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The Final Roar: Matthew And Andrew Burton

As the lights get ready to shine once more on Friday nights, the Mansfield Tigers are counting on a duo of battle-tested leaders to set the tone for their upcoming season. Seniors Andrew and Matthew Burton are the brothers whose grit and chemistry have become the heart of the team and are gearing up for what promises to be a defining final chapter in their high school football careers.

With years of experience, countless hours in the weight room, and a hunger to leave a lasting legacy, these two are more than ready to lead Mansfield into a season of high expectations and even higher intensity.

The Burton family is well known for making an impact in Mansfield athletics. Last season, Samuel and Daniel Burton were enormous factors in the Tigers’ rushing attack. The duo rushed for a combined 2,555 yards and 36 touchdowns last season.

With two of the leading scorers for Mansfield now graduated, it’s time for a new set of senior Burtons to step in. While Samuel and Daniel were a perfect mix of speed and agility, Andrew and Matthew are an absolute powerbomb of strength and force.

Photo courtesy of Megan Hecox

Andrew Burton has played football for eleven years in a variety of positions. His athleticism makes him the perfect player for the Tigers to put wherever there’s a need. Need a hard-hitting linebacker on defense who can turn into a velcro covering safety on the next play? Andrew is your guy.

How about a bulldozing running back that plows his way through an eleven-man box with ease but can also run a perfect post route at wide receiver? Yup, that’d be an Andrew Burton thing again. Basically, Burton is a 6’1, 200-pound bull that has no limitations on the football field. As with any bull, the last thing you want to do is make him mad. Just ask Newport.

After seeing his big brother get knocked out of Mansfield’s 2024 State Playoff game against the Greyhounds, Andrew went from a mere running back into a red-eyed, raging beast and rolled Newport in the second half, scoring three touchdowns and plowing over every orange helmet he could find.

Photo courtesy of Joey Bolin

While his talent is out of this world, Andrew’s personality is down-to-earth. Burton is usually quiet and to himself without a helmet on, but when he pulls that chinstrap tight, he’s focused on nothing but the task at hand.

When asked who he would consider as a rival, Andrew’s picks were those who have challenged him the most. “I’d have to say Booneville and Charleston,” said Burton. “They’ve always been tough programs to play against”. It’s the challenge that Burton lives for, and that’s why his most memorable games are the Tigers’ narrow 14-13 victory at Hoxie in the 2023 State Playoffs and of course, that ever-impressive win against Newport in 2024.

With all of his accolades, Andrew still has one left that has eluded him and the Tigers, the 3A State Championship. “That’s the final goal”, exclaimed Burton. “We are working on a trip to Little Rock this year”.

Matthew Burton (left) and Andrew Burton (right)
Photos courtesy of Joey Bolin

The word power is thrown around a lot in modern-day football. A player has to be 6’10 and 270 pounds while benching 350 pounds and running a 4.4-second forty-yard dash to be known as a powerful player. Matthew Burton has none of those stats to his name.

What he does have is something much more valuable to a team, especially Mansfield. Matthew has an unwavering amount of determination. Coming in at 5’10 and 210 pounds, Matthew may be overlooked by opposing coaches as they plan for their game against Mansfield, but once the opening kickoff happens, they wind up looking directly at him.

Burton’s fearlessness, determination, and power have led him to take on monstrous linemen and then turn around to chase down elusive quarterbacks.

Photo courtesy of Joey Bolin

In his eight years of playing football, Matthew has grown exponentially in his understanding of the game. With its ever-growing knowledge and willingness to play anywhere, Burton has snapped the ball and battled in the trenches as a center, blocked and ran short routes as a tight end, plowed through the trash as a running back, and has even had some successful time as a wide receiver.

