Tuesday, December 24, 2013

O THE JOYS OF CHRISTMAS

 Tuesday, December 16, 2013
A Hope and Prayer to You and YoursMerry Christmas

At our place snow is slowly getting deeper in the yard.  A few times the temperature has gone underground.  The Kids oogle longingly at their gifts.

Your beautiful cards are piling up faster than I can answer them. We think of each of you more often than there are days in a month, and the years keep rushing by.

Our Kids are all healthy and well.  We praise the Lord!  Carlene still teaches orchestra in Iowa and has joined an orchestra that performs once most months of the year.  Nathaniel is on the down hill slide toward completing Seminary.  Jeremy continues directing choirs in Kentucky.  Lydia and Gabriel are filling the Italian and German night skies with the sounds of music.  Gaia and Carys practice their math tables in three languages.

Joanna still translates many things heard, for those who cannot hear.  Tarah keeps in touch from across the Wisconsin border.  Elizza, Sebastian and Leo are learning as fast as they can.  They always outrun me from the porch to the park.  Winter has slowed us up a little.

If it were possible, I'd love to go from house to house of family and friends:  making hot buttered cornbread or shortbread apple pies, sipping coffee or tea and chatting the hours away.  Prayer meetings for the awful needs of our sick, tired world would be a plus.


Keep well and safe.
Go about doing good.
And may the God of peace  and everlasting lovingkindness
Keep you close thhrough all the coming year.

Love and Prayers,

Carlton Easley

BE YE THANKFUL

November 28, 2013,  Thanks Giving Day Was Just Great

 Carlene had come.  Joanna and the Kids, Elizza, Sebastian and Leo, were there with me .  Mrozek's, of long standing came, only their girls didn't, but Johanna and Fred.  Susan and her son, John, were our new guests.  For my part, it was a great day of fellowship and thankfulness.  Joanna and Carlene put out a great meal:  Turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, corn, Lilly's fabulous cranberry salad, Johanna's delicious - leafy green salad.  Joanna and Carlene brought out the pumpkin and pecan pies!!!  Mrozek's provided the sparkling cider.  One great round of applause to you all, a hearty thanks to the attending folks and hearts overflowing in gratitude to the great Almighty God for His blessings of health, protection and bountiful provision over all the years.

The shortest Psalm 117:1-2 declares:  "Praise the Lord, all nations; Laud Him, all peoples!
                                                           For His lovingkindness is great toward us,
                                                           And the truth of the Lord is everlasting.
                                                           Praise the Lord!"

Now We're in Kentucky for the Christmas Holidays:  We Left Friday after School 12-20-2013

Jeremy invited us all to come.  Carlene drove over and we rode down with her.  Nathaniel made the eight hour trip up from Mississippi.  Sunday morning Nathaniel and I attended the first service at UMC with Jeremy.  He'd asked Carlene to play violin with another lady and a lady on cello.  The choir was at the top of their game.  Alan has played that organ 27 years and as usual, was superlative.  The solos and duet added to the beauty.  Jeremy is an excellent conductor.  Pastor Paige gave a stirring message about God who came as a Baby.  The second service was the same, but with many more people and we had brought the boys along for that one.  Elizza was ill.  Joanna stayed with her.   The sanctuary was beautifully decorated.

We had a remarkable lunch.  Pastor Keith's family were gone.  Jeremy invited him to come.  Later we opened presents with Nathaniel because he's leaving before Christmas.  We played several table games until bedtime.  Leftovers kept showing up from time to time.

It's Monday morning. Nathaniel has gone.  Jeremy went to the Church for his usual responsibilities.  Joanna and Elizza did some early shopping.  Joanna and Leo have now gone to the Church for his piano lesson.  Sebastian is hoping for a borrowed cello so he can have his lesson.  I am so grateful for Jeremy's lap top so I can send out this wee report. 

God bless and keep you all.  Our deacon called early Sunday morning to say because of the eight inch snow fall, there would be no Church services at the Red Brick Church where we normally attend.  He was unaware that we had gone south and escaped the big snow fall.  All too soon we will need to repeat the trip.  But this time going north into the snow again.

