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GARRETT THOMAS CARROLL, 24, of Denison (Celebration of Life 1/25/19)

Obituaries

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

GARRETT THOMAS CARROLL, 24, of Denison, died Tue., Jan. 22nd, at the Crawford County Memorial Hospital. A Celebration of Life for GARRETT CARROLL will be held from 5-until 7-p.m. Friday, Jan. 25th, at the Pauley-Jones Funeral Home, in Avoca.

A Prayer service will be held at the funeral home beginning at 6-p.m., Friday.

Burial will be held in the Graceland Cemetery in Avoca, at a later date.

GARRETT THOMAS CARROLL is survived by:

His mother – Ann Carroll, of Avoca.

His sisters – Delaney Carroll and Erin Carroll, both of Avoca.

His grandmother – Mary Turner, of Anita.

Other relatives and many friends.

NICHOLAS JOSEPH GROSS, 54, of Glenwood (Svcs. at a later date)

Obituaries

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

NICHOLAS JOSEPH GROSS, 54, of Glenwood, died Wed., Jan. 23rd, at Methodist Jennie Edmundson Hospital in Council Bluffs. Services for NICHOLAS GROSS will be held at a later date. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Burial in the St. Boniface Cemetery at Westphalia, will be at a later date.

NICHOLAS JOSEPH GROSS is survived by:

His mother – Aquanata [Kaufman] Gross, of Earling.

His Sisters – June (Tony) Prom, of Harvey, ND; Bonnie McCoy, of Des Moines; Therese (Steve) Becker, of Storm Lake, and Rose Wignell, of Creston.

His brothers – Jerry (Sue) Gross, of Westphalia; Father Ken Gross, of Des Moines; Joe (Mary) Gross, of Donahue (IA); Andrew (Denise) Gross, of West Des Moines; Edward (Leslie) Gross, of St. Paul, MN; Paul Gross, of Atlantic; and Norman (Diane) Gross, of Spring Valley, MN.

RUDOLPH ‘RUDY’ ANTHOFER, JR., 71, of Audubon (Mass of Christian Burial 1/26/19)

Obituaries

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

RUDOLPH ‘RUDY’ ANTHOFER, JR., 71, of Audubon, died Tuesday, Jan. 22nd, at St. Anthony’s Regional Hospital, in Carroll. A Mass of Christian Burial for RUDOLPH ‘RUDY’ ANTHOFER, JR. will be held 10:30-a.m. Saturday, Jan. 26th, at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, in Audubon. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home, where a Rosary will be held 4:30-p.m. Friday, followed by family visitation at 5-p.m.

Burial will be in the St. Patrick’s Catholic Cemetery in Audubon.

RUDOLPH ‘RUDY’ ANTHOFER, JR. is survived by:

His wife – Donna Anthofer, of Audubon.

His sons – Mike (Kindra) Anthofer, of Exira, and Steve (Christy) Anthofer, of Carroll.

His daughter – Mary (Zach) Brandt, of Prescott (IA).

His brothers – Larry (Lora) Anthofer, and Clete (Pat) Anthofer, all of Audubon.

8 grandchildren, other relatives and friends.

DONALD POLLOCK, 88, of Anita (Svcs. 1/28/19)

Obituaries

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DONALD POLLOCK, 88, of Anita, died Wed., Jan. 23rd, at the Cass County Memorial Hospital, in Atlantic. Memorial services for DONALD POLLOCK will be held 10:30-a.m. Monday, Jan. 28th, at Holy Cross Lutheran Church in Anita. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Anita has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family is at the funeral home in Anita, from 2-until 4-p.m. Sunday.

Burial will be in the Evergreen Cemetery in Anita.

DONALD POLLACK is survived by:

His children – David (Julie) Pollock; Diane Bryant, and Daniel Pollock.

3 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren.

