Wildcats Team Tennis Opens the Season With Home Losses to Sherman and Denison

The Wildcats Team Tennis squad opened the regular season with losses to Sherman and Denison at the Wildcat Tennis Center Monday (August 5). Ironically, the scored were exactly the same as last year.
In the morning, the Wildcats lost a very close match, 10-9 to Sherman. In the afternoon, the Wildcats lost to Denison, 12-7. Against Sherman the Wildcats got two wins in doubles in seven matches. The mixed doubles team of Jeauxleigh Cantu and Jonah Kirkpatrick bested the Bearcats, 8-0. The girls doubles team of Paige Miesse and Trynity Luckett won 8-7 taking a tiebreaker. The Wildcats won seven of twelve singles matches. Boys singles winners were Kirkpatrick, 8-7 with tiebreaker, Logan Schumacher, 9-7, and Brandon Dittrich, 8-6. Girls singles winners were Cantu, 8-1, Miesse, 8-6, Savannah Lilley, 8-2 and Luckett, 8-2.
In the afternoon loss to the Yellow Jackets, the Wildcats won three doubles matches. In mixed doubles, Cantu and Kirkpatrick again won 8-0. The boys doubles team of Schumacher and Aaron Lucas won 8-4. The girls doubles team of Miesse and Luckett won 8-7 winning the tiebreaker. In boys singles, Kirkpatrick won 8-0 and Lucas won. Girls singles winners were Cantu and Miesse. The Wildcats, now 0-2 for the season, play at McKinney Boyd starting at 9 a.m. Tuesday.

Three Hopkins County Teams Are Still Alive in DSWS Despite a Pair of Losses on Monday
In action Monday (August 5) at the Dixie Softball World Series at Coleman Park in Sulphur Springs, the Hopkins County Ponytails staved off elimination with a dramatic 2-1 win over Virginia. Both the Hopkins County Angels and Debs suffered their first losses in the World Series. For the local Ponytails, things looked bleak Monday when Virginia broke open a scoreless pitchers duel with a big run in the top of the fifth inning. The Hopkins County Ponytails got a huge triple that scored two runs and gave them a walk off, 2-1 win in six innings. The Hopkins County Angels took their first loss at the hands of Alabama, 9-2. Alabama scored four second inning runs and five more in the third to go up 9-0. The local Angels scored two in the top of the fifth. For the Hopkins County Debs, they ran into the buzz saw that is South Carolina and absorbed a 26-0 loss. There are now three clear undefeated favorites with three more teams in each age group with one loss. For the Angels, Alabama is 4-0 in the World Series. They play South Carolina, 3-1 Tuesday at 8 p.m. on Field 3. The Hopkins County Angels, 2-1, play Virginia, also 2-1 in an elimination game Tuesday at 6 p.m. on Field 3. In Ponytails play, Alabama is 4-0. They face Tennessee, 2-1 Tuesday at 8 p.m. on Field 1. The Hopkins County Ponytails, 2-1 face South Carolina, also 2-1 in an elimination game Tuesday at 6 p.m. on Field 1. In Debs action, South Carolina is 3-0. They play Louisiana, 2-1 Tuesday at 8 p.m. on Field 5. The Hopkins County Debs, 2-1 have a rematch with Tennessee, 3-1 Tuesday at 6 p.m. on Field 5. Hopkins County came from behind Sunday night to defeat Tennessee, 5-4 scoring two runs in the bottom of the sixth and then closing the door in the top of the seventh. Play will wrap up in the Dixie Softball World Series on Wednesday night.

Grand Jury Signs 40 Indictments During August Court Session
The Hopkins County Grand Jury during the August session signed at least 40 indictments naming at least 32 different individuals in the charges, including four individuals accused of more than one offense and in other instances more than one person implicated in the same offense.
The majority of the indictments were for alleged controlled substance charges. The rest range from abandoning or endangering a child and assault of a family or household member that impedes breathing to unauthorized use of a vehicle, sex offender failure in duty to register, tampering with evidence and theft offenses.

