Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Way to go Dr. John Harrington!

The Nevada Rotary Club recently announced that they have welcomed Dr. John Harrington to their membership ranks.

Dr. Harrington is a surgeon at Nevada Regional Medical Center who began practicing there in March of this year.

Pictured with Dr. Harrington is Dr. Warren Lovinger who had the opportunity to serve as Dr. Harrington’s sponsor in welcoming him to the club.


Obituary - Merlin E. Sullins

Merlin E. “Boob” Sullins, 60, of Lee’s Summit, was born, November 26, 1960, in Kansas City, Missouri, the son of Elvis Eugene and Mary Allice (Goff) Sullins. He departed this life, Sunday, May 16, 2021, at the Kansas City Hospice House, Kansas City.

Merlin was a 1978 Kansas City East High School graduate. On June 4, 1980, he was united in marriage to Deborah Kay Walker in Independence.

Merlin was employed as Machinist for New Tech in Kansas City later working as a Maintenance Technician for Eagle Point Management in Kansas City. He enjoyed hunting and fishing and especially loved spending time with his grandchildren.

Merlin was preceded in death by his father, Elvis Sullins and his stepfather, Larry Raymond Burton.

He is survived by his wife, Deborah of Lee’s Summit; four children, Brandon (and Rebecca) Sullins of Lee’s Summit, Jennifer (and Brandon) Parks of Blue Springs, Andrea (and Brian) Sullins-Adams of Lee’s Summit, and Samantha Sullins of Lee’s Summit; six grandchildren, Maggie, Weston, Leah, Molly, Gwen, and Maisie; his mother, Mary Burton of Independence; three siblings, Terry (and Debbie) Sullins of Olathe, Vickey (and John) Hamblen of Kearney, and Sherry Couch of Oak Grove; several nephews; other relatives and friends.

Funeral services will be held 11:00 a.m. Thursday, May 20, 2021, at the Stanley-Dickey Funeral Home. Reverend D. Kent Deubner will officiate. Burial will be in the Strasburg Cemetery. Casket bearers are Brian Adams, Brian Hershey, Stefan Hershey, Brandon Parks, Weston Parks, and Jared Terrell. Honorary casket bearers are Brandon Sullins and Terry Sullins.

Visitation will be held 10:00 a.m. until service time at the funeral home.

Memorial contributions are suggested to Children’s Mercy Hospital and may be sent in care of the funeral home.

Online condolences may be sent to the family at www.stanleydickeyfuneralhome.com



News from Municipal Waste Services

Over the past few months, we have received complaints about the trash company not taking recycle or putting it in the same truck as the regular trash.

One of the reasons for this is that sometimes people put non-recyclable items in their bin - like sheet rock or tile or dirt or clothes or just regular trash.
 
Please understand that we know this isn’t always the case and we are working to correct instances of Municipal Waste Services employees dumping good recycling into trash trucks.
 
Acceptable recycle items include: Plastic (grades 1-4, 7), paper, newspaper and magazines, cardboard, tin and aluminum.
 
If MWS does see items like this being put into recycle bins, they will either not take them or will dump them with the regular household trash.



Missouri Department of Conservation seeking public assistance

WE NEED YOUR HELP: On May 6th, an injured peregrine falcon was found laying in a driveway in Freeman.

The falcon was taken to Lakeside Nature Center where it was determined the bird’s injuries were extensive and it would need to be euthanized. The post-mortem examination showed evidence the falcon had been shot in the breast.

If you have information, please call Conservation Agent Phil Needham at 816-809-6259 or call Operation Game Thief at 800-392-1111.

Pictured is a stock image of a peregrine falcon as no photo was taken of the injured falcon.



Structure fire in rural Tightwad

This afternoon at 3:38 pm the Tightwad Fire Department responded to a structure fire on the on CR 1131.

The fire was stated due to an arc from a lawnmower that the owner had parked in the garage. The fire unfortunately burned the entire building an its contents.

Thank to all volunteers who responded. We had 6 volunteers responded.


Obituary - William Eugene “Bull” Weber

William Eugene “Bull” Weber, 64, of Moundville, MO passed away unexpectedly on Sunday, May 16, 2021 in Poplar Bluff, MO. Bill was born on September 29, 1956 to William L. “Pete” and Patsy R. (Mooney) Weber in Kansas City, MO. On June 25, 2005 he married Bernice M. Million and she survives of the home.

