The male is said to be up and talking at this time a refused medical treatment. Mid America Live will update when more information is made available to us at a later time.
Monday, March 14, 2022
Pedestrian struck by vehicle in Butler
Obituary - Lois Jean Elliott
Funeral service will be held at 3:00 PM on Saturday, March 19, 2022 at the Friendly Pentecostal Church (625 NW Highway 7) Clinton, Missouri with visitation from 2:00-3:00 PM prior to the service.
Burial will follow in Vansant Road Cemetery in Clinton. Memorial contributions can be made to the Friendly Pentecostal Church or Straight Up Ministries and can be left in care of the funeral home.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Vansant-Mills Funeral Home in Clinton, Missouri.
Way to go K-9 Edo!
Pictured below is their latest; drug paraphernalia, a small amount of substance and $4,000 cash, which are proceeds from the sale of illegal narcotics.
Drug dealers need to steer clear of Nevada. This team is already taking care of business and will be for a good many years to come.
Think You’re Having A Bad Day?
Mounted Posse Saddles Up For A Busy Season
The Bates County Sheriff’s Mounted Posse gathered recently to recognize members and firm up plans for 2022 which include a rodeo and many other events on the calendar. During the meeting, members and mounts were officially ‘badged’ by the Sheriff along with Mounted Posse Captain Greg Mullinax and ‘Trigger’ as seen here. Addition details about this year's events are expected soon.
Senior Center Menu for Butler, Adrian and Rich Hill
March 16 Rosemary Dijon pork roast, roasted sweet potatoe wedges, Italian vegetables, wheat roll, molasses drop cookies
March 17 Corned beef, baked potato, steamed cabbage, wheat roll, chocolate chip cookie (St. Patty’s Day)
March 18 Fried fish, creamed spinach, roasted red potatoes, hush puppies, Cook’s Feature
March 17 Corned beef, baked potato, steamed cabbage, wheat roll, chocolate chip cookie
March 18 Fried fish, creamed spinach, roasted red potatoes, hush puppies, cook’s feature
March 21 Chili, baked potato, broccoli, cornbread, apple crisp
March 22 Western omelet, hashbrown, spiced pears, biscuit, coffee cake
March 23 Fried chicken, mashed potatoes & gravy, baby carrots, wheat roll, chocolate cake
March 24 Hand pattied Salisbury steak, liver & onions, mashed potatoes & gravy, roasted Brussel sprouts, wheat roll, pineapple upside down cake
March 25 Lemon pepper fish, roasted root vegetables, green beans, wheat roll, cook’s feature
Skim milk, unsweetened fruit, chef salad, baked chicken breast, or baked fish available daily as heart healthy alternatives by request
What’s Up by LeRoy Cook
Sheer Russian Stupidity
Now that the switch to no-daylight-saving time has occurred, it appears that the weather is turning decidedly more spring-like. The previous week was mostly spent hunkering down and talking about flying, rather than indulging in it. Other than for some UH-60 Army Guard helicopter traffic, few aircraft came by. Local airplanes that were rolled out included the Cessna Skyhawk, flown by Eric Eastland, and a Cessna 150, taken up by Patrick and Les Gorden on an instructional flight.
Thurday night’s 6 to 8-inch snowfall had to be dealt with, as the wet stuff was too heavy for little airplane tires to negotiate. Once again, the City street crews made short work of cleaning the access areas at the airport, despite having to assist some idiot (that would be me) who had gotten his car stuck while making an assessment of the accumulation. The sun finished the cleanup by Saturday afternoon.
The Antonov Design Bureau in Ukraine has long been a builder of big airplanes for Eastern Bloc countries, when the country was part of the former Soviet Union. Its most notable project was creating the AN-225 Mriya, the world’s heaviest airplane with a takeoff weight of over 1,400,000 pounds (a Boeing 747, by comparison, weighs about 850,000 pounds.) The big beast was built for the Russian space program, to carry a Soviet space shuttle piggyback like NASA had done; the “Shuttleski” never got of the ground, after the USSR collapsed in 1991. The one-and-only six-engine AN-225 was turned into a civilian cargo hauler and has been operating worldwide as the sole airplane capable of taking on outsize freight jobs.
Unfortunately, the AN-225 was between assignments at its home base when Vladimir Putin decided to make war on Ukraine, and the airfield and hangar was shelled in a Russian attack. The “Dream,” as the Mriya translates, now lies as a broken, burned-out shell in its hangar. No longer will it be a tramp steamer of the skies, carrying cargo no one else could accommodate. Its hulk has become a monument to mankind’s stupidity during wartime, posing no threat but caught up in the “collateral damage.”
In concert with the inflation that’s now gripping our nation, aviation gasoline is currently $5.75 a gallon at our local pump, and no doubt headed higher. There will no doubt be less flying done, although all other means of transportation are going to be more expensive as well. We may as well get used to it.
Our weekly brain-teaser concerned the two Wright Brothers, inventors of the airplane, specifically how to tell Orville from Wilbur when seen in a photograph. It’s simple; Orville’s the one with the mustache, Wilbur was cleanshaven. All righty, for next week, tell us why the Lockheed SR-71 “Blackbird” had silver-colored maingear tires. Send your replies to kochhaus1@gmail.com
The Museum Minute: Workers find pit of vipers
Courtesy of the Bates County Museum 802 Elks Drive, Butler Mo 64730 (660) 679-0134
Herrman’s Historical Happenings week of March 16
1870 A kitchen employee fires up the two large cook stoves at the Great Western Hotel in Butler, later finds a cat roasted in the oven.
1862 Encountering but little resistance in Bates Co., General James Lane and his 1st Kansas Cavalry passes over the Marais Des Cygne river bound for Osceola.
1884 Workmen clearing the Osage River bank for a bridge, South of Rockville, find hundreds of hibernating snakes.
1935 The Assembly of God church in Butler is organized by minister Ruth Johnson.
1942 After yesterday’s windstorm in northern Bates co, today a severe storm hits western Bates, with lots of damage.
1948 The Butler City Council votes to put blinker lights on US 71 at Pine, Mill and Fort Scott streets (no bypass in those days, the main highway ran through town).
1960 Hen egg sized hail batters the Foster area.
1972 The Bates County Democrat newspaper highlights the Miami Eagles basketball team and their records. Honored are Lynn Morgan, Darrel Poindexter, Chuck Lewis, Kevin Gutshall, Bobby Burch, Randy Gregory, Jack Smalley, Gary Jackson, Darrel Wilson, Steve Matthews, Robin Sigars, Joe Gaylord and coach Glenn Borum.
1979 Wilber Hastin, former Butler businessman, and an original mover toward the Bates Co Historical Society & Museum, is honored as the Butler Chamber of Commerce’s Citizen of the Year.
1990 Melissa Kling Phillips of Butler Monument Co., recently qualified as a certified Memorialist at the national convention of monument builders. She is the 75th person to receive the honor.