The ones we're missing at this time of year are Tarah still farther north and Lydia, Gabriel, Gaia and Carys in their home across the sea.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

KOICHI AND NANA . . . CHAPTER 4

They Arrive in the United States

Someone must have known they were coming.  They were entertained  by an American family.  I think they were in L.A. at least a week.  The time came for them to leave for Bethany, Oklahoma where they would attend College and study for the ministry.   Friends had come to the house where they stayed, to bid farewell.  Greetings were given all around.  They started to the car that would take them to the Bus Station.  As they stood by the car, everyone gave friendly hand waves of good bye.  Koichi and Nana came toward them again to see what they wanted?  "No, no, we didn't want anything."  Koichi and Nana returned to the car.  Everyone waved again, and once more Koichi and Nana came forward.  Finally someone realized:  "In Japan to wave with palm down, the fingers are meaning to Come Here."  When everyone understood the proper meaning of hand signals, Koichi and Nana started to the car.

But, Oh, someone wondered, if they had enough money for the Bus trip to the middle of America.  Koichi brought out his money.  That was not enough.  It would take them only about one hundred miles.  "Ok, then we will go that far and get off and walk."  At that moment the Mail Man came.  He ask, "Is anyone here named Koichi Yamamoto?"  Koichi took the envelope offered by the Mail Man.  It was addressed to this house with Koichi's name.  It had no return address.  There was no post mark.  It contained enough cash money to pay they're whole trip to Bethany.

The same God who leads men through torture and war, who lights temples on fire and guides His people over stormy seas, is surely able to provide their way to the center of America.  Dr. and Mrs. Roy Cantrell, president of the College, befriended them when they arrived in Bethany.  (Years later, when they received American citizenship, Koichi took the American name of Roy in honor of Dr. Cantrell.)  Housing was provided in two upper rooms of the Student Union Building.  Mrs. Drewry, the dietitian, lived below them.  Koichi was given employment in the College Kitchen.  He learned to break two eggs in each hand at the same time.  I don't know how many it took to make all the scrambled eggs for breakfast every morning.  I do know he could crack all those eggs faster than one can imagine.  In Japan this would have been a job WAY BELOW his station.  He did the job with grace.

Koichi and Nana's little daughter was born while they were in Bethany.  When she was a year old, Nana returned to Japan with her.  Koichi had one more year of study.  That was the year I started.  Most Saturdays we met in the Student Union after supper to talk.  He taught me many things Japanese.  He was a true teacher.  As the end of the School year approached he began selling items they had brought from their home land.  A carving of 10 or 12 ivory elephants all in a row, and several other articles I don't remember.  One painting of a tiger creeping through bamboo.  At that time it was 109 years old.  He was asking only $20 for the picture.  O my!  I wanted it so badly.  But I didn't have any money.  I worked on campus and all my time was turned in to the financial office.  It never occurred to me that I could draw out funds.  If I had known, I probably would have it all drawn out.  A friend bought it and later sold it to an antique shop and it was soon gone from there.

Koichi and Nana lived in Japan again with their little girl, but the government of Japan wouldn't allow her because she was born in the USA.  Eventually they moved to Okinawa where Koichi pastored a Church for a while.  Then they were able to return to the States.  Koichi had studied veterinary science before the war.  In Southern California he doctored animals and pastored a Church for ten years.  The next ten years he was director of JEMS, (Japanese Evangelistic Missionary Society).  This organization found Japanese speaking pastors who would move to Brazil.  Over the years there has been a large migration of Japanese people moving to Brazil.

There is also a large population of Japanese in the United States.  Koichi and Nana began a ministry they called The Circuit Rider.  Ever three or four months they got in their little pick-up with the camper on the back and headed down the roads of America hunting Japanese people.  Some might be just a lonely house wife in a lonely town, others might be several families in a larger city.  They were hunting folks with whom they would share the glorious gospel story.  The good news that Jesus Christ is come into the world to save sinners.  They crisscrossed this country west to east and back.  Home for a little while and out again.  They heard the voice of the Lord saying, "Go" and they went.  He said, "Come" and they came.

Several years ago while passing through our area, we had a wonderful evening together and the next morning fore they hit the trail again.  It had been forty years since we had seen each other.  It was a grand reunion.

