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Two things are scheduled to happen on Saturday. Let’s hope the weather cooperates so both events can have good results.

Tye Rudolph, president of Madison County Youth Baseball, has an extra reason to be excited for this year’s games: His daughter will be playing for the first time.

The Huntsville Eagles won four of five games played last week during Spring Break in Tampa, Fla.

Huntsville participated in the 2023 Siloam Springs 7th Grade Relays on Monday.

A crew with Hook Mechanical in Huntsville installs plumbing for new apartments being built near Madison 8662.

The Huntsville Planning Commission on Monday approved edits to the standards for culverts, aprons and driveways for all new commercial and private construction. The changes will be forwarded to the Huntsville City Council for consideration.

Plans for Madison County and the City of Huntsville to begin using solar power remain in place, despite new legislation that would lower the wholesale rate that solar users get when selling power back to power providers.

The 2023 Madison County Farmers Market will open on Saturday on Polk Square in downtown Huntsville.

Cory and Jenny Burbridge began work last fall on what they call a “primitive oasis” along War Eagle Creek north of Huntsville.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints delivered 19,877 pounds of food to Open Arms Pantry in Huntsville last week.

Charles Kay Grubbs, 83, of Huntsville, passed away Saturday, March 18, 2023, at Willard Walker Hospice, Fayetteville.

It is with heavy hearts, we announce that John H. Thompson traded his home on earth for a heavenly home on March 15 from complications of interstitial lung disease and congestive heart failure.

Ryan Dean Rogers, 21, of Fayetteville, Ark., passed away on March 15, 2023, in Springfield, Mo.

The legislature has advanced a long list of bills to prevent voter fraud and protect the integrity of elections.

An interesting discussion took place Monday night at the Madison County Quorum Court meeting.

Government trying to control your money Dear Editor: The best way to voluntarily forfeit the rest of your Constitutionally defined God-given rights is to relax and ignore the roll-out of Central …

The Arkansas House last week approved a proposed law that could make school and public librarians open to criminal liability for the distribution of “obscene” content. Seven Republicans joined 18 House Democrats in voting against Senate Bill 81, which I wrote about in last week’s edition of The Record. If the bill becomes law, local quorum courts could actually be the ones to decide what materials appear in libraries. Rep. DeAnn Vaught, a Republican from Horatio, voted against the bill, calling it “government overreach.”

Huntsville rallied for six runs in the final inning on Monday to down the Lutheran South Lancers of St. Louis 9-6 in Tampa, Fla.

Ozark downed Huntsville 11-2 on March 15 in nonconference softball action at Mitchusson Park.

Elkins hosted 14 visiting teams for the Elks Junior Relays on March 14. A senior high meet in Elkins on March 16 was rained out.

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