The proprietors, Russ and Sherry Adams, lived just up the road in Quitman. It was located next door to the Monitor offices, in the former Mineola General Hospital, and its membership included locals as well as people from Tyler, Dallas, and Louisiana. Swingers clubs are legal in Texas as long as no one is soliciting or paying for sex, and until Edwards’s column, the Retreat had been something of an open secret. we’ll try and forget they’ve infiltrated our town with their set of moral standards.” “If they just move quietly out into the country. “We’ll do the operators of the facility a favor and we won’t say where it’s located for now,” Edwards wrote. There were twelve rooms, two hot tubs, a karaoke machine, a stereo, a big-screen TV, a sex swing-and a lot of beds. Above the Community Calendar and next to the letters to the editor, they came to a story titled “Sex in the City,” in which regular columnist Gary Edwards revealed that a club for “swingers and swappers” was operating in town.
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“They braved the heat to enjoy music and good old-fashioned neighborly conversation,” read the caption. A photograph showed locals eating hot dogs at the Humble Baptist Church.
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“Area schools begin ’04 year next week,” one headline announced “28th Annual Hay Show samples to be collected,” declared another. On August 11, 2004, readers of the Mineola Monitor, a weekly newspaper that serves much of Wood County, in East Texas, sat down to a familiar front page.