ■ occupational therapy
■ lymphedema treatment and wound care ■ physical therapy ■ speech-language pathology ■ spine care
■ total joint replacement therapy ■ vertigo therapy ■ dry needling ■ balance program ■ neurotherapy
Wherever you live in Monroe County, Total Rehabilitation at Vonore is close to home and ready to serve you.
Total Rehabilitation Vonore 110 Deer Crossing • Vonore, TN 37885 • Phone: 423-884-1901 • blountmemorial.org
James M. Dash, D.D.S.
Meet Katrina Cox As a native of Madisonville it has been my privilege to serve the people of Monroe county for the last 38 years in my capacity as a dental hygienist. I have met many wonderful people during that time who have become like extended family. I hope to be able to continue meeting the dental health needs in my community for a few more years.
210 Warren Street Madisonville, Tennessee 37354 | 423.442.3928
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423.442.7262 PeoplesBank-TN.com
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By Matt Hollingsworth
THERE ARE SEVERAL TYPES OF VEIN DISEASE WITH SYMPTOMS RANGING FROM COSMETIC TO PAINFUL OR EVEN DANGEROUS. VARICOSE VEIN DISEASE You likely know what varicose veins look like— swollen, twisted veins, usually in the legs. Often painful. So, what causes this disease? Your veins have small valves that let blood flow in one direction but not the other. Without these, your body would have trouble pumping blood upward. Varicose Vein Disease is where
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these valves become weak in some veins which allows the blood to flow backwards and eventually pool. Now, your body has a lot of veins, so you don’t have to worry about not getting enough blood back to your heart. Even if some aren’t working, there are many others that will. However, while you’re not going to run out of blood, Varicose Vein
Disease can cause soreness, itching, swelling, and other symptoms. It’s even possible for the disease—if untreated—to cause blood clots or heavy bleeding. Often, there are more diseased veins farther under the surface of your skin. You can’t see these, but they can continue causing pain if untreated. Medical professionals use ultrasound to map out these invisible veins.
VENOUS LEG ULCERS This is the worst-case scenario for vein disease. The disease can result in painful ulcers which can cause bleeding or even clots. Even if the ulcer heals on its own, unless you get treatment, it has a 50% chance of returning over the next several years.
SPIDER VEINS & RETICULAR VEINS Varicose veins, spider veins, and reticular veins are extremely similar. They each refer to the valves in your veins weakening, but “varicose veins” are large veins, while “spider veins” are small ones and “reticular veins” are medium-sized.
HAND & FACIAL VEINS As people grow older, their veins often grow more pronounced. While this won’t cause any health problems, many people dislike how these veins look. Clinics like East Tennessee Vein Clinic work to improve their appearance.
Michelle Gilliam has treated varicose veins as a nurse for 20 years, and she works for East Tennessee Vein Clinic. She emphasized how much more affordable ETVC is than other vein treatments. An hour-long session with them costs less than a thirty-minute treatment with their competitors. Many times, other clinics only fix the more obvious surface veins, but they don’t treat the less visible feeder veins that cause the others to develop. Because of this, patients will often develop varicose veins again. East Tennessee Vein Clinic, however, will treat both surface and feeder veins, getting to the root of the problem to fix it permanently. ETVC provides comprehensive care, helping you with all aspects of vein disease. Many other clinics use hypertonic saline which is painful yet not very effective, but ETVC has the training to use less painful yet more powerful medications like sodium tetra sulfate and polidocanol.
IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE WITH VEIN DISEASE, CONSIDER REACHING OUT TO
EAST TENNESSEE VEIN CLINIC AT (865) 686-0507. The owner, Dr. Brittany Cook, is a diplomate of the American Board of Venous and Lymphatic Medicine and a member of the American Venous and Lymphatic Society. SPRING 2022
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SCHEDULE A PERSONAL TOUR OF OUR COMMUNITY TODAY! ∙ All-inclusive monthly rate structure ∙ Long-term care and veterans benefits gladly accepted ∙ 24-hour dedicated caregivers and nursing staff ∙ State-of-the-art Assisted Living with Alzheimer’s and dementia-related Memory Care available ∙ Complete array of in-house services & amenities
2317 US-411 South | Maryville, TN 37801 | (865) 238-5338 www.cloverhillseniorliving.com
Celebrating years of hand made pizzas
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Bert’s
Hometown Grill & Pizzeria!1987 est
902 Tellico Street • Madisonville, TN • 423.442.2222 www.bertsgrill.com
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• • • • • •
Screen Rooms Sunrooms Eze Breeze Windows SunSpace Windows Custom Handrails Motorized Screens
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Ron Lowery’s Magic Carpet By Matt Hollingsworth
Why do superheroes fly? Perhaps one reason is wish fulfilment—who wouldn’t want to be able to fly, after all? We may not be able to soar through the air like Superman, but we’ve designed experiences that come close. Yet, while staring out the window of a large passenger plane can offer pretty (though restricted) views, it doesn’t really feel like flying, does it? Photographer Ron Lowery has spent a lot of time in planes, but not the large passenger ones. Instead, he and his son built a unique twin engine experimental airplane from a kit. It has no roof and barely has enough space for Ron to sit. As he described, “If you take a typical plane that has an enclosed cockpit, you don’t see part of the environment, but with [my plane], there’s nothing around you… It’s like a magic carpet ride.” This sounds much more like the kind of flying we dream of— nothing but us and the clouds. Ron has spent countless hours in the sky, and from his perch, he has taken breathtaking photographs. He became interested in photography when he was in high school. His uncle travelled to other countries, taking lots of pictures, which Ron would always look forward to seeing. This sparked his interest in photography.
Ron was a professional photographer for many years. Some of his images have earned totals of over $180,000, and one was featured in The Wall Street Journal. He’s also done underwater photography in eight countries. Possibly his most breathtaking works, however, are the aerial photographs taken from his homebuilt plane, Cloud Chaser, which he has flown in 37 states. In 2003, he even retraced the famous journey of Lewis and Clark, flying Cloud Chaser over 14,000 miles across America with writer Mary Walker. He described this journey as a kaleidoscope of cities, rivers, farmland, prairies, and badlands. They created a book about this adventure called Chasing Lewis & Clark Across America, which was designed by Ron’s wife Sue. When Ron goes out in his plane, he won’t have a particular image in mind that he wants to photograph. He just looks for scenes that will make good compositions. “You can’t predetermine a shot,” he said. He lives in Chattanooga and has taken many pictures of East Tennessee. He especially enjoys photographing the Little Tennessee River as well as Tennessee’s farmland. He created a book of local photography called Tennessee River: Sparkling Gem of the South.
https://www.ronlowery.com
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Ron’s plane was originally designed for National Geographic to take pictures of the African Congo. It took Ron and his son three years to build from the kit. This was so long that silverfish ate the ink off the labels of some pieces, so he would have to go to the factory to find out which part was which and where everything went—like the world’s worst IKEA product. In 30 years, he’s never crashed, largely because he avoids risks like flying in bad weather. Our world is beautiful, and Ron Lowery has seen it in a way few have from his homemade “magic carpet.”
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THE EAST TENNESSEE FOUNDATION Names New Leaders
Jeanette Kelleher, Executive Vice President + Secretary
Morgan Vance, Pat Summitt Foundation, Director of Advancement
Sharon Moore, Director of Advancement
Jeanette Kelleher was recently named as East Tennessee Foundation’s (ETF) Executive Vice President and is now responsible for ETF’s overall operations and the coordination of the program, finance, operations, advancement, fundholder services, and communications teams into a strong functional framework. She will also serve as Secretary of the Board of Directors.
Morgan joins the Pat Summitt Foundation after serving as a development director for the University of Tennessee Athletic Department and the Tennessee Fund where she was responsible for soliciting major gifts for the annual fund and capital projects. Prior to her time in athletics, Morgan served as the associate director of development for corporate relations at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center. In that role, she was responsible for maintaining relationships with Children’s Miracle Network partners and executing fundraising campaigns while also establishing new relationships with local corporations and family foundations. She did similar work at East Tennessee Children’s Hospital prior to her time in Baltimore.
Sharon has lived in East Tennessee for more than half of her life and has served in the nonprofit sector for the entirety of her career. She joins East Tennessee Foundation following 12 years leading development efforts at Zoo Knoxville including spearheading the Dream Wilder capital campaign which raised $37 million and culminated in the two largest projects in the zoo’s history - Boyd Family Asian Trek and Clayton Family ARC Campus. In a volunteer capacity, Sharon currently serves as a board member and campaign strategist for Wesley House Community Center. She was named 2021 Outstanding Fundraising Professional of the Year by the Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP), Great Smoky Mountains Chapter and is a graduate of the Leadership Knoxville Class of 2021. Sharon serves donors, fundholders, and their professional advisors to assist them in fulfilling their philanthropic dreams. She can be reached at smoore@etf.org or 865-524-1223.