His mixed bag of skills doesn’t stay on the offensive side of the ball, though, as Matthew has also shuffled around between defensive end and linebacker in his tenure. Being a jack of all trades has allowed Matthew to put in quite a bit of time on the field and has given him a variety of experiences. “I’d say that my most memorable game was when we beat Hoxie in the 2023 Playoffs,” said Burton. “That was just a wild one”.

Burton also has his eyes on making up for last season’s loss to Lamar. As with every program in the state, Matthew’s final goal is to do his part to help take the Mansfield Tigers to the 3A State Championship game in Little Rock.

Photo courtesy of Megan Hecox

If anyone thought that the Tigers would struggle with the loss of last year’s Burton boys, they might want to think again. There is no doubt that both Andrew and Matthew Burton will be important keys to Mansfield’s success in 2025.

Their strength, focus, and overall athleticism could make them a coach’s dream and a starter for any program in the state. But it’s the red and white Mansfield jersey that the Burton brothers pull over their shoulder pads, and they’ll do everything they can to try and make Tiger Town into a Title Town.

Magazine is Ready to Strike Back to Their Winning Ways

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Obituary: Larry Allen (1952-2025)

Larry Wayne Allen of Waldron, Arkansas, passed from this life on August 6, 2025, in Hot Springs, Arkansas, at the age of 73. His departure leaves a deep sense of loss for those who knew and loved him, but his legacy of strength, love for the outdoors, and devotion to family and friends will live on in the hearts of many.

Larry was born on July 21, 1952, in Mena, Arkansas, to LC Allen and Mayrene (Franklin) Allen. From a young age, he developed a strong work ethic and a deep appreciation for the natural world-values that would shape his life and the man he became. In his early years, he worked at Scott County Lumber, where he created lifelong friendships and proved himself to be a reliable and dedicated worker. He later continued his career with Robinson Logging as a skilled skidder driver, where he was known not just for his hard work, but also for his good-natured spirit and friendship with his fellow workers.

Larry had a passion for the outdoors that was as much a part of him as the air he breathed. He especially loved deer hunting and running dogs on Henry Mountain, a pastime that brought him great joy and many cherished memories with family and friends. Those who spent time with him in the woods knew him as a man who respected the land and loved the thrill of the hunt, but more than anything, loved sharing those moments with the people closest to him.

He is survived by his loving daughter, Kristy Hinojosa and her husband Daniel, and by his treasured grandchildren, Gavin Sanders, Jada Hinojosa, and Jaxson Hinojosa, who brought joy and pride to his later years. Larry also leaves behind his brothers Donnie Allen, Gary Allen and wife Rosie, Kenny Allen and wife Lavada; and his sister Kathy Helton. He will be fondly remembered by a large extended family of nieces, nephews, cousins, and dear friends-especially his devoted hunting buddies, who shared in some of his happiest times.

Larry was preceded in death by his parents, LC and Mayrene Allen; his sister, Shirley Scott; and his brothers, Troy Allen and David Allen. Though his passing leaves a void, the memories he created and the lives he touched remain as lasting testaments to his character.

The family will hold a private memorial service at a later date to honor and celebrate Larry’s life in a way that reflects the quiet strength, loyalty, and love he gave to those around him.

Arrangements and cremation are being entrusted to Heritage Memorial Funeral Home in Waldron, Arkansas.

Obituary: Nancy Lynch (1977-2025)

Nancy Elizabeth Lynch of Waldron, Arkansas, passed away on August 6, 2025, in Fort Smith, Arkansas, at the age of 48. She was born on January 15, 1977, in Fort Smith to Joe Franklin Helton and Willie Delores (Sexton) Helton.

Nancy worked for many years as a box machine operator at Tyson Foods. She was a hardworking, loving woman who cherished her family above all else. Her greatest joy came from spending time with her grandchildren and celebrating holidays-especially Easter and Thanksgiving-surrounded by those she loved.

