The Press-Dispatch

September 1, 2021

The Press-Dispatch

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Phone: 812-354-8500 Fax 812-354-2014 E-mail: ads@pressdispatch.net John Heuring Ad Manager 812-789-3671 Pam Lemond Ad Consultant 812-354-8500 Cindy Petty Ad Consultant 812-664-2359 Fall Home Improvement is a subject that many homeowners are concerned with during this time of year. Many homeowners put off their spring and summer projects until later. And now, "later" has finally arrived. The Press-Dispatch will publish a special section targeted to homeowners. It will be published Wednesday, September 29. These sections will be in modular units on full-size pages. Add the Size Price Star-Times Full page $570.00 $409.00 3/4 page $419.00 $307.00 2/3 page $386.00 $273.00 1/2 page $299.00 $204.00 1/3 page $218.00 $136.00 1/4 page $165.00 $102.00 1/6 page $139.00 $78.00 1/12 page $79 $39.00 Deadline is Wednesday, September 22. Repeat youR ad on oct. 6 at half pRice. FREE pRocess coloR is with youR full-page ad $ 70 VALUE Fall Improvement & For 7 weeks, starting November 2, you may run a 2 col. x 3" ad for ONLY $49/week Price includes publication in both papers for double the exposure! That means for all 7 weeks, you invest only $343. Shopping with The Press-Dispatch & Star- Times is designed for small businesses that want to get their message out during the coming holiday seasons. With Summer behind us, the holidays will be here before you know it. Publication Dates: November 2, 9, 16, 23 & 30 • December 7 & 14 Call us today! 812-753-3553 or 812-354-8500 e-mail: ads@sgstartimes.com or ads@pressdispatch.net Shopping 2 02 1 W i t h Add Dec. 21 to catch last minute shoppers for $49 The Press-Dispatch 812-354-8500 | www.pressdispatch.net *By enrolling in the Birthday Club, you agree to have your name, town and birth- day, or the person's name and town and birthday of whom you are enrolling, printed in e Press-Dispatch on the week in which the birthday occurs. Joining is easy! Visit pressdispatch.net/birthday or send your full name, address, city, state, zip code, phone number and birthdate to birthdayclub@pressdispatch.net.* Each week, a list of birthdays will be published in the paper! You could win a FREE PRIZE from area businesses and a three-month subscription to e Press-Dispatch. MUST RE-ENROLL EVERY YEAR! Join the One WINNER is drawn at the end of each month The Press-Dispatch Wednesday, September 1, 2021 A-11 Court Report TRAFFIC AND MISDEMEANORS Pike County Circuit Court Adam E. Lemond charged with disor- derly conduct. Anthony D. Lemond charged with dis- orderly conduct. Terry Allen Lee charged with operat- ing a vehicle with an ACE of at least .08 but less than .15. Montanna Michael Halterman charged with invasion of privacy. Jacob Scott Powell charged with oper- ating a vehicle with an ACE of at least .08 but less than .15. Brent Dupuy charged with possession of marijuana. Kayla Knight charged with possession of marijuana. CIVIL Pike County Circuit Court Professional and Business Collections sues Lowell Truitt on complaint. Professional and Business Collections sues Tori Truelove on complaint. LVNV Funding, LLC sues Kevin Rich- ardson on complaint. Joshua Sanders sues Rachel Rene Sanders for dissolution of marriage. SMALL CLAIMS Pike County Circuit Court Deric Steward and Crystal Norrick sues Dana Benton on complaint. INFRACTIONS Pike County Circuit Court Quran F. Johnson charged with speed- ing, exceeding 70 mph. Robert A. Tucker charged with speed- ing, exceeding 55 mph. Xander B. Hinkle charged with speed- ing, exceeding 55 mph. Brian E. Ridener charged with speed- ing, exceeding 70 mph. Jorge Alberto Guerrero Vidales charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Joseph C. Branson charged with speed- ing, exceeding 70 mph. Dakota M. Koontz charged with speed- ing, exceeding 70 mph. Zachary Ossip charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Brittany A. Luman charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Brooke C. Blackburn charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Justin Denton charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Kasey D. Doerner charged with disre- garding stop sign. Kristen Kelly Spencer charged with child restraint system violation. Dennis M. Garwood charged with speeding. Trent M. Romans charged with speed- ing, exceeding 55 mph. Emma Marie Danis charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Praneeth Reddy Parne charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Andrea S. Edwards charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Wesley C. Allison charged with speed- ing, exceeding 55 mph. Sara M. Budd charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Kasey K. Cornelius charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Jessica C. Catt charged with speeding. Haley E. Piatkowski charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Morgan E. Swallows charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Kaelie M. Anthony charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Amber D. Jernigan charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Osiel Perez II charged with seatbelt vi- olation. Darrell G. Cox charged with speeding, exceeding 55 mph. Bryden J. Saunders charged with speeding, exceeding 70 mph. Jennifer S. Alcorn charged with speed- ing, exceeding 55 mph. Ryan J. Hertel charged with unlawful possession of tobacco, e-liquid or an elec- tronic cigarette. Miranda J. Caskey charged with dis- tracted driving. Amanda J. Scott charged with speed- ing, exceeding 30 mph. Olivia J. Brawdy charged with speed- ing, exceeding 70 mph. Economic growth slowed. Now the economy grows at half the rate it once grew. Japaridze thinks Georgia re-embraced big government because "people did not actu- ally understand" why Geor- gia's economy improved. Years of Soviet propaganda kept people from learning about markets. He says that mentality must change for Georgia to develop. Either "you want to take responsibility about your life, or you are fine with being a slave and having some kind of a master who will provide you with your needs." He's right, but I ques- tion whether "years of Sovi- et rule" are what made the difference. There's plenty of hostility toward free mar- kets among privileged Amer- icans who've never heard So- viet propaganda. The overall lesson from Georgia, says Asly: "Govern- ment should be very small. It should just regulate the min- imum." John Stossel is author of "Give Me a Break: How I Ex- posed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media." SOUL Continued from page 10 LESSONS Continued from page 10 ter. His father had attended missionary school, and his parents were very active in the religious community. Sta- lin attended a church school and later attended seminary. Both men swapped their Bi- ble for Karl Marx's "Das Ka- pital" and the rest, they say, was history. Stalin said, "Education is a weapon whose effects depend on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed." "Ideas are more powerful than guns. We would not let our enemies have guns, why should we let them have ideas." In the Soviet Union, child rearing would not be left to irrespon- sible parents and an archa- ic church. Children are cit- izens of the state and must be properly indoctrinated by the state and its political commissars. The creation of a new socialist state begins at the schoolhouse. A California teacher is un- der fire after she posted a vid- eo admitting that she encour- aged her students to pledge allegiance to a gay pride flag after she removed the Amer- ican flag from her classroom. The teacher posted a video on social network saying, "I always tell my class, stand if you feel like it, don't stand if you feel like it, say the words if you want, you don't have to say the words." Her video goes on and she says, "Ex- cept for the fact that my room does not have a flag." She re- moved the flag during the pandemic "because it made me uncomfortable." When asked by a student where they should look during the pledge of allegiance since there is no American flag in the classroom she replies, 'We do have a flag in the class that you can pledge your alle- giance to. And he like, looks around and goes, 'Oh, that one? '" and points to the "gay pride flag." Thomas Jefferson was a champion of public educa- tion. He believed that indi- vidual and national freedom and liberty were dependent upon a well-educated popu- lace and a free press. A free press means that news out- lets aren't sold to politicians, and education means that no one is illiterate. He said, "Where the press is free, and every man able to read, all is safe." Later he wrote in a let- ter to the Marquis de Lafay- ette, "The only security of all is in a free press." The India- napolis IndyStar newspaper has on its masthead, "Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty" 2Cor 3:17. Pray for more Spirit. clusion of religious principle. "It is substantially true that virtue or morality is a neces- sary spring of popular govern- ment." Over the last 20 years, as a nation, we have moved further from these truths. Under Presi- dent Joe Biden's leadership, we have politics, secularism and moral relativism on steroids. Let's understand that we will have no clarity abroad un- til we get our house in order at home. Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and host of the week- ly television show "Cure Ameri- ca with Star Parker." SOCIALIST Continued from page 10

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