Addie, not knowing she had taken on "Pistol-Packing Mama McDuff." When Addie backed down and promised to find Essie's purse, Essie replied, "You damn sure better, and the money better be there!" Essie got her purse back, and the money was there.
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Several days later Essie Trubee would relate what had happened to a number of astonished women in a Rosebud beauty parlor. Only then would she find out about the McDuff family, and it "scared her to death." 8
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As J. A. and Addie's separate businesses became more successful, the family could afford to move into a much nicer two-story house on Linden Street almost directly across the street from the laundromat. Addie became an active member of a somewhat raucous Assembly of God Church. 9 Neighbors around the building where the congregation worshipped often watched as the celebrants shouted and carried on. Reportedly, there was little evidence of a traditional church service like Bible study, teaching, or preaching. Some of the neighbors could see Addie, a leader of sorts, standing before a group, completely possessed by the Spirit and speaking in tongues, only to stop, fix her dress, get re-possessed, and continue. After services, some of the inhabitants of nearby homes were convinced that she threw items she picked off the street at their houses. 10
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The people of Rosebud had no such suspicion of J. A. McDuff. He was a quiet man who worked so much that most people wondered if he did anything else. No one questioned his devotion to Addie and his family. He seemed different, and he had a reputation for quality work. Kenneth and Lonnie worked with their father and years later Kenneth would talk about what an overseer J. A. could be. 11 Apparently, J. A. was the master of the workplaceand nowhere else.
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Both Kenneth and Addie would later speak of Kenneth mowing lawns for elderly Rosebud women, who reportedly developed a liking towards him. The story may be credible because they related it on separate occasions. The elderly women, Addie said in a 48 Hours broadcast, loved Kenneth. Kenneth maintained that his success in mowing lawns, in which he claimed to have made more money than many adult males in Rosebud, combined with the business success earned by Addie and J. A., caused most Rosebud adults to resent the McDuff family as a symbol of upward social mobility. It was then, according to Kenneth, that jealousy birthed a conspiracy, to keep the McDuffs down. 12
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