Letter: no charges against former Pike County Sheriff
Transcription
Letter: no charges against former Pike County Sheriff
Nashville News The Sheriff warns of alleged scam The Howard County Sheriff’s Ofice is warning area residents about a potential scam targeting the region. According to Sheriff Butch Morris, oficers have received numerous calls from residents stating that they are receiving calls from local numbers asking them to give out their credit card numbers. Victims have reported that the callers are saying they need the information to help them lower their interest rates. “Make sure you do not give out your personal information to anyone that you do not know or trust,” Morris said in a statement issued to local media today. THURSDAY • july 17, 2014 • Issue 55 • 1 Section • 12 Pages • USPS 371-540 • 75 cents • PUBLISHED EACH MONDAY & THURSDAY In Howard County, Arkansas since 1878 Letter: no charges against former Pike County Sheriff traffic stopper CHARLES GOODIN Editor D.E. RAY | Nashville News Arkansas State Trooper Clayton McWilliams and an employee of Bypass Diesel inspect the wreckage of a 1989 Mack log truck that overturned south of Tollette Wednesday. According to police reports, the accident occurred around 1:35 p.m. after the truck’s trailer axle hanger broke and a tire blew out. The driver, Lyle Gann, of Amity, was treated for minor wounds at the scene and released. At press time, he had not been cited, and was praised by law enforcement at the scene of the accident for his exemplary driving record. MURFREESBORO - An investigation into the accounting and money-handling practices of former Pike County Sheriff Preston “Pep” Glenn has concluded and no charges are to be filed against the ex-law enforcement official, according to a document acquired by the Nashville News. In a letter addressed to the Hon. Charles A. Yeagan dated July 10, Special Prosecuting Attorney Jack McQuary wrote that incomplete records prevented the investigation from turning up enough evidence to press charges on Glenn. “Prosecutors, in order to file charges against someone, must present to the judiciary probable cause for that person to be arrested, then must prove the charges against that person beyond a reasonable doubt for conviction,” McQuary said in the letter. “In this case, do I believe there was criminal activity concerning accounts of the Pike County Sheriff’s Department? Yes. Is there enough evidence to prove See LEttER | Page 10 Family seeking donations Third Friday singing set The third Friday night singing will be held Fri., July 18 at 6:30 p.m. at County Line Baptist Church, located ive miles west of Nashville on Hwy. 371. Everybody is invited to come and join the singing. For more information, call Leta Cox at 200-5368. KAtELyN COffmAN Staff Writer MINERAL SPRINGS – Roy Backus has been hired to serve as girls’ basketball and track coach and as assistant football coach. He was officially hired last Monday after applying for the position a month ago. Backus was born and raised in Mineral Springs, but had been commuting to his coaching job in Ashdown for the past 14 years. His three children attend school at Nashville so when he had the chance to transfer to Mineral Springs, he took it because it gave him the opportunity to be by his family. Backus attended school at Henderson State University and went on to Southern Arkansas University to complete his degree work. He got his first coaching job in the small town of Hattig then at Ashdown. According to Backus, his upbringing in Mineral Springs is part of what inspired him to become a coach in the first place. “Growing up in this little town, all we really had was ball,” he stated. Because of that and his love for kids, coaching seemed like the See BACKUS | Page 3 CHARLES GOODIN | Photo Illustration Attempts at a beneit for a Glenwood man have thus far fallen short of expectations. Rob Faulkner, a former truck driver, had recently experienced a major heart attack on June 18, 2013. He has since had three more, along with surgery that placed six stents. Faulkner has also been recently diagnosed with COPD and can no longer work, but has thus far been denied a disability designation. Cathy Faulkner, wife of Rob, states that the family is now living exclusively on her monthly social security checks and are unable to afford many of his medications, which are not classiied as maintenance necessary. “The family is feeling frustrated,” said Cathy at the inability to get interest in the fund raiser started in a community known for heavily supporting such causes. Those looking to help - either monetarily or via items for rafle/auction purposes - are asked to contact Christy Franks (daughter) at 200-2713 or Sheila Faulkner (sister) at 557-0639. A webpage has also been set up for the cause, which can be viewed at gofundme. com/9i7470. Thus far, simply due to a lack of response, a bank account has not been opened for donation purposes. “I have always been a daddy’s girl ... my father means so much to me, but I can only help so much. I’m asking for help for my dads medical bills, gas, ect. He is unable to work and is ighting disability. Any help is appreciated. Thank you,” said Franks on the website. Franks is an employee of Nashville Sonic. Historical society approves bylaws, elects officers during first meeting preparing for camp KAtELyN COffmAN Staff Writer NASHVILLE – Board officers were elected at the Howard County Historical Society’s first official organizational meeting Tuesday evening. Freddy Horn was elected president, Rachel Cooper was elected vice president, Maura Bissell was elected treasurer and Nikki Cherry now holds the position of secretary. As of the meeting, there are 12 paid members. Currently, dues are owed a year from the date in which they are paid and there is no specific date for every person to pay. According to board members, the policy may change in the future once the organization becomes more established. Having special rates for people such as families, gold members, lifetime members and corporate sponsors may be incorporated into the bylaws at a later date, but currently there is a set rate of $20 per person. The Historical Society currently has $570 as of the meeting with $240 coming from paid members and $330 in contributions. A bank account for the organization is about to be opened. AARON GRIMES | Nashville News Families of the Ebenezer Revival Camp stand outside of their rustic cabins just outside of Center Point on a cool Thursday night, preparing for a weekend of fellowship and fun. Revival services will be held every day this upcoming week at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. There will also be services held at 3 p.m. on Sundays and Wednesdays. Ebenezer was first mentioned in available church records in 1822. In 1837, Rev. John H. Propps donated land for the camp ground near the Center Point Cemetery. John Henry, one of the founders of the original camp ground near Old Washington, sent his son John Henry, Jr. to handle moving arrangements. John Henry is buried in the Center Point Cemetery. After moving two more times, seeking more space and spring water, Ebenezer trustees purchased the present 40 acre site in 1837. Pictured are (front row) Sarah Weston, Noah Weston, Natalie Fletcher, Landry Carter, (back row) Merilyn Jones, Cindy Lock, Bailee Weston, Peyton Carter and Jeanne Weston. 2 Editorial The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 | Thursday, July 17, 2014 Garner’s hard work lead to founding of popular lake William Carl Garner was a good-natured and gracious man, but through his many years of hard work became the man who put Greers Ferry Lake on the map and became the heart of the north-central Arkansas lake community. Garner was born in Sulphur Rock in Independence County in 1915. He graduated at the top of his class in 1933 Dr. kenneth and later attended Arkansas briDges College (which became Lyon History College in 1994) in nearby Professor Batesville on a basketball scholarship. He graduated with a degree in economics in 1938. After graduation, he got a job with the US Army Corps of Engineers. In 1945, he was transferred to the Little Rock District. In 1959, approaching mid-age, he discovered his life’s calling as construction began on Greers Ferry Lake. For the next several years, Garner carefully surveyed the area and studied every detail of the effort. His efforts earned him promotion to resident engineer in 1962, a position he would embrace for the next thirty-four years. In October 1963, President John F. Kennedy, in one of his last public appearances, came to dedicate the facility, with Garner on the platform with a delegation of state and local dignitaries. In one interview, Garner recounted riding in the presidential limousine afterward with President Kennedy, Sen. John McClellan, and Rep. Wilbur Mills all listening to the World Series game on the radio. While construction was complete, for Garner, the work was just beginning. Determined to make the lake a success and an economic engine for Cleburne County, he lobbied legislators and members of Congress continually for funding and for awareness of the lake’s potential. He spoke to numerous groups and media outlets and made sure the lake’s facilities were up-to-date, safe, and clean. He loved the lake and worked to keep it in pristine condition. He wanted the public to enjoy the beauty of the lake area as he saw it, and in 1970, organized a public effort to clean up the shoreline and lake facilities at Greers Ferry and the Little Red River. This would become an annual effort. So impressed by its success, Congress called for similar efforts every year at all national parks and federally-maintained lakes in 1985. In 1995, this became Carl Garner Federal Lands Cleanup Day, to this day marked the first Saturday after Labor Day. Garner was named the top resident engineer out of 440 by the Corps of Engineers in 1979 and received an honorary doctorate from Arkansas College in 1994. Only in 1996, at the age of 81, did he retire from his official duties at Greers Ferry. He had served 58 years, one of the longest careers in the federal government. More importantly for Garner, the lake had become a multi-million dollar attraction for the area, a place of recreation and joy for thousands, and local citizens would continue preservation and pollution control efforts through the Save Greers Ferry organization and other efforts. Even after his retirement, Garner would never stop his work with the lake. He continued to work with state and national leaders for funding and would speak with any organization about the many benefits of the lake. In June, just after his ninety-ninth birthday, the Keep Arkansas Beautiful Commission named Garner one of its top 25 inspiration leaders for his work with Greers Ferry. He would pass away quietly a month later, surrounded by a loving family and revered by a community forever altered by one man’s love for the beauty of the natural world. nnn Dr. Kenneth Bridges, a History Professor at South Arkansas Community College in El Dorado, can be reached at kbridges@southark.edu. The South Arkansas Historical Foundation is dedicated to educating the public about the state’s rich history. The SAHF can be contacted at PO Box 144, El Dorado, AR, 71730, at 870-862-9890 or at http:// soarkhistory.com/. The Nashville News USPS 371-540 P.O. Box 297 418 N. Main St. Nashville, AR 71852 Telephone (870) 845-2010 Fax (870) 845-5091 Toll Free 1-888-845-NEWS Established 1878. Published since Sept. 1, 1979 by Graves Publishing Company, Inc. Lawrence Graves, President Subscription rates: $30.00 per year in Howard, Pike, Sevier, Little River and Hempstead counties; $50.00 elsewhere in continental United States Periodicals Postage Paid at Nashville, Arkansas Any