Latest
Another December 7 . Yes, it is another Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day next Monday. It is an internationally known metaphor for disasters such as the day Japanese aircraft mounted a sneak attack on America’s 7 fleet peacefully at anchor in Hawaii. As such the slogan is remembered to this day.
Read moreVoters in Hughes County who want to have absentee ballots mailed to them for the January 12 Special County Election should apply now, County Election Board Secretary Brandy Davis said today. Although the County Election Board can accept applications for absentee ballots until 5 p.m. on Tuesday, January 5 , Davis urged voters who want to vote by absentee ballot to apply early.
Read moreDivorce has finally hit its lowest point in 50 years, and studies show coronavirus is giving couples a renewed appreciation for each other and for marriage.
Read moreT’was the Night Before Christmas, a poem by Clement Clarke Moore The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, In hope that Saint Nicholas soon would be there….
Read more“The Black Tiger,” William Henry Twine, was born December 10, 1864 in Red House, Madison County, Kentucky to Thomas J. and Lizzie Twine. Thomas Twine, part African American and part American Indian, was a runaway slave who worked as a wheel-right and constructed wooden wagons. William’s mother Lizzie is described as a “straight born African” and a renowned baker. Often, she sold her baked goods and enticed sales by baking prizes, such as rings, for her customers to find. Soon after 1865 the Twine family moved from Kentucky to Xenia, Ohio. There, William received a formal education and graduated from Blackburn’s High School in Xenia in 1881, and soon began teaching in Richmond, Indiana. Twine later moved to Mexia, Texas, where in 1888 he passed the Texas bar exam and soon afterwards began practicing law in Groesbeck, Texas. On March 12, 1888 Twine married Mittie Almira Richardson with whom he would have six sons.
Read moreThe Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity in conjunction with the Town of Clearview sponsored a Community Thanksgiving Dinner at the Clearview Main Street Community Building on Wednesday, November 25, free to Clearview residents. The Beta Epsilon Lambda chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity of Boley members Dr. Claud Evans and Dr. Donnie Nero donated most of the funding as part of their Thanksgiving giving program. The Town of Clearview Mayor Marilyn Jackson and citizen Doretha Golden prepared meals and served the take-out dinners.
Read more