The Concordia Blade
Transcription
The Concordia Blade
BLADE-EMPIRE CONCORDIA VOL. CIX NO. 3 (USPS 127-880) CONCORDIA, KANSAS 66901 Hail, tornadoes reported as storms roll across Midwest Good Evening Concordia Forecast Tonight, mostly clear in the evening then becoming mostly cloudy. A 50 percent chance of thunderstorms. Lows around 64. Northeast winds 5 to 15 mph. Thursday, mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming mostly sunny. A 40 percent chance of thunderstorms. Highs around 78. Northeast winds 10 to 15 mph. Thursday night, partly cloudy in the evening then becoming mostly cloudy. A 20 percent chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 60s. East winds 5 to 10 mph. Friday, mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming mostly sunny. A 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Highs around 80. East winds 5 to 10 mph. Friday night, thunderstorms likely. Lows in the mid 60s. Chance of rain 70 percent. Saturday, thunderstorms likely. Highs in the upper 70s. Chance of rain 60 percent. Saturday night, mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the upper 50s. Sunday, partly sunny. Highs in the mid 70s. Sunday night and Monday, partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s. Highs in the upper 70s. Monday night and Tuesday, mostly cloudy. A 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Lows around 60. Highs in the upper 70s. Relay for Life meeting Lending a hand A Relay for Life team captain meeting will be at 6:30p.m., Thursday, June 5, in the OK conference room (east entrance) at Cloud County Community College. Anyone wanting to form a team or who has questions may call Jamie Kegle, 785-427-6080 or 785-446-3547. Adam Lambert, the coach of the Peoples Insurance T-Ball team, helps Braytin Hake hit the ball off the tee during a game Tuesday night. (Photo by Todd Leif) Topeka to host world horseshoe competition TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)— Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback announced Tuesday that he is pushing the federal government to assume some costs for protecting the lesser prairie chicken by expanding incentives for farmers to enroll their land in a longstanding conservation program. Brownback also said Kansas will return to federal court this week to seek additional time for farmers, ranchers, and oil and natural gas producers to respond to the federal government’s decision in March to list the bird as threatened. Kansas residents were supposed to decide last month whether to participate in conservation efforts. They faced restrictions and federal fees to continue business activities in areas with prairie chicken habitats. The Republican governor criticized the listing of the lesser prairie chicken as a regulatory overreach by the federal government that threatens the state’s economy. He outlined new state responses during an Associated Press interview and had a news conference in Wichita. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has said the listing is justified by a steep decline in the bird’s numbers in recent years. The five states affected — Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas — had fewer than 18,000 in 2013, down almost 50 percent from 2012. Brownback released a letter dated Monday to U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell and U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, calling on the U.S. Department of Agriculture to pursue “enhanced incentives” to encourage more farmers to enroll land in the agency’s Conservation Reserve Program, which pays them not to cultivate. Brownback said doing so would expand lesser prairie chicken habitats; with such a move, the federal government also would pay farmers to help protect the bird, rather than the other way around. “If they’re upset about loss of habitat, the federal government has a fabulous tool that is available and that they’ve been cutting back on,” Brownback said during the Statehouse briefing. “Instead, they’re Across Kansas TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas residents are being encouraged to try their skill at pitching horseshoes to qualify for the world championships being held next year in Topeka. The Topeka Horseshoe Association and the Kansas Horseshoe Pitching Association say more than 1,500 people are expected to compete in July 2015 at two venues in Topeka. Kansas will have several qualifying events over the next year at locations including Bonner Springs, Salina, Topeka and Wichita. State board agrees to teacher regulation TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The State Board of Education has agreed to allow schools to hire teachers for certain subjects who have expertise but no education degree. The regulations approved Tuesday require teachers to meet one of three criteria: They would need an out-of-state license and to pass the licensure tests, or at least a bachelor’s degree and at least five years of related work experience in science, technology, engineering or math, or an industry-recognized certificate in a technical profession and at least five years of related work experience. Oil production in Kansas increases TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Fracking in southern Kansas has increased oil production in the state, but natural gas production continued its downward spiral. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the value of both oil and gas produced in Kansas has increased despite the lower gas output. The state produced about 46.8 million barrels of oil in 2013, a 7 percent bump from the 43.7 million barrels in 2012. Most of that increase came from southcentral and southwest Kansas. Natural gas production fell 1.5 percent, from 299 billion cubic feet in 2012 to 295 billion cubic feet last year. Visit us online at www.bladeempire.com Wednesday, June 4, 2014 Brownback pushes back on lesser prairie chicken putting the costs on the private landowner and energy industry.” The two federal departments announced last month that landowners enrolled in the program and adopting practices to protect the lesser prairie chicken would not be subject to additional restrictions. USDA spokesman Cullen Schwarz said farmers in all five states already receive conservation funds through “a number of programs.” “Kansas farmers are receiving enhanced incentives through the Conservation Reserve Program in particular,” Schwarz said in a statement. “USDA will continue to provide the support we can to help farmers in Kansas and throughout the region with voluntary, incentive-based conservation programs.” But federal farm legislation enacted earlier this year cut the cap on acreage in the Conservation Reserve Program by 25 percent, to 24 million from 32 million. Kansas acreage in the program has declined by 28 percent since 2008, to less than 2.4 million. Ron Klataske, executive director of Audubon of Kansas, said rising commodity prices, federal support