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HARTFORD AND BEAVER DAM, KENTUCKY
Serving All of Ohio County Since 1865
VOLUME 150 • NUMBER 3
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2015
3 SECTIONS • 32 PAGES • 50¢
Free tax
service
available
Starting on Tuesday, January 27, Ohio County’s
low-to-moderate-income families and individuals can take
advantage of free income
tax-filing services at the Ohio
County Community Center.
The center’s tax-preparation
site will be open from 4:00
p.m. to 7:30 p.m. for individuals earning $30,000 or less
annually and families earning $53,000 or less.
According to Don McLemore, tax site coordinator,
See Tax page 2-A
OCSD
arrest
reports
Michael T. Elliott, 35, Buford Road, was arrested
last Wednesday for alleged
drug activity on Washington
Street in Hartford.
According to the Ohio County Sheriff ’s Department report, Elliott was charged with
manufacturing methamphetamine, unlawful possession
of a methamphetamine precurser, drug activity endangering the safety of a child
and engaging in organized
crime.
Elliott was lodged in the
Ohio County Detention Center.
Tosha R. Hearld, 38, Beaver Dam, was arrested and
See Arrest page 2-A
Photo by Treg Ward
This pile of burned-out debris is all that remained of Gazi Bokkon’s double-car garage and upstairs storage space following a blaze early Monday afternoon on White Street off U.S. 231 south of Beaver Dam. Bokkon said he thinks the fire started from where he was burning some trash near the structure. He managed to get his car out, but a one-year-old tractor,
along with other belongings, was destroyed.
Latest book on market
Butler’s star keeps rising
Kirker Butler’s star in television and writing has risen
even higher in the heavens of
entertainment.
The former Ohio County resident and graduate of
Ohio County High is an Emmy-nominated writer and
producer who now makes his
home in Los Angeles with his
family.
His credits include Family
Guy, the Cleveland Show, The
neighbors, and his latest venture, Galavant, which pre-
miered on ABC on January 4.
Now Butler has authored
another book, “Pretty Ugly”,
which is drawing rave reviews from several in his profession.
One such verbal hand clapping came from Stephen Colbert, American political satirist, writer, producer, singer,
television host, actor, media
critic and comedian.
“Pretty Ugly is everything
you’d want in a novel,” Colbert
said. “It’s funny, poignant and
exceedingly well-written.”
‘Published by Thomas
Jerry Stahl, author of “Hap- Dunne Books-St. Martin’s
py Mutant Baby Pills”, placSee Butler page 2-A
es Butler in the company of
pantheon of comic American
fiction kings Nathanael West
and Jerry Southern.
“Let us now add the name of
Kirker Butler,” Stahl said. “In
fine-tuned, generous prose
that careens from screamingly funny to downright poignant, Pretty Ugly tells the
tale of Miranda Ford, a pretty
little girl with big-time beauty pageant dreams. Butler
has written a laugh-out-loud
joy ride of a book, the kind
you don’t want to finish.”
Kirker Butler
Kristy Luttrell in Paris
Teaching English to French
By: Savannah Pennington
teaching English to high
octimesnews.com
When presented with the school students in Paris,
opportunity of a lifetime, France. From getting handsKristy Luttrell had only one on teaching experience, to
witnessing the aftermath of
response – “Oui, oui!”
The Ohio County woman a terror attack felt across
said yes to the opportunity
to spend seven months See Luttrell page 2-A
Martin Luther King celebration
Hartford Mayor Dean Minton gave the welcoming address Monday during the program honoring the Rev, Martin Luther King at the Harvest House In Hartford. More than 150 people
were on hand for the remembrance, including Alma Randolph, formerly of Ohio County.
-----Subscribe Today!-----
Suspect held
in shooting
A “person of interest” has
been arrested in Ohio County by the Kentucky State
Police, but no connection
between that suspect and a
fatal shooting last Thursday
in McLean County had been
determined as of Monday of
this week.
The body of John Morris, 22,
no address listed, was found
dead of multiple gunshot
wounds in a mobile home on
Doug Hill Road following a
See Suspect page 2-A
Page A-2 January 21, 2015, Times-News
Luttrell teaching English to French
s the world, Lutrell said the
experience is one that she
will carry with her for the
rest of her life.
“I was overwhelmed with
both extreme excitement
and fear of the unknown,”
she said of learning of her
acceptance into the teaching
program. “My family also
seemed to be full of mixed
feelings: sad that we’d be
separated by an ocean for so
long, but ultimately happy
for me to have this new
experience.”
The 26 year-old decided to
apply for TAPIF, the Teaching
Suspect
Assistant Program in France,
following
her
December
2013 graduation from the
University
of
Louisville.
Luttrell, who holds a master’s
degree in English, with an
emphasis on linguistics, and
a bachelor’s in English and
French, said that she was
inspired to apply after her
fellow students spoke highly
of the program.
Luttrell had already spent
two summers in France in
study abroad programs, so
she said she decided to take a
leap of faith.
“I wasn’t sure what my next
Continued from page 1-A
report to McLean County
911 dispatch that shots were
fired in that area.
In a subsequent press release, the KSP said Cody A.
Ross, 22, Owensboro, fled the
scene of the shooting and was
later arrested following a vehicle accident in Ohio County. The location of that accident was not given.
Tax
Continued from page 1-A
proximately 2,000 tax returns
have been filed for eligible
Ohio County families in the
past eight years.
“This service can save families from $100 to $200 in tax
preparation and filing fees
and they then can use those
dollars to pay household expenses they ofter struggle
with to meet,” McLemore
said.
Internal Revenue Service
research, McLemore said,
indicates as many asa 15 to
20 per cent of eligible families fail to receive refundable
earned income credit because
they do not file tax returns.
The average EIC refund, he
said, is nearly $2,000.
Other volunteers serving at
the center’s tax site include
Linda Cox, Heather Goff, Kittye King, Don and Edna Sue
McLemore, Troy Richards,
Betty Rucker, Lori Widmar,
Patricia Cecil and Sherwood
Kirk.
Those taking advantage of
the free service are served on
a first-come, first-served basis. Required information includes a picture identification
card, Social Security information on individuals and family
members involved, information involving additional income such as Social Security,
alimony for maintenance and
unemployment and health insurance statements.
Arrest
Ross was charged with
tampering with physical evidence, leaving the scene of
an accident, possession of
marijuana, possession of drug
paraphernalia, possession of
a controlled substance and
possession of a controlled
substance not in a proper container.
Corey King, public information officer with the KSP, said
Monday that Ross has not
been charged in the shooting
but remains incarcerated in
the Ohio County Detention
Center pending a McLean
County Grand Jury probe of
the incident.
“Ross’ incarceration gives
us more time to paint a better picture of what actually
happened,” King said. “We’ll
present what information we
have to the grand jury and
allow those people to decide
if Ross did or did not commit
the murder.”
It was reported by one law
enforcement source that there
were four people in the mobile home at the time of the
shooting, but the other three
have not been identified.
“Our investigation leads us
to look at Ross and his involvement in the incident and
it will be up to the grand jury
for a resolution in this case,”
King said. “We think that’s
the best way for this case to
be handled.”
An update to the KSP’s earlier news release said Morris’
body was sent to Louisville
for an autopsy and that the
procedure did determine that
the victim did die of multiple
gunshot wounds.
move was, so I decided in
January 2014 to just apply
for TAPIF and see what
happened,” she said. “With
this program, I figured I could
see how I liked teaching and
live in France at the same
time, so it seemed like it could
be a great next move.”
The application process was
extensive. Luttrell had to
provide information about her
work, academics, experience
teaching
and
experience
living abroad as well as
legal documents, two letters
of recommendation and a
statement of purpose essay
written entirely in French.
On April 1, she
received
news
that she had been
accepted
into
the program and
that she would
be teaching in
the city – a relief
since she was
hesitant to accept
a position in a
more rural part
of the country.
“I actually was
placed right in
the suburbs of
Paris, so there
for about 5 minutes about a
subject they’ve learned about
in class. The other teachers
send me small groups with
instructions to do whatever
I want, as long as I’m
helping the students become
more comfortable speaking
English.
“For the vast majority, this
task isn’t difficult--English is
such a ubiquitous language
now, they’re already pretty
enthusiastic about improving
their skills,” she continued.
“I always have activities and
discussions planned, but if we
finish up early, I know we can
always chat about American
was no debate--there’s no
way I could pass up that
opportunity. I was already
in love with the city from
spending
two
summers
studying abroad there.”
She arrived in the country in
September, two weeks before
classes started, and came
home for a two-week visit
around Christmas. While
working in France, Luttrell
spends about 12 hours each
week working with nine
different English teachers.
“That seemed extremely
short to me, until I found out
that full time teachers in this
region only work 15 or 18
hours per week, depending on
their rank,” she said. “Four
of those teachers send their
students to me to practice for
their huge end-of-the-year
exam, the baccalaureate.
They come prepared to speak
TV shows--Game of Thrones
and The Walking Dead are
a few common favorites of
French teenagers!”
Luttrell explained that the
French educational system
has a very different structure
than we have in the United
States.
“The high school where I
work is open from 8 a.m. - 6
p.m. Monday-Friday, but the
students don’t spend that
entire time in class,” she said.
“Depending on the intensity
of their schedules, they have
a few free periods per day, as
well as everyone having a two
hour lunch break. Students
are free to go where they wish,
on or off campus. They’re also
allowed to smoke anywhere
outdoors on campus, and the
majority of students take
advantage of that.”
In her spare time, Luttrell
Butler
Press, Butler’s book is a satirical look at a dysfunctional southern family, complete
with an overbearing stage
mom, a nine-year-old pageant
queen, a cheating husband,
his teenage girlfriend, a crazy
grandmother and Jesus,” said
Michelle Blankenship, with
Blankenship Public Relations. “Doing what satire has
done for centuries, Butler’s
novel slyly turns the mirror
on ourselves. It’s really funny,
but, it’s also pretty ugly.”
Blankenship labels Butler
Continued from page 1-A
charged with wanton endangerment in the second degree.
Sarah Peach, Rockport, who
was originally charged with
making a false statement to a
sheriff department investigator following the shooting of a
dog, was later charged with
harassing communications.
According to the complaint
report, Peach made harassing
calls to at least one person
following her release from the
Ohio County Detention Center.
continued from page 1-A
Jan
Continued from page 1-A
as a bright, new voice in satirical literature.
“Butler dissects our culture’s
current state of affairs,” she
said.
Butler is co-executive producer of Galavant, a show
being hailed as the mostwatched television production on its opening night,
with an estimated 7.3 million
viewers.
Butler’s first episode on the
show, “Dungeons and Dragon
Lady”, will air Sunday night,
with guest star Ricky Gervais.
Who has
takes the train into the city a
few times each week. She said
she has already seen nearly
every major tourist attraction
in Paris, but says there is
always more to explore.
While in the program,
Luttrell also has eight weeks
of paid vacation, and has
already used some of that
time by visiting Rome in
October. Over the next four
months, she said she hopes
to visit Poland, Switzerland,
London, Amsterdam and
Spain.
Luttrell was also in Paris
during the Jan. 7 terrorist
attacks on the offices of
French magazine Charlie
Hedbo that left 12 people
dead.
“ I felt like I had been
somewhat desensitized to the
horror of the attack because I
grew up in the U.S.,” she said.
“I had no idea how traumatic
the shooting and subsequent
hostage situations were for
the French people at first.
But for them, it was the worst
attack on their country in 20
years.”
Luttrell said she stayed out
of the heart of the city for a
few days, but heard reports
of the heightened security in
Paris.
“ I didn’t go into the city
until Friday evening, and I
was a bit nervous,” she said.
“But there was nothing out
of the ordinary in that area.
Some of my friends talked
about all the extra security
they had seen around Paris
earlier that day, though.”
On
Jan.
11,
Luttrell
participated in the Marche
Républicaine,
a
massive
demonstration
in
which
millions of people came to
the city to show support and
solidarity for the victims of
the attacks.
“That turned out to be
an awesome experience,”
she said. “Nothing really
happened, as far as speeches
or marching, but the feeling
of three million people
coming together to stand up
for freedom of expression was
probably once in a lifetime.”
In April, Luttrell plans to
return home to Ohio County
to spend a few weeks with her
parents – Darren and Debbie
– and her brothers Josh and
Jeffery. Then, she said she
will return to Louisville to
pursue her career.
In the meantime, she said
she plans to enjoy every
moment in Paris and continue
making memories.
“Mostly, I think my favorite
memories will be just walking
around the city, knowing I
have the option to go wherever
I want in Paris, for an entire
seven months,” she said. “I
try to always appreciate the
fact that this is a freedom
that I’ll probably never have
again.”
?
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THE TIMES-NEWS
LOCAL DEATHS
Page A-3, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Waymon E.
Cambron
Waymon E. Cambron, 88, of Owensboro,
died Saturday, Jan.
17, 2015, at Owensboro Health Regional
Hospital. He was born
on June 20, 1926, in
Ohio County to the late
W.E. and Helen Cambron. Waymon was a
faithful and dedicated
member of Bells Run
Baptist Church for over
70 years. He loved his
church very much and
served as a deacon and
was chairman of the
deacons. He was a Navy
Veteran
of
World War II
and retired
from
Peabody Coal Company,
the UMWA and Local
633 Plumbers and Pipefitters. He was also a
mason from Joe Ellis
Lodge 473.
Waymon
enjoyed UK basketball, gardening, golfing,
bowling, but most of all
he loved reading his Bible.
He was preceded in
death by his brother,
Adrian Cambron, and
sister, Joyce Akins.
Survivors
include
his wife of 68 years,
Ella Mae Cambron;
three daughters, Brenda Likens of Owensboro, Debbie Hardesty of Utica and Carla
Stout of Georgia; four
grandchildren;
eight
great-grandchildren;
six great-great-grandchildren; a brother, Coy
Cambron; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral
services
were held Tuesday,
Jan. 20, at James H.
Davis Funeral Home
& Crematory. Burial
with military honors
was in Bells Run Cemetery
Expressions
of
sympathy may take
the form of donations
to Bells Run Baptist Church, Building
Fund, 3969 Taffy Road,
Whitesville, KY 42378.
Online
messages
of condolence may be
made at www.davisfuneralhome.com.
Nellie Mae
Massie
Quisenberry
Nellie Mae Massie
Quisenberry, 77, of Narrows, died Friday, Jan.
16, 2015, at her home.
She was born in Madison, Indiana, to the late
Samuel and Josephine
Garrett Massie. She was
a farmer, a homemaker,
a member of Dundee
Methodist Church and
she was a member of
Dundee
Homemakers
for many years. Nellie also enjoyed playing
bingo, hickory chicken
hunting and spending
time with her family.
She was preceded in
death by her husband,
Gordon
Quisenberry;
a son, John Harvey
Quisenberry; a daughter, Debbie Quisenberry
Porter; and a son, Morgan Quisenberry.
Survivors
include
a son, Denny (Cathy)
Quisenberry; a daughter, Terrie Jo Myers; two
brothers, Edward “Buddy” (Myra) Massie and
Jerry (Dottie) Massie;
ten grandchildren; and
18 great-grandchildren.
Funeral
services
were held Monday, Jan.
19, at Bevil Bros. Funeral Home in Beaver Dam,
with Bro. John Jarboe
officiating. Burial was
in Quisenberry Family
Cemetery at Narrows.
The family requests
expressions of sympathy
take the form of contributions to Hospice of
Ohio County.
Online
condolences may be left at www.
bevilbrosfuneralhomes.
com.
CARD OFTheTHANKS
CHARLES L. RANNEY
The
family
family wishes to
thank
all whoof
expressed support
and offered comfort during the illness and death
and interment of our father. In particular, we
thank the staff at Dogwood Estates and the friends
he made there; his caregivers from Hospice of Ohio
County - Tammy and Jo who brightened his days;
his final attentions from his friend Danny at Miller-Schapmire Funeral Home; Hartford Christian Church for providing a comforting meal and a place for the family to gather after
the service. Thanks to Sandy Ault, Debbie Ball, Arrie Winfield and
Kandy Nix who provided much needed support. Mike Erwin, long
time friend, who conducted the service exactly as Charles would have
wanted it. Pallbearers, other than family were friends, Steve Taylor
and Wayne Evans, and we thank them for helping with the last ride
in the red pickup.
Finally, we wish to thank the community of Hartford, who supported him from childhood through old age and gave us the many
wonderful stories he shared with all who would listen. We are sure he
would say he was a very blessed man.
