In Gardner Minshew, Chiefs have a reliable backup behind Mahomes

Patrick Holleron

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Dating back to the 2019 season, Gardner Minshew has made a name for himself in the NFL with his strong play, along with his iconic mustache and mullet.

The 178th pick in the 2019 NFL Draft has been a steady presence on many teams, including the Jacksonville Jaguars, Philadelphia Eagles, Indianapolis Colts, Las Vegas Raiders and now the Kansas City Chiefs. Entering his 6th season, Minshew has completed 1,094 passes for 11,950 yards, 68 passing and 5 rushing touchdowns.

As training camp as progressed, Minshew has drawn praise from the Chiefs coaching, Andy Reid included. Reid specifically noted Minshew’s experience in starting multiple games as something that has been noticeable.

“He’s smart. He’s got good accuracy, poise,” Reid said. “You kind of have a heads up because he’s actually started in games. You kind of know how he handles the pressure. We liked what we saw on tape and I’ve seen the same thing here.” 

The the skill in his accuracy and poise that Reid mentioned dates back to his high school days with the Brandon Bulldogs in Brandon, Mississippi. When his former Brandon offensive coordinator, Wyatt Rogers, started working with Minshew after his 8th grade year of school, he immediately took notice to Minshew’s attention to detail.

“Probably the biggest thing that foreshadowed his success was his attention to detail,” Rogers said. He was always hungry for more. He would ask the right questions. After he got home, maybe two hours after we had watched film, he would shoot me questions over text.” 

That same attention to detail has played a role in Minshew getting more comfortable and familiar within Kansas City’s offense.

“They communicate very well on like potential looks,” Minshew said. “You can understand how the play might adjust on the fly, really give the guys opportunity to play ball and be successful. That’s what has been a lot of fun”

Of the aspects of his game that have grown over the years, Rogers has seen Minshew’s running ability being put on more on display.

“He makes plays with his feet now,” Rogers said. “He didn’t really do that in high school. He was more of a a guy that was going to drop back and stay in the pocket. He ran some, but you particularly saw it once he got to Washington State (Cougars). It was like he found a new gear in his athleticism.”

The ‘new gear’ Rogers mentions was seen in the Chiefs’ preseason game against the Arizona Cardinals. Minshew completed 6 of his 9 passes for 54 yards, rushing 3 times for 4 yards and 1 rushing touchdown.

When the Chiefs signed Minshew back in March, they were looking for a reliable backup if Patrick Mahomes had to miss time. His early success in training camp and the preseason is showing exactly why they wanted to bring him to Kansas City.

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Operation Christmas Child packs shoeboxes of school supplies for families in need  

Praji Ghosh

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — With the first day of school just around the corner, St. Joseph families are busy checking off their back-to-school shopping lists. 

One local effort, Operation Christmas Child, is stepping in to help make sure every child has what they need.

Volunteers are filling empty shoeboxes with school supplies and personal care items, with a goal of reaching 12.6 million families worldwide. 

It’s a simple idea with a big impact—turning a small shoebox into a package of hope for children who are in need.

“We work on a mission that is filling shoeboxes, and through the shoebox, we get to bless children all around the world with the contents that we put in the shoeboxes, that makes a difference in their lives,” said Kristy Smith, a coordinator for Northwest Missouri. 

Operation Christmas Child, part of Samaritan’s Purse, works to reach as many children as possible with these boxes of joy. St. Joseph has been part of the effort since 1994, filling shoeboxes with school supplies, toys and personal care items for kids who might not otherwise have them. 

Smith said the project began when Franklin Graham saw a need in war-torn Bosnia, where children were struggling without basic items. From there, the idea grew into a global mission. 

Teams across the U.S. and around the world pack shoeboxes with items that are both fun and useful. Local volunteers also work to set up drop-off locations where community members can bring filled shoeboxes.

“We put lots of toys so that makes it fun and we also put school supplies l;ike paper, pencils and pens with hygiene items and stuffed animals,” Smith said.  

The volunteer team works in the U.S and other parts of the world to pack these boxes that are fun and have lots of items for the little ones.  

