Wilma A. Gulley

Wilma A. Gulley passed away at Parkway Manor in Marion, Illinois at 5:45 am October 16, following a brief battle with cancer.

Wilma was born at home in Jefferson County the daughter of William H. Grahlherr and Juastina Rhynes Grahlherr on March 21, 1934. Her mother Juastina, passed away when Wilma was only 5 months old and her Grandparents Walter and Nellie Rhynes raised her at the adjoining farms of her father William(Bill) Grahlherr and her favorite Uncle Ernie Rhynes, who all preceded her death. She was married for almost 60 years to Louis Alan Gulley who also preceded her death.

She worked in the abstracting business her entire adult life in Jefferson and Franklin Counties and was brilliant at the job.

Wilma is survived by her two brothers Fred Grahlherr of Texico, IL and Bill Grahlherr of St. Louis, Mo, and one sister Judy Grahlherr Grisley of Marion, Illinois, three first cousins Janice Rhynes Pigge of Mt. Vernon, IL, Cheryl

Rhynes Conner of Ina, IL and Nancy Rhynes Webb of Sesser, IL. and many more second cousins. She had been a resident at Heritage Woods Assisted Living in Benton for the past 4 years, where she leaves her best friends, Ina May, Francis, Ruth and Elsa.

Wilmas wish for graveside funeral services will be held at the Masonic Oddfellows Cemetery in Benton on Saturday, Oct. 19 at 10:30 am with the Rev. Victor Long officiating, Eulogy by Wendell Presley and arrangements provided by Morton & Johnston Funeral Home of Benton, IL.

There will be no visitation, those attending the service are asked to meet under the cemetery tent shortly before 10:30. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the charity of your choice.

For more information or to send online condolences please visit www.mortonjohnstonfuneralhome.com

Pastor Rick Warren: Look to the Needs of Others

Look to the Needs of Others
By Rick Warren

“Don’t be obsessed with getting your own advantage. Forget yourselves long enough to lend a helping hand” (Philippians 2:4 The Message).

The starting point for all happiness is the moment you shift the focus away from yourself. If all you think about is yourself, you’re going to be a pretty miserable person. If you truly want to be happy in life, you have to care about the needs of those around you.

Paul cites Timothy as an example of this in Philippians 2:20-21: “There is no one like Timothy for having a real interest in you; everyone else seems to be worrying about his own plans and not those of Jesus Christ” (TLB).
Most people don’t get up in the morning and spend energy thinking about how others are doing. Most people are only concerned with their own problems. And that’s why most people are unhappy with their lives!
If you want to be one of those rare, unselfish people, change your focus. You have to shift your focus away from yourself and toward other people. It’s not something that comes naturally; you have to learn to do it.
On many occasions, I’ve missed the needs of people around me that I love because I wasn’t paying attention. I wasn’t taking an interest in them. I hadn’t shifted the focus from me toward the others in the room. Because I wasn’t looking out for their needs, I missed chances to help. And that grieves me a lot.
Instead of grieving missed opportunities, be intentional about looking away from yourself and toward the needs of others, where you’ll find happiness in serving God through serving others.
PLAY today’s audio teaching from Pastor Rick
Talk It Over

What distractions keep you from focusing on the needs of others?
How have you benefited from another person’s interest in helping you with your needs?
What needs have you missed in someone’s life because you were too busy or focused on your own problems? What can you do today to shift your focus toward helping that person?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Nick Hill’s weekly press conference

CARBONDALE, Ill. — Southern Illinois head coach Nick Hill met with the media on Monday morning as the Salukis (2-4, 0-2) prepare to play No. 18-ranked Youngstown State (4-2, 0-2) on Saturday at 2 p.m. The last four meetings between the schools have been decided by a touchdown or less. Saturday is SIU’s Homecoming and Hall of Fame game, in which eight Class of 2019 Hall of Fame inductees will be recognized during the game.

Opening statement.
Looking back and watching the film against Illinois State, we had our opportunities to win the football game and we didn’t get it done. We talked about at halftime in the locker room, somebody had to make a play. We didn’t necessarily start it the right way when we fumbled the first kickoff, but our defense responded, they get a stop and miss the field goal, and we score on our first play of the second half. Then we hit the onside kick. Really, at that point, is where you need to take over the game, have full momentum of the football game. We weren’t able to, on that ensuing drive, to go and score. We continue to compete, but we’re not in this thing to be in close games. We have to go and finish games and win.

I know Youngstown’s in a similar situation. They’ve had two tough games against two tough opponents, one similar opponent in South Dakota State. It will be two teams that desperately need a win that compete on Saturday. Looking forward to the challenge and I know our guys are going to be ready. It’s a resilient group that has good leadership and I know they’ll be ready to play.

On Youngstown State.
They’re always going to play solid on defense. Coach (Bo) Pelini does a great job. Since I’ve been here, in 2015 the game went to overtime, and the last three years have been one-possession games. Last year, 17-14, felt like we let one slip away there. The year before that was 21-20 and we had the ball with two minutes to go around midfield and we got a strip sack and they went down the field and scored. Each year has come down to the last possession of the game, they’ve been low-scoring, grind-it-out type of games. They’re always going to run the football and they’re always going to play great defense. It comes down to who makes the least amount of mistakes. Winning and losing comes down to doing the fundamental things right. You can scheme up some plays or scheme up a blitz and make a play, but at the end of the day, you have to tackle well, you have to block, you have to throw and catch, you gotta get open, break tackles on offense. That’s what it will come down to on Saturday.

