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Mansfield Chamber of Commerce Meets, Discusses Upcoming Events

On Thursday, June 6 at noon, members of the Mansfield Chamber of Commerce met in a regularly scheduled meeting.

After calling the meeting to order, Chamber President Mike Gipson read the names of newly added members. Those include: Queen V Nail Salon, located at 12760 S. State Highway 23 in Booneville, Cherokee Tire, located at 700 Highway 71 N. in Mansfield, Mayor Buddy Black and Recorder/Treasurer Becky Walker.

The Chamber of Commerce is getting ready to host the second annual Mayor’s 5k Fun Run on June 29. That event will begin at 8 a.m. The following is a map for the race.

mansfield-mayor-5k-map-arkansas

Gipson updated the members on the cost of the fireworks for the upcoming Independence Day Celebration slated for June 4. This year’s festivities will begin at 5 p.m., and include a cornhole tournament and concessions. Fireworks will begin at dark. The chamber sponsors the annual event and pays for the fireworks display. This year’s celebration totaled $3,825.

In October the chamber will be sponsoring the inaugural cruise night. Details are still being worked out for this event.

The chamber is set to meet again on July 3 at noon.

SCSO Search for Missing Hackett Man

The Sebastian County Sheriff’s Office received a report on Wednesday, June 5, of a missing man in Sebastian County.  Keith D. Hamby, 55, was reported missing by a family member. Hamby, who lives near Hackett, was last seen approximately five days ago.  

​Captain Pevehouse said, “SCSO investigators are diligently working to find Hamby.  We are concerned for his welfare.  Hamby’s vehicle was found abandoned off of Highway 253 in the Greenwood area.   Investigators have been speaking to a lot of folks, but as of yet have no leads on Hamby’s whereabouts or welfare.”

 Hamby has been listed as a missing person. Authorities have no information on what he might have been wearing.

​Hamby is a white male, is 5’ 7’’ tall and weighs about 160 lbs.  His hair is brown to balding.

​Anyone with information is asked to call FSSO at 479-783-1051.  Callers do not have to give their name.  

Health and Wellness – Are we healthier today?

Who doesn’t love sweets, pasta, rice, potatoes and all that makes you feel good? And the choices! You can see and probably imagine how good these cream puffs would be.

As I look back on my own life, I can see the mistakes I’ve made with food. Some people get to the point of seeing food as a means of satisfying the appetite. But, did it start there or has there been something else fueling our eating?

Even as recent as 50 years ago, the average American diet came from home-grown vegetables, fruit and wild or raised animals for meat. Many homes shared their bounty with neighbors and those who did not have a cow for milking shared that as well.

Something started changing back then, the change to convenience foods. These were foods that were prepared in a factory with chemical additives for preservation and adding back in chemical vitamins because the natural vitamins were lost through processing.

According to Deb Proven-Martin of Sustain Your Life, “Our quality of life has greatly decreased and little by little, due to lack of nutrients, we are shortening our life span.”

Deb shares that every piece of food we eat will either harm or help our bodies. It will either feed and repair our cells or it will cause damage to those cells.

Today, on the store shelves, we see many words used to market a product: healthy, low-fat, all natural, no hormones added, whole grain, no sugar added, real fruit juice and there are more labels. Are there really health benefits to these labels?

We will continue to explore the transition of food products and the effects on our health, so be watching.

Lavaca Mayor Commends Emergency Response Teams

The City of Lavaca and the surrounding communities continue to deal with the aftermath of one of the greatest floods this area has ever seen. Mayor Hugh Hardgrave was well-pleased with the efforts of citizens and emergency responders throughout the disaster.

He issued the following statement on Wednesday, June 5.

“Never in my wildest dreams would I have believed that we would see such flooding, and devastation in our part of the state, especially in our town of Lavaca. Historical river levels and excessive rainfall has led to road closures, property damage and economic losses for individuals and businesses.