erroneous statement published in the newspaper will be gladly and promptly corrected after management is notified. The News is a twice weekly publication. Postmaster, send Change of address to: P.o. Box 297 Nashville, ar 71852 Louis ‘Swampy’ Graves, Editor and Editor Emeritus, 1950-2001 Mike Graves, CEO/Publisher Donna Harwell, Comptroller/Office Mgr. Charles Goodin, Editor D.E. Ray, Managing Editor Katie Whisenhunt, Advertising Sales Cindy Harding, Circulation Manager The News is the oldest active business in Howard County -- Founded in 1878. Find us on the Internet at: www.swarkansasnews.com flavor-of-the-week politics WASHINGTON -- “This is not theater.” T h a t w a s P re s i d e n t Obama’s answer in Dallas last week to critics who said he should have gone to the border to see firsthand the mass immigration of unaccompanied minors that has suddenly seized Washington’s attention. The president is wrong. The terror, abuse and suffering of children shouldn’t be theater, but it is. All the political world today is a stage. Our national dialogue has become a series of one-act plays: Each runs for a week or two, the critics volunteer their reviews of the president’s performance, and then it closes just as quickly -- perhaps, like Benghazi, to be revived for a second run at a later date. Last week, Washington’s thespians were chorusing about the border crisis. Is it Obama’s fault? Has he mishandled it? The border situation will be much the same a couple of weeks from now, but it’s a safe bet that the political world will have moved on to another oneact show. My nomination: Whether Obama is to blame for the upsurge of violence in Israel and the Palestinian territories. So it has been going for months. Two weeks ago, the show was about the Dana milbank Washington Post IRS and Lois Lerner’s missing emails. A week before that, Washington was deep in a seemingly existential debate about the terrorists who had overrun much of Iraq and Syria. Two weeks earlier, the play was about the Bowe Bergdahl prisoner swap with the Taliban. Two weeks before that, it was about the veterans’ health care scandal. A week before that, the play was about the kidnapped schoolgirls in Nigeria. A week earlier, there had been a brief reprise of the Benghazi show, because a previously unknown document had surfaced. Before that was the one-act play about Ukraine. Such is the attention-deficit disorder that has come to afflict our politics. Those Nigerian schoolgirls are still missing. The situation in Iraq is every bit as grim as it was when Washington was paying attention, and perhaps more so. Ukraine is still volatile and veterans still aren’t getting the level of service they deserve. But now we care only about whether Obama’s failure to visit the border was his “Katrina moment,” after George W. Bush’s weak initial response to the 2005 hurricane. There are many (including the media) to blame for leaving Washington in need of a group rate for Ritalin. Republicans had for years spent most of their breath on two issues -- unemployment and Obamacare -- but both have lost political potency now that job growth is accelerating and the health care law has stabilized. Lacking another dominant issue, they’re trying the flavor-of-the-week approach. This aimless Congress (which makes no effort to set a legislative agenda) leaves a vacuum for Capitol Hill’s troublemakers to take up issues only to see what political damage they might cause. Obama, too, has had a bit of an attention-deficit problem. In the last couple of weeks, for example, he has bounced in every direction, speaking about, among other things, the border, the economy, education, immigration, the highway bill, executive actions, gay rights and veterans. The bully pulpit isn’t what it used to be, but the president still can focus the nation’s attention on a topic if he hammers away at it relentlessly. Bush did this. Obama chooses not to. As Washington drifts, the public follows. In last month’s Pew Research Center poll, which measured the percentage of Americans following major stories closely, the top story was veterans’ health care, followed by Iraq and the IRS. None of those was among the top stories the previous month, when the Nigerian kidnapping dominated. Before that, it was the missing Malaysian airlines flight. Before that: cold weather. A decade ago, the Iraq War routinely dominated public attention. In recent years, the economy, and to a lesser extent Obamacare, did the same. For the first time in years, there’s no overarching crisis at home or abroad, and Obama can take some satisfaction in this. But the nation’s wandering attention will only worsen if Obama doesn’t try to help it focus. A top Obama adviser, justifying the decision not to send the president to the border, told me that the hubbub would dissipate in a couple of weeks, even as the crisis, and the administration’s response, continues. That’s probably so, but it does Obama no good to piously shun theatrics. If he embraces his potential as writer, producer and director, he can stage a better production. Bordering on heartless WASHINGTON -- Glenn Beck says he has come under fierce attack from some of his fellow conservatives for a grave transgression. His crime? He announced plans to bring food, water, teddy bears and soccer balls to at least some of the tens of thousands of Central American children who have crossed the border into the United States. “Through no fault of their own, they are caught in political crossfire,” Beck said. “Anyone, left or right, seeking political gain at the expense of these desperate, vulnerable, poor and suffering people are reprehensible.” Beck, not averse a certain grandiosity, let us know that “I’ve never taken a position more deadly to my career than this.” But assume he’s right -- and he may well be. It’s one more sign of how the crisis at our border has brought out the very worst in our political system and a degree of plain nastiness that we should not be proud of as a nation. Let’s stipulate: This is a difficult problem. Unless the United States is willing to open its borders to all comers -- a goal of only the purest libertarians and a very few liberals -- we will face agonizing choices about whom to let in and whom to turn away. Moreover, it’s clearly true, as The Washington Post editorialized, that “there is nothing humanitarian in tacitly encouraging tens of thousands of children to risk their lives, often at the hands of cutthroat smugglers, to enter this country illegally.” But instead of dealing with this problem in a thoughtful way reflecting shared responsibility across party lines, President Obama’s critics quickly turned to the business of -- if I may quote Beck -- seeking political gain. Last week, the only issue that seemed to matter was whether Obama visited the border. It’s not just partisan politics, either. It should bother religious people that politicians pay a lot of attention when conservative church leaders speak out against contraception and gay rights but hardly any when religious voices suggest that these children deserve empathy and care. There are those in our clergy who could usefully consider whether they speak a lot louder when they’re talking about sexuality than when they’re preaching about love. Nonetheless, many religious leaders are condemning callousness toward these kids. “The church cannot be silent,” the Rev. Gabriel Salguero, president of the National Latino Evangelical Coalition, wrote in Time magazine, “as angry groups of people stoking the flames e.J. Dionne Washington Post of fear yell at buses filled with helpless immigrant children and women.” And Sister Mary Ann Walsh, the media director for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, called for “a moral conscience moment” akin to the response during the civil rights era “in the welcoming of children and others escaping the violence in such countries as Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.” It is said, and it’s true, that the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act that swept through Congress and was signed by President George W. Bush in December 2008 has had the unintended consequence of encouraging the Central American children to head north. To protect victims of sex trafficking, the law guaranteed an immigration hearing to unaccompanied minors, except for those from Canada and Mexico. As the bill was making its way through Congress, members of both parties could not stop congratulating themselves for their compassion. The bill, Rep. Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb., said, arose from “exemplary bipartisan cooperation” and showed how big-hearted we are. “Together, let us end the nightmare of human trafficking,” he declared, “and lead the world to see, in the poignant words of Alexis de Tocqueville, that America is great because America is good.” Suddenly, although kids are still involved, we are far less interested in being “good” than in protecting our borders. All the pressure now is to change the Wilberforce Act so it would no longer apply to Central American children. There’s a strong logic to this. The law does create a powerful incentive for unaccompanied minors from Central America (which is not that much farther away than Mexico) to seek entry, en masse, to our country. But there is another logic: that the anti-trafficking law really did embody a “good” instinct by holding that we should, as much as we can, treat immigrant children with special concern. Do we rush to repeal that commitment the moment it becomes inconvenient? Or should we first seek other ways to solve the problem? Yes, policymakers should be mindful of unintended consequences. But all of us should ponder the cost of politically convenient indifference. 3 Thursday, July 17, 2014 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 Park to fence in playground following address BACKUS from Page 1 appropriate career path. Throughout his years of coaching, his favorite thing has been watching his students grow and seeing how much they mature from seventh grade throughout high school. “I enjoy seeing them grow as a member of society,” he explained. AtAshdown,Backuswon numerous district titles for both junior high and high school. His team was state runner up in 2006. He has also been behind several championships and sent multiple kids to All Star games. His goal for his Mineral Springs girls’ basketball team is for them to win the district championship and get into regionals. “Anything can happen,” Backussaid.