|
|
|
|
Appraisal Fair will benefit Civitan |
|
|
Monday, 04 August 2008 |
Annual event set Aug. 23 includes auction and crafts
The third annual Antique Appraisal Fair sponsored by Benton Civitan Club will include live appraisals, a silent auction, refreshments from an old-fashioned soda fountain and various arts and crafts booth sales. The event is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23, in the Christian Life Center of Benton’s First United Methodist Church. The Benton Civitan Club is putting on the event as part of the club’s Circle of Friends fundraising program to benefit Civitan Services of Saline County. Admission is free and each appraisal is $5 to be paid at the door. Limited booth space is still available for any local artists or collectors wanting to display and sell their merchandise at the event. Vendors selling a variety of antiques, art, jewelry, home and garden accessories, collectibles and handmade crafts are welcome. Interested people should call the Civitan Center between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at 776-0691. Booth rental is due by Friday, Aug. 8, and is $15 per booth, or the donation of a silent auction item. The event is designed for the family to enjoy and learn a little about the history of all the unique items hidden in people’s attics. Appraisers specializing in various items will be on hand to provide approximate Arkansas sale values and some background information on the items. Areas of appraisal include, but are not limited to, quilts, pottery, jewelry, furniture, photography and clocks. General appraisers also will be available to look at items that do not fall into these categories. Civitan Club members say they are proud to bring back the silent auction again this year. People may bid on a wide array of items donated by local merchants. Some items include antique furniture, professional art lessons, an old victrola, sports equipment, dinner at local restaurants, hot air balloon rides and many more. Shoppers are invited to take a break at the old-fashioned soda fountain station and let the family enjoy some ice cream treats or grilled hot dogs and hamburgers while bids are being monitored. Sponsors for this year’s event are Landers Auto Group, Smith-Caldwell Drug Store, Glover’s Plumbing, Middlebrooks Electric, Curves, Floors and More and McClendon’s. All proceeds benefit the programs of Civitan Services of Saline County. Civitan Services is a nonprofit community organization that offers preschool and adult day programs. For 50 years, it has served people with developmental disabilities. |
| | | |  | Just being with family and eating good food is the best part!!- Liz McGee Quantz (Haskell, AR)
The Mabelvale United Methodist Church in Mabelvale, AR will be hosting a fall carnival on Sunday evening October 26th from 5 to 7pm in the Fellowship Hall. Kids will love it, parents will too! - Roger Poole (Bryant, AR)
I make an awesome Pina Colda Cake. You buy a boxed yellow cake mix and mix it and bake it per the instructions on the box. After you bake the cake allow it to cool for about 15 minutes. Use the end of a wooden spoon to poke medium size holes all in the cake. Take a can of Eagle Brand Milk and Cream of Coconut and alternate pouring them into the holes. Place the cake in the fridge for about one hour, remove and put Cool Whip on top, as much or as little as you like. The cake is better if you let it sit all night in the fridge before eatting. It is wonderful!!! - Kelly Chase (Alexander, AK)
My favorite memories of Thanksgiving were when we lived in Tulsa, Ok. There were always folks that didn't have a place to go for the holiday- so they wound up at our house along with most of my husband's family from Benton. The house was packed. The Thanksgiving meal was wonderful. But the celebration didn't end there. At night, all weekend, there were pallets spread throughout the house and the good eats seemed to never end. And on Friday morning (after Thanksgiving) all the females were up before dawn and Christmas shopping by 8:00 a.m. Those are memories that I will cherish forever. - Billie Loe (Texas)
I always get to make the turkey for our Thanksgiving. So you can add more butter or flour for consistency. Wash your turkey, pat dry, take another stick of butter and rub all over turkey. Then take with your hands and smear the batter a little thick, all over the turkey. Once all of the turkey has the batter on it, I will melt the another bar of butter and put it in the bottom of the pan of my turkey. It will make a wonderful gravy to use on your turkey when done. So, then get enough aluminum foil to make a "tent" over your turkey. Put in oven and bake @ 375 all night. It will be so moist, the crispies are great and the gravy makes it better. Now the flip side to this is, it will be so tender it will fall apart. So, I do not serve as a whole turkey. I go ahead and slice up, pour some grave over some of the sliced up turkey for those who like it and then slice up some turkey without gravy. You will have many compliments on this. Happy Thanksgiving and Enjoy! - Liz Johnson (Benton) We prepare a traditional Thanksgiving dinner that morning. Then we pack it all up and travel to deer camp in South Arkansas. We serve dinner to all those who don't have family with which to share. We'll spend the afternoon playin' dominos, pitchin' horseshoes and just visitin'. It's a wonderful time. - Pat Stuckey (Bismarck) We invite all the family in and cook the traditional feast. Everyone gets silly when they get full. That is entertaining. - Jim Perry (Benton) Frozen pizza - Greg Marsh (Medicine Hat) The whole family gets together and we have dinner and noon visit for a while then go home to take naps and get ready for black friday sales! - Terrie Schulz (Benton)
My childhood memories are of the sumptuous dinners my grandfather, Byron Yarbrough, Sr. would prepare. Family members came from all over Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas to our home of South East Street. It was a wondeful time I really didn't learn to appreciate until he and my grandmother passed away. Later, my cousin Eleen Murray brought the tradition back and family members gathered at their home near Lake Norrell. Today, it's the memories of Thanksgivings past that I treasure. It was because of these gatherings that I came to realize the importance of family. - David Hughes (Herndon, VA)
My favorite time of remembering Thanksgiving is when all of my family would get together and enjoy the most wonderful feast I have ever tasted. My mom would make at least 2 to 3 different stuffings, actually her and my sister Tammy Parker(Schultz) would make everything. I am not quite the chef my mom and sister are. I live now and have lived for most of my life away from home in different states so I have tasted many other dishes. None can compare to my mom's(Pat Brumley). But most of all it is the family being altogether and just laughing and having fun. My husband experienced this tradition for the first time in 1999 and still to this day can not stop talking about it. His traditions were not the same. He couldn't believe the amount of food, fun, and family we had for the holidays. I didn't understand it because I am used to it always being that way. I am very lucky to have the family I have. My ex-step dad (David Hughes) still treats me and my sister like his own so I have extended family to share the holidays with too. Even if it is just a phone call, prayer, or written. I sure so miss Benton. I was raised there and even though I am in Hoosier state since 2001 I let everybody know I am proud to be a Razorback. I will never be anything else. God bless everyone in Benton and someday I hope to see you soon. - Debbie Brooks (Schultz) (Columbus, IN) |
|
|
|
|
|
|