The Family Of
JERRY LEE HAYSE
would like to thank all the friends
who came to visit and brought food.
The Hospice nurse, all the prayers
and kind words people shared with
us. Bobby Renfrow for preaching the
funeral and
Bevil Brothers Funeral Home.
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Frances Geary
Bratcher Leach
Frances
Geary
Bratcher Leach, 47, of
Beaver Dam, passed
away Saturday, Jan.
17, 2015, at Hardin
Memorial Hospital in
Elizabethtown.
She
was born May 30, 1967,
in Hartford to the late
Leonard Alton and Judlida Bratcher Geary. She
was of Christian faith
and was a homemaker.
Frances loved DQ Blizzards, watching HGTV
and posting inspiring
memes to Facebook.
She was easy to tease,
quick witted in her own
right, meeting each joke
with a warm smile and a
joust of her own – some
better than others. Other people came first for
Frances, and it is why
so many people across
so many states loved her
so dearly.
Besides her parents,
her first husband, Kevin
Bratcher, preceded her
in death.
Survivors include her
husband, Michael Leach
of Beaver Dam; her son,
Nicholas Bratcher of
Bloomington, Indiana;
her daughter, Tabitha
(James) Kincaid of Owensboro; her stepdaughter, Rebekkah Leach
of Bowling Green; one
brother, Leonard Alton
Geary Jr. (Amber), of
Central City; and two
sisters, Tammy (Jerry)
Franklin of Morgantown
and Rita (Daymon) Deweese of Morgantown.
Funeral
services
were held Wednesday,
Jan. 21, at William L.
Danks Funeral Home in
Beaver Dam, with Rev.
Fritz Games and Rev.
Tim Cook officiating.
Burial was in Sunnyside
Cemetery.
Online messages of
condolence can be made
at www.danksfuneralhome.com.
Billie Lee
WilliamsRichardson
Billie
Lee
Williams-Richardson, 81,
of Beaver Dam, went
to be with her Heavenly Father, Monday,
Jan. 19, 2015, at her
family home. She was
born Jan. 28, 1933, in
West Virginia to the
late Hobert and Mary
C. Williams. She was
a member of Oak Grove
Church of God and a
lifelong server of God.
She loved her family
and enjoyed spending
time with her many
grandchildren.
She
loved her garden and
making home cooked
meals for everyone who
would stop by.
She was preceded in
death by her husband,
Orva Lee Richardson;
her daughter, Debbie
Richardson; and her
granddaughter, Tiffany
NaToshia Richardson.
She will be greatly
missed by her children
and their spouses, Betty and Mike Rutledge,
Terri and Timmy Renfrow, Tena Wilson,
Orva Lee Jr. and Jackie
Richardson and Gilbert
and Kimberly Richardson; grandchildren and
spouses, Joey Rutledge,
Jason
and
Shellye
Crabb, Adam and Kristi Crabb, Aaron and
Amanda Crabb, Terah
and Jon Penhollow, Katie Renfrow, Adam Renfrow, Erica and Mitchell
Smith, Josh and Jennifer Wilson, Clifton Wilson, Jedediah and Megan Richardson, Rachel
and Cody Baize, Casey
and Kala Richardson,
Christian Richardson
and Ciara Richardson;
14 great-grandchildren;
and a sister, Susie Cox.
Funeral
services
will be held at 11 a.m.
Thursday, Jan. 22, at
Oak Grove Church of
God near Cromwell,
with Brother Steve
Leach officiating. Burial will be in Richardson
Family Cemetery near
Beaver Dam. Visitation
will be from 4-8 p.m.
Wednesday at Bevil
Bros. Funeral Home in
Beaver Dam and from
10-11 a.m. Thursday at
Oak Grove Church of
God.
Online
condolences may be left at www.
bevilbrosfuneralhomes.
com.
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David Wilson
(George) Taylor
David
Wilson
(George) Taylor, 60, of
Rosine, passed away
Friday, Jan. 16, 2015,
at Jewish Hospital in
Louisville. He was born
Sept. 11, 1954, in Owensboro to the late V.C
and Della Taylor.
David loved hunting
and fishing and cheering
on either the Louisville
Cardinals or the Minnesota Vikings. He enjoyed
looking for arrowheads
and spending time and
walking the farm with
his grandkids.
David is survived by
his wife, Stephanie Taylor of Rosine; four sons,
Josh (Felisha) Taylor
of Cromwell, Zach Taylor of Cromwell, Jake
(Sara) Taylor of Beaver
Dam and Dakota Taylor
of Rosine; one daughter,
Cheyanne (Chris) Davis of Beaver Dam; two
brothers, Neil Taylor of
Rosine and Johnny Taylor of Des Allemands,
Louisiana; one stepson,
Cody Thomasson of
Bowling Green; and one
stepdaughter, Danielle
Thomasson of Bowling
Green. He had six grandsons and six granddaughters, the mother of
his children, Kathy Taylor of Beaver Dam, and
other family and friends.
Funeral service were
held Tuesday, Jan. 20,
at William L. Danks Funeral Home in Beaver
Dam, with Charlie Lacefield and Rev. Terry Tarrance officiating.
Online messages of
condolences can be made
at www.danksfuneralhome.com.
James
Darrell Dukes
James Darrell Dukes,
83, of Rosine, passed
away, Thursday, Jan.
15, 2015, at Professional
Care Health and Rehab
Center. He was born
June 18, 1931, in Rosine
to the late William Leslie and Reba Rafferty
Dukes. He worked as a
laborer, was of Methodist
faith and was a Kentucky
Colonel.
Survivors
include
four sons, James Dukes
Jr., Speed Dukes, Scott
Dukes
and
Merlon
Dukes; two brothers, William Lowell Dukes and
Jackie Dukes; two sisters, Merlene Austin and
Geraldean Jones; seven
grandchildren; and one
great-granddaughter.
Funeral services were
held Saturday, Jan. 17,
at William L. Danks Funeral Home in Beaver
Dam. Burial was in Rosine Cemetery.
Online messages of
condolence can be made
at
www.danksfuneralhome.com.
Local Deaths
continued on
page A-4.
Lynda
Dean Gross
Lynda Dean Gross,
67, of Hartford, died
Monday, Jan. 19, 2015,
at Owensboro Health
Regional
Hospital.
Lynda Dean Decker was born May 28,
1947, in Greenville,
to the late Tilford and
Pairlee Winfield Decker, and was married to
James Edward Gross
on Oct. 16, 1987. Lynda was a member of
Nickel Ridge Holiness
Church of Daviess
County, where she
was a Sunday School
teacher and helped in
the church plays. She
worked at Murphy
Miller and Bob’s IGA
in Hartford and was
a homemaker. Lynda
enjoyed cooking, loved
her family and getting
to visit with her children and grandchildren, but would always
put Jesus first. She
was a Girl Scout leader for Troop 5 for 13
years and a member of
the Honorable Order of
Kentucky Colonels.
In addition to her
parents, Lynda was
preceded in death by a
grandson, Steve Willis;
and by two sisters, Geneva Allen and Edna
Decker.
Survivors include
her husband of 27
years, James Edward
Gross; her children,
Brandon James “B.J.”
Gross of Hartford,
Brittney Diana “Dana”
Cauley and husband
Jeff of Owensboro,
Janet Willis and husband Danny of Owensboro, Jamie Lee
Gross of Livermore
and Dwayne Edward
Saunders of Fordsville;
nine grandchildren; 12
great-grandchildren;
and a brother, Bobby
Neal Decker of Knox,
Indiana.
Funeral
services
will be held at 11 a.m.
Thursday, Jan. 22,
at Muster Funeral
Homes, Calhoun Chapel, with the Revs. Ancle
Wilson and Clettis Sinnett officiating. Burial
will be in the Calhoun
Cemetery in McLean
County. Friends may
visit with Lynda’s family from 4 until 8 p.m.
Wednesday and from
9 a.m. until 11 a.m.
Thursday at Musters
in Calhoun.
The Lynda Dean
Gross family requests
that expressions of
sympathy take the
form of donations to the
Lynda Dean Gross Memorial Fund, C/O Muster Funeral Homes,
P.O. Box 160,Calhoun,
KY 42327. Memorial
contribution envelopes
will be available at
Musters in Calhoun.
Share your memories and photos of Lynda at www.musterfuneralhomes.com.
Breast & Cervical Cancer
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Miller-Schapmire Funeral Home
114 W. Walnut Street - Hartford, Kentucky
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Page A-4, January 21, 2015, Times-News
A Legislative Perspective on the Kentucky General Assembly
with State Representative Tommy Thompson
With the turn of a
page of the calendar and
a whirl of arctic air, Kentucky state lawmakers
began the new year in
Frankfort this week with
a new legislative session,
some new faces in legislative leadership, and a mix
of issues—both old and
new--to tackle over the
2015 Regular Session’s 30
legislative days.
Over 120 House bills
were filed on the session’s
first day on Tuesday including House Bill 1,
typically the top priority
of House majority leadership in any legislative
session. This session’s
HB 1—the House’s local
option sales tax measure—is bipartisan, with
both House Speaker Greg
Stumbo and House Mi-
nority Floor Leader Jeff
Hoover signed on as its
primary sponsors. Should
the bill pass, voters statewide would determine
whether the General Assembly could give cities
or counties the ability to
levy up to a one-cent sales
temporary tax for construction projects, as decided by local referendum.
A worsening heroin
problem in the Commonwealth is also expected to
be addressed this session,
with several bills filed
already to tackle the issue. Proposed provisions
would maximize sentencing for heroin dealers,
require reporting of overdose deaths, and allow
emergency responders to
use the rescue drug Naloxone to treat overdoses,
Wondal Lee Bates, 81,
of Dundee, passed away
Friday, Jan. 16, 2015, at
Owensboro Health Regional Hospital. He was
born March 7, 1933, to
the late Jesse Lee Bates
and the late Lena Mae
Wells Bates Gibbs. He
was a retired industrial truck repairman for
Ford Motor Company.
Survivors include his
wife, Maxine Lauerman
Bates of Dundee; one
son, J.T. Bates of Cedar
Lake, Indiana; five stepsons, Chris Centracchio
of Morgantown, Jeffrey
Centracchio of Texas,
Jeremy Centracchio of
Gallatin,
Tennessee,
Jason Centracchio of
Beth Page, Tennessee,
and David Centracchio
of Dundee; one stepdaughter, Melissa Girdley of Tuscon, Arizona;
one brother, JR Bates
of Indiana; four sisters,
Verlean Ramos of Vine
Grove, Kentucky, Linda
Collins of Virginia, Brenda Keown and Donna
Fried of Kentucky and
Earlin Woods of North
Carolina. He was blessed
with several grandchildren and several great
grandchildren.
Funeral services were
held Tuesday, Jan. 20,
at William L. Danks
Funeral Home in Beaver Dam. Burial was in
Geary Cemetery near
Horse Branch.
Online messages of
condolence can be made
at www.danksfuneralhome.com.
heroin epidemic.
thoughts or views. My son@lrc.ky.gov.
Another area Gov. address is Room 324D,
I hope to hear from
Beshear advocated for Capitol Annex, 702 Cap- you soon. It is a priviwas increasing civil pro- itol Avenue, Frankfort, lege to serve you in the
tections for victims of KY 40601. My e-mail Kentucky House of Repdating violence, an area address is tommy.thomp- resentatives.
where Kentucky unfortunately trails the rest
EYE LASH EXTENSIONS
of the nation. He pointed to a study showing
477 W. 43RD ST
one in four women over
JASPER IN 47546
65 in this country say
(812) 639-6768
they have been physically hurt by a partner, and
more than 14 percent of
GARRY FUNK
Kentucky’s high school
students say they have
been a victim in this type
CONSULTATIONS UPON REQUEST
of case, one of the highest
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
rates among the states.
These are just a few of
the issues that will be debated during the legislative session’s remaining
24 working days, which
will begin on Tuesday,
February 3. I will cover
more in the weeks ahead.
I have been appointed
142 E. Center St.
to serve on the following
Ben McKown
Chris Hunt
legislative committees: Hartford, KY
Banking and Insurance
(H); Economic DevelopCivil Litigation ! Criminal Defense
ment (H); Rules (H); and
Real Estate ! Personal Injury
State Government (H) .
As always, your inwww.mckownhunt.com
put is important to me,
so please stay informed
THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT
of legislative action by
logging onto the Legislative Research Commisauto home life business a member service kyfb.com
sion website at www.lrc.
ky.gov or by calling the
LRC toll-free Bill Status
Line at 866-840-2835. To
find out when a committee meeting is scheduled,
Not just big on commitment, but big on discounts.
you can call the LRC tollfree Meeting Information
Save up to 10% on your home or farm insurance,
Line at 800-633-9650. as well as your car insurance with a multi-policy
The Kentucky Educadiscount*.
tional Television (KET)
* Discounts subject to eligibility.
has live video streaming
of committee meetings
and chamber sessions
1350 Clay Street
of the Kentucky GenerHartford, Kentucky
al Assembly at http://
www.ket.org/legislature/
about/. A message can also
be left for me or any legT.C. Sanderfur
Tyson Sanderfur
islator at 800-372-7181. Agency Manager
Agent
For those with a hearing
impairment, the number
is 800-896-0305. More
You can now pay your premiums online at kyfb.com
information can be found
on the General Assembly’s website: www.lrc.
ky.gov. Please don’t hesitate to let me know your
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Wondal
Lee Bates
among other purposes.
Proposals on these
issues and more are expected to begin flowing in
and out of House standing committees and on to
the House floor for a vote
by all members when the
General Assembly returns on Feb. 3 from its
session break scheduled
for January 10 through
Feb. 2. This first week—
considered “Part I”—is
designed for leadership
elections,
organizing
committees, filing of bills,
and lots of ceremony.
Beyond
completing
this organizational work,
the General Assembly
heard from Governor
Steve Beshear Wednesday evening as he gave
the final State of the
Commonwealth address
of his administration.
He used his remarks
to note the challenges
and opportunities facing
Kentucky since he first
took office in late 2007. Over the last seven years,
for example, the state’s
budget has been cut 15
times for a combined total of $16 billion.
The economic trend
behind that, however,
appears to be reversing. He said that since the
General Assembly revamped the state’s business incentives in 2009,
these new programs have
helped about 700 businesses locate here or expand, with investment
nearly reaching $10 billion. If these projects
meet their goals, they
will save or create about
57,000 jobs.
In education, he said
that the college and career-readiness rate of our
graduating high school
students
has
grown
from 38 percent in 2011
to more than 60 percent
now, and our graduation
rate is the 12th best nationwide and better than
five of our seven surrounding states.
In focusing on legislation being considered this
year, he also said it is imperative that the General Assembly pass a new
law combating the state’s
Shirley
J. Greer
Shirley J. Greer, 79,
passed away Saturday,
Jan. 17, 2015, at the
Ohio County Hospital.
She was born in Jenkins, Kentucky, on June
11, 1935, to the late Augustus H. and Nettie
Lipps Hayes. She was
a LPN and worked at
several nursing homes
in the area. She was of
the Baptist faith and enjoyed her work helping
people in the nursing
homes.
Shirley was preceded
in death by her son, Michael Neal Greer.
Survivors include her
husband Bobby Greer;
three sons, Steve (Melinda) Greer, Anthony
Lee (Betty) Greer and
Mark (Theresa) Greer;
12 grandchildren; 11
great-grandchildren;
and two sisters, Roberta
Webb and Donna Mattherly.
Memorial
services
were held
Tuesday,
Jan. 20, at Bevil Bros.
Funeral Home in Beaver Dam.
270-256-2497
298-3506
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Page A-5, January 21, 2015, Times-News
THE TIMES-NEWS
Editorial
VIEWPOINT
Terrorism difficult to figure
Terrorism, as it now
exists in various parts
of the world, may never
be felt in Ohio County.
And that would be a
blessing of unequaled
proportions.
But, terrorism in all of
its deadly and hideous
measurements
still
does exist and who’s to
say it won’t some day - with the Twin Towers
tragedy and the Boston
Marathon last year already being painful reminders - again strike
at the very heart of our
country.
No, we don’t purport
to be prophets of doom
or to ignite a wave of
panic. We do suggest
that what’s recently happened in Paris,
France, and other terrorist-prone countries
can very easily spread
to our shores.
