St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.
St. Paul hosted the 53rd Pioneer Days on Friday and Saturday with live music, arts and crafts, children’s games and the always-popular parade. A chicken lunch following the parade helped raise money for the St. Paul Schools’ Parent-Teacher-Student Organization. Covid-19 forced Pioneer Days to be canceled the past two years. The fun kicked off Friday with the annual dance at the newly refurbished bandstand. St. Paul Mayor Nina Selz on Saturday said a large crowd was on hand Friday night. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission brought its mobile aquarium, which was filled with a variety of fish found in the state. Food trucks offered a variety of treats. The St. Paul Public Library had a book sale on Saturday. The parade began at the community center, then proceeded to Highway 16, then east to Locust Street and back to the start. The parade featured classic cars and trucks, King and Queen W.J. Combs and Glenda Baker, horses, Boy Scouts, the Huntsville High Marching Band and more. Gary Whittmore, chairman of Pioneer Days, Inc., is recovering from an accident. Whittmore served as grand marshal in the parade. The parade concluded with the St. Paul Volunteer Fire Department’s new fire truck.