She is survived by Kenny Lynch; her children, Makenzi Godfrey, Anastisia Bolin, Stephen Wagner, and Keegan Lynch; and her siblings, Janet Neill, Lavada Allen, Joanna Hyde, Dorothy Preston, and Joe Helton, Jr. “Nana” also leaves behind eight beloved grandchildren: Xaiden, Dylan, Tatum, Penelope, Harper, Brycen, Paxton, and Devyn.

She was preceded in death by her son, Dylan Wagner; her daughter, Faith Lynch; and her parents, Joe and Willie Helton.

Nancy’s warmth, strength, and devotion to her family will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved her.

A private memorial service will be held at a later date.

Arrangements are being entrusted to Heritage Memorial Funeral Home in Waldron, Arkansas.

“Just Roll with It” Serving up Recipes and Humor

By Sheri Hopkins, Lifestyle Contributor

Hello everyone! Hot weather has returned. Summer in Arkansas in always a hot one. My hubby was from the Pittsburgh, PA area and he hated Arkansas summers. He loved all the other seasons, just not summer.

Tonight, there are 20 of us, this crazy family of mine, meeting at the Catfish Barn in Rock Island. I guarantee there will be a crazy story come out of it. I sent the family a group text and told them to make sure they bring cash or a check, because they don’t take debit. My nephew, Michael, says, “I am only bringing one check.” We all know what happened the last time. He wrote it wrong and had to scribble on it and had it all messed up. Did he learn a lesson? I guess not because he is doing it again tonight.

While we were on vacation we met up with my other son, Jimmy and his wife Jessica. They have just moved to Hendersonville, TN so they met us at the Cracker Barrel for supper. Every time I go in Cracker Barrel, I feel like I am at a yard sale. I want to turn stuff over and see if there is a price on the back. Keep in mind, the Cracker Barrel is just right down the road from our hotel in Mt. Juliet, TN. We leave and you can almost see the sign from our hotel. We have the address in the GPS, and it takes us past Cracker Barrel and has us on the interstate going 12 miles out of the way, when we just passed the restaurant. Jimmy is texting me wanting to know where we are, and I said, “on this interstate and can’t find a place to turn around.” Who knows how many miles we drove, got off on an exit and turned around and finally made it all the way back to Cracker Barrel. I am telling you we couldn’t find our way out a paper sack. I felt like Chevy Chase in European Vacation, just going in circles and not being able to turn in.

Speaking of the Cracker Barrel, my nephew, yes Michael, everything crazy happens to him. He is at Cracker Barrel in our area, and he orders dumplings, and he noticed the waitress never brings him any silverware. He gets his food and asks the waitress if he could have a spoon for his dumplings and she leaves and takes forever to come back and she tells him, and I am not lying, “we don’t have any clean.” and walks off. He’s like what am I supposed to do? She leaves and finally comes back with him a spoon. Was that spoon clean? Who knows. He got to eat his dumplings. The moral of this story is if you go to Cracker Barrel it wouldn’t hurt to carry you some plastic silverware in your purse. I know I told y’all I wasn’t going back after what happened on our last trip. Over time the memories fade and you forget. We did have good food at the Cracker Barrel in Mt. Juliet, TN. Something crazy is always going to happen to us for sure.

This is just a little something I saw on a towel at the Cracker Barrel. It said: “90% of being married is yelling ‘WHAT’ from other rooms.” I am telling you that is a true statement. This recipe is a lemon flavor, and I just love lemon!

SUGAR COOKIE LEMONADE CRUMBLE
The crust: 1 17.5 oz. bag of sugar cookie mix (like Betty Crocker), 1/2 cup butter
Lemonade filling: 16 oz. cream cheese (room temperature), 1/2 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon flour, 3/4 cup frozen lemonade concentrate, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 3.4 oz. box of instant lemon pudding mix, 1 egg
Preheat oven to 350 degrees and grease the bottom of a 13×9 baking dish for the crust. In a large bowl, mix sugar cookie mix and butter together with a pastry blender or fork until crumbly. Set aside 1/2 cup for the topping. Press the rest of the mixture in the bottom of a baking dish. For the filing, using an electric mixer, thoroughly blend cream cheese and sugar till smooth, add flour, lemonade, vanilla, pudding mix and egg. Beat until smooth. Drop filling evenly onto the crust in spoonfuls and gently spread. Sprinkle the 1/2 cup reserved crust mixture on top and bake for 30 minutes. Cool 1 hour then refrigerate three hours or until you serve it. Enjoy!