“Ittakesalotof luck. It takes good athletes, but it also takes a little luck to go with it.” He feels that the key to Puzzle Answers C A S E S A L I V E S H O W T O R E I N T S H L I E L L S R O T A N S P I N E R I N G F O N G M I B S W A L E R V I C E T O C K S R I K E R O E D E L E S L E D P A S A R P Y C E S C H D I A B O A T A L L S L L S L S C C H S J O E M A L E U N D R S E E S T D R O M P E R R P O H O I M L A O B M I A T P O I N T A L A I W O R N I T S M E T I L E Mrs. Jo Ann Strong, age 63 of Bingen, Arkansas passed away at her home on Sunday, July 13, 2014. She was born, Monday, November 6, 1950 in Bloomington, Illinois to Donald Frank and Ruth M. Chambers Williams. Jo Ann is survived by her husband, Bob Syzdek of Bingen, two sons; Seth Strong, and his wife, Cheryl, and Bob Strong all of Nashville, two daughters; Jami Strong and Lesli Strong both of Nashville, brother, Donny Williams of Illinois and sister; Hazel Chase of Phoenix, Arizona and ive grandchildren, other family member and friends. Memorial service will be held at 2:00 p.m., on Saturday, July 26, 2014 at the First United Methodist Church of Nashville. Rev. James Harris will oficiate the service. Arrangements are by Brazzel/Oakcrest The Funeral Home of Hope, Eddie Brazzel, Director. Online guestbook: www.brazzelfuneralhomes.com. tent revival scheduled on Hutchinson St. The Pastor Vasper Cooper and First Providence Church will host a tent revival on Hutchinson Street in New Edition in Nashville from Mon., July 21 to Fri., July 25. Events will kick off each night at 6:30 p.m., with worship services beginning at 7 p.m. An additional day-long youth session will be held Thurs., July 24 from 9 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. For more information about the event, contact Margaret Cooper at 200-3543. P E E P S 9 2 1 6 3 5 7 8 5 4 9 2 4 3 6 8 1 7 O N E S 4 3 8 1 7 6 2 9 5 © 200 Hometown Content 2 9 7 5 4 3 8 6 1 Survivors include two daughters, Debbie Davis and husband, Floyd of Nashville and Judy Smith and husband, Gerald Wayne of DeQueen; one brother, Walter Artre; four sisters, Ethel Baxter, Ila Hill, Helen Kitchens, and Jo Wainwright; ive grandchildren, Jason and Joanna Davis, Jennifer Jones, Joshua and Jennifer Davis, Jarred and Ashley Smith, and Ashley Davis; and seven great-grandchildren; and one special friend, Don Whisenhunt; numerous nieces and nephews and a host of other relatives and friends mourn her passing. No services are announced at this time. You may send an online sympathy message at www.latimerfuneralhome.com Undra Hendrix, Sr., July 1 Mr. Undra Lenord Hendrix, Sr., age 45 of Nashville passed away on July 9, 2014. He was born to Ira Hendrix Jr. and the late Dorothy Stewart Hendrix on January 19, 1969 in Nashville, Arkansas. He leaves to honor his memory his wife of 17 years, Melisha Hendrix of Nashville; his father, Ira Hendrix, Jr. of Nashville; two sons, Undra Hendrix, Jr. and DreVon Hendrix, both of Nashville; three daughters, Delicia Hendrix and DeMia Hendrix, both of Nashville and Gabrielle Swift of Arkadelphia; three brothers, Ralph (Debra) Hendrix of Texarkana, Ira Lewis Scott of Hope and Rodney (Karen) Nelson of Nashville; one sister, Shirley Stevens of Nashville; six grandchildren; two aunts, Minnie Willis of San Francisco, California and Velma (Ben) Williamson of Ozan; four uncles, Isaac Stewart of McCaskill, Lee Dell Stewart of Antioch, California, Henry (Ruth) Stewart of Nashville and Andrew (Alzean) Stewart of Ozan; and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, sisters-in-law and friends. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p.m., on Saturday, July 19, 2014 at the 6th Street Auditorium, Nashville, Arkansas under the direction of Nashville Funeral Home. You may send the family an online sympathy message to www.nashvillefh.com. liquidation sale D.E. RAY | Nashville News The liquidation auction of Master Kraft Construction of Nashville was held Wednesday morning at the closing business’s location. A total of 110 bidders registered with Blackmon Auctions to bid on 487 items, but more than 300 attended the sale. The family of Cindy Reed DeWitt would like to thank everyone for their calls, cards, food, visits, flowers, & memorials. We appreciate it very much. Reuben & Jo Jo Reed Larry & Madison DeWitt Perhaps you sent a lovely card, Or sat quietly in a chair Perhaps you sent a floral piece, If so we saw it there. Perhaps you spoke the kindest words, As many friends could say; Perhaps you were not there at all, Just thought of us that day. Whatever you did to console our hearts, We thank you so much whatever the part. May God richly bless each of you Murfreesboro / Two Bedroom / One Bath / $350 Deposit / $400 Per Month / Call 870-285-1080 The family of the late Randolph Crofton, Jr. Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! 6 5 1 1 4 6 3 8 2 7 1 9 8 2 5 9 6 4 5 9 7 4 7 3 2 3 8 3 7 9 2 6 8 1 5 4 8 5 4 3 7 1 6 2 9 Clip this coupon! Clip thi A L O T Jo Ann Strong, July 13 a successful team is having a good relationship with its members and receiving support from the community. “It takes time [to be successful] and goes back to the rapport you have with the kids. The kids have to buy into what you’re doing. The main thing is to get the kids and the community behind me,” he explained. “Every coach is different. It’s going to be ongoing and you’ve just got to keep work and see how far you can go.” Backus is currently getting familiar with his team and said, “Coach Martin left the girls’ program in good shape. Right now I’m getting in here and getting to know the girls.” So far, his response has been positive. He stated that the team has been very attentive and that he’s observed a good number show up to the practices he’s had. Overall,Backusislooking forward to be working in his hometown. “I live two blocks from here and it’s awesome. It’s been tough leaving Ashdown but coming back home has been exciting,” he said. HOUSE FOR RENT F O R M Efie Jean Wilson, 74, of Nashville, passed away on Monday, July 14, 2014 in Nashville. She was born on February 16, 1940, the daughter of the late James Monroe Artre and Artie Mae Adair Artre. She was a retired cafeteria manager for the Nashville school systems and member of the Lone Oak Baptist Church in DeQueen. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Glenn Ray Wilson; two brothers, James Artre and Garland Artre; and two sisters, Lorene Lowder and Frankie Logan. is coupon! Clthis coupon! NASHVILLE – Police Chief Dale Pierce addressed the park commission during Tuesday evening’s meeting. Pierce said he often does work with special needs children and stated that he has had people come to him and ask about getting a fence around one of the playgrounds at the park for autistic youths, who often have a tendency to wander away from their parents. Members of the commission agreed with his idea and began debating on the best type of fencing to use, finally coming to the conclusion that an aluminum fencing made to resemble a wrought iron would be best. They also agreed that the middle playground would be the best place to seclude. Pierce plans to get back with the park on price information. The frame for the Ronnie K. Woods memorial pavilion was completed the day of the meeting. The iron work and roof still has to be painted. It will be set up to allow for electricity to be run to it. The commission also spoke briefly of possibly putting a water fountain near the pavilion. As for seating, for now tables the park already has will be placed under the pavilion but later on purchasing more specifically for the area might be looked into. Other topics discussed at the meeting were: • Boards on the tables need to be replaced. • Putting boulders at intervals to keep people from driving on the trail. •Thebasketballgoalsare completed except for striping, which will be done as soon as there is not a chance of rain for at least three days. •Thebidforeight,threetiered concrete bleachers to be constructed at the baseball complex was read aloud and the plans were presented. •Thevenderofthemetal light poles, which they plan to place on the baseball fields, wants to have the lighting specs from the original plans, but they can’t be found. Because of this, the mayor would like to differ from the original plan and share only the interior poles. Instead of having only 12 poles, it was proposed that there be 20, some of which shorter than the original 12. The mayor also proposed the idea of replacing the old light with new ones. As of now, no final decisions have been made. • The total cost for the soccer complex sign and base will $1,175. $100 of that will be donated by Crete Cast. •Revisionsofthememorial bench and tree policy were discussed after people expressed concern with the number of benches being placed on the walking trails. No final decisions were made, but a policy will be looked up. •Theparkreceivedquiet a bit of lightening damage to security cameras, lights, phones and other devices because of the recent storm. •Aftergoingintoexecutive session, a motion was made to hire Junior Witherspoon as the maintenance supervisor at the current supervisor’s position at the same salary. Junior was on a temporary basis for 28 days but has now been promoted to his current position. The motion was voted on unanimously. Effie Jean Wilson, 74, Loving Mother, July 14 Free eXam Reg. Value $6000 • New patients only Must present coupon to redeem at time of service. Offer not good with any other offer. s coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip this coupon! Clip th KAtELyN COffmAN Staff Writer Obituaries Keep that pretty smile! Family Dentistry W. Darrel Fain, D.D.s., P.a. 419 E. 6th St. • Prescott, Arkansas & 3201 Richmond Rd. • Texarkana, Texas Call toll-free 1-800-487-1854 www. faindental. com We accept ARKids & MedicAid Ask us about Whitening for Life and IV & Oral Sedation! SUNRISE SUNSET Mar. 23 1945 Jun. 25 2014 4 Community The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 | Thursday, July 17, 2014 Lt. Governor candidate visits southwest Arkansas D.E. RAy Managing Editor NASHVILLE - On the same day as the airing of the first television commercial for his campaign for lieutenant governor, Democratic candidate John Burkhalter toured Nashville and Murfreesboro. Burkhalter made this an early campaign stop because of his long roots in the area. His greatgrandfather, Wylie Newman McClure, was sheriff and county judge in Pike County, and McClure family members had interests in the peach industry in Highland on the line between Howard and Pike Counties. Burkhalter began his tour of the area by meeting with Nashville city clerk Liz McDaniel, financial manager Jimmy Dale and mayor Billy Ray Jones, who he spoke to about his background as an engineer and small business owner and plans to streamline the state‘s apparatus for economic development. He also met with Howard County treasurer Sherri Mixon, circuit clerk-elect Angie Lewis, deputy prosecutor Aaron Brasel, and assessor Deb Teague at the Howard County courthouse before making a stop to pick up some of Tim Jones’s peaches from Bob Martin’s fruit stand on his way to Murfreesboro. In Murfreesboro, Burkhalter spoke with deputy county clerk and city recorder/treasurer Penny Lamb, as well as police chief Randy Lamb, and also Pike County treasurer Loletia Rather, assessor Beckie Alden and circuit clerk Donna White. He also made a side-trip to the Crater of Diamonds State Park and spent quite a bit of time in discussion with park superintendent Caleb Howell. He praised the park highly as a model L isa and John Jones, of Dierks, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Jennifer Diane Bostic, to Christopher Glen Gates, son of Terri and Ron Byrd, of Nashville, and Billy Gates, of Paris, Texas. Jennifer is the grand daughter of D.E. RAY | Nashville News Lieutenant Governor candidate John Burkhalter visits with Sherry Beaty-Sullivan Tuesday during a campaign swing through southwest Arkansas. Burkhalter also visited public officials in Pike County. for what other state parks can be to drive economic Daniel and Rhesa Kesterson, of Dierks and Nonavee and the late Frankie Jones. She is a 2003 graduate of Dierks High School. Christopher is the grand son of Elton and Florence Turley and Tony and Norma Gates. His is a 2002 graduate of Mineral Springs High School. The couple will be united in matrimony Sat., Aug. 9 at the Mineral Springs church of Christ. The ceremony is set to begin at 6 p.m. activity in the state. Burkhalter capped his visit to the area by attending the Howard County C ome celebrate the marriage of Mitzi Romo Lowery and Jake Lowery at a garden wedding reception and shower Sat., July 19 at 5:30 p.m. The event will be held at the home of Scooter and Donna Reeves, 3246 Corinth Rd., in Nashville. Mitzi is the daughter of Ismael and Democrats’ monthly meeting. Marivel Romo, of Bentonville. Jake is the father of Miss Brayley Lowery and the son of Chuck and Debbie Lowery, of Murfreesboro. The couple were married in a private ceremony Nov. 26, 2013, in Bentonville. They