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Juanita Joyce Adams

September 18, 1933 - February 20, 2011
Service
Nalley-Pickle & Welch Funeral Home-Big Spring
Wednesday 2/23, 10:00 am
Nalley-Pickle & Welch Funeral Home
3800 N. Big Spring St
Midland, Texas 79705
Tuesday 2/22, 1:46 am
Nalley-Pickle & Welch Funeral Home
3800 N. Big Spring St
Midland, Texas 79705

Juanita Joyce Adams, 77, of Big Spring, died on Sunday, February 20, 2011, in an Odessa hospice facility. Funeral services will be held at 10:00 AM, Wednesday, February 23, 2011 at the Nalley-Pickle & Welch Rosewood Chapel with Wade Cobb, officiating. Interment will follow at Trinity Memorial Park.The family will receive friends from 7:00 PMContinue Reading

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KERRIE MORROW left a message on March 9, 2011:
I remember Angela and I helping Juainta cook when she had a trailer house that was a cafe. She was alot of fun. Ya'll are in my prayers
KERRIE MORROW left a message on March 9, 2011:
I remember Angela and I helping Juainta cook when she had a trailer house that was a cafe. She was alot of fun. Ya'll are in my prayers
valerie thompson left a message on February 23, 2011:
May the family of Ms. Juanita Adams find comfort in knowing that God is "near to those that are broken at heart; and those who are crushed in spirit he saves." (Psalm 34;18) He has promised to soon "swallow up death forever...and wipe the tears from all faces." (Isaiah 25;8) With deepest sympathy,
Norma Green left a message on February 22, 2011:
I meant to thank her for: Canvassing downtown in the1960's tirelessly until she found a job for me. Juanita talked Franklin's into hiring me even though the store didn't need sales help. It had no more than five customers a week and I didn't last very long. But I meant to thank her. The job lasting one or two nights checking coats for quarter tips at the Big Spring Country Club during the Air Force banquets. The money helped. I meant to thank her. Hiring me to vacuum the pine needles from the carpet after Christmas. The hardest job I even held, but I meant to thank her. A plaid pleated skirt with a matching red wool sweater wrapped in the prettiest Christmas paper I'd even seen. Wool was a big thing in the 1960's. A status sympbol. My first. For the laughs and the "Hello, Sugar," greeting that always made me feel so welcomed--sometimes followed by a squint and the warning that it was time to pluck my eyebrows again. This always irritated me until I looked in the mirror. Juanita was one of a kind. Blessings and condolences to the family. These things may not seem much to people these days, but back then it meant everything to have someone on your side. It didn't come from obligation but from a generous spirit.
Lisa Cobb left a message on February 22, 2011:
I'm so sorry to hear about Juanita. She certainly brought joy to many people. I know she will be missed.
Nalley-Pickle & Welch Funeral Home & Crematory left a message:
Please accept our deepest condolences for your family's loss.
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