Monday, August 25, 2025

Obituary - Dudney (Dud) R. Spears

Dudney (Dud) R. Spears age 81 of Harrisonville, Missouri departed this life Sunday, August 24, 2025 at his home in Harrisonville, Missouri peacefully surrounded by love and family. 

Visitation will be held 9:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Thursday, August 28, 2025 at Dickey Funeral Home, Harrisonville, Missouri. 

Funeral Service will be held 11:00 a.m. Thursday, August 28, 2025 at Dickey Funeral Home, Harrisonville, Missouri with interment at Johnstown Cemetery, Montrose, Missouri. 

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Kansas City Community Blood Center, or American Heart Association and send in care to Dickey Funeral Home, P.O. Box 432, Harrisonville, Missouri 64701.

A complete obituary will be posted once that information becomes available.

Recipe of the Week

 


Education in Prairie township continued

When the Civil War ended the people begin to move back rebuilding their homes and a two storying school was built in 1868. School was conducted down stairs while the Osage Masonic Lodge was conducted upstairs. The present school was added on to the two story in 1895.

In the late 1800’s a school year was only six months. Some schools had seven and eight months. Most of the records we have found for Papinville had eight months. I was always told that the boys had to help with planting the crops and the girls had to help plant to gardens. In 1917 it discussed about going to a nine month school year but it was voted down by the school board.

In 1913 a law was passed providing for a teachers training class to be taught in a approved high school. The school had to be designated by the state superintendent of schools. If student had finished the course in high school they could teach for two years and then they had to go to college to get a teaching degree. They also had to be eighteen years old.  A rural teacher salary in 1906 through 1917 was $234.00 to $400.00 a year.  My mother taught at Papinville for one year, because she took the teachers training course. When the teacher came to teach (if they lived far away) lived with a family close to school. I remember going to my grandparents (Herman and Mae Steuck) that Evelyn Schooley lived at their house.

There were four schools in the Prairie Township. Papinville was the first school in district 7. Seelinger, Mission Branch and Prairie City followed. The next story will continue about Papinville. We hope when we have the picnic that there will be some students that attended these schools present or family members of a student. When you come to Papinville you will see a beautiful new sigh welcoming you to “the little town with a big history.” 

The Papinville Historical and Cemetery Association will be serving fried fish, pulled pork and hot dogs with all the trims. There will be music starting at 1:30, cake walk, silent auction, pie contest plus pie auction, wagon rides and children’s games. A time schedule will be published closer to the event. Papinville History and District 7 School books, hats, T shirts  printed with (present school) and many other booklets will be for sale. We are still adding events for our 130th anniversary  of the little school. Come help us celebrate. Sat. Sept. 27th in historical Papinville. Until next week.      

Submitted By Phyllis Stewart, Activity Director


Osage Valley holds 87th annual meeting

Osage Valley Electric Cooperative held their 87th Annual Meeting on August 21, 2025, with a  drive thru format at both the Butler and Clinton offices.   Employees registered members, then members were able to vote electronically from 4-6pm, receiving a gift on departure.  In addition to the drive-thru, members were able to register/vote online from August 9-19, 2025.  All registered members will receive a $20 electric bill credit. 

Electric bill credit prizes and other prizes were awarded to registered members, online and drive thru.  Jim Tenholder & Larry Brown were each the lucky winners of a $250.00 electric bill credit. The winner of the Freestyle Rocker, donated by KAMO Electric, was Brad Bodenhamer. 

The business meeting featured the election of three members to the Cooperative’s Board of Directors. All three incumbent directors were uncontested and re-elected to the Board to serve three-year terms. They were Ron Steuck, representing Vernon County, Richard Wirsig, representing Henry/Johnson Counties, and P.D. Kircher, representing Cass County. Along with 

Proposition A bylaw amendment passing with an affirmative vote. 