are making their home in Murfreesboro. The couple is registered at Wal-Mart, Ace of Diamonds and Caddo Antiques & Gifts. VBS Ridgeway Baptist Church (corner of Hwy. 371 E. and Hearn St.) en Th ow &N Donnie & Dana Newberg Anniversary date: July 16, 2014. YOUR MISSION AWAITS!!! For Children 1st - 6th Grade Register: Sunday, July 20 at 5:00 VBS: Sunday, July 20 Thursday, July 24 6:00 - 8:30 p.m. Family Night: Friday, July 25 at 6:00 p.m. For more information call 845-1386 Community 5 Thursday, July 17, 2014 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 Several factors to consider before co-signing student loans If you have a child heading off to college this fall, they may be considering a student loan to help pay for college expenses. College is expensive. Graduating in four years without any debt is the preferred way to pay for this investment, but most students do not have this option. Many will have to get a loan in order to pay part of the costs. As a parent, most lenders will require a co-signer on the loan. Many students have serious trouble paying back student loans. Today’s students are graduating and many are finding it hard to find a job in their career of choice. This is the reason lenders want to have a co-signer on the loan. Keep in mind, once you co-sign on the loan, it will be on the student’s credit report as well as your credit report. You are taking a risk on your child not being able to pay back the loan. Here are some questions to ask before you sign on the dotted line: * Can you afford the risk? If you will suffer a severe financial hardship if your child can’t replay the loan, then think long and hard about putting your name (and credit) on the dotted line. Don’t jeopardize your retirement plan, for example, to fund college. You child can look to other options to help pay for college and get the financial aid they will need. Possible solutions include the Post 9/11 GI Bill or they can get a job to help fund college costs. Keep this in mind; no one is going to give you financial aid in your retirement, other than Social Security (which is debatable in today’s world). So, don’t co-sign if you can’t afford to pay it back. * What are the criteria for being released as a cosigner? Each lender is different, but Sallie Mae’s private student loan program will release a co-signer based on the following criteria: The borrower must have successfully completed school, made 12 consecutive on-time principal and interest payments for Sallie Mae’s Smart Option Student Loan® (24 consecutive ontime principal and interest payments are required for all other Sallie Mae private student loan programs), meet age of majority requirements and meet the underwriting requirements when the request for co-signer release is processed. The borrower’s account must remain current until the request for the co-signer release is processed. The borrower must be a U.S. citizen or permanent resident at the time the co-signer release is processed. * Will I need credit for my own purposes soon? If you’re on a loan as a cosigner for a child’s student loan, it will show up as a potential liability on your credit report. This could make a significant difference if you go to get a car loan, mortgage or other borrowing need because it will affect your debt-to-income and debt-to-assets ratio. * What happens if my child dies or become disabled? The short answer is you will be responsible for paying back the loan if you are the co-signer. However, if your child is in good health, you might consider buying term life or disability insurance to protect you. It’s a terrible thing to have a child die. But if you have insurance, you will have some tax-free money to pay off any debt that the child may have. * Does the debt apply to bankruptcy? Loans that are guaranteed against default by the U.S. Government are not generally dischargeable in bankruptcy. Unlike credit card debt that can sometimes be wiped out with a Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing, guaranteed student loan debt will follow both you and your child until you fully repay it. The decision to co-sign a loan is a complex one and is not to be taken lightly. Don’t co-sign just because you think you are expected to as a parent. Use your head, and consider the risk and your alternatives thoroughly. The University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service has lots of free financial information on credit, financial well-being, plus communicating about money with your family. Contact the Texarkana Court Appointed Special Advocates for Children will host a 5K color run Sat., Sept. 13 beginning at Trinity Baptist Church in Texarkana. Registration is set for 8:30 a.m. with the race to begin at 9 a.m. Prizes will be awarded for the top three male and female finishers, and a “kids’ zone” will be available with bounce houses, face painting, a magician, balloon art, cotton candy, snow cones and other attractions. Those wishing to participate in the event may register online at casatexarkana.org/5k, or by visiting the organization’s office at 1201 Main St. in Texarkana. Sponsorship opportunities are also available by CASA 5K color run scheduled FOR SALE Tips 1 Owner 2004 Mustang 40 Anniversary - 3.9, V-6, Sonic Blue, excellent condition. 101,000 miles - Asking $6,500 Stereo System - pevy concert system with receiver all goes with for $800.00 2002 John Deere Tractor 790 small, 699 hours with Bush Hog - Asking $7,000 CALL: 870-200-3555 Staff chairman UofA Cooperative Extension Service • Howard County Recipe of the Week Tomatoes are in full swing in many home gardens. Here is a great recipe for making Homemade Tomato Salsa. If you make and preserve it, bring a jar to the fair this year and enter it in food preservation. If you have any questions about preserving food safely call the Extension Office at 870-845-7517. Tomato Salsa (Using Paste Tomatoes) 7 quarts peeled, cored, chopped paste tomatoes* 4 cups seeded, chopped long green chiles 5 cups chopped onion ½ cup seeded, finely chopped jalapeno peppers 6 cloves garlic, finely chopped 2 cups bottled lemon or lime juice 2 tablespoons salt 1 tablespoon black pepper 2 tablespoons ground cumin (optional) 3 tablespoons oregano leaves (optional) 2 tablespoons fresh cilantro (optional) contacting Cathy Hernandez at mcathernandez@ gmail.com. For more information on the event, call the CASA office at 903-792-1030. 200 Sipes St. • Sat. 19th • 8am-? Collections, odds & ends, baby items, great for boothers, priced to sell Bingen Community Center is hosting a fund raiser on July 18 & 19, 2014 starting at 7:00 a.m. with all proceeds going toward the update and beautiication project. You are welcome to donate any items and all will be greatly appreciated! For more information or to have items picked up, call 870-200-1425. The deadline for donations is July 16, 2014. Thank you in advance for all your support and we look forward to seeing everyone there! Mineral Springs Church of Christ Vacation Bible School Come Join Us Sunday, July 27th - Thursday, July 31st 6:00 p.m. - 7:50 p.m. For more info or ride call 870-287-5652 KJEP-TV TELEVISION SCHEDULE www.kjep.tv FOR LOCAL EVENT SHOWING TIMES, VISIT: KJEP 23 12:00 am 12:30 am 1:00 am 1:30 am 2:00 am 2:30 am 3:00 am 3:30 am 4:00 am 4:30 am 5:00 am 5:30 am 6:00 am 6:30 am 7:00 am 7:30 am 8:00 am 8:30 am 9:00 am 9:30 am 10:00 am 10:30 am 11:00 am 11:30 am 12:00 pm 12:30 1310 S 4th • 870-845-1413 by Jean A. Ince *This recipe works best with paste tomatoes such as Roma. Slicing tomatoes require a much longer cooking time to achieve a desirable consistency. Caution: Wear plastic or rubber gloves and do not touch your face while handling or cutting hot peppers. If you do not wear gloves, wash hands thoroughly with soap and water before touching your face or eyes. Hot Pack – The jalapeno peppers do not need to be peeled. The skin of long green chiles may be tough. If you choose to peel chiles, use the directions above. Peel, wash and chop onions. Combine all ingredients except cumin, oregano and cilantro in a large saucepot and heat, stirring frequently, until mixture boils. Reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add spices and simmer for another 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. Fill hot salsa into hot jars, leaving ½-inch headspace. Remove air bubbles and adjust headspace if needed. Wipe rims of jars with a dampened clean paper towel. Adjust lids. Process in a boiling water bath: pints – 15 minutes. Yield: about 16-18 pint jars. Going through Storage Sale th Come to Power Pharmacy and check out our selection of children books your kids will love! n sion e t x E Howard County Extension Office at 870-845-7517 for more information or visit our office located on the second floor of the courthouse. Sunday Family Market‐ place Saturday Night At The Movies Great Am. Gosple Sing Out America Worship TBA Horse Talk Live Ambush Camp Cooking N. Florida Baptist Monday Family Market‐ Place Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Wretched Friday Family Marketplace Ridgeway First Immanuel Baptist Baptist Baptist Church Church Church Family Marketplace Wretched Family Marketplace Family Market‐ Place Saturday Wretched Family Market‐ place Great Am Gospel Sing Out America TBA TBA Zoo Flea Market Mania Diaries Zoo Embassy Chefs Diaries Judie First Judie Byrd’s Kitchen Dog & Cat Byrd Baptist Training Mr. Belvedere Future Phenoms Ridgeway Cowboy Baptist Today With God Dan Church Through the Bible Aqua Kids Immanuel War Sherwood 700 Club Baptist 700 Club Heroes Baptist with Pat Roberson Church with Pat Roberson Horsing Church Around Spirit Crosstalk with Randy Weiss Advantage Fest Horseman. Sing Out Marriage Today with Jimmy and Karen Evans Horse America Country Love Worth Crossing Finding Your Health with Dr. Richard and Cindy Becker The Cumber‐ Faith In Lands Practice Indiana Gaither Know the Cause with Doug Kaufman Outdoor Homecom. The Right Place Brush Ridgeway First Precepts For New Life Precepts Cooking Arbor Baptist Baptist Life‐K. In Jesus For Life Outdoors Jubilee Church Church Arthur Christ Billy God’s View Babbie’s American pm 1:00 pm 1:30 pm 2:00 pm 2:30 pm 3:00 pm 3:30 pm 4:00 pm 4:30 pm 5:00 pm 5:30 pm 6:00 pm 6:30 pm 7:00 pm 7:30 pm 8:00 pm 8:30 pm 9:00 pm 9:30 pm 10:00 pm 10:30 pm 11:00 pm 11:30 pm Graham Nature’s Adventur. Healthy Lifestyle The Janee Show Young Country Horse Trix Equine VIP Gentle Giants Jimmy Sturr Ralph Emery Memories House Sue Thomas FBEye Your Health Harvest Time Your Health Assembly BonanZa First Baptist Church Immanuel Baptist Church BonanZa Crook and Chase Remington Steele Farmer Boot Daddy’s Kenny & Friends Inside Music Music Row Prof. Agility Show Sure In the Saddle America Treasures Total Team Roping Gaither Gospel Hour Country’s Machinery Ken California High School Shotgun Old Time Family Show Mcnabb Bountiful Rodeo Tour Red Music Reunion Rural Evening News Country Jubilee WKRP in First New Life WKRP in Marty Stuart Hee Haw Cincinnati Baptist PBR 20/20 In Jesus Cinc. Church Christ Mary Mary Tyler M. Tyler M. Midwest Country Marty Ridgeway Bob Rural Radio Bob Bob Stuart Baptist Newhart Newhart Newhart Live From Church Newhart Newhart Newhart Newhart Cumberland Highlanders Daryl’s Highway Harvest Immanuel Polka Gaither To Time Baptist Highway To Heaven Party Gospel Heaven Assembly Church Hour Country Diner Closer Look Gaither Homecoming Joey & Rory Happy Classic Downunder Trains & Family Market‐ Family Trails Tractor Hee Haw Horseman‐ Loco‐ Market‐ motives Place Roy Theater ship Place Rogers The Nashville News PROUDLY SPONSORED 418 N. Main St. • Nashville • (870) 845-2010 BY ... 