Local man arrested on internet stalking charge

Transcription

Local man arrested on internet stalking charge
The
Nashville News
THURSDAY • April 11, 2013 • Issue 29 • 1 Section • 16 Pages • In Howard County, Arkansas since 1878 • USPS 371-540 • 75 cents
IN BRIEF
t
Sheriff’s
Dept.
warning
of scam
The Howard
County Sheriff’s Department has received several
complaints
from citizens
recently where
someone calls
and notifies
them that they
have won a
large sum of
money and a
car.
The caller
will advise you
to go to WalMart and get a
money card to
pay required
fees. They
will tell you to
meet them in
the parking lot
but will never
show up.
When they
contact you
back they will
ask that you
give them the
card number
over the phone
and you’ll be
sent the money
and the car.
In many
cases the
caller is out of
state or even
in another
country. This is
a scam. Do not
mail, call in,
wire, or by any
other means
transfer money
to anyone in
hopes of receiving money
or prizes.
Contact
your local
banks or the
sheriff’s office
if you have
any questions or think
you’re being
scammed.
Deputies
complete
training
course
TURNER
WAKEfIELD
Deputies Steven
Wakefield and
Travis Turner
completed a
training course
on Criminal
Interdiction on
April 4, Chief
Deputy Bryan
McJunkins
said via press
release.
The 21-hour
course was
sponsored by
the Criminal
Justice Institute and certified through
Arkansas Standards on Law
Enforcement
Training.
Local man arrested on internet stalking charge
daNIEllE BRowN
The Glenwood Herald
The Pike County Sheriff’s
Office continued their vigilance at removing predatory sex offenders from the
street with another arrest
made last Thursday, April
4 in Murfreesboro.
On April 3, Pike County
Detective Jason McDonald
continued his investigations through social media
for suspects preying on
children for sexual purposes. That day, a conversation was initiated
by a 36-year-old Nashville
man, Dan iel Charles
Humphries.
According to the
re p o r t ,
Humphries
is a regisHUMPHRIES
tered sex
offender from Oklahoma.
Humphries began by
asking Det. McDonald, who
was posing as a 14-year-old
girl, personal questions.
Det. McDonald answered
the questions including
telling Humphries he was
14-years-old. Humphries
requested that they text
and McDonald stated he
would text him later.
Humphries then told
Det. McDonald since they
did not know each other,
they needed to play a game
called twenty questions.
Humphries asked if there
were limits to the questions, to which McDonald
replied back “I supposed
not.” Humphries then stated he did not know what
to ask since his intended
victim was young, and then
stated “I’m ok with it as long
as you are.” Humphries
then started asking Det.
McDonald questions for
the game. According to the
report, Humphries began
by asking simple questions
then moved to questions
that were sexual in nature.
McDonald then ended the
conversation for the night.
T h e f o l l o w i n g d a y,
Humphries once again
initiated a conversation
with Det. McDonald via
social network. Conversations were held throughout the day. At one point,
Humphries made a sexual
reference toward the genital area, of who he believed
to be the 14-year-old girl to
which he was speaking. He
then told Det. McDonald he
wanted to hang out, play
games and watch a movie.
He continued that he would
pick her up and carry her to
his house. According to the
report, Humphries state he
could not stay in Murfreesboro due to him having his
one year old daughter. McDonald asked if they could
ride back roads instead and
Humphries agreed.
They agreed to meet in
a predetermined location.
Because Humphries made
sexual solicitations towards McDonald, he asked
See MaN / Page 4
HCCC 27th
Annual Bass
Tournament to
cast off April 13
TERRIca HENdRIx
Editor
CECIL ANDERSON | Nashville News
Alex Kwock, Hayden Kirchoff, Jonathan Lance and Alex Perrin visit before the senior Scrappers’ final quiz bowl
match against Heber Springs. The NHS quiz bowl team went undefeated in the morning and was seated number one
over all, but Heber Springs upset the Scrappers in the first round of play that afternoon.
SURPRISE UPSET
cEcIl aNdERSoN
T
n NHS Correspondent
he Nashville Scrapper quiz bowl team tasted an early
end Saturday to a season that initially held the promise
of back-to-back state championships.
Heber Springs brought the season to an end with a first round 335255 upset victory over Nashville in
the state finals.
The Scrappers steamed rolled
the competition before losing
to Arkansas Baptist on the last
question at district, and looked to
be title-bound again at the state
tournament held at Maumelle High
School.
Nashville opened up state play
with Highland High School, who
kept it close in the first quarter
of 20 toss up with the score 90-80
Nashville.
The Scrappers crushed the
Rebels in the second quarter bonus round, running the tables and
shutting out the Rebels to build a
175-80 lead.
Highland put up a fight in the
third but was no real match for the
high-scoring Scrappers. Going into
Heber Springs ends
Nashville’s title run
the fourth stanza it was 255-130
Nashville and the Scrappers out
scored Highland 90-60 in the fourth
to close it out at 345-180.
DeWitt fared no better against
the Scrappers. Game two saw
Nashville open up early, taking 100
points to DeWitt’s 10. The Scrappers rolled once more in the second
quarter of bonus questions, scoring
50 to Dewitt’s 20 - making it 165-30.
DeWitt put up a fight in the
third, scoring 80 on their questions
and only losing 10 to Nashville on
bounce back. Nashville took only
40 and lost 40 to DeWitt on their
LAKE GREESON – More
than 70 boat positions have
been reserved for the 27th
Annual Husqvarna sponsored bass tournament.
The tournament - benefitting the Howard County
Children’s Center - is scheduled for Sat., April 13 on
Lake Greeson in Murfreesboro. As of Wednesday afternoon, 73 boat positions
have been reserved.
The tournament, located
at Swaha Landing on the
lake, will begin at 6:30 a.m.
and the weigh-in will start
at 3 p.m. that day.
Cash prizes will be given
out through 5th place in
the boat check category.
The first place winner in
that category will receive
$2,000 and second place
will receive $1,000. Prizes
will be given out through
25th place.
Registration is $80 per
boat (two man boat). Contestants must be 16 years
of age or accompanied by
an adult, according to the
rules and regulations of the
tournament. No live bait
will be allowed.
All proceeds from the
tournament will benefit the
HCCC.
To reserve your boat
position or for more information, call Shada Driver at
845-1211 or visit the HCCC.
See UPSET / Page 4
Council to
consider water,
sewer rate hike
cHaRlES GoodIN
Managing Editor
DIERKS - City aldermen are set to
consider a possible water and sewer
rate increase following discussion at
Monday’s city council meeting.
Debate on the subject came about
after Mayor Terry Mounts reported
that officials with the United States
Department of Agriculture had expressed concern over whether Dierks would be able to remain current
on loan payments with its present
amount of revenue.
“It’s something we’re gonna have
to do,” the mayor said. “Nobody
wants to but we’re gonna have to.”
According to Mounts, the increase will be the city’s first since
March of 2007, when rates were set
at $15 for the first thousand gallons
of water and $3.66 for every thouSee HIKE / Page 4
SUBMITTED PHOTO | Nashville News
The new 2013-14 Jr. High Outlaw Cheerleaders are (back row) Perry Lowrey, Alyssa Ward, Grace Martin,
Megan Welch, Blair Garner, (front row) Delaney Eckert, Gracie Thomas, Gabby Strassner, Annaliese
Stamps and Kyra Helms.
2 editorial
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Britain’s ‘Iron
Lady’ will be
remembered fondly
This week we received news that former
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Lady
Margaret Thatcher, has died. A towering figure
of the Cold War, she stood strong alongside
President Reagan against the Soviet Union
earning the nickname “Iron Lady”.
She was one of those leaders whose steel
and charisma endear their legacy to people’s
memories for
generations. A true
historical figure, she
Mark Darr stood firm on her
conservative prinArkansas Lt.
Governor
ciples at home and
against the foes of
humanity and freedom abroad. Her
alliance with the United States helped stem
Soviet aggression and avert a third World War.
She said that the problem with Socialist
governments was that “they always run out
of other people’s money.” I certainly agree.
That’s why I worry about how much money
our federal government is spending in Washington.
According to our national debt and annual
deficits, the government ran out of our money
a long time ago and yet it keeps spending
more. It’s unbelievable. I’m extremely grateful that our state government is bound by law
to have a balanced budget in Arkansas. We
can’t afford to go into debt like other states are
doing and I don’t think Arkansans would stand
for it.
Government spending is a constant battle
between those who think government should
spend an abundance of “other people’s money” to solve everyone’s problems and those
who think individuals should keep more of
their own money to make more of their own
decisions.
Lady Thatcher said, “You may have to fight
a battle more than once to win it,” – which is
why your state legislators come to Little Rock
every year. There is always a battle between
more taxes and more spending or less spending and fewer taxes.
It’s my hope that we see some good tax cuts
come out of this session. Arkansas families
need some tax relief and unlike some, I believe
they can be better trusted to use it how they
see fit.
It’s been a busy few weeks at the Capitol.
I am glad to say that a new voter ID law has
passed and will now ensure more secure elections in Arkansas.
Other significant pieces of legislation are
being debated right now that will, no doubt,
have an effect on the future prosperity of our
state. Be sure to continue to contact your
state representatives and senators to let them
know your opinions as they cast these important votes.
Finally, this week I will be speaking at the
dedication for the new John W. Turk, Jr. Power
Plant in Fulton, Arkansas.
This state-of-the-art facility will be one of
the cleanest, most efficient coal-fueled plants
in the United States, and the first of its kind in
operation in the United States.
It has impacted the economy in Hempstead
County as well as surrounding counties in a
positive way. The Turk Plant has created 110
permanent jobs with an estimated payroll of $9
million. SWEPCO which owns 73% of the plant
has contributed $1 million for scholarships to
fund work force development at local community colleges.
I am excited to see this job-creating project
come to fruition.
The Nashville News
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Subscription rates:
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NatioNal
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associatioN
Terrica Hendrix, Editor
Charles Goodin, Managing Editor
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Cindy Harding, Circulation Manager
The News is the oldest active business in Howard County -- founded in 1878.
Find us on the Internet at: www.nashvillenews.org
Tests and tiger moms
New York City's Stuyvesant High School is one of
those all too rare public
schools for intellectually
outstanding students. Such
students are often bored to
death in schools where the
work is geared to the lowest
common denominator, and
it is by no means uncommon
for very bright students to
become behavior problems.
Recent statistics on the
students who passed the
examination to get into
Stuyvesant High School
raise troubling questions
that are unlikely to receive
the kind of serious answers
they deserve.
These successful applicants included 9 black students, 24 Latino students,
177 white students and 620
Asian Americans.
Since this is definitely not
the ethnic makeup of the
general population of New
York City, we can expect
to hear the usual sort of
comments from those who
are in the business of being
indignant and offended.
The most common of
these comments is that
the tests are "unfair." That
is of course possible, but
it is also possible that the
groups themselves are different. Yet only the first
possibility is allowed to be
mentioned, in an age when
race can be discussed only
with pious hypocrisy and
obligatory lies.
However shocked some
people may be by the ethnic breakdown among students who passed the test
to get into Stuyvesant High
School, similar disparities
can be found among students from different ethnic
backgrounds in other countries around the world. Back
in the decade of the 1960s,
students from the Chinese
minority in Malaysia earned
20 times as many Bachelor of Science degrees as
students from the Malay
majority.
In Sri Lanka, children
from the Tamil minority
consistently outperformed
members of the Sinhalese
majority on university admissions tests and, in at
least one year, made an absolute majority of the A's on
those tests.
Back in the days of the
Ottoman Empire, Armenian
students did better than
Turkish students when it
came to writing in the Turkish language.
What does all this mean?
That people are different.
Would ordinary observation
and ordinary common sense
not tell you that? Or dare
you not even think that, in
the suffocating atmosphere
of political correctness?
These differences are not
set in stone.