Where there were Japanese needing a pastor, they helped locate one.  If there were Believers wanting a Church, they helped to organize it.  Koichi and Nana Yamamoto have been servants of God since they were in their teens.  Now as they have traveled the highways and byways of the USA and Canada for many years, they've long passed beyond the years of retirement.  But now they've made the decision to rest and wait.                                                                                                                        


WE JUST WALKED OUT OF TOWN AND THEN BACK AGAIN

Through Corn, Wheat and Grapes

We went out the gate in the yard wall at 6:30 p.m.  Past the end of the building  and to the right up the hill on the alley behind the bath and bed, then a hard left onto the street above the third floor and we were off.  As we walked up there, Lydia came to the upper window and bade us all "Adieu."

The yard gates all opened onto the street from the right side.  Across on the left, cars and trucks were parked for the night along the whole way down to the end of the street.  It was evening and every dog was in the yard behind their gates to howl us on our way.  At the bottom of the street we passed out of the Village.

We walked on the paved road for about a quarter of a mile, then turned right for probably two, maybe three city blocks.  As we turned left onto a two track gravel with grass in the middle, we met an old man driving very slowly toward us.  Carys and Gaia on their bikes hugged the ditch and stopped as Gabriel and I stood very still.  He crept on passed and we didn't meet anyone else for a long time.

It was a wonderfully nice evening.  Almost no traffic sounds, we were shielded from the highway noises by the hills.  There were virtually no farm steads along our path, we saw a few in the distance.

The two tracker had started to rise in its elivation and continued to reach up for a long time.  We were passing one of those fenced in Italian gardens where they grow produce for the markets.  The gate was open and I was interestedly looking to the right.  On the left were the rows and rows of gorgeous grape vines full of rapidly ripening, nine or ten inch, clusters of grapes, when a car pulled up behind us and turned into a narrow parking space.  He waited and watched for us to move on out of his way.  The girls were struggling a bit with their bicks in the gravels, so had got off to walk and push for a while.  Gabriel was taking pictures of the beautiful grapes in their vineyard.

The driver behind us had probably come back to his garden to check on something or lock up for the night, since the gate was still open.  My little over active brain went into mystery mode and I just knew he thought since I had the largest backpack and Gabriel was photographing and the Girls had baskets on their handle bars, that we were there to rip off several pounds of his precious wares.

But we all kept heaving up the long gravely hill and thoughts of the kindly man in his parked car soon faded from my mind.  Shortly I noticed in the paths of the hill quit a stretch, three or four yards, of small broken pieces of white marble stone.  Now my brain moved over into a different stream of thought.  Wouldn't be interesting to pick up all that marble and see what I could make of it, if I brought it home next week on the plane?  Then reality gave my brain a yank and I walked on just stepping on small chunks of marble.

At the top of a hill where we could look over and see the highway in the valley below, there was a space between a field of corn and one of hay.  Gabriel put down a rug and handed out some plumbs and apples.  We had a bit of a respite with gulps of good cool water.  Since I'm usually the one behind, I started on and after a while, they followed.

At that point the road bent and I followed the bend.  After several rods it bent again.  There in front of me, above the bend, was a brick built schrine.  I knew it was old, but couldn't tell who or what it represented.  Through the trees, there was some kind of farm yard or dwelling.  I left it to move on and soon came to a patch of blackberries.  Looking back, I couldn't see Gabriel and the Girls yet.  So I thought to wait and eat a bit.  O, my goodness!  The berries were abundant.  They didn't have as much juicyness as I would have liked, but they were fine enough.  I ate two large hands full.  There were plenty, but my back up had arrived and they were eager to press on.

We soon reached the apex of our journey, and now it was down a tractor road that hadn't been traveled for many weeks and one track was washed deep from recent rains.  There were prickly vines in the way.  This was another one of those two or three block paths, full of slow going.  But the joy was, that at the bottom a better gravel road was waiting, than we had crossed since we met the first and only creeping car.

Now after all those two track farm paths, it felt like we had hit the high road.  In a little while we saw the moon rising from behind the distant horizon.  We couldn't see the sun,  because of the high hill right beside us, but it was still sending out its light.

Then over the top of that hill, we met a woman runner coming up, and past us.  We kept stepping down.  The Girls were doing great and we could see the distant lights of the village beginning to shine.  Suddenly we were on pavement and in the outer streets of town.