6 Community The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 | Thursday, July 17, 2014 Howard County Dems make big donations to candidates D.E. RAy Managing Editor NASHVILLE- More than $2,000 was donated to the campaigns of local and statewide candidates at the regular monthly meeting of the Howard County Democratic Central Committee Tuesday evening. Donations, accounting nearly a quarter of the group’s current financial holdings, came in the form of several fund raiser sponsorships, as well as large block donations to candidates. The committee made donations to the campaigns of Senator Mark Pryor and James Lee Witt, who is running for Congress from Arkansas’s fourth Congressional district. Additionally, the committee will sponsor fund raising events for state representative Fonda Hawthorne, who currently represents the Dierks area in the state legislature, and Jeremy Ross, who is seeking to represent the remainder of Howard County. $250 was appropriated to sponsor the event for Hawthorne, which will be held outside of the county, while $500 was spent to sponsor a fund raiser for Ross at the Fisherman’s Cove restaurant in Nashville to be held on Aug. 9 from 2-4 p.m. A donation of $300 was also made to the campaign of John Burkhalter, candi- cuffs and hoses William Richardson (above) and Coralee Kelly (at right), both members of the Dierks Volunteer Fire Department, participate in a “Cuffs and Hoses” blood drive competition Tuesday at the Dierks Community Building. Lifeshare Blood Center hosted the event. Staff photos by Katelyn Coffman date for lieutenant governor. The committee had previously donated more than $300 to the campaign of Susan Inman, candidate for secretary of state, who attended the group’s last meeting. Hawthorne, Ross and Burkhalter were all present at this month’s meeting, with Hawthorne and Burkhalter both addressing the group about their campaigns. Hawthorne spoke about the need for voter turnout. Burkhalter spoke about his background as a small businessman, and the importance of education and access to capital to support and expand the dreams of the people of the state. He also discussed a plan to realign portions of the state government to work jointly for economic development and jobs creation. In addition to the disbursal of donations to campaigns and hearing from candidates, the committee also discussed the voter registration drive held in conjunction with the Stand Up for America event held at the Nashville City Park on Independence Day, which resulted in four new voters registered in the county, and efforts to have a similar registration drive at the Pine Tree Festival in Dierks. The Howard County Democrats meet each third Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Western Sizzlin in Nashville, and all are invited to attend their meetings. City to crackdown on messy yards KAtELyN COffmAN Staff Writer DIERKS - Enforcement of a long-existing ordinance was the main topic of discussion at the council meeting held Monday evening. Police Chief Brian White told aldermen he has successfully identified 25 properties that are out of compliance with a code that prohibits poor upkeep of houses. This includes overgrowth of grass, hav- Police Chief: 25 people out of compliance will receive warnings, then tickets ing abandoned vehicles or other debris littering yards and other offenses. Those who have violated the ordinance will be notified and have seven days to clean up their property to be in compliance with the law or be faced with a citation. White will continue working his way across town to check for more violations, he said. Also discussed was the resolving of issues with the sewer system. “Our sewer samples have been out of compli- ance for a while so we’re treating our plant now with some enzymes and we’re doing 15 pounds a week and it’s supposed to help get us back in compliance,” Mayor Terry Mounts explained at the meeting. The containment chamber, which is located at the end of the sewer system and discharges treated water into Holly Creek, was scheduled to be cleaned last week but the cleaning had to be put off because of the large amount of rain- now is the time For stocking * 3-5” Channel Catfish $35 per 100 * 6-8” Channel Catfish $55 per 100 209 N. Main, Nashville, AR 71852 We hAve WhAt you neeD in Faulkner auto & truck Supply 1123 Main Ave. Dierks (870) 286-2504 robert e. Gunter, DDs FAmily DentiStry Braces • Dentures • Partials • Crowns • Bleaching • Root Canals • Extractions Ar kiDS & Ar kiDS BrACeS By appt., Mon.-Thur. 8:00-5:00 Adult Medicaid accepted 202 East 3rd St. • Dierks (870) 286-2112 • Black Crappie (If Avail. ) • 8-11” Grass Carp • Fathead Minnows • Koi • Bluegill (Coppernose & Hybrid) • Redear • Largemouth Bass For more information, call (870) 845-5930 Ofice 845-7728 Cell slight problem with the water system that occurred after the core swapped gates to help the town maintain a steady amount of water after heavy rainfall. The water that was pumped into the city’s wells ended up slightly dirty. Now, the gates are swapped back and the water is on its way to being completely purified. It was noted that the current water is not out of compliance and was just slightly tainted for awhile. Fish Day Lisa ChandLer insuranCe ~ Group & Individual ~ G Health G Life G Dental G G Medicare Supplement G fall the area saw. As of now, Mounts is unsure when the cleaning of the chamber can be rescheduled because of the rain that we are supposed to see the next few weeks. “The health department and ADEQ thinks that if we do that, if we clean that, then it’s going to really help us to get back into compliance,” Mounts stated, continuing, “Our numbers are not bad out. They’re just a little bit off.” There has also been a Farmers Association Co-op in Nashville, AR Thursday • July 24, 2014 • From: 4-5 p.m. Credit Cards shown above accepted at participating stores To Pre - Order Call - Arkansas Pondstockers 1-800-843-4748 Walk Ups Welcome DierKs equal housing lender member FDic 110 East 4th St. • Dierks (870) 286-3088 www.wilkersonfuneralhomes. com Place your ad here! Nashville • DeQueen • Dierks People helping people (870) 845-3323 member FDic 286-2121 equal housing lender PLACE YOUR AD HERE! $10/WEEK ONLY $10/Week CALL KATIE (870) 845-2010 (870) 845-2010 888-845-NEWS (888) 845-NEWS Serving Howard County since 1878 Place your ad here! ONLY $10/Week (870) 845-2010 888-845-NEWS (870) 286-2090 of Dierks 507 Front St. • Dierks archie cothren Insurance agency, Inc. p.o. Box 268, Dierks • 870-286-2777 • 286-3220 (home) Complete line of property, casualty & life insurance • Highest Standards • • Professional Service • Shop DierkS ArkAnSAS FirSt! Community 7 Thursday, July 17, 2014 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 Dierks dropping three art classes Cell phone policy also debated D.E. RAy Managing Editor CHARLES GOODIN | Nashville News University of Arkansas Extension Service horticulturist and Democrat-Gazette columnist Janet Carson speaks to Rotarians Tuesday during the club’s weekly meeting at Western Sizzlin’. how does your garden grow? Horticulture expert talks shop with Rotarians CHARLES GOODIN Editor NASHVILLE - University of Arkansas horticulture expert and Democrat-Gazette columnist Janet Carson gave Rotarians tips on properly tending their gardens and lawns Tuesday during the club’s weekly meeting. Carson, who recently returned from a trip to Scotland with 36 of the state’s master gardeners, addressed topics ranging from controlling pests and weeds to proper pruning technique during the hour-long session. She began by telling Rotarians that, although the state has enjoyed a mild summer, recent rains were “too fast and too furious” to do much good for area flora, and to make matters worse, may have exacerbated the population of mosquitoes and other pests. “Mosquitoes are, like, nuts out there,” she said. To combat the pests, Carson recommended the use of organic water treatments that eliminate breeding zones for the insects without harm- ing the quality of the water. She also said residents should walk their gardens daily and be on the lookout for potential conditions that might breed bugs or disease - something plants are particularly susceptible to if they are wet at nightfall. Discussion then moved to ensuring the well-being of crepe myrtles, which Carson said are particularly vulnerable to powdery mildew and black sooty mold, a by-product of aphids feeding on surrounding trees and plants. She said both could be warded off with the use of dormant oil. When it comes to lawn care, Carson stressed the importance of maintaining a buffer zone between grass and flower beds or trees. “When you’re out there mowing or weed eating and you whack that tree, the damage is done and can’t be undone,” she explained. According to Carson, there are three qualities that determine how often one’s lawn should be watered: how much sun it receives, the quality of the soil and the slope of the land. She related that her own Southwest Arkansas Domestic Violence/Crisis Center (SWADV/CC) Battered Women’s Center and Sexual Assault Services 24 Hour Crisis Line 870-584-3447 Ofices located in: yard in Little Rock is rocky, posing a unique challenge for the horticulture mastermind. “When I’m planting, I try to do as many raised beds as possible because digging is so hard,” she explained. Carson said she is a proponent of using mulch to control moisture and soil temperature, and went on to recommend organic brown or black varieties, which she said don’t draw too much attention to themselves. Discussion then gave way to the topic of hydrangea maintenance, which Carson said should be done on most large-leaf varieties when their color begins to fade. She recommended talking out one third of the stems at the soil line. As the meeting drew to a close, Carson also spoke briefly on when to prune rose bushes, an activity she recommended gardeners engage in each February. For more information on Carson, or to take advantage of the University of Arkansas Extension Service’s many free programs, visit uaex.edu. DIERKS - Changes to the Dierks High School student handbook, including the removal of three elective courses in arts, were approved by the Dierks school board during their regular monthly meeting Monday evening. The three courses, described by new high school principal Jody Cowart as survey courses, are elective courses. He explained that the district does still offer sufficient arts courses to meet state requirements for art education. Courses in business algebra and psychology were added to the course offerings. The board spent a greater amount of time discussing proposed changes to the school’s policy on the use of cell phones on campus as part of the update of the student handbook. Board member Jeffery Mounts emphasized that he felt that the policy as it stood was close to what was needed, but that consistent enforcement of the policy was key. After several minutes of discussion, it was decided that the policy would be changed to add a 30 day restriction from using cell phones by students who violated the policy multiple times, and restricting use of cell phones by students to only during lunch, rather than at lunch and between classes as had been allowed last year. In addition to the changes to the cell phone policy and re-structuring of classes, new rules regarding the wearing of tights and leggings were added to the dress code, and several administrative updates were added to the handbook. Changes to the elementary school student handbook, almost wholly updates of staff names, were also approved. The changes to the handbooks were approved in a single unanimous vote. Another notable change to the school’s operations for the coming year will be an increase to the price of meals in the cafeteria. Superintendent Holly Cothren explained that the price of meals is adjusted periodically to match the amount paid by the federal government for the subsidized “free and reduced” lunch program for students in need. The price of a meal from the Dierks school cafeteria will increase ten cents from last year, to $1.75. Milk and juice prices will not be raised, and will remain 55 cents per carton. A third major occurrence during the Monday evening meeting was the hiring of Sonja Markham as high school special education teacher. Other items heard during the meeting include: The approval of Bank of the Ozarks to act as the district’s bond trustee, as the district’s former bond trustee will no longer be providing that service. The district’s membership in the Arkansas School Board Association was renewed. Bids for purchase of milk and bread for the school cafeterias were awarded to Highland Dairy and Flowers Bakery respectively, and a bid for insurance to cover students involved in accidents on campus or at school related activities was accepted from Health Specialty Risk Insurance. A list of current substitute teachers was approved, with discussion of narrowing the list in the future, and Cothren was named in loco parentis for children needing representation in lieu of parents or guardians. Save the Bees Help the Junior Beekeepers save the bees. Call us if you have swarms. 