 Appalachian Wireless now has new forward pay pricing where you can pay up front and get the data and features you desire. Five gigabytes of data just $39.99, unlimited just $79.99, better service, bigger savings. That's today's Appalachian Wireless. With thousands of people set to descend upon downtown Pikeville for hillbilly days, there's an opportunity for festival goers to shower blessings upon those most in need. Buried in the hillbilly days festivities are the Pikeville blessing boxes that provide free food to those in need. Pikeville 9-1-1 director Paul Maynard says the boxes typically run dry in the middle and latter part of the month. It seems like at the first of the month the blessing box tend to stay a little fuller than towards the end, and it could be just a question of people run short at the end of the month and they're having to use them a lot more. Maynard said with the scores of festival goers coming to town for hillbilly days, there's an opportunity to fill the city's blessing boxes. If we could get people coming to the festival, just bringing in one item, and it doesn't necessarily have to be food. It could be toller trees. It could be several different things that people may need out there. If people coming to the festival, if we could just get one out of every 10, one out of every 20, one out of every 50, could just bring in one item. These blessing boxes would be filled up and people that you could use them will have that opportunity. We have one here obviously at the police station, it's right at the front door. There's one located at the Wesleyan Church on Hamley Boulevard just before you get to Lorraine Street, there's one located on the bypass at the Church of God, and there's also one located at Grace Fellowship on Woolford Street. Sealed non-perishable food items are accepted at the city's blessing boxes. Toiletries and other items are also accepted and can be dropped off at any of Pikeville's four blessing boxes, even during the hillbilly day's festivities. It'll make a difference in somebody's life out there that needs the food. In downtown Pikeville, Chris Anderson, EKB News.