Indicted for unauthorized use of a vehicle was Michael Allen Coker, 51, of Sulphur Springs. Coker was arrested on May 28 by a state trooper, who alleged he had stopped Coker for speeding on Interstate 30 and a records check showed the car Coker was driving had been reported to Paris police as stolen. Paris police were contacted. A Paris Police Department detective said the owner of the car reportedly left it running while he went inside a Paris store; the car was missing when he walked back outside, the trooper alleged in the May arrest reports. Coker remained in the county jail Monday, Aug. 5; his bond on the stolen vehicle charge was set at $5,000, according to jail reports.

Vincent Raymond Davis, 52, of Sulphur Springs was indicted during the Aug. 1 grand jury session for failure to comply with sex offender duty to register. Davis was taken into custody and held in Tarrant County jail on the charge until a Hopkins County deputy transported him to Hopkins County jail on July 8. The offense was alleged to have occurred on June 11, according to arrest reports. He remained in Hopkins County jail Aug. 5, in lieu of $100,000 bond on the charge, according to jail reports

Indicted for abandoning or endangering a child was Patrick Mondrell Hood, 45, of Sulphur Springs. Hood was arrested July 9 on a warrant alleging the charge. The warrant was obtained following an investigation by Sulphur Springs-Hopkins County Special Crimes Unit investigators and Child Protective Services personnel. Hood remained in the county jail Monday, Aug. 5. Bond on the charge was set at $15,000, according to jail reports.

Thea Colynn Patterson, 18, of Sulphur Springs was indicted for tampering with or fabricating physical evidence. She was one of five individuals arrested after deputies found suspected methamphetamine, Ecstasy pills, marijuana and drug paraphernalia during a May 20 traffic stop on State Highway 11. In the grass next to the vehicle, the deputy reported finding a clear glass pipe of the kind commonly used for smoking meth in the grass next to the vehicle; Patterson later claimed the pipe, resulting in the tampering charge, police alleged in arrest reports. She was released from jail on $10,000 bond on the tampering charge on May 27, according to jail reports.

Indicted for theft of property valued at $2,500 or more but less than $30,000 was Heriberto Reyes. The 33-year-old Jonesboro, Arkansas man was arrested May 16 and released from jail later that day on $5,000 bond on the charge, according to arrest and jail reports.
He was reportedly hauling a cargo trailer; a records check using its identification number showed it had been reported to Benton, Arkansas authorities in 2017 as stolen, a police detective said following Reyes’ arrest. Reyes allegedly told police he bought the trailer about a month before from an individual in Memphis. He reportedly had in his possession a “certificate of origin” for the trailer, but it was not registered to him, according to police reports.

Nathaniel Dion Smith Jr. was indicted for possession of 4 ounces or more but less than 5 pounds of marijuana. Special Crimes Unit and the local SWAT Team assisted Texas Department of Public Safety Narcotics Team in serving a search warrant at a Drexel Drive residence on Nov. 8, 2018. During the search, a pistol, approximately $10,000 in US currency and marijuana were allegedly found at the location. The search came as a result of a Texas DPS investigation concerning marijuana being shipped from Fresno, California to be sold in Sulphur Springs and Hopkins County. Smith, 29 at the time, was arrested at the location on a marijuana possession charge, according to reports following the 2018 arrest. The Sulphur Springs man was released from jail on $10,000 bond on the charge on Nov. 9, 2018, according to jail reports.

Indicted for failure to comply with sex offender’s duty to register was Vernon Vincent Vaughan III. A sheriff’s investigator alleged the 42-year-old Sulphur Springs man, a convicted sex offender, did not report his address change with his primary registration authority, the sheriff’s office, 7 days prior to a new change of address, as required by Chapter 62 of the Code of Criminal Procedures. The investigator located Vaughan on July 8 on West Industrial Drive, allegedly his new address, and arrested him. He remained in Hopkins County jail Aug. 5; bond on the charge was set at $10,000, according to jail reports.

