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VERNON KENNETH HOLDSWORTH, 94, of Harlan (Svcs. 07/23/2018)

Obituaries

July 20th, 2018 by admin

VERNON KENNETH HOLDSWORTH, 94, of Harlan died Friday, July 20th at Myrtue Medical Center in Harlan. Funeral services for VERNON KENNETH HOLDSWORTH will be held on Monday, July 23rd at 10:30am at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Harlan. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Family will greet friends on Sunday, July 22nd from 5:00pm-7:00pm at Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan.

Burial will be in the Arlington Heights Cemetery in Audubon.

VERNON KENNETH HOLDSWORTH is survived by:

Wife: Della (Sheer) Holdsworth of Harlan.

Daughters: Linda (Alan) Kuhlmann of Charter Oak. Connie (Jerry) Ahrenholtz of Defiance. Colleen (Roger) Andersen of Harlan. Becky (Denny) DeWild of Shenandoah. Carol (Tim) Whittaker of Letts.

Sons: Don (Pat) Holdsworth of Harlan. Tom (Julie) Holdsworth of Oak Grove, MO.

Sister: Virginia Mundt of Manilla.

25 Grandchildren

39 Great-Grandchildren

2 Great-Great-Grandchildren

DELILA “DE” ANN BRILES, 72, of Atlantic (Celebration of Life 7/28/18)

Obituaries

July 20th, 2018 by admin

DELILA “DE” ANN BRILES, 72, of Atlantic died Thursday, July 19th at the Griswold Care Center in Griswold. Friends and family are invited to gather and celebrate DE BRILES‘ life on Saturday, July 28, 2018, from 2:00 – 4:00 p.m. at Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic.

Online condolences may be left at www.hockenberryfamilycare.com

DELILA “DE” BRILES is survived by:

Her husband – Melvin “Mel” Briles

Her daughters – Shelly (Robert) Burrows, Stacy Mueller and Shaunna Briles.

Her sisters – Karen (Lenny) Theulen, and Sharen Herrick.

Her brother – Rick (Laura Belle) Proehl.

6 grandchildren, 5 great-grandchildren, sisters,  numerous nieces and nephews.

Onawa set to host the start of RAGBRAI

News

July 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Thousands of people will be traveling this weekend to Onawa, the starting point for RAGBRAI. The annual bicycle ride across the state will begin Sunday morning in the Monona County community and end in Davenport next Saturday (July 28)th. Jen Collison, with the Onawa Chamber of Commerce, believes the town of 3,000 residents is ready for 20,000 visitors.

“There’s been a lot of mowing and weed-eating, porta-pots are coming in, picnic tables, we’re starting to close streets,” Collison said. “The businesses have been great as far as decorating their store fronts.”

The Monona County Fairgrounds will serve as the primary site for campers Saturday night, but tent camping will also be allowed at the high school, in all city parks, and on the grounds of the Onawa Library. “Every piece of green grass is being used at this point for tents,” Collison said.

The entertainment in Onawa includes four live bands. Onawa last hosted RAGBRAI in 2004. According to Collison, the town has been preparing for this weekend since January. On Sunday, the first day of RAGBRAI, bicyclists will pedal 43.3 miles to Denison. The other overnight host cities are Jefferson, Ames, Newton, Sigourney, and Iowa City.

Cass Co. Treasurer sworn in as President of NACCTFO

News

July 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Cass County Treasurer Tracey J. Marshall was sworn-in last week, as President of the National Association of County Collectors, Treasurers and Finance Officers (NCCTFO). The ceremony was conducted by her brother, Retired Sergeant Major Terry Weiss, in Nashville, TN.

NACCTFO is an affiliate of NACo, National Association of County Officials. NACCTFO promotes professional growth, a higher level of service efficiency and character to both the general public and county government and is proactive in federal legislation and regulations that affect county government, tax collection and treasury.

Tracey Marshall has received the Chancellor’s Certificate in Public Administration, Finance Master from University of Missouri St. Louis.

(Updated 4:20-p.m.) Iowa tornadoes hit unexpectedly, causing damage and injuries

News

July 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa (AP) — Thousands of people were without power Friday after a flurry of unexpected tornadoes swept through central Iowa, injuring at least 17 people and flattening buildings in three cities. The storms even surprised weather forecasters when they hit the region Thursday afternoon, causing extensive damage to a manufacturing plant and prompting the evacuation of a hospital.

The National Weather Service said Friday that at least five tornadoes and likely more struck. Meteorologist Jeff Johnson said it will take days to determine their strength and total number. The most extensive damage was in Marshalltown, a city of 27,000 people where 10 people were injured, brick walls collapsed into the streets, roofs were blown off buildings and the cupola of the historic courthouse tumbled to the ground.