Back during the First
Thomas
Sowell
Creators
Syndicate
World War, low mental test
scores among Jewish soldiers in the U.S. Army led
one mental test expert to
declare that this tended to
"disprove the popular belief
that the Jew is highly intelligent."
But many of the men
taking the Army's mental
tests during the First World
War were the children of
immigrants, and had grown
up in homes where English
was not the language used.
Mental tests in later years
showed Jews scoring above
the national average.
Every study I know of
that compares the amount
of time that black students
and Asian American students spend watching television, and how much time
they spend on school work,
shows disparities as great
as the disparities in their
academic outcomes.
When teaching at UCLA,
years ago, I once went into a
library on a Saturday night,
noticed how many Asian
students were studying —
and looked around in vain
for any black students. How
surprised should I have
been when Asian students
did better in the courses I
taught?
A few years ago, Professor Amy Chua of Yale caused
a controversy when she
wrote a book about Asian
"Tiger Moms" who put heavy
pressure on their children
to succeed in school. But a
more recent book ("Gifted
Hands") by black neurosurgeon Benjamin Carson
shows that his mother was
as much of a Tiger Mom as
the Asians.
Not only did Dr. Carson
rise from the ghetto to become an internationally recognized neurosurgeon, his
brother became an engineer
— both of them children of
a poverty-stricken mother
with only three years of
education. But Tiger Moms
get results.
Unfortunately, we are at a
stage where the interests of
race hustlers is to cry "unfair" at the tests — and they
have a lot more political
clout than black Tiger Moms
have. So long as the rest of
us are silenced by political
correctness, racial progress
on that front is unlikely.
Put differently, whole generations of black young people can continue to go down
the drain because their fate
carries less weight than
fashionable racial rhetoric.
Where have all the workers gone?
That America created
only 88,000 jobs in March,
less than half the number
anticipated, was jolting
news, indicating the recovery that the White House
has boasted about may not
be at hand.
But in that March jobs
report, there was more disturbing news. While unemployment fell to 7.6 percent,
the reason it fell is alarming.
Half a million U.S. workers (495,000) disappeared
from the labor force. They
dropped out. They are no
longer even looking for a job.
Worse, this appears to
be an inexorable trend. The
participation rate of eligible
workers in the United States
has fallen to 63.3 percent, a
level unseen since Jimmy
Carter gave his malaise
speech in 1979.
These folks, who have quit
working and quit looking,
who are they? How do they
support themselves? What
does this surging dropout
rate from the workforce portend for America's future?
Disproportionately, the
dropouts are young, black,
Hispanic, female, working
class. Some have gone home
to live with their parents
and may have re-enrolled
in school to re-enter the job
market better prepared. But
other indices are troubling.
Though we have been
creating jobs for two years,
even if at a torpid pace,
the food stamps rolls have
soared to 47 million at a cost
of $80 billion. When George
W. Bush departed, 31 million
Americans were on food
stamps. Fifty years ago,
there was no food stamp
program. Yet, now more
than one in seven Americans
is fed by government.
In another shocking number, almost 9 million Americans ages 20 to 64 years old
— nearly 5 percent of the
working-age population —
is receiving disability pay.
Among workers 55 to 64,
10 percent are on disability.
Few of those folks will ever
enter the job market again.
In 1971, only 1.5 percent
of U.S. workers were on
disability. Yet, today's workplace is a less hazardous
and safer place than it was
back when manufacturing
was a far larger factor in the
economy.
O t h e r q u e s t i o n s a re
raised by the Friday numbers released by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics.
Why is Asian unemployment 5 percent, while the
Hispanic rate is more than
9 percent and the AfricanAmerican rate more than 13
percent?
Do Asian-Americans and
Asian immigrants have a
superior work ethic or superior capacities for work and
success in a post-industrial
economy?
And with 14 percent of
the U.S. labor force unemployed, underemployed or
having quit looking for work,
why is Congress about to
grant amnesty to 12 million
illegal aliens who are taking
and doing jobs that might
otherwise go to unemployed
Americans?
Patriotism argues that
Pat
Buchanan
Creators
Syndicate
we enforce the laws against
businesses that hire illegals
and declare a time-out on
handing out a million green
cards every year to foreign
folks to come here and work,
until our own fellow countrymen are fully employed.
As to why so many are
dropping out of the U.S.
labor force, politically incorrect thoughts come to mind.
Have we made idleness so
appealing we are killing the
work incentives of millions,
and perhaps tens of millions, who would prefer not
to work, if they don't have
to work?
In the 19th century, the
phrase was "root, hog or
die." Raise crops, farm animals or starve. From the
Jamestown colony to the
20th century, America was
a self-sufficient society in
which all understand St.
Paul's epistle to the Thessalonians, "He who does not
work, neither shall he eat."
During Depression days
and World War II up through
the 1950s, the necessities
of life were provided by the
individual himself or herself
or by the family.
Today, however, government provides for almost all
of the needs of those who
claim they cannot provide
for themselves.
There is the welfare program Temporary Aid for
Needy Families. Medicaid
pays the health care costs.
Head Star t, free public
schools K-12, Pell grants
and student loans take care
of education from cradle
through college.
School breakfasts, lunches and food stamps take care
of feeding folks who say they
cannot feed themselves. So
successful are these programs that obesity is most
prevalent among food stamp
recipients. Then there are
the unemployment checks,
rent and energy subsidies
and endless tax credits for
taxes never paid.
The impolitic questions
that arise are these:
Has the welfare state
killed the work ethic for a
rising share of the American
people? If you can live a
comfortable life with your
food, shelter, health care,
education and income paid
for or subsidized, why work
when you don't have to?
Today, the top 1 percent
of Americans in income pays
37 percent of all income
taxes. The top half of wage
earners pays 98 percent of
all income taxes. How long
can one-half of America
carry the other?
With the Baby Boomers
going on Social Security and
Medicare at a rate of 300,000
a month, and scores or hundreds of thousands going on
disability rolls and quitting
the labor force every month,
what kind of future are we
looking at?
obituaries 3
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Kathy “Nana” Cowling, 60, loving mother, April 9
Kathy “Nana” Cowling 60, of Mineral
Springs, passed away on Tuesday,
April 9, 2013. She was born
October 1, 1952 in Mador, Texas
the daughter of the late Marshall
and Violet Brumley Young.
Kathy was a member of the
New Shiloh Baptist Church.
She is survived by her husband
Kendall “KK” Cowling of Mineral
Springs; three sons Brian Smith and
wife Stephanie of Mineral Springs;
Brandon Smith and wife Carrie of Mineral
Springs; Joshua Jester and wife Virginia of
Hot Springs; a daughter Kim Ganous and
husband Randy of Nashville; four brothers
Marshall Lee Young and wife Barbara
of Nashville; Jimmy Young and wife
Margie of Jonesboro; Willie Young and
wife Barbara of West Memphis; Kenneth
Young and wife Deb of Nashville; three
sisters Mae Ray of Amarillo, Texas;
Sharon Henderson and husband
Dalmer of Nashville; and Patricia
Harrison of Hot Springs; a
special grandchild Josh T.
Jester of Mineral Springs; nine
grandchildren,
eight
greatgrandchildren, a special friend,
Gladys Turner; a host of nieces,
nephews, and friends.
Visitation will be 6:00 to 8:00 P.M.,
Thursday, April 11, 2013 at Latimer
Funeral Home.
Funeral services will be 5:30 P.M.,
Friday, April 12, 2013 at the Latimer
Funeral Home Chapel in Nashville, with
Bro. David Raulerson oficiating.
You may send an online sympathy
message at www.latimerfuneralhome.com
Billy Joe Crawford, Navy Veteran, April 10
Billy Joe Crawford, age 62, six grandchildren, Matthew Lovell, Jason
a resident of Lockesburg, died Crawford, Kevin Crawford, Rachel Parish,
Wednesday, April 10,
Chase Parish and Tanner Parish
2013, in the Wadley Regional
all of Lockesburg; and a number
Medical Center in Texarkana,
of nieces, nephews and cousins.
Texas.
Funeral Services for Mr.
He was born April 2, 1951, in
Crawford will be held at 10:00
Cuba, New Mexico. He was a
a.m., Saturday, April 13, 2013,
machinist for Suttle Equipment,
in the First Baptist Church
a member of the First Baptist
in Lockesburg with Harley
Church in Lockesburg and a U.S. Navy Patterson, Jack Gilliland and Jerrell Helms
Veteran having served in Vietnam.
oficiating. Burial will follow in the
Mr. Crawford was preceded in death by Coulter Memorial Gardens in Lockesburg,
his father, Jack Lee Crawford.
under the direction of Wilkerson Funeral
He is survived by his wife, Lois Hodges Home.
Crawford; his mother, Leoda Edwards
The family will receive friends from
Crawford; two sons and daughters-in- 6:00- 8:00 p.m., Friday, April 12th at the
law, Eric and Carla Crawford and Mark funeral home.
and Krystal Crawford; one sister and
You may register on-line at www.
brother-in-law, Linda and Ray Hargrove; wilkersonfuneralhomes.com
ANNOUNCEMENTS
On April 17, the Mineral Springs Saratoga
Band will go to Grambling State University to
watch a band show.
The cost is $50 per
band member. Band Director David Walker said
“I want as many kids
to go, but finances are
an issue.” If you would
like to donate, contact
Walker at the Mineral
Springs High School at
870-287-4747.
The 7th annual Old
Brown/Ralls Cemetery
decoration is Sunday,
21 April. If you’d like to
come but need driving directions, just go
to www.yahoomaps.
com and enter “399
Mineola Rd., Umpire,
AR 71971-6006” or call
479-234-1711. The cemetery is on Weyco Rd.
53500. Follow sign.
Lunch will be provided and if you’d like
you can bring a dessert.
Canopy, seating and
portable toilet will also
be provided.
Ebenezer U.M.C. will
celebrate Pastor Shirley
White-Souder’s 4th anniversary on Sat., April 13
at 2 p.m. at the church.
The speaker will be
Minister Geneen Souder-Cochran, a Scrapper
alumni. Area churches
are invited to sing an “A”
and “B” selection. The
church is located at 318
West Dodson Street in
Nashville.
Blessed Beginnings
Mission House in Murfreesboro will be open
this Sat., April 13 from
10 a.m. until 3 p.m.,
located on 2nd Ave.
in Murfreesboro right
beside the First United
Methodist Church. For
more information, call
Pat McKnight at 870285-3809. If you would
like to donate food or
other items, you may
also call the above
number.
The First Baptist
Ladies will host their
Birthday Brunch on Sat.,
April 13, at 10 a.m. in
the First Baptist Church
Fellowship Hall in Murfreesboro. The guest
speaker will be Dianne
Swaim of the Arkansas
Baptist State Convention.
The cost of the
brunch will be $8 per
person. Proceeds will go
to fund mission projects.
For tickets please call
285-2593 or 285-3646.
The deadline to purchase tickets in Sunday,
March 31.
A benefit for Jimmy
Charles Campbell will
feature a rifle raffle.
Campbell is currently
undergoing cancer
treatments for lung
cancer.
The rifle, a Savage
AXIS, 7 mm-08 with a
Nikon 3-9-40 scope,
will be raffled on July 1.
Tickets are $1 each or 6
for $5.
For more information
contact Lonnie Ballard at 870-285-1745 or
Campbell’s Restaurant
at 870-285-2051.
The Pike County Jail
is seeking paperback
book donations. No
romance or hardback
books please. For more
information contact
Sarah Haney at (870)
285-3315.
SWABA Cookoff and
Barbecue Dinner, Sat.,
April 27 at the Old Feed
Mill outside of Delight
on Hwy. 19 South.
Meal will be served
from 5 p.m. until they
run out of food.
Menu includes beef
brisket, pulled pork,
potato salad, cole slaw,
baked beans, homemade desserts, tea and
water.
Adults $7, kids $4,
proceeds to support local church youth groups.
T-shirts and tickets
available at Bumper to
Bumper and McKnight’s
Grocery in Delight.