I have been very impressed by the support and skill of our local emergency personnel and Sebastian County Emergency Management officials. Our very own Lavaca Police, Fire and Rescue Departments have gone above and beyond to keep our residents informed and safe in our current flooding situation in a very professional manner. I’ve always said: ‘training matters,’ and there is no doubt that their training has been put to the test and we are seeing the results of their dedication and professionalism. Our water department personnel and office staff have worked diligently to address issues as they arise to keep our city running as smoothly as possible considering the circumstances.

It has been a pleasure to witness our community come together and to help their neighbors. Residents of neighboring communities have shown up to help. Businesses have offered support. Simply put: people helping people in need.

I am proud to say that Lavaca is my home town. I know that we as a community will survive our current situation and be stronger together as we move forward.”

-Hugh Hardgrave, Lavaca Mayor

Remembering D-Day

My father never really spoke about his service in the Army during World War II.  He told small stories but always held back.  He had nightmares about the war, even into the end of his life at eighty-one in 1999.  I never knew of it but there it was on his army papers I found at his death: Normandy.  My father was a hero.

Seventy-five years ago this week, June 6, 1944, a fleet of Allied soldiers, some 150,000 of them, landed on five different beaches in Normandy, France.    Their goal was to free Europe from the control of the Nazi regime and Hitler’s grasp.  In what has been called the “largest seaborne invasion in history,” the Allies hit those French beaches.  The Allied group included Americans, British, Australian, Canadian soldiers as well as men from France, Poland, Norway and Czechoslovakia.

It was called “Operation Overlord” and was planned for over a year.  The invasion of Normandy is now referred to as D-Day.  Few dates in history are etched in our minds but June 6, 1944 will always be remembered.

One of the reasons it will be remembered is the shear enormity of the campaign itself. Despite the many countries involved in the project, it still came as a complete surprise to Germany. Another reason for its place in our history and memory is the tremendous loss of life but their sacrifice in this one day of the war marked the beginning of the end of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party.

Launched as the “Operation Overlord” campaign, the battle that initiated the invasion of Normandy is forever etched in history by one word: D-Day.  The D simply stands for “day.” The designation was traditionally used for the date of any important military operation or invasion, according to the National World War II Museum. So, the day before June 6, 1944, was known as D-1 and the days after were D+1, D+2, D+ and so on.

Some historians consider it “the single most important day in the 20th century”. Amphibious landings were supported by an airborne drop of 13,000 men later that night. It is stunning to think that more than 11,000 aircraft and 5,000 ships landed across the five Normandy beachheads.  They were each given code names: Utah, Gold, Juno, Sword, and Omaha. The day was plagued by bad weather but they had come too far to stop now.

We have all seen film clips of the U.S. troops as they waded ashore during the Allied invasion of Normandy. Even now it is hard to watch as they encountered thousands of German soldiers who were dug deeply into protected keeps high above the beaches. Of the 160,000 Allied troops that stormed those beaches, 9,000 died or were wounded. Hundreds of the men died instantly as the machine guns were ready to rip into them as they dropped the metal doors of the landing crafts.  Some drowned due to the weight of the supply packs on their shoulders.  Those who survived to the beaches faced a fortified beach of wooden stakes, metal tripods and rolls of barbed wire.

Yet the Allies fought onward.  Despite our losses, between 4,000 and 9,000 Nazi troops were killed. By the end of the evening, the Germans were in retreat and the Allies had established control of the area.

I read where thirty-four Virginia National Guard soldiers from the town of Bedford were part of D-Day. Nineteen of them were killed during the first day of the invasion, and four more died during the rest of the Normandy campaign. A D-Day Memorial and Museum has been built in that town, honoring those soldiers and the others who fought, like my father.

The cost of victory was unbelievable. They quickly estimated that there were 10,000 Allied casualties, with 4,414 confirmed dead. Yet, out of this carnage came a new way forward. The western front was finally opened against Hitler, marking the beginning of his downfall. 

The invasion of Normandy resulted in a decisive Allied victory over Axis powers in France, and set the stage for an Allied victory over all of Europe one year later. 