Terrorism knows no
boundaries. Those who
devote their lives to
senseless killing have
only one goal in mind:
Kill and keep on killing. Most targets are
randomly selected, with
a sole thought in mind
that death here will create fear elsewhere.
most cases they don’t
let you know they’re going to strike until after
they’ve struck. That’s
a sick philosophy born
of sick or treacherous
minds.
Can we compete?
We’re sure there are
many capable minds
working on that question. Whether or not
they have any workable
answers is anybody’s
guess. Former President Harry Truman
had an answer for Japan during World War
11, but that solution
involved the killing of a
object was really worth.
I remember my father
would always say after
some outlandish bid, "I
sure would've loved to
have sold that to that
guy." Then he would
stare out into space a
little bit thinking about
that whole idea. He always wanted to be the
seller and not the buyer.
Then my wife hit me
with a difficult question.
"Is there something you
would never sell for 2 ½
million dollars?"
What a loaded question. I am not even sure
what 2 ½ million dollars
is worth! I have never
seen that much money in my whole life and
probably never will. But
some people have put
value on certain things
and are willing to part
with something if someone comes up with the
right price.
People put value on
things that really are
not that important. An
old penny worth 2 ½
million dollars cannot
be used for anything
practical. What can you
buy with that penny?
What is that man going
to use that 2 ½ million
dollar penny for? Just
look at it?
I think Solomon had
the right idea when he
wrote, "For wisdom is
better than rubies; and
all the things that may
be desired are not to be
compared to it" (Proverbs 8:11).
Some things in life
you cannot put a price
on, it is a joy to discover
those things and sometimes those things are
people.
Money woes expose couple’s
communication problems
A penny for
your thoughts
By: Dr. James L. Snyder
The Gracious Mistress of the Parsonage
and I were going into a
store to do some shopping. Her idea, not
mine. Halfway to the
door, I noticed a penny
on the ground so, being
who I am, I bent over to
pick up the penny. It is
a habit I picked up the
day I was born.
"What are you doing?" My wife gasped,
thinking something was
wrong.
"I found a penny and
I picked it up. Finder's
keepers, loser's weepers." And I threw a smile
in her direction.
She looked at me and
said, "What in the world
did you do that for?"
"You know what they
say, a penny saved is a
penny earned."
"It's just a penny.
What in the world can
you do with a penny?"
As I stuffed the penny
in my pocket, I looked
at her and said, "I can
stuff this penny in my
pocket." Then I gave her
a sarcastic smile as wide
as the Grand Canyon,
but not quite as deep.
She sadly shook her
head as we went into
the store together. I, one
penny richer and smiling all the way. Pennies
usually have that effect
on me.
I know a penny is not
worth that much. I just
cannot resist picking
up a penny I find on the
ground. I guess it is that
Pennsylvania Dutch attitude I was born with. I
never saw a penny I did
not want to pick up.
I can remember many
a time at a checkout
counter I was one or
two pennies short and
had to break a $20 bill.
You know what it is
like to break a $20 bill?
So, I try to have a little
backlog of pennies for
just such emergencies,
hoping I will never need
them.
Do not let this get
around, but on my dresser in my bedroom is a jar
full of pennies. I found
them here and there.
One time I remember
finding 17 pennies on
the ground in one spot.
What a great day that
was.
My wife is always kidding me about this and
when I am in some kind
of meditative mood, or
so I want her to think I
am, she will direct this
to me, "A penny for your
thoughts!" I only look
at her and smile, the
temptation is there because I can always use
another penny and how
many thoughts are really worth a penny? Especially mine.
Then a strange thing
happened. We were
home
watching
the
news when the story of
the day was somebody
auctioned off a penny
for 2 ½ million dollars.
If you do not think that
got my attention! Just
one penny brought all
that money.
I know right here
I would sell all of my
pennies for half that
amount. Anybody looking for a bargain? After all, I am not really
greedy.
I looked at my wife,
smiled broadly, and
said, "A penny for your
thoughts!"
"Who," she finally
said in a disgusting sort
of tone, "would pay 2 ½
million dollars for one
penny?"
"I don't know," I retorted, "but I know who
would sell one for 2 ½
million dollars."
She glanced towards
the bedroom where my
pennies were at I said,
"Don't even think it."
Then we both had a
good laugh together.
As much as I appreciate pennies, I am not
going to go crazy about
their value. I know a 2 ½
million dollar penny is
old and has quite a bit of
history behind it, but it
will be a long afternoon
in the shower when
I'm going to believe it's
worth that much money. Who in the world put
such a value on a thing
like that?
I remember my father
taking me to auctions
and it always amazed
me how much people
would pay for some
things. They get so excited in the bidding and
trying to outbid somebody else that oftentimes they would pay
twice as much as the
The Ohio County Times-News
welcomes public involvement in the
form of letters to the editor. Opinions,
the newspaper’s management feels, should
not be limited to staff members, but,
rather, to anybody with a voice desiring to be
heard. However, with space constraints,
the newspaper asks that those submitting letters
be mindful of the limitations and keep
their submissions to a maximum of
between 150 and 200 word. Excessively long
letters cannot be accepted, but those
contributors will be contacted and allowed to
shorten their opinions or suggestions.
lot of innocent people.
any more than we can
Besides, most terror- say all Chinese, all
ists - so those who are Vietnamese or all Koresupposed to know say ans are anti-American. - are not concentrated And as treacherous
in one particular area. as the Nazis were in
They ply their trade World War 11, we could
from many quarters, not attach that label to
leaving open the prob- all Germans.
ability that defending Terrorist are a speagainst them would be cial breed of people
a gargantuan under- who devote their lives
taking.
to havoc, misery and
It is generally believed unconscionable killing.
that Muslins are the A lot of them see their
root and soul of terror- treachery as some kind
ists as they now exist of a holy vocation. That
and operate. This, cer- makes meeting them
tainly, is not to say all on a level playing field
Muslims are terrorists almost impossible.
So no, Ohio County
has no Twin Towers,
no Boston Marathon
and no serious ties to
national or international politics. Still, what
would be felt in New
York or Washington,
D.C. would be severely felt in our own little
corner of the world. We
have been one in war,
one in patriotism and
we would be one in grief
over the pitfalls of others.
Is there an answer?
Do streams run uphill? Terrorists are like
thieves in the night. In
Rev. James L. Snyder
is pastor of the Family
of God Fellowship, PO
Box 831313, Ocala, FL
34483. He lives with his
wife, Martha, in Silver
Springs Shores. Call
him at 1-866-552-2543
or e-mail jamessnyder2@att.net or website
www.jamessnyderministries.com.
Question: How can I
convince my husband
that budgeting is important? I'm a firm
believer in it, but my
husband doesn't think
it will work in our situation.
Jim: Finances are a
significant issue in any
marriage.
Disagreements about money can
create huge problems
between husband and
wife, but the need for
good communication is
even more important. In
fact, it's absolutely fundamental to the health
and longevity of your
relationship. So before
tackling the question of
a budget, I'd suggest you
take steps to strengthen
the foundation of your
marriage,
including
some serious reading on
the subject of marital
communication and goal
setting. (We can help
with that -- see below.)
That said, I'd hazard
a guess that "your situation" is probably one
that's faced by millions
of families: Your bills are
bigger than your paycheck and you're spending more than you're
earning. The good news
is that things are not really as hopeless as they
seem. You may need to
seek professional assistance, but if you can
learn to communicate
with each other, you and
your husband can come
up with a workable plan
for gaining control of
your finances.
The key is to learn
how to live on less than
you earn. A budget will
enable you to do this. In
the process, it will also:
-- Establish a spending plan.
-- Encourage saving.
-- Reduce stress.
-- Allow for the unexpected.
-- Encourage charitable giving.
--Discourage debt.
-- Facilitate flexibility.
To set up a budget,
you have to discuss and
establish your priorities
-- which can take you a
long way in the direction
of relational and financial harmony.
For
related
articles and resources, see
www.focusonthefamily.com/marriage/money-and-finances. If you
feel you need help sorting through these ideas
and applying them to
your situation, feel free
to give our counselors a
call at 855-771-HELP
(4357).
******
Question: We don't fly
frequently, so as parents
we're wondering how to
handle in-flight movies.
Should we assume the
"airline versions" are
free from inappropriate
material?
Bob Waliszewski, Director, Plugged-In: The
short answer is, "No!"
But that needs a bit of
unpacking, given the
rapidly changing ways
airlines deliver movies. First, some aircraft
within an airline's total
fleet still offer in-flight
films the "old-fashioned"
way: an announcement
about a single movie
with everyone being encouraged to lower their
window shades. If that's
the case with your upcoming trip, you need
to know that these particular airline versions
can range from squeaky
clean to quite problematic.
Much of that has to
do with the original
movie itself. If the film
is something like "Dolphin Tale 2" or "When
the Game Stands Tall,"
you're fortunate because
movies like these require little to no editing.
But for motion pictures
like "Let's Be Cops" and
"The Heat" (both R-rated originally, and recently shown in-flight
on at least one airline),
it's nearly impossible to
edit out all inappropriate content. Plus, my
personal experience is
that editors of in-flight
movies rarely think
like you and me!
But there's something else at play in
the sometimes-friendly
skies these days. Many
aircraft are wired for
Wi-Fi and/or offer a
plethora of media choices. I was recently on
an international flight
that advertised "over
1,800 channels of premium entertainment to
keep you busy." Almost
2,000 options!
Another
domestic
carrier I regularly fly
offers DirecTV and
on-demand films for
flights over two hours.
If you're flying an airline that delivers dozens -- if not hundreds
-- of airborne media
choices, do some research ahead of time.
Airline entertainment
options can often be
found online; then
cross-reference
with
Pluggedin.com to determine appropriateness. You're likely to
find an encouraging
and uplifting film for
your children (and you)
to view, right there in
plane sight!
Jim Daly is a husband
and father, an author,
and president of Focus
on the Family and host
of the Focus on the
Family radio program.
Catch up with him at
www.jimdalyblog.com
or at www.facebook.
com/DalyFocus.
Page A-6, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Ohio County
times-news
Records
real estate
Jacqueline Adkins and
Troy Wayne Adkins to
Donald G. Bray and
Mary Bray, 50 acres.
Nancy Carol Ammon,
Ronald Lee Ammon,
Mike
Bridgmon,
Sherry Gale Bridgmon,
Charles Ray Brown,
Marilyn Sue Brown,
Eddie Calloway, Wilda
Elaine Calloway, Mark
Cooms, Pamela Kaye
Cooms, Joe Edge, Lisa
Edge, Derick Farmer,
Elaine Farmer, Linda
Farmer, Robert Prentiss
Farmer, Pamela Kaye
Gilmore,
Kristen
Hughson,
Evonne
Calloway
Tierney,
John Robert Tierney,
Frank
Westerfield,
Teresa
Westerfield,
Judy Elfreda Wilson
and Stanley Wilson
to Kristen Hughson,
Robert Prentiss Farmer
and
Linda
Farmer,
tracts.
Nancy Carol Ammon,
Ronald Lee Ammon,
Mike
Bridgmon,
Sherry Gale Bridgmon,
Charles Ray Brown,
Marilyn Sue Brown,
Eddie Calloway, Wilda
Elaine Calloway, Mark
Cooms, Pamela Kaye
Cooms, Joe Edge, Lisa
Edge, Derick Farmer,
Elaine Farmer, Linda
Farmer, Robert Prentiss
Farmer, Pamela Kaye
Gilmore,
Kristen
Hughson,
Evonne
Calloway
Tierney,
John Robert Tierney,
Frank
Westerfield,
Teresa
Westerfield,
Judy Elfreda Wilson
and Stanley Wilson
to Kristen Hughson
(trustee), John Robert
Tierney and Evonne
Calloway Tierney, tract.
Nancy Carol Ammon,
Ronald Lee Ammon,
Mike
Bridgmon,
Sherry Gale Bridgmon,
Charles Ray Brown,
Marilyn Sue Brown,
Eddie Calloway, Wilda
Elaine Calloway, Mark
Cooms, Pamela Kaye
Cooms, Joe Edge, Lisa
Edge, Derick Farmer,
Elaine Farmer, Linda
Farmer, Robert Prentiss
Farmer, Pamela Kaye
Gilmore,
Kristen
Hughson,
Evonne
Calloway
Tierney,
John Robert Tierney,
Frank
Westerfield,
Teresa
Westerfield,
Judy Elfreda Wilson
and Stanley Wilson
to Kristen Hughson
(trustee), Charles Ray
Brown and Marilyn Sue
Brown, tract.
Nancy Carol Ammon,
Ronald Lee Ammon,
Mike
Bridgmon,
Sherry Gale Bridgmon,
Charles Ray Brown,
Marilyn Sue Brown,
Eddie Calloway, Wilda
Elaine Calloway, Mark
Cooms, Pamela Kaye
Cooms, Joe Edge, Lisa
Edge, Derick Farmer,
Elaine Farmer, Linda
Farmer, Robert Prentiss
Farmer, Pamela Kaye
4
Gilmore,
Kristen
Hughson,
Evonne
Calloway
Tierney,
John Robert Tierney,
Frank
Westerfield,
Teresa
Westerfield,
Judy Elfreda Wilson
and Stanley Wilson
to Kristen Hughson
(trustee), Ronald Lee
Ammon and Nancy
Carol Ammon, tract.
Leo Begley to Chinn
Enterprise LLC, three
tracts.
Erica
Boyd
and
Jeremy Boyd to Casey
Richardson and Kala J.
Richardson, 1.059 acres
in Rosine.
Darron L. Brawner
(trustee), Adrian Ray
Evans, Jo Ann Green
Evans, Vonell Kirk
and William A. Kirk
to Darron Brawner
(trustee), William A.
Kirk and Vonell Kirk,
50 acres.
Jarryd Brown and
Kristi Brown to Bruce
Hall and Kristi Hall,
deed.
Joey R. Brown and
Melissa A. Brown to
Adam
Hardin
and
Stevie Hardin, tract in
Centertown.
Sandy Daugherty and
Terry Wayne Daugherty
to
Nicklos
Keith
Daugherty and Alison
Taylor Daugherty, 1125
Bethel Church Road,
Beaver Dam.
Derek S. Hawkins and
Sondra R. Hawkins to
Jimmy Lee Ashby and
Helen K. Ashby, tract.
Josh Huff and Shannon
L. Huff to Cody Wilson,
two tracts.
Alan James, Sharon
A. James, Frederick D.
Pipes and Melinda L.
Pipes to James F. Piper,
lots in Hartford.
Ohio County Sheriff’s
Department to S&L
Realty LLC, 5.167 acres.
Gary Newton Raley
and Sheila F. Raley to
Stephen Julian Raley,
tract.
Rolly
C.
Tichenor
Estate to Don Phillips
Jr. Properties LLC, two
acres more or less.
Alan Dale Vincent and
Cindy M. Vincent to
Richard W. Pemberton
II and Melinda S.
Pemberton,
91.7177
acres.
Benny Lee Whitehead
and Stacy Whitehead to
Newman Farms LLC,
two parcels of land.
Marion H. Young to
C&N Development LLC,
24 acres.
Cornerstone
Hall
Senior
News
Friday, Jan. 23: Snack bingo at the Hartford
site at 10 a.m.
Monday, Jan. 26: The monthly birthday
celebration will be held at the Fordsville
site at 1:30 p.m., sponsored by Beaver Dam
Nursing and Rehab.
Tuesday, Jan. 27: All people over the age
of 50 are invited to the Hartford site to have
chili and hot dogs and sit in on our local AARP
meeting. Lunch will be served at 11:30 a.m.
Come out and see what AARP can offer you.
Tuesday, Jan. 27: Bingo at the Horse Branch
site at 10 a.m., sponsored by Caretenders.
Wednesday, Jan. 28: Bingo at the Hartford
site at 10 a.m., sponsored by Caretenders
Home Health.
Thursday, Jan. 29: Join us at Lil Stevie’s
as we enjoy a night of fun and fellowship. The
bus will leave the center at 5 p.m. If you are
driving, meet us there about 5.
For more information
about the Senior Center,
call 270-298-4460
61% of Kentuckians say, of all media,
newspapers are their primary source for
advertising information.
1
1/2 to
13% mentioned another medium as their
primary source.
That’s a 4 ½ -to-1 advantage for newspapers.
If it were a basketball game, you’d be leaving
at half-time.
Source: Advertising and Media Use in Kentucky (June 2010, American Opinion Research)
This fact brought to you by the Kentucky Press Association and its 162 member newspapers.
