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MYRNA [Cass] NELSON, 85, of Stuart (Celebration of Life: 6/14/18)

Obituaries

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

MYRNA [Cass] NELSON, 85, of Stuart, died Saturday, June 9th, at the Stuart Community Care Center. A Celebration of Life service for MYRNA NELSON will be held 6-p.m. Thursday, June 14th, at the Johnson Family Funeral Home, in Stuart.

Visitation will be held prior to the service Thursday, from 5-until 6-p.m. Thursday, at the Funeral Home, in Stuart.; Online condolences may be left at www.johnsonfamilyfuneralhome.com.

Burial will be held at a later date.

MYRNA NELSON is survived by:

Her daughter – Alveda Nelson & wife Kim, of Puyallap, WA.

Her son – Andrew Nelson, of Stuart.

Her sisters – Francis Stanley, of Creston, and Betty Weinheimer.

Her brother – Dean (Karen) Cass, of Fontanelle.

A host of grandchildren, great-grandchildren, great-great grandchildren, other relatives and friends.

 

LARRY MAYNES, 79, of Carson (Memorial Svcs. 6/16/18)

Obituaries

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

LARRY MAYNES, 79, of Carson, died Sunday, June 10th, at the Bethany Lutheran Home, in Council Bluffs. A Memorial service for LARRY MAYNES will be held 11-a.m. Saturday, June 16th, at the Loess Hills Funeral Home, in Carson.

Visitation will be held two-hours prior to the service, from 9-until 11-a.m., Saturday.

Memorials may be directed to the Larry Maynes Scholarship Fund.

Skyscan Forecast & weather data for Atlantic: 6/13/18

Weather

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly cloudy. High 83. N winds becoming SE @ 10-15.

Tonight: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scattered shwrs & tstrms. Low 65. SE @ 5-10.

Tomorrow: Shwrs & tstrms ending early; Becoming P/Cldy. High 85. SE @ 10-15.

Friday: Mostly sunny. High 94,

Saturday: Mo. Sunny. High 96.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 85. Our Low this morning was 60. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 92 and the Low was 64. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 96 in 1987. The Record Low was 37, in 1906.

Challenging schedule awaits Iowa State

Sports

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

One college football preview magazine expects Iowa State to make more progress next season even though the win total may not show it. Phil Steele’s College Football Preview expects Iowa State to be in bowl contention once again against a difficult schedule. ISU posted upsets over Oklahoma and TCU in 2017 in posting an 8-5 record that included a win over Memphis in the Liberty Bowl. (Click on the left side of any sound bar to listen to the clip)

Steele says this Iowa State team does not have as much experience and another factor this season may be luck. The Cyclones were a plus-10 in turnover margin last season and Steele says history has proven that turnover margins tend to even out.

Steele feels Iowa State’s defense will be solid and he expects the offense to make progress.

Steele says David Montgomery and the run game will be more effective.

Iowa State opens the season at home on September first against South Dakota State. Steele’s College Football Preview will hit the news stands on June 26.

(Learfield Sports)

Midwest Sports update: 6/13/18

Sports

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Despite setting records last fall, Iowa tight end Noah Fant went largely unnoticed outside of the Big Ten West. That shouldn’t be the case in 2018. Fant will return for his junior season with the Hawkeyes as one of the nation’s most intriguing pro prospects. The 6-foot-5, 241-pound Fant has size, speed, athleticism and a knack for finding the end zone.

The Brewers are back atop the NL Central after Travis Shaw and Chase Anderson led a 4-0 win over the second-place Cubs. Shaw provided a pair of two-run doubles to back Anderson, who limited Chicago to one hit over seven innings before the bullpen finished up a two-hitter. Tyler Chatwood gave up the four runs over five innings as the Cubs fell a half-game behind Milwaukee.

The Cardinals’ 4-2 loss to the Padres leaves St. Louis three games behind the Brewers. Eric Hosmer hit a solo homer and A.J. Ellis added a two-run single while San Diego scored three times in the fourth inning off Miles Mikolas (MY’-koh-lahs). The Padres have won 10 of their last 14 games.