Heavy equipment crews worked around the courthouse lawn Friday to remove entire trees blown over or shredded by the storm. The loud beep of backing trucks and grinding chain saws echoed several blocks away. Businesses and homes had gaping holes, some with roofs torn off or collapsed inward.

Alliant Energy spokesman Justin Foss said 500 utility poles needed to be replaced and 10 to 12 truckloads of poles were on their way. He said 200 crews have been called in to make repairs and restore power to 6,600 customers still without power. Natural gas service remains shut down in part of the city, he said.

In Marshalltown, the main hospital was damaged and all 40 patients at UnityPoint Health were being transferred to several other hospitals. Some buildings at the Iowa Veterans Home sustained roof damage, but no residents or staffers were injured at the facility that houses nearly 500 people, home officials said.

Such strong storms weren’t expected. Forecasting models produced Thursday morning showed only a slight chance of strong thunderstorms later in the day, said Alex Krull, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Des Moines, said
“It didn’t look like tornadic supercells were possible,” Krull said. “If anything, we were expecting we could get some large hail, if strong storms developed.”

Elsewhere, seven people were hurt when a tornado hit the agricultural machinery maker Vermeer Manufacturing in Pella, scattering huge sheets of metal through a parking lot and leaving one building with a gaping hole. People were still working at the plant at the time. Seven people injured at the plant were taken to Pella Regional Health Center, hospital spokeswoman Billie Rhamy said. They all were released after being treated for their minor injuries, Rhamy said.

A tornado also destroyed several homes in the Des Moines suburb of Bondurant.

Study: Iowa counties falling short with gender balance

News

July 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — A new study shows that Iowa’s counties are having trouble achieving gender balance on boards and commissions as required by state law.

The study by Iowa State University’s Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics found only four counties in the state are balanced, which is down from six counties two years ago, the Quad-City Times reported. Researchers collected data from 97 counties.

Scott, Harrison, Jasper and Winneshiek counties achieved balance on all seven boards, while 15 other counties fell one board short, the report said.

According to the report, 58.92 percent of boards and commissions were gender balanced, up just 0.28 percent from two years earlier. The percentage of boards that were balanced reached 58.64 percent in 2016, up from 49.53 percent in 2014.

There’s better representation of women on health boards, 78 percent of which are gender balanced, but only 40 percent of compensation boards are balanced, said Kelly Winfrey, coordinator of research and outreach for the center. Winfrey said achieving gender balance will require going beyond accepting applications. It also requires recruiting.

A separate report will be issued for cities soon.

Greenfield Drinking water now safe; Boil Order lifted

News

July 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Officials with Greenfield Municipal Utilities, Friday (Today), said the water system in the community and surrounding customers of GMU is now safe to drink. Here is the statement issued this afternoon:

“Customers of Greenfield Municipal Utilities were notified on 7/17/2018 of a problem
with our drinking water and were advised of a bottled water advisory followed by a boil advisory on 7/18/2018. We are pleased to report that the problem has been corrected and that it is no longer necessary to boil water for human consumption. We apologize for any inconvenience and thank you for your patience.

Greenfield Municipal Utilities has flushed out their storage and distribution system.
Results of the samples sent to the lab for analysis on Thursday, July 19, 2018 confirm
that we are within the recordable DNR limits.

This document officially lifts the boil order that began on Wednesday, June 18, 2018.
As always, you may contact GMU at 641-743-2741 with any comments or questions.”

FRIDAY, JULY 20th

Trading Post

July 20th, 2018 by Jim Field

WANTED:  older washer and dryer in clean, good condition.  Also gas stove in clean, good condition.  Call 712-784-4848 and leave a message if no answer.

WANTED:  1946, 1947, 1948 Science and Mechanics magazines for the months of June, July and August.  Looking for articles about cream separators in World War II.  Will pay $20 for them.  Call 712-764-7644.

Backyard & Beyond 7-20-2018

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

July 20th, 2018 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen visits with Charlene Johnson about the Questors garage sale.

Play

Mills County Sheriff reports two early morning arrests

News

July 20th, 2018 by admin

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports two early morning arrests on Friday. At 2:21am Deputies arrested 39-year-old James Patrick Duffy of Lincoln, NE on a Possession of Drug Paraphernalia charge. Duffy was taken to the Mills County Jail and held on $300 bond.

At 5:30am Deputies arrested 24-year-old Mariah Mae Dale of Council Bluffs for Providing False Identification Information. Dale also had a warrant out of Pottawattamie County for Possession of a Controlled Substance. Bond was set at $300 on the Mills County charge and $10,000 on the Pottawattamie County charge. Dale was arrested at the 34 mile-marker of Interstate 29.