My father suffered three wounds throughout the war.  The last one was on the edge of taking Berlin when a sniper shot him in the chest.  The bullet blew his left lung from the exit wound in his left side.  I guess my father relived the war in his mind for the rest of his life.  In the days before PTSD was a thing and when ‘real’ men dealt with issues, my dad must have suffered horribly.  No wonder he had nightmares.  This will be a solemn week for me as I respectfully thank my father and the thousands of men who left their blood in the sand on the beaches of France.

Resources:                                                                                          http/www.cbs.news/news                                                  http/www.cbs.news/news/Bedford-boys                       http/www.washingtonpost/news/retropolis (photo)                                    http/www.latimes/nation/nationnow

CWD Management Zone Expands to Include Scott County

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission has expanded the Chronic Wasting Disease Management Zone to include Baxter, Scott and Stone counties following the confirmation of CWD-positive deer in or near these counties during the 2018-19 deer hunting season.

AGFC biologists identified 241 new positive cases of chronic wasting disease in white-tailed deer and five  elk during the 2018-19 deer hunting season. Among these were positive cases on the northern edge of Scott County and the eastern edge of Searcy County. To ensure compliance with the AGFC Code of Regulations, any county where a wild or captive cervid tests positive for CWD and any county within a 10-mile buffer of a positive CWD sample will be included under the CWD management zone regulations. 

“As we continue to learn about CWD in Arkansas and determine the outer edge of the disease, we have to adjust our management zone’s boundaries in an effort to help contain the disease and slow its spread,” said Cory Gray, chief of the AGFC’s Research, Evaluation and Compliance Division.

Inclusion within the CWD Management Zone will mean new regulations concerning baiting and feeding wildlife, hunting on public and private land within these counties, and movement of harvested deer.
Supplemental feeding of wildlife is not allowed within the entire CWD Management Zone; however, baiting is allowed from Sept. 1-Dec. 31 for hunting purposes. 

“Supplemental feeding and baiting of wildlife concentrates animals in close quarters, which increases the frequency of direct contact between animals and increases the chances of disease transmission,” Gray said.

Food plots may be used year-round in the CWD Management Zone as they do not concentrate deer in such close quarters as feeders, salt licks or bait piles. Certain baits also may be used for trapping and bear hunting purposes, with bear baiting allowed from 30 days before bear season opens until the end of bear season. Bear baits may only be dog food, cat food, pastries/bread, grease, non-wildlife meat scraps, popped popcorn, fish and fish byproducts. Exceptions to this feeding and baiting rule include Incidental feeding from active livestock or normal agricultural operations as well as feeding birds and squirrels with common bird feeders and squirrel feeders.

The following wildlife management areas will be relaxed by the new regulations concerning CWD: Cedar Creek WMA, Muddy Creek WMA, Norfork Lake WMA and Sylamore WMA. Within these WMAs, button bucks will now count toward a hunter’s antlerless bag limit and antler size restrictions such as the three-point rule will be removed. These liberalizations focus additional harvest on the male segment of the herd, which is one of the best known management practices regarding disease dispersal.  Private land hunters in these counties also will see the lifting of antler restrictions and the change of button bucks from being checked as bucks to antlerless deer. Deer harvest limits also will be liberalized on private land to help lower concentrations of deer and slow the spread of the disease. 

Baxter, Scott and Stone counties will be included in Tier 2 of the CWD Management Zone’s carcass movement regulations as well. Deer and elk harvested on private and public ground from these counties may not be transported intact outside of the CWD Management Zone. Only the following low-risk items may be taken to areas outside the CWD Management Zone:

  • Antlers and cleaned skulls
  • Meat with all bones removed
  • Cleaned teeth
  • Hides
  • Finished taxidermy products

Visit www.agfc.com/cwd for more information about chronic wasting disease in Arkansas.

Hornets Lend A Helping Hand

Hard work and selflessness is nothing new to the Hackett Hornet coaches and players. When the Hornets first heard that help was needed in the flood relief efforts for their neighbors to the North, there was zero hesitation. They immediately began getting a group together to volunteer with cleanup and the picking up of sandbags.