Ella Grace McCauley,beloved child, April 9
Ella Grace McCauley, the cherished
daughter of Andrew Tate and Jayma
Allison McCauley, passed away
in the loving arms of her parents
following her birth, April 9,
2013.
She is greeted in Heaven
by her grandfather, Dennis
McCauley and mourned on
Earth by her grandmother,
Sheila McCauley of Nashville;
grandparents, Stefanie and Bill
Crow of Daisy, James and Jennifer
Tidwell of Glenwood; great grandparents,
Paul and Margot Thompson of Bella Vista,
Ronnie and Marion Tidwell of Glenwood
and Walter McCauley of Nashville; greatgreat grandmother, Mary Thompson
of Miami, Texas; her big brother, Gus;
uncles, Casey McCauley (Sunne), Andrew
Tidwell (Erica) and Johnny Tidwell;
cousins, Lorenn McJunkins, Emily, Hope
and Soia McCauley, Colton and Hayden
Tidwell.
She was also preceded in death by her
Judy Stokes, 65, loving wife & mother, April 10
bers and 27 current members.
The induction ceremony will be held Thurs.,
April 11 at the Elementary
Cafeteria at 6:30.
Inductees are: Cameron Alexander, Cassandra
Barron, Braden Bowman,
Clarissa Brizo, Katherine Carballo, Xavier Claiborne, Jana Copeland,
Lindsay Coulter, Luke
Dawson, Chantel Gilliam,
Kynnedi Gordon, Cornell
Hawkins, Abby Herzog,
Blake Hockaday, Sydney
H u g h e s , L a u re n I n c e ,
Breona Jefferson, Corina
Johnson, Kathleen Jones,
Aver y Kesterson, Alex
Kwok, Kathleen Lance,
Victoria Littlefield, Irene
Martinez, Tanner McAlister, Iesha Neal, Storm
Nichols, John Nguyen,
Alex Perrin, Braden Rather, Jamecia Robinson,
Brandon Shamrock, Tyler
Tollett, Chad Tucker, Caleb Webb, Eileen Weider,
Kayla Wilson, and Mashayla Wright.
They join the following current seniors who
were selected for membership last spring: Cecil
Hunter Anderson, Gabriel
Alexander Briggs, Silver
Burton, Amy Castle, Vir-
County Judge’s Ofice for 23 years. Her
most cherished past time was time
spent with family.
Services will be held at 10:00
AM, Saturday, April 13, 2013,
in the Pike City Landmark
Missionary Baptist Church with
Bro. Jim Shelby oficiating.
Visitation will be Friday, 7:00
PM until 9:00 PM.
Interment will be in the Pike City
Cemetery under the direction of DavisSmith Funeral Home, Glenwood.
Pallbearers will be Tommy Parker, Neil
Parker, Ricky Bailey, Marty Cook, Leotis
Snowden and Jeffery Morris.
Honorary pallbearers will be Tim
Young, Larry Webb, Ronnie Epperson,
Ray Wise, Jack Herring, Cliff Woods,
Dewayne Reid and Clyde Keys.
Guest registry is at www.davis-smith.
com.
Judy Ann Stokes, age 65, of Pike City,
went to be with her heavenly Father,
Wednesday, April 10, 2013.
She was born October 15,
1947, in Pike City, where she
grew up and always considered
home. She was the daughter
of Ola and Tincie Jackson. She
was preceded in death by her son,
Robert Wayne Stokes; her parents;
and her sister, Jean Parker.
She was survived by her husband of 47
years, Bobby Stokes of Pike City; her son
and daughter-in-law, Ryan and Rebecca
Stokes of Norfork; two grandchildren,
Ricky and Railyn Stokes; her brother and
sister-in-law, Tim and Teresa Jackson of
Pike City; and a number of nieces and
nephews.
She was a member of the Pike City
Landmark Missionary Baptist Church.
She worked as the secretary for the Pike
A 5x10 utility trailer
will be raffled off with
tickets sold for $1 each
or 6 for $5.
Harvest Time Assembly Youth are having a
BBQ fundraiser April 20
on the front parking lot
of the church.
They will be serving
smoked BBQ pork sandwiches, fries, desserts
and a drink for $5.
They will be serving
from 11 until 4. This
fundraiser is going to
help offset the price of
church camp.
The annual Billstown
Reunion will be held on
Sat., April 27 at 6 p.m.,
at the Municipal Building in Murfreesboro.
Everyone is welcome
-- all residents, former
residents, families and
friends please make
plans to attend.
The meal will be
potluck, come and enjoy
good food and entertainment, visit with friends/
neighbors and show
support for the community.
Call 870-379-2896 for
additional information.
NHS National Honor Society to induct 38 new members
NASHVILLE - Several
students at Nashville High
School have been selected
for membership in National Honor Society.
To receive this honor,
students are evaluated in
areas of service, leadership, character and scholarship.
Students must maintain
a grade point average of
at least 3.5 on a 4.0 scale.
National Honor Society is
an organization that recognizes and encourages
academic achievement
while also developing other characteristics.
There are 38 new mem-
great-grandparents, Wendell McCauley,
Laverne and Ella Mae Hardin; greatgreat grandparents, JW Thompson,
Hershel and Eleanor Gill, Hurshel
and Pauline Allen, Lewin and
Myrtis Tidwell.
Graveside Services will be
on Monday, April 15, 2013 at
2:00 PM at Unity Cemetery
in Nashville, with Tim Freel
oficiating, under the direction of
Latimer Funeral Home.
In lieu of lowers the family request
that you support Arkansas Regional
Organ Recovery Agency (ARORA, 1701
Aldersgate Road, Suite 4, Little Rock,
AR 72205) or Now I Lay Me Down to
Sleep, who through their remembrance
photography, provided a volunteer to
record Ella’s short life with us. (NILMDTS,
7800 S. Elati St. #111, Little, CO 80120,
or http://nowilaymedowntosleep.org.
You may send an online sympathy
message at www.latimerfuneralhome.com
ginia Codi Crawford, Olivia Nicole Drummond,
Richard M. Dunn III, Kaylie
Efird, Jenna Janelle Hendry, Joel Hendry, Mayra
Hernandez, Pace Hill,
Jerrad Jones, Kirby Marie Kell, Hayden Brooke
Kirchhoff, Stephen Kreul,
Jonathon Lance, Maddie
Lee McJunkins, Melinda
Moncus, Zachary Pounds,
Dudley Jacob Slaton, Alex
Snodgrass, Heather Biranna Sparks, Tamira Reshey
Stewart, Hannah Kaylee
Vines, Abbey Williams,
and Mai Xiong Yang.
- Southwest Arkansas Radio
Hosea B. Germany
Mr. Hosea B. Germany, Sr. of Maywood,
Illinois died Wednesday,
April 03, 2013 in a Mayood, Illinois hospital.
Mr. Germany was
born April 19, 1932 in
Emerson, Arkansas.
Survivors includes his
son, Hosea Patrick Germany, Jr. of Forest Park,
Illinois; two daughters,
Debbie Teresa Germany
of Houston, Texas and
Aretha Laverne Germany
of Broadview, Ilinois;
nine grandchildren, ten
great-grandchildren and
number of other relatives.
Graveside
Services
will be Tuesday, April
16, 2013 at 1:00 p.m. in
the McElroy Cemetery,
Lockesburg with the Rev.
Michael Grifin oficiating. Burial will be in
McElroy Cemetery under
direction of Lyles Funeral Home, Inc.
For ALL your
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Eddie L.Carver
Eddie Lee
Carver was
born on January 5, 1932 at the Falls
Chapel
community
where he lived his entire life. He went to be
with the Lord on April
8, 2013.
He is survived by his
wife of 56 years, Emma
Ruth Carver. Two boys:
Lee Todd Carver Sr.
and Paul Lance Carver:
three grandchildren and
four
great-grandchildren; Siblings; Betty
Crow, Hugh Carver,
Tommy Carver, Sarah
Smart and Laura Jones,
many special nieces,
nephews and friends.
Funeral
Services
were held at the Falls
Chapel
Cumberland
Presbyterian church at
2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 10, 2013,
with Bro. Kenny Polk,
and Ann Holley oficiating. Burial followed
at the Falls Chapel
Cemetery.
Visitation
was open. The family received friends
at the home of Lance
and Brandie Carver,
Cypress Road in Falls
Chapel.
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Puzzle Answers
Stag Movies
Sudoku Solution #2864-D
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Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
MAN
From Page 1
if Humphries would
be bringing condoms.
Humphries replied that
he had them. He told
McDonald he was on his
way and would be driving a silver Malibu car.
Det. McDonald along
with a task force consisting of PCSO, Murfreesboro PD and Arkansas
Game and Fish set up
at the location they had
agreed to meet with an
undercover female deputy posing as the underage girl.
Minutes later a silver
Malibu approached, circled and parked nearby.
Humphries texted McDonald to “come on.”
After the undercover
female officer came
into public, Humphries
HIKE
From Page 1
sand gallons above that
amount. Sewer rates
were also reset at that
time to $13.75 for the
first 1,000 gallons and
$2.25 for each thousand
after.
Mounts said USDA
o f f i c i a l s h a d re c o m mended setting up this
increase to take effect
by a given percentage
annually over a period
of years as opposed to
all at once, but noted
that the final decision
was up to the council.
City aldermen gave
no indication as to how
they would approach
the change and agreed
to address the topic at
next month’s meeting.
In other business,
Mounts announced
that new basketball and
tennis equipment had
been installed at the city
park, costing the city of
total of roughly $1,200.
Improvements include
new metal backboards,
goals and nets as well as
pulled into the location.
Officers approached
Humphries with extreme
caution due to a statement he made that his
one year old daughter
was with him.
He was taken into custody without incident
and transported to the
Pike County jail.
A small child was in
the back seat. Department of Human Services
were notified and the
child was taken into protective custody.
During the inventory of the vehicle, cond o m s w e re f o u n d a s
Humphries stated he
would have during previous conversations.
Humphries is being
held on a $100,000 bond
for charges of internet
stalking of a child, a
class B felony and endangering the welfare of
a minor, a class A misdemeanor.
UPSET
From Page 1
CECIL ANDERSON | Nashville News
Susan Renfrow and her NHS EAST class test out the frames of the posters they
have created for the Nashville prom Saturday. Keeping with this year’s theme of
Hollywood, the EAST students have been creating many posters of popular movies
with NHS students Photoshopped in place of the actual characters.
a new net for the tennis
court.
M o u n t s e x p re s s e d
frustration at the need
to replace the equipment and said it would
be “hard to approve”
spending to do so again
if the park falls into disrepair due to misuse.
“I’m hoping that the
k i d s w i l l a p p re c i a t e
that and not tear them
down,” he said.
Also during the meeting, council members:
•฀were฀informed฀that฀
Mounts intends to apply for funds from the
Arkansas Highway and
Transportation Department to aid in the repair
of bridges on First and
Second Streets which
have routinely failed
inspections;
•฀were฀informed฀that฀
Mounts intends to apply
for a community block
grant to replace the air
conditioning system in
the city’s community
building;
•฀were฀informed฀that฀
the Dierks Volunteer
Fire Department may allow Center Point VFD to
borrow a pumper truck
while theirs is serviced.
MOONLIGHTERS
BLOOD DRIVE
ABOVE: Kirk Dunson
donates blood as Red
Cross worker Tina
Lovelace looks on.
AT LEfT: Madalynn
Rogers, the granddaughter
of Patricia Reese, enjoys
refreshments at the blood
drive.
Staff photos by
Cindy Harding
Grandview
to host
photography
workshop
Rick Evans Grandview
Prairie Conservation Education Center will host a
photography workshop
Mon., April 22 from 6-8 p.m.
The event is free but
registration is required.
For more information or to
register, call 870-983-2790.
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bounce back, making it
215-150 Nashville.