The National Leadership team around the world comes together to decide who receives this items.

“It’s fun to buy something for someone else and let them get excited about that and share their excitement by seeing them receive a bouncy ball,” said Raydena Allison, a logistics coordinator.

There are nearly 10 drop-off locations in northwest Missouri and northeast Kansas, with two in St. Joseph. One of the central locations being the Frederick Boulevard Baptist Church, located at 5502 Frederick Ave.

“Sometimes I take my grandkids and we go shopping and they will buy stuffed animals because the two little girls I have loved stuffed animals, so that’s so easy to pack,” Allison said.  

The hope is simple: keep filling shoeboxes and keep bringing smiles to children’s faces around the world. 

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Human trafficking counter-operation leads to 12 arrests

News-Press NOW

PLATTE COUNTY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A coalition of law enforcement agencies led efforts to identify offenders and tackle human trafficking in communities north and east of Kansas City.

Twelve arrests were made in the multi-agency operation, that took place on Aug. 7 and 8, according to the Platte County Sheriff’s Office.

Seven people were arrested for attempting to buy sex with a child and three were arrested for attempting to buy sex. Two suspects were taken into custody for promoting prostitution/recruiting a person to engage in prostitution, with one of the offenders being booked for kidnapping and sexual assault.

According to a press release, a victim-survivor was recovered during the operation, and eight potential survivors met with Value Unconditional and RPOR advocates. The victim and potential survivors are all receiving support.

“I commend the actions of every agency involved in this operation,” said Platte County Sheriff Erik Holland. “No community is immune to these types of crimes. Law enforcement must continue to work together and share resources in a commitment to fight sex trafficking.”

The agencies involved included sheriff’s offices in Clay, Clinton, Platte and Ray counties, as well as the Kearney Police Department. Other regional agencies in Missouri and Kansas provided assistance, along with technical support from departments in Kansas, Arizona and Nevada.

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Commerce Bank announces baseball and softball equipment collection drive

Ryan Eslinger

ST. JOSEPH, Mo (News-Press NOW) — Commerce Bank announced a baseball and softball equipment drive to support the “Commerce Bank: Helping Kids Take the Field” campaign Monday afternoon.

Commerce Bank focuses on helping people and businesses solve financial challenges so that they can focus on what matters most.

The event aims to benefit youth baseball and softball players in T-ball through High School in the St. Joseph community providing equipment for kids who may not have it.

Commerce Bank is partnering up with Pony Express Baseball, the Kansas City Royals, and Royals rookie standout/St. Joseph native Noah Cameron to help with the event.

Commerce Bank is accepting donations of new or gently used baseball and softball equipment at all of Commerce’s 45 branches around the Kansas City and St. Joseph communities.

The following equipment can be accepted:

Baseballs

Bats

Batting gloves

Equipment bags

Fielding gloves

Hats

Helmets

Socks

Uniform pants

The event will be from 1:30-3 pm on Thursday Aug. 14 in the Commerce Bank Branch at 3303 Ashland Avenue in St Joseph.

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Despite preseason opener loss, Chiefs fans share which players they had eyes on

Carter Ostermiller

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A three-point loss to the Arizona Cardinals on Saturday didn’t stop the Red Kingdom from showing out to support their favorite football team.

Chiefs fans shared the names of the players they had their eyes on during the game. With Mahomes being the one player who remained the easy fan-favorite.

Other fans even mentioned Travis Kelce, Isaiah Pacheco and the popular rookie, Josh Simmons.

“Yeah, he’s going to be the next Trent Williams…”

“He’s going to be a stud this year.”

Despite a loss during the preseason opener in Arizona last week, fans were excited to see many of their favorite players back in action.

One fan even shared one of his most prized possessions. A helmet.

“I’ve been wearing it for a couple of years now,” said Chiefs fan Matt Courtin. “Come on, training camp, and kind of got the name, like, Speed Flex. So, because it’s Speed Flex helmet.”

Courtin also proudly shared the signatures “Speed Flex” has collected.

“…We got Kareem Hunt on here, Steve Spags, Brett Veach and Rashee Rice,” said Courtin.

