All Things Southern
All Things Southern




Home     Contact     Calendar     Book Shellie     Media Kit     F.A.Q.     TV     Radio     Shop     Community


Home
Past Issues
Southern Jokes
Southern Recipes
Southern Spotlight
Southern Quotes
Southern Comforts
Southern Definition
My Photo Journals
Search My Site

Book Shellie!
Radio Info
TV Info
ATS Word Game
ATS Affilates
Ministry Opportunites




Books and CD's
Fine Art
T-Shirts
Kitchen Gifts
Good Eats
Porch Donations







Upcoming Projects
Gator Giveaway
Yellow Ribbon Gallery
Link to ATS
Favorite Links



The All Things Southern Weekly
Bringing you the charm and heritage of the South...

Volume 1 Issue 010--November 1, 2001


IN THIS ISSUE:

"From the Publisher's Porch"
"Chuckles" Southern joke of the week
"A Taste of the South" Southern recipe of the week
"Spotlight on the South" News of interest
"It's Been Said..." Southern Quote of the week
"Southern Comfort" Inspiration from my heart to yours
"A Southern Exchange" Readers Write In

====================================================

       From the Publisher's Porch

        Shellie Rushing Tomlinson

Hey friends--time for a porch break. Yes, it's been a whole week since our last visit. I can't believe it either. What's happening at your place? Chances are, if you're reading this from the South, a strange phenomenon is about to overtake the men in your home. Maybe it already has...

The symptons will come on with very little warning. One day they'll be talking about football and harvesting their crops and then--wham!

Their eyes will glass over and they'll begin to stockpile ammunition. Closets and dresser drawers will be upended in an effort to dig out everything camo they've ever owned. Of course, whatever they find will be insufficient, forcing them to trek to the nearest hunting store for supplies.

But, wait, there's an upside! Your men will begin to read more--(hunting magazines). They might even help decorate the house--(duck decoys, deer calls and Cabella boxes will be strewn around carefully for that ecletic look).

My tongue is getting sore, so I'll pull it out of my cheek and get on with the emag. But before I go, my husband wants everyone to know there is still time to rent a duck blind on our family farm. You can email Phil for more info, tomtom@bayou.com. Also, don't forget, there are some great hunting and fishing gifts for the outdoorsmen at my online store, http://www.allthingssouthern.com. Check them out today.

It's a wonderful time of year. Enjoy it!

Hugs,
Shellie

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~**~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Please forward ALL THINGS SOUTHERN to your friends and family! (You can also email them the parent site by going to http://www.allthingssouthern.com and clicking on the link that says "email this site to a friend.")

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~**~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

"Chuckles"

Did you hear the one about the Yankee relative who came down south for a visit? Seems he had a bad experience at the local church.

After the service the pastor stood at the door of the church to shake hands with the congregation.

"Mercy!" he exclaimed, as he saw their visitor. "What happened? I don't remember your having those black eyes when you came in."

The Yankee hesitated before answering, "It's kind of embarrassing. You remember the large lady that stood in front of me during the song service? Well, I noticed her dress was wedged, so I thought I would be helpful, and I reached to pull it out. That's when she decked me in the right eye."

"I'm so sorry," the pastor said sympathetically, "That explains a lot. But what happened to your other eye?"

"Well, she was so angry I thought I should put it back in."

============================================================

"A Taste of the South"

Few desserts say southern cooking like a good cobbler. Here is a quickie version. It's simple to stir up and the ingredients are easy to keep on hand. I like to put it in the oven just as we sit down to eat supper.

"EASY PEACH COBBLER"

•1 cup sugar
•1 cup flour
•1 cup milk
•1 stick butter
•1 large can peaches

Cut butter into pats and scatter in your baking pan. Mix flour and sugar, add milk, blend well and pour over butter. Add drained peaches. Bake at 350` until top crust is bubbly and brown, (about thirty to forty-five minutes). Best served piping hot with vanilla ice cream.

============================================================

"Spotlight on the South"

Rick Bragg's "Somebody Told Me" http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0375725520/allthingssout-20

If you're looking for an easy but unforgettable read, I offer this unforgettable collection of newspaper stories by Pulitzer Prize writer, Rick Bragg. William Morris says, "Rick Bragg's stories help tell us who we are as Southerners and Americans."

The people Rick Bragg introduced to me in "Somebody Told Me" have all taken permanent residence in my memory. Dirty Red still comes to me at odd times and forces me to wonder how old he is now, and what he is doing and if he has recovered from being accused of molesting a seven year old girl with a stick when he was only six himself--to wonder how it felt to be taken away as a child, photographed, fingerprinted and charged with something you don't understand, while knowing it must be horrible.