State Capitol Week in Review From Senator Terry Rice

Execution by nitrogen hypoxia occurs when the inmate is forced to breathe nitrogen and therefore is deprived of the oxygen required to live. Alabama has executed five men using the method, but its law is being challenged in federal court. Louisiana has executed one inmate. Oklahoma and Mississippi, like Arkansas, have passed laws allowing executions by nitrogen hypoxia but have not used it.

The new Arkansas law is being challenged in a Pulaski County Circuit Court. The Arkansas attorney general said he would vigorously defend Act 302.

There are 23 men on death row. Seven were convicted and sentenced in the 1990s. Two of the inmates who filed the lawsuit to strike Act 302 were convicted in 1992 and 1993, and two other inmates listed in the suit were convicted and sentenced in 1994.

Arkansas has used lethal injection since 1990, which was the last year an inmate was executed in an electric chair. Lethal injection requires three separate drugs that are difficult to obtain. The most recent executions in Arkansas were in 2017, when four men were killed by lethal injection before the Correction Department’s supply of drugs was due to expire.

Act 302 had 20 Senate co-sponsors and was passed by a vote of 26-to-9. It passed in the House by a vote of 67-to-23.

Attorneys for the 10 inmates argue that their death sentences were originally supposed to be by lethal injection and cannot be changed retroactively. At the date of their sentencing for capital murder the only legal sentences were death by lethal injection and serving life behind bars without parole.

The lawsuit asks for a judicial declaration that Act 302 should apply only to offenders who are convicted and sentenced after August 5, the date the law took effect. Also, attorneys for the inmates argue that Act 302 is unconstitutional because it amounts to legislative overreach into functions of the executive branch and the judicial branch.

10 Commandments in Classrooms

Act 573, another new law that was scheduled to take effect on August 5, would require public school classrooms to display a copy of the Ten Commandments. However, it has been challenged in federal court and the judge called it “plainly unconstitutional.”

He issued a preliminary injunction that prevented it from going into effect, based on his conclusion that plaintiffs were likely to win their challenge. The attorney general, who is defending the act, said he is reviewing the state’s legal options.

The judge wrote that about 45 years ago the United States Supreme Court struck down a law that was very similar to Act 573.

The act would require the display to be at least 16 by 20 inches in size, with large enough lettering so that a person with average vision can read it from any place in the classroom.

LITTLE ROCK – Earlier this year the legislature approved Act 302 to allow executions by nitrogen hypoxia. The act took effect on August 5, the same day 10 inmates on death row filed suit to challenge its constitutionality.

Execution by nitrogen hypoxia occurs when the inmate is forced to breathe nitrogen and therefore is deprived of the oxygen required to live. Alabama has executed five men using the method, but its law is being challenged in federal court. Louisiana has executed one inmate. Oklahoma and Mississippi, like Arkansas, have passed laws allowing executions by nitrogen hypoxia but have not used it.

The new Arkansas law is being challenged in a Pulaski County Circuit Court. The Arkansas attorney general said he would vigorously defend Act 302.

There are 23 men on death row. Seven were convicted and sentenced in the 1990s. Two of the inmates who filed the lawsuit to strike Act 302 were convicted in 1992 and 1993, and two other inmates listed in the suit were convicted and sentenced in 1994.

