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City Honors Dedicated Duo

On Thursday evening, the City of Mansfield and Mayor Buddy Black honored two individuals who have given many years of service to the city. Retiring Police Chief Boyd Farmer and Ward 1, Position 1 Alderman Georganna Mabry have both served proudly for over a decade.

dedicated-duo-Farmer-Mabry-Mansfield
dedicated-duo-Farmer-Mabry-Mansfield

Alderman Dave Johnson presented Farmer with a gold retirement shield. Farmer has served as Police Chief for the past seven years, been with the Mansfield Police Department for the past 16 years, served in law enforcement for 24 years and as a first responder for 30 years. His tearful words of gratitude to the city council, mayor, and the people were heartfelt.

“I want to thank my wife and my family for being by my side. Thirty years of saving lives…helping the community and doing what I love…I thank the citizens of Mansfield, I’ve really been honored to serve the people in this town.”

Farmer plans to take some time off following retirement, fishing and camping. Following that, he plans to work part time as a reserve officer for Sebastian County.

Former City Alderman Mabry served 13 years on the council. Mayor Black commended her for the years of service.

“We want to thank you for your service to the City of Mansfield.”

Sincere thanks to both Farmer and Mabry for their dedication to the city, and its citizens.

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dedicated-duo-Farmer-Mabry-Mansfield

Hornet Baseball Ready To Swarm NWA

The first weekend of spring can mean only one thing. BASEBALL! On Saturday, March 23, the Hackett Hornet Baseball Team will pack their gear and head to Arvest Park in Springdale, Arkansas. That’s right. Small town USA is headed to the big city to play in a professional baseball park. Are the Hornets excited? Dang skippy they are! How many people can say they’ve done that?

Along with the Hornets wanting to be a part of this awesome program, this opportunity also comes in the form of a fundraiser. Until the end of the school year, the Hornets will be selling tickets to the Naturals games to cover the cost of playing at their field. “If we sell all the tickets we also get money back as a fundraiser. It is a really cool opportunity and I’m excited we get to be a part of it,” says Coach Adams.

The Hornets still have tickets left for purchase and can be bought from any player or from Coach Adams. The Naturals tickets are $8 each and good for any home Naturals game excluding the Fourth of July.

Hackett will be playing against the (1-7) Sloan-Hendrix Greyhounds from Imboden, Arkansas. The Hornets are sitting at 1-3 in total season play. The game will start at 11:30 a.m. and admission is free. Since there will be no concession available, fans are more than welcome to bring in food and drinks.

There is no crying in baseball…unless you miss the sign-up deadline

East Sebastian County Youth Organization needs your help making this summer season special. The league is up against a deadline and must lock teams by this Saturday. Therefore the last chance to sign up your child will be this Saturday March 23rd from 1-4pm at ball field on Featherhill Road.

“We have one last sign up on Saturday March 23rd from 1-4pm at ball field on Featherhill Road.
I need three more boys age 7-8 to fill a team. I need 6 more girls age 7-8 to fill a team. I will also need a coach for the 7-8 year old girls and the 7-8 boys. I am also still looking for a coach for the 13-15 year old boys. Rosters must be turned in on Monday March 25th so we will not be able to accept any sign ups after Saturday. Please make sure you are signed up by the 23rd. Call Cindy at 479-252-2794 if you have any questions or if you can’t make the sign up Saturday and need to make other arrangements”

If you know someone in these age brackets that want to play, please help get them in touch with Cindy. There is an online registration availability. Please see the following link.

https://sites.google.com/view/escyobaseball/sign-up-online?authuser=0

Vandals Damage Hartford Coal Mine

On March 15, a caretaker discovered vandals had visited the closed coal mine in Hartford.  The vandals did over $5,000 in damage to equipment, which was in the mine, as well as set fire to an area near the mine entrance.

According to the Sebastian County Sheriff’s Office, the last time the caretaker was at the mine was the previous day. Additionally, that ​a neighbor saw two young men around the property the day before.  

Game cameras captured photos of the unidentified young men.  At this time SCSO investigators are seeking to identify the young men and would like to speak to them.  

​Anyone who can identify the young men or has any information about them are asked to call the Fort Smith Sheriff’s Office at 479-783-1051. Callers do not have to give their name. 

Semi-Pro Football Has Touched Down In Waldron

Have you found yourself suffering from the football blues? Sluggishly moving through life like a robot while waiting for fall to arrive? Well wait no further. The Ouachita Reapers are answering your prayers. A semi-pro football team with members from Mena to Fort Smith, have partnered up with Sodie Davidson Park in Waldron to bring another level of sports to the area.

Any football enthusiast aged 18 and up, can find themselves on the talented roster that makes up the Reapers. In being the first season, the team is individually funded by the team members who provide their own equipment, purchase their own jerseys, and provide their own way to and from games until sponsors are found. Plus the added cost of officials. At the moment, sponsorship is greatly needed and welcomed.