The Scrappers gained
some breathing room in
the fourth, once again
crushing DeWitt’s wouldbe comeback in its tracks
to make the final 335-180.
Game three saw the
Scrappers, now 2-0 in
morning play, taking on
Dover High School in
the last game before the
state bracket was set.
The Scrappers had a fight
on their hands with Dover, who put up 60 points
to Nashville’s 90.
Dover held their
ground in the third, taking 80 and leaving only
10 in bounce back for the
Scrappers. Nashville took
70 and lost none on the
bounce back to Dover.
Dover finished strong,
posting up 60 points in
the final stanza of play,
but Nashville put up 100
to close the final game of
the morning play and put
the Scrappers first seed
over all in the bracket.
Like in Bauxite, the
Scrappers would face
their final opponent in
room one. Heber Springs
beat out DeWitt in the
play in game to keep
themselves alive walking
into play with the Scrappers, who were primed to
repeat their state championship run of a year
ago.
H e b e r, n o t h o l d i n g
anything back, opened
up a can of academic
strength on the Scrappers, taking a shocking
and decisive 120-70 score
after the first.
Buzzer-happy Heber
continued to outscore a
stunned Nashville team.
The second quarter saw
Heber take advantage of
their two bonus questions, scoring 55 while
Nashville only put up 35.
T h e t h i rd m a rc h e d
in and the Scrappers
matched Heber 60 to 60
with both teams taking
50 and losing 10.
Going into the fourth
and final quarter of play,
the Scrappers were down
235-165. Nashville fans
and the team held their
breath, hoping for another Jonathan Lance
come from behind rally
like the one a few weeks
ago in Bauxite against
Arkansas Baptist.
Heber had other plans,
stopping the Scrappers’
c o m e b a c k d re a m s b y
matching Nashville 90-90
in the final quarter of the
Scrappers’ season.
Despite the heartb re a k i n g l o s s , s e n i o r
Jonathan Lance scored
enough points to be
named to the state quiz
bowl team.
commuNity 5
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
ension
t
x
E
Tips
How well is your exercise plan?
by Jean A. Ince
Staff chairman
UofA Cooperative Extension
Service • Howard County
Did you make a New
Year’s resolution to lose
weight and get in shape? If
so, how’s it going? Are you
getting the recommended
minimum amount of 150
minutes of exercise per
week? If not, now is the time
to revisit your goals and
make new ones if necessary.
Pick up almost any
magazine or turn on the
television and I bet within
a few minutes you will see
something related to eating
healthy and moving more.
Why all the fuss? Fact is
America is getting fat.
Years ago, staying active
was not an issue. People
got plenty of exercise just
from everyday activities
working on the farm. Following behind a mule all
day, working in the fields
and various other activities
provided plenty of exercise.
But today in our world
of technology and modern conveniences, most
physical activity has been
removed.
In fact, more than 60
percent of American adults
do not get enough physical
activity to provide health
benefits. More than 25 percent aren’t active during
their leisure time.
Unfortunately, this isn’t
limited to adults. More than
a third of young people in
grades 9-12 do not regularly participate in any form
of vigorous activity. And
children younger than that
are spending more time in
front of a computer screen
or television than outside
playing.
Research has found that
regular physical activity
substantially reduces the
risk of dying of coronary
heart disease, the number
one leading cause of death.
It also decreases the risk
for stroke, colon cancer,
diabetes, and high blood
pressure.
Regular physical activity also helps to control
weight; contributes to
healthy bones, muscles
and joints; reduces falls
among older adults; and is
associated with fewer trips
to the doctor, hospitalizations and medications. Do
you suffer from arthritis? If
so, regular physical activity
can help. Getting up and
moving helps to keep joints
flexible.
Being physically active
is much easier than you
may think. No longer can
you use the excuse that
you don’t have 30 minutes
or you don’t have the right
clothes to wear, or any of
those other excuses you
have given yourself before.
The Center for Disease
Control and Prevention,
and the American College
of Sports Medicine, recommend that “Every U.S. adult
should get 30 minutes or
more of moderate-intensity
physical activity on most,
preferably all, days of the
week.”
The good news is that
you don’t have to do all
the physical activity at one
time. It is possible to get
as much benefit from exercising in 10 to 15 minutes
at a time. As long as you
speed up your heart rate
and breathing, or increase
your strength and flexibil-
ity. Examples of moderate
activities include gardening
for 30-40 minutes, taking extra stairs, park as far from
the door as you can, walk
or march in place as you
talk on the phone or watch
television, or golf without
the cart.
You many notice that I
have been saying physical
activity instead of exercise.
Is there a difference? According to the American
College of Sports Medicine,
physical fitness is the ability of your heart, blood
vessels, lungs and muscles
to carry out daily tasks
and occasional, unplanned
bodily challenges, with a
minimum of fatigue and
discomfort. Physical fitness
requires a lifetime commitment.
Exercise is physical activity that follows a planned
format. The movements
are repeated, with a goal of
improving or maintaining
one or more specific areas
of physical fitness. These
specific areas include: aerobic fitness; muscular fitness; flexibility and body
shaping.
Does this sound over-
whelming? It doesn’t have
to be. Walking is one of
the best forms of physical
fitness that almost anyone
can participate in. Walking
gets your heart rate up and
provides flexibility by keeping joints loose. It is not expensive because you don’t
need a lot of equipment. All
you need is a good pair of
walking shoes, comfortable
clothes and a safe place to
walk.
With the weather finally
warming up, why not get
out and enjoy the great outdoors? Find time throughout your day to work in
20-30 minutes of walking.
You can get the whole family involved. By including
physical activity in your
daily routine, and balancing
it with a well balanced diet,
you can achieve that New
Year’s resolution you made
to eat better and exercise
more!
For more information
on eating healthier or exercise, call Howard County
Extension Service at 870845-7517, visit our website
at www.uaex.edu or stop
by our office located on
the second floor of the
courthouse. The Extension
Service is part of the U of
A Division of Agriculture
Department.
Recipe of the Week
Asparagus is in season
and readily available at the
grocery store. Asparagus
is an excellent source of
vitamins A and C, which are
antioxidants that may reduce your risk of heart disease and certain cancers.
Asparagus also provides
potassium, vitamin K and
fiber. Here is a great way to
enjoy it.
Asparagus, Peas
and Pasta
2 cups penne pasta
½ pound asparagus,
cut diagonally into 1-inch
pieces
½ pound peas, removed
from pods
1 cup Parmesan cheese,
grated
1 Tablespoon olive oil
1 teaspoon dried oregano
Prepare pasta according
to package directions. Add
asparagus and peas for
the last minute of cooking.
Drain pasta and vegetables
and toss with remaining ingredients. Yield: 4 servings.
YARD AND BAKE SALE
ADOPTION FUNDRAISER
Friday, April 12th • 7 am - ??
Next to Smith’s Cleaners • Main St.
CECIL ANDERSON I Nashville News
Clothes, Household Items, Lots of Misc.
Bread, Pies, Pumpkin Rolls & Cinnamon Rolls
Kendall & Marian Hostetler
All proceeds will help bring our son home from China
Eduardo Padilla and Steven Snell tape on their “Day 22” tag for the Senior Countdown. NHS Seniors have 22 days of
school left.
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6 Home & Family
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Nashville native releases ‘a Faded Cottage’
By aIKEN STaNdaRd
SOUTH CAROLINA Getting your first book
published is something
special. Just ask Diann
Shaddox, whose romance
novel, “A Faded Cottage,”
came out March 17.
“I’m thrilled to death;
I’ve been hugging it,” said
Shaddox while clutching
a copy of the book to her
chest. “A Faded Cottage”
is also special to Shaddox
because the protagonist,
Quaid Witherspoon, suffers from a progressive
neurological condition
known as essential tremor
or ET for short. Shaddox
knows a lot about the disease because she has ET,
too.
Often confused with
Parkinson’s disease, ET
causes rhythmic trembling
of the hands, head, voice,
legs or trunk. It affects
an estimated 10 million
people in this country.
“The tremors started
when I was in my 20s,”
said Shaddox, who lives
in Aiken with her husband,
Randy. “One day I tried to
fill out a form, and my hand
shook so bad I couldn’t
write my name.”
Shaddox is a Native
American Indian and a
member of the Wyandotte
Nation of Oklahoma. She’s
an author, book-lover, wife,
mother, and has ET. She
loves fairytales, magical
creatures, kids, and dogs.
Shaddox was born on
Dec. 18 in a small southern town of Nashville, the
youngest and only daughter of William and Mary
Ann Shaddox. But, fate had
stepped in and William, a
crop-duster, at the age of
25, died in a plane crash on
Nov. 20, the month before
she was born, therefore,
Shaddox was never able
to meet her father. Mary
Ann, who grew up in Miami, Oklahoma, moved
back to Miami after William’s death, where Shaddox lived until her mother
died, when she was only
3-years-old. Shaddox and
her brother moved back
to Nashville to live with
Creath and Cleo Holt, her
grandparents. At the age
of 10, Shaddox’s granddad Holt died of a stroke,
leaving her Mamow Holt
alone to see to her and her
brother.
She learned from an
early age about death,
and how life should not be
squandered. Her Mamow
Holt, who had lost her right
hand in an accident at a
factory in Nashville, Arkansas, taught her, you never
give up. Mamow Holt never
let anything stand in her
way. She taught herself to
write, cook, and even how
to sew and make quilts
with only using her left
hand, without any prosthetics. Being handicap
was a word Mamow Holt
never used.
Growing up with Mamow Holt in a small town
was wonderful, learning to
fish, growing a garden and
the most important thing,
patience of a grandmother.
Stories from the past
evolved of family bringing
many stories to life. Sitting
out late at night on cool
summer evenings, swinging on an old swing staring up at the stars helped
Shaddox’s vivid imagination grow.
As most people, life
moved on quickly for her,
graduating from Nashville
High School, a real Scrapper, college, marrying her
sweetheart Randy, having children, letting her
dreams of so many characters stay in her head.
Inspired by a grandmother who lost her right
hand and learned to do everything with her left hand,
Shaddox was determined
to live as normal a life as
possible.
“I’ve worked hard
holding things with both
hands,” said the Arkansas
native. “I can play the piano, and I have been able to
do cross-stitch.” Shaddox,
decided to start writing
books about five years ago.
“I always had ideas in
my head, but I wouldn’t
do anything about them,”
she said. “Then I got up
one night, sat down and
started writing on a piece
of paper.”
Shaddox’s first effort
was a science fiction book,
“Legends of the Diaries.”
She also produced love
stories, children’s stories
and fantasy fiction. She
started writing “A Faded
Cottage” in 2010.
“It was my birthday,
and it was late,” she said.
“I went to my office and
sat down, and my hands
were shaking. I was trying
to type, and I was getting
mad. That is how “A Faded
Cottage” and Quaid Witherspoon came about.”
Witherspoon is a talented artist who has trouble
painting after developing
ET.
Despondent, he moves
from New York to the South
Carolina coast, where his
family had vacationed
when he was younger.
There he buys a cottage
and reunites with a love
interest from the past and
learns how to deal with ET.
“But there is a twist at
the end,” Shaddox said.
“They (Witherspoon and
his former girlfriend) have
two weeks together, but
will fate let them have
more time?”
The author wants to
raise awareness of ET with
her book and plans to
SUBMITTED PHOTO I Nashville News
Diann Shaddox, raised in Nashville, has a released new
book, “A Faded Cottage”. The protagonist suffers from
Essential Tremors, as Diann, herself, does. for more
information, visit her website, www.diannshaddox.com
donate a portion of the proceeds to the International
Essential Tremor
But even though it has a
serious purpose, Shaddox
believes “A Faded Cottage”
will appeal to anyone who
enjoys romance books.
“Anyone who really gets
into a love story and wants
to believe in happily ever
after should enjoy it,” she
said. “How many people
have thought about their
sweetheart from when they
were a teenager? There are
a lot who sit back and
think, ‘What if?’”