Amanda Lanell Shanks was indicted on six separate charges: two for manufacture or delivery of 4 grams or more but less than 200 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance; and one each for manufacture or delivery of 1 gram or more but less than 4 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance, tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, possession of 4 grams of more but less than 200 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance and prohibited substance or item in a correctional, civic or community facility. The 31-year-old woman has remained in the county jail since her arrest May 12 on the charges.
She was reportedly the front seat passenger in a vehicle stopped by police around 2:45 a.m. May 12 on East Industrial Drive. Shanks was allegedly seen reaching into the floorboard and looking around, as if concealing something, as the car stopped, officers alleged in arrest reports. A female jailer was requested to conducted a search of Shanks; a bulge in her pants turned out to be a small black handbag containing a substance packaged in a form suspected to be a controlled substance. Shanks admitted the suspected substance was to be delivered to another person, police alleged in arrest reports. The substance tested negative for controlled substances; Shanks was arrested for having a simulated controlled substance, police alleged in reports. The manufacture or delivery warrants were added, along with the other charges she was indicted on in August.
Raymond Antonio Sheard Kayla Marie Sessums
Kayla Marie Sessums and Raymond Antonio Sheard were indicted for possession of more than 400 grams of a Penalty Group 2 controlled substance. The pair was accused of having about 1.5 pound of THC product, marijuana packaged for sale and firearms when stopped Nov. 21, 2018, for a traffic violation on Interstate 30, according to arrest reports. Sessums was released from jail later that day; her bond was set at $30,000. Sheard was released from jail on $45,000 bond on Nov. 24, 2018, according to jail reports.
Also indicted was Gerardo Rubio Martinez on an assault of a family or household member that impeded breathing or circulation charge. He was accused of placing his hands around the neck of his 32-year-old girlfriend and applying continuous force for approximately 15 seconds, preventing her from breathing, police alleged in arrest reports. He was arrested June 22 and released from jail June 24 on $30,000 bond, according to jail reports.
The remained of the indictments were for controlled substance charges, including:
- Samantha Deann Lee and Eddie Malone — possession of 4 grams or more but less than 200 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance.
- David Glen Self — possession of 4 grams of more but less than 200 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance and for possession of 4 grams or more but less than 400 grams of a Penalty Group 2 controlled substance.
- Timothy Alan Goss — possession of 4 grams ore more but less than 400 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance.
- Cameron Bain — possession of less than 1 gram of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance and for possession of 1 gram or more but less than 4 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance.
- Natalia Malia Kincaid — possession of 1 gram or more but less than 4 grams of Penalty Group 1 controlled substance.
- Cathy Sue Pichardo, Curtis Leroy Marler and Steffany Lynne Taylor — possession of 1 gram ore more but less than 4 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance in a drug-free zone.
- Martin Lee Contreras and John David McGee Jr. — possession of less than 1 gram of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance in a drug-free zone.
- Rebecca L. Maiello — two possession of less than 1 gram of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance charges.
- Kalen Reigh Halbert, Amanda Kay Burleson-Knutson, Marquise Alfredo Hernandez, Tracy Odell Marshall, Melissa Mask Roberson, Leobardo Sanchez, Daryl Christopher White, Mario Tremaine Small and Randy Lynn Webb — possession of less than 1 gram of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance.
Upcoming Opportunities You Don’t want to Miss