The Ouachita Reapers will play their first game this Saturday, March 23 in Waldron at Sawer Wright field at 3 p.m. Coached by Donald Thomas and coached and team owned by Wesley Allen Schuller, the Reapers will face first the Arkansas Silverbacks. The Silverbacks are coached by Pat Patterson out of Hope, Arkansas.

Wesley Allen Schuller has been working extremely hard to get this team up and running. “The Ouachita Reapers are glad to be able to call Waldron home. We are proud to be this areas team and we hope to be here for a long time.” For more information, you can contact Mr.Schuller on Facebook or through the team Facebook page, Ouachita Reapers football. So grab your cushions, cowbells, and football spirit and head to Waldron this Saturday. Lets help support and build-up not only the Reapers but the area as well.

Team Schedule

United Way Day of Caring 2019

The United Way Day of Caring is scheduled for April 25, and is a great way to get involved, volunteer and make a difference in your community.

Last year over 1200 volunteers completed an estimated 6,000 volunteer hours. This year, 110 projects are planned in a six county area with over 1,000 volunteer opportunities available.

According to the United Way Website, “Day of Caring is a great way to promote volunteerism, increase awareness of local human service agencies and give people a chance to see firsthand the impact that United Way is having in our communities. These unique collaborations provide essential support to our community partners agencies.”

Choose below which city you want to volunteer in. Projects are listed alphabetically by Community Partner Agency. Be sure to look at the entire list as some community partners are listed in more than one community.

Projects are located in:

Alma
Barling
Booneville
Cedarville
Charleston
Fort Smith
Greenwood
Lavaca
Mansfield
Mulberry
Ozark
Paris
Poteau
Sallisaw
Van Buren

You can also volunteer by texting “dayofcaring” to 51555 or visit the United Way of Fort Smith website.

Obituary – Dovie L. (Smith) Williams (1925 – 2019)

Dovie L. (Smith) Williams, of Mansfield, Arkansas left this life on March 20, 2019 at the age of 93 years, eleven months and eleven days. Dovie was born April 9, 1925 in Scott County, Arkansas to the late Felix and Mima (Taylor) Smith. She enjoyed cooking and spending special times with her family.

Dovie is survived by two sons; Paul and wife Shannon Williams of Mansfield, AR., Arnold and wife Dalana Williams of Mansfield, AR., four grandchildren; Julie (Evans) Williams, Linda and husband Davey Lowery, Allen and wife Angela Williams, Macy and husband Stevie Cowan, six great-grandchildren; Aaron, Kaylie, Austin, Danielle, Colten and Jani. She is also survived by her siblings; Frances Judy, Dora Harrison, Melvin Smith and wife Betty, Margaret McCafferty and husband Jerry and by a host of others friends and family.     

She is preceded in death by her husband Charlie Williams, parents Felix and Mima Smith, and six siblings; Ardell, Jess, Lester, Roxie, Evie Jewell and Iola.

Visitation will be 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. on Friday March 22, 2019 at Martin Funeral Home Chapel in Mansfield, AR.

Funeral service will be held 2:00 p.m. Saturday March 23, 2019 at Martin Funeral Home Chapel in Mansfield with Bro. Keith Elmore officiating. Burial will follow the service at Freedom Cemetery under the direction of Martin Funeral Home in Mansfield.

Pallbearers will be Allen Williams, Bill Weaver, Kevin Jolley, Stevie Cowan, Davy Lowery and Aaron Evans.

Park Expansion to Feature Unique Additions

Earlier this week, Waldron city leaders announced plans to add two very unique additions to their new city park.

One of those is a Bankshot Basketball Court. A Bankshot course consists of a varying number of stations, each with a uniquely shaped Bankboard. Each Bankshot requires a different banked shot to score. Players may use a scorecard to track their score as they shoot increasingly difficult shots at each of the stations.

bankshot-basketball-court-Waldron

There is no running, no jumping, no offense and no defense. Participants play alongside, not against each other creating equality for everyone. Non-aggressive, accessible and inclusionary variations.

The other addition is a dinosaur dig. Most children love dinosaurs and what could be better than to uncover one? Parts of the skeleton protrude from the sand it is buried in to grab the attention of the child who then starts digging!

Both of these additions will be unique to the park. As Waldron Mayor David Millard says, “good things are happening in Waldron!”

Senior Center Purchases New Van for Meal Delivery

The Mansfield Senior Center recently received a new 2019 Nissan MV200 van, which will be used to deliver meals to seniors.

Altogether, six vans were purchased by the Sebastian Retired Citizens Association through the Arkansas Trans-Lease Program, which is available for non-profit organizations and offers no down payment and no interest lease purchases.

Site Director Candice Graham said the van was a much needed addition and will allow them to continue delivering the meals that the receipts depend on.

For more information on the Mansfield Senior Center or its services, you can contact 479-928-4429.

The Barber Who Was Handed A Death Sentence Part 2

Dave’s GodWink: Part 2

Cindy arrived at the hospital, and the doctor pulled her into a small room.  It was the kind of room they only take you into to tell you that someone has died, and Cindy immediately knew something was horribly wrong. 