870-557-4349 DeQueen • Nashville • Mt. Ida • Mena GOSPEL MEETING at Dierks church of Christ 308 Main Street • Dierks, AR July 27th through July 30th Speaker Chris Hooten of Highland church of Christ in Texarkana Sunday Morning - “A Vision of Life” - 10:20 am Sunday Evening - “The Time is Come” - 6:00 pm Monday Night - “Gone to Church But Haven’t Worshiped” Tuesday Night - “What Do Your Woks Show You Believe” Wednesday Night - “The Second Coming of Christ” Services begin each weeknight at 7:00 pm 8 SportS The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 | Thursday, July 17, 2014 Diamond Park Speedway Victory Lane results from july 12 NOVICE Car# 1. 45R 2. 22R 3. 2A Heat Winner: #45R-Jace Factory Winner: #42 - Lee Carver, Lockesburg Driver Jace Reid Lane Rinkle Alyssa Cox Reid From Nashville, AR Kirby, AR Nashville, AR FACTORY Car# Driver 1. 42 Lee Carver 2. 40 Miranda Carver 3. 10x Chad Abernathy 4. 3 Rodney Whisenhunt 5. 7D Blake Ayers 6. 71 Tyler Young 7. 2 Thomas Woodruff 8. 45J Justin Kilcrease 9. 28M Joseph Morrow 10. 38 Rodney Hall Heat Winners: #10X-Chad Abernathy, #2-Thomas #42J-Justin Burt, #40-Miranda Carver From Lockesburg, AR Lockesburg, AR Mt. Ida, AR Nashville, AR DeQueen, AR Norman, AR Nashville, AR Nashville, AR McCaskill, AR Hot Springs, AR Woodruff, PURE Car# Driver From 1. 32 Larry White Hot Springs, AR 2. 41 Brian Carver Lockesburg, AR 3. 43 Jesse Godwin Hot Springs Village, AR 4. 13X Michael Fagan Amity, AR 5. 14 Brandon Ellis Murfreesboro, AR 6. 21 Justin Deer Dierks, AR 7. 26 Tony Fatherree Nashville, AR 8. 343 Jimmy Jordan Blevins, AR Heat Winners: #43-Jesse Godwin, #13X-Michael Fagan, #43-Jesse Godwin, #32-Larry White Street Winner: #20 - Neil Kemp, Kirby STREET Novice Winner: #45R - Jace Reid, Nashville Pure Winner: #32 - Larry White, Hot Springs ATTENTION: BUILDERS, DEVELOPERS, INVESTORS & LAND OWNERS! (Tract 1) 18.47+/- Acres of Prime Development Land w/Excellent Building Sites ~ Also Selling (5 Lots) in Deerwood Estates III ~ Live, Online Bidding Available BANK ORDERED DEVELOPMENT LAND & SUBDIVISION LOT AUCTION WEDNESDAY ~ JULY 23, 2014 ~ 11:00 A.M. • DEERWOOD LANE ~ NASHVILLE, AR DIRECTIONS: From Nashville, head North on Highway 27 Approx. 1.2+/- Miles ~ Turn Left onto Deerwood Lane & Watch for Auction Signs & Property. REAL ESTATE DESCRIPTION: (TRACT 1) 18.47+/- Acres of Prime Development Property will be Offered in its Entirety ~ Property has Several Great Building Sites, Utilities Available & it has been Partially Cleared for Development ~ Excellent Location Approx. 2 Miles North of Nashville ~ Located at the End of Deerwood Lane ~ Also Selling Separately, 5 Lots in Deerwood Estates III ~ (LOT 7) 1.17+/- Acres ~ (LOT 9) 1.228+/- Acres; both Lots are Located on Deerwood Lane ~ (LOT 16) 2.034+/- Acres ~ (LOT 17) 1.176+/- Acres & (LOT 18) 1.287+/- Acres; these 3 Lots are Located on Fawn Lane ~ Utilities to All Lots ~ Development Land Offered in its Entirety ~ Lots to be Offered Separately & Combination ~ Auction will be held On-Site ~ Whether you’re Searching for a Place to Develop or Build your Dream Home, Don’t Miss this Opportunity to Purchase Prime Developed Land in an Excellent Location ~ For Additional Information, Online Bidding Instructions, Aerials, Photos & Utilities Map, Visit www.wilsonauctioneers.com or Contact our Ofice Toll Free at 877-243-2289 for a Complete Information Package. TERMS ON REAL ESTATE: (TRACT 1) $5,000.00 Cashier’s Check & (LOTS 7, 9, 16, 17 & 18) $1,000.00 (PER LOT) Cashier’s Check (NO EXCEPTIONS) Down Day of Auction, as Earnest Money ~ Balance Due at Closing ~ Closing within 30 Days ~ Title Insurance with Warranty Deed Provided at Closing ~ 10% Buyer’s Premium ~ Offers Prior to Auction are Welcomed. INSPECTION: Drive by & Inspect this Property Anytime or Contact Agent, Ben Williams at 501-815-3527/ e-mail ben@wilsonauctioneers.com for Additional Information ~ Auctioneers will be on Premises at 10:00 a.m. Day of Auction. Announcements made day of sale take precedence over printed material WILSON REAL ESTATE AUCTIONEERS, INC. Leading Real Estate Auctioneers “Since 1961” 501-624-1825 * TOLL FREE: 877-BID2BUY WEBSITE: www.wilsonauctioneers.com - AAL #4 look for the nashville news on facebook! Car# Driver From 1. 20 Neil Kemp Kirby, AR 2. 26F Cole Farmer Glenwood, AR 3. 71 Joel Young Norman, AR 4. 48 Shelly Carver Lockesburg, AR 5. 41X Clifford Mussett Murfreesboro, AR Heat Winners: #20-Neil Kemp, #26F-Cole Farmer THE CENTER POINT STORE 870-451-9141•CallinOrdersWelcome Monday-Wednesday&Saturday 6amto6pm Thursday6amto7pm•Friday6amto8pm Closed Sunday Check out our Lunch Specials!! Our Popular Catfish is Served Thursday - Saturday HOWARD COUNTY FARMER’S MARKET 110 S. Washington (between Howard & Hempstead) Free basket of produce & goodies! 7 a.m. till sold out WIC APPROVED Friday, July 18, 2014 Hospitality Table: Pop’s Bait Shop - Royce Reed Cooking Demo: Joan McCrary - Chunky Salsa This Ad Sponsored By: Howard County Ambulance Service SportS 9 Thursday, July 17, 2014 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 Sophomore Hornet receiver Kevonte Esters pulls down a pass Tuesday during seven on seven action at Mineral Springs. Nashville standout LaMichael Pettway leaps for a pass over a Magnolia defender Wednesday during seven on seven drills at Mineral Springs. Quarterback Tyler Kesterson throws a long ball for Dierks Tuesday during seven on seven action at Mineral Springs. Scrapper quarterback Leonard Snell looks for an open receiver to throw to Wednesday as Nashville faces off with Magnolia during seven on seven drills at Mineral Springs. Brady Bowden picks off an errant Magnolia pass for the Scrappers Wednesday during seven on seven drills at Mineral Springs. This page is sponsored by... D.E. RAY Candidate for mineral Springs Saratoga School Board Wakefield, Midway, Trails End, Bluff Springs & Social Hill Communities Political Ad Paid for by D.E. Ray 10 Community The Nashville News | Online at http://www.swarkansasnews.com | Call: 1-888-845-6397 | Thursday, July 17, 2014 LEttER from Page 1 this case to the highest burden in our judicial system? No.” McQuary went on to explain that the case “truly causes [him] anguish,” prompting him to further elaborate on his decision not to file formal charges. “The Sheriff’s Department, under then Sheriff Preston Glenn, and in most instances, prompted by Glenn, lacked any accounting concerning the acceptance, collection of and spending of monies coming into or out of the Sheriff’s Department. It is precisely the lack of records and controls that keeps the State from being able to file charges in this matter,” he wrote. “There is evidence of the then sheriff endorsing checks submitted to Pike County for taxes, from citizens, and cashing them at a local grocery store. There is evidence of missing funds that were seized as part of a criminal investigation being “found” by the ex-sheriff in a personal file cabinet after he left office. There is evidence of the ex-sheriff writing checks for supplies, but instead of writing the checks directly to the merchants, he would write the checks to himself, endorse and cash them at the grocery store and then, according to Glenn, he would purchase what the check was intended summer readers at mineral springs The Mineral Springs library is presenting their summer reading program “Fizz, Boom, Read!” now through the end of July. Participants in the program this past Wednesday afternoon were Keithan Smith, VonDerek Stuart, Aidria Sigler, Matthew Holden, librarian Cheryl Burcham, Keria Smith and Winter Smith prepare sand sculptures in bottles above, while Matthew Holden, Keria Smith and Aidria Sigler work on a project at right. to purchase to begin with.” The letter goes on to describe what McQuary characterized as a “huge lack of record keeping,” and instances where Glenn allegedly returned money to the department after leaving office that totaled more than what could be determined missing by an examination of the department’s records. “There was also an account set up through a vending machine in the Sheriff’s Department which the record keeping was so poor, one could never determine if money was stolen,” McQuary wrote. “Vending accounts are supposed to be run through a county’s general fund and should never be controlled by independent departments.” McQuary concluded the letter by stating that the file on the investigation is now open and stored with the Arkansas State Police, and by mentioning that “proper accounting procedures now appear to be in place concerning the Sheriff’s Department of Pike County.” Bill Sadler, spokesman for the Arkansas State Police, said Wednesday that documents related to the investigation have not yet been reviewed for redaction and would be available under the state’s freedom of information law soon. The Nashville News has submitted a freedom of information request for the documents, but had not received them at press time. future of Lockesburg Post Office the subject of meeting scheduled for July 17 Staff photos by D.E. Ray The United States Postal Service will hold a public meeting to discuss possible changes at the Lockesburg Post Office on July 17 at Lockesburg City Hall/Community Building at 7 p.m. Week of 07-14-14 "A Little R&R" Across 1 Very soft, as a sound 6 Health resorts 10 Uncooked 13 North of the Irangate scandal 14 Angel's instrument 15 Sport played on horseback 16 Fancy car 18 Actor Sharif 19 Peaks: abbr. 20 Lays out by the pool 21 Donate some money 23 Cleaner scent 24 Actress Keaton 25 Sweet and kind 28 Excursion on the water 31 Go ___ for the ride 32 Niagara ___ 33 Highway: abbr. 34 Brothers and sisters, for short 35 Word with tread, wind or steel 36 Play to the camera 37 Christmas ___ 38 There are four in most rooms 39 Bite down on 40 Trash pickup, electric, water, etc. 42 Wind ___ 43 Clock sounds 44 Billy who sang "Piano Man" 45 Good pitch 47 Guy 48 From ___ Z 51 Worked with a certain tool 52 Kind of tournament 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 16 10 21 23 29 32 30 33 35 34 36 38 40 HELP WANTED 22 28 31 39 43 44 46 Want A Career Operating Heavy Equipment? Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. "Hands On Training" & Certifications Offered. National Average 18-22 Hourly! Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497. (Allied Career Training, AL. Licensed: SBPCE) Earn $500 Per Day Selling Final Expense Ins. To Seniors. Daily Pay. Daytime Market. Leads Furnished. Health & Dental Ins. Provided. Complete Training. Call 1-888-713-6020. 