Monday, October 1, 2012

Two sentenced in Circuit Court

On September 27, 2012 the following defendant(s) plead guilty or were found guilty and sentenced by Judge James K. Journey

Defendant: David Mealman
DOB: 08-02-1982
From: Nevada, MO
Charge: Probation violation original charge possession of a controlled substance
Sentence: 5 years Department of Corrections

Defendant: David Mealman
DOB: 08-02-1982
From: Nevada, MO
Charge: Stealing
Sentence: 4 years Department of Corrections

Defendant: Gerald Jones
DOB: 01-23-1963
From: Butler, MO
Charge: Probation violation original charge driving while intoxicated
Sentence: 4 years Department of Corrections

Time change for Butler JH volleyball tonight...

The Butler Jr. Hi Volleyball game at Pleasant Hill this evening will begin at 6:00 p.m.

-FM 92 the Bullet

The black walnuts in your back yard are healthy

From Tammy Roberts, Nutrition and Health Education Specialist, Missouri Extension office

 It’s that time of year when walnuts will start dropping off their trees. Picking these walnuts up to sell can be a great money maker but don’t forget that you can actually eat those nuts. Black walnuts are a tasty, healthy addition to your diet.

The nuts aren’t quite ready to eat when they come off the tree. The green (or brown) outer hull of the walnut must be removed to reveal the shell of the nut. Be sure to wash the nut with the garden hose. That can be a messy job so wear heavy rubber gloves. (Some people just put them on the driveway and run over them until the nut is revealed.) Leave the clean, unshelled nut in a cool, well ventilated area for about two weeks before cracking to get the nut meats. It is ready when the nut breaks crisply.

If you look at the nutrition information from a bag of Diamond shelled black walnuts, you’ll find that ¼ cup provides 190 calories, 18 grams of fat, 2 grams of fiber and 7 grams of protein. They also contain iron, vitamin E, vitamin B6, zinc, copper, phosphorus, magnesium and molybdenum.

Notice of meeting change at James P. Arnold Post 46

The James P. Arnold Post 46 and Auxiliary meetings will be the second Monday of the month at the Post Home. There will be a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. 

The meetings will follow at 7:30 p.m. The next meeting will be held onOctober 8, all members please attend.

I-49 to become reality Dec. 12th

On December 12 at noon, there will be another interstate highway in Missouri as U.S. 71 from Kansas City south to Joplin will officially become Interstate 49.

Officials with the Missouri Department of Transportation say that the finishing touches, including changing all at-grade crossings to overpasses, will be complete by early November, and will be a big step forward in creating an all-interstate connection between Kansas City and New Orleans.

The interstate designation is expected to be an economic boon in Missouri, especially near the intermodal freight facility at the former Richards-Gebauer Air Force Base in south Kansas City.

The nearly $64 million project will end at Pineville, Missouri – just north of the Arkansas border. According to the Kansas City Star, officials in Arkansas are struggling to find funds to complete the interstate through a 180-mile stretch of the Ouachita Mountains.

The cost of completing the project in Arkansas – and thus completing an uninterrupted interstate path from New Orleans to the Canadian border via I-29 – is estimated at $3 billion dollars, the Star reports.

Not including local interstates 435, 635 and 470, the completion of I-49 will give the metro area four major interstate routes with I-70, I-35 and I-29.

Editor's note- Many of us are wondering how long (possibly years) will we continue to inadvertently refer to it as 71 highway..?

Obituary - Earl Lemmer

Earl Lemmer, 94, of Harrisonville, Missouri died Sunday, September 30, 2012 at Adrian Manor , in Adrian, Missouri. Funeral Services are pending at the Atkinson Funeral Home in Harrisonville.

Storm siren test this Wednesday...

The City of Butler will test the outdoor warning sirens on Wed., Oct. 3 at 10:00 A.M.

Due to recent radio upgrades, multiple tests may be required.

In the event of severe weather, the test will be postponed.

-Butler Fire Chief, Jim Henry

Sunday, September 30, 2012

MoCHIP event set for Oct. 6th

MoCHIP—Child Identification & Protection Program: Keeping Missouri Kids Safe!


Butler, Missouri—October 6th 2012—With more than 100,000 children processed through the MoCHIP Child ID program in 4 years, MoCHIP is clearly a presence in the community and vows to remain so! Taking place this Saturday the Missouri Masonic Family will be on hand to further ensure the safety of area children FREE OF CHARGE.

And the MoCHIP program works! No parent wants to believe that the unimaginable could happen to them, though nearly 2,000 children are reported missing or abducted in the United States each day. The peace of mind MoCHIP provides to Missouri families is invaluable. The program consists of five major components—digital photographs, digital fingerprints, vital child information and emergency contacts, a dental bite impression, and two laminated ID cards. The photographs, fingerprints, and child data are burned onto a mini-CD that is compatible with the AMBER ALERT system already in place. The dental impression provides a virtual diagram of the child’s biting surface, which, like fingerprints is unique to each individual, and further supplies enough saliva to provide a DNA sample that can also be used as scent source for trained canine search teams. Combined, this five-part process provides a dramatic, time-sensitive recovery tool for authorities.

Once the child is processed through the program, which generally takes only 15 minutes, the parent is armed with a single pre-printed envelope that instructs authorities in the event of an emergency, something a parent in crisis would undoubtedly have trouble with, and a proactive measure to combat the time sensitivity involved in recovery. Within a matter of minutes the MoCHIP CD can be loaded into a computer directly form a police officers automobile and entered into the Amber Alert system. Girls AND boys ages 11 - 21 are statistically most susceptible to become missing and the “MoCHIP Packet,” that contains all the child’s vital information, has been tested 6 times that we know of, and resulted in all children—teenagers—being returned safely and promptly to their parents care.

On the day of the MoCHIP event, parents are urged to gather pertinent information about such as, doctor, dentist, and emergency contact and phone numbers, allergies, medications, and parent work, cell, and assorted phone numbers. Information Collection Forms and Permission slips can be downloaded from the mochip.org Web site and filled out ahead of time. Height charts and scales are available at the event to facilitate the most current details regarding the child. As would be expected, security and privacy are of utmost importance. All information and specimens are collected on site, processed and provided to the parent or legal guardian in a yellow envelope. At the end of each event, databases are erased using state-of-the-art software. The only item retained by the Masonic Children’s Foundation is the signed permission slip.

Deemed “one of the most comprehensive child recovery and identification programs in the nation,” by The National Center for Exploited and Missing Children, NCEMC, and the leader of the Take 25 campaign push this past May, holding more than 20 Take 25 events—MoCHIP is solely sponsored by the Masonic Children’s Foundation of the Grand Lodge of Missouri Masons. Please visit our Web site (www.mochip.org) for more information or to schedule an event in your area, and we are on Facebook and Twitter too!

Sponsoring Masonic Lodges: 32nd Masonic District
Event Date: October, 6th
Event Time: 10:00 am till 2:00 pm
Event Location: 11 W. Dakota St. Butler Mo.

For more information on becoming a corporate partner or to make a donation, please contact MCF Coordinator, Nicholas R. Cichielo (636-530-6069, email nick.mochip@charter.net) or visit the calendar on our Web site www.mochip.org to locate future events in your area.

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