for ethanol production and heavy federal subsidies for crop insurance have given farmers incentives not to enroll on the conservation program, resulting in “a major loss of wildlife habitat.” Audubon of Kansas has criticized Brownback for opposing the listing, but Klataske said improved conservation incentives are a good idea. And U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, a Kansas Republican, said: “I would be very supportive of that.” Kansas already has responded to the listing in other ways. A new Kansas law that took effect last month declares that the federal government has no authority to regulate lesser prairie chickens inside the state and allows the attorney general or county prosecutors to sue to block federal conservation efforts. Kansas also joined Oklahoma, Nebraska and North Dakota in a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Tulsa over the process leading to the lesser prairie chicken’s listing at threatened. DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Baseball-sized hail pummeled homes and cars in Nebraska and Iowa on Tuesday as powerful thunderstorms moved through a swath of Midwest states, also causing severe flooding and prompting reports of tornadoes. The National Weather Service said reports of extensive hail damage and flooding trickled in as storms pushed into Nebraska and moved into neighboring Iowa, where winds of up to 85 mph were recorded. Up to 4 inches of rain was expected in parts those states, which were the hardest hit. The storm also tracked across parts of Kansas, Missouri, South Dakota and Illinois. “This is one of these days we can’t let our guard down,” said Bill Bunting, forecast operations chief at the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma. Bunting said several trained spotters reported tornadoes in central and southwest Iowa, and at least one report came in from southwest Kansas. Reports will not be confirmed until damage can be assessed Wednesday morning. Becky Kern, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Valley, Nebraska, said the system has involved a “training” of thunderstorms, which involves a series of thunderstorms following one after another. The system will move to the southeast early Wednesday, toward parts of Missouri and Illinois, she said. “It looks like the threat has pushed further south into Missouri, the northern strongest of the storms,” she said. Heavy rain and flooding were reported in the Omaha area of Nebraska, where dozens of residents were evacuated from low-lying homes on the northeast side of the city. The Eppley Airfield airport closed for several hours. “It’s just completely flooded these areas, and these homes are now filling up with water in their basement areas, so we’re pulling people out,” said Omaha police spokesman James Shade, noting a 95year-old woman in a wheelchair was rescued. Police also used boats to assist dozens of drivers stranded in floodwaters around the city. Shade said many cars remain stuck on those flooded streets. Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad issued Tuesday night a proclamation of disaster emergency for Pottawattamie County in the western part of the state, which will allow officials to use state resources to respond to the effects of the storms. In the northeast Nebraska cities of Norfolk and Blair, residents reported shattered windows in homes and vehicles after baseball-sized hail passed through. The weather service received reports of two motels with roofs torn in western Iowa’s Missouri Valley. On Interstate 29 north of Council Bluffs in western Iowa, more than 25 vehicles had their windows shattered by hail, said Terry Landsvork, an observation program leader for the National Weather Service in Valley, Nebraska. “They were driving along Interstate 29, had no place to go, and whether they were driving or pulled over, they just didn’t escape the hail,” he said. The storms impacted primary elections in Iowa and South Dakota. Officials in Pottawattamie and Montgomery counties in Iowa, where polls closed at 9 p.m. CDT, reported closing some precincts temporarily due to poor weather. TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The problems with delayed care and unauthorized wait lists that caused a furor at a Veterans Affairs health care campus in Arizona existed at several facilities in the Midwest, but in much smaller numbers, VA officials said in letters to two U.S. senators. The Department of Veterans Affairs maintained 10 such “secret waiting lists” of military veterans in need of care at facilities in Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and Indiana, the letters said. They also said at least 96 veterans waited more than 90 days for treatment at seven facilities in those states, including 26 in St. Louis and 19 in Columbia, Missouri. The letters said that eight of the 10 lists “served to complement authorized lists to more fully support Veteran care and access.” But the two other lists, including one at the Wichita facility, “placed Veterans at risk.” The information about conditions in the VA’s Heartland Network was sent to U.S. Sens. Pat Roberts and Jerry Moran of Kansas late last week, as the VA released a summary of 216 site-specific audits detailing widespread falsification of waiting list records and unreported treatment delays at VA facilities nationwide. In that release, the VA did not reveal any information about conditions at individual sites. The VA is conducting a system-wide investigation after it was found that the Phoenix VA Health Care System had about 1,700 veterans in need of care on secret waiting lists, and another that had 1,400 waited over 90 days for primary care appointments. The scandal led to the resignation last week of Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki. Roberts said Tuesday he wanted more answers about conditions at the Robert J. Dole Veterans Administration Medical Center in Wichita and the other facilities. One letter said 21 veterans waited longer for 90 days for care in Wichita; the second put that total at nine. Roberts said he had earlier been assured by VA officials there were no such problems at the hospital. “My top priority is who is on that secret list and what is the status of their care?” Roberts said. VA hospitals had secret waiting lists 2 Blade-Empire, Wednesday, June 4, 2014 OPINION Trivial History of Concordia and Environs By Clarence Paulsen November 11, (misdated the 18th) 1983 ARMISTICE Today, November 11, 1983, is Veterans Day. It is both a national and a Kansas legal holiday. It is the 65th anniversary of the ending of the first World War. Not until May 28, 1925, did the Kansas legislature declare November 11th to be a holiday. It was then called Armistice Day. On June 30, 1955, the legislature enlarged the holiday to honor all veterans Clarence of all UnitPaulsen, 1987 ed States wars, and changed the name to Veterans Day. Beginning in 1971 Veterans Day was celebrated in Kansas