Those Were The Days
Old News and Old Photos
Compiled by
Jan Himes Stone
Send old photos for publication to: jan.timesnews@octimesnews.com
Page A-7, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Church News
GOSPEL SINGING
Lone Star Church
Heavenly Vision will be singing Saturday, Jan.
24, at 6 p.m. at Lone Star Church, 55 Lone Star
Church Road, Centertown. A love offering will be
taken to help Josh and Gerri House with recent
medical expenses. Chili and other refreshments
will be served in the fellowship hall after service.
Pastor Kenny Shepherd and the congregation
invite everyone.
SUNDAY SERVICES
Pleasant Grove Baptist Church
Pastor Andy Vance and the congregation of
Pleasant Grove Baptist Church would like to invite
everyone to Sunday morning services starting at 10
a.m. with Sunday School, followed by church at 11
a.m. Wednesday night services are held at 6 p.m.,
with a children’s program. The church is located at
296 Askins Road, off Hwy. 110 in northeast Ohio
County.
Happenings
In and around Ohio County
Homecoming at Old Bethel Methodist Church, taken around 1947. Photo submitted by Margaret
Austin Rock. Pictured (left to right): first row, Henry Stanley, Grethel Stanley, Maude Stevens, Effie
Crowder (Effie and her husband Carey owned and operated Horton Grocery Store.), Agnes Griffin
Stewart with her arm around her baby sister Fern Griffin, Belle Patton Austin, Bessie Griffin with her
grandson in front of her, next little boy possibly Hershel Rock, Roy Daniel, Elsie Rock, Donia Rock
Martin, unknown, Herbert Hoover, Wilma Porter and Thomas Vance; second row, Ruby Bratcher?,
Cecil Bratcher, unknown, unknown, Nola Rock McCormack, Kermit Griffin, Margaret Austin, unknown,
Earnest (Buster) Griffin, Vernie Hoover Black, James Lewis Rock, Guy Black, Cliffie Rock Baldwin?,
Carrie Hoover Bartlett’s sister?, unknown man holding unknown child, Connie Porter; third row (on
steps), Bernice Patton, unknown, Anna Rae Vance, Barbara Jo Vance, Clarence Bartlett, song leader
of Old Bethel Church; fourth row, Mildred Smith, Willye Sutton, Gayla Sutton?, Celda Sutton, Carrie
Hoover Bartlett. ---------1939 HARTFORD HIGH SCHOOL BAND
AND ORCHESTRA: Back row: Rudell
Ward, L.C. Acton, Browder Holland, unknown, Dorothy Barnes, Murrell Brite,
Keith Ware, Tommy Iglehart. Middle
row: Miss Couch, Thelma Decker, unknown, Hope Horton, Lillian Hatler, unknown, H.B. Pendleton, Bessie Lynn
Hunley, E.R. Taylor, Lloyd Martin. Front
row: Lillian Martin, Ossie Decker, unknown, Martha Shultz, Marjorie Leach,
Beth Schroeder, Virginia Brookshire,
Pete Schroeder. Thanks to Dorothy
Barnes for giving me the names.
AARP to meet Jan. 27
Ohio County AARP Chapter No. 4061 will open
the 2015 year with its first meeting on Tuesday,
Jan. 27, at the Hartford senior building at 11:30
a.m. Senior Services will be providing chili and
hot dogs for the meal. Members can bring other
foods if they like. Other persons 50 and over are
invited. President Douglas Smith has invited
Judge-Executive David Johnston to be the guest
speaker. Members are asked to bring valentines
to be addressed to members of the Eddie Ballard
Veterans Center at Hanson.
Special meeting called
Fordsville Elementary School will hold a specialcalled SBDM meeting on Friday, Jan. 23 at 3:30
p.m.
Mall Cinema - Hartford, KY
CALL THEATRE FOR SHOW TIMES 270-298-3315
Cinema I Cinema II
AMERICAN SNIPER UNBROKEN
SUNDAY
SERMONS
ON 99.9
(R)
8:00 - 8:30 a.m. .Ohio County Churches of Christ
8:30 - 9:00 a.m. ...........Hartford Christian Church
9:00 - 10:00 a.m. ..... Beaver Dam Baptist Church
10:15 - 11:00 a.m...Beaver Dam Church of Christ
11:00 a.m. - Noon ........... Hartford Baptist Church
Call now while openings remain for
the Sunday Morning Schedule.
Discuss the huge possibilities to grow
your congregation and reach more
people than ever on 99.9.
Call 298-3268 and ask
to talk to Jerry Wright.
Investing in Family
One of the greatest investments we can make is in our family. If realized it will bring a joyful return for them, our self, this community,
and for God. If neglected, it will bring a pain that is not easily forgotten.
The Bible says that “a child left to himself brings shame to his mother” (Pro. 29:15). And, “He who troubles his own house will inherit the
wind” (11:29). Both of these verses emphasize the importance of people
sacrificing for their family - with spouses loving one another and parents training their children to be responsible citizens. Those who have a
family and refuse to make this investment are guaranteed a future of shame and disappointment.
Our family needs our attention. They should be important enough to us to sacrifice our time, energy and money to
interact with them. Obviously, we have other responsibilities that also demand our attention (Eph. 4:28; 1 Tim. 5:4),
but we must never deprive our spouse or children of our devotion. They must always know they are significant to us.
Those who abandon their family for career, hobbies, sports, drugs, or materialism are making a terrible trade. True
success can never be found without gaining our family’s respect through a life of service (Pro. 31:27-31).
The Lord said of Abraham, “For I have known him, in order that he may command his children and his household
after him, that they keep the way of the Lord, to do righteousness and justice” (Gen. 18:19). People must see the same
qualities in us if we are to make a positive difference in this world. A selfish, greedy, uncaring and “un-serving” person is useful to no one. The truly wealthy people are those who fear God, love others, and lead their family to heaven
through faithful devotion. - Mike Thomas
Radio Program on Sundays at 10:15 a.m. on 99.9 F.M.
BEAVER DAM CHURCH OF CHRIST
www.beaverdamchurch.com
(PG-13)
Page A-8, January 21, 2015, Times-News
OHIO COUNTY
DEVOTIONAL
PAGE
Kevin L. Rice
Agency Owner
Kevin L. Rice Allstate Insurance
24-Hour Customer Service
Allstate Insurance Company
707 W. Everly Bros. Blvd - Suite 2
Central City, KY 42330
Office 270-757-0012
1001 S. Main Street - Hartford, KY 42347
Office 270-298-9574
1-800-844-6218
Providing skilled
nursing, medical social
work, physical, occupational
and speech therapy
in your home.
1501 N. Main St, Beaver Dam, KY
270-298-3079
270-298-9043
1-800-224-0642
JOHN FOREMAN - OWNER
“Five Generations of Quality Bar-B-Q”
338 Washington Ave.
Owensboro, KY 42301
Phone (270) 926-9000
Fax (270) 683-0747
THIS DEVOTIONAL AND DIRECTORY IS MADE POSSIBLE BY
THESE BUSINESSES WHO ENCOURAGE ALL OF US TO ATTEND
WORSHIP SERVICES.
Beaver Dam Nursing &
Rehab Center, Inc.
Laura Cole, Administrator
1595 US Highway 231 South • Beaver Dam, KY 42320
administrator@bdnrc.com
ABUNDANT LIFE WORSHIP CHURCH
202 W. Second Street, Beaver Dam - Charles Shepherd, pastor
270-274-9646
Cell: 270-875-2324
Fax: 270-274-0484
HARTFORD BUILDING
& SUPPLY
621 Old Main Street
Hartford, KY
“For All Your Painting &
Building Needs”
Phone: 270-298-3039
William L. Danks
Funeral Home
222 Lafayette • Beaver Dam
270-274-7124
24 Hour Funeral Service Info
270-274-3444
Hometown
Flooring
APOSTOLIC
APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST - Rev. Jerry Bratcher
g
Carpetin
•Free Estimates
•Residential & Commercial
1102 Town Square Drive, Beaver Dam
(231) South
270-274-0760
Fordsville
NURSING AND REHABILITATION
CENTER
Fordsville
270-276-3603
Serving The Community For Over
35 Years
PIZZA KINGS
270-274-6775
235 South Main Street - Beaver Dam
FREE DELIVERY/FAMILY OWNED &
OPERATED
CHURCH DISCOUNT
Sun. 2-9 Mon. - Thurs. 11-9 Fri.-Sat. 11-10
TC Sanderfur
Tyson Sanderfur
Farm Bureau
Insurance
BAPTIST
ADABURG BAPTIST CHURCH - George Barker, pastor
BARNETT’S CREEK BAPTIST - Matt Shaffer, pastor
BEAVER DAM BAPTIST CHURCH - (270) 274-7174
BELLS RUN BAPTIST CHURCH - Rev. John Cummins (270) 281-9321
CENTERTOWN BAPTIST CHURCH - Rodney M. Albin, pastor
CENTRAL GROVE BAPTIST - Rick Beard, pastor
CLEAR RUN BAPTIST CHURCH - Bryon Priar, pastor
CONCORD BAPTIST CHURCH - Brother Jeff Hawkins
COOL SPRINGS BAPTIST - Rochester Rd. - Jerry Alexander 270-754-1945
DEANEFIELD BAPTIST CHURCH - Joe Colburn, pastor
DUNDEE BAPTIST CHURCH - Don McGuire, pastor
EAST FORK BAPTIST CHURCH - Bro. Adam Jarboe
EAST HARTFORD BAPTIST - Pastor Bro. Troy Richards
EMMANUAL BAPTIST TEMPLE - Hwy. 62, McHenry - Jim Hohimer
FAIRVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH - Jason Bratcher, pastor
FORDSVILLE BAPTIST CHURCH - Joe Simmons, pastor
FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH OF CABOT - 2964 Easton Cabot Rd., Fordsville
Pastor: Vernon Veteto
FRIENDSHIP FREEWILL BAPTIST - Hwy. 54, Fordsville - Roger Hill - 270-274-3695
GREEN RIVER BAPTIST CHURCH - Kelly Harris, pastor - Hwy. 231, Cromwell
GOSPEL LIGHT BAPTIST CHURCH - 226 E. 1st Street, Beaver Dam, Clyde Shaffer, pastor,
270-302-1595
HARTFORD BAPTIST CHURCH - 415 Liberty Street - Ed Mitchell, pastor
HARTFORD SECOND BAPTIST - 1011 White Avenue - Pete Leach, pastor
HOPEWELL BAPTIST CHURCH - Hopewell Rd. - John Daugherty, pastor
INDEPENDENCE MISSIONARY BAPTIST - Jerry Toler, pastor
LIVING FAITH BAPTIST - Hwy. 231 North - Bro. Greg Hillard, pastor
McGRADY CREEK BAPTIST - Fordsville - Bobby Renfrow - 270-276-9927
McHENRY BAPTIST CHURCH - Brent Howard, Pastor
MOUNT CARMEL BAPTIST - 607 Buford Rd., Utica - Chris Taylor, pastor
MT. ZION BAPTIST - Ricky Taylor, pastor
NARROWS BAPTIST CHURCH - Pastor: David Ford
NEW HARMONY BAPTIST - Brother Geary Hines, pastor - Hwy. 269, Beaver Dam
NEW HOPE BAPTIST - 1255 St. Rt. 54 E, Fordsville - Bro. Jerry Embarton, pastor
NEW LIBERTY MISSIONARY BAPTIST - Gene Gardner, pastor
NEW PANTHER CREEK BAPTIST - Hwy. 764 - Pastor: Roy Douglas 270-684-0723
NEW ZION BAPTIST - Gerald Geary, pastor 270-274-7937
OLATON BAPTIST CHURCH
PATHWAY MISSIONARY BAPTIST - 3973 U.S. Hwy. 231 S., - Beaver Dam, Pastor: Don Beverly
PLEASANT GROVE BAPTIST - Butch Ford, pastor
PLEASANT HILL BAPTIST - Pastor: Kenny Sapp
POND RUN BAPTIST CHURCH - Alton “Doc” Crowe, pastor - 270-256-4455
PROVIDENCE BAPTIST CHURCH - Bro. Shane Tucker, pastor
RIDGECREST BAPTIST CHURCH - Ridgecrest Dr. & 2nd Street
ROCKPORT BAPTIST CHURCH - Charles Brownd, pastor
ROSINE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH - Nicholas Westerfield, pastor
SLATY CREEK BAPTIST - Rev. Truman, Johnson, pastor
SMALLHOUS BAPTIST CHURCH - Rossie Stewart, pastor - St. Rt. 69 South, Centertown
SUGAR GROVE BIBLE BAPTIST and CHRISIAN ACADEMY
Fordsville, 276-5265, Eddie Calloway 270-233-9080
TAYLOR MINE UNITED BAPTIST
WALTON’S CREEK BAPTIST - Barry Davis, pastor
WEST POINT BAPTIST CHURCH - George Darnell, pastor
WEST PROVIDENCE BAPTIST - Barry Black, pastor
WORD MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH - 132 Veller Dr., - Beaver Dam, Bro. Darrell Maran
Sunday School 10 a.m. - Worship 11 a.m. & 6 p.m.
WOODWARD’S VALLEY BAPTIST - David Isbell, pastor
ZION BAPTIST CHURCH - Zion Church Rd., Reynolds Station - Bro. Chad Patterson, Pastor
212 North
Main Street
Beaver Dam
270-274-3212
www.young-deals.com
270-338-5040
270-754-2600
Jeff D. Embry
3321 Liberty Road - PO Box 94
Beaver Dam, KY 42320
Cell: 270-256-2205
800-270-5105
270-274-4011
Fax: 270-274-4031
Bank of Ohio
County
Conway & Keown
124 West Union Street
P.O. Box 25
Hartford, KY 42347
Telephone
(800) 242-4115
(270) 298-3231
(270) 526-0592 Morgantown
Fax
(270) 298-7855
1830 N. Main St.
Hartford, KY 42347
270-274-9994
Mall Cinema - Hartford, KY
CALL THEATRE FOR
SHOW TIMES
270-298-3315
DRIVE-IN
OPEN ON WEEKENDS
SUPERCENTER
1701 N. Main, Beaver Dam - 270-274-9608
Open 24 Hours A Day 7 Days A Week
Page A-9, January 21, 2015, Times-News
OHIO COUNTY
DEVOTIONAL
PAGE
CASE STORAGE
All-Types Storage
270-274-9333
‘Second Month Free’
1209 N. Main • Beaver Dam
270-274-3318
Gift Gallery & Medical Equipment
“Everyday Low Prescription Prices”
RicePharmacy.com
RiceGiftGallery.com
ALLEN ASPHALT
SEALING & STRIPING
270-274-9123
132 McHenry
Church
Road
Protect Your
Asphalt Investment!
•Parking Lots • Driveways •Seal Coating
•Concrete Work
April Bradley - Agent
1389 N. Main St. - Beaver Dam, KY
42320-8957
ABradley@Shelterinsurance.com
ShelterInsurance.com/ABradley
P 270-274-9915
C 270-363-1068
F 270-274-5152
Beaver Dam Building Supply
(270) 274-9605
For All Roofing & Construction Needs
202 South Main St.
Fax: 270-274-9665
LIKENS
PLUMBING SUPPLY
201 Broadway
Beaver Dam, KY
270-274-9825
HARTFORD RECYCLING
A DIVISION OF PHILLIPS ENTERPRISES, INC
WE BUY ALL TYPES SCRAP METAL
270-298-4033
-Hours• JUNK CARS • PREPARED STEEL • SHEARING • FARM EQUIPMENT
• TIN • APPLIANCES • STAINLESS STEEL • ALUMINUM
• ALUMINUM CANS • COPPER • BRASS
Monday - Friday
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Saturday 8:00 AM - 12 Noon
WE’RE RECYCLING, ARE YOU?
Hwy. 231 N.
270-274-3449
Mon. - Sat. 5:30 a.m .- 10 p.m.
Sun. 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Randy Webb
Sales Representative
West Kentucky
809 McGinnis Quarry Road/Bowling Green, Ky 42101
Phone (270) 782-5905 / Fax (270) 782-3454
Cell (270) 991-2301
randy@bluegrassmaterials.com
Bevil Bros.
