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2017 Stoddard County Pageants Set for October 8, 2017
September 28th 2017 by Dee Loflin
2017 Stoddard County Pageants Set for October 8, 2017

Dexter, Missouri - The members of Xi Lambda Psi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi would like to announce the plans for the 2017 Stoddard County Pageants.

The pageants will be held Sunday, October 8, 2017 at the Dexter High School Auditorium beginning at 2:0 p.m.

The following categories will be included:

Little Miss and Little Mister (ages 3 to 7)

Petite Miss (ages 7 to 11 or in the 5th grade)

Junior Miss (ages 11-14 or grades 6, 7 and 8)

Miss (age 14 -20, grade 9 and above)

All contestants must be residents of a Stoddard county School District, or attend a Stoddard County School.

They must also be a reigning Queen or attendant in their respective category or age group.

Any title bestowed from October 9, 2016 to the date of the pageant meets eligibility requirements.

Entry forms and rules will be available at all area High Schools and the Bunny Patch in downtown Dexter.  An optional rehearsal will be held on Friday, October 6, in the Dexter High School Auditorium.

The deadline for entry is 4:00 p.m., Friday, October 6, 2017.  The order in which entry forms are received has no bearing on the order of contestants' appearance in the pageants.

Proceeds for the pageants will be used to help various community and county projects such as the Karen Pippins Scholarship, 18FOreLife, Relay for Life, the Stoddard County Children's Home, the ARC Groups Homes, the local Beta Sigma Phi Scholarship, Christmas gifts for needy families, Dexter PAT, the Mother-to-Mother Program, and the Stoddard County Rescue Mission.

For more information concerning the pageants or entry forms please contact Susan Hill at (573) 624-5295 or Melanie Stoelting at (573) 421-3983.



Last Updated on September 28th 2017 by Dee Loflin




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2017 Tiny Miss Heartland Named
September 28th 2017 by Dee Loflin
2017 Tiny Miss Heartland Named

Dexter, Missouri - The annual Miss Heartland pageants were held on September 10, 2017 at the Dexter High School Auditorium.

The pageants are sponsored by the Dexter High School choral Department.

The 2017 Tiny Miss Heartland is Averiana Kimbrel.  She is the daughter of Neil and Tosha Kimbrel.

First Alternate is Annabelle Xandria Grace Shelton.  She is the daughter of Jason and Melissa Shelton.

Second Alternate is Lexi Espey.  She is the daughter of Thomas and Jerrica Espey.

The 2017 Tiny Miss Heartland winners are shown in the photo (L to R): Anabelle Xandria Grace Shelton, Averiana Kimbrel, and Lexi Espey.


Last Updated on September 28th 2017 by Dee Loflin




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2017 Wee Miss Heartland Named
September 28th 2017 by Dee Loflin
2017 Wee Miss Heartland Named
Dexter, Missouri - The annual Miss Heartland pageants were held on September 10, 2017 at the Dexter High School Auditorium.

The pageants are sponsored by the Dexter High School choral Department.

The 2017 Wee Miss Heartland is Bexley Keigan Horne.  She is the daughter of Keith and Ashley Horne.

First Alternate is emery Kate McClintock.  She is the daughter of Mark and Ashley McClintock.

The 2017 Wee Miss Heartland winners are shown in the photo: Emery Kate McClintock, and Bexley Keigan Horne.


Last Updated on September 28th 2017 by Dee Loflin




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Clint Lacy Presents: Blood in the Ozarks
September 22nd 2017 by Dee Loflin
Clint Lacy Presents: Blood in the Ozarks
Bloomfield, Missouri - Deep in the eastern Ozarks of Missouri, a battle still rages about a massacre that happened on Christmas Day of 1863. While some call it a simple rescue mission to liberate captured Union soldiers, others claim that it was mass murder, which included women, children and the elderly.

The Civil War (or the War of the Rebellion as many Southerners prefer to call it), was a bitter and brutal conflict, but perhaps never more so than in the state of Missouri, where the wounds of the Kansas border wars were still open and festering.

Clint Lacy will present "Blood in the Ozarks" at the Stars & Stripes Museum on Monday, September 25th at 6:30 p.m. at the Stoddard County Historical Society meeting.