Gabriel and Lydia made phone contact about 8:40 p.m. and agreed we would meet her at the gelato shop at 9:00 p.m.  By the time we reached that paved road the sun light was going out and we were glad to be within the confines of a known way.  Our walking didn't speed up very much, but we did keep walking and now were passing buildings we knew and had passed before.  Finally we were at the door of the ice cream shop and it was 9 o'clock.  Lydia came soon and we all sat on the bench outside and licked away at our reward.

By Gabriel's calculations and the map, we walked five kilometers.  I think that would be about 3 miles.  It's not such a long walk.  It begins to be a bit more when there are a lot of ups and downs.

As delicious at Italian ice cream is, the walk was its own reward.  And I am so grateful for the ability and opportunity to walk.  I remember a few years ago when I had to learn to walk again.

Monday, August 19, 2013

LET'S GO TO THE MARKET

Except for Sunday, Every Day in a Village not too Far Away, There Will Be a Market

When Lydia first lived in the center of Torino, there was a little market open each morning from 6:00 a.m. to about 1:00 p.m.   I hope I got that right.  It was just around the corner from her apartment.  Different stands had different produce.  The same people came with their wares laid out on tables:  veggies, fruits, clothes, chickens, eggs, meats were usually in a truck with a refrigerator, fish would be in a truck with their wares laid on a bed of ice.

Occationally she took her little two-wheeled fold up cart and went to the huge everyday market over near the Royall Palice .  There they had almost anything and it was huge, covered more than a city block in the open air (with covers) and two or three very large building.

In the smaller town and villages they're not so large and come once a week or in Chieri they come on Tueday and Saturday.  There will be cook ware, shoes (men, women and kids), two or three booths.  a few booths in trucks with fold down sides or lift up windows.  Some have all cheeses, or sausages and processed meats.  Some carry fresh meats or roasted whole chickens, that one also makes a wonderful french fry almost a large around a your thumb.

There will be clothes, blankets, rugs, pillows, and odds and ends or all kinds:  Trinkets, pocket books, coin purses, flash lights, and the list goes on and on.

We always like to visit the fresh produce area.  There might be six to eight persons or family groups with their garden goods.  Saturday everybody had peaches as well as their other offerings.  Because the peaches needed to sell that day, the prices were good for the customers.  Gabriel bought two flats, probably a very full half bushel.  When we go home we set up shop.  Carys, Lydia and I pealed and sliced very delicious freestones of different varities.  There were so very delicious.  After we finished, Gabriel set in to cook up some of the best tasting marmalaide.  For a supper dessert, Lydia patted out a short bread dough into the bottom and sides of a large glass pie dish.  After it was baked and cooled, she served it sliced in wedges with fresh cut peaches on top.  That was really good.

In our village the market is a small area, maybe a third of a block, in front of City Hall and across the street from the Coffee Bar.  How convenient can that be?

Today is Tuesday.  I wonder if we'll drive the five miles into Chieri?  There will be two or three markets open.  O, and you should see and visit the Honey stand.  They have flavors from flowers all around these hills and valleys.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

WE DID IT AGAIN: WHAT A CLIMB!

The Information Book Said It Is a Shorter and an Easier Climb

Right!  Wrong!!

SATURDAY, August 17, 2013:   Our backup team, Gabriel and Gaia went with us.  He found this trail as well.  So  we were all excited to try a new walk, but thought the easier one would help our muscles, our joints and our ego.  At least it would be a comparison of the one we walked from the Abby on Wednesday.

Gabriel and Gaia seemed impressed with our talk of the walk on Wednesday, so they wanted in on the on hands, or maybe "on feet and legs" experience.  Today we drove to Monta.  That's a little south of Torino.  We couldn't leave too early, because I'm out of needles I'm using every other day for a while and the pharmacy is closing at noon and going on vacation, they are opening at 8:30 a.m.

Wednesdays walk was said to be one hour and forty-five minutes for trained walkers..  It would be up hill for a ways, then we'd begin to descend for a while and finally end after a prolonged ascent.  You already know it took Lydia, Carys and me four hours and thirty minutes.

We understood the literature to say that today's walk would be relatively level and would be finished in about an hour and forty-five minutes.  Wednesday we carried bottles of water, always an important necessity. At resting times along the way we each ate a rather large carrot, an apple and some peanuts, sunflower seeds and almonds.  That was enough and other than never having done this kind of walk, we felt good and were exceedingly elated with our accomplishment.