By Johanna Hicks, B.S., M.Ed., Texas A&M AgriLife Extension, Family & Community Health Agent
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension provides numerous workshops, educational series, camps, one-shot programs, multi-county programs, newsletters, educational social media articles, newspaper columns, radio spots and individual consultations. Previously, a local media outlet would drop by the office asking if we had anything going on. That person now asks WHAT is coming up, rather that IF anything is coming up! We always have opportunities available for you! Below are a couple of upcoming opportunities you will want to jot down.
“Get a Taste for Reducing Food Waste”
Hopkins County has been selected as a pilot county for this four-lesson series, and the dates are just around the corner! Rather than spreading it out over a 4-week series, I will be presenting a condensed version on two dates (two lessons per day.) The goals of the program are:
- Participants will learn how much food they throw away at home.
- Participants will learn how to plan and prepare meals that minimize food waste.
- Participants will improve their ability to store foods to extend their life and quality.
- Participants will learn how to compost uneaten/spoiled food.
Participants will reduce the amount of money that is lost due to food waste.
If this sounds like something you would be interested in attending, there is no charge, but I do need to know how many plan to attend in order to make adequate preparations.
- What: Get a Taste for Reducing Food Waste series
- When: Monday, Aug. 12, and Thursday, Aug. 15
- Time: 10 a.m.
- Where: Hopkins County Extension Office, 1200 West Houston St., Sulphur Springs
- Call: 903-885-3443 to reserve a seat
Hopkins County Fall Festival Arts & Crafts Show
Vendor applications are now being taken for the 2019 Hopkins County Fall Festival Arts & Crafts Show. This is always one of the major attractions during the Fall Festival, and it provides a great opportunity for visitors to do some early Christmas shopping! There are a few guidelines to remember:
The Arts & Crafts Show will take place Oct.r 25 & 26, in the Sulphur Springs High School cafeteria, north entry way, and outdoor covered walkway. Set up will be Friday morning, October 25, from 7:15 to 10 a.m. The show is open to the pubic from 10 a.m. to p.m. on Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. This show is for handmade/hand-crafted items only. Commercially-made items or commercial businesses will not be accepted. If you want to be a vendor in the commercial exhibit area, contact Blake Weir, 512-740-8618.
Here are a few other guidelines to consider:
- You will need to provide your own tables, chairs and display equipment.
- Electrical outlets are limited and will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. Please indicate on your application if you need electricity.
- Covered outdoor spaces are available.
- Arts & Crafts Show hours are: Friday, Oct. 25, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday, October 26, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. No early pack-up unless cleared with Coordinator (me).
- Those wishing to exhibit for one day only will be assigned an outdoor space.
- A confirmation letter, including directions to the facility, unloading and parking information will be sent to exhibitors after receipt of registration and payment.
- Indoor space sizes are 8 foot X 8 foot (single space) or 16 foot X 8 foot (double space). Outdoor covered spaces are larger. Prices vary according to location of spaces (indoors or outdoors), number of spaces requested, and age.
- The deadline to apply for a space is Oct. 9. Fee is required with completed application.
Contact the Hopkins County Extension Office at 903-885-3443 for details and to get an application.
Other upcoming events:
- Twogether in Texas marriage education workshop – Saturday, Aug. 17
- Planning meeting/luncheon for Master Wellness Volunteers, Family & Community Health Committees – Aug. 23
- Diabetes Support Group – Aug. 27
- Cooking Well for Healthy Blood Pressure – Sept. 9, 12, 16
- Cooing Well with Diabetes – Sept. 16, 19, 23, 26
Closing Thought
“I no longer listen to what people say – I just watch what they do. Behavior never lies.” Winston Churchill

Woman’s Unusual Parking Job, Difficulty Using ATM Attract Police Attention

A 39-year-old Sulphur Springs woman’s inauspicious parking job at a bank ATM at 2:18 Sunday morning, Aug. 4, caught a police patrol officer’s attention and ended with her arrest.
When the Sulphur Springs police officer went to check out the suspiciously parked Ford Explorer, he reported finding a woman on the phone, holding a credit/debit card. She allegedly said she was having issues with the ATM. The officer noticed thick-tongued, slurred speech and her glossy eyes. The officer, in arrest reports, further claimed the woman emitted an alcohol odor.
The patrolman reportedly asked the 39-year-old woman to step out of the SUV. He then performed horizontal gaze nystagmus tests; she showed 6 out of 6 clues of intoxication. She was already swaying and having trouble standing up straight while he conducted the HGN tests, so the officer, out of concern for the woman’s safety, opted not to perform walk-and-turn and one-legged stand tests, police alleged in arrest reports.
The woman reportedly allowed the officer to properly park and secure her vehicle at the bank just off South Broadway Street, then took her to jail. She was booked for public intoxication.
She was released from the county jail later Sunday, Aug. 4, according to jail reports.
Woman Accused of Alcohol Consumption, Spitting On Cop At Travel Center