on the 4th Monday in October, but for only five years; since and including 1976 the day has again been celebrated in Kansas on November 11th. Let us explore the day’s beginnings in Concordia, Kansas. On April 6, 1917, the United States formally declared war on Germany. We were in it to win; it was not a so-called “police action.” Naturally, our soldiers, sailors and marines were treated as heroes. Patriotism reached a fever – sometimes ridiculous – pitch. Southeast of Fort Riley a vast place known as Camp Funston sprang up where Marshall Field is now. Many, if not most, of our Cloud County, Kansas, boys went there. Some of them died there – of Spanish influenza. Local newspapers carried long lists of names of people who had enlisted, or were registered for and drafted, into military service. The Concordia Empire started a “Tobacco Fund” for the men. The Huscher preacher, the Reverend W.F. Schuerman, objected strenuously. He said the men should be given Bibles, not tobacco. In August 1917 a woman, who said she was Lieda Bachtol of Concordia, tried in Salina to enlist in the navy. She had been working as a man doing farm labor. She didn’t back down until a male navy officer told her to strip for a physical examination. In 1918 Karl Flitch of Yuma and Harry Larson of Concordia were busily running a jitney service between Junction City, Camp Funston and Manhattan. On Easter Sunday, in 1918, a new daylight savings law went into effect – to end the last Sunday in October. The railroads permitted local folks to plant “war gardens” on the railroad rights of way. In those days when one bought a pound of wheat flour in a store he had to buy a pound of corn meal also. No one could kill a hen, only roosters. Hens had to be kept to lay eggs. Certain days of each week were “meatless.” In June 1918 there was a standard restaurant menu designed to save meat. Beef could be served on only certain hours during Monday, Wednesday, Thursdays and Saturdays. Sugar bowls were removed from restaurants, and sugar was dispensed in small individual packets. In May 1918 there was a Red Cross drive in Concordia. The names of the donors, and the amounts given by each, were published. And there was a “Slacker Committee” to wait on and “encourage” those whom the committee members thought hadn’t given enough. It was dangerous to have a German or German-sounding name. On November 11, 1918 – one year and seven months after we declared war – an armistice was signed at five o’clock in the morning near Compiegne, France, in the private railroad coach of French Marshal Ferdinand Foch, chief commander of the allied forces. At eleven that forenoon bugles sounded “Cease firing,” and the war was over. One news gathering service jumped the gun, and erroneously announced an armistice on November seventh. Red faces resulted. The pent-up tensions of the past twenty months exploded across the land. In Concordia on November 13th there was a very noisy and more or less impromptu celebration. All Concordia businesses closed for the day. There was a parade, so long that it chased its own tail. At the city park that night there was a torchlight drill. A big bonfire was arranged. A huge pile of inflammable material arose, and on the very top of the pile was the “Kaiser’s Castle.” It was somebody’s outhouse, with an effigy of the recently-abdicated German Kaiser Wilhelm II seated inside. Guards had to be posted around the pile to prevent boisterous people from igniting the fire before the planned time. And when at last that time came the fire threatened to get out of control. The fire department was called, and stood ready to contain the conflagration. When the fire finally died down the people attended a street dance and kept on celebrating. Eleven months later, on October 10, 1919, Concordia again celebrated the ending of the first World War. This time Mayor A.D. Millirons issued a proclamation, and everyone declared a holiday. Concordia and thirty surrounding towns were represented by “queens.” Those from Cloud County’s towns were: Helen Rigby, Concordia; Clare Letourneau, Aurora; Frances Mahon, Hollis; Lucille Buoy, Ames; Margaret Rogers, Clyde; Phoebe Chitty, Jamestown; Hazel Isabel Lundy, Rice; Segra Flobert, Miltonvale; and Vivian Pratt, Glasco. Again there was a parade, featuring, among many other things, marching veterans in uniform. At eleven o’clock that forenoon Kansas Governor Henry J. Allen made a speech. During the afternoon there was a football game, a baseball game, a municipal band concert, a dance, and dinner for the veterans, and fireworks – all despite a disagreeable cold wind. That afternoon occurred the “piece de resistance.” The county poor farm (now the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blosser) on the east side of the Meridian Highway (now U.S. Highway 81), a mile south of town, and DOONESBURY® by G.B. Trudeau McCowan’s pasture (now Blossers’ pasture) on the west side of the highway, were closed and vacated. The surrounding roads, including the Meridian Highway, were closed to traffic. Horse-drawn vehicles were kept far back. The military, in charge of the event, prescribed places where the approximately 20,000 spectators could watch. Promptly at three o’clock soldiers of the U.S. Army’s Seventh Division from Camp Funston began laying down a bombardment from about where the Cloud County Community College is today. It wasn’t a phony show. They used live ammunition! High explosive shells, some of them sixty-pounders, and shrapnel, landed around and beyond the poorhouse. After fifteen minutes of this deafening barrage, the soldiers, crouching in the pasture to the west, cautiously began to advance under cover of the artillery fire. Army planes droned overhead. Soon the army “took” the poorhouse. The War Department had authorized the “battle” to reproduce as nearly as possible the Battle of the Argonne in France in which several of Concordia’s veterans had seen service. Veterans, witnessing the event, pronounced it just like what they had been in as “doughboys” in France the year before. A month after the “second Battle of the Argonne” Mayor Millirons issued another proclamation to commemorate the first anniversary of the armistice. He asked all businesses in Concordia to close at eleven o’clock for fifteen minutes on the forenoon of November 11th. At eleven o’clock the town’s whistles blew for fifteen minutes, and local telephone switchboard operators were swamped with inquiries about why the whistles were blowing. That evening the town’s Chamber of Commerce celebrated the day with a quiet dinner in the Presbyterian church. It was much quieter than it was when the Kaiser’s effigy burned in the outhouse atop the bonfire in the city park the year before – but it was Armistice Day. Concordia Blade-Empire Published daily except Saturday and Sunday by THE BLADE-EMPIRE PUBLISHING COMPANY 510 Washington, Box 309 Concordia, Kansas 66901 Periodical Class Postage paid at Concordia, Kansas 66901 Subscription Rates: By mail, in trade area, Cloud, Republic, Ottawa, Mitchell, Washington, Jewell and Clay Counties, $98.24 one year. Out of trade area, $118.45. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Concordia Blade-Empire, Box 309, Concordia, Kansas 66901. FBI: Man had bomb components SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – Federal investigators said a search of a social media expert’s apartment in San Francisco turned up ball bearings, screws and components needed to make a homemade bomb designed to kill or maim, according to an affidavit unsealed Tuesday. Investigators said they found the materials inside a bag at the apartment of Ryan Kelly Chamberlain during a search over the weekend. The discovery prompted a manhunt for the 42-yearold Chamberlain that ended with his arrest Monday in San Francisco. The bag also contained a circuit board, screw top glass jar with batteries, a wire and a powdery green substance believed to be explosive material, FBI Special Agent Michael Eldridge said in the document. “FBI bomb technicians believe that the circuit board described above was designed to serve as a remote control, allowing detonation of the device from afar,” Eldridge said. “They further believe that the device was designed to maim or kill a human being or human beings.” The FBI has not said what, if any, plans Chamberlain might have had for the device, or how they were alerted to the material. Though Chamberlain was considered armed and dangerous, FBI spokesman Peter Lee reiterated Tuesday that he did not seem to pose an immediate threat to public safety. Chamberlain appeared in federal court Tuesday after being charged with one count of possession of an il- legal destructive device. He was accompanied by a public defender and did not enter a plea. He had on the same shorts and sweatshirt when police arrested him near the Golden Gate Bridge. On Saturday, as authorities arrived to search the apartment, they spotted Chamberlain and a woman leave and drive away. Chamberlain returned on foot about 30 minutes later, when Eldridge said he identified himself and asked if they could talk in a nearby coffee shop. After a short discussion, Chamberlain asked if he could leave, and Eldridge said he could, the document states. Authorities tried to follow him as he drove off but decided to pull back when he began speeding and running lights, Eldridge said. Authorities then searched the apartment and found the bomb materials. “There were particular items that were found when we executed the search warrant that caused us great concern, concern for the public’s safety in the event he decided to use those in such a fashion,” FBI Special Agent in Charge David Johnson said. “It was going to be a significant problem.” Chamberlain was arrested by police officers who responded to a report that a person matching Chamberlain’s description had been spotted, Police Chief Greg Suhr said. Chamberlain had spotted the officers and was taken into custody after a brief chase and struggle, Suhr said. He described Chamberlain as someone who was in crisis and getting “more desperate by the moment.” PEOPLE Blade-Empire, Wednesday, June 4, 2014 3 Marriage announced Annie’s Mailbox Thomas William Dunn and Beverly June Parks, Concordia, were married Friday, May 30, at the home of the bride. Judge Guy R. Steier officiated. Diane Dunn is the mother of the groom and Betty Myers is the mother of the bride. by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I work at a regional medical center, and friends and family often ask me to recommend a doctor or a physician's group for them. For a while, I didn't mind giving these people a few names, but I have grown reluctant to do so. My reluctance is not because I don't trust in the knowledge and care provided by the doctors I work with. It's because of the negative feedback I get after these people visit the specialists I recommend. I am tired of handing out the names of good, hardworking practitioners to people who refuse to listen to the advice given to them. They don't want to take the prescribed medications or regimens, nor do they follow through with the therapy as ordered. Then they complain to the entire community about what terrible doctors I told them to see. I feel as if the doctors are judging me each time they see my name as a referral. Yet when I decline to give suggestions, people react as if I am being a snob. How do I keep my sanity, as well as my career? — Please Stop Asking Me Dear Please: Medical professionals are accustomed to patients who disregard their instructions, but you certainly can ask directly whether they would prefer that you not refer your friends and family to them. We suspect they are glad to know that someone who works closely with them thinks highly of their skills. But either way, you are under no obligation to give out recommendations. It's OK to tell people nicely that you no longer make referrals because you don't wish to mix your professional and personal lives. If they don't like it, too bad. Dear Annie: My 85-yearold aunt, who was quite active, recently underwent extensive abdominal surgery and ended up in the hospital for six weeks. During this entire time, she was not bathed by the overworked nursing staff except for the times we complained about the smell. There wasn't even a washbasin in her room. Eventually a friend of hers who is a retired nurse came in regularly and bathed her. This was in Florida, but I've heard similar stories from friends and family in other states. I think this is absolutely disgusting. When I was a student nurse in the 1970s, my textbook dedicated 20 pages to the importance of bathing, not only for physical health, but for psychological wellbeing. Florence Nightingale said that nurses who allow sick patients to remain unwashed are interfering with their healing. This lack of care did not occur where I worked. We bathed our patients daily and gave them back rubs to increase circulation and prevent bedsores. Since then, nurses aides and LPNs have practically been eliminated. My aunt is now home, but she is still weak from fighting off infections. It's no wonder. I would like to see the doctors and medical staff running the hospitals again and not the insurance companies, which seem to know nothing about human dignity. This kind of care is appalling. — Disgusted in New York Dear New York: Health care costs have skyrocketed since you were in nursing school, and it is unfortunate that in some cases the level of care has deteriorated in an effort to save money. We, too, wish there were a better solution. Dear Annie: This is for "Wish I Could Turn Back Time," the 62-year-old greatgrandmother who served prison time for a nonviolent felony and can't get a job because of her record. Most states have laws allowing for the expungement of criminal records, especially for nonviolent offenses. This allows those who made a mistake and learned their lesson to get a conviction removed from their record, in which case, she wouldn't need to tell prospective employers. She should check out the expungement requirements in her state. — L. Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast. net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie's Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. “My Favorite Older Person” The winning essays in Concordia Elementary School fourth graders’ “My Favorite Older Person” writing activity selected by Sunset Home residents are being published as space permits in the Blade. Following is an essay by Jessica Thurston. “My Favorite Older Person” By Jessica Thurston My favorite older person gets to watch my dad work on the farm. He is also my Grandpa Thurston. My grandpa is bald. He wears dark blue overalls and walks with a cane. He is funny and he can make anyone laugh. One of his interests is taking care of his cats. He also takes care of his cattle. He lives in Jamestown. I’m related to him because he’s my dad’s dad. My grandpa and I enjoy checking cows and taking drives out in the country. We also enjoy visiting the neighbors. Anytime I get to spend time with him, I feel happy. He is patient about getting his tasks done. He never lies. He tells the truth. He has been gentle with his wife, my grandma, for 65 years. He does everything correctly. These qualities make him a perfect grandpa. My grandpa has always been my favorite older person and always will be. *** An elder statesman is somebody old enough to know his own mind and to keep quiet about it. -Bernard M. Baruch Beckner speaker for CWO Helping a student Sister Ramona Medina, one of the three Sisters of St. Joseph who opened Neighbor to Neighbor four years ago, helps a student in a Tuesday afternoon painting class, held in the sunlit studio upstairs at the downtown Concordia Center. A new grant from the Kansas Health Foundation will help pay for art supplies and other materials used in Neighbor to Neighbor’s free programs. Neighbor to Neighbor receives Health grant Neighbor to Neighbor has received more than $5,800 to help pay for crafts and cooking for use in three of the Center’s most popular activities. The Recognition Grant awarded to the downtown day center operated by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Concordia was one of 66 announced today by the Kansas Health Foundation. Those grants total about $1.2 million. The grant to Neighbor to Neighbor includes $2,550 for art supplies used in classes offered by Sister Ramona Medina twice a week; plus $2,400 for food used in the Thursday afternoon cooking and baking classes; and $900 for jewelry making supplies. Neighbor to Neighbor, which celebrated its fourth anniversary in May, offers a variety of programs for women and their preschool children, while also giving them a place to find friendship and to informally learn from each other. All programs and services are free to the Center’s guests, with funding provided by the Sisters of St. Joseph, individual donations of money and materials and a few grants. “Each year we are amazed at the incredible projects being done by organizations across Kansas,” said Steve Coen, president and CEO of the Kansas Health Foundation. “This grant program allows us to support these innovative and impactful community initiatives and recognize the groups and individuals making them a reality.” Using a competitive application process, the Foundation allocates up to $2 Martin honored at retirement reception Former Concordian, Bill Martin, was honored at a reception at the Federal Courthouse in Wichita, April 25, to recognize his years of service as a United States probation officer and to celebrate his retirement. The Honorable Monti L. Belot presided at the reception. Chief U. S. Probation Officer Ron Schweer and Deputy U. S. Probation Officer Phil Messer presented Martin with certificates recognizing his service. He received a U.S. flag which flew over the Wichita federal courthouse and a representative of Congressman Mike Pompeo’s office presented a second U.S. flag that flew over the Capitol. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom’s office and the Office of the Federal Public Defender also made presentations. Martin was appointed to his position in 1987 by Chief Judge Earl O’Connor and served in the Kansas City, Manhattan and Wichita offices during his 27-year career. Prior to becoming a U.S. Probation Officer, he was a Court Service Officer for the Fifth Judicial District of Kansas in Emporia. He is a graduate of Concordia High School and Cloud County Community College, received a Bachelor of Science degree from Kansas State University and a Master of Science degree from Emporia State University. Martin is the son of Susan Martin, Concordia, and the late W.D. Martin. million each year for the Recognition Grants program. Application deadlines for the two cycles are March 15 and Sept. 15 each year. Any tax-exempt, nonprofit organization using the money for charitable purposes and proposing a project meeting the Foundation’s mission to improve the health of all Kansans is eligible. For information about the Neighbor to Neighbor programs that will be funded with this grant, or to learn how to make a donation or volunteer, visit csjkansas. org/neighbor-to-neighbor/ or the Center’s Facebook page at facebook.com/ N2NConcordia. Visitors are always welcome at the Center at 103 E. 6th St., which is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday, Tuesday and Friday, and from 1-5 p.m., Thursday. “Little Houses on the Prairie” will be Brenda Beckner’s topic when she speaks at the monthly Christian Women’s Outreach meeting June 10 at Marla’s Joy Tea House. Beckner and her husband have been in ministry since 1985. They help support local ministries. The Beckners have three children and one grandson. Jason Waller, the couple’s son-in-law, who is a recording artist and worship leader at his church, will provide music. Amanda Townsdin, owner of the Flower Gallery, will present the feature, “Greenhouse Effect.” The meeting will begin with brunch at 9 a.m. followed by the program. To make a reservation call Dorothy Morgan, 243.1807 or Sherry Johnson, 243.3360 by June 5. To cancel a reservation call 243.3360. Senior Citizens Menu Thursday, June 5—Smothered chicken, dressing, green bean casserole, cookie. Friday, June 6—Liver and onions, mashed potatoes, vegetable blend, apricots; alternative: beef patty; 10 a.m.—Exercise. Fresh coffee and cinnamon rolls daily, 9 a.m.–11 a.m. Call Teddy Lineberry at 243.1872 to make reservations or for questions. Today in History 50 years ago June 4, 1964—Seniors on the last semester honor roll at Concordia High School were Jeanean Graves, Steve Johnson, Doug Musick, Jean Saindon, Tana Sherwood, Russell Swenson, Eldon Trost, Evamarie Frehwald, Sandra Arnold, Dixie Waite, Ginger Williams, Martha Palmquist, Dennis McFall, Jean Kelly, Rita Hopkins, Carolyn Elliott, Karen Barleen, Cathy Ceder, Bill Trower, Ray Higgins and Sarah Andersen. . . . George Meyer took first place the hard way at the Downs invitational golf tournament. Meyer tied with Fred Bond of Russell, six under par, and was able to claim first in the six-hole sudden death playoff. 