"Blood in the Ozarks: Union War Crimes against Southern Sympathizers & Civilians in Civil War Missouri

Layout 1By Clint Lacy. Deep in the eastern Ozarks of Missouri, a battle still rages about a massacre that happened on Christmas Day of 1863. While some call it a simple rescue mission to liberate captured Union soldiers, others claim that it was mass murder, which included women, children and the elderly.

The Civil War (or the War of the Rebellion as many Southerners prefer to call it), was a bitter and brutal conflict, but perhaps never more so than in the state of Missouri, where the wounds of the Kansas border wars were still open and festering.

Though no famous battles were fought in Missouri, there was severe fighting across the state. In fact, Missouri ranks third in the number of battles and skirmishes during the war. Most of the 1,162 military encounters that took place in the Show Me State were smaller and much more personal than in the Eastern Theater of the war.

The brutality of the conflict was punctuated with multiple Union war crimes, especially in the eastern Ozarks. There, Southern patriots like Joe Shelby, Timothy Reeves and others raised regiments and did the best they could to halt the advance of the better-armed and better-supplied Union juggernaut, conducting lightning raids and surprise attacks—and even beating the Union in pitched battles.

But rather than take their frustrations out upon the rebel forces, Union commanders in the area—Maj. James Wilson, Capt. William Leeper and others—preferred instead to target the civilians of the Ozarks as a way to subjugate the Southern sympathizers of the region. As a result of this policy, 27,000 Missouri citizens were killed during the war.

Starvation, theft, looting, torching homes and outright murder were not uncommon tactics used by this bevy of Federal miscreants whose criminal tactics culminated on Christmas Day 1863 at Tom Pulliam’s farm in Ripley County. It was there, on one of the holiest of Christian holidays, a day universally regarded as a day to avoid bloodshed between even the most bitter of enemies, that the Confederates and their families were set upon by a group of Union cavalry under the command of the aforementioned Maj. Wilson.

According to eyewitnesses and numerous other sources, 34 of the attendees were killed and 100 more wounded by the berserk Union Missouri State Militia Cavalry.

To this day, local historians with an axe to grind have worked diligently to cover up this heinous war crime—perhaps the worst of the Civil War—to protect local reputations. Historian Jerry Ponder, who was the first modern historian to expose this Christmas Day massacre—was relentlessly defamed for his pioneering reports on the tragedy. But, despite the recriminations, Ponder never backed off his research or his story.

Sadly, Ponder passed away in 2005, but author Clint Lacy has taken up Ponder’s torch of truth and, in this book, Lacy presents all the known evidence, making a strong case that the Wilson Massacre, as it has come to be known, did in fact occur as Ponder claimed, despite the denials of those looking to sweep it under the rug.

But the Wilson Massacre was not the only Union war crime in Missouri. Lacy also discusses many others committed by Union forces in Missouri in his attempt to bring history into accord with the facts and shine the light of truth on one of the darkest periods of American history.

Softcover, foreword by TBR Editorial Board member Prof. Ray Goodwin, six appendices based upon period newspaper reports and diary entries, informative photo section, 157 pages."

Last Updated on September 22nd 2017 by Dee Loflin




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2017 Stoddard County Fair Parade Winners
September 22nd 2017 by Dee Loflin
2017 Stoddard County Fair Parade Winners
Stoddard County - Missouri - The 2017 Stoddard County Fair Parade float winners have been announced.

In the Commercial Category 1st Place went to Circle G Ranch Supply, 2nd Place went to Busy B Lumber, and 3rd Place went to Pyramid Home Health.  Prize money is as follows 1st place gets $150, 2nd place earns $100 and 3rd place gets $50.

In the Schools/Clubs Category 1st Place went to Dexter Headstart, 2nd Place went to Dexter High School FFA,, and 3rd Place went to Puxico High School FFA.

In the Churches & Other Category 1st Place went to Monsanto for Kids, 2nd Place went to Elks Lodge, and 3rd Place went to Stoddard County Nutrition Center.

In the High School Band Competition the Puxico High School Marching Band won 1st Place.  Bloomfield High School earned 2nd Place and 3rd Place went to Richland High School.  The Dexter Marching Band participates in the parade, but does not compete against the other high school bands in the competition.



Last Updated on September 22nd 2017 by Dee Loflin




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