42 41 STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS Call Eva or Linda at 1-800-569-8762 to place your ad here! 24 27 37 12 18 20 26 11 15 17 19 45 9 14 13 25 8 47 48 49 50 SECURITY - POST CAPTAIN 51 52 55 56 57 for McGehee Area $10 - 13 an hour. Will train 58 59 60 866-840-2066 for appointment 53 54 Call Brad 7 days a week SECURITY OFFICERS for McGehee Area $9-$11 an hour. Will train 55 Valuable rocks 56 "What ___ is new?" 57 Actor Hirsch 58 Marry 59 "___ we forget" 60 Calendar squares Down 1 Take the shape of 2 Oodles 3 Societal problems 4 Zero 5 Giving a quiz to 6 Blazed, like the sun 7 Gives a salary to 8 Semicircle 9 Some restaurant dishes 10 Children's show from 1953 to 1994 11 Jai ___ (fastmoving sport) 12 Tattered 15 What an arrow does 17 Hit the doorbell 22 Bowlers and derbies 23 Ten in a bowling alley 24 "Guys and ___" 25 Beer amounts 26 Existing 27 He played Mr. Brady on "The Brady Bunch" 28 Fancy dances 29 "Who's there?" response 30 Easter candy 32 Nail ___ 35 "Holy" fish 36 TV's Dr. ___ 38 Candle part 39 Rooted for your team 41 Makes a check useless 42 Freezing 44 One of the Jacksons 45 "The ___ must go on" 46 Ripped 47 "No ___, no fuss" 48 Not much 49 Scrabble piece 50 Small bills 53 "Bravo!" 54 Grandma, in Germany Answers on Pg. 3 Call Brad 7 days a week 866-840-2066 for appointment EXPERIENCED DEISEL MECHANIC NEEDED Full Time, Comp. pay and benefits. Must have own tools. Call Lauren at 870-231-6020, or fax resume to: 870-231-6070 Woodfield, Inc. Camden, Ar. HELP WANTED TRUCK DRIVERS DRIVERS- NEW LANE OPEN IMMEDIATE NEED- Owner Operators Wanted! Home Weekly On Board Nav! Ideal candidates will live in Dallas, TX; Little Rock, AR; Memphis, TN; Nashville, TN or Bowling Green, KY. PAM offers Benefits and 401K. Call 877700-6615 or PamJobs.com for details. DRIVERS- DEDICATED Runs Available in your area TODAY. 100% Customer Dedicated Freight. TOP PAY & BENEFITS; Mthly BONUSES & more! CDLA, 1yr Exp. Req'd. EEOE/AAP. LIMITED POSITIONS AVAILABLE. 866-370-4476. www.Drive4Marten.com 1 2 3 1 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 9 4 9 6 7 3 8 8 9 7 3 8 6 4 3 2 5 © 2009 Hometown Content Difficult SHORTHAUL FLATBED/ CHIP DRIVERS - Must have 1 year experience - SIGN ON BONUS - REFERRAL PAY MAKE Apply ONLINE at OUR HOME www.woodfieldinc.com YOUR or CALL Recruiter: HOME 800-501-6020 x13 ATTN: Drivers Quality Home Time! Now Hiring in your Area! Avg. $1000 Weekly. BCBS + 401k + Pet & Rider. CDL-A Req. 877-258-8782 www.Ad-Drivers.com DRIVERS- NEED CLASS A CDL TRAINING? Start a CAREER in trucking today! Swift Academies offer PTDI certified courses and offer “Best-In-Class” training. • New Academy Classes Weekly • No Money Down or Credit Check • Certified Mentors Ready and Available • Paid (While Training With Mentor) • Regional and Dedicated Opportunities • Great Career Path • Excellent Benefits Package Please Call: (866) 2011406. DRIVERS- AVERITT EXPRESS New Pay Increase For Regional Drivers! 40 to 46 CPM + Fuel Bonus! Also, Post-Training Pay Increase for Students! (Depending on Domicile) Get Home EVERY Week + Excellent Benefits. CDL-A req. 888-602-7440. Apply @AverittCareers.com. Equal Opportunity Employer - Females, minorities, protected veterans, and individuals with disabilities are encouraged to apply. DRIVERS- $2000 Bonus! Oilfield drivers. High hourly, Overtime. Class A-CDL/Tanker. 1 year driving Experience. Home 1 Week Monthly. Paid Travel, Lodging. Relocation NOT necessary. 1-800-588-2669. www.TTTransports.com DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT children $125.00. Includes name change and property settlement agreement. SAVE hundreds. Fast and easy. Call 1-888-7337165, 24/7. WANTED ONLY 5 HOMES to advertise siding,windows or roofs. Save hundreds . 100% Financing. Payments from $89/mo. Mention this ad for free door or shutters. 1-866-668-8681. FOR SALE CLEARANCED STEEL BUILDINGS Perfect for Homes, Garages & Workshops. Lowest Prices and LOW Monthly Payment on remaining cancelled orders. Various Sizes Available CALL 1-800-991-9251 Heather. SWEET CORN Place your orders NOW! Corn is READY Now August 9th! ESAU’S DUMAS, AR Call 870-382-5738 or 870-382-2623 TRAINING/EDUCATION Medical Billing Trainees Needed! Become a Medical Office Assistant at Ayers Career College! Online job training gets you ready. HS Diploma/GED & Internet Required. Ayers.edu/disclosures 1-888-734-6717 Licensed by ASBPCE. 8820 Jewella, Shv., LA 71108 Become a TRUCK DRIVER IN LESS THAN 30 DAYS!! DRIVERS WANTED- Trucking Co. in SE Arkansas - Need CDLA experienced OTR drivers with clean MVR and knowledge of equipment/logbooks. Call 313623-8913 or 770-375-6062. Tuition Reimbursement Available if Qualified! Classes Start Every Monday! MISCELLANEOUS Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: 1-877-939-9299. PINE BLUFF TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL, INC. CALL TODAY! DISH TV Retailer Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/ month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-393-5829 REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! Get a whole-home Satellite system installed at NO COST and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers. CALL NOW 1-800-474-0423 • Financing Avail. • Lodging Provided! 1-800-954-4981 www.pbtds.net The RIGHT TRAINING for today’s trucking industry lic. by ASBPCE ADOPTION ADOPT- Happily married stay-athome mom and loving professional dad look to adopt, offering the joys of fresh air and farm life. Private, confidential. Contact LR Attorney Evan Bell 1-877-852-0040. ADOPT CARING, NURTURING HOME for your newborn baby. Beautiful life, much love, secure future. Expenses paid. Legal, confidential. Devoted married couple, Walt/Gina. Call 1-800-315-6957. ClaSSifiEdS 11 Thursday, July 17, 2014 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.swarkansasnews.com | Call: 1-888-845-6397 Nashville N COMBINATION CLASSIFIEDS Murfreesboro Diamond NEWS Reach over 4,500 readers! Call 1-888-845-6397 to place your ad today! ** Call The Nashville News (870) 845-2010 or The Murfreesboro Diamond (870) 285-2723 for rates, dates or questions ** We strive for accuracy, though occasionally errors do occur. Please notify us immediately if your ad has a mistake in it, so that we may correct it and give you a free rerun for the irst day that it ran incorrectly. Mistakes not brought to our attention before the second printing of the ad are eligible for one free corrected ad only! For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of inancing or business opportunities, he Nashville News urges our readers to contact the Better Business Bureau of Arkansas, 12521 Cannis Rd., Little Rock, AR 72211 or phone (501) 665-7274 or 1-800-4828448. ERCHANDISE HAIR, portable, lightweight, like new. Low $ or perhaps free to senior. (888) 442-3390. (WG:10-tf, w14) ___________________________ Silver Sequined Prom Dress, Size 4. Call 870-557-6411. (kw:25-tfn) ___________________________ A BRAND NEW PILLOW TOP MATTRESS SET W/WARRANTY! Twin Set $99, Full Set $119, Queen Set $149 & King Set $199! Call Sandy at 903-276-9354. (PD:53-61) ___________________________ Stereo system, Peavy concert speakers, with receiver, all goes with, $800.00. 870-200-3555. (PD:57-60) ___________________________ ISCELLANEOUS 28X65 oice or can be converted to house. All sheet rock and bay windows. $27,500. Delivered within 30 miles of Nashville. WHITTENS HOUSE MOVING! 580-306-5350. (PD:56-57) ___________________________ Carlton Mini Storage (870) 845-3560 AU TOS 2004 Mustang 40th anniversary edition, 3.9 V6, Sonic blue, one owner, excellent condition, $6500 - 101,000 miles. 870-200-3555. (PD:57-60) ___________________________ W ELP ANTED Experienced Short Order Cook. 11:00 am-7:00 pm. Must be able to work Saturdays. Apply at the Centerpoint Store. (CPS:53-tf, w15) ___________________________ BestMark Inc. (BBB Acred), is completing Customer Service Evaluations for a local auto dealership. CHEVY owners will be reimbursed for an oil change/tire rotation + $20-$40 for your feedback! Sales department evaluation available as well $17- $40! Apply: www.Shop.BestMark.com or call 1-800-969-8477. (PD:53-58) ___________________________ TRUCK DRIVER WANTED Hope, Ar based trucking company needs two drivers. Pay is .40 cents per mile, tarp pay, extra drop pay, waiting time paid. Layover pay, very rarely happens, Breakdown pay. Home most weekends, regular runs available. Our drivers average over 1000.00 dollars per week. Call Ken or Lucinda at 870-777-7503. (UFS:57-tfn,w53) ___________________________ Diesel Mechanic wanted, must have own tools. Need a class A mechanic not helper. Starting pay depends on experience. Must be able to work weekends. Paid holiday and vacation, medical insurance. Call Ken at 870-777-7503. (UFS:57-tfn,w35) ___________________________ FOR o ENT Furnished apartments for rent, utilities paid, 1403 S. Main, two blocks from Tyson, call Hal Scroggins, 845-1691. (tf) ___________________________ Peach Tree Trailer Park, 2 and 3 bedrooms, furnished, conveniently located laundry. 845-1355 or 8452943. (PT:18-tf, w15) ___________________________ NOW HIRING A MECHANIC Re-Opening Nashville Terminal Medical Insurance offered, Paid Holidays, Paid Vacation, 40-50 hours per week. If interested call 877-317-3223 Ask for Daryl or Jeff REAL ESTATE OTICE Looking for scrap metal, small amounts OK. Call (870) 557-0838. (dj:tf) ___________________________ Now buying good usable pallets 40 inches wide X 48 inches long $2.00 each delivered to Ward Shavings LLC 870-285-3377. (WS:82-tf, w20) ___________________________ LOOK GOOD...... FEEL BETTER!!! Cancer Survivors. For more information contact: 870845-2759 or 870-557-1444. (tf) ___________________________ B U SINESS 3 or 6 ac. lots, city water, Hwy 26W, owner inancing. (501) 758-2303. (CL:74-tf; w13) ___________________________ 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Home on 3.6 acres with fenced in back yard. 20x40 shop. Located on Hwy 371 E. of Nashville. For more info call, 870-451-3901. (PD:57-58) ___________________________ M H ANU FACTU RED OMES MUST SELL! 3/2 tape and textured set up on 1 acre. 30 yrs at 4.75% for $467.63. Call 24 hours! (903) 831-4540. (SH:99-tf, w21) ___________________________ SINGLE PARENT AND FIRST TIME HOME BUYERS. Special inancing for low down and monthly payments. Call anytime! (903) 8317324. (SH:99-tf; w18) ___________________________ Bad or good credit! You own land, we can inance you on any home. Call 24 hrs. (903) 831-5332. (SH:99-tf; w18) ___________________________ ABANDONED 3/2 with land. Must sell! Call 25 hrs. (903) 8316412. (SH:99-tf; w10) ___________________________ FAR M SERVICES Jimmy Don Sullivan Welding & Construction Service, 845-4752, licensed septic tank installation. (JDS:tf; w12) ___________________________ he Terminator Pest Control (870) 557-1780. (tf) ___________________________ Ward Shavings LLC - dry shavings $1,500/van load. (870) 285-3377. (WS:89-tf; w9) ___________________________ Brazil’s Full Service Center & Detail. For all your car care needs! Why shine when you can sparkle. 805 S. Main, right beside Hickory House. Call us at 870-557-7739. (mg:tfn) ___________________________ Harris Construction-New, Add on, Porches, Decks, Etc. References Available. 870-200-1727. (mg-tfn) ___________________________ Experienced Caregiver looking for elderly clients to work as caregiver & companion, housekeeper, run errands, or whatever is needed. Call 501-538-5101 or 918-7871437. (PD:57-58) ___________________________ MOVE IN READY Close to town & schools , Updated 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Fireplace, Approx. 