Saturday, June 06, 2026

 Man's Chest Holds Ticking Time Bomb 

Washington--The heart is a time-bomb. You carry it around in your chest. On still nights, in the dark, you can hear it ticking away. Then one day--if you're one of about 30 per cent of the people-| it seems to explode. Maybe there's only a dull pain, or maybe it's a blinding pain, and then death, or long months of lying quietly in bed.

Recently the public health service said heart disease is still the No. 1 killer, that 460,000 people died of it last year. For years, as people have grown older, they've wondered how a man feels who's had a heart attack and recovered. They've wondered what it did to him and to his thinking about himself. A man who had such an attack, a man of 44 who had been extremely active physically, was asked these questions.

He told how it had been for a couple of nights before: There was a terrible feeling, like indigestion, not a sharp pain, just that dull feeling that sent him to the doctor. The doctor took a cardiogram, a check on the heart. The man asked him, dead-pan, when it was over: "Well, what's the score?" "It's a heart attack," the doctor said. "How much time do I have?" he asked him. "I don't know," the doctor said.

"You may live 10 years, maybe 20, maybe till 65. I can't tell how your arteries are." It was a terrible shock. The man had thought his arteries would be all right till he was 100. Anyone feels that way. The man's attack was mild.

He could sit up in a chair most of the time and read. He told everyone: "I looked out the window, day after day, and my whole life went before me. I thought: suppose I die today or tomorrow. What difference does it make? "I can't see where it makes much difference, except to my family. It wouldn't make much difference to me.

I've lived my life. I know what being alive in the world is. "I've tried to live it without hate or prejudice for any other human being. People to me have always been people. I've had no illusions about them.

Some have been horrible. Some have been wonderful. "I know that if enough of us act decently with all other human beings we may work out a civilized society. I think we can do that. I'm not sure we can.

"I've been married. I know what it means to subordinate some of your own ideas to someone else's so there can be peace withir. a home, at least. "I've had children. I hope I've done a good job with them.

I'll never know for sure, because they will live longer than I. "I can't solve anything myself. All: I can do is contribute to the things I believe in. If I die tomorrow, or 30 years from now, that's all I can do. "I know if I die today, I leave a job unfinished.

I hand it to my children, just as my parents and grandparents handed it on to my me. I think it will be like that for a long time."

Friday, June 05, 2026

 ROCKY RACCOONZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ!!!!



























 ALTON LAMBERT (1910-1986) talks about being an Alabama prison guard.

 Dr Lois Alton “Pop” Lambert Sr. (1910-1986) - Find a Grave Memorial

Mr. Lambert's remarks come from his autobiography that is included in his two volume HISTORY OF TUSCALOOSA COUNTY. One of the people Alton lists in his "ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS" in Volume 1 of his history is Lester "Leck" Appling, my late wife, Sharon Swindle Register's uncle. James Lester “Leck” Appling (1909-1993) - Find a Grave Memorial

"On 22 August 1938, eleven of them made an attempt to escape. We shot six or eight of them. All of them were captured. The attempted escape was on Monday afternoon about 4:00 p.m. The last of the escapees was caught on Thursday, 25 August, 1938. About the same time the last one was caught, one of the ones ho had been shot on Monday, died."

Thursday, June 04, 2026

 ANDREW PICKENS (1739-1817) & THE TUSCALOOSA COUNTY LINE

The Hopewell Treaty between the U.S. and the Choctaw Indians was signed at Andrew Pickens Hopewell plantation on South Carolina's Keowee River in 1786. Pickens County Alabama is named after Andrew Pickens. Andrew Pickens (congressman) - Wikipedia

Geographic Shift & Modern Status
  • The Rivers: The property historically overlooked the rushing waters where the Keowee River and Twelvemile Creek converged to form the Seneca River. [1]
  • Inundation: Today, that entire river confluence and the adjacent valley have been completely flooded by the creation of Lake Hartwell. [1]
  • Current Ownership: The Hopewell property, now known as Cherry Farm, is owned by Clemson University. The surviving historic home is preserved as a window into the state's complex history with early native diplomacy and antebellum plantation economics. [1, 2, 3]
  • Lake Hartwell - Wikipedia

The 1786 Treaty of Hopewell set the boundaries between the U.S., Choctaws, and Chickasaws. In Tuscaloosa, the watershed ridge dividing the Black Warrior and Cahaba rivers served as a key historical border, dividing Choctaw and Creek territories. [1, 2]
The Hopewell Treaties (1786)
  • What they were: A trio of foundational peace and boundary treaties signed in Hopewell, South Carolina, by U.S. commissioners (including Benjamin Hawkins and Andrew Pickens) and Native nations. [1, 2]
  • The Treaties: The Cherokee signed in 1785, while the Choctaw and Chickasaw signed theirs on January 3 and January 10, 1786, respectively. [1, 2, 3]
  • Purpose: To establish government-to-government relations, define tribal boundaries in the Southeast, and bring the tribes under U.S. protection over Spanish influence. [1]
Tuscaloosa County Relevance
  • River Divide: According to official treaty boundary records, the watershed dividing the Black Warrior River and the Cahaba River functioned as the official territorial divide in this region, specifically separating Creek and Choctaw hunting grounds. [1]
  • The "Black Warrior" Border: Historically, this meant the dense forests and rivers of modern Tuscaloosa County fell right along this tense, contested frontier zone between sovereign tribal claims. [1]
  • Tribal Homelands: The broader region of northwest Alabama and the Black Warrior basin served as an intersection of Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Creek homelands as recognized—and subsequently highly disputed—by the U.S. government as settlers expanded westward. [1]
To read the exact verbiage of the accords, you can review the official Treaty with the Choctaw (1786) or the Treaty with the Chickasaw (1786).
  • Treaty with the Chickasaw, 1786
    ARTICLE XI. Peace and friendship perpetual. The hatchet shall be forever buried, and the peace given by the United States of Ameri...
    go.okstate.edu
  • Treaty of Hopewell - Chickasaw.tv
    Set a detrimental precedent that was used against the tribe in future negotiations. Two years after Ugala Yacabe or "Wolf's Friend...
    Chickasaw.tv
  • Treaty of Hopewell | Mississippi Encyclopedia
    Apr 14, 2018 — The Treaty of Hopewell refers to three treaties negotiated with the Cherokee, Choctaw, and Chickasaw Nations in 1785 and 1786 by c...
    Mississippi Encyclopedia
  • 1785 Treaty of Hopewell | News | cherokeephoenix.org
    May 22, 2008 — TREATY WITH THE CHEROKEE: 1785 Articles concluded at Hopewell, on the Keowee, between Benjamin Hawkins, Andrew Pickens, Joseph Mar...
    cherokeephoenix.org
Show all