I was anticipating Monta to be a smaller village, but it was larger than I thought and very beautiful on top of the rather high hills.  Our parking place was good and safe, in the center of town by the police department.  Our departure point was a half block away, across the street.  The whole path is devoted to bee keeping and honey production.  We read four or five sign posts along the way, describing very ancient methods of bee keeping through the centuries.  Interestingly they used two-story brick built bee hives.

Having found our departure point, we almost immediately began to descend a steep bricked alleyway.  Then very quickly we were crossing the last street around the edge of town.  The path opened into a small mowed, somewhat, launching area.  It had a kind of billboard to introduce the idea of apiaries and all things bees.

The trail led off to the side and down, as in not up, but down, going down a steep path which turned into something like stairs.  A three by six  board about three feet long, on edge, held in place by two wooden post about three inches across, driven into the ground held back the upright and the dirt behind it.  In this case a hand rail built of the same three inch post follow some of the steps.  That was a great help to hold onto as we went down the hill or were later climbing up again.  We depend on walking sticks, as well.

At a small kind of level area was the first of those brick bee hives.  It was more like a kids play house in the back yard, but both rooms were tall enough for adults.  The "hive" did not appear to be in operation.  The building was probably 8 X 10 feet and 18 to 20 feet high.  There was a well dug beside that one.  We did read several of the posters along the way, but as I had grown up with bees, we had not come on this walk to study bees.  We were here to walk the trail.

So leaving the somewhat level area around the "bee hive," I expected pretty level going.  But I was really surprised when I looked at the trail in its continuing journey.  We kept going down.  It was several more yards to the bottom.  Earlier, even at the beginning, we had seen small evidence of previous rain, not that day.  At the bottom of the hill we crossed some muddy ground and muddy grass.

At the top, down the first series of stairs, across the mud flats and beginning upward again we passed several patches of black berries.  The first ones were ripe and ready to eat, so we did.  Others will continue to ripen as the next days pass.  It will be a blessing to those who take advantage of those wild berries of juicy sweetness.

Half that first descent was in partial shade, due to trees along the path.  The muddy crossing brought us to an entire hill covered with beautiful old trees and quite a bit of undergrowth.  Continuing on we had the good fortune of those wood and dirt stairs often with the side rail on one side.  I didn't know how to measure the degrees of the climb, but I'm sure a lot of it was in the range of 45 degrees.

Finally we came out of the woods and were now climbing, without stairs or railing, in the turn row of a huge vineyard.  At that point we all were ready to flop down and rest.  Of course, I expected Lydia and Gabriel to make it, because they were in on the planning.  But Gaia, 7 and Carys, 5 went because the adults were going and they in some ways, didn't have a choice.  They didn't complain.  After a short rest, we took a wagon path between vine rows to the top of the hill (not part of our path).  There was another brick house, kinda where many rows meet.  This one was a one room, two story.  The door was open, it had a fireplace, a cook stove, a cubboard and a stair to the upper level.  We concluded it to be for the benefit of workers in harvest.  The vines were beautiful and full of fruit, still a little green.

Lydia brings a small floor rug for down times.  The girls like to lie down at rest times.  We reloaded our back packs and went back down the row.  At the end of all those rows of vines in a vineyard, large or small, is some kind of access road.  That's were we arrived when we came out of the woods, onto an access road.  Now we were at the top and needed to go to the bottom.  This particular road was newly dozed out of the hill.  There were lumps and clods of dirt.  The dried tractor wheel tracks made tough walking.  It often is far more difficult to walk down hill than to walk up.  That's what we now had to do and after an almost tortuous descent we came out onto a "county" black topped road.  Sigh and relief!!!  We moved to the not so muddy side of the flat land road, put down the rug, sat on our back packs, pulled out the water bottles, and the food.  Gabriel had made ham and cheese sandwiches on brown bread.  We had apple slices and walnut halves with more peanuts.  We sat in the shade of some wonderful trees and feasted our bodies and souls on the glorious thought of rest.  An occasional car went by.  After about a half hour we rose up and looked toward the sky.  Our road led out to the highway and at the top was the town with our car in the middle.