Arkansas has used lethal injection since 1990, which was the last year an inmate was executed in an electric chair. Lethal injection requires three separate drugs that are difficult to obtain. The most recent executions in Arkansas were in 2017, when four men were killed by lethal injection before the Correction Department’s supply of drugs was due to expire.

Act 302 had 20 Senate co-sponsors and was passed by a vote of 26-to-9. It passed in the House by a vote of 67-to-23.

Attorneys for the 10 inmates argue that their death sentences were originally supposed to be by lethal injection and cannot be changed retroactively. At the date of their sentencing for capital murder the only legal sentences were death by lethal injection and serving life behind bars without parole.

The lawsuit asks for a judicial declaration that Act 302 should apply only to offenders who are convicted and sentenced after August 5, the date the law took effect. Also, attorneys for the inmates argue that Act 302 is unconstitutional because it amounts to legislative overreach into functions of the executive branch and the judicial branch.

10 Commandments in Classrooms

Act 573, another new law that was scheduled to take effect on August 5, would require public school classrooms to display a copy of the Ten Commandments. However, it has been challenged in federal court and the judge called it “plainly unconstitutional.”

He issued a preliminary injunction that prevented it from going into effect, based on his conclusion that plaintiffs were likely to win their challenge. The attorney general, who is defending the act, said he is reviewing the state’s legal options.

The judge wrote that about 45 years ago the United States Supreme Court struck down a law that was very similar to Act 573.

The act would require the display to be at least 16 by 20 inches in size, with large enough lettering so that a person with average vision can read it from any place in the classroom.

Lavaca Preparing To Set A New Gold Standard For 2025

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Norris Shares Vision for Secretary of State Role at Scott County GOP Meeting

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Obituary: Treva Coffey (1945-2025)

Treva Nell Coffey of Waldron, Arkansas passed from this life on Wednesday, August 6, 2025, in the comfort of her home at the age of 79. She was born on October 15, 1945, in Waldron to Eugene Webster Bates and Edith Mae Allen Bates.

A devoted wife, mother, grandmother, and faithful servant of the Lord, Treva was a longtime member of the Waldron Pentecostal Church of God, where she worshiped for over 25 years. She had a deep love for her church family-she found joy in cooking for them, lending a helping hand, and sharing her heart through acts of service. Her faith never wavered, and during her final days, she continued to praise the Lord and sing along to her favorite Christian music.

Treva loved the simple pleasures of life-working in her flower bed, fishing, bargain hunting, and spending time with her family. Her greatest treasures were her family and her faith, and she poured her heart into both.

She was reunited in Heaven with her beloved parents; her brothers Tommy and Billy “Bo” Bates; sisters-in-law Joann Bates and Belinda Bates; and her nephew Cody Carpenter.

On December 14, 1963, Treva married the love of her life, Ralph Coffey, and together they built a beautiful life and family. She leaves behind many who will carry her memory in their hearts, including her husband Ralph; her son Tim (Brenda) Coffey; her daughters Tammy (Bob) Caldwell and Tanya (Wilson) Kennedy; and her cherished grandchildren: Jeremy Woodard, Jessica (Todd) Brothers, Jennifer (Chris) McCafferty, Amber (Torrance) Underwood, Danny (Jess) Urban, Autumn (Bryan) Foshee, and Logan (Desiree) Kennedy. Treva was blessed with 17 great-grandchildren, 3 great-great-grandchildren, and many nieces, nephews, and extended family.

She is also survived by her brother, Scotty Bates, and her sister Lucille (Don) Carpenter.

A celebration of Treva’s life will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Friday, August 8, 2025, at the Heritage Memorial Funeral Home Chapel in Waldron, Arkansas, with Rev. Konner McKay officiating.

Arrangements are entrusted to Heritage Memorial Funeral Home in Waldron, Arkansas.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Waldron Pentecostal Church of God Building Fund, P.O. Box 2035, Waldron, AR 72958.

SR Hornets Ready To Put Doubters To Rest In 2025

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