Funeral Homes
301 Liberty
42347
Beaver
Dam Street • Hartford, Kentucky
Hartford
(270) 298-3287 • FAX (270) 298-3288
270-274-9600
270-298-3287
226 Louisville Road
Ultimate
Beaver Dam, Kentucky
42320-0003 Look
Phone (270) 274-9600 • Fax (270)
274-9622
Salon
Jerry Bevil Ruby Garner
Larry Bevil
Cosmetologist
1391 North Main Street • Beaver Dam, KY 42320
270-274-0083
See me for your special needs!
Find Ultimate Look on Facebook!!!
THIS DEVOTIONAL AND
DIRECTORY IS MADE POSSIBLE BY
THESE BUSINESSES WHO
ENCOURAGE ALL OF US TO
ATTEND WORSHIP SERVICES.
CATHOLIC
ST. JOHN’S CATHOLIC - Fr. Gerald Baker, pastor - 270-233-4196
HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC - Fr. Jean Kalombo, pastor - 270-274-3414
CHRISTIAN
HARTFORD CHRISTIAN CHURCH - Walnut Street - Sr. Minister Mike Sweeney - 1-270-298-7222
Associate Minister of Youth - Chris Parker - 1-270-298-7222
HORSE BRANCH CHRISTIAN - Jim Swaford, pastor
CHURCH OF CHRIST
BEAVER DAM CHURCH OF CHRIST - Mike Thomas, Minister - 1235 Williams St. - 270-274-4451
FRIENDSHIP CHURCH OF CHRIST - 9776 Sunnydale Road
Fordsville, Gary Hall, minister - 270-684-7294
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST - West Washington Street - Jim Hogan, minister
270-298-3800
McHENRY CHURCH OF CHRIST - Kirby Duncan
NEW BAYMUS CHURCH OF CHRIST - Davison Station Road
New Baymus - Dewayne Johnson, miniter - 270-274-7440
SUGAR GROVE CHURCH OF CHRIST - Minister: Ethan Eadens
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
LATTER DAY SAINTS - 308 Liberty Street, Hartford
James Wiles, Pres., 270-274-7034
CHURCH OF GOD
ECHOLS CHURCH OF GOD - Rev. Scott Simms, pastor
LIBERTY LIGHTHOUSE CHURCH OF GOD - Madison & Sycamore Sts., Mary K. Doepel, pastor
270-298-9047
HORSE BRANCH CHURCH OF GOD - Earnest Whitely - 11955 U.S. Hwy. 62 East
OAK GROVE CHURCH OF GOD - 270-274-7227 Hwy. 505 - Cromwell, Steven D. Leach, pastor
REFUGE CHURCH OF GOD - Hwy. 62 West, Beaver Dam - Fire Dept. Multi-Purpose Bldg.
THE CHURCH OF GOD - 270-298-9950 - 1377 Beda Rd - Pastor Hollis D. Peters
CHURCH OF GOD PROPHECY
CHURCH OF GOD PROPHECY - 229 W. Main Street, Fordsville - Neville Green 270-276-3782
CHURCH OF GOD PROPHECY - 701 St. Rt. 1245, McHenry - Bro. Roy Smith - 270-589-0521
CHURCH OF GOD PROPHECY - Oakwood Drive, Hartford - Robert Randolph - 270-274-3891
GENERAL BAPTIST
BROADWAY GENERAL BAPTIST - Tim Smith, pastor
CEDAR GROVE GENERAL BAPTIST - Between Hwy. 1164 & 1544, Near Olaton - Pastor Larry Embry
EAST FAIRVIEW GENERAL BAPTIST - Jr. Decker, pastor
ECHOLS GENERAL BAPTIST
HORSE BRANCH GENERAL BAPTIST - Terry Tarrence, pastor
HUMBLE VALLEY GENERAL BAPTIST - Between Hwy. 69 N. & 1164 - Pastor Tom Dever
LEACH CHAPEL GENERAL BAPTIST - Arnold Leach Road, - Horse Branch, Ricky Dockery, pastor
LONE STAR GENERAL BAPTIST - Bro. Kenny Shephard
LONGVIEW GENERAL BAPTIST - Jay Raymond, pastor
MT. OLIVE GENERAL BAPTIST - Joey Blanton
VICTORY GENERAL BAPTIST - Horse Branch
INDEPENDENT
BIBLE BAPTIST CHURCH - Hwy. 231 S., Beaver Dam - Bro. Cleatus Bowman, pastor
BETHESDA BIBLE CHURCH - Robert Bailey, pastor 270-274-3169
CALVARY INDEPENDENT CHURCH - 1580 Dan Road, - Horse Branch, KY 42349, 270-274-3094
JEHOVAH’S WITNESS
JEHOVAH’S WITNESS KINGDOM HALL - 878 Hwy. 231 S. - Beaver Dam,
270-363-2427 or 270-274-4056
METHODIST
BARNES CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST - 11 Church Street - Beaver Dam, Bro. Ray Austin, pastor
BEAVER DAM UNITED METHODIST - Third & Lafayette - Gary Hardin, pastor
BEECH VALLEY UNITED METHODIST - 4661 Sunny Dale Rd. - Kevin Campbell, pastor
CENTERTOWN UNITED METHODIST - 139 Church Street - Rob Stout, pastor
CROMWELL UNITED METHODIST - 5750 US 231 - Mike Taylor 270-274-9290
DUNDEE UNITED METHODIST - 11503 SR 69 - John Jarboe, pastor
EASTON UNITED METHODIST - 35 SR2124 - Hancock County - Richard Burgraff, pastor
FORDSVILLE UNITED METHODIST - 263 E. Main St. - Richard Burgraff, pastor
GOSHEN UNITED METHODIST - 1409 SR 273 - Mike Taylor, pastor 270-274-9290
HARTFORD UNITED METHODIST - Center & Liberty - Bro. Bob Clements, pastor
LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST - 2433 SR 2718 - Rob Stout, pastor
MT. PLEASANT UNITED METHODIST - 2756 Mt. Pleasant Rd. - Kevin McGee, pastor
NO CREEK UNITED METHODIST - 1770 SR 136 - Steve Flener, 270-256-6950, pastor
ROSINE UNITED METHODIST - 61 McLeod Street - Contact Mike Baldwin - 270-314-0468
SHILOH UNITED METHODIST - 1103 Shiloh Church Road - Kevin McGee, pastor
NON-DENOMINATION
BEAVER DAM COMMUNITY CHURCH - G.H. Young, pastor
CENTERTOWN TABERNACLE - Ruby St. - Centertown - Marty Bowlds, pastor
CHARITY FAITH CHAPEL - Larry Minton, pastor - 270-274-7715
CROSSROAD COMMUNITY CHURCH - East First Street - Beaver Dam - Anthony Goff, pastor
MT. MORIAH CHURCH - Ricky Leisure, pastor
NEW ASSEMBLY CHURCH - Hwy. 1543, Hartford - Pastor: Bro. Lealin Geary 270-298-7843
NEW HOPE CHURCH - Warren Brooks, pastor 525-2854 or - 270-274-7077 or 270-232-4319
REFLECTION OF CHRIST CHURCH - Hwy. 231 & Boling Rd. - Pleasant Ridge - 270-275-2555
REMNANT WORSHIP CENTER - 201 Midtown Plaza, Beaver Dam - Todd Leach, pastor 270-526-5744
RIVER OF PRAISE WORSHIP CENTER - Terry & Eileen Morris
237 S. Main Street - Beaver Dam - 270-256-5767
THERE IS HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH - Pastor, Darrell Blacklock
UNION GROVE RESURRECTION COMMUNITY CHURCH - 1778 Taffy Road, Hartford
Pastor: Don Goatee
PENTECOSTAL
CENTERTOWN HOLINESS CHURCH - Rev. Bruce Lindsey, pastor
NEW COVENANT TABERNACLE - Bro. Dale Calloway 270-274-4065
PLEASANT RIDGE HOLINESS - Hwy. 231 N., Ancie Wilson
UNITED PENTECOSTAL
THE PENTECOSTALS OF OHIO COUNTY - 1103 Main St. - Hartford - Pastor: Kenneth Moore
PRESBYTERIAN
BEULAH CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN - Rev. Mike Justice, pastor
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST - Goshen Road - Beaver Dam - Christopher Rollins, pastor - 270-703-9945
*Commercial ~ Residential
*Asphalt Paving
ALT
FREE
ESTIMATES
THE
DEPOT
Gifts & Interiors
2 LOCATIONS:
121 Broad St - Central City - 270-754-1595
117 North Main St. - Greenville
270-338-2144
Visit us on Facebook - www.depotgifts.com
Free Glamours Gift Wrap - Call In Your Gift Order!
Compliments of
YOUNG
Manufacturing
BARRY K. STEVENS, D.M.D.
1221 N. Main Street
Beaver Dam, KY 42320
Telephone: (270) 274-3379
CABINET DOORS & MORE, LLC
We Build It You Paint It
271 State Route 54 East Fordsville, KY 42343
OUR PRICES ARE WORTH YOUR DRIVE!
270-276-3545
Hours: Monday - Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 2 pm
CabinetDoorGuys@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/cabinetdoorguys
Miller-Schapmire
Funeral Home
114 West Walnut
Hartford, KY
Hometown
iGA
1137 Hwy. 231
270-298-3709
COMMONWEALTH
COMMUNITY BANK
“We Try Harder”
FOUR LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
Greenville
Hartford
270-338-2125
270-298-3261
Centertown
270-232-4231
Fordsville
270-276-3663
www.cwcbank.com
BRIAN ADDINGTON
CO-OWNER/MANAGER
M & B AUTO PARTS
1340 S. MAIN - HARTFORD, KY 42347
(270) 298-4900
(270) 298-4941 FAX
Telephone: (270) 274-3294
NC.
ASPH
Need a Gift? - Birthday? Anniversary? Wedding?
Baby? Home?
,I
ICES
V
R
SE
Don House
(270) 298-3073
(270) 274-0095
*Rock *Sand *Marble *Fertilizer *Slag
*Lime * Dirt *Coal
Ray Jones Trucking, Inc.
“Specialize in Bulk Hauling”
Ray Jones, Pres. (270) 338-2417
Fax (270) 338-7725
2296 State Route, Hwy. 181
South
Greenville, KY 42345
Jonathan Shrewsbury, O.D.
Mallory Sanderfur Roberts, O.C.
Doctors of Optometry
1303 N. Main St.
Bluegrass Family Eyecare
Beaver Dam, KY 42320
TAMMY’S
“Boots & clothes for the
working man”
Carhartt, Redwing, & more
We carry the best brands
270-274-0203
Mon - Fri 10am - 5pm
Sat 9am - 4pm
Closed Sunday
726 North Main Street
Beaver Dam, KY 42320
& TREE SERVICE Trimming
& Tree Removal
• Stump Grinding
& Tree
T
ree
Service
Tree Trimming & Tree Removal Full Service Lawn Care 330 Mallard View Drive
Lic
ens
270-­274-­0025 ed Cromwell,
Kentucky
42333
FREE ESTIMATES ESTIMATES
270-274-0025
or 270-256-7574
Lawn Care, Tree Service & Stump Removal
FREE ESTIMATES
Licensed & Insured
red
Insu
45
vs
40
Page A-10, January 21, 2015, Times-News
45% of Kentucky job
seekers look in the
newspaper for job
openings.
40% look on the Internet.
Chamber presents awards
The
Ohio
County
Chamber of Commerce
presented
annual
awards for Entrepreneur
of the Year and Chamber
Member of the Year at
its annual Christmas
Gala on Dec. 16. This
is the first year these
awards have been given
and the Chamber hopes
to expand the awards
program in the future.
The Entrepreneur of
the Year Award for 2014
was presented to Sara
Michaels Events, LLC.
In 2014, Sara Michaels
Events opened a 3,500
square feet commercial
kitchen in Beaver Dam,
creating four full-time
and
four
part-time
positions and additional
contract workers in the
county.
The other nominees
for Entrepreneur of
the Year were Goody’s,
Fuller Physical Therapy
and Peaches Cakery.
The Chamber Member
of the Year Award for
2014 was presented
to Debbie Boehmann.
Ms. Boehmann is a
recent member of the
Chamber’s board of
directors
and
lead
the efforts to put on
many programs for the
Chamber in the past
year and prior years.
The other nominees
for Chamber Member of
the Year were Charlotte
Whittaker,
City
of
Beaver Dam and Bank
of Ohio County.
“This year, the Board
of Directors chose the
award recipients with
the
opportunity
for
input from the Chamber
membership,”
said
Chamber
president
Chris Hunt.
“In the
future, we seek better
So if you’re looking for
a job…or you’ve got a
job opening to tell people
about…doesn’t it make
sense for both of you
to meet where you’re
most likely to find
one another?
That’s right…in the
newspaper.
ways to gather more
information about more
businesses in the county
and what they are doing
so that we can recognize
the great businesses and
leaders we have here.”
This fact brought to you by the
Kentucky Press Association
and its 162 member newspapers.
Source: Advertising and Media Use
in Kentucky (June 2010, American
Opinion Research)
OCMS honor roll
A HONOR ROLL
7th Grade
Keeley
Addington,
Jazlynn
Atherton,
Austin
Ball,
Alisa
Blankenship, Brooklyn
Brown,
Rhiannon
Cherolis,
Shelby
Chinn, Kevin Diaz-Cru,
Baileigh
Duff, Alex
Farris, Seira Filback,
Lacey Gordon, Noah
Henninger,
Vincent
Jabczynski,
Keenan
Luttrell, Ethan Maddox,
Timothy
Martin,
Klemmer
Nicodemus,
Jessalyn Poynter, Jakob
Quisenberry,
Tommy
Rhodes,
Madison
Roberts, Brittany Rock,
Madalyn Rock, Darren
Scoggins,
Gabrialle
Simpson,
Adelynn
Stewart, Alexis Swift,
Kaitlyn
Tichenor,
Samantha
Tierney,
Dakotah
Vanover,
Jeremy White-Zavala,
Breanna Young.
8th Grade
Mary Adams, Gavin
Brown, Maecy Brown,
Tyler
Daugherty,
Evan Decker, Jackson
Dockery, Julia Eaton,
Elijah
Embry,
Troy
Fairchild,
Macaila
Ferguson, Chloe Fulton,
Christopher Goff, Corey
Hale, Haley Jameson,
Ivy Johnson, Haylee
Jones, Caleb Kennedy,
Taylor Naue, Jalyn
Poynter, Erin Sisk, Ty
Smith, Alyssa Taylor,
Benjamin Wood.