Jeanette joined ETF in 2004 to administer its Affordable Housing Trust Fund and Community Investment Fund. During her 17 years, she has served in various roles and is knowledgeable of all areas of ETF’s work. She has worked closely with the previous Executive Vice President + Secretary, Carolyn Schwenn, who is transitioning to a newly created role of Special Advisor. Jeanette currently serves on the advisory board for the City of Knoxville’s new Affordable Housing Fund and previously was the deputy director of the City of Knoxville’s community development department. Before relocating to Knoxville, she served as a research economist in Boston and New York. She focused on industrial analysis at the Transportation Systems Center in Cambridge and domestic financial markets at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Jeanette earned an A.B. in economics from Harvard University and a Master’s in economics from Columbia University.
Morgan was born and raised in East Tennessee and is a proud descendent of the Sparks family of Cades Cove in the Great Smoky Mountains. She holds a master’s degree in business administration from UT Martin and a bachelor’s in public relations from UT Knoxville. She lives in Lenoir City with her husband Jason and their five children. Morgan is available to assist donors who wish to support Coach Pat Summitt’s goal of beating Alzheimer’s disease. She can be reached at mvance@patsummitt.org.
520 W. SUMMIT HILL DRIVE, SUITE 1101 KNOXVILLE, TN 37902 easttennesseefoundation.org
CELEBRATING 30+ YEARS OF THOUGHTFUL GIVING FOR STRONGER COMMUNITIES AND BETTER LIVES CONFIRMED IN COMPLIANCE WITH NATIONAL STANDARDS FOR U.S. COMMUNITY FOUNDATIONS.
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An Adventure Through Monroe County, Tennessee Photo credit: GypsyDreams Photography dry-cured hams and bacon. These meats are slow-cured to perfection and always ready for travelers to take home to enjoy.
BLAINA BEST
Monroe County Tourism Director
Sometimes you can just hear the mountains calling. They cry out to you like an old friend. Regardless of if you were born and raised in the mountains or not, most everyone can relate to this calling. The need for breathtaking views, heart pounding adventures, and fresh air is embedded in all of us. A charming, small county in east Tennessee, Monroe County, offers folks the opportunity to enjoy their getaways off of the beaten path in places that enrich your soul and help you rediscover the wild living inside of you.
Down the road, history lovers can step back in time to one of the earliest British fortifications on the western frontier - Fort Loudoun. Fort Loudoun State Historic Park not only features a completely reconstructed fort, but the mountain views over Tellico Lake are too stunning to not stop and take in. Across the road the historical encounters continue at the Sequoyah Birthplace Museum. Here, you can witness how Sequoyah gave his people, the Cherokee Nation, a gift that will endure forever - a writing system.
As you turn off of I-75 in Sweetwater, Tennessee and arrive at the Lost Sea Adventure, you can already tell you have discovered an American wonder. Deep inside of the mountains is an extensive and historic cave system that opens up to America’s largest underground lake, a Registered National Landmark you have to see for yourself.
Afterwards, immersing yourself into the gorgeous blue-hued mountains of Tellico Plains is necessary. As you drive into this small town, the mountains feel like they are rising from the earth to greet you. Anything and everything related to the great outdoors awaits you here - hiking, kayaking, tubing, gold-panning, cycling, fishing, hunting, and more. A ride up the Cherohala Skyway National Scenic Byway will provide you with 40+ miles of scenic views and elevations rising over 5,400 feet above sea level. It is truly a
It would only be fitting to stop in at Benton’s Smoky Mountain Country Hams. Benton’s meats are internationally recognized for their delicious
drive above the clouds with beautiful views of the Unicoi Mountains. All of this adventure’n calls for a wonderful place to stay. We invite you to make plans to experience Monroe County and stay at one of our unique lodging facilities. From treehouses, glamping, and RV camping to cozy cabins and hotels, we have a place for everyone. Explore your options at visitmonroetn.com/lodging. To plan your vacation with us, please visit us at visitmonroetn.com or find Visit Monroe TN on Facebook and Instagram.
Photo credit: Ron Lowery
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WELCOME TO
TELLICO PLAINS The gateway to the Cherohala Skyway and the Cherokee National Forest. Here in the foothills of the Smoky Mountains, a simpler way Welcome To of life prevails. Enjoy the bakery and the other shops in townTELLICO that sell PLAINS fine arts, crafts and furnishings. There are plenty of restaurants and The gateway to the Cherohala Skyway and the Cherokee National Forest. Here places to stay. in the foothills of the Smoky Mountains, a simpler way of life prevails. Enjoy the bakery and the other shops in town that sell fine arts, crafts and furnishings. There are plenty of restaurants and places to stay. www.tellico-plains.com
Find your perfect property with Sharron Jenkins, an experienced Realtor® for over 30 years.
