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Mayfield Reunion

July 20, 2019

Mayfield High School Commons

A Time For

Scholarships

Joe Morris--4 Carolyn Sparks--5 Lon Carter Barton--6 Coach Louis McDonald--7

Tossie Thorpe--8-9 Elizabeth Carter--10 Imogene Monroe--11 Brady Smith--14-15


Give towards a MHS Scholarship Today, Tomorrow or....

Scholarships you can Give to...

Mayfield Community Foundation Murray State University Foundation

Joe Morris, page 4 Carolyn Sparks, page 5

Tossie Thorpe. pages 8-9 Coach Lewis McDonald. page 7

Any Teacher Lon Carter Barton, page 6

In Memory of...

In Honor of...

Any contribution will be graciously accepted and placed in a pool and grouped

with others to fund Community Scholarships in teachers or individuals names.

Example: The Class of ‘59 gives a scholarship in the names of those who passed away during the year.

NO AMOUNT TO SMALL!

Coming Home Again Magazines Free -- Consider giving to a Scholarship

Tossie Thorpe Books Free -- Consider giving to the Tossie Thorpe Scholarship

Checks for Joe Morris, Tossie Thorpe or any teacher or individual can be made to Mayfield Community

Foundation. Make checks for Carolyn Sparks, Coach Mac, and Lon Carter Barton to Murray

State University Foundation. Scholarships will be presented on Honors day at Mayfield High School.

Leave checks with Mel Doughty at the scholarship table.

May 5th the Mayfield Rotary Club awarded $41,750 in

scholarship monies to 70 very deserving seniors from

Mayfield High School, Graves County High School,

and Northside Christian. The awards ceremony took

place at the Independence Bank Performing Arts Center

at Graves County High School. The Rotary Club

appreciate all those individuals, organizations, and

businesses who have donated and supported our program

for our seniors.

KIWANIS CLUB

Graves County High School

Caroline Shell

2


GCHC JIMMY THOMAS

MHS CLASS OF ‘59

2019 Scholarships

Class of ‘59--JANET DRAKE JIMMY THOMAS

Isabella Noles

GCHS ANONYMOUS

Amari Kendrick

HIGDON FAMILY

Megan Vinson

BOB MCNEILLY

Carly Arant

Gene, Jake & Teena Patty

CLASS OF “59 RESPONSIBLE

Father, Adrianna & Melissa FOR 6 SCHOLARSHIP

Huston Lancaster (on left) comes from a family of Golfers. His Great Uncle

Freddie Lancaster (CLASS OF ‘59) was on the 1959 State Golf Championship

Team. Huston is shown with Grandparents, Suzette & Lanny. Lanny played

golf for MHS and in 1964 they won the region with Bubba Nall, Bobby Brown,

Johnny Barclay. Lanny coached 1976 to 2001 as the golf coach for boys and

many years coached the girls as well. O.J., Huston’s father and Jason, his uncle,

team won the region in 1990-91. O.J. in 1990 won the region and Jason came in

second. Team won by 23 strokes

Huston received the following: Honor Graduate, College Ready, Beta Club,

Murray State University--Golf, Scott Nall Golf, and Gardner Seay Golf.

3


Joe Morris

Mayfield High School

Head Football Coach

2015

4 PEAT

Since 1999

First of all I would like to thank the Mayfield Independent School

System for giving me the opportunity to be a part of the Mayfield football

program for the past 32 years.

I would like to thank all my former players. You have taught me how

to be a better man and a better coach. I would not be where I am today without

all the great young men that I have been lucky enough to coach. Thanks

for making going to work each day fun.

I would also like to thank all my assistant coaches. I have always

said that head coaches get too much credit. I have been very blessed over my

career to have coached with so many great coaches. I have learned so much

from them over my coaching career. Football is the ultimate team game and

if it was not for the help of so many great assistants over my 20 years. It has

been much fun and has been my honor, Thanks!

To all my family and friends, thanks for all your support. Thank you for your guidance and always being there

during the good times and the bad times.

I am very fortunate to be a part of one of the most successful high school football programs in the country.

The Mayfield football program is ranked 4th nationally in all-time wins. We have won 12 state Championships and 11

runner up. To be successful it takes a lot of great players, coaches, a great school system and a great community. Thanks

for allowing me to be a small part of it.