A-B HONOR ROLL
7th Grade
Claudia Arias, Logan
Ashby,
Emmaleigh
Ashworth,
Logan
Baggarly,
Ethan
Beatty-Johnson,
Garrett
Bellamy,
Abigail Bennett, Colton
Bratcher,
Hannah
Brown, Olivia Bullock,
Carter Bunch, Lorelie
Burden,
Robert
Burden, Austin Carden,
Sophie Chinn, Victoria
Christian, Jerry Clark,
Kamryn
Combs,
Joseph Cooper, Ethan
Corley, Seth Cotton,
Erin Coy, Ethan Coyle,
Garrett Crumes, Dylan
Decker, Trevor Doan,
Chloe Durham, Taya
Elms, Allison Embry,
Wade Everley, Hiram
Ferguson, Jordan Fields,
Diego Garcia, Easton
Givens, Derik Hall,
James Hargus, Noah
Hawkins, Ariel Hearld,
Brianna
Henderson,
Lindzey
Hohimer,
Joseph Holland, Emily
Huggins,
Jordan
Hurst,
Isaac
King,
Brock Kirtley, McKaley
Johnson,
Sydney
Johnson,
Adrianna
Joiner,
Timothy
Lacefield, Trey Lewis,
Emileigh
Lindsey,
Hannah
Logsdon,
Andrea Lopez, Yagnyted
Lopez-Martinez,
Angelica
Martinez,
Leah Meador, Caitlin
Midkiff, Sierra Minton,
Jaron Molter, Aryonna
Moore,
Maquenzie
Moore,
Madison
Moorman,
Dylan
Morris, Jace Niehaus,
Riley Payne, Cortney
Payton,
Bonham
Phelps,
Madison
Piper, Trevor Pogue,
Katelyn Probus, Kyle
Quisenberry, Katawna
Raley, Katelyn Ray,
Martin Renfrow, Laney
Risinger, Dylan Roberts,
Haley Rodrigues, Lain
Romero, Evan Sandefur,
Austin Sexton, Justin
Shock, Tai Simmons,
Madison
Smallwood,
Alyssa Smith, Erika
Smith, Blaine Starnes,
Carrah Stowe, Tarrah
Stowe,
Billy
Tolle,
Jocelyn Travis, Billy
Wester, Loren Wilcox,
Mary
Wiles,
Andi
Wilson, Robert Wilson
8th Grade
Aaron Allen, Scarlet
Allen,
Tristen
Armstrong, Jacob Autry,
Madison Basham, Dylan
Blair, Logan Birchwell,
Kristen Burden, Jason
Burgess,
Kathryn
Burgess, Shane Burton,
Daniella
Bustos,
Laryssa Carter, Logan
Carter, Kamryn Cecil,
Lennon Chinn, Hannah
Clark, Chad Coleman,
April
Conkright,
Jacob Corley, Jessica
Cox,
Callie
Cruse,
Jenna
Daugherty,
Aliyah DeVore, Kate
Edge, Kegan Embry,
Kyle Embry, Catelyn
Fancher,
Autumn
Fendel, Taylor Filback,
Laura Fulkerson, Olivia
Funk, Daniel Garner,
Keaton Gary, Mattie
Gilstrap, Brooklyn Goff,
Connor Gray, Matthew
Gray, Kaleb Gregory,
Elijah
Hatfield,
Ezekiel
Hatfield,
Colton Holland, Robby
Howard, Yvonna Hunt,
Abigail Johnson, Haley
Johnson, Allie Manning,
Martin
Jose-Martin,
Madelyn
Maikranz,
Jamie Maurer, Jenny
Mercer,
Madison
Minton, Nolan Morris,
Isaiah Moxley, Hannah
Oldham,
McKenzie
Oldham, Colby Payne,
Corey
Payne,
John
Parker, Jayna Patterson,
Paige Payton, Danielle
Pedigo, Triston Phelps,
Emily Raymer, Briley
Raymond, Luz ResendizNeblina, James Roach,
Parker
Shrewsbury,
Russell Simpson, Isaac
Smallwood,
Jessica
Smith, Nicholas Stacy,
Kalee Stafford, Chanler
Statts, Amber Stanley,
Grayson Stout, Emma
Swindler, Lance Taylor,
William
Vanover,
Bryson Ward, Steven
Weiler, Brian Wright
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Classifieds
Page A-11, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Ohio County Times-News
DUFF’S
CONSTRUCTION
Owner:
Bobby Duff
256-1054
or
274-7552
Jeff Lindsey &
Sons Trucking
Rock, Sand, or Dirt
Now accepting
major credit cards
(270) 363-1813
P I E R C E
UPHOLSTERY: 270298-7172. tfn
S M I L E Y ’ S
UPHOLSTERY
SHOP: 318 Oakwood
Drive, Hartford. Custom
upholstery.
Serving
Ohio County since 1961.
Call 270-298-3460 or
270-298-9906. tfn
A P P L I A N C E S
REPAIRED:
House
calls $35, plus parts
and labor. Call 270-3142027 or 270-275-9898.
tfn
FOR
HOME
OR
BUSINESS:
For
renovations-drywall
hanging/finishing,
interior/exterior
painting, ceramic tile,
laminate flooring, vinyl
flooring, trim carpentry,
plaster repair and more,
call Thomas Barrett,
contractor, at 270-3922081. Reasonable rates
and free estimates.
35 years experience.
Licensed and insured.
1-21
Services
Offered
Services
Offered
WOODCHUCK TREE SERVICE
270-298-9483 or 270-256-0558
• Tree Topping & Cut Trees Down • Stump Removal • Firewood for Sale
Licensed & Insured • Free Estimates • Operator Eddie Culbertson
HAVE CRANE TRUCK- 24 HOUR EMERGENCY STORM SERVICE
Frames Seamless Gutters
“Where Our Minds Are Always In The Gutter”
Scotty Frames
Call for free estimates
270-256-0906
oone’s
B
Building And Remodeling
FREE ESTIMATES
INSURED
• Roofs
• Room Additions
Timmy Boone
• Decks
275-4321
• Garages
mickey Boone
• Vinyl Siding
929-2713 • Replacement Windows & Doors
Fields Construction
~ Tim Fields ~
Fully Licensed & Insured • 25 Years Experience
Cell: 270-791-0348; Home: 270-274-9920
New Home Construction • Remodeling
•Roofing • Siding • Replacement Windows
•Garages and Decks
MAGANS
BACKHOE & DOZER SERVICE
Septic System Installed
Dirt Work
Licensed & Insured
ADVANCED
HEATING & COOLING
“Providing Comfort
Through Technology”
P.O. Box 355
Morgantown, KY 42261
999-4503
Phone: (270)
Fax: (270) 526-3858
License #M03021
Jones
septic
service
270-363-1818
J&J TOWING
We Sell
New and Used Tires and Batteries
We Mount and Balance Tires
54 River Road
Cromwell, Kentucky 42333
270-256-6002
Legal
Notices
Legal
Notices
Legal
Notices
NOTICE OF INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application Number 892-0117 MA1
In accordance with the provisions of KRS 350.070, notice is hereby given that Armstrong Coal Company, Inc., 407 Brown Road, Madisonville, Kentucky 42431 has applied for a major revision to a surface coal mining and reclamation operation located
3.5 miles southeast of Centertown in Ohio County. The major revision adds no additional surface disturbance to the existing permit area of 1025.0 acres.
The proposed major revision area is 1.2 miles northeast of the junction of State Route
85 and US Highway 62 and is located 0.2 miles west of Southards Creek.
The proposed major revision is located on the Hartford and Paradise U.S.G.S. 7 1/2
minute quadrangle maps. The surface area affected is owned by Western Land Company, LLC and Joseph L & Rose A Ralph.
The major revision proposes to revise the operations plan in order to dispose of refuse
material in the mining pits.
The major revision application has been filed for public inspection at the Division
of Mine Reclamation and Enforcement’s Madisonville Regional Office, 625 Hospital
Drive, Madisonville, KY 42431. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director, Division of Mine Permits, #2 Hudson
Hollow, U.S. 127 South, Frankfort, KY 40601.
This is the final advertisement of the application. All comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be received within 30 days of today’s date.
GRAYSON CIRCUIT COURT
CIVIL ACTION NO. 13-CI-00204
DIVISION I
WILBUR LAMBERT, ET AL, PLAINTIFF vs. JAMES LAMBERT, ET AL, DEFENDANTS
By virtue of a Judgment and Order of Sale entered on November 7, 2014, the Grayson
County Master Commissioner will on February 9, 2015 at 1:00 p.m., offer for sale the
property described below. The property will be offered at public auction to the highest
bidder on terms of TEN (10%) PERCENT down in the form of cashier’s check or
certified check, and the balance on a credit of forty-five (45) days, secured by a bond
with sufficient surety, bearing interest at the accruing interest rate of 12% per annum
from the date of sale until the purchase price is paid. The auction will be held on the
Courthouse steps of the Courthouse located in Hartford, Kentucky, 301 South Main
Street, Hartford, Kentucky, to-wit:
A certain tract of land lying in Ohio County, Kentucky, and in the valley of Caney
Creek, bounded as follows:
BEGINNING at a stone on the I.C.R.R. with said road to a stone on the Bank of Caney
Creek; thence with the meanders of Caney Creek to White Oak; thence to a stone,
corner to John Leach land; thence to a stone in John Lindsey’s line; thence to the
beginning corner, containing 78 acres, more or less.
THERE IS EXPECTED from the hereinabove description, approximately 16.44 acres
having been previously conveyed to Charles A. Tarrance, by deed dated September
1, 1997, appearing of record in Deed Book 225, Page 301, records of the Ohio County
Clerk’s Office.
Being a certain property conveyed by Roger Dale Ferguson and Betty Jo Ferguson,
his wife, to Wilbur Lambert, James R. Lambert and Paul Lambert on May 14, 1988
as is shown on a deed of record in Deed Book 265, Page 301, records of the Ohio
County Clerk’s Office.
This real estate will not be appraised because this property is being sold pursuant to
a partition sale. The real estate has been adjudged indivisible and will be sold as a
whole, including all improvements. It will be sold subject to the real estate taxes for the
current year, and also subject to all restrictions and easements of record. Neither the
Court nor the Master Commissioner warrant title or condition of the subject property.
The purchaser will be required to make the down payment at the time of sale, payable
to the order of the Master Commissioner in the form of, cashier’s check or certified
check. The purchaser will be required to give bond for the balance of the purchase
price with surety that is satisfactory to the Master Commissioner. The bond payable to
the Master Commissioner, will have the force and effect of a judgment bearing twelve
(12%) percent interest from the date of sale. A lien will be retained on the property sold
until the purchase money is fully paid.
BETH C. RATLEY
GRAYSON COUNTY MASTER COMMISSIONER
(270) 230-0226
Now has
Portable Toilets
PUBLIC NOTICE
256-2958 or
274-4636
A&P
SELF STORAGE
274-5554
3
NT
VENIE S
N
O
C
N
IO
T
LOCA
10x20
8x15 LON
TE G
10x10 DISCOURNM
TS
5x10
STATEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION
Custom
Kids need love...
Logging
Dozer and support, high expectations,
adult role models, integrity,
Backhoe
boundaries, responsibility,
Work
caring schools, self esteem,
positive peers and all other
40 Developmental Assets
Call or text
270-256-9953
For more information
Call 270-274-7787
togetherwecare.org
Professional Care Health & Rehabilitation Center is the reProfessional
Carefinancial
Health &assistance
Rehabilitation
Center
the recipient
of federal
from both
theisMediccipient
of federal financial
from both
theprovisions
Medicaid
aid
and Medicare
program,assistance
and is subject
to the
Medicare
and is
to as
theamended.
provisions
of
ofand
Title
VI of theprogram,
Civil Rights
Actsubject
of 1964
SecTitle
VI
of
the
Civil
Rights
Act
of
1964
as
amended.
Section
tion 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended, and
504
of the
1973Department
as amended,
the
the
rules
andRehabilitation
regulations ofAct
theofU.S.
of and
Health
rules and regulations of the U .S. Department of Health and
and Human Services which provide that no person in the
Human Services which provide that no person in the UnitUnited States on the basis of race, color, national origin, age
ed States on the basis of race, color, national origin, age or
or handicap shall be excluded from participation in admishandicap shall be excluded from participation in admission
sion
or access
to, denied
the benefits
of, or otherwise
be
or access
to, denied
the benefits
of, or otherwise
be subjected
subjected
to
discrimination
under
any
of
this
organizations
to discrimination under any of this organizations programs
programs
or activities.
or activities.
The
Theperson
personresponsible
responsiblefor
forcoordinating
coordinating this
this organization’s
organization’s
non-discrimination
Graves,
Adnon-discrimination compliance
compliance efforts
efforts isis Ken
Patricia
Donald,
ministrator.
AnyAny
individual,
or or
specific
Administrator.
individual,
specificclass
classofofindividuiindividuals,
als,who
whofeels
feelsthat
thatthis
thisorganization
organization has
has subjected
subjected them to
discrimination may obtain
information
about
the statdiscrimination
obtainfurther
further
information
about
the
utes.
statutes.
Pursuant to 405 KAR 8:010,
Section 16(5), the following is
a summary of permitting decisions made by the Department for Natural Resources,
Division of Mine Permits with
respect to applications to
conduct surface coal mining
and reclamation operations
in Ohio County.
ARMSTRONG
COMPANY INC
12/1/2014.
COAL
8920113
aragon
P
Printing
Page A-12, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Items
for Sale
Everly Brothers Boulevard
Central City, KY 42330
Email:
paragon@ky-leadernews.com
270-754-3000
Did You Know?
Paragon Printing Offers:
• Flyers/Handbills
• Letterheads/Envelopes
Convent
• Invoices/Statements
ional,
Digital a
• Magazines
n
d
• Brochures
Web
• Fair Catalogs
P
r
inting
• Menus
• Program Guides
• 11 x 17 Posters - Full Color
• Business Cards w/Your Photo
• Gift Certificates
• Candidate Cards
• Post Cards
• Note Pads
• Computer Checks
• Labels
• Raffle Tickets
• Promotional Mailouts w/Direct Mailing
• Custom Wedding Invitations
• Wedding Programs
• Promotional Items: Pens, Cups,
Key Chains, Door Hangers, etc.
• Buttons for Special Events or Elections
• Custom Self Inking Rubber Stamps
COLOR
Copies
CONSIGNMENT
CONNECTION:
We
buy and sell used
furniture. A piece or
a house full. Will do
estates.
Consignment
connection.
270274-0003
or
270792-7994.
www.
consignmentconnection.
com. tfn
THIS
AND
THAT
USED FURNITURE
AND
APPLIANCE:
Buy and sell at 123 East
Union Street, Hartford.
You deliver, we pay
more. 270-256-8018 or
270-298-3248. tfn
FOR SALE: Washers,
dryers
and
stoves
from $99; refrigerators
from $150.
Lakeside
Scratch & Dent Sales,
Morgantown. 8 a.m. to 5
p.m., Monday-Saturday.
270-526-2092 or 270999-3699. tfn
A P P L I A N C E S
REPAIRED:
House
calls $35. Also, appliance
parts for sale. Call 270314-2027 or 270-2759898. tfn
Hay
Wanted
WANTED TO BUY:
Hay. Delivered to my
farm, 468 Chiggerville
Lane, Beaver Dam.
Malcolm Barnes. 270274-9328. tfn
Hay
for Sale
Round
FOR SALE:
and square bales of
orchard grass, fescue
and red clover hay with
net wrapping. 270-2763209 or 270-256-8636.
tfn
Dirt
for Sale
DIRT FOR SALE: Call
270-274-7338. tfn
Timber
Wanted
WANTED:
Standing
timber. Will harvest
your timber and sell it
for you. Certified logger.
References
available.
Eli Miller Logging, 270524-2967. If no ansswer
we will call back 5-13
Cattle
Wanted
CATTLE
WANTED:
Will buy and pick up on
farm. No commission on
trucking. Call 270-5479889. tfn
Firewood
for Sale
FOR SALE: Seasoned
firewood.
Oak and
hickory.
$50 pickup
load.
Call 270-2560065. 1-21
Love kids?
Build assets.
All young people need the
40 Developmental Assets.
You can build
them every day.
For more information
Call 270-274-7787
togetherwecare.org
Page A-13, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Help
Wanted
Help
Wanted
HELP
WANTED:
Looking for a new
hairstylist
at
the
Ultimate Look Salon.
Boot rent or commission.
Call 270-274-0083 or
270-256-0194. 1-21
DRIVERS:
Hiring OTR!
$2,000 Sign On!
Home Weekends!
Average $65K A Year!
Help
Wanted
*** FREE ***
NOW THAT WE HAVE YOUR ATTENTION!!!
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A FAMILY ORIENTED JOB!!!
WE HAVE THE PERFECT PLACE FOR YOU!
HELP WANTED
Cashiers - Cooks
Must be 18 or older.
No experience necessary.
Apply at W.K. Truck Stop,
Hwy 231 & WK Parkway,
Beaver Dam. Flexible Schedule
available.
E.E.O.
Great Benefits! EOE M/F/Disabled/Vet
Sarah: 855-571-2751
HELP WANTED
The City of Beaver Dam is accepting applications for
the position of
Water Operator & General Laborer
Consideration for employment is based upon successful completion of a police background investigation, a
drug/alcohol screening and a physical exam.
Application Deadline:
Friday, January 30, 2015
BEAVER DAM NURSING & REHAB CENTER, INC.
IS SEARCHING FOR FAMILY ORIENTED
SRNA’S AND CMT’S
WITH SECOND AND THIRD SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL
FULL-TIME & PART-TIME * SECOND, THIRD AND WEEKEND SHIFTS
NEW PAY SCALE
DIETARY STAFF POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Full and Part-Time • Competitive Wages
Medical, Dental, Vision, Life Insurance
Paid Time Off • Referral and Sign on Bonus Available
Subscribe
today!!
Please apply in person - NO PHONE CALLS ACCEPTED
BEAVER DAM NURSING & REHAB CENTER, INC.
1595 US HIGHWAY 231 SOUTH
BEAVER DAM, KY 42320
Fordsville Nursing &
Rehabilitation Center
Auction
is seeking full time and part time
C.N.As, Nurses
and Sitters
Application packets are available at:
Beaver Dam City Hall
309 West 2nd Street
Beaver Dam, KY 42320
WED. FEB. 4TH
4:30 PM
Location: From the intersection of HWY 69 and the
William Natcher Parkway (Exit 50) just east of Hartford,
KY take HWY 69 north 6.8 miles, then north on Sunnydale
Road for two miles. The property is on the right. Watch for
signs!
for all shifts
In pursuance to court order 12-CI-00417, Kurtz
Auction & Realty Company has been authorized
to sell the following regardless of price:
$500.00 sign on bonus for
Nurses and C.N.A.’s
The City of Beaver Dam is an
Equal Opportunity Employer.