Shaddox, who now
works on a computer, written about 20 books in all
and wants “to keep writing
forever.”
“A Faded Cottage,” published by Rebel Ink Press,
is available online from
Amazon.com as a trade
paperback ($12.99) or an
ebook ($5.99 for a Kindle
version).
Paperback and e-book
editions can also be purchased from Barnes & Noble (www.barnesandnoble.
com).
Booklovers Bookstore
and Tollett’s Gifts are also
carrying “A Faded Cottage.”
Birding convention highlights world’s oldest bird
CONWAY - Hear the inspiring story of Wisdom—
a 60-year-old albatross
who survived the Japanese
B
E
N
E
F
I
T
tsunami—at the 2013 Arkansas Audubon Society
(AAS) spring convention,
which will meet Friday,
A
U
C
T
I
O
N
May 3 through Sun., May 5
at the Hilton Garden Inn in
Conway.
The convention will feature birding field trips,
ornithology student presentations, and keynote
speaker Darcy Pattison,
author of Wisdom, The
Midway Albatross.
Furthermore, participants will enjoy a silent
auction, door prizes, and
Brenda (Fulcher) Krantz
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Dierks Community Center
Auction at 2:00 p.m.
Auction items: Swing, picnic table, fish
fryer, tool set, air compressor, handmade
quilts, jumper cables, Dierks Outlaw and
Razorback gear, gift baskets, gift certificates
& miscellaneous other items.
Dinner at 4:00 p.m. By Donation Only
Dinner includes Chicken, potato salad,
coleslaw, baked beans, homemade yeast roll,
dessert, and a drink
Raffle Drawing • Live Music
Come out, enjoy the festivities, and help
support a good cause!
Miss Elberta Peach Pageant
will be held on Saturday, April 20,
2013 at 6:00 p.m. at the Nashville
Elementary School Cafeteria.
$25.00 Entry fee • Deadline
April 19, 2013 (No exceptions)
Applications are available at
Nashville Chamber of Commerce,
Nashville News and Unique Body
Salon
his advertisement paid for with a combination of State Funds and
Arkansas Great Southwest Recreation Association Funds
opportunities to network
with other wildlife enthusiasts. Friday registration
lasts from 4 - 6 p.m. in the
Cypress/Juniper Ballroom.
Field trip participants
will explore wetlands,
grasslands, and mudflats
to see a cornucopia of
birds, potentially Wood
Ducks, Bachman’s Sparrows, Bell’s Vireos, Painted
Buntings, Bobolinks, and
more. Friday afternoon
field-trip destinations will
encompass Bell Slough
Wildlife Management Area
and Lollie Bottoms.
Saturday field trips
include Bell Slough plus
Ed Gordon Point Remove
Wildlife Management Area,
Bald Knob National Wildlife Refuge, Camp Robinson
Special Use Area, and Toad
Suck Park.
Friday evening’s speaker is Darcy Pattison, author of Wisdom, The Midway Albatross. She will
discuss her research and
collaboration with illustrator Kitty Harvill. Additionally, she will give an update
on Laysan Albatrosses.
Her book will be for
sale, and she will autograph copies. Saturday
evening’s highlight is AAS
member Lyndal York, who
will share intriguing stories from his birding trip
to Spain.
Also Saturday, two graduate students will deliver
presentations about their
areas of study: the breeding and foraging behavior
of Black Skimmers in Louisiana after the BP oil spill
(Brehan Furfey), and the
use of video-monitoring
to study Red-shouldered
Hawks in Ohio (Sara John-
son Miller). Convention
registration is $15 per
person if registered by
April 19; after that, it is
$20 per person. To reserve
a room at the Hilton Garden Inn, call 501-329-1444.
The convention is open to
non-members. Children
under 16 are free. Meals
are an additional charge.
A downloadable brochure
about the society, convention registration form, and
complete meeting agenda
are available at http://
www.arbirds.org/.
If you have questions
about the convention,
please contact Karen Holliday at ladyhawke1@att.
net. The biannual AAS
conventions are excellent
opportunities to watch
birds, meet other birders,
learn, and have fun. Find
us on Facebook at www.
facebook.com/ArkansasAudubonSociety.
The Arkansas Audubon
Society, a nonprofit allvolunteer organization
founded in 1955, aims to
foster a greater knowledge
of Arkansas’ natural history through observation,
investigation, education
and publication; and to
be a potent force in the
conservation of all of the
state’s natural resources.
dierks 7
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Dierks youths compete
in baseball jamboree
at Nashville City Park
Photos by Dewayne Holloway
Aaron Stokes (44) of Dierks winds up and fires the first pitch
of the game as Dierks faces off with Blevins.
Aaron Stokes (44) of Dierks winds up and fires the first pitch of the game as Dierks faces off with Blevins.
Chandler Turner (6) of Dierks beats the throw back to first
base as Dierks battles Jessica Gunter Law firm in 9-10 year
old action.
Ruston Simmons (54) bounces one into fair territory and beats the throw to first as Dierks moves ahead in 7-8 year old
action.
Lisa ChandLer insuranCe
~ Group & Individual ~
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G Medicare Supplement G
Save the Bees
Help the Junior
Beekeepers save the bees.
Call us if you have swarms.
870-557-4349
or 870-451-1396
For more information, call
(870) 845-5930 Ofice
845-7728 Cell
WE HAVE WHAT
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(870) 286-2112
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888-845-NEWS
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(870) 845-3323
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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 •
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SHOP DIERKS ARKANSAS FIRST!
8
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Y
T
I
N
U
M
M
O
C
E
H
TO T
Congratulations
on
your
nd
Anniversary
with us in Southwest
Arkansas!
We look forward to
many more ...
2
y
a
r
W
k
c
Bro
-Your Loyal
Customers
& Friends
OperatOr
nce
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p
x
e
s
13 year
man
y
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u
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a
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y
11
Latimer
Funeral Home
Nashville & Murfreesboro
• 870-845-2233 •
Power
Pharmacy
Nashville, AR
• 870-845-1413 •
Neeley’s
Diamond State
Insurance
Service Center
Nashville & Murfreesboro
• 870-285-3191 •
Simple
Simmons Pizza
Nashville & Murfreesboro
• 870-845-1330 • 870-285-3110 •
Nashville, AR
• 870-845-2802 •
Diamond State
Manufacturing
Glenwood, AR
• 501-617-8064 •
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Nashville, AR
• 870-845-2290 •
Kelley’s
Smith‘s Computers
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Nashville, AR
Nashville, AR
• 870-845-5900 •
• 870-845-0065 •
9
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Happy
nd
anniversary
n
a
s
i
r
e
b
o
m
h
u
l
w
p
r
e
A
r
s
u
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adv
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Lawrence
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Cruisers
Nashville
• 870-845-4320 •
Nashville
Home
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Nashville
• 870-845-3500 •
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Car Wash
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Glenwood, AR
Nashville
• 870-845-3335 •
Portable Buildings
870-845-4320 •
The Nashville News
870-845-2010
www.swarkansasnews.com
The Murfreesboro
Diamond
870-285-2723
10 sports
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Lady Outlaws earn
two conference wins
Dierks whips Lafayette
County, Horatio to advance
to 4-1 in conference
cHaRlES GoodIN
Managing Editor
The Dierks Lady
Outlaws were victorious
in their last two appearances on the diamond,
defeating Lafayette
County 4-0 Monday and
Horatio 7-1 Friday.
On Monday, Caitlin
Lites struck out 10 batters and gave up only
three hits in Dierks’
shutout victory over the
Lafayette County Lady
Cougars.
Lites was also credited
with an RBI and a run
after turning in a 2-3 performance at the plate.
Kendall Ayers (1-3),
Hannah Allen and Whitney Bennett accounted
for Dierks’ other scores,
while Ayers was credited
with an RBI and Autumn
Helms tallied two RBIs.
Dierks assumed the
lead early in the contest,
scoring all four runs in
the first inning and holding on for the remaining
six to secure the win.
The Lady Outlaws
scored six runs in three
innings to roll past Horatio Friday in conference
action.
Lites was credited
with the win after striking out 15 batters and
giving up only one run in
seven innings of work.
Whitney Bennett and
Hailey Carraway led the
team from the plate with
2-4 performances that
yielded two runs and one
RBI each. Kendall Ayers,
Stephanie Stuard and
Madasan Muse rounded
out the scoring with one
run each, while Sarah Cothren (2-4) was credited
with two RBIs and Lites
with one.
The Lady Outlaws kept
up a two runs per inning
pace for the first three
stanzas of play, then
scored once in the fourth
to seal the win.
Horatio managed a
single run at the bottom
of the sixth, but the Lady
Lions were unable to
gain any momentum and
Dierks came away with a
7-1 victory.
Scrappers fall
to Taylor
Nashville unable to
overcome late rallies
cHaRlES GoodIN
Managing Editor
Fourth and seventh
inning rallies by Taylor
proved to be too much
for the Scrappers Tuesday as Nashville fell 10-4
in nonconference action.
The Scrappers jumped
out to a 1-0 lead at the
bottom of the first inning
courtesy of a double
by Nichols that scored
Nick Myers, but the lead
was not meant to last as
Taylor responded with
four runs at the top of the
fourth.
Nashville tried to
regain the lead at the
bottom of the fifth, when
Myers singled to left field,
scoring Lane Goocher
and Chas Scott. The runs
cut Taylor’s advantage to
one, but it was the closest
Nashville would come to
reassuming the lead.
Taylor went on a sixrun rally in the seventh
that sealed the Scrappers’
fate, making it 10-3 as
Nashville went on the offensive in the final stanza
of play.
Scott added a run to
the Scrappers’ total after
Myers reached base on
an error, but the score
was too little, too late.
Alex Curry was credited with the loss after
striking out four batters and giving up three
earned runs in three innings of work. Justin Reed
also contributed from
the mound, striking out
one batter and giving up
four earned runs in four
innings.
CECIL ANDERSON | Nashville News
Jose Camacho competes in the high jump Tuesday at the Scrapper Relays.
SCRAPPER RELAYS
Nashville boys dominate De Queen to win meet
cHaRlES GoodIN
Managing Editor
T
he Nashville Scrappers thrashed second-place finisher De
Queen by over 35 points
Tuesday to win the Scrapper Relays.
Nashville scored 141.5 points
to De Queen’s 105 as two individual athletes and two relay teams
won their events.
Eric Perez won the two mile
run with an 11:06.51 effort while
Jalen Whitmore placed first
in the shot put with a toss of
52’9.5”.
The 4x100m relay team,
consisting of Jalen Jones, Jacobi
Lampkin, Jakaree Gaines and
LaMichael Pettway, also won
their event with a 44:20 performance, while Perez, Robbie
Morphew, Jared Jones and Jose
Camacho won the 4x800m relay
in 9:06.23.
Other results were as follows:
100m Dash - Gaines - 2nd place
- 11.10.
200m Dash - Gaines - 3rd
place - 22.78; Lampkin - 4th place
- 23.55; Camacho - 7th place 23.76.
400m Dash - Justin Kennedy 5th place - 55.92.
800m Run - Perez - 3rd place
- 2:09.79; Jones - 4th place 2:10.54; Morphew - 7th place 2:18.64.
1600m Run - Perez - 2nd
place - 4:56.31; Jones - 4th place
- 5:03.89; Braden Bowman - 8th
place - 5:31.29.
3200m Run - Bowman - 6th
place - 12:46.95.
110m Hurdles - Pettway - 2nd
CECIL ANDERSON | Nashville News
LaMichael Pettway competes in the long jump Tuesday at the Scrapper
Relays.
place - 16.86; Ryan Sube - 8th
place - 19.55.
300m Hurdles - Pettway - 2nd
place - 43.15.
4x400m Relay - Camacho, Corey Cooper, Jamie Newton, Justin
Kennedy - 2nd place - 3:42.80.
High Jump - Cooper - 6th place
- 5’4”; Montorey Johnson - 8th
place - 5’2”.