I miss Dirty Red. I still wish I could help him. Though the charges against this little boy didn't stick, the stigma of his accusation did. Dirty Red's nickname didn't come from the sexual molestation charge; that tag came from the tint of his skin at birth. But the meaning behind the moniker changed as surely as the little boy who had his childhood stolen and never returned. Because the police didn't come back and say he was innocent, because they didn't make a scene when it was over, like the one they made when they took him away; the neighborhood still sees him as a molester, a pervert.

When Rick introduced me to Dirty Red, he was a sad, introverted little boy who didn't play outside anymore because of his judges' taunts, a little boy that stayed close to his mom rather than risk the punches and kicks of other children and the harsh stares of their parents. Mr. Bragg's story left Dirty Red on the porch of an apartment complex in Fort Lauderdale, Florida--and in my heart, forever. And then Mr. Bragg repeated that feat over and over again, with different people in different places until the last page had been read and the people he introduced were gone, and I was left with their memories.

~Shellie

Click on the following link to order "Somebody Told Me": http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0375725520/allthingssout-20

*************************************************************

"It's Been Said..."

"The man who doesn't read good books has no advantage over the man who can't read them."

--Mark Twain

**************************************************************

"Southern Comfort"

TWISTED TOLERANCE

As Americans, and especially as Christians, we are being called to tolerance. I'm ready to answer that call--but only when it is the true call of tolerance.

There was a time when tolerance meant being able to have a reasonable discussion or conversation with someone who didn't believe the same way you believe. The old tolerance said someone was right and someone was wrong and the parties agreed to disagree. But our culture has twisted the meaning of tolerance.

Today, tolerance says there is no right or wrong; in the spiritual arena that means the speech police expect us to agree that all religions are the same and praying to any god is as good as praying to THE GOD.

My Christian faith demands that I respect another's beliefs without malice and hate. Today's tolerance says that is not enough. To make the world a safer place, the culture says I should not say that there is only one God and one way to salvation. I am told to relinquish this message for the greater good. If I comply with this twisted call to tolerance, am I not dooming the people who don't believe by the very tolerance I'm offering as protection?

~Shellie

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Southern Exchange"

A Louisiana reader sends in the following link. You've got to see it to believe it. ~Shellie

"Limited Edition Memorial Flag Poster to Benefit the Fallen FireFighters Fund in New York City" http://www.memorialflag.com

One of the most breathtaking poster prints you will ever find, this poster of our great American Flag is made up of close to 1,000 micro-images of the events that occurred on September 11, 2001 in New York, Washington D.C., and Pennsylvania. At the bottom of this amazing print is the powerful statement, "United We Stand".

Most importantly, 50% of the purchase price goes directly to The Fallen Firefighters Fund in New York City to help the families of those who lost their lives helping others during this tragic event. The cost for this Limited Edition Print of The Memorial Flag is $20.00, and shipping is only $5.00 for as many posters as you order. The Fallen Firefighters Fund receives $10.00 for every poster purchased.

http://www.memorialflag.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It's here! My memoir, "LESSONS LEARNED ON BULL RUN ROAD" is available at http://www.allthingssouthern.com/books.html Won't you visit the site and check out the FREE sample chapter? (If you don't want to use your credit card, you can snailmail, email of fax the printable order form!)

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

~*~ Homefires Hearth ~*~ We're the weekly zine and community for Christian homemakers! Each Tuesday you'll receive your issue packed with creative, fun, and useful homemaking helps, such as tips, advice, ideas, humor, recipes, cleaning hints, web links, inspirations, and more. To subscribe, visit www.homefireshearth.com or send any email to homefireshearth-subscribe@homefireshearth.net.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

WHAT SOUTHERN MOMS TELL THEIR DAUGHTERS... About marriage: "You should marry for love and not for money. But if you're gonna marry for money--make darn sure he's got some!" Do you remember your southern mom's advice about love, marriage, relationships and life in general? Then join the fun; this project is exploding! Write me at tomtom@allthingssouthern.com to have your mom's advice memorialized in my new book: WHAT SOUTHERN MOMS TELL THEIR DAUGHTERS...

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

To SUBSCRIBE :-) send any email with SUBSCRIBE in the subject box to: tomtom@allthingssouthern.com To UNSUBSCRIBE (Please don't go, we'll miss you!) send any email with UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject box to: tomtom@allthingssouthern.com

=========================================================
Share this site with a friend:
Your Name:
Your Email:
Your Friend's Email:


Enter a Personal Message From You (Optional)

Home AdvertiseArchivesPoliciesTerms of UseEmail Shellie and All Things SouthernLink to All Things SouthernEternal HelpEmail Promotion and Sales

Copyright 2001 All Things Southern. All Rights Reserved.
Site designed by Bayou Internet and Communications