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Elect

Fred Nichols
Franklin County Judge
I promise to bring the Right Change to the County Judges Office.
- I will be a full-time County Judge with no outside business.
- I oppose nepotism, I will not employ any of my family.
- I will have an efficient and professional office opened to the public.
- I will expect efficiency and accountability in the road department.
- I will secure state and federal grants.
- I will support senior citizens, youth, veterans and rural fire depart-
ments.
- I will insure transparency and accountability in county government.
- I will partner with organizations, community and political leaders
for the economic advancement of our county.
- I will reflect the values and principles of citizens of Franklin County.
If you will give me the honor to serve as your next County Judge, I
promise to bring the Right Experience, the Right Education and the
Right Leadership to the County Judges office.
Please vote for me, FRED NICHOLS, in the Republican primary
May 20.
Thank you in advance for your support.
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Does your farm cash flow
need help to make ends
meet?
Do you have a son or daughter
graduating from high school or
college who wants to stay on the
farm and you need to increase the
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KIARA MEDLOCK, a student at the Ozark Alternative
School, is shown receiving a Certificate of Achievement
for successfully completing her language assignment. Judy
Council makes the presentation.
Jethro News
By Kendall Frazier
Students attend FBLA Conference
The Middle Level Chapter
of Future Business Leaders
from Ozark Junior High at-
tended the District 1 Spring
Leadership Conference with
22 schools in attendance. The
Conference was held at Van
Buren Fine Arts Center on
May 7.
Three guest speakers at-
tended, Champ Williams, Don
Bailey and Mark Travis. They
taught us to Never Give Up
and to not look down on fail-
ure, to just keep moving for-
ward.
The members placing in
the top five of their events
were: first place winners: Lexi
McClellan, tabulations;
Danielle Wheeler, three-
minute timings; Lauren
Woolsey, job interview;
Danika Sanders, keyboarding
applications I, and second in
state, National recognition.
Second place winners:
Morgan Wilson, manuscripts;
Jennyfer Gallegos, Hannah
Johnson and Holly Parrish,
desktop publishing, Ozark
Chapter, Leukemia & Lym-
phoma Society.
Third place winners: Harla
Troub, spreadsheets; Rebec-
ca Wheeless, intro to busi-
ness communications, fifth in
state.
Fourth place winners:
Maddie Orrick, career explo-
ration; Shyann Willis, Chelsea
Howe, Cierra Wachob,
website development.
Fifth place winners: Logan
Chambers, creed; Jordan
Flanary, intro to parliamentary
procedure; chapter, sweep-
stakes.
- - Ilianlee Holman
Down Memory Lane
by Clydene Overbey
Living down that old dead
end dirt road as I grew up was
a great childhood. We were
happy, we had most every-
thing we needed and some of
what we wanted.
A smell like pinto beans
cooking can transport me back
in time and open up the win-
dows to my youth. I can see
Mama standing at the stove
stirring the beans. I can see
me as I stand on a box to reach
the cabinet as Mama taught
me to make corn bread. I still
make it the same way today. I
loved to cook then and I still
love it today. Stuff we cooked
then was mostly home-grown.
Not much store bought
things. I long for a dinner
eaten off the table sitting
across from my Daddy like I
used to.
I see Daddy mowing the
lawn with that old wooden
push mower or maybe plow-
ing the garden with Ol Dixie. I
love to tag along and help
him feed the chickens, horse,
pig and cow down in the barn.
I look up and I see Brenda
running across the pasture
and I run to meet her. I see
Norman and Paul climbing the
trees in the yards or along the
lane that connects the two
homes. I see Auntie drawing
water from the well that is way
down by the RR tracks or
maybe drawing from our well
to give the cow, Old Pet, a
drink.
I see us walking to Hall
Parks or Keys store with
maybe a nickel or maybe not,
for ourselves. Sometimes we
bring back something Mama
has sent us to get.
Lying in bed on cold
mornings listening to the
voices of Mama and Daddy. I
cant hear what they are say-
ing, but the soft buzz of the
beloved voices rings in my
ears. I smell coffee brewing
and bacon frying just before
one of them comes to my room
and tells me to Get up now!
I just snuggle down in the
covers and lay there until Im
told more firmly to Get up
right now and I say, I am
up.