An abbreviated business meeting was held by the Board of Directors immediately following the drive thru portion of the Annual Meeting. The Board of Directors were present at both offices and participated in a zoom meeting to conduct the business meeting.  

Pastor's Perspective

This column is open to all local pastors who would like to contribute. Please keep at 400 words or less and email to midshopper@gmail.com or drop by our office at 5 W. Dakota St in Butler.

How do you do with failure? I know it sounds like a silly question, but it seems like failure is the one unpardonable sin in society today. I’m not trying to say we should seek out failure. There is a God-given desire within each of us to advance and improve, to do better and be better than our basest desires and the lowest common denominator of our intentions. 

That being said, it’s important to recognize the difference between seeing our or another’s failing and viewing them or ourselves as a failure. Failure is an action, not a person. If we confuse the two, a spiral into hopelessness and a loss of motivation to try again is a reality for those who are seeking to rebound from failure. And if I begin to view another person as a failure I place myself on the shaky ground of perceiving myself to be “king or queen of the mountain.”

I say shaky ground because given enough time, everyone fails. It’s a reality of being human. We’re far from perfect and we’re impacted by factors outside our control. And yes, we’ve done dumb, sometimes sinful things… on purpose. In those moments we need to take ownership of our decisions, their impact on others, and the consequences that come with it.

The challenge comes in what happens after failure. In the New Testament we find a man named Peter who failed Jesus in a major way. Peter had promised to go all the way to death with Jesus. But when the moment arrived for Peter to stand up for Jesus, he folded like a deck of cards. Peter denied ever knowing Jesus.

The Bible tells us after Jesus’ resurrection, Peter had returned to fishing. And along the banks of the Sea of Galilee we find Jesus had gone before Peter. Why? Jesus wanted to share a meal with Peter… as well as a course in forgiveness and rebounding from failure. 

Jesus brought Peter face to face with his failure, but He also revealed to Peter his failure had not disqualified him from relationship with Jesus or service in His Kingdom. It was to serve as a step, painful as it was, in Peter’s development as a man, a disciple, and leader. Jesus restored Peter… not by castigating him, but by handling the man with grace.

Did Peter fail in the future? Yes. But he had learned from Jesus that God’s grace was bigger than his failing and that what was needed was for him to recognize it, go to Jesus with it, grow in grace from it, and keep moving forward. 

Peter would go on to die for Jesus as he’d promised. He would be crucified for the sake of his love and commitment to Jesus and His church. Such was the difference in how Jesus handled Peter and his failure. Have you failed lately? There’s grace for you. Take it to Jesus. You’ll find He’s been waiting for you.

By Pastor Jeremy S. Henderson, Butler Church of the Nazarene


The Museum Minute: One lucky guy

Courtesy of the Bates County Museum 802 Elks Drive, Butler Mo 64730 (660) 679-0134

Herrman’s Historical Happenings week of August 27

1867 A mass gathering is held in Butler to find ways to get a railroad to Butler, including voting a $330,000 bond and getting other counties to join in.

1895 While digging a water well, Mr. Workman, east of Rich Hill, discovers a bed of Sienna, a valuable mineral.

1948 The Osage Valley Electric Cooperative (REA) moves their offices from 206 N. Main to the northeast corner of US 71 & Fort Scott (Citizens Bank location).

1948 The Special Lens Plant, grinding optical lens, opens in Butler (Midwest Lumber location).

1956 100 ladies gather at the Bates Co courthouse to organize the Women's Democratic Club of Bates County. Gleeta Jewett, President.

1980 98 year old Birdie White wows the crowd with songs and stories at the 83rd annual Old Settler day. Butler.

1999 Theres something strange at the Yarick farm near Rich Hill, as neighboring fields of corn and soybeans are withering in the heat, the cotton on the 160 acres is doing well.

1999 R. W. Moreland is one lucky man. While filling his truck at Don Malan's station in Butler, lighting strikes the pump blowing it to smithereens. He suffers only minor burns.