Long Jump - Gaines - 4th
place - 18’5”; Pettway - 5th place
- 18’1.25”; Lampkin - 6th place 18’1”; Johnson - 8th place - 17’8”.
Triple Jump - Pettway - 2nd
place - 42’6.5”; Lampkin - 5th
place - 41’6.25”.
Shot Put - Rashon Lee - 3rd
place - 47’10”; Camacho - 8th
place - 42’.
Discus - Lee - 4th place 131’5”.
sports 11
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
Fifth inning rally
boosts Scrappers
over Robinson
King credited with win
after giving up no runs,
striking out three
cHaRlES GoodIN
Managing Editor
A
prolific fifth
inning rally
lifted the
Nashville Scrappers
to a 6-0 victory over
the Joe T. Robinson
High School Senators Monday.
Donyell “Head” King
was credited with the
win after striking out
three batters and giving up no earned runs
in four innings of work.
King also delivered a 1-3
performance from the
plate that resulted in
two runs and an RBI.
Nick Myers went 1-4
and Justin Reed went
1-3, adding one run each
to Nashville’s tally, while
Dylan Chambers’ 1-2 effort produced a run and
an RBI.
Andy Graves rounded
out the Scrappers’ scor-
ing with a run despite
never recording an official at bat.
Action was slow early
in the game, but Nashville was able to jump
out to a 1-0 first inning
lead thanks to King, who
capitalized on an error.
The teams battled
through three scoreless
innings before the Scrappers put the game away
in the fifth.
King got things
started when he singled
to second base, scoring
Chambers. King himself
scored a few plays later
when Storm Nichols was
hit by a pitch.
Graves was the next
to score after Tesean
Green reached base on
an error, then Myers
made it 5-0 after scoring
on another error.
The Scrappers added
a final point to their lead
in the sixth when Chambers singled to score
Reed.
CECIL ANDERSON | Nashville News
Austin Lovelis watches a ball fly past the plate Monday as the Nashville Scrappers roll past the Joe T. Robinson High
School Senators.
Hendry strikes
out nine as girls
whip Robinson
cHaRlES GoodIN
Managing Editor
Jenna Hendry struck
out nine batters and allowed no runs Monday
as the Nashville Scrapperettes easily defeated
the Joe T. Robinson High
School Lady Senators.
Hendry also turned in
a 3-4 performance from
the plate, delivering five
RBIs for Nashville as they
claimed the 10-0 victory.
Mattie Jamison,
Maddi Horton and Maggie Worthington turned
in two runs each, and
Worthington (2-2) was
credited with an RBI.
Nicole Drummond and
Avery Kesterson tallied
CECIL ANDERSON | Nashville News
Kathleen Lance bunts Monday during the Scrapperettes’ shutout victory over the Joe T. Robinson High School Lady
Senators.
Fish Day
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one run each despite
never getting a hit, while
Brittany Middleton’s 1-2
effort was good for another score.
Peekaboo Garland
rounded out the Scrapperettes’ scoring with
another run despite never
recording an official at
bat.
Action was sluggish
early in the game as the
teams battled through
two scoreless innings, but
Nashville came alive in
the third, scoring two.
The Scrapperettes
added five to their lead
in the fourth and sealed
the victory with three in
the fifth and final stanza
of play.
BYERS
AUTO REPAIR
To our loyal customers,
after over 40 years of serving
this area, we are closing our
business. This has not been
an easy decision for us. We
have prayed about this for
some time now but for several
reasons we have decided that
this is the best decision for
us. It has been our privilege
to serve you. Our last day to
be open will be Friday, April
19, 2013.
The Byers Family
12 miNeral spriNgs
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
AT LEfT: four Saratoga
School staff members were
presented commemorative
blankets before the April
meeting of the Mineral Springs
Saratoga Board meeting for
their work through the years
at Saratoga basketball games
and tournaments.
Pictured (left to right): Dale
Gathright Jr. (Class of 1979)
clock keeper and public
address announcer, Christine
Green (Class of 1979) official
scorer as well as coaching
both girls and boys basketball
teams and organizing
hospitality for the Southwest
Arkansas Invitational
Tournament and state
tournaments, Inez Gentry,
(Class of 1980) official scorer,
and Kenneth Green, who
coached girls and sometimes
the boys teams, clock keeper,
and does much of the behind
the scenes planning and work
for the Southwest Arkansas
Invitational Tournament. He
began his teaching career in
1978 at Saratoga High School.
Gathright credits the four’s
involvement to the late
Saratoga High School Principal
James A. Stewart. “When
the M.H. Peebles Auditorium
opened in 1982, he recruited
us and a few others to run the
clock and be the scorer and
set the example of running
the tournaments and being
hospitable. The scorer’s table
is the best seat in the house,
and after 31 years, I still love
it,” Gathright said.
Staff photo by Terrica Hendrix
TERRIca HENdRIx
Editor
Mineral
Springs
school
refinances
bonds
MINERAL SPRINGS – The
Mineral Springs Saratoga School
Board recently refinanced three
of its bonds in order to take
advantage of favorable bond
market conditions.
Jason Holsclaw, of Stephens,
Inc., spoke to the board about
refinancing the bonds at lower
interest rates Monday evening at
the April board meeting.
He told the board that the
district could save more than
$250,000 by refinancing.
The board unanimously approved the three resolutions.
In other business, the board
unanimously approved:
* the 2013-14 school calendar;
* two school trips (the band
students will attend a band show
at Grambling University on Wed.,
April 17, and the 3rd - 8th grade
Gifted and Talented students will
go to the Mid-America Museum
in Hot Springs next month);
* the 2013-14 salary schedule
retroactive to Jan. 1, 2013 for five
staff members (Jeanie Gorham,
Specialty Clinic
Spotlight
Education:
University of North Texas
Health Science Center
Fort Worth, Texas
Residency:
Internal Medicine
Plaza Medical Center
Fort Worth, Texas
Fellowship:
Fellowship in Cardiology and
Interventional Cardiology
Plaza Medical Center
Forth Worth, Texas
Kevin Formes, MD
Cardiology
Contact Info:
Ofice: 903/794-8820
Facility/Ofice:
Advanced Cardiology
5502 Medical Parkway
Drive
Texarkana, Texas 75503
Specialized in invasive and
interventional cardiology and
peripheral vascular disease.
Memberships:
American College of Cardiology
American Osteopathic Association
Texas Osteopathic Medical
Association
American Medical Association.
American College of Cardiology Fellow
American College of Physicians
Arkansas Medical Society
Charles Hanson, Marla Williams,
Liz Ann Bell and Frankie Darr)
whose duties changed in January
The board held a specialcalled board meeting Tues., April
9 to interview Lendell Martin,
superintendent of the Battiest
School District in Oklahoma for
the superintendent position.
Meetings to interview candidates were also held on March
25 and March 26.
Candidates who interviewed
with the board include: Teresa
Ragsdale, superintendent at
Hardford School District; Holly
Cothren, Dierks High School
principal; Charles Hanson, Saratoga Building principal; Curtis
Turner Jr. Turner, superintendent at the Eureka Springs
School District and Tim Erwin,
Ashdown Assistant High School
principal and athletic director.
No action was taken after the
interviews.
There were no candidates
interviewed for the superintendent’s position at the special
called board meeting on April 5
and no action was taken at that
meeting.
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legal 13
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
ON THE BEAT
NPD report log
compiled by Investigator larry Marion
Nashville Police Department
* On March 29, 2013 Flint Stone with Crow Burlingame reported that Terry Wayne Carter (date of
birth 1-21-78) tried to purchase parts that he ordered
with a check on the account of Jalana Murdock. Mr.
Stone called the bank to make sure the check was
valid. The bank told him that there was no account
with that account number. Mr. Carter took the check
back and left the store.
* On April 4, 2013 Nashville Officer Tim Bowlin
received a call from Malvern Police Department stating that Jalana Murdock had reported several checks
stolen on an account that had been closed for several
years. Officer Bowlin located Mr. Carter at O’Reilly’s
in Nashville and arrested him on Forgery 2nd Degree.
Man in custody after forgery report
Investigator
larry Marion
Nashville Police
Department
NASHVILLE - On April
8, Leroy Posas of Lyford,
Texas called the Nashville
Police Department and
reported that he received
a letter from the Internal
Revenue Service stating
that he owed back taxes
for 2011 when he was working at Mission Plastics in
Nashville.
Posas stated that he had
never worked at Mission
Plastics.
On April 11, Immigration Custom Enforcement
Agent Louie Patton and
Investigator Larry Marion
went to Mission Plastics
to investigate the matter.
A human resource official
stated that someone was
working at the plant under
the name Leroy Posas.
That person was brought
to an office area for an interview. The person stated
that his real name was Alejandro Lozada Perez, date
of birth 1-21-77.
During the investiga-
tion, officers recovered
Posas’ birth certificate
and bank records where
Perez had opened a bank
account under the name
Leroy Posas. Perez had
been working at Mission
Plastics since 2007.
Perez was taken into
custody by Agent Patton
and transported to Texarkana.
DRUG COURT GRADUATION
* After Mr. Carter was taken to Howard County
Jail approximately two grams of methamphetamine
was found in his shirt pocket by Jailer Shantara
Green. Mr. Carter was charged with Possession of
Controlled Substance and Forgey 2nd Degree. Bond
is set at $50,000.
* On March 28, 2013 Tamarreo Williamson reported that his 1991 Chevrolet Caprice was stolen
from the parking lot at Husqvarna. On March 29,
2013 Investigator Larry Marion received information
that there was an abandoned car in the Clow community. Investigator Marion went to the area, and
it was the stolen vehicle of Mr. Williamson’s. The
vehicle’s wheels and tires had been removed, and
several items from inside the car were missing. No
arrest have been made at this time.
* On March 16, 2013 Thomas Johnson 717 S. Ansley
St. in Nashville reported that someone had thrown
a cinder block threw a window of his residence. Mr.
Johnson stated that some change was missing from
the residence.
* On March 21, 2013 Donna Muldrow 608 S. Front
St. in Nashville reported that someone had broken
into her residence. A 50” Sanyo TV was stolen and
some change.
*On April 3, 2013 Chad Blanchard 719 Cypress St.
in Nashville reported someone had broken into his
residence and stolen approximately fifty dollars in
change.
*On April 4, 2013 Arthur Thompson 1009 S. Ansley
St. in Nashville reported someone had broken into
his residence, and stolen an Xbox 360, several games,
and money. On April 6, 2013 the Xbox and games
were recovered from US Pawn in Nashville by Officer
Clint Tedford. No Arrest have been made at this time.
The Howard County
Democratic Central
Committee Meeting p.m.
16 April 2013
Western of Nashville
EVERY BODY is
Welcome
TERRICA HENDRIX I Nashville News
Chad Hopkins and Delbert Crow graduated from the Ninth
West Judicial Distict Drug Court on Wed., April 10. The men
are pictured with Circuit Judge Charles A. Yeargan who
presides over the special court once a month in Howard
County.
16 Temporary job openings Abbigator, Inc. in Abbeville, LA 5/19/2013
to 2/28/2014. General worker needed for alligator farm. Feed and maintaining of alligators, harvesting of alligators and eggs and returning of wild
alligators to marshes. Work includes ield prep, fertilize, harvest, plant,
tractor driving, and water maint. Field prep includes manual shovel work
and hoeing of weeds, spot spray treatments and gen farm labor. Help repair and maintain alligator houses, buildings, equip, farm, fences, ields,
levees, marshes, roads and shop. Load and unload trucks. Worker must
be able to lift/carry 70 lbs. Allergies to ragweed, goldenrod, insect spray
and related chemicals and pesticdes, etc. may affect workers’ ability to
perform the job. Employer may require post hire, random, upon suspicion
or post accident drug testing, all at no cost to employee. Testing positive or
failure to comply may result in immediate termination from employment.
Job involves stooping, lifting and working outside in inclement weather.