Joey Votto lined a tiebreaking, base-loaded triple in the 10th inning to send the Reds past the Royals, 5-1. Tucker Barnhardt slammed a solo homer and Cincinnati starter Sal Romano lowered his ERA to 5.67 by holding the Royals to a run and four hits over eight frames.

The final pitches from still seeking GOP’s nod for state ag secretary

Ag/Outdoor

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Five men still hoping to run for state ag secretary this fall gave their closing pitches to a group of Polk County Republicans last (Tuesday) night. No candidate got at least 35 percent of the vote in last week’s primary to secure the G-O-P nomination outright, so delegates at the Iowa G-O-P’s state convention will choose a nominee this Saturday. Mike Naig replaced Bill Northey as state ag secretary in early March when Northey left for a job in the Trump Administration. Naig was the first place finisher in last week’s primary, with a fraction less than 35 percent.

“It is absolutely critically important that we maintain conservative leadership in the secretary’s office at the Department of Ag and we must be prepared for a competitive race against the Democrat candidate in November and so we’ve got to put our best foot forward,” Naig said. “I think the experience that I bring being in the office really brings a lot to the table.”

State Senator Dan Zumbach of Ryan was the second-place finisher in the primary, with about 20 percent of the vote. Zumbach emphasizes his ability to survive the Farm Crisis and his work in the legislature.  “This isn’t where I thought I’d be. I never thought I’d be a public speaker. I’m much more comfortable sitting in a tractor with the radio turned up, but here I am in front of a group of folks in Des Moines,” Zumbach said. “…Allow me to utilize my talents, my hard work and my passion to represent you.”

Former Iowa Farm Bureau president Craig Lang of Brooklyn was the third place finisher in the primary. Lang says his experience on the board that governs the three state universities as well as leading the Farm Bureau have equipped him for this new job. “Our nominee must be prepared to take the battle to the Democrat nominee and win,” Lang said. “I ask you to judge my future ability to serve as your secretary of agriculture by judging my decades-long past performance of fighting and winner the fights that matter.”

Ray Gaesser of Corning, the past president of the Iowa and American Soybean Associations, argues those posts gave him experience in foreign export markets as well as with congress in writing the Farm Bill. “I really don’t need a job. I really don’t want to be governor either or anything else,” Gaesser said. “I want to be the best secretary of agriculture that I can be and, I promise you, if you vote for me and elect me, I will be. And I know how to support the party.”

Chad Ingels of Randalia was the last place finisher in last Tuesday’s primary and he says he’s not at all embarrassed about it. “I spent a fraction of the money on my campaign as the other candidates did,” Ingels says. “…I’m very proud of the 8000 votes I got in the last election and hope to get many more on Saturday.”

The Iowa Republican Party’s state convention schedule seems to indicate the process of selecting the G-O-P nominee for this post will begin early Saturday afternoon.

(Radio Iowa)

Reynolds says GOP platform plank on same-sex marriage not binding on candidates

News

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A spokeswoman for Governor Kim Reynolds has issued a clarification of the governor’s views on same-sex marriage after Reynolds seemed to call for a statewide vote on the issue. “People have traditional views on what they believe marriage consists of and they have every right to have that, but it was decided by the courts,” Reynolds says. “And I have said from the very beginning my position has been that it probably should go to a vote of the people and they should weigh in and then we would stop this back and forth.”

A few hours after Reynolds made those remarks, her communications director indicated those were the governor’s views in the past, not the present.The Iowa Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision in 2009 that legalized same-sex marriage in Iowa. A U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2015 made it legal throughout the country. The governor’s spokeswoman says Reynolds believes the courts “weren’t necessarily the place” where the issue should have been decided, but Reynolds considers the issue “settled.

The Iowa Republican Party’s platform that will be ratified Saturday at the G-O-P’s state convention calls for repealing “any laws allowing any mar­riage that is not be­tween one natural man and one natu­ral woman.” Reynolds says the platform provides the “guidelines” grassroots Republicans hope elected officials will advance. “But it’s not something that every single candidate has to abide by,” Reynolds says. “It is kind of an over-arching goal of what the party is working on.”