1248 Sq. Ft., Central A/C & Heat, Located at 214 W. College St............... ............................... Listed at $72,900 Call our ofice for more information or to view this property! www.rayandassociates.net Call for your personal tour today! Ray & Associates Real Estate 724 S. Main St., Nashville • (870) 845-2900 Terry Ray 845-7757 Dale Bennett 557-6597 • Laurie Westfall 584-7926 Carolyn Reed 200-0201 • Robert Chism 451-3358 MILLWOOD CORPORATION Buyer of TimBer & TimBerland Matt Tollett - (870) 703-6939 Johnny Porter - (870) 777-3774 J.K. Porter Jason Porter RF#987 Ofice: 800-647-6455 P.O. Box 1316 Hope, AR 71802 219 N. 2nd St. PO Box 903 Nashville, AR 71852 Ofice 870-845-5303 LARRY R. TEAGUE, CIC Fax 870-845-1764 PARTNER HOME • LIFE • AUTO www.teagueandteague.com Larry@teagueandteague.com SANDY BRANCH MOBILE HOMES We have your mobile home needs. SALES, SERVICE, RENTAL & MOVING Financing Available! 8:00-5:00 (870) 845-2940 Angus Bulls. (870) 451-4189. (mg:tf) ___________________________ 2002 John Deere Tractor 790 Small, 699 hrs with Bush Hog. Like new, $7000. 870-200-3555. (PD:57-60) ___________________________ Smith’s Mini Storage Units available in Nashville & Mineral Springs (870) 845-5075 Freet Roofing, Inc. 2 Story Home with Pool~ Antiques~ Furniture~ SUV Residential & Commercial Roofing with online Pre-Bidding Serving the community and state since 1979 Call today for a Free Estimate! 501-262-3658 501-617-5404 Daryl Thomason Trucking Murfreesboro Mini Storage and Maxi Storage. 845-1870 or 8453168. (GS:tf, w9) ___________________________ 2 & 3 BR trailers for rent. (870) 845-2940. (SBMH:62-tf; w8) ___________________________ Apartments for rent. (870) 4513940. (DCL:tf, w4) ___________________________ Modern brick apartments for rent, contact he Agency, 845-1011. (CA:tf, w11) ___________________________ Country Living - 2 BR Houses, 5 miles West of Nashville. Laundromat on premises. (870) 845-5520. (LR:34-tf, w14) ___________________________ For ALL your printing and oice supply needs... Call us: #110 (870) 845-2010 Delicious, Homestyle Food! It’s what keeps our customers coming back...and we do love our customers! Dine-in or Drive-thru service 7 days a week! rant stau e R ily Fam 411 S. Main • Nashville Ph. 845-4997 Live on location Walker Brothers Construction Kasey Walker & Kelly Walker 870-584-9166 Walkerbrosconstruction.com FREE ESTIMATES - 20 Years Experience Custom Homes, Framing, Flooring, Decks, Vinyl Siding, Remodeling, Add Ons, Etc... Countryside nursery IRRIGATION SYSTEMS, LAWN CARE, LANDSCAPING AND STUMP GRINDING Shrubs & Trees (wide assortment) INSURED (870) 845-2307 198 MURRAY LANE Off Hwy 278 W, toward Center Point AUCTION SATURDAY JULY 19th @ 10 AM 501 Columbia Circle, Hope AR. 71801 Online pre-bidding for the real estate only is now in progress for the convenience of the bidder that may not be able to attend the live auction on July 19th. Register www.FowlerAuctioneers.com for details. This property consists of an incredible 2568+/- SF, 2 story home. It is a 3 bedroom, 31/2 bath home with a 2 car garage, a 18X36 in-ground pool and entertaining area and is all situated on a large beautiful corner lot on the peaceful Columbia Circle. 58156 AUCTIONEERS NOTE; We are excited to offer one of the finest homes in the area plus all quality Personal Property at Public Auction on the same day. All personal property will be sold to the highest bidder consisting of an Acura SUV, Air Compressor, Mower etc., Furnishings and Accessories, Antiques, Collectibles, Glassware, Fostoria, Holly Crystal, Franciscan Pebble Beech Earthenware, Milk Glass, Beautiful Amish Dinning Table seats 10 with 4 Leaves, Antique Dental Cabinet with Marble Top, Queen Bedroom Suit, the list goes on and on. It would take 2 pages to list everything. For listing, details, photos and terms of the auction visit www.FowlerAuctioneers.com Terms for real estate; 10% down day of sale with balance sue at closing within 30 days. Title insurance and warranty deed furnished at closing, 10% buyers premium. Terms for personal property Full payment day of sale in cash, good check or Visa Master Card, 10% buyers Premium. Auction day announcements take precedence over all advertisement. Auctioneer; Nick Fowler CAI, lic.#162 870-356-4848 email> nick@fowlerauctioneers.com 275 Hwy 70 E. Glenwood AR. We appreciate your business 12 The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397 | Thursday, July 17, 2014 a newly-complete family of four AARON GRImES Staff Writer O n Mon., July 7, three local siblings’ journey to find a permanent home came to a joyful conclusion. Six-year-old Landon, five-year-old Ethan and nine-month-old Stella were all officially adopted by Traci Jones, finally anchoring the three children with the Jones name after the long process of foster care and adoption. Jones, the Response to Intervention specialist at Murfreesboro Elementary, has been giving children a safe place to rest their heads for the past three years by providing a foster home through the Department of Human Services. During that three years, 19 children ages five and under have come and gone under Jones’s roof, each child with their own special needs and their own unique story. Surprisingly, Jones stated that the children usually make a fairly smooth transition to living in an unfamiliar place with new people. “They adapt really quickly,” Jones said. “Especially the younger ones - they get used to their surroundings and environment really quick.” According to Jones, the best way to help make sure they readjust to living in a new home is to simply provide them with all of the basic needs a child needs to thrive. “I want them to feel safe, that’s the main thing. Most of the time, they’re in foster care because there’s Murfreesboro woman adopts three children been a situation where they haven’t been taken care of,” Jones said. “You look at the necessities: you want them to feel safe, to feel loved, make sure they’re fed, make sure they’ve got clean clothes and a nice place to sleep and things like that. And then you also look at things like church. I go to church at First Christian, so I like to get them involved with that. I want to get them used to going to church.” Jones stated that each foster child stayed with her an average of six weeks, but some could stay as short as week or two. She claimed that she was very fortunate that each child who has been under her care was able to find a safe home, but she also said that watching them go was a struggle each and every time. “Taking care of them is the easy part. When you know they’re leaving, that’s the hardest part,” Jones said. “The day when they leave is tough.” Thankfully, now that the adoption of her three children has become legally binding, Jones will never have to feel the dread of watching a child she loves leave again. Instead, she now has the family that she has always wanted and worked so hard to get. “I think I’m just like anybody else, I’ve always wanted a family,” Jones said. “I thought maybe when I got out of college I’d get married and have kids, but my career became important, and my kids up here at school were just like my kids. But I’ve always dreamed about having a family of my own.” During her three years as a foster parent, Jones always had the intent of adopting permanently, but she never had the opportunity. Finally, she was able to take baby Stella into her home when she was only a day old. At first, she planned on ending her familybuilding plan with one child because she is a single mother. However, an unexpected blessing disrupted her carefully-laid plans: in December of this year, Jones was presented with the opportunity of adopting Stella’s brothers, Landon and Ethan. “I thought, well, I need to pray about it, I need to think about it, I need to talk with my family and make some decisions to see if it’s doable,” Jones said. “But after the first time I met them, I just thought there’s not any way that I could not have them. It was just a gut feeling. It was just meant to be.” Jones knows that it will be tough raising three children as a single mother, but she’s also familiar with the old adage, “It takes a village to raise a child.” Jones stated that she’s thankful that she’ll have the help of her parents, Danna and Charles Jones, to help HOWARD COUNTY AMBULANCE SERVICE ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP DRIVE her family as the kids grow older and become more active. Mostly, however, she is excited and thankful that she won’t have to see Landon, Ethan or Stella leave her care to be placed in a different home. “I’m most excited about the ease of knowing their mine. As far our lives, nothing has really changed,” Jones said. “We’re still going on and doing the things we do. But just knowing that everything is signed by the judge and they’re mine now, it’s a [relief].” Jones also wanted to stress the importance of providing a foster home for children, whether people plan on adopting permanently or not. According to Jones, it took her over a year to complete the DHS application process, but after becoming eligible on a Wednesday, she received her first child that Thursday. “We need more foster families in Pike County,” Jones said. “We need good people that are willing to take care of these children and make sure these babies are okay.” In the United States, being a single mother is one of the most demanding and difficult occupations that there is. In Murfreesboro, however, Traci Jones isn’t backing off and scared. Instead, she’s overjoyed at the chance she’s been given to raise three children of her own, and she’s excited that she’ll be giving them the motherly care they need, the home they deserve, and the Jones last name that they will be taking as their own. summer reading in tollette n AT LEFT: Librarian Wilma Lafferty helps Nasay and Shamach Stuart read a book recently during the Tollette Library’s summer reading program, which ran for several weeks before concluding. The program was science-themed and was open to all school-age children. Can you put a price on peace of mind? How about $4.16 a month? Only HCAS offers freedom from the spiraling cost normally associated with ambulance service. As a HCAS member, you receive a year’s worth of service for an affordable one-time fee of $50 (that’s just $4.16 per month)! But more importantly, you get service you can count on, when you and your loved ones need it most. And who can put a price on that? Photo courtesy Tollette Public Library What is a HCAS Membership? A HCAS membership is a membership program that offers valuable beneits for patients who have Medicare, and private insurance. Our program is designed to cover the out-of-pocket costs - like co-payments, deductibles and denials - that most insurance companies assign to their members. Unlike standard “gap” insurance coverage, the membership program covers all HCAS emergency transports - even if Medicare issues a denial! Beneits of a membership apply exclusively to HCAS service, and include: • If you are a member, and if you do not have insurance or your insurance claim is denied, you will receive a 40% discount off normal charges. • If you have insurance, HCAS will accept your insurance company’s payment as payment-in-full. I Have Insurance, Do I Need a membership? Medicare and insurance companies deny about 30 percent of all ambulance claims they receive. When they refuse to pay, the entire bill - usually totaling $500 of more - becomes the patient’s responsibility. Members are charged a signiicantly reduced rate (40% savings off the standard rate) for uncovered emergency or non-emergency service. How Do I Become a Member? HCAS’s annual enrollment period is from July 1st to July 31st. For more information, please call 870-451-0400. Moe’s Plumbing Repair & Drain Cleaning Inc. ”The crack may be showing, but the drains will be flowing!” www.moesplumbingrepair.com 710 North 4th Nashville, AR 71852 Charles Maurice Beth II/Owner Licensed Plumber moebeth@moesplumbingrepair.com 870-845-1950 • 870-200-1776/Cell