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Just because Sandee of Comedy Plus is no longer hosting a Silly Sunday blog hop, do not expect me to quit telling Cajun jokes, especially as it has now become a habit.
Every Saturday, on the way home from Grandma and Grandpa's house, i stop at the bank and get cash to put in the offering plate on Sunday. (Writing checks proved problematic for me, i don't keep up well with what's in the account, so i prefer cash.)
Tee Boudreaux done been savin' to put de money in de plate, an' he done gots him a $5 bill. Den de plate come in de service, an' he put him de money in an' den take two $1 bills out!
Boudreaux an' Clothile done look at him, an' Boudreaux whisper, "You not aposta do dat!"
An' Tee whisper back, "Mais! I done hear you an' Mère ague dis mo'nin', an' I's gonna use de change to light two candle an' pray fo' you!"
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Sunday Selections was started as a way for bloggers to use photos that might otherwise just languish in their files. The rules have been relaxed, and it is now simply a showcase for your photos, new or old, good or bad, although nothing rude, please. It was hosted by River, who still participates, and is now hosted by Elephant's Child, who is on a blog break and missed.
Flowers, because they are everywhere.
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Today is:
Arbor Day -- China; Taiwan
Daylight Saving Time -- if your area is observing this, it switched over at two o'clock this morning; if you are just finding this out, you are already late!
Check Your Smoke Alarms and Carbon Monoxide Detectors Day -- make sure the batteries are fresh and that they are in good working order
Donkey Appreciation Day -- formerly celebrated, but the lowly donkey is no longer as indispensible as he was; if you share my fondness for beasts of burden, celebrate it anyway
Girl Scouts Birthday -- US
Huddling of Fairies of the Third Flight -- Fairy Calendar
Kronprinsessans Namnsdag -- Sweden (Name Day of HRH Crown Princess Victoria, the Heir Apparent; an official flag day)
Lesser Eleusinian Mysteries -- Ancient Greek Calendar (three day festival, dates approximate; celebrates the marriage of Kore and Dionysos)
Martyrdom of Hypatia of Alexandria -- in 415, she was murdered for the three crimes of being intelligent, female, and pagan
National Baked Scallops Day
National Day -- Mauritius (anniversary of independence in 1968)
Plant a Flower Day -- sponsored by the National Wildlife Federation; now's a good time to give wildlife friendly perennials a head start, starting them indoors if you have to
St. Gregory the Great's Day (Patron of choir boys, educators, masons, musicians, popes, schoolchildren, singers, stonemasons, stone cutters, students, and teachers; England; Kercem, Malta; Legazpi, Philippines; Montone, Italy; San Gregorio nelle Alpi, Italy; West Indies; against gout and plague)
note that Pope St. Gregory is also celebrated on Sept. 3, the date he was elected pope
Graekarismessa (Mass of St. Gregory) -- Torshavn, Faroe Islands (traditional day on which the oystercatcher, their symbolic national bird, returns)
Gregoru Diena -- Ancient Latvian Calendar (Gregory's Day, similar to groundhog day for weather prediction)
St. Seraphina's Day (Patron of the disabled and handicapped, and of spinners)
World Day Against Cyber Censorship -- sponsored by Reporters Without Borders and Amnesty International
World Glaucoma Week begins -- to expand global awareness of the Silent Thief of Sight
Youth Day -- Zambia
Anniversaries Today:
Mick Jagger marries Bianca Perez Morena de Macias, 1971
Paul McCartney marries Linda Louise Eastman, 1969
Birthdays Today:
Frank Catalano, 1978
Aaron Eckhart, 1968
David Daniels, 1966
Darryl Strawberry, 1962
Marlon Jackson, 1957
Rob Cohen, 1949
James Taylor, 1948
Liza Minnelli, 1946
Al Jarreau, 1940
Barbara Feldon, 1933
Andrew Young, 1932
Edward Albee, 1928
Wally Schirra, 1923
Jack Kerouac, 1922
Gordon MacRae, 1921
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, 1881
Simon Newcomb, 1835
Charles Cunningham Boycott, 1832
Clement Studebaker, 1821
Debuting/Premiering Today:
"Moses und Aaron"(Opera), 1954
"Fervaal"(Opera; d'Indy Op. 40), 1897
"Simon Boccanegra"(Opera), 1857
Today in History:
Martyrdom of Hypatia of Alexandria, philosopher, 415
Witiges, king of the Ostrogoths ends his siege of Rome and retreats to Ravenna, leaving the city in the hands of the victorious Roman general, Belisarius, 538
Orvieto, Italy, rules it will behead and burn Jewish-Christian couples, 1350
Jews are expelled from Syria, 1496
New Jersey becomes an English colony, 1664
The first steam engine in America installed, to pump water from a mine, 1755
Andrew Watson makes his Scotland debut as the world's first black international football player and captain, 1881
In Vicksburg, Mississippi, Coca-Cola is sold in bottles for the first time, 1894
The first main line electric train in UK, from Liverpool to Southport, begins running, 1904
The Girl Guides (later renamed the Girl Scouts of the USA) are founded in the United States, by Juliette Gordon Lowe, 1912
The foundation stone of the new Australian capital in Canberra is laid, 1913
Mohandas Gandhi begins 200m (300km) march protesting British salt tax, 1930
The Truman Doctrine is proclaimed to help stem the spread of Communism, 1947
The Church of England ordains its first female priests, 1994
Former Warsaw Pact members the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland join NATO, 1999
Financier Bernard Madoff plead guilty in New York to scamming $18 billion, the largest in Wall Street history, 2009
The U.S. Census Bureau reports the world now has 7 billion people, 2012
JOGMEC becomes the first to successfully extract methane hydrate from seabed deposits, 2013
Research shows Chinese cites have decreased pollution by 32 percent on average in just four years, 2018
Tens of thousands of farmers from Indian state Maharashtra end protests over loan waivers, prices and land rights after promises from state officials and walking 167km to Mumbai, 2018
Researchers claim more births are resulting in twins than ever before in history, with almost 1 in 42 pregnancies resulting in multiples, 2021
When I was very young I thought the offering plate was for people to take money if they needed it so I did, but when I learned I was supposed to put my money in it instead, well, that was a different story. The lolly shop was on the way home, and that's where my sixpence (5cents) went. I almost never went to Sunday School or Church anyway.
ReplyDeleteThank goodness they are giving some money on each other. My dad use to make sure that we, the children had some money to put in the plate each Sunday.
ReplyDeleteHave a great Sunday Mimi.
Cruisin Paul
Lovely flowers. Make me cheerful.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
Beautiful flowers!
ReplyDeleteThe flowers are gloriously beautiful!
ReplyDeleteLove the joke.
Fun Cajun joke and awesome floral photos!
ReplyDeleteWishing you good health, laughter and love in your days,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
We had a heavy downpour yesterday caused by a storm...so the blooms will be blooming soon, and the bloomin' grass growing even more quickly!
ReplyDeleteTake care. :)
Good one. :) Beautiful blooms. XO
ReplyDeleteThat was a good joke! The flowers are beautiful, hooray for blooming season!
ReplyDeleteIt is me, thecontemplativecat. Such flowers. We have bougainvillea here, and it grows to take over all other beautiful flowers, unless they are ruthlessly pruned. The history of injustice and religious intolerance is horrible.
ReplyDeleteI love your Boudreaux jokes. As we creep towards winter, it's a pleasure to see your colourful flowers.
ReplyDeleteCorrection: Flowers are everywhere you are. They're in short supply here! Sigh.
ReplyDelete