It was still a down hill walk to the highway, and there we discovered the trail crossed the highway, didn't follow it.  But oh my, one look at that trail and you knew the tough part of the day had arrived.  Those rugged tractor wheels don't leave "smooth roads nor flowery beds of ease."  Get yourself a book or calender that has pictures of Italian vineyards.  See how beautiful those long rows up the high sides of those beautiful mountains really are.  Now get on your mountain climbing boots and come on over.  I don't know if they can drive their tractors up an incline at more than 45 degrees.  I am almost certain that some of what we climbed must have been very close to 50 degrees. 

Midway of that trail was one of those little brick houses at the edge of the vineyard.  It was level enough we could stand straight up for a few minutes.  Then up toward the blue, blue sky once more.  For a bit, there were those wood and dirt stairs completely overgrown with grass and weeds.  Part of the stair had the hand rail.  From there on it was just dig in your toes and climb.  After several more rows of grapevines we were at the top of the field.  There set another little brick house, Shade!!  Some large posts had been left laying and we sat down and sucked in great long gulps of sweet Italian air.

I don't know if that was a mountain or only a hill, but at the top of it I could see a house.  Our path seemed to be a two path road working it way around the side of a cliff.  Gabriel had read that there were old Roman roads in the area.  I didn't think we were on it, it was not made of stone, only dirt and weeds.  Finally we were beside a brick wall and it kept getting higher and higher.  The road turned to gravel.  Being steep it was a little bit hard to keep going forward.  We came to the end as we stepped onto good old blacktop. 

Gabriel had gone ahead of us a little.  Now he was back with our empty water bottles refilled and announced, "This is it.  We're here."   Another block of walking between houses on a brick street and we were in a little square with a water fountain, seat benches with backs and shade trees.  We sat down after four hours and thirty minutes from our beginning. 

It felt so good to be back, to the other end of the trail.  We walked, after a very long sit, about a half block and dropped down into some chairs with tables on the sidewalk beside a coffee bar, with sandwiches, water and later ice cream.  Another very good rest.

Finally up from the chairs, with packs on our back and in a block we were in the square by the police department were we left the car hours before.  For me, I am learning that this kind of walking does something good for body, mind and spirit.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

TO ANSWER JEREMY'S FURTHER QUESTION

He Asked Me to Tell about My First Sermon and Traveling with Royce Thomason

We met Dr. Rev. J. Royce Thomason some time in late 1952 or early 1953.  He was recommended to us by our dear friends, the Percey Ryan family.  Brother Royce was born and grew up on a dirt farm near Fredrick, Ok.  I think he was called to preach at age 19 and began to hold revival meetings about that time.

In 1942, or there about, WWII had started and President Roosevelt put several names in a fish bowl and began to draw out the names one by one to start the draft of young American men for fighting in the war.  The seventeenth name he drew was J. Royce Thomason.

Brother Royce, as everybody called him, was trying to keep the family farm together and help with their needs.  He was the eldest of five children.  His Dad had just died.  His four younger siblings were all still in school.  His Mother was not well and the Grand Mother who lived with them was sickly.  He made an appeal to his Draft Board for a deferment, but was denied.

He shipped out to Europe where he worked as a medic under the command of Dr. Piggman, a surgeon from the Hospital in Hazard, KY.  Brother Royce had great respect for the Doctor.  Their Unit often had no Chaplin to serve the men or to preach on Sundays, so Brother Royce stepped up to fill the gap.  He got acquainted with the Salvation Army Captain in the French town near where their Unit was working, and sometimes was asked to preach there, as well.

In the early and mid '50s Royce was in our area a lot.  He gave a service / program in the Eldorado High School that summer were he invited the entire community, and many people came.  He told of some war time experiences and of other travels through the world.  Once he told me he had, by that time, been in 109 countries.

He was well known in the Burkburnett, Texas area.  There was a military base there, maybe an Air Base.  He often held services in a Church near by.  When he started coming to the Eldorado, OK area, some of those service men came over with him or because of him.  I remember TJ. and Norwood.  There were several others whose names I don't remember any more.  Several of them stayed with us on the farm when they came.  Royce nearly always stayed with Uncle Lawton and Aunt Nina.  They lived just a mile out of town.

It was at their house that he published his first, one page, "Voice in The Wilderness", news letter.  He printed them on an old mimeograph machine he had.  That news letter soon turned into a four page "magazine" and later sixteen pages.