2 arrests in Red Oak, Wednesday night

News

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Red Oak Police report two women were arrested, Wednesday. At around 7:30-p.m., officers took into custody 24-year old Kaylie Louise Hudson, of Red Oak, on a Pottawattamie County warrant for Theft in the 3rd Degree. Her cash or surety bond was set at $2,000. And, just before 10-p.m., Red Oak Police arrested 35-year old Elysia Tylene White, of Red Oak.  White was taken into custody on a Montgomery County warrantr for failure to appear on a charge of Domestic Abuse Assault/1st Offense. White was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 cash-only bond.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: 1/24/19

Weather

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: **Winter Weather Advisory in effect from 5-a.m. until 6-p.m.; Wind Chill Advisory in effect from 6-p.m. today until 9-a.m. Friday** Partly cloudy to cloudy w/scattered flurries. High in the 20’s early, w/temps falling to around 10 degrees by this afternoon. NW @ 15-30. Wind Chills around -15.

Tonight: P/Cldy. Low -5. V @ 5-10 w/gusts to around 20. Wind chills as low as -20.

Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy w/a chance of light snow or flurries. High 25. SE @ 10-20. Wind chills around -20.

Saturday: Mo. Cldy w/light snow or flurries. High 28.

Sunday: Mo. Cldy. High around 30.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 25. Our Low was 11. Last year on this date our High was 35 and the Low was 19. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 66 in 1981. The Record Low was -24 in 1894.

2 from Glenwood arrested on drug charges in Fremont County

News

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports that a traffic stop on Maple street in Sidney Wednesday night, lead to the arrest of two Glenwood residents. At around 7:20-p.m., Deputies with the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office and the K9-unit conducted a traffic stop in the 2000 block of maple street in Sidney.

During the course of the stop, Deputies located one-quarter pound of marijuana in the vehicle and numerous pieces of paraphernalia. Taken into custody, was 18-year old Logan Christopher Harding,  and 20-year old Chelsey Marie Spiegelberg, both of Glenwood. They were charged with two counts each, of possession of a controlled substance with the intent to deliver.

Both subjects were transported to the Fremont County Law Enforcement Center being held on $10,000 bond.

spiegelberg,c

harding,l

Midwest Sports Headlines: 1/24/19

Sports

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Megan Gustafson scored 32 points and No. 17 Iowa made 12 of 15 free throws in the fourth quarter t to end Rutgers’ 10-game winning streak 72-66. There were 14 ties and 12 lead changes in the early going before the Hawkeyes scored 10-straight midway through the second quarter to take the lead for good.

UNDATED (AP) — Iowa was blown out last month at Michigan State. The Hawkeyes collapsed late in the first half, allowing the Spartans to reel off a 40-11 run in a d90-68 win. The 19th-ranked Hawkeyes have looked much better since then. They will host the sixth-ranked Spartans tonight (Thursday night). Michigan State is currently leading the Big Ten.

WACO, Texas (AP) — Lauren Cox had 22 points to lead all five Baylor starters scoring in double figures, and the No. 2 Lady Bears pulled away in the second half for an 84-69 victory over No. 20 Iowa State. Cox had a tying layup to start an 8-0 run that put 16-1 Baylor ahead to stay midway through the second quarter. She added a reverse layup early after halftime for a 10-point lead.

UNDATED (AP) — Purdue has won four straight, and next up is a showdown with No. 6 Michigan State. The Boilermakers lost by 18 at Michigan State earlier this season, but they get the Spartans at home this weekend. The winning streak for Purdue includes double-digit victories over Indiana and Ohio State.

UNDATED (AP) — The ninth-ranked Jayhawks travel to face the eighth-ranked Wildcats in the highlight of the SEC/Big 12 Challenge. Kentucky has hit its stride after some early struggles, beating Mississippi State 76-55 for its fifth straight win. The Jayhawks are tied for the lead in the Big 12 at 5-2, but they’re also just 1-3 on the road.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Sug Sutton scored 18 points, Joyner Holmes added 15 and No. 12 Texas defeated Kansas 62-43. The Longhorns (16-3, 6-1 Big 12) never trailed but didn’t put away the Jayhawks (11-6, 1-5) until a 12-0 run in the fourth quarter pushed the lead to 58-35 with 5½ minutes to go.

UNDATED (AP) — The head-spinning offenses NFL fans are enamored of and will watch in the Super Bowl in Atlanta share their explosiveness with the previous team to win the big game in the ATL. The Greatest Show On Turf. And the latest version of the Rams has made the NFL title game this season.