Joe Morris

PO BOX 751

Mayfield, KY

42066

Joe

Morris Scholarship

All Checks for the Joe Morris Scholarship will be made to the Mayfield Community

Foundation. Joe will determine the guidelines for the scholarship, however,

the student will be able to choose any school they want to attend. Plus the recipient

will be an athlete for Mayfield High School. All money will be kept in the Joe Morris Scholarship fund. We

are encouraging those who wish to give to the Scholarship to consider a three year pledge. Our goal is to have an

endowed scholarship as soon as possible. Let’s make this happen for JOE MORRIS!

4


Carolyn Lowe Sparks

January 31, 1936 - July 23, 2018

Carolyn Lowe Sparks, 82, passed from this life on July 23, 2018 at

Mills Health and Rehab after an extended illness.

A fifth generation descendent of the founding family of Lowes, KY,

she was born in 1936 to the late John W. and Mary Huie Lowe of Lowes.

She had fond memories and great affection for the town and its’

families.

A proud alumna of Mayfield High School, Class of ’54, and Murray

State University (’58), she remained deeply committed to her alma

maters all her life. While at MSU, she was a member of Alpha Sigma

Alpha sorority and was voted Miss Murray State by the student body.

She tirelessly served the Mayfield High School Reunion Committee and the Mayfield-Graves County Retired

Teachers Association and supported all things Mayfield Independent Schools and Murray State until prohibited

by poor health.

A faithful member of Seven Oaks Church of Christ, Carolyn was a beloved elementary teacher for twenty-seven

years, first in Mattoon, IL, then at Mayfield City Schools. She was most happy when serving others behind

the scenes, whether in her church, community or family. Possessing a quiet strength and strong work ethic,

she was a virtuous woman with a servant’s heart who taught many a lesson without saying a word.

Carolyn is survived by her husband of sixty years, Don W. Sparks, a son, Bradley Lowe (Teri) Sparks and a

daughter, Donna Carol (Marty) Moses, all of Mayfield, and a sister, Marian Lowe (Glen “Sonny”) Sears, of Lowes, KY.

Also surviving are three beloved granddaughters: Shelby Carol Moses (Jordan) Curtsinger, of Mayfield,

Logan Anne Sparks, of Lexington, KY, and Madeline Grace Moses, of Louisville, KY, and a great-granddaughter,

Anna Grace Curtsinger, of Mayfield, as well as several cousins, nieces and nephews.

Retired Murray State University Regent Don Sparks of Mayfield has established a scholarship for MSU students in

honor of his late wife, Carolyn.

The Carolyn Lowe Sparks Memorial Scholarship has been established with Don Spark’s gift to the

Murray State University Foundation. Mayfield High School graduates enrolled at MSU full-time may apply for the

$1,000-$1,500 annual scholarship to lower the cost of their Racer education, starting with the 2020-21 academic

year, according to a news release from the university. Preference will be given to students pursuing a degree leading

to a teaching certificate for any K-12 grade or subject, including learning behavior disorders/special education.

Retired Murray State University Regent Don

Sparks (front, center) of Mayfield has established a

scholarship for MSU students in honor of his late

wife, Carolyn. In the front row are their children, Brad

Sparks and Donna Sparks Moses. In the back row (from

left) are Mayfield High School counselor Lynn Henderson,

MHS principal Billy Edwards, and Jamie Haynes,

MSU’s assistant director of stewardship and donor relations.

Anyone wishing to donate to this scholarship

can contact Jamie Haynes in the office of development

by telephone at 1.877.282.0033 or 270.809.3737 or by

emailing her at jhaynes@murraystate.edu. Donations can also be made by mailing a check made out to the MSU

Foundation (please write the name of the scholarship in the memo line) and sending it to MSU Foundation, c/o

200 Heritage Hall, Murray, KY 42071. Online gifts can be made at www.murraystate.edu/giving.

5


Lon Carter Barton

Scholarship

MURRAY, Ky. — Residents of the Jackson Purchase area of far western Kentucky

with even a glancing interest in local history have probably heard the

name of Lon Carter Barton. Barton, who resided in Mayfield from the time of

his birth in 1925 until his death at the age of 80, is best known for his unofficial

role of historian for Graves County and the Purchase region.