A 23-year-old woman allegedly consumed alcohol on the premises of a local truck stop and displayed aggressive behavior toward officers who located her at another. She was arrested Saturday night, according to police reports.
Sulphur Springs police were told the woman purchased alcohol and a stick of beef jerky, then began drinking the alcohol inside Pilot Travel Center. When told by store staff not consume the alcohol in the store, she allegedly told them she didn’t care if she went to jail. She reportedly continued to drink the beverage while trying to exit the store, falling into the door before getting it open and leaving, police alleged in arrest reports.
Police attempted to locate the woman, who they were told was last seen walking toward the truck parking area. They were unable to locate her.
A short time later, the woman was reported to have reentered the South Hillcrest Drive business. When police arrived, however, they were told the woman yet again had left, reportedly walking across the highway to Love’s Travel Stop, officers alleged in arrest reports.
The woman was reportedly inside Love’s when police arrived. Police spotted a woman matching the description given for the suspect in a beer cooler. As an officer approached her, the woman allegedly threatened to punch him in the face and became verbally aggressive toward him.
The officers alleged an alcohol odor could be smelled on her breath as she spoke with slurred speech. When asked about the alcohol consumption, she allegedly admitted to eating a stick of beef, which the officer believed confirmed she was the woman from Pilot, who had purchased beef jerky.
Once officers got her outside, they alleged the woman continued to shout and curse, after being warned multiple times to cease doing so. The officer, in arrest reports, claims when he asked her if he could perform horizontal gaze nystamus tests, the woman told him he could, but continued shouting and arguing with the policeman, preventing him twice from administering the HGN test to her.
The woman then allegedly stepped close to the officer, accidentally spitting on him. The officer alleged, in arrest reports, that when he asked her to step back and not spit again she placed her fingers to her mouth and made a hand gesture of spitting, causing more spit to strike the officer in the face.
The woman was placed into handcuffs and taken into custody for public intoxication about 11:45 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3. Upon arrival at the jail, the policeman requested an inmate clean out the back of his patrol vehicle, where he alleged the woman had spit in multiple locations, he noted in arrest reports.
The 23-year-old allegedly refused to provide any more information than her name and date of birth, and had no ID on her, preventing officials from completing the portion of the arrest report containing her address and other personal information.
The 23-year-old was released from jail on the public intoxication charge Sunday.
2 Jailed Over Weekend On Felony Warrants
Two men were booked into Hopkins County jail Saturday on unrelated felony warrants, according to jail reports.

Cumby Police Officer Zack Steward arrested 35-year-old Daniel Garza of Grand Prairie man at 4:12 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3, on a Tarrant County possession of 4 grams or more but less than 200 grams of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance warrant, according to arrest reports.
Garza was in a Chevrolet 1500 pickup Steward stopped on Interstate 30 east at mile marker 114 for a traffic violation. A records check showed the outstanding warrant for Garza’s arrest, resulting in the Cumby officer taking the Grand Prairie man into custody and jail on the charge, the officer alleged in arrest reports.
Garza remained in Hopkins County jail Monday morning. Bond on the Tarrant County controlled substance charge was set at $30,0000, according to jail reports.

Hopkins County Sheriff’s Deputy Terry Bevill traveled to Collin County, where 37-year-old Richard Otto Hall Jr. of Pickton was being held on a Hopkins County warrant.
Bevill took Hall into custody at 1:55 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3, at Collin County Sheriff’s Office and transported him to Hopkins County Law Enforcement Center. Hall was booked into the county jail on a warrant for violation of probation, which he was on for possession of a Penalty Group 1 controlled substance in a drug-free zone, according to arrest and jail reports. The offense was alleged in arrest reports to have occurred on Feb. 28.
Hall remained in the county jail Monday morning on the charge, according to jail reports.
Sulphur Springs Man Reportedly Arrested On At Least 4th DWI Charge