Chiefs Training Camp is wrapping up with its final few days. The next camp day will begin at 9:15 a.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 12, at MoWest’s campus.

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LaTonya Williams to remain as SJSD Board president

Charles Christian

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A School Board meeting on Monday that could have resulted in a possible future change of board leadership ended with rescinding the recommendation for a called meeting to replace the president.

After over an hour and a half of discussion following the regularly scheduled meeting, the St. Joseph School District Board of Education decided not to proceed with a vote to consider a separate meeting to replace current President LaTonya Williams.

Williams, whose board term expires in 2027, was recently re-elected as board president. Williams said she feels this latest move is a reflection of changes in the makeup of the board and represents what she claims is a longtime attempt to remove her from her leadership position.

A standing room only crowd of citizens showed up for the meeting, with several signing up for the open discussion portion of the special meeting.

Speakers included concerns about the political nature of the proposal, with some citing concerns about special interest groups like the Herzog Foundation taking the focus off key educational priorities of the district.

Other speakers addressed more general concerns that the board was seeking a change of leadership titles without focusing enough energy on priorities like test scores, building improvement and staff retention.

After members of the public spoke, each board member was allowed the opportunity to address their concerns and to address the reasons for either supporting or opposing a board leadership change.

Kim Miller, who called the meeting, said while she initially supported Williams as president, she has since had second thoughts due to what Miller perceived as a “lack of support” for newly elected superintendent Dr. Ashly McGinnis.

Miller added, she felt the tension between board president Williams and superintendent McGinnis had become a distraction from the stated priorities of the board.

Board member Jennifer Kerns cited a lack of unity on the board and a perceived unwillingness to collaborate as her reasons for wanting the meeting.

Board Vice President Ronda Chesney also cited a perceived lack of support for McGinnis as a reason to reconsider the role of Williams.

Member Mike Moore publicly cited support for McGinnis, but noted that he opposed a change in board leadership.

Tom Richmond, the newest board member, made no specific reference to a change in board leadership but did say that he has been disappointed in the unity of the board under its current leadership and wants the board to rally behind the new superintendent.

Whitney Lanning voiced support for Williams and said, the board members who called for the meeting may have been in violation of Sunshine Laws by excluding certain members in their planning. Furthermore, she noted the financial support of the Herzog Foundation for certain board members as a key reason for rhetoric online and behind the scenes in opposition to Williams.

Williams spoke last and said she has sought to act according to policy and law when making decisions as both a board member and as president. She also expressed public support for McGinnis, saying that any criticism was not meant to be personal, and apologized if her questions were perceived as criticism.

Williams added, her focus would continue to be upon the staff and children of the district and hoped that this meeting would remind all members — including Williams herself — about the importance of more open communication and receptivity to one another.

Williams then called the board to take action based upon the agenda item, and board members declined to make a formal motion to call for a meeting for a change in leadership. The board then voted to adjourn.

During the formal meeting, the board discussed with the new treasurer, Dr. Robert Hedgecorth, the possibility of an audit. Hedgecorth introduced new software that demonstrated what he called a better tracking of proposed budget numbers and answered questions about deficits that have been brought to light in recent weeks.

Hedgecorth recommended, the current auditing firm employed by the board be allowed to do its work between now and the end of the year. He also added, in response to further board discussion of the nature of an audit, that a different outside firm or an individual appointed by the board could be brought in for a financial audit instead of the state, because the state’s audit includes policies beyond the financial and takes longer. The board tabled the discussion of the kind of audit it would request.

After the meeting, Williams said she was relieved and said she intended to be more intentional in her communication, both through speaking and listening with the rest of her board colleagues.

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Clinton County Sheriff’s Office arrest individuals involved with multi-county sex trafficking operations

News-Press NOW

CLINTON COUNTY, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The Clinton County Sheriff’s Office announced two individuals are in custody, following a successful counter-sex trafficking operation conducted on Thursday, Aug. 7.

During the investigation, undercover law enforcement officers engaged in virtual communications with the individuals, who then traveled to the area to fulfill arrangements made during the chats.

As a direct result of those efforts, two individuals were arrested and are currently in custody and formally charged.