Barton’s love of history was evidenced early on by his study at Murray

State University and later in his role as an educator in Mayfield. Fittingly, a fund

Don Sparks (left), former superintendent of the Mayfield Independent

School District, and Jim Baker, a member of the MHS Alumni

Association, presented $50,000 collected from friends and family of

the late Lon Carter Barton by the Mayfield High School Alumni Association

to Murray State University. This donation established the

Lon Carter Barton Scholarship.— MSU photo

collection that

was started several years ago by the Mayfield High School

Alumni Association to honor Barton is being transferred

to Murray State to assist qualified students in obtaining a

higher education. The MHS Alumni Association presented

a check for $50,000 to Murray State to establish the Lon

Carter Barton Scholarship.

Recipients of the new scholarship, was awarded for the

first time in the 2016-17 academic year, Student must be

full-time freshman students at Murray State or another

accredited college or university, and graduates of Mayfield

High School. Students who choose to attend a school other

than Murray State University must still apply for the scholarship

through MSU.

Family and friends of Barton began the fundraising effort

to memorialize Barton’s loving spirit and his dream of assisting

Mayfield students in the attainment of an education

that will prepare them for a career in journalism, English

or history. Barton, himself, earned a degree in English and history, with an emphasis on journalism, from Murray State in

1949. He began his long teaching career at Mayfield High School a year later in both history and Journalism classrooms.

Barton’s time in the classroom was interrupted for a year in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He also served in the

Kentucky legislature during the late 1950s and early 1960s, but he always kept up with his teaching.

On the side, Barton pursued his love of history by authoring numerous articles in The

Kentucky Encyclopedia about Mayfield, Graves County and West Kentucky, and was particularly

interested in the Civil War era in the Jackson Purchase. He narrated a two-part documentary,

A Historical Tour of Mayfield.

Barton also researched and wrote about the “KITTY League,” a Class D Minor League

baseball circuit in Kentucky, Illinois and Tennessee that was active off and on from 1903 through

1955. “KITTY” was a riff off the initials of the three states. The Mayfield Clothiers was one of

three teams from Graves County that played in the league. The team was affiliated at different

times with major league teams including the New York Giants, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis

Browns and Brooklyn Dodgers, and won the minor league title in 1936 and 1950.

Barton was an only child and never married. He died at his 150-year-old family home

—at that time was the second oldest house in Mayfield — on March 28, 2006.

Anyone wishing to donate to this scholarship can contact Jamie Haynes in the

office of development by telephone at 1.877.282.0033 or 270.809.3737 or by emailing her

at jhaynes@murraystate.edu. Donations can also be made by mailing a check made out

to the MSU Foundation (please write the name of the scholarship in the memo line) and

David Duran

2019 Recipient

sending it to MSU Foundation, c/o 200 Heritage Hall, Murray, KY 42071. Online gifts can be made at www.

murraystate.edu/giving.

6


For 30 Years

A MHS

Graduate has

received the

Coach Mac

Scholarship

Let’s Honor

Him on His

60th

Anniversary

For 31 Years,

Only on the Day

Of The Tilghman Game

Coach Mac Wore

These Red Socks

1958-1989

Barrett Henley

2019 Coach Mac Scholarship

You can give to the

Coach Mac Scholarship

By making a check to:

MSU Foundation

Mail to: Office of Development,

200 Heritage Hall, Murray, KY 42071

Contribute by Credit Card call:

270-809-6926 MSU Foundation

No minimum or maximum

As of June 30, 2017--$34,411.43 endowed portion,

$3,474.88 restricted funds available for use and curent

spendable about $8,625.24 current funds

7


Article Subitted by John Davis

$500.00 in 1922 is equivalent to $7,261.07 today!

8


Miss Tossie Thorpe--’59

This was the first M.H.S. Annual--The Mayflower,

which was made possible by Miss Tossie’s efforts and

thus the reason for the Dedication.

At the 2019 Reunion a table will be set up with some of

Tossie Thorpe’s books. They are free but encourage a

donation to the Tossie Thorpe Scholarship.

9


Miss Elizabeth Carter was a Senior who was

Vice-President of the 1921 Class, Associate Editor of

Annual. member of Chewing Gum Club, “We Chew

‘Beach Nut’.” She was Assistant Giggler in the Antique

Order of Gigglers, played Belinda in the Senior Play,

“The Spell of the Image.”

Picture of School from the Annual Below

10

Miss Elizabeth Carter--’59


Mrs. James (Imogene) Monroe

Imogene Monroe graduated from Mayfield High School in 1934.

She had Tossie Thorpe for three years and had classes with Mrs. Elizabeth

Carter and Georgia Lee Murphy. Also Brother Horton’s (long time pastor

at First Baptist Church, Mayfield) daughter Opal Horton. Mr. William Wells

taught her freshman algebra and was band director but she was not in the

band.