A faulty license plate light lead to a traffic stop and eventually the arrest of a 41-year-old Sulphur Springs man early Sunday morning on a fourth driving while intoxicated charge, according to arrest reports.
Hopkins County Sheriff’s Deputy Lance Burdick alleged he could smell alcohol on Timmy Lynn Clark as he spoke to him, after stopping him for the equipment violation on the Chevrolet Cobalt he was driving at 1:17 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 4, on Bellview Street at Locust Street.
Burdick reported seeing an open 30-pack of Keystone light beer in the back seat of the car as well. When asked how many of the beverages he had consumed, the 41-year-old Sulphur Springs man allegedly admitted to having 8 beers.
Burdick reported having the man step out and asking him to perform standard field sobriety tests. Clark allegedly agreed to do “the eye” test but not others, and showed six clues of intoxication during horizontal gaze nystagmus testing. When asked, Clark refused to attempt standard field sobriety tests and was taken into custody, Burdick alleged in arrest reports.
A records check showed Clark to have three prior DWI arrests, resulting in the DWI charge being enhanced to a felony, according to arrest reports. Jail reports show Clark was arrested in 2010 on a third or more DWI charge and sentenced to 1 year in a substance abuse felony punishment facility for third or more DWI in 2013.
Clark also reportedly refused to submit to a blood test, so the deputy sought and obtained a search warrant requiring a blood draw for analysis. The sample was taken at the hospital, then the man was transported back and booked into the county jail, Burdick alleged in arrest reports.
Clark was released from the county jail later Sunday, Aug. 4 on $15,000 on the felony DWI charge, according to jail reports.
Success for Jayden Holly at the Texas Amateur Athletics Federation “Games of Texas” in July 2019

Although she has many family members and friends in the area, Miss Jayden Holly will be entering the Sulphur Springs School District for the first time in the Fall as a student athlete. In a follow up story on Jayden’s trip to the Texas Amateur Athletics Federation Games this summer where she participated in shotput and discus, here is her report in her own words.
“I PARTICIPATED IN TEXAS AMATEUR ATHLETIC FEDERATION “GAMES OF TEXAS” IN JULY. THERE WERE HUNDREDS OF YOUTH THERE AT THE GAMES, AGES 6 TO 18, FROM ALL OVER TEXAS ON SATURDAY JULY 28 AT BRYAN COLLEGE STATION.
MY SPORTS ARE SHOTPUT AND DISCUS. I COMPETED IN THE 13 AND 14 YEAR OLD DIVISION.
IN SHOTPUT, THERE WERE 52 COMPETITORS. I GOT FOUR TRIES TO THROW MY LONGEST SHOTPUT. MY LONGEST THROW WAS 33.7. MY ACTUAL COMPETITION ONLY TOOK ABOUT 20 SECONDS EACH TIME BUT THE WHOLE SHOTPUT CONTEST TOOK OVER 2 HOURS. THEN WE WENT TO DISCUS.
IN DISCUS, I HAD 49 OPPONENTS IN THE 13 AND 14 YEAR OLD DIVISION. I GOT THREE TRIES TO THROW MY FARTHEST. MY BEST DISTANCE WAS 80.5. SO I MADE THE PRELIMINARY FINALS. LATER, I GOT TO THROW ANOTHER THREE TRIES, AND MY LONGEST THERE WAS A 77.2, SO I DIDN’T DO AS WELL AS I HAD HOPED. WE WERE TIRED AND IT WAS VERY HOT ON THE FIELD! WE DID HAVE MIST FANS TO STAND UNDER AND THAT HELPED! SO I ENDED UP WITH 7TH PLACE OVERALL IN DISCUS AND I WAS PLEASED WITH THAT.
THAT SAME NIGHT, THE RECOGNITION CEREMONY WAS SET UP LIKE AN OUTDOOR OLYMPIC STAGE, AND THE TOP THREE COMPETITORS IN EACH SPORT GOT TO RECEIVE THEIR MEDALS. AS 7TH AND 9TH, I RECEIVED A RIBBON FOR EACH SPORT. THEN WE ALL TOOK PART IN THE AWARDS PARADE THROUGH THE TOWN OF BRYAN COLLEGE STATION.
WHEN SCHOOL STARTS, I WILL BE A LADY WILDCAT PLAYING VOLLEYBALL AND I HOPE TO PLAY BASKETBALL AND CONTINUE IN TRACK SPORTS. AT SCHOOL. AND NEXT SUMMER, I PLAN TO BRING HOME A MEDAL IN TEXAS AMATEUR ATHLETIC FEDERATION ‘GAMES OF TEXAS’!

Jayden will be a Freshman who, along with participating in sports, hopes to become a Sulphur Springs Blue Blaze during her high school tenure. Also, along with Cadyn Spigner, Jayden has been a student intern at KSST for a portion of the summer through Morning Chapel Missionary Baptist Church’ youth program started by Reverend H.B.Nash and Deacon Pete Nash.