Clinton County Prosecutor Brandi McClain submitted charges on:

Kurt M. Hay, for Sexual Trafficking of a Child

Denzell L. Adams- for Promoting Prostitution, Kidnapping-Facilitating a Felony-Inflicting Injury- Terrorizing, Forgery, No/Improper Operator License

Clinton County Associate Judge Teres Bingham issues no bond warrants on both Hay and Adams, who are currently being held in the Clinton County Jail.

Both Hay and Adams are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Clinton County Sheriff AJ Carrel said, “This operation was successful because of the talented law enforcement professionals who conducted the investigations and worked as one team. We will continue to partner with all our law enforcement partners to provide a safe community. We will make it very clear that human trafficking crimes will not be tolerated in Clinton County.”

The Clinton County Sheriff’s Office was assisted by the Cameron Police Department, the Ray County Sheriff’s Office, the Missouri State Highway Patrol and the Kansas City, Kansas Police Department. The Clinton County portion was conducted in Cameron, Missouri.

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I-229 Double Decker bridge to temporarily close for maintenance

News-Press NOW

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The Buchanan County Interstate 229 Double Decker bridge is scheduled to close beginning Monday, Aug. 25, for annual maintenance.

Road crews from the Missouri Department of Transportation will evaluate the bridge’s structure, signage and lighting to ensure it is up to par for drivers this coming year.

The I-229 bridge, including all ramps and the north and southbound lanes, will be closed around the clock from Monday, Aug. 25, through Wednesday, Aug. 28, from Highland Avenue to U.S. Route 36.

MoDOT said drivers will need to seek an alternate route.

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Court date set for later this month in Ryan Ferguson’s civil case

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Ryan Shiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A court date has been scheduled in Ryan Ferguson’s civil case for later this month.

A Cole County jury sided with Ferguson and six former Columbia police detectives in November in their lawsuit against Travelers Insurance.

They claimed Travelers refused to pay out the remaining $2.9 million of a more than $11 million settlement Ferguson and the detectives inked over his reversed murder conviction for sports editor Kent Heitholt’s death in the Columbia Daily Tribune parking lot and decade-long incarceration. The jury awarded him $2.9 million in compensatory damages and $35 million in punitive damages.

Attorney Michael Berry asked a Cole County judge in June to add at least $1.3 million to the $43.8 million judgment he awarded. Berry said Walker did not properly add 129 days’ interest on the award.

Both sides have filed motions on how much Ferguson should be awarded. The hearing is scheduled for 9 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 26.

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A century of influence: How St. Joseph and one man inspired the name ‘Chiefs’

Cameron Montemayor

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Decades before the founding of the Kansas City Chiefs, before the glory of four Super Bowl championships, and even before the birth of Chiefs founder Lamar Hunt, decorated civic leader H. Roe Bartle was known as “Chief” throughout St. Joseph.

It was a fitting and renowned name for the former mayor of Kansas City and larger-than-life figure who stood 6 feet, 4 inches tall, at times weighing between 350 and 400 pounds. Bartle would change the course of sports history by persuading Lamar Hunt to move the Dallas Texans football team to Kansas City in 1963, adopting the name “Chiefs” as a tribute to him shortly after.

“It was kind of a dual nickname. He was chief of the tribe of Mic-O-Say, which is the honor camp society he started in St. Joseph. And he was also the chief scout executive,” said Bill McMurray, a scout for the last 60 years and former mayor of St. Joseph, who met Bartle several times. “Even the guys who were young and scouting in the 1920s always called him ‘Chief’.”

“Chief” H. Roe Bartle, left, is pictured with Kansas City Chiefs founder Lamar Hunt.

The son of a St. Joseph pastor, Bartle earned the famed nickname during his early days as the scout executive for the St. Joseph Boy Scouts chapter in the late 1920s. Under Bartle’s acclaimed leadership, the local district grew by more than 1,000 scouts in just three years. He was even married in St. Joseph.

For Bartle, the name “Chief” was more than just an adopted nickname, it was considered a symbol of his leadership, wisdom and philanthropic efforts that flourished in St. Joseph, whether it was mentoring young scouts or countless community service hours, setting the stage for Bartle’s political career and savvy lure of Kansas City’s first professional football team decades later.