On the play of the defense.
I’m encouraged by the way they’ve been playing. To go from a pretty good defense, to a good defense, to a great defense, those drives that we can eliminate some of those mistakes, we can be even better. That’s what Coach (Jason) Petrino and that staff continue to coach and preach and hound on. We gotta have a great week of practice. I think Malik Haynes has played the best football he’s played since he’s played here. Cody Crider is playing at a high level. We’re rotating some guys up front, we have a couple guys banged up, and it’s really just next-man-up. In this league you have to play great defense, and they’ve done that. They’ve played good enough for us to win the football game the last two weeks.

On the protection problems versus Illinois State.
We got sacked nine times last week. We felt four of them were really on the quarterback. The first sack in the red zone on third down, just slid the protection the wrong way. They brought a field pressure and we should just slide right into it, have enough guys to protect it, and we take a sack. Whether it’s setting the protection wrong, sometimes you have to learn to fight another day when there’s not a play there to be made, sometimes you have to throw it in the stands. Some of them, we’re just getting beat. There were too many of them, regardless. We had 14 third downs and seven of them were 3rd-and-10+. We had a 3rd-and-24 in there, a 3rd-and-18 in there — not high percentage, where people can pin their ears back and come after you. It’s a collective thing. Those sacks are on everybody and we’ve got to get it fixed. It’s our job as coaches to put them in better positions.

On quarterback Stone Labanowitz’s injury rehab.
Stone practiced yesterday. He’s not be cleared to play in a game yet. He did the non-contact portion of practice but had his pads on. It’s really day-to-day with him on how he feels, as far as really pushing the ball down the field. He looked good with the intermediate stuff, but he’s still really probably a week or two away from being able to play in a game. You still have to take hits and take a pounding. He’s definitely on the trend upward.

On the importance of positive plays on early downs.
We’ve had too many negative plays. We had eight plays for minus-114 yards in that game, whether it be penalties, sacks or throws behind the line of scrimmage where we didn’t get a block on the perimeter and got tackled for minus yards. You aren’t going to win any games with those numbers. We’ve had a couple of penalties to start drives, so now you’re 1st-and-15, 2nd-and-15. It’s a little bit of everything. I have complete confidence we’re going to get it figured out. We just have to take ownership, (don’t) start pointing fingers, we all have to do our job better.

On wide receiver Sam Bonansinga.
He’s always been a consistent guy. Sam’s going to be where he’s supposed to be, when he’s supposed to be there. He’s continuing to get more confidence and we have confidence in him. He’s been doing it for a long time, he’s the smartest guy in the room. He’s a junior on the field, but he’s applied to medical schools, has a few interviews coming up. He’s a really smart kid, good football player and has had a really good career here.

On the quarterback situation when Labanowitz is healthy.
We have to win. Going into this week and this gameplan, Karé (Lyles) is our starting quarterback. Stone’s done some good things, he was our opening day starter. We need Stone to come back and compete, get into practice and get in a rhythm. At this point, it’s not a quarterback competition. Karé’s our starter and will be our starter this week.

Labor officials urge farmers to slow down amid harvest rush

The narrow window for farmers to get their crops out of the fields is open in Illinois and state officials are reminding operators to slow down or risk injuries.

Here’s a link to the story at Illinois News Network.

Cardinals starting to look like a team that knows it’s over

WASHINGTON — In hindsight, it was fitting that the Nationals called upon professional boxing announcer Michael Buffer to perform his iconic, “Let’s get ready to rumble,” introduction before Game 3 of the National League Championship Series.

Here’s a link to the column at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Op-Ed: Springfield response to capital bill corruption: A new coat of paint

Illinois drivers paid an extra $100 million in gas taxes this July, according to new state reporting. That’s because Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a doubling of the state’s gas tax to fund an infrastructure package. And the hike took effect July 1.

Here’s a link to the editorial at Illinois News Network.

Sen. Rand Paul: If socialists can’t find a crisis, they’ll create one

Most socialist governments rise up claiming to be the solution to a widespread economic disaster, such as peasants starving while corrupt leaders wage pointless wars. However, today’s socialists have to overcome the longest economic expansion in American history.

Here’s a link to the editorial at Fox News.

Editorial: The real Ukraine scandal is US cash for gas — It involves the Bidens and a growing list of Dems

Joe Biden hit back at allegations over his son, Hunter, saying there was nothing corrupt about the firing of that Ukrainian prosecutor. But that is a total dodge.

Here’s a link to the editorial at Fox News.

Illinois drives awareness of cyber protection during Cyber Security Month

Having a strong password is the first step to protecting online accounts, the state’s Chief Information Security Officer said.

Here’s a link to the story at Illinois News Network.

Poll: Six in 10 Illinoisans consider leaving state

Six in ten Illinoisans have thought about becoming ex-Illinoisans in the last year, according to a September poll conducted for the University of Illinois at Springfield.

Here’s a link to the story at Illinois News Network.

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