I see Mama rocking my
baby brother Norman while
she feeds him. She is trying to
get him to sleep and Im stand-
ing on the wooden rockers
jabbering until she tells me,
Hush, Clydene.
Sometimes I get my toes
rocked on, scream out and
Norman starts crying.
We play ball in the pasture
in front of Brendas house. We
need to watch because Ol
Smokey is in there and he is a
mean ol thing.
So many memories can
materialize in my mind by a
smell, a sound, and a vision
and Im back there in my child-
hood as a skinny little kinky-
headed girl. I become that girl
again. She is right here inside
my mind and Im hanging on
to her as tight as I can.
Sometimes I look in a mir-
ror and think, Who in the
world is that ol wrinkled up
prune? Where the heck did
that smooth faced, black
haired, skinny little girl go? In
my heart Im still that girl
growing up. Hey, Im still
here, I want to shout at that
dad-burned mirror. Stop lying
to me, come on now, that aint
me.
It doesnt have to be me
that I see there in the mirror. I
can be that girl again anytime
I want to if I keep her alive,
sure nuff can. So there you ol
mirror. I dont have to listen
to you. That girl was lively, no
aches and pains, no worries
either. Well, by golly, Im 69
and Ive earned the right to
be a girl again. I can certainly
do it as long as I dont lose
the desire. I love taking a trip
down memory lane once in a
while. It is so refreshing and I
often need to be refreshed.
2 Peter 3:9: The Lord is
not slack concerning his
promise, as some men count
slackness; but is longsuffering
to us-ward, not willing that
any should perish, but that all
should come to repentance.
I hope all the mothers had
a Happy Mothers Day!
The annual Campbell Fam-
ily Reunion was held Satur-
day, May 3, at the Jethro Com-
munity Building. It was great
seeing everyone and enjoying
all the delicious food.
After the reunion, Uncle
Leroy Campbell and I went to
the old Jones/Drakes farm to
search for the lost cemetery
that I have been searching for.
Tony Contreras and I went
camping near Campbell Cem-
etery on Friday and Saturday
(May 9 & 10) to hike the area
hoping to locate the cemetery
on the old George Jones and
Drakes Farm (between
Campbell Cemetery and
Milton Ford). We hiked from
Hamm Ford to Campbell Cem-
etery and had no luck finding
the cemetery. I spoke to Joe
Bond on the phone and he
thought it was northeast of the
Drake barn. I also called Ruth
White Moore of Pasadena,
Texas, to ask if she had any
additional information that
would help me locate the cem-
etery. If you have any infor-
mation regarding the cem-
etery, contact me. You can call
or text me at 479-209-2971;
write me at 15618 Camp Newell
Road, Ozark, AR 72949; or e-
mail me at Kfrazier72949@yah-
oo.com.
Mary Ann (Owens) Walker
passed away on Tuesday,
May 6. Visitation was Wed-
nesday, May 7, 6 8 p.m. at
Shaffer Funeral Home.
Graveside service was Thurs-
day, May 8, 2 p.m. at Oak Ridge
Cemetery. Mary Ann was the
daughter of Johnathan and
Cindy Jane (Campbell) Owens.
Cindy was a sister of my late
grandfather, Sammie Camp-
bell.
Ellis and Frances
Whitesell of Eudora, Kan.,
and Duane Owens of New
Mexico spent Wednesday
thru Saturday with Fay and
Rose Campbell.
Darrell and Ella Tincy
(Whitesell) Thrasher of Kan-
sas spent those days with
Ellas sister and brother-in-law,
Aldan and Wilma Jean
(Whitesell) Brumley.
We took my mother,
Loretta Frazier, and my two
grandmothers, Fay Campbell
and Wanda Barnes, to eat
Mothers Day lunch at the fair
building on Sunday, May 11.
Those attending were Fay and
Rose Campbell, Wanda
Barnes, Mike, Loretta, Duane,
Terri, Austin, Bethany, Isaac
and Kendall Frazier, Tony and
Alanna Contreras and Joyce
Aldridge.
May 12 marked 13 years
since my grandfather, Elbert
Pug Frazier, passed away.
Happy Birthday to An-
thony Boen, May 6; Cody
Jones, May 6; Colby Jones,
May 6; Lenona Graham, May
18; and Haley Tucker, May 18.
Page 22 - - THE SPECTATOR, Ozark, Ark., Wednesday, April 30, 2014

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