37.399 ACRES
WOODED AND OPEN LAND
Please apply in person at
Mary Wallace
City Clerk
Professional Care Health
& Rehab Center
is looking for individuals with a generous heart, warm
spirit and genuine compassion for others.
Due to increased census we are currently seeking the
following positions:
Autos
for Sale
Fordsville Nursing & Rehabilitation is an equal opportunity
employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration
for employment and will not be discriminated against on the
basis of disability, race, ethnicity, gender, religion, or otherwise. Minorities, veterans, and individuals with disabilities are
encouraged to apply.
ROWE
USED CARS
Over 50 Years
1964 - 2014
BUY - SALE - TRADE
‘09 Ranger X-Cab 4x4 - 36,xxx miles...........$10,995
‘07 Fusion SE .................................................... $7,495
‘06 F250 .............................................................$3,895
‘06 Chevy Aveo - 4 Door .................................. $3,695
‘05 Equinox LT................................................... $4,495
‘05 Jeep Liberty 4x4.......................................... $5,995
‘05 Cavalier ........................................................ $3,695
‘05 SunFire......................................................... $3,495
‘04 Stratus SXT ................................................. $3,995
‘04 Cavalier LS .................................................. $3,495
‘04 Taurus SES - 118,xxx Miles....................... $3,695
‘03 F150 .............................................................$4,495
‘02 Ranger - 4 Cyl., Auto .................................. $3,995
‘02 Safari SLT Van - AWD ................................ $3,695
‘01 Silverado X-Cab, 4x4 ................................. $6,995
‘99 Silverado 1500 X-Cab 4x4 Z71
105,xxx Miles..................................................... $7,495
‘97 Dakota X-Cab 4x4 ...................................... $3,695
‘97 Ford E350 - Work Van................................ $2,995
‘92 Ranger X-Cab............................................. $2,195
HARLEY DAVIDSONS
‘06 120 Custom - Black Cherry ....................... $5,495
‘05 FXST Softail - Red...................................... $7,995
‘04 Super Glide - Blue ...................................... $6,495
‘03 XL 1200 - Blue............................................. $3,995
Warranty Available 6 Mo. to
3 Yrs. on Most Vehicles
New Parts & A/C Service
Since 1964
6 miles west of Beaver Dam
13 miles east of Central City
On Hwy. 62
270-274-7731
800-214-8813
CROSSROADS
STORAGE
Crossroads
Storage
Rentals
Mobile
Homes
FOR SALE: 14x70
mobile
home.
2
bedroom,
1
bath.
Electric furnace, new
hardwood floors. Sitting
on private country, one
acre lot five miles east of
Horse Branch. Owner
will finance.
$1,500
down, $300/month. 270287-3301. 1-28
Available
270-256-1306
FOR RENT: Taking
applications for rent.
2
bedroom
trailer
available Feb. 1. New
carpet/linoleum,
new
furnace, central air,
stove, fridge. No pets.
No smoking.
Great
country
atmosphere.
Call after 5 p.m. 270256-5011. 1-21
FOR RENT: Nice 3
bedroom, 2 bath mobile
home.
Appliances,
washer/dryer hookup,
two decks on 1 1/2 acre
lot.
Two miles from
Beaver Dam.
$500/
month,
$500/deposit.
References
required.
270-256-7464 or 270256-7465. 1-21
FOR RENT:
100
Holmon Ct., Hartford. 3
bedroom, 2 bath. $600/
month,
$500/deposit.
Call 270-256-5390. 1-21
Livestock
for Sale
Terms: 10% down day of sale with balance due on or before
March 6th, 2015. 2015 taxes will be paid by the
purchaser.
Inspection: Anytime!! Please take care, but feel free to
walk or drive around on this farm.
313 West Main Street
Fordsville, Kentucky
For
Rent
Equal Opportunity Employer
• Permanent deeded 30’ access from Sunnydale Road.
• A survey has been completed so acreages and
distances are accurate. • Perfect farm for recreation or
hunting. • Mineral Rights – the sellers are making no
reservations and are conveying all mineral rights they
own.
Fordsville Nursing &
Rehabilitation Center
PART TIME
DIETARY AIDE
packages and a great place to work.
Interested candidates may bring letter
of interest and resume to: Professional
Care at 114 McMurtry Ave., Hartford,
KY or email resume and letter of
interest to:
Auction
Livestock
for Sale
45 BLACK BRED HEIFERS
SELLING MONDAY
January 26, 2015 - 1:00 PM
Kentuckiana Livestock Market
8411 Hwy. 81 South, Owensboro
Danny Fulkerson 270-314-2253
Mike Baker 270-970-9118
270-926-8553
Contact:
Clay Taylor, 800-264-1204
Auctioneer kurtzauction.com
Real
Estate
Real
Estate
Real
Estate
Prime Building Lots For Sale
FORPRICING
SALE
CALL FORLOTS
UPDATED
•All utilities
underground
LD OLD
O
S
S SOLD SOLD
2
1
•Electric lines
underground - secure
from ice storms
•Curb & Gutter Streets
•Conveniently Located
•Country Living
in the City
3
0.647 ACRES
0.795 ACRES
•Natural gas
•Rebates available
for new gas
appliances
5
0.620 ACRES
0.900 ACRES
VICTORIA DRIVE
6
7
0.849 ACRES
0.738 ACRES
12
11
SOLD SOLD
9
8
0.517 ACRES
0.668 ACRES
SOLD SOLD SOLD
0.669 ACRES
0.732 ACRES
•Restricted no need to
worry that next
door neighborhood
will devalue
your home.
4
0.659 ACRES
14
13
18
0.760 ACRES
0.657 ACRES
15
0.737 ACRES
0.611 ACRES
0.689 ACRES
VIOLET LANE
17
10
16
0.818 ACRES
20
19
0.595 ACRES
0.682 ACRES
21
0.899 ACRES
0.662 ACRES
FOR
SALE
23
22
0.980 ACRES
0.871 ACRES
24
25
0.782 ACRES
0.835 ACRES
26
27
0.782 ACRES
0.835 ACRES
28
29
0.796 ACRES
0.971 ACRES
KY STATE HWY 1543
Payton Place
Payton Place
Highway 1543 • Hartford, KY
(Directly after Southdale Drive, off Hwy. 69)
COnTACT:
• All Utilities
Underground
Highway
1543
•
Hartford,
KY
• Curb and Gutter
Crawford
Located Drive, off Hwy. 69)
(Directly• Conveniently
after Southdale
• City Limits
• Restricted
CONTACT:
Contracting, Inc.
298-4884 or 256-2150
Crawford Contracting, Inc.
298-4884 or 256-2150
Page A-14, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Real
Estate
Real
Estate
Real
Estate
Real
Estate
LANDMARK REALTY
LLC: For all your real
estate
and
auction
needs. Homes, land and
farms. Visit our website
at www.landmarkpros.
com. Call 270-999-1540
or email landmarkpros@
gmail.com.
Randy
Arnold, broker. tfn
FOR SALE: 2 1/2 acres
on Hwy. 629, off Hwy.
54, Fordsville. $14,900.
Call 270-422-1234. tfn
FOR SALE: Two houses
for one price. 3 bedroom,
1 bath; second house, 1
bedroom, 1 bath, two
car detached garage,
plus six acres, fenced.
$45,000 in Cromwell
area. Call Joe at 270608-4846. 2-4
FOR SALE: 3.4 acres.
Hwy. 340 and Dockery
Ridge Road.
Open
pasture, some trees,
pond, utilities available.
(Neafus area.) $18,900.
$1,000 down, $211 per
month. 270-422-1234.
tfn
HOUSE FOR SALE: 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths.
Curtains
included,
partly furnished. Movein ready. Call Cookie
Hudson, 270-256-5969.
151
Center
Drive,
off Highland Drive.
$60,000. 1-28
FOR SALE: 8 acres on
Park Ridge Road and
Cecil Lane.
Stream,
pasture.
All utilities
available.
$29,700.
$1,700 down, $300 per
month. 270-422-1234.
tfn
FOR SALE: $185,000.
3 bedroom, 2 bath.
1,665 sq. ft. 1315 Phelps
Avenue, Beaver Dam,
located
behind
PBI
Bank. Built in 2012.
Bonus room, custom
cabinets,
hardwood
floors.
Call 270-2560673 or 270-256-3138.
1-21
HOME FOR SALE:
262 Horse Branch Loop.
3 bedroom, kitchen,
living room, bathroom.
$30,000. Call 270-2749668. 1-21
FOUR TRACTS LEFT:
4-10 acres, Hwy. 505
S. Water and electric
available. Owner will
finance. Call Malcolm
Barnes, 270-274-9328.
tfn
FOR SALE: Located in
Centertown. 3 bedroom,
2 bath, all electric. Over
2,100 sq. ft. of living
space. 24x24 garage
on approx. 1 acre. Call
270-256-4091 for more
details. 1-21
FSR
HOUSE FOR SALE: 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths.
Curtains
included,
Alan Maddox:
270-256-1679
partly furnished. Movein ready.
CallMaggard
Cookie
Ashley
Hudson, 270-256-5025
270-256-5969.
151
Center
Drive,
off Highland Drive.
$60,000. 1-28
Raise a Crop or Fish
Near Town, Basement Too!
If you like to go fishing or raise a large garden, and want to
be close to town then we have the place for you. This lovely
all brick home is located within 2 miles of downtown Hartford.
It features 2 spacious bedrooms, 1-1/2 baths, a great room,
(living room, kitchen and dining combination). The basement
is arranged so that you can have 2 more bedrooms, family
room, and recreation room, and 1 full bath. Detached 2 car
garage, and a carport. Central heat and air too! There is 9
acres with a pond full of fish. Better check it out. Priced at
a very conservative $185,000. Located at 130 Clearview
Drive, Hartford.
$49,900
100% Financing Available
It’s just to good to be true! This lovely home features 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, nice kitchen with cherry finish cabinets dining
area and oven and refrigerator, living room is a huge 18x14
with carpet and ceiling fan. This home would be perfect for
anyone that needs 100% financing. If you’re looking for a
new beginning, or happy downsizing, then look no further.
Located at 924 Broadway in Beaver Dam, Ky.
HOUSE FOR SALE
505 Central Avenue - Beaver Dam
3 bedroom, 1 bath, gas heat, carport, large lot,
kitchen appliances stay. $67,000.00.
Call 270-274-7098 • 270-274-3436
For Sale
on Contract
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Central heat and
air, all electric. Large covered porch.
5.8 miles out Hwy 1414
MOVE IN READY!
2500.00 down, $40000 month
Call 270-274-3645 for more details!
$
Alan Maddox’s
www.Maddox5star.com
The Most Trusted
Name In Real Estate
Five Star Realty
225 Main St. • Hartford
Breathtaking
That’s right, as soon as you step through the front door and
take one glance at the living room, you’ll fall in love. The ceiling is 10’ high with a tray making it even higher, plenty of recessed lighting and a fireplace, will make this a cozy room for
the winter. Also to the right as you walk in, is the dining room
with dark rich wood laminated floors and plenty of wide crown
molding. The kitchen is something to crow about. Plenty of
cherry cabinets, stainless steel appliances only 1 year old,
snack bar and breakfast area. The master suite is 15x15 with
and additional 5x8 area with plush carpeting, tray ceiling, recessed lighting and crown molding. Just off the master bedroom is a full size bath with shower, whirlpool tub, and spacious walk in closet. 2 more bedrooms at the opposite end
of the home feature plush carpeting, ceiling fans, spacious
closets, and Jack and Jill bath with recessed lights. There is a
bonus room upstairs that can be used for just about anything
you can imagine, plus expansion possibilities into the attic.
An attached 2 car garage will help you keep warm and dry,
and extra 30x30 garage for the person that likes to tinker with
things. Located at 1223 Phelps Ave., Beaver Dam, Ky.
Country Feel in Town
If you like the feel of the country but need close to town, then
I invite you come check out this fantastic remodeled home.
Features 3 bedrooms, sunroom, remodeled kitchen with appliances and recessed lighting. Cozy living room with ceiling
fan. Stay dry and warm with the 2 car garage. All on a large
shaded lot. (.790 Ac.). Located at 197 Taylor Mine Road,
Beaver Dam, KY. Call Gina at 270-256-1157.
•
270-298-4674
Love Entertaining
Do you love having the family and friends over for an evening of entertainment. Then I invite you to take a tour of this
lovely home. This home features a walk out basement at the
pool deck. Yes you read it right an in ground pool with large
enough area for cooking out and entertaining, the basement
has a kitchen, family room, fireplace and recreation room.
Already want it don’t you? Read the rest of the story! On the
main level there is 4 or 5 bedrooms, kitchen with nice clean
white cabinets, formal dining room, octagon living room with
massive timbers and heart warming fireplace. And if that isn’t
enough there is a 20x50 bonus room upstairs, that can be
used for whatever your imagination will allow. The price is
really low at a mere $249,500. All of this on 2 acres±. Don’t
wait any longer, give Alan a call at 270-256-1679 before it’s
too late. 100% financing on this one.
147 Acres
147 Acres. This wonderful hunting site, or cattle and crop
farm, offers many opportunities. This land offers many financial and recreational uses and has about 83 acres timber and
59 acres of cropland. This area is populated with an abundance of deer, turkey, squirrel, and rabbit. Build a weekend
cabin or a Permanent residence. Septic, Electric, barn and
fence an 3 ponds are located on the site. Priced at $272,000.
This property is located at 681 Hickory Church Road, Cromwell, KY. From the Jct. of Hwy. 231 and 62 East, go 2-3/10th
miles to Rob Roy Road turn and go 1-9/10th miles to Sandefur Crossing Road, turn left and go 1 mile to Hickory Church
Road, turn right onto Hickory Church Road and 7/10th miles
to the property.
Country Privacy
If you would like to live in the country, but like living close
to town in a subdivision. Then I invite you to take a look at
this lovely home in a restricted subdivision in the Southern
Elementary School District. This home sits on 2 lots, and features 4 bedrooms, 2 full size baths, family room. If you have
ever considered moving to the country and do not want too
far from town then I invite you to come look at this one! Priced
right! Now Only $114,500. 100% Financing Too!
Energy Efficient Home
Have you ever considered moving to the country so that you
can have some peace and quiet, let your dogs run or target
practice, even riding your 4-wheeler. Then let me give you
a tour of this lovely home. It features 4 bedrooms, the master bedroom is 14x15 and has plush carpenting and walk in
closet. There are also 2 baths, large spacious kitchen and
living room. In addition to the attached garage there is also
a detached garage. All of this nicely arranged on 1.37 acres.
Located at 591 Denton Slack Rd. Just off Hwy. 69 between
Dundee and Fordsville, Ky. Give us a call today! Only asking
$124,900.
Sindy Hancock
270-256-4394
Gina Bennett
270-256-1157
Hunting, Fishing, Comfortable
If you enjoy having peace, quiet, and privacy then let me take
you on a tour of this estate. As soon as you step inside, you
will know that it’s the place for you to call home. This beauty
features 4 bedroom, 2-1/2 baths. Spacious kitchen with appliances. When you’re cooking in this kitchen you’ll be glad
you’re the chief cook. Formal dining room, cozy living room
with fireplace. The handyman will love the spaciousness of
the 2 car garage, and the bonus room above the garage
is attached to the home. Do you like to hunt or just target
practice, you can do that when you own this home. Pond is
stocked with largemouth bass and catfish. It has 11-1/2 acres
of private land and woods. Even has a man cave. Priced at
only $229,900. And well worth it! 100% financing on this one.
Home & Horse Barn
If you would like the country life, but only want minutes from
town then I invite you to take a look at this lovely home in
the Southern Elementary School District. This home sits on 2
acres, with a 4 stall barn, and white wood fencing. This well
cared for home features 3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 full size baths,
living room with laminate flooring, and spacious kitchen with
all the appliances, and carport. If you have even considered
moving to the country and do not want too far from town then
I invite you to come look at this one! Located at 3409 Hwy
231 S., Beaver Dam, KY. Priced right! Now Only $110,000.
Lake Side View
Do you like to fish or even have a nice view of water when
you step out on your porch? If that’s the case then you’ll love
this home. This home sits on 4 6/10th acre and is just a cast
away from the lake, it has laminate flooring and is an all open
area with the exception of the bath. Relax on the front porch
and watch the fish jump or get in your boat and go catch’em.