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, Jan. 24, 2019

News

January 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:45 a.m. CST

ALBIA, Iowa (AP) — Animal rescue officials in Iowa say they’ve found one dead steer and rescued seven other ailing animals from a rural southern Iowa property. The Animal Rescue League of Iowa says in a news release that its response team helped Monroe County officials rescue three horses, one burro, a steer and two dogs that were left in freezing weather with no food, water or shelter. Charges are pending against the animals’ owner.

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — A former worker at Sioux City’s wastewater treatment plant has pleaded guilty to conspiring with others to tamper with wastewater sampling and testing. The Sioux City Journal reports that 69-year-old Patrick Schwarte entered the plea Wednesday in federal court. Prosecutors say chlorine was added to wastewater on days that E. coli samples were taken, then reduced after the tests, saving the city money.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — House Republicans leading a committee to review the results of a contested northeast Iowa House district election say they plan to recommend not opening and counting 29 absentee mail ballots that could reverse the outcome of the race. Committee Chairman Steven Holt says since the ballots had no postmark and didn’t have a seldom-used county election official tracking barcode, they can’t be counted even though postal officials have confirmed they were mailed in time to be valid votes.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A state judge has struck down Iowa’s restrictive “fetal heartbeat” abortion law. Judge Michael Huppert on Tuesday found the law unconstitutional. The law would ban abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected. That can happen as early as six weeks into pregnancy. It would have been the most restrictive anti-abortion law in the nation.

City of Atlantic Personnel & Finance Committee punts Senior Center issue to Council

News

January 23rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The City of Atlantic’s Personnel and Finance Committee discussed for 45-minutes, Wednesday, the issue of whether to sell the Senior Center as is, fix the roof and sell it, or fix the roof and hold onto the building. In the end, the committee decided to punt the matter to the full City Council for further discussion and action at their next meeting.

City of Atlantic Personnel and Finance Committee

The Atlantic Elks Lodge was sold late last year to Bev Moffatt. Representatives with the Lodge said they learned in late December that the Senior Center might be available for purchase as their new home. The Elks are looking for a place to hold their bingo and other events, and have offered to buy the Senior Center as is, make the necessary repairs to the roof, and share the facility with Senior Citizens during the day, as is currently the case.

City Administrator John Lund says a realtor told him the fair market value of the building, as is, would be $59,000 to $63,000. If the City pays for the roof repair, that would up the value to between $86,000 and $88,000. The roof has been leaking since last August, and must be replaced. The cost of that project was estimated at $36,255.

In addition to the roof factor, the City receives about $2,000 per year in revenue from the Senior Center. Operating costs range from $4,244 to $4,323. Officials say payback on the roof “Is not mathematically feasible from ongoing revenues. The Fund balance for the Senior Center Fund at the end of FY 2018, was $11,069. The City admits the building has not been a high priority on physical updates, and while the structure itself is solid (minus the roof issue), it could use additional investment.

John Lund says the City Council could activate levy a 13.5-cent tax (per thousand dollars valuation) to pay for the roof repair, and accordingly lower the employee benefits levy by the same amount. Those funds ($30,000), combined with the remaining balance of the Senior Center Fund, would allow the roof to be repaired. And, the Council could use the Elks to use the facility without charge in the evenings. It would no longer be rented out for other purposes, and still allow the Senior Center to be used from 10:30-a.m. to 3-p.m. as it is today.

The Committee had a hard time deciding whether to recommend to the Council that the City sell the building outright to the Elks, or fix the roof. Lund said the building would be better off under the Elks’ control/ownership. He said the building would be on the tax rolls – earning money for the City – it would be under better management, and their Fair Market Value offer, is very reasonable. Council/Committee person Chris Jimerson, who sits in on the Committee, says it would be a “win-win.” The Elks get a new place, and the Seniors still have a place to go to that’s easily accessible and familiar to them.

Council/Committee person Kathy Somers said she didn’t want to sell the building because the City wouldn’t be able to control what goes on there, with regard to Seniors being allowed to sharing the building, and it may, in the future may be useful to the City as a Police Station if necessary, or used for parking space if the second floor of City Hall ever gets modified as discussed over the past several years (Including the addition of an elevator).