In the summer of 1953, Brother Royce put up his Revival Tent in Eldorado.  He could be "a one man band." He sang well, played his little portable pump organ, and preached an excellent message every time he opened his mouth.  When he came to our town, Percy recommended that he ask Daddy to lead the singing.  But Daddy really did not want to do that.  One, there was a lot happening on the farm and he was the lead horse.  Second, he had always sang base in the family quartet, he didn't want to try to lead the singing.  Three, Royce was coming to preach the revival as an independent evangelist, though we had already started the Church of the Nazarene in town.  But he did accept the challenge and switched to singing lead.  There was good interest and the crowds were pretty good.

Ryan's had come, at least for the week-end.  It was a 125 mile drive from their house to ours.  We were always so glad when they came.  At the close of the Tent Revival, Brother Royce was loading tent, chairs, hymn books and pump organ into his old school bus and heading for the long road to Vicco, KY for his next Tent Meeting.  He had three teen age boys lined up to go help raise the tent and help with handing out hymnals, and whatever needed doing.

Albert Ryan was going and I so wanted to go.  For whatever the reasons that I shouldn't go, my folks "finally" gave permission and I was in.  From Eldorado in far southwest Oklahoma Royce drove the bus to McCloud, OK.  There we picked up Larry McCloud.  He was 14, Albert and I were both 15.  Our next stop was a little north of Springfield, MO.  We were there a couple nights with the Reeves family.  Frank, their 19 year old son, was going with us.  He owned and managed two gas stations, so was getting all his people lined up to fill the gap while he was away.  During the wait, we guys filled gas tanks, washed wind shields, checked the motors for oil levels, and swept the drivers side floor.  AND Frank's Mom was one of the greatest women and a fabulous cook.

On the road at night, we guys slept on piles of tent canvas in the bus.  Brother Royce always slept on an old army cot set up on the ground beside the bus door.  Every night along the way, we were all waiting for Brother Royce's story about his night's adventure.  One morning he told us he knew there must be a military base near by, because during the night a couple of mosquito came and turned him over looking for his "dog tag".  Another night we slept near a swampy place.  Royce was awakened by an awful noise in the frog pond.  When he went to investigate, he discovered two or three frogs trying to break another frog to ride.  He told great stories.  Some he had made up, but his true life adventures were better yet.

We took a break form the road to visit an early American grave site in Paduca.  As we approached Bowling Green, Royce spotted a Revival Tent.  It was about five o'clock.  We stopped and the pastor was there.  Royce made arrangements for us to stay the night, then we had supper nearby, cleaned up a bit and dressed to attend the revival service.  That was a good break in our road routine.  By that point we were following old Kentucky highway 80.  Eighty goes the length of Kentucky and in those days there were no inner-states.  It was a long, twisty road with more mountainous as we passed Sumerset and London.  We slept that night in London.

Brother Royce was acquainted with a Free Methodist Pastor in London, Ky.  They had us in for a wonderful breakfast before we left for our last day on the road until Revival time began.  O my, those narrow twisting mountain roads.  While we were still in Eldorado, OK, Bro. Royce found a sign painter to paint on the back door of the bus, "At the End of the Road, you'll meet God."  On some of those eastern Kentucky mountain roads, we wondered if maybe our Road's End was about to come.

We drove through Hazard, stopped in Happy where one of Brother Royce's faithful supporters lived.  His name was Gillmore, I don't remember his given name.  After the war, when Brother Royce was traveling around in Europe, he had come to the near end of his journey.  He came to a French town near the English Chanel.  Because of his war time connections with the Salvation Army, he knew he could get a free bed there.  He did, but the Captain was gone and they weren't serving breakfast.  He had no more money.  He needed a breakfast and money to cross the Chanel.  As he was leaving the front door of the SA, a mail man came.  He ask if a person named Royce Thomason might be there.  Brother Royce took the letter that was offered.  It was from his friend, Gillmore in Happy, Kentucky.  The note inside said, "Brother Royce, I don't know where in the world you might be.  But I do know that sometimes you might pass by the Salvation Army in G---  Town.  I would send more but this $1.00 is all I have to my name.  I really believe the Lord has prompted me to send it to you."  Another time Bro. Royce might have been in a remote area of New Guinea and his shoe strings were broken.  He had tied knots for the last time and some how he received a letter from the Brother Gillmore which enclosed only a short letter and a pair of shoe strings.