Bill was raised in Vernon County, MO and graduated from Bronaugh High School with the Class of 1974. He worked in the coal mines in Arcadia, KS and Mindenmines, MO area for a time. Bill owned and operated his own trucking company WFX, LLC., with the pride of the fleet being his truck “BLUE ATTITUDE”. He has spent the past three years driving a truck for Farmer’s Ag in Deerfield, MO.

William enjoyed spending time doing autobody work, as well as mechanic work, woodworking, fishing, and riding his beloved Harley “LUCILLE”.

Survivors include his wife Bernice, of the home; his children: William "Bud" Weber (Toni) of Park Hill, OK; Donald Million (Amanda) of Bronaugh, MO; Justin Million (Valerie) of Sheldon, MO; and Chris Million (Lynn) of Moundville, MO; numerous grandchildren; his siblings: Judy Broughton (Bob) of Independence, MO, Bruce Weber (Sherie) of Moundville, MO, Virginia Read of Nevada, MO, Ed Weber of Moundville, MO, Patricia Harris of Moundville, MO, Julie Nikodim (Mike) of Moundville, MO, and Glenda Leer (Jimmie) of Bronaugh, MO; and numerous nieces and nephews. William was preceded in death by his parents, and one brother, David Weber.

Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Friday, May 21, 2021 at Ferry Funeral Home in Nevada with the Rev. Bill Smith officiating. The family will receive friends at the funeral home prior to the service from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. A gathering of family and friends will be held at Farmer’s Ag in Deerfield immediately following the service.

Memorial contributions in Bill’s name can be made to the family in care of Ferry Funeral Home


Midair collisions are survivable

What’s Up

By LeRoy Cook

 In a seeming unending progression of weather systems, the flying conditions varied from good to fair to impossible last week. Thunderstorms deter even the high performance jets, whose operating procedures call for maintaining a 20-mile spacing from storm cells. That means a 40-mile gap has to exist before airliners can penetrate a line. And those are nautical miles, so figure on 46 statute miles.

 The transient tally for the week included a Cessna-Centurion, a Cessna Skyhawk, a Piper Arrow and a Beech King Air FAA flight inspection airplane verifying instrument approaches. An RV-10 homebuilt passed through the airspace and a Beech Bonanza utilized the VOR/DME approach. The local aircraft making flights were Roy Conley’s Grumman Tr2 and my own 1946 Aeronca Champion. Flight Instructor Eric Eastland took the Cessna Skyhawk to Paola for lunch and he and I flew Cessna 150s to El Dorado Springs for service. Jeffery Adams flew a Cessna 150 to Ava, MO to visit family on Thursday.

 From Europe, we learn that Margit Waltz, experienced German ferry pilot who began moving airplanes across the ocean in 1976, recently made the 900th ferry flight of her career. She brought a Daher TBM 930 from the factory in southern France to a dealer in Muncie, Indiana. While the TBM is a fast, capable ride, it’s still a single-engine airplane and the North Atlantic is still wide and cold. Preparation is the key to survival over her many years of ferry flights.

 A lucky escape was made by four pilots flying in the Denver area last week. Their two airplanes collided in mid-air while attempting to land at Centennial airport, being vectored by approach control to the parallel runways at Centennial. The Swearingen Metroliner was on one frequency and the Cirrus SR-22 was on another. The Cirrus pilots evidently overflew their final approach course, striking the Metroliner’s aft fuselage. The bigger Swearingen landed successfully, but the Cirrus pilots had to fire their full-airplane parachute and wound up settled down into a residential park, unhurt.

 Small amounts of crosswind can make for a rough landing, if not taken into account during the touchdown. Pilots tend to ignore a few knots of wind blowing from only ten or twenty degrees off the runway direction, but one of two things will happen to spoil the landing. Either the airplane will be crabbed into the wind as it sits down, jerking straight as the wheels touch, or the pilot will straighten up to match the center stripe but drift sideways with the wind, again causing a screeching arrival. Even little winds need to be corrected with a little sideslip to negate their effect.

 The question from last week was about the source of the white streaks left by high-altitude airplanes flying over. Rodney Rom knew those are condensation trails, resulting from hot exhaust gases hitting the moist air’s frozen water crystals. Heated up briefly to become visible water, they refreeze into a cloud behind the airplane. Contrails can be left by piston engines as well, as World War II bomber crews knew. For next time, who was the American pilot who became a national hero by landing in Ireland back in 1936?You can send your answer tkochhaus1@gmail.com.

Photo courtesy airlive.net

Butler Town Hall Meeting set for June 7th




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