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Kzrs Hamilton County to start charging city for tax collections Contributed photo / Guy William O Connell, 44, of Rhea County, Tennessee. A Rhea County, Tennessee, man charged in the August death of a Bradley County woman will be returned to Tennessee next week from a Douglas County, Kansas, jail to face charges of murde <a href=https://www.airmaxplus.es>air max 96</a> r and abuse of a corpse.Guy William O Connell, 44, is still bein <a href=https://www.nikeair.fr>nike air max</a> g held in the Douglas County Jail on a fugitive-from-justice warrant stemming from an indictment issued by the Rhea County grand jury in October, authorities said, but he ll be back in Tennessee sometime after the New Year s holiday weekend.O Connell is accused in the death of 34-year-old Amber Renee Monday of Bradley County. Contributed photo / Amber Renee Monday O Connel <a href=https://www.salomons.com.es>salomon</a> l initially waived his extradition, then withdrew his waiver, then in another hearing in Kansas earlier this month decided not to fight extradition to Tennessee to face the charges after all, 12th Judicial District Attorney General Mike Taylor said. They notified us that we could come and get him, Taylor said Monday. An extradition hearing set Dec. 1 had been postponed a couple of weeks when O Connell informed the Kansas court he no longer planned to fight extradition to Tennessee.Rhea County Sheriff Mike Neal said Monday that arrangements have been made to transport O Connell back to Tennessee in the coming days.Taylor said the case will still be slowed after O Connell gets back to Tennessee because of Supreme Court Wjac Tennessee Democrats blame Republican supermajority for election ballot foul-up By Andy DiffenderferCorrespondentCHICKAMAUGA, Ga. - Visitors to downtown Chickamauga on Saturday were able to step back in time twice, as two festivals celebrated the town as it was during the 1860s and the early 1900s.For the firs <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.fr>stanley cup</a> t Chickamauga Yesteryear Festival, downtown merchants opened their doors and dressed in period clothes. The annual War Between the States Day brought to life the sights and sounds of the Civil War. I ve had several customers say they feel they are actually in a town from 100 years ago, said Andrea Cleckler, owner of Le Frou Frou antique store downtown. It s exactly what we were aiming for as merchants. Antique cars lined one side of Gordon Street, while artisans and crafters, including a blacksmith and yarn spinner, plied their wares. An afternoon parade featured living historians and marching bands from Gordon Lee and Ridgeland high schools. I opened the doors and t <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley tumbler</a> hey flooded in here, said Joseph Oliver, owner of the Bare Walls antique, art and frame gallery. This is what Chickamauga is about, said Angie Davis, owner of the Oh! Fiddle-Dee Shoppe, an antiques and gift store. We as merchants, we want it to feel relaxed, not hustle-bustle. Everyone is laid back and just enjoying themselves. War Between the States Day attracted about 18 living historians, said Chickamauga City Manager John Culpepper. Cannon firings, exhibits, demonstrat <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley mugs</a> ions and other activities commemorated the Battle of Chickamauga on Sept. 19-20, 1863.Tour host Susan Veazey sa
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