We passed out of Happy and around the bend in the highway we turned off the road, across the bridge and at the Post Office in Scudy made arrangements to pick-up our mail.  Then came back across the bridge and wound on around the mountain to Vicco.

In Vicco, the Methodist and Presbyterian Churches were cooperating to sponsor the Tent Revival.  The Presbyterians were without a pastor.  They gave us permission to stay in their Manse, the guys, that is.  Brother Royce stayed in the tent at night.  The Manse was across a creek and up a very steep hill.  We got there from the tent site by a swinging bridge.

As I remember, after the meetings had continued a few nights, Royce asked Larry and me, if we'd like to preach a sermon before he preached one of the nights, seeing we both had a call to preach?  So he announced that on Monday night, I would bring a message.  On Tuesday night, Larry brought his sermon.  I don't remember what his scripture or title was.  I do remember it was a very good, well prepared message.

I remember that I struggled for days over my message from Revelation 3:20,  "Behold, I stand at the door and knock."  I had three or four points to make.  I don't know how well I made them.  It seemed that I must have gone on forever.  When I finally sat down and looked at my watch, I had spoken a full five minutes.  The only other thing I do remember was how ashamed I felt after I finished.  Brother Royce gave his message after that and it was as good as usual.

Every day at noon, someone in the community had us over for a fabulous home cooked meal.  One old lady had her daughter and a friend help serve the table.  As we sat down, she apologized for the flies.  She said they had not had any flies all summer, but that morning when she woke up, "the house was just filled with flies."  And it was.

Another place we ate was up a holler.  Only recently their road had come in.  Before that, it was at least a three or four mile walk to their house.  But we were able to drive right up to the bottom of the hill.  Then we climbed up to the back entrance of the house.  We stepped up onto a foot high stone, maybe two feet wide and three feet long.  The front porch was on stilts ten or twelve feet in the air.  The house was pretty large, square with four or six large rooms and high ceilings.  The porch ran across the complete width of the front.  A few years before we were there, the lady had been doing her summer canning of her garden produce.  As she finished a caner full, she stacked her boxes of jars on the porch.  One bright day, she dragged the ringer washer onto the porch and carried bucket after bucket of water from the well into the back door, heated it on the stove, then poured it into the washing machine.  She carried out the baskets of clothes to wash, filled the first load  and turned on the agitator.  It wasn't long until she, with water and machine and canned goods suddenly felt the support posts of the porch let loose and they all rolled down the mountain together.
The rebuilt one was in place when we were there.  It was made good and strong.  The woman's husband had also been in the war.  He told Brother Royce how scarred he was ridding a troop train through Oklahoma.  He kept seeing what he thought were Indian smoke signals.  He just knew they would be attacked almost any minute.  What he didn't know, was the oil companies put up pipes near the sludge pits to burn off the excess gas escaping from the wells.

A young couple, Bill and Dorothy with his brother, Peanut, had us to their upstairs apartment for a noon meal.  The young men operated a filling station and auto repair shop.  Years later I learned they were Lilly's uncles, younger brothers of Pearl.  We ate with a family named Campbell.  Gillmore's were a sort of home base.  And I know there were others that I can't recall at this distance.

Several times we went up the holler from Vicco to have a wonderful supper with Dr. and Mrs. Piggman and their three daughters.  They were a wonderful family and had befriended Brother Royce since those days, early in WWII.  When the meetings came to an end, it was time for us to fold up the tent, stow everything back in the old yellow bus and prepare for the long road home:  back past Frank Reeves parents, McCloud, Oklahoma and Eldorado.  I don't remember how Albert got home.  Maybe Royce was headed that way, or...   That was a wonderful time of new sights and great memories.  After a year or two, Bro. Royce let me know that Frank had married Sarah Piggman, middle daughter of the Doctor.  The last I heard, Sarah was a farm wife, raising feeder calves on bottles of milk.

Brother Royce had warned us from the start that Mrs. Piggman was a kind and loving woman.  Before we leave on packing day, she will give you each one, a great big hug and a kiss.  We all vowed that it would never happen.  But according to prophecy, when leaving day arrived, Mrs. Piggman arrived out of the holler in her big, beautiful car.  As we worked and talked and bid goodbyes to members of the Congregations, one by one, with unexpected suddenness, we had each been hugged and kissed by the wonderful Mrs. Piggman.