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The Advertiser is distributed each week to 13,500 homes across Barry County, [1] and focuses on local news. The first issue of the Advertiser was published on December 13, 1967, [ 2 ] and was at that time one of three weekly papers in Cassville, a town with a population of 3,206 as of the 2020 census, but less than 3,000 at the time.
Cassville is a city in Flat Creek Township, Barry County, Missouri, United States. According to the 2020 census , the population of Cassville was 3,190. [ 4 ] Cassville is one of the primary markets and job centers for an estimated 14,000 people living in the surrounding area. [ 5 ]
Located near Lenoir retirement home near U.S. 63 in south Columbia. Possibly relocated. White-Robertson Columbia area Family Located by Bobcat of St. Louis-Columbia north of I-70 Wigginton Cemetery Family Located east of Mt. Zion Church. At least two Wigginton family burials Williams Cemetery Family One of two William Family cemeteries
It is approximately 20 miles (32 km) southeast of Cassville. It is located south of Table Rock Lake and one mile north of Missouri Route 86 on Highway J. [2] At the 2020 census, Golden had a population of 275. [4] A post office called Golden has been in operation since 1876. [5] The community most likely was named after the local Golden family. [6]
The US is in the throes an unusually intense and severe flu season, with hospitalization rates topping the levels seen with Covid-19 at some points of the pandemic.
White 34 M June 30, 1999 St. Louis: Fred Harmon 41 David R. Leisure White 49 M September 1, 1999 St. Louis City: James A. Michaels Sr. 42 James Henry Hampton White 62 M March 22, 2000 Callaway: Frances Keaton 43 Bert Leroy Hunter: White 53 M June 28, 2000 Cole: Mildred Hodges and Richard Hodges 44 Gary Lee Roll White 48 M August 30, 2000 Boone
Conley was an above average hitter for a pitcher, posting a .192 batting average (105-for-548) with 33 runs, 19 doubles, 5 home runs and 45 RBI in 276 games. Defensively, he was below average, recording a .944 fielding percentage , which was 14 points lower than the league average at his position.
Eliza Burton "Lyda" Conley (c. 1869 – May 28, 1946) was a Wyandot Native American and an American lawyer. She was the first woman admitted to the Kansas Bar Association . She was notable for her campaign to prevent the sale and development of the Huron Cemetery in Kansas City , now known as the Wyandot National Burying Ground .