Must have 3 mo exp in job offered, after 3 days worker required to keep
up with other employees to produce crops. All tools furnished at no cost.
$9.50 hourly. Housing provided for all workers who cannot reasonably
return to their permanent residence daily. Guaranteed ¾ contract beginning with worker date of arrival .If applicable, Transp & subsistence exp to
worksite provided/paid by employer by 50% of contract, rtn at completion
of contract. Apply/Send resumes for this job at the nearest local SWA @
700 South Elm, Hope, AR 71801 ph 870-777-3421 using LA JO# 447953.
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:
DeQueen • Nashville • Mt. Ida • Mena
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HOWARD
COUNTY, ARKANSAS
PROBATE DIVISION
PR-2013-12-1
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF
EDWARD BROWNING BOSWELL, JR.,
DECEASED
NOTICE OF THE OPPORTUNITY TO
PRESENT CLAIMS
Notice is hereby given that Edward Browning
Boswell, Jr., who resided at 1400 Hwy 27
South, Mineral Springs, Arkansas, died on
February 22, 2013. On this date, March 13, 2013,
Edward Browning Boswell, Sr. was appointed
Administrator of the Estate of Edward Browning
Boswell, Jr.
All persons having claims against the estate said
persons must present them, duly veriied, to the
undersigned within six (6) months form the date of
the irst publication of this notice. A failure to do
so will forever bar and precluded the claim from
receiving any beneit in he estate.
This notice irst published the 4th day of April,
2013.
Jim Bob Steel
Attorney at Law
219 N. Main St.
Nashville, Ar. 71852
870-845-4532
(JBS:27, 29;W:149)
NOTICE Of DRAfT PERMIT DECISION
BY THE ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT
Of ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
In accordance with provisions of Arkansas Statutes, 8-4-203, public notice is hereby given that as of April
3, 2013, the Surface Mining and Reclamation Division of the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality
(ADEQ) announces its draft decision to issue a modiication of open-cut mining permit number 0457-MN-A2
by adding an additional twenty (20) acres as requested by Blue Bayou Sand & Gravel, LLC, 1240 Lafayette
County Road 31, Stamps, Arkansas 71860 for a mining facility located in Howard County, Arkansas.
ADEQ has received the necessary documentation from the above named applicant for the issuance of a
modiication of open-cut mining permit number 0457-MN-A2 for the removal of sand and gravel from a location in Section 22 Township 9 South Range 28 West in Howard County.
Any interested person may submit written comments concerning the technical merits of the ADEQ’s draft
decision within 30 days of the publication of this notice. Any interested person may submit a request for a
public hearing on the draft permit decision within 30 days of the publication of this notice. The decision on
whether to schedule a public hearing is at the ADEQ’s discretion. If a hearing is scheduled, irst class mail
notice will be provided to the permit applicant and to all persons who submitted a request for a public hearing
and who provided public comments on the record.
Written comments concerning ADEQ’s draft decision should be sent to: James F. Stephens, Chief, Surface
Mining and Reclamation Division, Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality, 5301 Northshore Drive,
North Little Rock, AR 72118-5317 or by email to [email protected]. Additional information regarding the draft decision, including copies of the permit application and documents concerning the review process by the ADEQ staff, can be made available for inspection and copying by contacting the ADEQ’s Surface
Mining and Reclamation Division at the above address. There will be a charge to cover photocopying costs.
A inal, written decision on this permit application will be issued by ADEQ after the close of the 30-day
public comment period or after a public hearing if one is held. The inal decision will include a response to
each issue raised during the public comment period for this proposal, and will include an explanation of the
rationale for any technical requirements or standards involved in making the inal decision. Any person with
legal standing in this matter may appeal the ADEQ’s inal decision to the Arkansas Pollution Control and
Ecology Commission. Appeals must be in writing, must be iled within 30 days of the ADEQ’s inal decision,
and must conform to all the requirements set forth in Regulation No. 8.
Dated this 11th day of April, 2013.
By authority of the Director, Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality
(BBSG:29; w465)
14 televisioN
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
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4/7/2013
11. 1996 Jim Carrey
stag movie?
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points
28. Soph. and jr.
31. Track tipsters
34. Space out
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Kahlo
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45. Well-put
49. Marsh plants
51. "Trick" joint
53. Walk through
water
54. Loren's husband
55. Teed off
57. Little hooter
60. "The Grapes of
Wrath" family
name
64. HST's successor
65. Get prone
66. "__ longa, vita
brevis"
67. Several reps, in the
gym
Answers
on Pg. 3
7
7
3
5
5
7
9
8
© 2009 Hometown Content
Difficult
Week of 4-08-13
STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS
Call Eva or Linda at 1-800-569-8762 to place your ad here!
HOLTGER BROS., INC.
UTILITY CONTRACTOR
Since 1946
Immediate Opportunity:
Field Service Technician
Must be proficient in
mechanical, electrical &
hydraulic troubleshooting and
repair, possess strong listening
skills, have the ability to follow
through with projects, and have
the ability to complete paperwork
properly. Travel Required.
Call: 800-831-0754
Email resume:
[email protected]
or Mail to: HBI, Inc., 950 W
Main Ave., De Pere, WI 54115
EOE by AA
HELP WANTED TRUCK DRIVERS
DRIVERS- CRST offers the Best
Lease Purchase Program! SIGN
ON BONUS. No Down Payment
or Credit Check. Great Pay.
Class-A CDL required. Owner
Operators Welcome! Call: 866261-6532.
DRIVERS- CDL-A TEAM WITH
TOTAL. $5,000 Bonus for
Hazmat Teams. Solo Drivers
Also Needed! 1 yr. exp. req'd.
800-942-2104 Ext. 7308 or
7307.
www.TotalMS.com
DRIVERS- OTR Positions. Up to
45 CPM. Sign On Bonus $1,000.
Pet Policy. Assigned Equipment.
O/O's Welcome! deBoer Transportation 800-825-8511.
www.deBoerTrans.com
Become a TRUCK
DRIVER IN LESS THAN
30 DAYS!!
Tuition Reimbursement
Available if Qualified!
Classes Start
Every Monday!
PINE BLUFF TRUCK DRIVING
SCHOOL, INC.
CALL TODAY!
76/52
Sunshine.
Highs in the
mid 70s and
lows in the
low 50s.
©2009 American Profile Hometown Content Service
DRIVERS- HIRING EXPERIENCED/INEXPERIENCED
TANKER DRIVERS! Earn up to
$.51 per Mile! New Fleet Volo
Tractors! 1 Year OTR Exp. Req.
- Tanker Training Available. Call
Today: 877-882-6537.
www.OakleyTransport.com
DRIVERS- $5,000 SIGN-ON
BONUS for exp'd solo OTR
drivers & O/O's. Tuition reimbursement also available! New
Student Pay & Lease Program.
USA TRUCK 877-521-5775.
www.GoUSATruck.com
OTR DRIVERS EXPERIENCED only - Trucking
co located in SW AR. hiring FT
OTR Drivers pulling 53’ vans &
reefers. Clean MVR. Home wkly.
Sign on bonus $500 after 30 days.
Call 870-887-0800 or 870-703-3734
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
ATTN: EXP. OTR DRIVERS!!
What You Want - We Got It!
Late Model Equip! 2011 or
NEWER!! Family Atmosphere!
Treated like a NAME, not a NUMBER!
Home Most weeks (if you live in Ar.)
Maj. Med Ins. Avail, NLR terminal.Call
888-202-3569, x 114, or Nights/Weekends
call RETIA, 501-240-7348 or 501-247-7511
MISCELLANEOUS
LIVE LINKS- Meet Singles right
now! No paid operators, just real
people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and
connect live. Try it free. Call now
1-877-939-9299.
DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT children $125.00. Includes
name change and property
settlement agreement. SAVE
hundreds. Fast and Easy. Call
1-888-733-7165, 24/7.
WORLD'S
LARGEST
GUN
SHOW- April 6 & 7 - Tulsa, OK
Fairgrounds.
Saturday
8-6,
Sunday 8-4. WANENMACHER
PRODUCTIONS. Free appraisals. Bring your guns!
www.TulsaArmsShow.com
DISH Network
The RIGHT TRAINING for today’s trucking industry
lic. by ASBPCE
67/45
8
9 3
www.pbtds.net
66/39
7
5
7
6
4
1-800-954-4981
62/36
6
3
• Financing Avail.
• Lodging Provided!
4/10
66/39
5
4
1. Tourney type
14
15
5. Tent securer
10. "Don't look __!"
17
18
14. Twistable cookie
20
15. 1998 animated
Disney film
23
24
25
16. __-Pei (wrinkly
dog)
30
29
17. 1991 Bette Midler
stag movie?
33
34
35
19. Hospital fluids
40
41
20. Mineo of
moviedom
44
45
21. __ Claire, WI
22. Mos. when World
49
48
Series begin
23. Reductions in night 53 54
lighting, in wartime
58
59
27. Pocket jingler
29. Sked guess
62
63
30. Riga resident
32. Tiny amount
68
69
33. Deuce or trey
35. Santa's landing
71
72
area
37. Zesty dip
American Proile Hometown Content
40. Jai __
69. Give the slip to
41. Sudden burst
70.
Word on Irish
43. Watch over
stamps
44. "__ luck!"
71. "Getting warmer,"
46. Culinary direction
e.g.
47. "Zounds!"
72.
Passover dinner
48. Brewery stock
73.
Lab
procedure
50. Mt. Rushmore's
state: Abbr.
DOWN
52. Luau instrument
1. Sock-in-the-gut
53. Had on
grunt
56. Ticked off
2. Debate side
58. Anderson of
3. Sonnet's
"WKRP"
conclusion?
59. Hoopster Erving,
4. "False!"
familiarly
5. Ore processors
61. Make zigzags,
6. Rub-a-dub-dub site
maybe
7. Natural emollient
62. "The joke's __!"
8. Eskimo craft
63. 1990 Robert De
9. Came after
Niro stag movie?
10. Business partner
68. Baseball's Musial
HELP WANTED
Sunday Evening
3
Sudoku Puzzle #2864-D
Bad Boys II
After
Them Idiots
CNN Newsroom
Oklahoma
Redneck Vacation
Kidnapped to Egypt
Get Him to the Greek
Deadliest Catch
Jessie
2
1
ACROSS
PROFESSIONAL CLASS A DRIVERS
Good Pay! Great Home Time!
Company and Owner Operators
Small company atmosphere/LARGE
company benefits. OTR tractor
trailer,good pay, Great home time,health
ins., 401K, pd vacation pkg/top equip.!
Call BLAKE, @888-967-5737,
www.driveforpamtransport.com
INEXPERIENCED OR REFRESHERS
call Lavonna, @ 877-440-7890
or www.driveforpamtransport.com
eeoc
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! 1-800-278-8081
ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA
SUFFERERS with Medicare.
Get CPAP Replacement
Supplies at little or NO COST,
plus FREE home delivery!
Best of all, prevent red skin
sores and bacterial infection!
Call 1-888-722-3974
Highspeed Internet
EVERYWHERE By Satellite!
Speeds up to 12mbps!
(200x faster than dial-up.)
Starting at $49.95/mo.
CALL NOW & GO FAST!
1-866-759-0701
Canada Drug Center is your choice
for safe and afordable medications.
Our licensed Canadian mail order
pharmacy will provide you with
savings of up to 75 percent on all
your medication needs.
Call today 1-800-261-7091,
for $10.00 of your irst
prescription and free shipping.
FOR SALE
SAWMILLS from only $3997.00
- MAKE & SAVE MONEY with
your own bandmill - Cut Lumber
any dimension. In stock ready to
ship. 1-800-578-1363 Ext. 300N
FREE Info/DVD:
www.NorwoodSawmills.com
TRAINING/EDUCATION
AIRLINE
CAREERS
begin
here - Become an Aviation
Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if
qualified - Housing available.
Job placement assistance. Call
AIM 877-424-4177.
ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE
100%. Medical, Business, Criminal Justice, Hospitality, Web.
Job
Placement
Assistance.
Computer AND Financial Aid if
qualified. SCHEV authorized.
Call 877-596-6796.
www.CenturaOnline.com
Heavy Equipment Operator Career! 3 Week Hands On Training
School. Bulldozers, Backhoes,
Excavators. National Certifications.
Lifetime Job Placement Assistance
VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-3626497.
MOBILE/
MANUFACTURED
HOMES
Mobile Homes with acerage.
Ready to move in. Seller Financing
with approved credit. Lots of room
for the price, 3br 2ba. No renters.
501-588-3300
www.LandHomeExpess.com
A DOLLAR & A DEED IS ALL
YOU NEED - to be a homeowner.
Call Application hotline 870-8624305.
STOP THROWING MONEY
AWAY RENTING!
YOU CAN BE A HOMEOWNER! Call
now for application, 870-862-4305.
classiFieds 15
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | 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
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, portable, lightweight, like new. Low
$ or perhaps free to senior. (888)
442-3390.
(WG:10-tf, w14)
___________________________
A
N E W
P I L L O W
T O P M AT T R E S S S E T.
w / Wa r r a n t y.
Tw i n
Set $88, Full Set $108,
Queen Set $138 & King
Set $168. Call Sandy
903-276-9354.
(Pd:26-34)
___________________________
SEWING & NEEDLEWORK SUPPLIES, 205-207 Cassady, Nashville
- Arkansas Emporium. 870-4519696.
(PD:23-30)
___________________________
BRIDESMAID’S GOWNS &
DRESSES SAMPLE SALE, No Two
Alike. Size 10 & 12, $33-$58. 205207 Cassady, Nashville. Arkansas
Emporium. 870-451-9696.
(PD:25-32)
___________________________
New Power Chair - Bargain at
$500. 870-200-5599. (mg:28-29)
___________________________
W
& sick leave, health insurance &
retirement pension. Minimum
qualifications: high school diploma/equiv. plus 2 yrs. of vo-tech
training in maintenance; plus 2 yrs.
in general maintenance, including
1 yr. in a leadership capacity. Applications accepted online ONLY:
www.arstatejobs.com.
(WSP:29-30, w137)
___________________________
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)
___________________________
Murfreesboro Mini Storage and
Maxi Storage. 845-1870 or 8453168.
(GS:tf, w9)
___________________________
Portable toilets for construction
jobs and special events. Lonnie
Johnson, (870) 642-2787.
(LJ:tf, w11)
___________________________
2 & 3 BR trailers for rent. (870)
845-2940.
(SBMH:62-tf; w8)
___________________________
Apartments for rent. (870) 4513940.
(PV:tf, w4)
___________________________
Modern brick apartments for rent,
contact he Agency, 845-1011.
(TA:tf, w11)
___________________________
One Bedroom Apartment, Carport, Inside Storage Room, $360,
Deposit, References. 845-4214.
(JS:tfn,w11)
___________________________
Trailer, No Pets. 870-784-0001.
(PD:27-30)
___________________________
3 BR, 2 BA House. 870-784-0001.
(PD:27-30)
___________________________
House For Rent, 101 N. Jones, 3
BR, 2 BA, CH/A, $700.00 month.
(501) 909-1124.
(PD:29-30)
___________________________
REAL
ESTATE
3 or 6 ac. lots, city water, Hwy 26W,
owner inancing. (501) 758-2303.
(CL:74-tf; w13)
___________________________
M H
ELP
ANTED
ANU FACTU RED
OMES
Maintenance Tech./Carpenter,
Salary: $26,531, Location: Historic
Washington State Park, Washington, AR, Closing date: 4/19/2013,
Helps maintain over ity historic
buildings. Should have knowledge
of 19th century construction
methods & techniques, including
brace frame construction, mortise
& tendon, square nails, pegged
joints, etc. Experience in electric,
HVAC & plumbing a plus. Applicants will also need knowledge
of historic fencing, boardwalks,
& signage. Must be able to work
during special events, including
occasional evenings & weekends.
Should be able to read blueprints
& have a good understanding
of construction tools. Driver’s
license required; will check driving record. Paid holidays, annual
SANDY BRANCH
MOBILE HOMES
We have your mobile home needs.
SALES, SERVICE, RENTAL & MOVING
Financing Available! 8:00-5:00
4/2 on land. 5.75%, 30 yrs., $550/
mo. Please call for info (903) 8314540 rbi#35153. (SH:48-tf, w15)
___________________________
Bad or good credit. You own land,
you’re approved. Call for details
(903) 831-4540 rbi#35153.
(SH:48-tf; w14)
___________________________
For ALL your printing and ofice supply needs...
Call us:
(870) 845-2010
Hostetler
Mowing
Dependable Lawn Care
Commercial & Residential
Leaf Cleanup
(870) 5574510
Nashville
(870) 845-2940
$0 down delivers. Bring your deed
& proof of income. No application
refused on your dream home. Call
anytime (903) 831-5332 rbi#35153.
(SH:48-tf; w21)
___________________________
1st time home buyers, low down,
No Credit, all applications accepted. (903) 838-7324 rbi#35153.
(SH:49-tf; w13)
___________________________
Bingham Manufactured Homes:
All Homes discounted, SOME
AS MUCH AS $4,000.00. Invest
your IRS Return in a New Home!
Financing Available. 4 miles East
of DeQueen, Hwy 70-71, 870-6427321 or 870-584-7837.
(BH:13-tfn, w31)
___________________________
3 BR, 2 Bath, Single Wide Home,
Must move. Take over payments.
501-813-2715.
(CHHS:27-tf, w13)
___________________________
3 BR, 2 Bath. Must Sell - Will move
to your land. Will Finance. 501773-4034.
(CHHS:27-tf,w14)
___________________________
Repo Mobile Home on Land. Will
Finance. Call For Details.
(CHHS:27-tf,w11)
___________________________
TRAILERS
WE HAVE MOVED! (Temporarily) across the road to Bingham
Homes, sooo we are reducing
inventory, BINGHAM TRAILERS,
save now!!! 4 miles East of DeQueen, Hwy 70-71, 870-642-7321
or 870-584-7837.
(BH:13-tfn, w29)
___________________________
FAR M
Bulls for Sale. (870) 451-4189.
(mg:tf)
___________________________
Breeder Chicken house farm. 870642-3049.
(PD16-32)
___________________________
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)
___________________________
Smith’s Mini Storage
Units available in
Nashville & Mineral Springs
(870) 845-5075
Carlton
Mini Storage
(870) 845-3560
LOOK GOOD...... FEEL BETTER!!! Cancer Survivors. For
more information contact: 870845-2759 or 870-557-1444. (tf)
___________________________
A
NIMALS
Boston Terrier & Chipin puppies
ready May 8. For more information
call 870-557-6406.
(PD:28-31)
___________________________
B U SINESS
SERVICES
Septic tank pumping and drain
cleaning service, sewer lines/drains
unstopped. Johnson Services,
(870) 642-2787. (LJ:27-tf, 13w)
___________________________
Jimmy Don Sullivan Welding &
Construction Service, 845-4752,
licensed septic tank installation.
(JDS:tf; w12)
___________________________
he Terminator Pest Control (870)
557-1780.
(tf)
___________________________
Hostetler Mowing - dependable
lawn care. (870) 557-4510.
(RH:20-tf; w6)
___________________________
Ward Shavings LLC - dry shavings
$1,400/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)
___________________________
Retired Nashville Man Looking for
Something to Do. Yard & Flower Garden Maintenance, House
Plants too! Year Round Service.
Call Chuck at 903-748-4655.
(PD:26-30)
___________________________
ANDREW CLARK’S
PRO LAWN CARE
Approx. one mile from Millwood Lake
with 6 bedrooms, 2.5 bath, this home features a ireplace in the family room, new
central heat & air, new metal roof, a 76x10
screened front porch and 40x10 screened
rear porch as well as a 50x40 shop with full
bath. Located on Pineview Dr. Mineral Sprin
gs...................................... Listed for $59,000
Call our ofice 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
Randy Ray (870) 904-0293
Terry Ray 845-7757 • Dale Bennett 557-6597
Laurie Westfall 584-7926 • Carolyn Reed 200-0201
For all your Printing needs:
Self-inking Stamps, Business
Cards, Ofice Supplies, Ofice
Furniture, Paper
& Commercial Printing!
418 N. Main St., Nashville,
email
[email protected]
or call
(870) 845-2010
FREE ESTIMATES
Before you let your
grass get too tall,
pick up the phone
and give me a call.
Andrew’s cell
870-200-0488
• Residential
YOUNG
• Commercial
ELECTRIC
• Industrial
Steve Young, Owner
Licensed,
870-845-2643
Bonded
870-845-7092
& Insured
1917 CR 342 • Nashville, AR 71852
Charles’ Tree Service
870-557-1003
Tree trimming •Tree Removal
• Professional Tree Service
• Bucket Trucks
Fully insured for all your tree
trimming needs Free Estimates
and years experience.
Send your ads to:
[email protected]
HASLEY ROOFING
Quality is our #1 Priority
Wood • Asphalt
Tile and Metal • Fiberglass
Mobile: 903-733-3858
Ed Hasley, Owner • Ed Hasley, Jr.
Ofice: 903-792-6478
Be
American
Buy
American!!!
MILLWOOD CORPORATION
Buyer
of
TimBer & TimBerland
Matt Tollett (870) 845-5582
Johnny Porter - (870) 777-3774
J.K. Porter
P.O. Box 1316
Hope, AR 71802
Jason Porter RF#987
Ofice:
800-647-6455
219 N. 2nd St.
PO Box 903
Nashville, AR 71852
Ofice 870-845-5303
LARRY R. TEAGUE, CIC
Fax 870-845-1764
PARTNER
www.teagueandteague.com
HOME • LIFE • AUTO
[email protected]
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.
16
Thursday, April 11, 2013 | The Nashville News | Online at http://www.nashvillenews.org | Call: 1-888-845-6397
COUNTY YOUTHS WIN TOURNAMENT
Proud sponsor of the
Mean Green Team
Bring this ad in
for a FREE Queso
Mr Pancho’s
#58 South Park Shopping Center
Nashville, AR 71852
870-845-2400
Howard County
Insurance
1-870-845-5800
691 HWY 27 S Bypass • Nashville, AR
(Located behind Southern Belle Inn & Western Sizzlin)
Assuring you the
lowest rates
year after
year after
year .......
SUBMITTED PHOTO I Nashville News
Texarkana Young Guns 8U won the Spa City Slam, Hot Springs Tournament Championship. Pictured (top row): Ty Waid,
Dalton Raley, Thatcher Strack, Nate Mennie, James Mitchell, of Nashville and Carson Sanford.
#104
Bottom row: Mackay Smith, of Umpire, WT Jones, Evan Acosta, Gabe Dodson and Spencer Potts.
In-Ground and Above Ground Pools
New Construction, Renovations and Repairs
Chemicals and Supplies
Liner Replacement - Sand Change
Pool Maintenance
Decorative Concrete
License #23019
PROUD SUPPORTER OF THE
NASHVILLE SCRAPPERS
Stamps - Stains - Overlays
Old or New - Interior or Exterior
We can make your old, ugly concrete look like stone,
brick or tile. A great solution to ugly concrete.
Enjoy dining at
one of Nashville’s
true all-time
favorites!
Open 7 days a week
with a large, diverse
menu. For take-out
orders, call ahead
at 845-4997.
rant
stau
e
R
ily
Fam
411 S. Main • Nashville
Ph. 845-4997
Allan & Denise Gentry • (870) 582-1590 or 870-582-2574
Nashville
Junior
Auxiliary
Presents
a “Tour
of Italy”
Italian
Luncheon
First Baptist
Church
Activities
Building
Friday
April 12th
11am-1pm
e
n
o
ery d
v
E vite
In