After graduating from Murray State in 1939 she taugh in Marshall

County at Briensburg’s one room school house, first through eigth grades.

In 1940 went to Graves County, Folsomdale with was two rooms. 1941-

1944 was an English teach at Folsomdale. 1945-47 was at Sedalia. 1946-

1952 was at Lowes and had Nancy

Scholar in her class and who is now

a

resident at Morningside. When

Lowes burned in 1952 she came

to Mayfield and taught math and

plain geomentry. Her last year to

teach was in the new high school.

Faculty picture from 1959 Annual

After her husband died in 2001 she lived by herself until 2015 when

she moved to Morningside. 2001 she worked as a pink lady at Jackson

Purchase Medical Center along with Betty Rogers and later with Jessie

Vance. The thembles on the left are part of hundreds she has collected

through the years. She has begun to give them out to her relatives.

Big100th Birthday Celebration

September 6, 2017

Jenny Wren Sims who visits Mrs. Monroe often

11


Mayfield City Schools History & Timeline

1908--Mayfield Independent City School District was established

on July 1, 1908 with the selection and meeting of its first

Board Members, organized by Mr. W.J. Webb. The first official

school year as an independent school district was the 1908-1909

school year.

Schools and their locations at this time were as follows:

Mayfield High School Location: West Walnut Street School

Opened Sept. 1908

Dunbar Colored School Location:In a home on Water Street

Independent Negro School, advised to joined with City Schools

to receive better funding from the State

Old W KY College Location: 112 West College (Current location

of Mayfield Middle) Mayfield purchased the Old West

KY College so that it would not be in competition with the high

school.It was owned by the Christian Churches.

West Ward Location: West Broadway

South Ward Location: Water Street (Between 8th and 9th)

North Ward Location: North 6th Street (Near Maplewood

Cemetary)

1909 The three “graded wards” were built in 1909 at a cost of

$3,500 each. Each one was two story, with eight classrooms, an

office and two playrooms in the basement.

Mayfield High School: Moved to Old W KY College Bldng.

West Ward: WashingtonLocation: 1201 W Broadway (behind

current building of the oldSparks ElementarySchool)

South Ward: LongfellowLocation: 112 West College (MMS

West Parking Lot)

North Ward: Lee Location: Corner of 5th and Indiana Streets

In these grade schools, grades 1-4 were on the first floor; grades

5-6, the library and the kitchen were on the second floor.

These schools were eventually torn down in the early 70’s.

The Mayfield Jaycees took bricks from the old Longfellow school

and used them in the building of the concession stand at the fairgrounds.

1921 The new Dunbar school was constructed in the south-west

part of town (assuming on the lot where the bus garage is today).

This was a two story brick building with the elementary school

on the lower level and the high school upstairs.

1925 A new stadium was built behind the high school and

dedicated on Nov. 6, 1925 at the Madisonville/Mayfield Game.

Up to this point, games were played at Cyclone Park, which was

in the far north corner of what we now know as Maplewood

Cemetary.

1927 W.J. Webb Jr. High School Constructed at 112 West College

Street. T.P. Smith Auditorium and Gymnasium for the

colored was constructed on South 12th Street by the Dunbar

School.

1955 The front section (offices and gym when closed) of Washington

Elementary (now Sparks—1201 West Broadway) was

constructed.

1956 East College, Longfellow and Lee Street schools (current

buildings) were constructed. Old Longfellow School (on current

MMS campus) was called the Wells building and turned

into the Band Building for the High School

1962 The addition of the wing of Washington/Sparks that was

closest to 18th street was added East College added PreSchool

wing Longfellow added 3rd grade wing1966. Dunbar was

closed and schools were integrated, by Court Order.

Early 70’s Old buildings from 1909 were torn down.Bricks

from the old Longfellow school (the one on College Street) were

used to build the concession stand at the fairgrounds.

1974 Mayfield High School moved to the new (and current)

building and Mayfield Middle School began in the old Webb

building. Ray Warmath was the first principal of MMS.

1975 Washington students were sent over to Lee Street School

while the library and wing that had “pod” classrooms was built.

Late 70’s Longfellow added 1st grade wing Lee Street School

was shut down and all students were moved to Washington Elementary.

Lee Street School building was sold to West KY Allied

Services.