“It was here in St. Joe that the name started, and then he just continued on to Kansas City, and he was the chief there. And the rest is history. Right?” said McMurray, a passionate Chiefs fan since the team’s inception in 1963. “Bartle was instrumental in getting the Dallas Texans to Kansas City.”

St. Joseph and the ‘Chief’

Born in 1901 in Richmond, Virginia, Harold Roe Bartle received his early education from the Fork Union Military Academy of Virginia before graduating with a law degree in 1920. He practiced law for several years before finding his calling in youth leadership with the Boy Scouts of America in 1923.

A young Bartle made his way to St. Joseph in January of 1925 after spending two years as scout executive in Casper, Wyoming, a pair of transformative years for his life and later St. Joseph scouts. It was during his time there that he developed a passion for Native American lore and culture, even claiming to have received the name Lone Bear from a local Arapaho tribe.

Bartle used those experiences to create the Mic-O-Say tribe once in St. Joseph in 1925, an honorary Boy Scouts society for experienced scouts who displayed strong leadership.

Artifacts, dances and ceremonies became traditions of the Mic-O-Say and Boy Scouts camp that thrived under Bartle’s leadership. Participation grew exponentially from 420 scouts to more than 1,700 as summer camps were filled with jamborees, training schools, courses and a range of other activities.

It’s where the nickname “Chief” was born.

“He was always ‘Chief’… he honored and revered these traditions, ‘Be like our Native American ancestors, be people of courage,'” McMurray said, remembering his words. “He wanted to use the high ideals of the Native American culture to inspire Boy Scouts to live by the Scout oath and law.”

An article from the St. Joseph News-Press in 1985 reported that more than 9,500 scouts had been inducted into Mic-O-Say by that point.

During his time in St. Joseph, Bartle’s community contributions beyond scouts were extensive, a trait he would carry throughout his life. Along with serving on numerous boards, he was a member of several booster clubs, the Kiwanis Club, the Chamber of Commerce, the American Legion and the Ministerial Alliance.

“He was an incredible leader. He was president of a college. He never took a salary as the scout executive; he donated it all,” McMurray said. “He was everywhere for many, many years.” 

Wearing his longtime necklace from when he first joined Mic-O-Say, McMurray vividly remembers Bartle’s public speaking prowess and leadership going back to the first time he met him as a 15-year-old scout in St. Joseph in 1966.

Bartle was said to give upwards of 700 speeches a year. One of the top local scout leaders now, McMurray has studied many of his speeches to imitate his dynamic speaking ability.

“People across the river bluff could hear him and he was that loud, even at an advanced age,” McMurray said. “He would say things like, ‘Reach out and lift up those who were younger and weaker.” 

During World War II, he served as director of the American War Dads, a soldier support organization, which provided council and assistance to those returning home to the U.S.

He also founded the American Humanics Foundation later in his career, now a thriving group called the Nonprofit Leadership Alliance, an organization aimed at preparing students for leadership in nonprofit organizations.

A move to Kansas City and tale of the Chiefs

This photo from a 1928 edition of the St. Joseph News-Press reports that H. Roe “Chief” Bartle will be leaving St. Joseph to accept the scout leader position in Kansas City.

Bartle quickly rose through the ranks of the Boy Scouts of America due to his success in St. Joseph. In 1928, he was asked to relocate to Kansas City to take the same position while also joining the national scout executive board.

Bartle rose to become a prominent and well-known figure in the community over the next few decades as his accomplishments and responsibilities grew, including being national president of the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity from 1931 to 1946 and president of the Missouri Valley College from 1945 to 1952.

In 1955, with no prior political experience, he ran for and was elected mayor of Kansas City as an independent. Bartle was urged to run by several former scouts, the local Citizens Association, and even former president Harry S. Truman, according to reporting from KC Yesterday.

It was during Bartle’s second term in office in 1962 that the “Chief” caught wind of team owner Lamar Hunt’s desire to relocate the Dallas Texans, then part of the AFL, due to competition with the newfound Dallas Cowboys, a rival NFL expansion team.