Or why not pack up your gun and go into the woods and bring
home something to cook. Located acoss the street from 649
Washburn Lake Rd., Hartford, KY. Priced at only $45,000.
Give Alan a call at 270-298-4674.
Home Sweet Home - 100% Financing
If you are looking to make your life simpler this is the home
for you! This home is located on a large lot in Beaver Dam
and close to everything you could need. Recent updates,
include new roof, new heat and cool, stone and brick exterior. The low utilities are an added bonus. Features include 3
bedrooms, 1-1/2 baths, open living area and kitchen, patio,
attached garage. Priced at $89,900. Sale is subject to lender
approval. Located at 1312 Cherry Lane, Beaver Dam, KY.
Give Sindy Hancock a call at 270-256-4394.
Little Price for So Much
Looking for homes at a reasonable price? Then this is one
home you can’t pass up! This two bedroom home has a
basement that is finished and can be used as a bedroom or
family room, updated central heat and air, a newly remodeled
kitchen with appliances. Other features include dining room,
sunporch, and computer room. It also has a new metal roof.
This home sits on a 1/2 acre lot with a two car garage, and
two additional buildings. Only $75,000. Give Alan a call today!! 270-256-1679. 100% Financing Available.
Livermore Road!!!
This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with a great location, has that
nice country feel with plenty of room for family gatherings, it
has a spacious living room with cathedral ceilings and wood
beams, the kitchen has a dining area and snack bar, kitchen
appliances stay too. What more could you want. Located at
Country Living and 6.88 Acres
3668 Livermore Road. Priced at $79,500. 100% Financing
This home is a 1327 square foot home, with 4 bedrooms,
available.
and 1 bath. Features include hardwood floors, the bathroom
has recently been remodeled,entire interior of the home has
been painted. This home also has a new metal roof, and carport. With 6.88 acres and a pond stocked with fish there is
plenty of wildlife to see. Located at 947 State Rt. 2713, Horse
Branch, KY. Only asking $76,000.
McHenry Location
Want some acreage, a garden spot, a place for some pets.
Come check out this easy to maintain place. It features 5
bedrooms, large open kitchen, and dining area, formal dining room. Family room with cathedral ceiling. Approximately
1768 square feet of living area. Enjoy the fruit trees. All on
.82 acres±. It’s permantely attached making insurance and
financing even cheaper. Located at 18 Dorcas St., McHenry,
KY. Bargain Priced $49,500. Financing available at BB&T,
PNC, PBI and American Mortgage. Financing Available with
a 3-1/2% down payment.
Multi-Family or Single Family Unit
That is for you to decide. This home has a living room, a
dining area, kitchen, and laundry room. It also has two bedrooms and two bathrooms, the bedrooms have carpet flooring and a closet. Both of the bedrooms have vinyl flooring.
This home previously was a duplex and it’s now being used
as a single family dwelling. Could very easily be converted
back to a duplex. Only asking $47,500. 100% Financing
Available.
Enjoy Being at Home
If you enjoy having peace, quiet, and privacy; then let me
take you on a tour of this luxury home. When you first step
inside, you will know that you are about to tour an exceptionally nice place. There is a large, spacious living room
with hardwood floors that opens to a formal dining room
and relaxing sunroom. In the spacious kitchen, you will find
pickled oak cabinets topped with a wonderful Corian counter top, and an island for extra space. The kitchen features
appliances with a large 6’x12’ walk-in pantry. This home has
four bedrooms and four bathrooms. The basement features
an office with built-in desks and custom cabinets. There is
a large utility room and laundry. The family room is 35 x13’.
In addition to the family room, there is a large recreational
room as well. Outside, you will find a relaxing pool, great for
entertaining family and friends. You will enjoy the large deck
and a tiled front porch. Priced at $294,500. Happily located
at 196 Green Meadows Drive, Beaver Dam, KY. Call Alan at
270-256-1679 for a tour of this lovely home.
Perfectly Located
This nice 3 bedroom, 1 bath home has 1032 square feet
of living area, it also features a large family room, spacious
kitchen for those big family get-togethers. It sits on a nice
size lot which gives you plenty of room to garden or create
your own landscaping if you like. Call for a showing. $69,000.
100% Financing Available.
$39,900
100% Financing Possible On This One
Its just too good to be true! This lovely home features 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, nice kitchen with beautiful cabinets, living room with new carpet, dining room, covered porch and
a patio. Natural gas heat and central air. This would be a
perfect home for a new beginning. Located at 421 Mulberry
Street, Hartford.
Old Time Charmer
100% Financing Possible
With modern day features. If you would like a really nice 3
bedroom home that is reasonbale priced, then I invite you to
come look at this charmer. You won’t be disappointed, nice
living room with hardwood floors, 3 bedrooms with hardwood
floors, and eat in kitchen. 2 car detached garage, the yard is
large enough for a garden or pet or 2. At $69,500 the price
will make your wallet happy! Give us a call today!
Need Plenty of Room
Here it is, fantastic home, fantastic neighborhood, fantastic
neighbors, and a fantastic price. This home is extra clean
and ready for you to move in. It features an extra large living,
big kitchen and dining area with plenty of cabinets, and built
in appliances too! There is a family room with glass doors
opening the view to the deck and rear yard, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, and the 2 car garage for that do it yourself handyman
or to keep the car clean. This excellent home is all situated
on a large in town lot. With approximately 2100 square feet
of living area it’s a bargain at $129,500. Located at 301 W.
Walnut in Hartford. 100% financing available on this one.
Office Building
This well constructed office building is located in Hartford,
on Courthouse Square. First floor area consist of reception
area, 4 offices, 1-1/2 baths, and 3 storage rooms. Upstairs
has a kitchen, meeting room, 1-1/2 baths, storage room, and
2 misc. rooms. This building has all brick exterior, 2 heating and cooling units. Total square footage on both levels is
3200. Walk out basement used for mechanical components
of the building. On a corner lot and priced at only $49,000.
Weekend Getaway
Do you like having a place to get away on the weekends? If
so this could be a good option for you with Lake Washburn
not even a hop a way you can do all the fishing you’d like.
With a living room, a sunroom, and three bedrooms with all
carpet and drywall. Also this home has a basement with central heat and air. Nice storage building and 1-1/2 acre lot with
a creek. Locate at 649 Washburn Lake Road, Hartford, KY.
Only asking $45,000.00.
Won’t Break the Piggy Bank
If you would like an affordable home located in downtown
Hartford. The yard is not to big and mowing won’t wear you
out. The home is well kept and features 2 bedrooms with
hardwood floors, 1 bath, living room with fireplace, and kitchen with custom oak cabinets. The home has many newer
upgrades such as Central heat and air. Roof, front porch with
vinyl trim. Enjoy relaxing on the front porch. This lovely home
is being offered at the low price of $61,500. It’s move in ready.
Call Alan at 270-256-1679 for a tour!
Nothing But Class
This home has it all, with 2176 sq. ft. of living space, 3 spacious bedrooms, 2-1/2 baths, beautiful kitchen with tile flooring, dark cherry cabinets, dining room, spacious living room,
large utility room with a 1/2 bath. The master bedroom and
master bath is located on the lower level with a large bath and
a lot of tile work, the upper level has 2 bedroom, 1 bath and a
family room. It also has detached garage with a man cave but
still has plenty of garage space for your car. All this sits on 27
beautiful acres some wooded and some cleared which gives
you plenty of privacy. ALL THIS FOR ONLY $244,900.00.
100% Financing possible.
Fixer Upper $39,000
This property is located at 32 Maple Hill Lane in the Southern
School District with 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath, large spacious
living room, kitchen area with appliances. This home is in
need of some new carpet, and vinyl floor covering. Needs
some new paint. Needs some soffit work and paint. It has
replacement windows and metal roof. Priced at only $39,000.
Is Bankruptcy, Foreclosure,
Garnishment a possibility in
your future? If so, contact Alan
Maddox’s/Five Star Realty.
We have cash buyers ready to
purchase fast and close fast.
Give us a call and save your
credit history.
SEE OUR WEBSITE
AT
maddox5star.com
LAND &
BUILDING SITES
Creekside Subdivision - Home Sites
Now have 1.15 Acres home sites
available
Restricted Subdivision. Only 6 Left.
Blacktop Streets, County Water,
Underground Electric.
$16,900 and up.
Manufactured Home Lots
Goshen Meadows Subdivision
2 Lots Available, City Water, Sewer,
Electric, Paved Streets, Subdivision
Restrictions Apply
Only $13,500 per site
2-1/2 Acres
Commercial or Industrial
Beaver Dam City Limits
$200,000
Building Site .447 Ac.
Near Southern Elementary
Electric, Water
$10,000
44.388 Acre
Corner of Mt. Carmel Road and Cedar
Grove Road
4100 Feet of Road Frontage, County
Water, Electric
$94,776
147 Acres
Hickory Church Road and Rob Roy
Road
Barn, 3 Ponds, Fenced and
Cross Fenced
County Water, Septic, Electric
Asking $272,000
Page A-15, January 21, 2015, Times-News
​Students throughout Western Elementary wore blue on Friday, Jan. 9, in support of National Law Enforcement Appreciation Day. Students wrote letters
to individual deputies and provided the sheriffs office with doughnuts. Students also created the picture above to say “Thank You” with the “Thin Blue
Line” in recognition of the motto used by law enforcement.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day celebrated
Alma Randolph, a native of Ohio County and who now
makes her home in Owensboro, was on hand Monday to
help mark the celebration of Martin Luther King Day at
the Harvest House in Hartford. Randolph started and has
continued a charity for deserving children in Owensboro
and Daviess County for several years.
The Rev. Otis Cunningham, pastor of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Central City, was the
guest speaker during the Rev. Martin Luther King remembrance program Monday evening
at the Harvest House in Hartford. Bishop Robert Randolph, pastor, said more than 150 people were in attendance, including his sister, Alma Randolph. “It was a great evening and a
great program,” the pastor said.
PHOTOS BY TREG WARD
It’s why Owensboro Health and Muhlenberg Community
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Page A-16, January 21, 2015, Times-News
Little Bit of Everything
By: Dave McBride
editor@octimesnews.com
As a youngster there
were few things I enjoyed more during the
winter months than
sitting in front of a coalwood burning fireplace
and watch as the flames
danced from the fuel
and up into the chimney.
A simple pleasure,
yes, but one a small boy
could claim with regularity.
And when the fascination with the flames
dwindled, there always
was the kitchen table
where a piece of scrap
paper and a few blunt
crayons could serve to
infringe on the world
of real art and await
the forever distant day
when technical devices
would crowd out such
trivial forms of entertainment.
But were they really
trivial?
Did it make no sense
at all to park a young
body in front of a fireplace, watch the dancing flames and wonder
what happened to them
once they disappeared
up the chimney? And
were the crude pictures
created by a developing love for drawing do
nothing but gather the
dust of wasted time?
The answers, as far
as this old fossil is concerned, are yes to the
first question and no to
the second.
Try what follows on for
size.
If you were so inclined,
last Sunday was a major football day. Four
professional teams put
forth their best in a couple of games that would
secure the two coveted
positions in the upcoming Super Bowl game.
In the living room of
a home on Lydia Drive
in Owensboro there
was nestled a 50-plusyear-old father and
his 16-year-old son,
a 49-year-old uncle
and an 83-year-old papaw. All were seated
in front of a large flatscreen television for
the intended purpose
of watching the Green
Bay Packers and the
Seattle Seahawks in a
crucial NFL game.
There also was a fireplace - without a fire
on that particular day which oftentimes drew
the attention of the
older man and pulled
him back to another
day when there were
no television sets, no
interest in professional
football games, no comfortable recliners or soft
leather sofas on which
to placate tired bones
and............no high-tech
electronic devices that
effectively rob the human consciousness of
something more important to do.
You getting my drift?
Don’t you already know
that the father, the son
and the uncle had their
noses buried in hightech electronic devices
that ruled out the necessity for conversation, football-watching,
awareness of a world
around them and necessary trips to the bathroom?
The aged papaw sat
wondering how he came
to be “alone” in the
room, how the years
from then until now left
him near to being alone
in the procession of
technology and how the
three other people seated nearby didn’t know
if it was Sunday or that
the Japanese had surrendered to the U.S. in
1945. All they knew at
that time was that the
gadgets they were holding in one hand and
pecking at with the other made them oblivious
to all of the other things
that were happening in
the world around them
- including a papaw
fuming over the fact
that three consumed
humans had missed
two touchdowns, a field
goal and a cheerleader
dressed in almost nothing.
But that was okay,
I guess. A lot of years
from now they’ll sit
around and talk about
how they were mastered
by technology and absolutely loved every minute of it. And that will
be okay, too, I guess.
Who - besides an
old fossil like myself needs flames and chimneys and memories?
OHIO COUNTY WEATHER
Last Week’s Almanac: Jan. 12 - Jan. 18
Day
Hi
Low
Precip.
Monday
37
28
0.24 in.
Tuesday
29
26
0.0 in.
Wednesday
29
24
0.0 in.
Thursday
34
26
0.01 in.
Friday
46
23
0.0 in.
Saturday
54
30
0.0 in.
Sunday
52
30
0.03 in.
Total Precip. for January 1.25 inches;
Yearly 1.25 inches.
Lake Conditions
The pool elevation at Lake Barkley is 356.0
Kentucky Lake pool elevation is 355.8 above
the dam and below is 307.8.
Extended Forecast: Jan. 21 - Jan. 27
WEDS. Jan. 21
Hi: 51
Lo: 29
Partly
Sunny
THURS: Jan. 22
Hi: 44
Lo: 28
Partly
Sunny
FRI: Jan. 23
Hi: 47
Lo: 28
Sunny
SAT: Jan. 24
Hi: 49
Lo: 30
Mostly
Sunny
SUN: Jan. 25
Hi: 47
Lo: 34
Mostly
Cloudy
TUES: Jan. 27
MON: Jan. 26
Hi: 42
Lo: 31
Cloudy
Moon Phase:
New
Moon
0% of
Full
Hi: 49
Lo: 20
Snow
Showers
This week’s weather sponsor:
Agri Gro
FARM CENTER INC.
PHONE 270-298-3296
•Poultry House Products
•Mud Stabilization Fabrices
NK Seeds
DRY & LIQUID FERTILIZERS
•Cropseed & Chemicals •Fuel & Petroleum Products
OWNER/MANAGER - SCOTT BEDDOW
Join us for a fun filled night with
Several Big Bluegrass and Old Country Music Bands
that will be performing for a
B E N E F I T S H OW
For the late Eric (Rick) Burden’s Medical Bills
Saturday, January 24th at the
Ohio County Community Center Auditorium
Hartford, Kentucky
Admission
(SNOWDATE: SATURDAY, JANUARY 31ST
$5.00 Each
Same Time and Location)
at
the Door
Doors open at 5 p.m. - Music begins at 6 p.m.
PUBLIC
NOTICE
50 Lb. Bag
RUSSET POTATOES
9
$
If it’s not in the newspaper,
how will you know?
Zoning changes in your
neighborhood. A proposal to
increase your property taxes.
Information on how public
officials are spending your
tax dollars. These are just a
few of the topics — topics
that affect your family and
your community — local government officials are required to publish
in the local newspaper.
Your local newspaper fulfills an essential role in serving your right to
know. After all, it shouldn’t be your responsibility to know how to
look ... where to look ... when to look ... and even what to look for in
order to be informed about public information. It is the government’s
responsibility to notify you of public information, and your local
newspaper is the most accessible place to find it.
PUBLIC NOTICES IN NEWSPAPERS.
Where public information is accessible to the public.
FAMILY PACK
BONE-IN LOIN CUT
PORK CHOPS
2
$
59
LB.
95
Ea.
FAMILY PACK
T-BONE STEAKS
5
$
99
LB.
ALL PRICES
EFFECTIVE
FROM
MONDAY,
JANUARY
19, 2015
ASSORTED
BONELESS
THRU
PEPSI
CHUCK
16.9 Oz.
SUNDAY,
ROAST
6 Pack Bottles
FEBRUARY
4/$
1,
2015
LB.
4
$
99
10