JENKINS REALTY Jenkins RealtyCOMPANY Co. Sharron@JenkinsRealty.com
www.JenkinsRealty.com Find your perfect property with Sharron 5588 Hwy. 360, Tellico Plains, TN 37385 Jenkins, an experienced Realtor® for over (423) 253-3526 30 years.
Come discover the most beautifully biodiverse area in America. We’ll help you find your place on the planet in the East Tennessee mountains with creeks and meadows and a chain of lakes leading to the rivers flowing down to the gulf. Cherohala Skyway Visitor Center The Cherohala Skyway Visitor Center in Tellico Plains is a “must stop” before starting up the Skyway. Come by between 9am and 5pm daily for free maps of the Skyway and Cherokee National Forest, Skyway driving conditions and local area souvenirs and gifts. Picnic tables and spotless restrooms are also available, with friendly staff waiting to welcome you with important Skyway and area information!
CHARLES HALL MUSEUM AND HERITAGE CENTER 225 Cherohala Skyway, 423.253.8010 www.cherohala.org
CHEROHALA SKYWAY VISITOR CENTER The Cherohala Skyway Visitor Center in Tellico Plains is a “must stop” before starting up the Skyway. Come by between 9am and 5pm daily for free maps of the Skyway and Cherokee National Forest, Skyway driving conditions and local area souvenirs and gifts. Picnic tables and spotless restrooms are also available, with friendly staff waiting to welcome you with important Skyway and area information! 225 Cherohala Skyway 423.253.8010 www.cherohala.org
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A local historian and collector since boyhood, Charles also served as mayor of Tellico Plains for 31 years. Showcased in two museum buildings are his magnificent collections of historical local pictures and documents, antique telephones, guns, Native American artifacts, coin and currency collections, a moonshine still, a 1922 Model T Ford telephone repair truck and so much more. Open Daily: 10am–5pm, Admission: Free 229 Cherohala Skyway, 423.253.8000 charleshallmuseum@hotmail.com www.charleshallmuseum.com Local handcrafted items and souvenirs in their gift shops!!
Charles Hall Museum and Heritage Center
A local historian and collector since boyhood, Charles also served as mayor of Tellico Plains for 31 years. Showcased in two museum buildings are his magnificent collections of historical local pictures and documents, antique telephones, guns, Native American artifacts, coin and currency collections, a moonshine still, a 1922 Model T Ford telephone repair truck and so much more. Cherohala Skyway Festival - October 23, 2021
We offer log cabins in the forest and farms in the valleys. And if you want to sell, we can Come discover the most beautifully biodiverse area find the very best buyers for in America. We’llyou. help you find your place on the
Open Daily: 10am–5pm, Admission: Free 229 Cherohala Skyway, 423-253-8000, charleshallmuseum@hotmail.com www.charleshallmusuem.com You will also find local handcrafted items and souvenirs in their gift shops!
planet in the East Tennessee mountains with creeks and meadows and a chain of lakes leading to the rivers flowing down to the gulf.
We offer log cabins in the forest and farms in the Sharron@JenkinsRealty.com valleys. And if you want to sell, we can find the very best buyers for you! 5588 Hwy. 360, Tellico Plains, TN 37385 423.253-3526
The Bookshelf The Bookshelf is a qu the Historic District ju Celebrating 15 years a full-service bookstore history books and gen categories. Their frien staff also offers free ou
Hours: Tuesday–Satur 108 Scott Street, 423.2 www.tellicobookshelf. Find us on Facebook
Tellico Vacation Re Savor the serenity of y mountains! Choose fr thats sleeps from two a cabin with a hot tub stone fireplace or a po room. Our cabins are getaway, a wedding or vacation or reunion. W multiple bedrooms, co and outdoor decks, yo to be a fabulous value for several couples or cabins are private and unique. A change in a in attitude!