Reynolds told a reporter who asked if she supported the party platform’s call for a ban on same-sex marriage that she’s focused on economic issues instead. “We’re going to talk about reducing taxes and continuing to create an environment where our job creators and businesses…will feel confident in investing and continuing to grow in the state of Iowa,” Reynolds said.

Reynolds made her comments Tuesday during a news conference in Pella.

(Radio Iowa)

2 fatal crashes in Iowa, Tuesday

News

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa State Patrol is investigating separate, fatal crashes that took place Tuesday. In southern Iowa’s Clarke County, 25-year old Jesse John Ray, of Osceola died, when for reasons unknown, the westbound 2010 Toyota Camry he was driving on Highway 34, crossed the centerline of the road, and collided head-on with an eastbound 2017 Freightliner semi, driven by 33-year old Jesse Lee Bain, of Ottumwa.The accident happened a little after 4-p.m., Tuesday.

The semi came to rest in the south ditch, while car came to a halt on the road. Ray, who was not wearing a seat belt, died at the scene. Bain was wearing his seat belt. He was transported by Clarke County Ambulance to the Clarke County Hospital.

The Patrol says the other fatal accident happened in eastern Iowa’s Cedar County, when the driver of a 2004 Dodge Ram pickup attempted to make a U-turn from the right turn lane on northbound Highway 38. The pickup was struck broadside by a northbound by a 2003 Peterbilt semi registered to a trucking company out of Springfield, MO. The accident happened at around 9:45-a.m., Tuesday. No names had been released as of early this (Wednesday) morning.

Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., 6/13/18

News

June 13th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 2:30a.m. CDT

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — A former housing programs manager for the city of Davenport has pleaded guilty to charges accusing him of concealing a camera in an apartment employee bathroom. The Quad-City Times reports that 46-year-old Roy DeWitt pleaded guilty Tuesday to eight counts of invasion of privacy. Each count carries up to two years in prison, but in exchange for DeWitt’s plea, prosecutors agreed to a cap of six years in prison and to not file additional charges from video on the camera DeWitt hid.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Democrat Cathy Glasson, who lost her bid for Iowa governor in last week’s primary election, has made an unusual request to Iowa Democrats that she be allowed to address the party at its upcoming state convention. Glasson’s campaign manager Misty Rebik tells The Associated Press the former candidate asked the Iowa Democratic Party on Tuesday afternoon whether she can speak at the June 16 convention. Democratic Party spokeswoman Tess Seger says party leaders are reviewing the request.

SABULA, Iowa (AP) — A car ferry from Iowa to Illinois is up and running as residents wait for the opening of a bridge connecting the two states. The Telegraph Herald reports that the ferry between Sabula and Savanna, Illinois, began running Tuesday, providing direct access between the two communities for the first time in months. The ferry can hold 15 vehicles per trip, can be used for free and will run from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily until the new bridge is completed.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A central Iowa woman has been charged with insurance fraud after state regulators say she submitted an application for insurance coverage containing false information. Joy Marie Heldt of Madrid, who was an insurance agent, was initially charged last month after an investigation by the Iowa Insurance Division’s fraud bureau.

Single-vehicle, injury accident in Fremont County

News

June 12th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A man from Shenandoah was injured during a single-vehicle accident early Tuesday afternoon, in Fremont County. The Sheriff’s Office reports deputies responded at around 12:42-p.m. to the 2400 block of Highway 59, for a vehicle that had struck a tree head-on.

Deputies determined that Daniel Douglas, of Shenandoah, was southbound on Highway 59 in a 2015 Ford Focus, when the vehicle left the road and struck a guardrail on the west side of the road.  The vehicle continued south on Highway 59 before hitting a tree head on, and coming to rest.

Douglas suffered unknown injuries and was transported to the Shenandoah Hospital by Shenandoah Rescue. Deputies cited him for Failure to Maintain Control. Shenandoah Police and Shenandoah Fire and Rescue assisted the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office with the call.