1980-1989 Beverly Fulks (held Instructional Supervisor position

before Leanna Austin) played a major role in reorganizing

the city schools so that each building held defined graded levels

(East College-preschool/kindergarten; Longfellow-1st-3rd

grade; Washington/Sparks-4th-5th grade)

1986 Current MMS building was constructed and opened.All

that remained of old building and was remodeled was gym, auditorium

and basement.

1994 Washington Elementary was renamed Sparks Elementary

after Don W. Sparks, retired Superintendent.

2005 East College, Longfellow and Sparks Elementary are consolidated

into Mayfield Elementary Location:1004 Backusburg

Road . We started moving in on August 3rd, 2005. Students

served are grades PreK-5th.

2017 A “wing” addition was built on to the back of Mayfield

Middle School for the 5th grade. MMS began housing students

in grades 5th-8th Washington/Sparks-4th-5th grade)

Superintendents

Name

Timeline

A. C. Burton 1908-1913

M.Faughender 1913-1917

R.L. Lector 1917-1918

G. A. Young 1918-1919

D.W. Bridges 1919-1927

Kenneth R. Patterson 1927-1940

Charles I. Henry 1940-1945

J.O. Lewis 1945-1949

J. Marvin Glenn 1959-1964

J.C. Maddox 1964-1970

Don W. Sparks 1970-1994

Lonnie J. Burgett 1994-2015

Joe S. Henderson 2015-Present

Principals

North Ward/Lee Street

J.L. Duflot Timeline:1908-

Kitty Andrus Timeline:1927-1928

Jewel Hollifield Timeline:1958-1974

South Ward/Longfellow

12


R. London Timeline:1908-

Hattie Veal Timeline:1927-1959

Lucien Smith Timeline:1938-1950

Cleo B. Hendon Timeline:1956-1968

Max Workman Timeline:

Elsie Jones Timeline:

Ruth Carneal Timeline:

Cheryl Gilliam Timeline:

West Ward/Washington/Sparks

C.L. Spears Timeline:1908-

Amy Orr Timeline:1927-1942

Jimmie Collie Timeline:1949-1951

Jewel Hollifield Timeline:1951-

Elizabeth Wyatt Timeline:1959-1960

Rex Smith Timeline:1967-1988

Bobby McClain Timeline:

Phillip Forester Timeline:

Jeff Hill Timeline:

East College

Hattie Veal Timeline:1956-1957

Elizabeth Wyatt Timeline:

Jimmy Cagle Timeline:

Bobby McClain Timeline:

Phillip Forester Timeline:

Beverly Offutt Timeline:

Mayfield Elementary

Jeff Hill Timeline:2005-2017

Heather Dublin Timeline: 2017-Present

W.J. Webb Jr. High School

O.A. Mitchell Timeline:1956-1957

Bob Pay Timeline:1957-1961

Mayfield Middle School

Ray C. Warmath Timeline:1974-1988

James “Jim” Almand Timeline:1988-2004

Joe S. Henderson Timeline:2004-2006

Lisa Huddleston Timeline:2006-2008

Ricky Hayes Timeline:2008-2010

Kim Reed Timeline:2010-Present

Mayfield High School

William Pennington Timeline:1908-1911

Charles Cannon Timeline:1911-

??? Boy Timeline:

Ray Ross Timeline:-1923

Kenneth R. Patterson Timeline:1923-1927

Ray Ross Timeline:1934-1936

J.P. Glasgow Timeline:1938-1940

C.R. Uphoff Timeline:1940-1941

S.W. Douthitt Timeline:1943-1947

Harry M. Sparks Timeline:1947-1949

Raymond Herndon Timeline:1949-1951

J.O. Lewis Timeline:1951-1953

Florence Wyman Timeline:1953-1954

Paul Craig Timeline:1954-1955

Bob Fiser Timeline:1957-1959

Barkley Jones Timeline:1959-1970

Barney Thweatt Timeline:1970-1973

Ralph Colby Timeline:1973-1989

Joe David Smith Timeline:1989-1997

Steve Traynham Timeline:1997-2005

Anthony Hatchell Timeline:2005- 2011

Don Hubbard Timeline:2011-2016

Billy Edwards Timeline:2016-Present

Dunbar School Principals

J. B. Cooper Timeline:1908-1933

Fred Stiger Timeline:1938-1954

Board Offices First location known of was in the basement

of the Whittemore apartments, which were where the Regions

Bank in downtown Mayfield currently resides.It then moved to

a house at 709 South 8th Street (across from the Mayfield Middle

School).It now resides in the old East College School Building

at 914 East College Street.