Appleton City Carousel welcomes very special visitor

 


New Jersey resident Sheila Steuck, formerly of Rich Hill, read that the Appleton City Carousel had visitors from 35 states but none from New Jersey- so while visiting the area she stopped by to check out the unique ride and took the opportunity to visit with Linda Lampkin who gleefully then upped the state visitor count to 36.

The carousel has gained famed through rave reviews penned by Visit Missouri, Rural Magazine, Missouri Life and many others over the years.

Many thanks to Sheila for helping put the spotlight once again on this very unique and popular attraction.

What’s Up by LeRoy Cook

Selling Windows That Aren't There

 Pilots enjoyed a respite from the August heat over the weekend, more like fall with temperatures topping out in the 70’s. It sure helped with ground operations, especially with tight-cabin low-wing airplanes. And the haze gave way to clear blue dry air.

Traffic for the week included an Army Guard Black Hawk helicopter shooting approaches to a hover, a Cessna Skyhawk trainer, several Piper Cherokees, a Cessna 182, a Piper Cherokee Six, and a passing business jet on the VOR-A procedure. Locally, Jon Laughlin flew his Piper Cherokee 180C, Jeremie Platt took his Grumman Tiger to the shop, I logged two landings in the Cessna 172 and Randy Miller was out in the club’s Cessna Skyhawk. Instructor Delaney Rindal kept a steady pace in the Cessna 150s, as did BCS’s AirTractor sprayplanes.

We lost a former flight instructor last week, at the passing of Marty Ghere. In the 1980s and 90s Marty kept a plane at the Butler airport and enjoyed traveling in both his Beech Baron and his Dad’s Piper Cherokee 180D. He wanted to add Certified Flight Instructor to his commercial ratings, so in 1986 I helped him with the process of getting CFI Single and Multi-engine. Marty enjoyed life and will be missed by all who knew him.

The ramp at Harrisonville airport has been cleaned up by the removal of the three derelict Twin Cessna airplanes that had deteriorating in the elements for years. They were dismantled and loaded on trucks last week, two slated for use in teaching student mechanics in training, and another headed for restoration, which will be a tall order. Sad ends for once proud aircraft. 

Thursday, August 28th, there will be an airshow at the Branson airport, from noon until evening, so if you have plans to visit there, avoiding using the airport that afternoon. Also, this Saturday marks the monthly breakfast fly-out of the Fliars Club; Fliars should gather at 0730 on the Butler airport ramp to determine a course of action.

The Reno Air Racing association has been tossed out of its 60-year home at Reno, Nevada, now settling into Roswell, New Mexico, where lots of wide-open space is available for their pylon racing events. However, the Unlimited class of souped-up WW-II fighter planes won’t be running this year, for undisclosed reasons. There will be five other classes, Formula One, Sport, biplane, jet and T-6 racing next month. 

On the airline side, Delta and United airlines are being sued over charging extra for “window seats,” my preferred ride on big jets. Turns out that not all their planes actually have a window beside each row of cattle-car seating. Due to the irregular pitch spacing, some outside seats have nothing but a blank plastic wall beside them. But the airlines still collected the added “window seat” charge. Just like being stuck behind a post at the ball park.

The U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds put on their usual precision F-16 formation-flying demonstration over Lake Michigan in Chicago last weekend, but some lakeshore residents aren’t happy, claiming damage from “sonic booms” generated by the jets. The Air Force says it couldn’t be, because their Mach-meters showed they were well below the sound barrier. Sometimes shock waves form on another part of a plane, though.

Last week’s question wanted someone to give us the definition of “angle of attack” as it applies to airplanes. That’s the lift-producing tilt of a wing to oncoming air. More angle, more lift—up to a point, where the wing stalls. For next time, how old was the last-surviving World War fighter ace, who died last week? You can send your answers to kochhaus1@gmail.com



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