“Cindy, we have your husband and we have been working hard at trying to save him.  But, Dave is bad.  He came to us with no heartbeat and no pulse.  He had already turned black from lack of oxygen.  We gave him a shot of adrenaline to get his heart beating again.  We’ve intubated him and he is on a ventilator to help him breathe.  We are looking to see if Dave has had a heart attack or a brain bleed, but we aren’t sure what’s happening right now.  We aren’t sure why he stopped breathing.  The next 48 hours will be crucial for Dave to survive but things do not look good.”

Cindy’s mind could almost not comprehend all the information she had just been told.  She fell apart crying.  How could this happen?  He was just fine this morning when he left for work.  How God?

Within the next 48 hours, Dave went through a cooling down process where his body was forced to be 93 degrees.  This was important so his heart could rest and his brain would not swell.  Dave was placed in a drug-induced coma and paralyzed.  Cindy continued to pray for a miracle.  The cardiologist came and spoke to Cindy and told her if he makes it, they honestly did not know what quality of life Dave would have.  Dave had suffered a severe case of arrythmia when his heart had stopped which is called a cardiac death episode.  The statistics of recovering from something like this was near impossible. 

 The next four days looked hopeless, but Cindy knew her hope was not in the doctors.  Her hope was in God.  She continued to pray and asked others all over the United States to pray.  They needed to pray like they had never prayed before, because Dave needed a miracle to live. 

Then, finally a ray of hope, Dave finally began to breathe on his own. 

When the cooling process was finished, they began to warm Dave up.  It was time for him to wake up, but Dave did not wake up.  The Neurologist came to speak with Cindy and told her, that if Dave did make it, he would never be anything but in a vegetative state.   Cindy finally told the doctors,

“I can’t go on what you see or feel.  I am standing on God’s word, and if you have something negative to say, I want you to tell me outside the room.  I only want positive things spoke in Dave’s room.  I want to speak life.” 

Cindy refused to give up hope.  She refused to give up faith.  She told herself over and over, “I have to walk by faith.” 

Thirteen days passed, and a case manager came to speak with Cindy about discussing a DNR.  Cindy knew she could not sign it.  She had to continue walking by faith.  Day after day went by and things did not get better.  Thanksgiving passed, and the doctor told Cindy once again, “He’ll never be more than a vegetable.”  Cindy told the doctor, “But, my God can do a miracle.”

For sixteen days, he lay there.  He never spoke, and he never opened his eyes. The doctors were convinced that Dave was a hopeless case. 

Twenty days passed in the ICU with small improvements medically. His vent was removed, he could open his eyes, and he tried to speak.  Yet, hopefulness was still not in the doctor’s reports.  Dave was moved to the 3rd floor where he stayed for another 19 days. 

Now, thirty-nine days had passed, and Cindy was still begging God for a miracle.  Yet, the hospital was saying the insurance would no longer pay for Dave to stay.  She had to decide on what to do.

Dave was placed in a nursing home where he stayed a week, but then quickly landed back into the hospital for another ten days.  Life was no longer the same.  Looking at Dave was like looking at a stranger.  He wasn’t there.  It had been 56 days since he fell dead, and for 56 days Cindy had prayed for a miracle.  She was determined to not give up hope. 

On New Year’s Day, she decided to go to church.  She went up to the front for prayer for Dave.  The pastor and the church began to pray.  They began to speak LIFE on Dave’s behalf in their prayers.  Service ended, and Cindy drove back to the hospital.  All the while driving, she reminded herself of the prayers and the words spoken.  She had to keep clinging on to hope.  Dave was the love of her life, and she refused to let him go.  She could not bear the thought of living without him. 

Finally, she reached the hospital and made it to Dave’s room.  She walked into the room and he looked at her and began to TALK and he WOULD NOT STOP!  It was Dave!  The nurses called the cardiologist, the neurologist, and all the other doctors to see this miracle!  It was GOD at work! It was a GodWink!

Dave however could not immediately leave the hospital.  He still had more obstacles to overcome.   This would be a long road of recovery.  Days were going by, and finally Cindy decided God would complete the miracle He had begun at home. 

So, after 97 days of hospital and nursing home stays, on Valentine’s Day, Cindy signed Dave out of the hospital and took him home!   Although life was not completely back to normal, Cindy believed it was time to move forward.  What man said was impossible, what Doctors said was hopeless, and what looked like would never happened, God completely made possible, gave hope, and restored life! 

Have you been praying for a miracle?  While visiting with Cindy to write down Dave’s GodWink story, she said something to me that I will never forget.  “What if you are just one prayer away from your answer?  You just gotta keep praying.”  All the time she waited for God to do the impossible, she had to keep praying and believing that God was not done with Dave yet.  She couldn’t give up and she didn’t give up. Dave has gone from not speaking and being lifeless to preaching and teaching again!  It is an unexplainable GodWink…that moment in time when only credit can be given to God. 

If you would be interested in having Dave come speak at your church, you may contact Cindy at 870-210-1366.

Galatians 6:9 So let’s not get tired of doing what is good. At just the right time we will reap a harvest of blessing if we don’t give up.

GodWinks: the unexplainable moment in life when it can only be God!