The founder of the AFL, Hunt, made the decision despite the Texans winning the AFL Championship that season with a familiar duo leading the charge: head coach Hank Stram and quarterback Len Dawson. Hunt knew that having two football teams in the same city — even one as large as Dallas — wasn’t sustainable before the sport’s popularity exploded.

Hunt was reportedly engaged in negotiations and favored relocating to other cities such as New Orleans, Atlanta and even Miami.

But as he did throughout his career, Bartle’s leadership would prove instrumental in making the case to Hunt and General Manager Jack Steadman about the prospect of Kansas City, which had no professional football teams at the time.

“What I had always heard was that (Bartle) contacted Lamar Hunt and agreed to sell an enormous number of season tickets, and I guess impressed him enough,” McMurray.

Lamar Hunt, left, founder of the American Football League and president of the Kansas City Chiefs, and Chiefs coach Hank Stram, one of only two coaches who have been with the AFL since its inception, are pictured in this Associated Press 1970.

Bartle called upon the help of more than 1,000 community members and 20 businesses to conduct a massive season ticket drive with the goal of selling 35,000 tickets for the team, nearly triple the amount the Texans had in Dallas. He also promised to expand Municipal Stadium by an additional 14,000 seats.

Bartle was given a four-month deadline to secure the tickets, a condition of the team’s move, all of which was done in secret as the announcement had not been made public. Fans buying tickets knew almost nothing about who the team was or where they were coming from.

Bartle accomplished the feat in just two months. Hunt was more than convinced.

On May 22, 1963, Hunt announced the team would be moving to Kansas City, much to the buzz of the city. Despite initially wanting to keep the name Texans, Hunt was talked out of it, and a naming contest was held shortly after.

The Mules ended up receiving the most votes, followed by the Royals. The city was also home to the Kansas City Athletics of the MLB at the time.

Despite the vote, Hunt and team executives opted to pay tribute to the man who convinced not only them but the city of Kansas City to buy into the newfound team, something the Chiefs honor on their website.

“So they named the team the Chiefs,” McMurray said.

Just four years after moving the team to Kansas City, the Chiefs were playing in the first-ever Super Bowl against the Green Bay Packers, a 35-10 defeat.

“I didn’t like the ending, but it was quite the game,” McMurray said with a laugh. “Everybody remembers that Super Bowl.”

The following years would see the team’s first Super Bowl victory in 1969 against the Minnesota Vikings, followed by the construction of Arrowhead Stadium in 1972, now a major topic of discussion in 2025.

Bartle would end up serving two terms as mayor of Kansas City from 1955 to 1963. The Kansas City Convention Center was later named “Bartle Hall” in his honor in 1976.

Fond memories and return to St. Joseph

Bartle often made his way back to his old stomping grounds in St. Joseph following his days as mayor and impact on the Chiefs, even praising a speech by a teenage McMurray during a Mic-O-Say event.

“I gave a little speech. Kind of bumbled around at the age of 15, and then when he gave his speech, he came up and said ‘This young man gave a fine speech,'” McMurray recalled. “He was always very elevated.”

Nearly 50 years from when he first set foot in St. Joseph as a young scout executive, Bartle continued to uplift those around him and support the community he had such strong ties.

“Chief” H. Roe Bartle, center, is pictured with a group of Boy Scouts in this undated photo. | Photo courtesy of Kansas City Library

Several years later, as a 21-year-old Eagle Scout in 1972, McMurray was able to convince Bartle to return for another speech at Camp Geiger in St. Joseph. By then, the towering Bartle weighed between 350 and 400 pounds and was known to smoke upwards of 20 cigars a day.

“He used to joke and say he wore size 52 Boy Scout shorts. So he was a big guy and just very personable and interested in scouting and people,” he said.

Bartle died two years later on May 9, 1974, at the age of 72, often speaking fondly of St. Joseph until the end.

“What a life. A very admirable life,” McMurray said. “He certainly held St. Joe in great esteem … some of the older guys said he wouldn’t trade a golden nugget for the great feeling that he had being back in St. Joe.”

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