On Wednesday, June 5, Hackett players and staff loaded a bus bright and early and headed to the Community Bible Church to assists in the rebuilding process of a town forever impacted by the Great Flood of 2019. Armed with gloves and sunscreen, the Hornets were ready to spend the entire day getting their hands dirty and breaking their backs to help their fellow man. The Hackett Hornets are the perfect example of how big of an impact a little town can really make when they come together as one!


Reapers Football Comes To An End

At the end of March, sports fans across the River Valley were introduced to their very own semi-pro football team, the Ouachita Reapers. Calling Waldron their home for season one, the Reapers stepped on to the scene ready to dominate the field and start making a name for themselves. Playing teams from Louisiana and Texas along with local teams from Hope and Little Rock, the Reapers might not have had the season that they had hoped for but they definitely never lacked in heart and determination.

“As a whole, despite what the final record was, I feel the season was a success,” stats Reapers organizer Wesley Schuller. “The men I have on this team went into every game knowing they were basically going to be playing the full game both ways and went into it head first and didn’t blink. Always understaffed and short-handed, the guys still played their hearts out for me, their team, and our area.”

“The Reapers will be taking a month or two off to enjoy our summers with our family and then we will begin meeting again to start getting in shape for next season. We will be getting our bodies right and start studying plays to prepare ourselves while also playing some padded 7 on 7. For new guys interested in joining the Reapers I urge you to contact us. We are planning to take a BIG step into year two and we need your help to be a part of it!”


Tigers Looking Hardcore On The Hardwood

Both junior high and senior high Mansfield Tiger basketball teams have been busy busy busy since summer started. Over a two day period, the junior and senior squads took on Waldron’s basketball camp where they went head to head with many other talented schools. On the second day, both teams went back to work during Booneville’s basketball camp where they saw much of the same success as the day before.

The senior high Tigers went 3-0 at Waldron against Nashville, Mt Ida, and Mountainburg. The junior high Tigers went 1-2 as they battled against the same teams as their upperclassman. During the Booneville camp, the senior high boys went 2-0 facing Western Yell County and Booneville while the junior high boys went 2-0 taking on County Line and Western Yell County.

Head coach for the senior high Tigers, Keith Dake, explained the performance of his players, “Sr High looked exactly like what they are. A team led by five seniors with an abundance of young talent and depth to complement them. We were poised and in control from the opening tip of game one and now through two days of camp 5-0 for the summer.”

Coach Dake went on to say, “Jr High is a team that last year finished runner up in the conference and district tournaments. We moved up four out of five starters. With a lot of new faces seeing varsity minutes, this week has been a great opportunity to get multiple guys great minutes and work to develop our young players. They have answered with tremendous hustle and determination in hopes to continue to improve as we prepare to attempt a repeat of last seasons success under new head junior high coach, Keith Stovall.”


Boys and Girls Club Have No Beef With Fun Informational

Students at the Scott County Boys and Girls Club enjoyed a fun, and interactive presentation by ladies of the Scott County Farm Bureau Women’s Leadership Committee.

President Laurie Richardson and representative Regina Oliver visited the club and shared information on by-products provided by the beef cattle industry.

Of course, most think of the protein source the animal provides. However, they also provide things such as leathers, textiles, oils, lubricants, fertilizer and insulin.

According to the presentation, “More than 100 individual drugs perform such important and varied functions as helping to make childbirth safer, settling an upset stomach, preventing blood clots in the circulatory system, ‘pepping up’ a sluggish thyroid, controlling anemia, relieving some symptoms of hay fever and asthma, and helping babies digest milk. Insulin is perhaps the best-known pharmaceutical derived from cattle. There are 5 million diabetics in the United States, and 1.25 million of them require insulin daily. It takes the pancreases from 26 cattle to provide enough insulin to keep one diabetic person alive for a year.”

Following the informative session, Oliver invited volunteers to pick a product out of her grab bag. The students then had to guess what part of the cow that product came from. Each child received some gummy worms and a hand out to take home.