Last night’s adventures in insomnia included this guy.

That’s my great-great grandfather, Jim. He was born in the winter of 1871, a year when the crops didn’t come in and the cotton caterpillars ravaged what was there. Jim married Sarah in 1904 and and they lived on a farm that her grandfather bought in 1854. They had 11 children. He died in 1953, his wife in 1970. So while I don’t know them, I did meet one of their kid’s, my great-grandfather. But I don’t remember him. My grandmother remembers her grandparents well, but I don’t know much more than what you find in this paragraph beyond where he’s buried. I do like that bicycle, though. So I found some old newspapers online and I’m looking for mentions, but turn up nothing.
I did find this, though:
Just found this ad in a 1953 newspaper, right next to a church ad detailing the evening's sermon. #fb pic.twitter.com/qquRaPKIHl
— kenny smith (@kennysmith) August 13, 2014
In 1953 the church ads told you what the evening’s sermon was going to be about. This one wasn’t about Old Hickory Bourbon, or temperance. The topic was “A Methodist sermon by a Baptist preacher.” A different church had an ad in the next day’s paper, the preacher had promised to answer the question of a generation, “Should a woman wear a hat to church?”
The pressing stuff of their time.
I guess that branch of my family didn’t believe in obituaries, or care for the local paper. I don’t find a mention of him there. Otherwise, he must have been the quiet type. You don’t get in the paper until you do something wrong or something bad happens. Maybe that’s a good sign for the couple.
On my bike ride today, something of a casual ride around the greater neighborhood just to get in a few miles, I passed one of the better church signs I know. They’ve got personality here, as noted by most any previous message, one of the best in recent memory suggesting that you bring your sin and “drop it like it’s hot.”
This week’s note:

It is a quiet little church, a lovely little place:

I also learned during this ride that I was on one of the local segments that the cycling apps chart as races. Without knowing it, I currently have the eighth fastest time on it for the year. I’ll have to try it again tomorrow to see if I can go any faster.
For dinner, we grilled pork chops and had beans which we discovered a few weeks ago:

I said to the lady that made them, a family friend, “You must give me your recipe or — ” which was the moment a look of embarrassment crossed her face. ” — or tell me what brand they are, because they are just about the best beans I’ve ever had.”
And they were. And they are. Also, they are from a can — Margaret Holmes. We discovered we didn’t necessarily need the lard — which is fine. The lady that made them, she’s a retired school teacher. She told me that her father, a man I knew a bit, was so old-fashioned the type that would not allow anything in his home that involved shortcuts. In this case that meant no canned foods. He made an exception for Margaret Holmes.
That’s an endorsement.
Things to read … because there’s probably something worth endorsing in here somewhere.
First, the journalism stuff:
How digital retailing could roil local media
If Disney is making that move …
Closer to home, 108 immigrant children relocated to Alabama in last 3 weeks:
Included among the children are those from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador who have crossed into the U.S. as part of a massive wave of immigration that has set off a humanitarian crisis and political firestorm.
The data does not include information on where the children were placed or whether they are residing with family members or foster care. The children will remain with the sponsors until a judge orders they be deported; until they turn 18 and are transferred back to DHS; or they are given permission to stay by immigrantion courts.
Finally, Ferguson:
Media upset tonight about the militarization of police haven't been paying attention these last several years.
— kenny smith (@kennysmith) August 14, 2014
Folks, it is possible to simultaneously think rioting/looting are bad and that the police in Ferguson are out of their minds.
— Sean Davis (@seanmdav) August 14, 2014
Consider this from a crisis comm perspective. Wake people up. Media, online audiences are looking for real answers.
— kenny smith (@kennysmith) August 14, 2014
If you have a problem with "online audiences are looking for real answers," you might want to rethink your crisis comm.
— kenny smith (@kennysmith) August 14, 2014