This information is a work in progress at all times! If

you have any information that would be helpful to us

in collecting documentation about our district’s history,

please contact Cheri Gossett at 270-247-8299.

Cheri is the person who organized this material.

Mayfield - As I Recall

by John L. Davis

A look back at Mayfield from the

late 1800’s to the early 2000’s.

$25.00

Can be purchased at:

King’s Publisher’s Inc.,

The Good News Shoppe,

Graves County Library,

2 Chicks & A Farmer

13


Brady Smith Proud of MHS and Mayfield, KY

Valedictorian,

Distinguished, College

Governor’s Scholars Program,

Youth Leadership Representatives,

Beta Club,

STAR Student,

Paducah Teen of the Week,

Farmington Baptist Church,

Graves County Farm Bureau,

Wacker Chemical Corporaton Scholarship,

Robert Barkley Memorial,

Mayfield Police Department,

Mayfield Rotary,

AP Calculus,

AP Chemistry Award,

Woodmen of the World History Award,

14

Brady with Jake Patty

the other valedictorian

As I embark and reminisce on my time in the Mayfield Independent

School system, I can’t help but think immediately about the people

who have had some sort of influence on my life, small or large. From parents,

friends, teachers, administrators, mentors, and coaches, I cannot even

begin to thank each and every person. With this being said, it is not what I

did that made my time at Mayfield so memorable, but the things that each

and every one of these people helped me do by pushing and guiding me

that made this so special to me. Some might look at me and say, “This kid

is something special because of all he does.” (Sixteen Awards and Scholarships

listed on left plus played football, basketball, tennis and worked for

Stone’s Drug Store while attending Farmington Baptist Church on Sundays

and Wednesdays also helped out every day this year with a special elementary

education class. I say he is special -- I have worked with youth all my

life and I never meet anyone like Brady. In true fashion he is giving credit

to those who influenced him.--Mel Doughty Class of ‘59)

However, this cannot be true without the people that have been

alongside me throughout everything. The reason behind this is simply because

at Mayfield, students like me are surrounded with opportunity small

and large. I truly believe that it is what you do with these opportunities that

determine your success. This is what makes Mayfield so special.

I can look back on my high school experience and humbly say that

it was an honor to be a part of so many things that are so special. I truly

hope to one day be able to give back to my school system to begin to repay

them for everything they have done for me. Many people know me as the

long haired defensive end that wears number fifteen. However, I hope this

is not all that can be said about me. I want

to be more than someone that people admire

for my performance on the field.

I have always strived to be that person

people can look up to not only for athletic

participation, but for performance in

the classroom, participation in extracurricular

activities, but most importantly, a

good-hearted person who genuinely cares

about the people around me. It definitely

is not easy to be a balanced student, athlete,

church member, family member, and

friend. However, it is important that there

are people around you that will help you

do these things while pushing you to be

the best at them that you can be. Thankfully,

I have been blessed beyond measure

to have been surrounded by these people.

One thing I would tell young people, is to

take advantage of the opportunities

Wholesale Distributors Dairyman’s Supply Since 1925


given to you through people and all the different things that Mayfield has

to offer. They have taught me so many life lessons such as persistence, facing

adversity, trust in others, and the value of being balanced in all you do.

Take it from me. Mayfield may be a small town, but the opportunities this

city and school has to offer are simply amazing. With this being said, I cannot

begin to thank each and every person who has helped me be successful

until this point individually. However, I would like to say that Mayfield

will always hold a huge spot in my heart, and that I will one day give back

to the future students of the Mayfield School system for all it has done for

me. I can assure you that I will use these principles and values that I have

learned at Mayfield through the rest of my life as I plan to attend college

as a student at Murray State University to pursue a degree in Pre-Dental

Biology, then continue my studies in dental school. I hope to bring a great

practice back to Western Kentucky to repay what all it has given me. I am

truly blessed to have such a supportive community behind me. The Cardinals

will always be something I am grateful for and hold dearly.

All round Guy--filled with school spirit!

Left to Right--Addaley Smith who

will be a freshman playing basketball

and cheerleading. Dad, Micah, Brady

and Mom, Jen.

Stone’s Health

Mart Pharmacy

414 South 9th Street, Mayfield, KY 42066

270-247-3232

Proud of our employee

and outstanding student

Brady Smith

614 S. 6h Street,

Mayfield, KY 42066

270-247-1616

www.acreerealty.com

15


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