206 Cherohala Skywa tvr@tellicovacationr
THE BOOKSHELF The Bookshelf is a quaint little bookshop in the Historic District just off the Town Square. Celebrating 15 years as Monroe County’s only full-service bookstore, they offer new local history books and gently used books in all categories. Their friendly and knowledgeable staff also offers free outof-print book searches. Hours: Tuesday–Saturday: 10am-5pm 108 Scott Street, 423.253.3183 www.tellicobookshelf.com & Facebook
TELLICO VACATION RENTALS Savor the serenity of your own cabin in the mountains! Choose from one to five bedrooms that sleeps from two to ten guests. Select a cabin with a hot tub on the deck, a cozy stone fireplace or a pool table in the game room. Our cabins are ideal for a romantic getaway, a wedding or honeymoon, a family vacation or reunion. With your own kitchen, multiple bedrooms, comfortable living areas and outdoor decks, you’ll find cabin rentals to be a fabulous value for extended vacations for several couples or extended families. Our cabins are private and comfortable, each totally unique. A change in altitude creates a change in attitude! 206 Cherohala Skyway, 866.253.2254 tvr@tellicovacationrentals.com
EVERHART LUMBER COMPANY, LLC Everhart Lumber Company specializes in high quality specialty timber and furniture products. Everhart’s is a wood specialty and furniture store in Tellico Plains, Tennessee that offers Ready-Made and Custom-Made Furniture from unique character woods such as black walnut, figured maple, flaming box elder, eastern red cedar, teak, and other wood types. We also offer mantles, wooden counter tops for kitchen islands and paneling made from reclaimed barnwood and reclaimed wood previously used to harvest mushrooms. 911 Veterans Memorial Drive Open Tuesday – Friday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm, Saturday – 9:00 am – 2:00 pm 423.253.2323 www.everhart-lumber.com
SKYWAY REALTY LAND AND HOMES Skyway Realty’s associates create home and land dreams for buyers and sellers. For buyers, we hone in on and help you select the places you are most likely interested in buying. Sellers have new dreams we help them find as we sell their current properties. We love being helpers in one of the most important decisions of your lives. We make the real estate experience enjoyable from the first call to the close and enjoy win-win transactions with everyone at the table talking to each other as friends...that’s what we all like about Tellico Plains, it’s warm, friendly, peaceful and successful. Call today 423.253.7100. Email us at info1@tellico-tn. com. We are ready to go. Stop in and see us at our office on the Skyway...where the bears are. 411 Cherohala Skyway, 423.253.7100 www.tellico-tn.com
TELLICO MOUNTAIN REALTY Helping you make our hometown your hometown. Stop by and see one of our seasoned agents with expertise in our historic and scenic area. 418 Cherohala Skyway, 423.253.6145 email: info@easttennnrealty.com www.tellicomountainrealty.com
TELLICAFE The Leudemann family can now boast twenty-five years and four generations of good service and good food employing an executive certified chef. The Tellicafe is open seven days a week all year round serving lunch and dinner. Providing a memorable dinning experience, specialties like Fried Green Tomatoes, Trout Cakes, Fresh Prime Rib, BBQ Menu and Country Cooking keep customers coming back time after time. Enjoy the $7.99 variety burger menu. 128 Bank Street, 423.253.2880 www.tellicafe.com
THE BEARS DEN Rich Leudemann, owner of The Bears Den and Tellicafe, located in Tellico Plains, TN, grew up in the restaurant business. His father was a restaurant owner and passed his love of the business on to Rich. Over the years, Rich has been around the business in almost every aspect. Rich’s latest endeavor, The Bears Den, a pizza restaurant heavily influenced by his Italian heritage, is now open and already hosting live music and other wonderful events. With seating for over 80 people, you are sure to find your place. Menu consists of New York Style and Sicilian Pizza. Specialty pizzas and dessert pizzas, cold beer, hoagies and wings! 9188 New Hwy 68, 423.253.3361 www.bearsdentellico.com The Perfect Gift “GUIDED FLY FISHING TRIPS” Gift Certificate Tellico Outfitters wants to make sure you have the best experience possible. Our guides are well versed in fishing the Tellico River under a variety of conditions and with a variety of tactics and techniques. Want to learn something specific on your trip such as small stream tactics, tenkara or euro-nymphing? Let us know and we’ll customize your trip just for you. Tellico Outfitters operates all guided trips under permit from the U.S. National Forest Service. All gear (rods, reels, waders, flies) provided for all trips. Lunch is provided on full day trips. Call for more information or to schedule your trip.
Fly Rods & Reels Fly Tying Materials Fly Line & Backing Packs & Fly Boxes Waders & Boots Landing Nets Fly Tying Hooks & Vises Apparel & Footwear Leaders & Tippet Books, Gifts & Novelties Tenkara USA Camping Supplies 109 Scott St. Downtown Tellico Plains • 423-253-2231 • www.tellicooutfitters.com • Hours: Tuesday -Saturday 9a-5p Sunday 1p-5p • Closed Monday
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MASON FURNITURE & APPLIANCES
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