25 years ago June 4, 1989—Rustin James Carter and Kimberly K. Chandler announced their May 27 wedding, which took place at the Jamestown Fellowship Church. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Dutton, Concordia, announced the birth of their son, Darin Michael, born June 6. 10 years ago June 4, 2004—Cloud County Historical Society Museum was having a reception to honor Byron and Dan Menke for the dona- tion of Norman Rockwell figurine plates, in memory of Helen Menke. . . . Members of the Hollis Hustlers 4-H Club who donated $50 to Mt. Joseph Senior Village for purchase of flowers for its grounds and patios and planted the flowers as a service project were Krystal Mosher, Angie Dvorak, Megan Thoman, Kaylee Mosher, Ashlee Adams and Audrey Stiles. 5 years ago June 4, 2009—Freshmen on the 3.40-3.99 Honor Roll for the second semester at Concordia High School were Garrett Brummett, Suzanne Carlgren, Sydney Chrisco, Aren Coppoc, Ian Currier, Drew Erkenbrack, Connor Goedert, Hannah Haist, Emily Hasch, Jamie Morgan, Tyrel Peters, Brittney Randall, Gabriel Sprague and Kristin Strait. . . . Haley Walsh was the winner of the 2010 Cloud County Junior Miss title at a program at the Brown Grand Theatre. 1 year ago June 4, 2013—David Smith and Kenda Campbell Preston announced their March 15 wedding, which took place in Kansas City, Mo. . . . Chaput-Buoy placed first in the Big Bang Softball Tournament at the Concordia Sports Complex. Thank You for Reading the Blade-Empire 4 Blade-Empire, Wednesday, June 4, 2014 ONE PLACE HAS IT ALL THE CLASSIFIEDS Cars & Trucks, Used FOR SALE- 1994 Mazda B3000 pickup, 124,000mi., manual transmission, AC. $1500 OBO. 785-614-5178. For Rent FOR RENT- Newly remodeled 2 bedroom apartment, stove and refrigerator, washer and dryer hookups, partial utilities. 785-243-9886. FOR RENT- 2 bedroom house with garage, big yard, $585/mo. 785-2752062. FOR RENT- 1 bedroom apartment, utilities included. Contact 785-2433325, Ext. 2. FOR RENT- Small 1 bedroom house with trash and water. $350/mo. 785275-2062. FOR RENT- 1 bedroom apartment, includes trash & water, $335/mo. 785275-2062. FOR RENT-Storage spaces, various sizes, reasonable, locally owned. 785-243-4105. FOR RENT- 1 & 2 bedroom apartments in quiet building, beautiful open floor plan, most utilities, $600/mo. 785-275-2062. Garage Sales HUGE RUMMAGE SALE Thursday, June 5, 8am-6pm 2134 Republican Sponsored by Cloud County Community College, Go Green Committee. Freewill Offering, All proceeds go toward Scholarships and Green Initiatives. SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! Help Wanted DRIVERS NEEDED Part time, in the Concordia Area Please call Tonya at 785-543-7314 RN-MDS Coordinator To manage RUG levels and CMI. Must have experience in Medicare management. Reply to: Box S c/o Blade Empire P.O. Box 309 Concordia, KS 66901 HELP WANTED Salina based company needs OTR-CDL Drivers for step-deck, cattle or box van trailers. Good wages, benefits. Call 785-476-5076. C.A. Picard is looking for a Sales Driver Home most weekends. Expenses and Straight Tandem Truck provided with competitive wages and benefits. CDL, clean DMV report and ability to obtain a passport upon hiring required. Must be able to pass drug and alcohol screening upon hiring with random testing thereafter. Send resume to C.A. Picard, Inc., P.O. Box 98, Belleville, KS 66935. NO PHONE CALLS. Casey’s General Store is looking for a Part-time Donut Cook Hours are 2am to 9:30am, every other weekend and 2 days a week. Apply at: Casey’s General Store Concordia, KS. Must be 18 to apply Legals (First published in The Concordia Blade-Empire, Wednesday, May 21, 2014.) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF CLOUD COUNTY, KANSAS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF DAVID WAYNE FOWLER, Deceased. Case No. 14PR18 NOTICE OF HEARING THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are hereby notified that a petition was filed in this Court by Phillip R. Fowler, interested party in the estate of David Wayne Fowler, deceased, praying descent be determined of the following described real estate situated in Cloud County, Kansas: Lots Five (5), Six (6), Seven (7), Eight (8) and Nine (9), Block Sixty-0ne (61), College Addition to the City of Miltonvale, Cloud County, Kansas, commonly described as 615 Williams St., Miltonvale, KS 67466. and that such real estate owned by the decedent at the time of death be assigned pursuant to the laws of intestate succession. You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before June 16, 2014, at 11:00 o’clock a.m. in the District Court, Cloud County, Kansas, at which time and place the cause will be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition. Phillip R. Fowler, Petitioner Submitted by: Robert A. Thompson, S.C. #11594 316 N. Santa Fe, P.O. Box 2237 Salina, Kansas 67402-2237 Attorney for Petitioner 3we Sales Calendar •Saturday, June 7, 2014– Estate Auction at 9:00 a.m. located at the Kearn Auction House, 220 West 5th Street, Concordia, Kansas. Vehicles, Antiques, Collectibles, Large Coke Collection, Immediate Opening at Antique Furniture, Dolls and NCK Commercial Tools. Betty Brown Esate, Laundry NCK Commercial Laundry Seller. Dannie Kearn Auchas positions open in the tion. •Saturday, June 21, clean linen department. Paid vacations, holiday 2014– Public Auction at pay, retirement and health 10:00 a.m. located at the insurance available. Cloud County Fairgrounds Apply in person at Commercial Bldg., East edge 217 W. 3rd of Concordia, Kansas on InAll recent applicants please dustrial Road. Antiques and reapply. Collectibles. Alvena Swenson, Seller. Larry Lagasse Auction. Notice •Tuesday, June 24, 2014 – Nursing Home Auction at 1:00 p.m. located at at the faREAD THE BLADE-EMPIRE ON-LINE cility across from the Ameriat can Legion at 310 Strand www.bladeempire.com Street in Clifton, Kansas. NOTICE- Let the Classified Depart- Real Estate and Nursing ment at the Blade-Empire help you with Home Supplies. Greg Kretz Auction. your advertising. Call 785-243-2424. Wanted to Buy Wanted to Buy GUN CABINET That would hold 8-10 long guns. Please call Kansas Classifieds For Sale Mobile Homes with land. Ready to move in. Owner Financing (subject to credit approval). 3Br 2Ba. No renters. 785-789-4991. VMFhomes.com Help Wanted Anthony, Kansas is seeking FT Police Officer. Must be 21. Salary DOQ. Law Enforcement Certification required. Excellent benefits. More Information: www.anthonykansas.org/ jobs. Open until filled. EOE. Help Wanted “Partners In Excellence” OTR Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012 & Newer equipment. 100% NO touch. Butler Transport 1-800-528-7825 www.butlertransport.com Help Wanted Want a Career Operating Heavy Equipment? Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. “Hands On Training” & Certifications Offered. National Average 18-22 Hourly! Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497 Help Wanted/Truck Driver Drivers Prime, Inc. Company Drivers & Independent Contractors for Refrigerated, Tanker & Flatbed NEEDED! Plenty of Freight & Great Pay! Start with Prime Today! Call 877-736-3019 or apply online at driveforprime.com Misc. CANADA DRUG CENTER. Safe and affordable medications. Save up to 90% on your medication needs. Call 1-800-908-4082 ($25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping). Misc. For Sale Use Your Land or Trade-in as Down Payment New, Used and Repos available. Singles, Doubles, and Modulars. Less than perfect credit OK! 866-858-6862 Real Estate for Sale Three Gas Stations! Selling As Is! 2,100SF Building Peabody, KS $35,000 2,744SF Building Goddard, KS $495,000 2,115SF Building Tyrone, OK $275,000 Joe 813-3411250 *** The universe is but one great city, full of beloved ones, divine and human by nature, endeared to one another. -Epictetus *** Farmers’ Market opens Thursday CONCORDIA—Concordia Farmers Market will open at 5 p.m., June 5, at the same location as last year, Concordia City Park, 11th and Washington. The spring weather has been unusual with extreme hot and cold days coupled with minimal rainfall, but area gardeners have persevered and the volume of produce available warrants the opening of the Market. Fresh locally grown produce and baked goods will be available. For more information call 785.275.1700. For the Record Sheriff’s Dept. Report Arrest—Deputies arrested Keici Lynn Seibold, 25, and Kaleb Ricky James Howell, 21, June 3 after a routine traffic stop. During the stop, deputies discovered several types of illegal drugs and drug paraphernalia. Seibold was arrested and charged with Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, Possession of Methamphetamine and Transporting an Open Container. Howell was arrested on a Cloud County Bench Warrant, two Warrants for Probation Viola- tions out of Clay County, and a Warrant for a Parole Violation from the Department of Corrections. Howell was also charged with Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, Possession of Methamphetamine and Transporting an Open Container. Both remain in Cloud County Jail waiting court appearance. Fire Dept./EMS Report At 5:51 p.m., Tuesday, Medic-2 went to Cloud County Health Center for the long distance transfer of a 63-year-old male to Salina Regional Health Center. Thank You for Reading the Blade-Empire 243-2424 • Monday thru Friday 8 to 5 MUTTS® by Patrick McDonnell When you need to buy or sell advertise in the blade-empire 785-614-3619 ZITS® by Scott and Borgman NANCY® by Guy & Brad Gilchrist BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH® by John Rose HAGER THE HORRIBLE® by Chris Browne Blade-Empire Wednesday, June 4, 2014 5 Sports Royals clip Cardinals, 8-7 ST. LOUIS (AP) — The St. Louis Cardinals ended their offensive slump, but the Kansas City Royals found a way to keep the National League champs down. Eric Hosmer hit a tiebreaking single off closer Trevor Rosenthal in the ninth inning and the Royals won 8-7 Tuesday night for their second straight road victory in the four-game, two-city series. “It was a great game back and forth, a lot of clutch hits by both teams,” said Alex Gordon, who homered in both games. “It was good to see and hopefully we can build on this.” Rookie Kolten Wong’s first career home run was a grand slam in the second that ended the Cardinals’ 20-inning scoreless drought and gave them an early four-run cushion. Wong said it was the first grand slam he’s hit at any level. “It’s awesome,” Wong said. “It was good to get us up early, try and give us a chance.” The Cardinals finished a dismal 2-7 home stand when their pitchers faltered and fell to 30-29 overall. Before the game, manager Mike Matheny fielded an endless series of questions about the lack of hitting. Gordon’s three-run homer capped a six-run fifth for the Royals against Jaime Garcia that put them up by two. “We can’t complain about what the offense did,” Matheny said. “It just wasn’t enough.” Kansas City starter James Shields also scuffled, surrendering five earned runs in 5 1-3 innings, and has given up seven homers his last three starts. Shields helped himself with two hits, including an RBI double. “I was just kind of all over the place, really wasn’t commanding my slider at all,” Shields said. “I made three crucial bad pitches and that’s what caused six runs.” Peter Bourjos’ 422-foot homer put the Cardinals ahead 7-6 in the sixth. Alcides Escobar’s bloop RBI single off Pat Neshek tied it in the eighth, a rally fueled by pinch hitter Billy Butler’s infield hit. Omar Infante doubled off Rosenthal (0-3) with one out in the ninth ahead of Hosmer’s hit. Wade Davis (5-1) allowed a hit in the eighth and Greg Holland worked the ninth for his 16th save in 17 chances for the Royals, the home team for the last two games of intrastate interleague series that resumes Wednesday. “That was one of those grinder games, where you’re grinding right from the getgo — everybody,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “It was a great game.” Jhonny Peralta added two doubles and an RBI for St. Louis, outscored 14-0 the previous two games by the Royals and Giants. Wong was chosen as the NL rookie of the month earlier Tuesday and his slam in the second was the Cardinals’ fifth hit in 10 at-bats against Shields. St. Louis loaded the bases in the first, too, but Yadier Molina grounded into an inning-ending double play on good glovework by Escobar at shortstop and capped by Infante’s barehanded grab on the move at second and relay. The Royals had one runner in scoring position the first four innings, then batted around and hit for the cycle in the sixth to take the lead. Gordon homered for the second straight day, Escobar had an RBI triple and Shields had an RBI double with his second straight hit. No St. Louis relievers warmed up during the rally and Matheny said after the game a couple of pitchers had been unavailable. “I’m on the mound, I’m trying to execute pitches until the manager takes the ball out of my hand,” Garcia said. “I’m not looking anywhere else.” SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Tony Parker plans to play in Game 1 of the NBA Finals. The San Antonio Spurs open their rematch with the Miami Heat on Thursday, and their star point guard is nursing a balky left ankle. “He’s getting better every day, and I expect him to play,” coach Gregg Popovich said Tuesday. Parker aggravated the injury Saturday, missing the second half of San Antonio’s series-clinching victory over Oklahoma City in the Western Conference finals. Parker didn’t practice Tuesday, but said he expects to be back Wednesday. Parker is averaging a team-leading 17.2 points and 4.9 assists this postseason but has been bothered by injuries the past two rounds. “I always try to be honest with Pop,” Parker said. “He knows, but if I’m 50 percent I’ll try to play. If I’m under 50 percent, we can argue.” Parker conceded the ankle has bothered him since San Antonio’s second-round series against Portland, although he did not divulge it at the time. “I don’t like to talk about when I’m hurt,” he said. “I played on it for the whole series against Portland. That’s why I think my hamstring got hurt because I was playing on a bad ankle.” Parker had tightness in his left hamstring midway through the second quarter of Game 5 against the Trail Blazers, forcing him to miss the rest of the Spurs’ seriesclinching victory. He did not miss any of the Western Conference finals because of his hamstring. But he aggravated the ankle injury in Game 4 against Oklahoma City. “I twisted it again, but didn’t say anything,” Parker said. “Played on it, and then Game 6 I think my body is like, ‘That’s enough.’ It’s perfect timing to get five days and to get better and to be ready for Game 1.” San Antonio was still able to clinch the series without Parker, holding off Oklahoma City for a 112107 overtime victory to advance to its sixth finals appearance. Parker said he wanted to return for the second half, but was overruled by Popovich and the team’s medical staff. Parker plans to play in game one of finals Four Panthers named All-NCKL Four members of the Concordia High School baseball team have been named first team All-North Central Kansas. Infielders Jordan Mehl and Drake Hake, outfielder Tanner Gilbert and pitcher Skyler Hittle received all-league honors for the Panthers. Trevor Tholstrup, outfield, and Ethan Bechard, utility, received all-league honorable mention. Mehl, a senior, batted a team high .577 for Concordia. He led the Panthers in hits (41), runs batted in (42), total bases (67), onbase percentage (.698) and slugging percentage (.944). Hake, a senior, batted .439. He drove in 17 runs and led the team in runs scored (36) and stolen bases (13). Gilbert, also a junior, batted .368. He drove in 17 runs and scored 26. Hittle, a senior, compiled a 7-2 record with a 2.20 earned run average. He allowed 35 runs, 18 earned in 57 1/3 innings and struck out 56. He batted .333 with 21 runs batted in. Tholstrup, a sophomore, batted .283 with 15 runs batted in. Bechard, a sophomore, batted .280 and had 12 stolen bases. Joining the four Panthers on the all-league team include: Shawn Burns, catcher, Wamego; Carson Sherbert, catcher, Abilene; Chase Stalder, infield, Abilene; Derek Piper, infield, Wamego; John Teneyck, infield, Wamego; Jayton Haggard, infield, Marysville; Gavin Canaday, outfield, Chapman; Kyler Alderson, outfield, Wamego; Grant Prichard, outfield, Abilene; Trenton York, outfield, Wamego; Hunter DeMars, utility, Clay Center; Brock Watts, utility, Marysville; Jared Ayres, pitcher, Wamego; and Hunter Combes, pitcher, Abilene. Receiving honorable mention include: CJ Becker, catcher, Marysville; Kade Wallace, catcher, Clay Center; Lody Black, infield, Clay Center; Parker Base, infield, Abilene; Wade Hambright, infield, Chapman; Tommy Brinegar, infield, Marysville; Jon Lang, outfield, Clay Center; Cole Hogan, outfield, Clay Center; Triston Hormann, outfield, Marysville; and Landis Rowden, utility, Wamego;. Subway rallies to beat American Legion Scoring four runs in the fifth inning, Subway rallied to defeat the American Legion 8-6 in Girls’ Softball play Tuesday night at the Concordia Sports Complex. Subway, trailing 6-4 heading into the final inning pushed across four runs to take an 8-6 advantage.The American Legion was held scoreless in the bottom of the fifth. Kendall Reynolds was the winning pitcher for Subway. She also scored two runs.Arista Bombardier did the pitching for the American Legion. Subway led the game 2-1 after one inning of play.Two runs in the top of the second inning gave Subway a 4-1 cushion. The American Legion scored five runs in the bot- tom of the second to go up 6-4. It remained a 6-4 game until the fifth inning. Samantha Sjogren scored three runs for Subway. Athina Liby scored two runs for the American Legion. In the other game played on Tuesday night, Funk Pharmacy shut out Cloud County Co-op, 11-0. Taking advantage of six walks, Funk Pharmacy scored six runs in the first inning. Funk Pharmacy added five runs in the third inning to make it 11-0.Allison Poore had two hits for Funk Pharmacy. Haley Lewis and Kennedy Chrisco scored two runs each. The Concordia Swim Team hosted a meet Saturday at the Concordia Municipal Pool. Concordia swimmers placing in the top six in their individual events include: Boys 6-and-under Danner Benfer — 25backstroke, 1:42.27, 1st; 25-freestyle, 47.03, 1st; 10freestyle relay, 2:57.60, 1st. 8-and-under Davin Benfer — 25-butterfly, 37.38, 1st; 25-back42.57, 1st; stroke, 25-freestyle, 31.02, 1st, 100-freestyle relay, 2:57.60, 1st. Reece Dorman — 50freestyle, 1:43.44, 1st; 25backstroke, 1:04.49, 2nd; 25-freestyle, 49.85, 4th; 100-freestyle relay, 2:57.60, 1st. Damien Tremblay — 25butterlfly, 45.14, 2nd; 25backstroke, 1:22.10, 3rd; 25-freestyle, 44.13, 3rd; 100-freestyle relay, 2:57.60, 1st. 9-10 Gunnar Hale — 50breaststroke, 1:29.06, 5th; 200-medley relay, 5:56.81, 3rd; 200 freestyle relay, 5:48.55, 3rd. Levi Mehl — 200-medley relay, 5:56.81, 3rd; 200 freestyle relay, 5:48.55, 3rd. Phillip Shirkey — 100individual medley, 3:54.85, 3rd; 200 medley relay, 5:56.81, 3rd; 200 freestyle relay, 5:48.55, 3rd. — 25Koby Tyler freestyle, 26.91, 4th; 200medley relay, 4:33.55, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 3:45.93, 1st. Drew Benfer — 50freestyle, 44.91, 3rd; 50butterfly, 1:02.27, 2nd; 100-individual medley, 2:27.64, 1st; 200-medley relay, 5:28.18, 2nd; 200freestyle relay, 4:08.31, 2nd. Drew Brown — 200-medley relay, 4:33.55, 1st; 200freestyle relay, 3:45.93, 1st. Nathan Brown — 50freestyle, 56.00, 6th; 50butterfly, 1:18.23, 3rd; 50-breaststroke, 1:29.85, 5th; 25-freestyle, 28.00, 1st; 200-medley relay, 4:33.55, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 3:45.93, 1st. Shelby Giersch — 50butterfly, 1:24.47, 4th; 100individual medley, 3:04.67, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 5:28.18, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 3:49.32, 2nd. Dalton Owen — 50freestyle, 55.31, 5th; 50- backstroke, 1:13.81, 2nd; 50-breaststroke, 1:36.81, 6th; 200-medley relay, 5:28.18, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 4:08.31. Chase Parker — 50freestyle, 42.02, 1st; 50breaststroke, 1:14.24, 4th; 25-freestyle, 22.14, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 4:33.55, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 3:45.93, 1st. Cole Stahlman — 50backstroke, 1:16.47, 4th; 50-breaststroke, 1:11.17, 3rd; 25-freestyle, 30.77, 6th; 200-medley relay, 5:28.18, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 4:08.31, 2nd. 11-12 Treyton Marsh — 50backstroke, 1:30.10, 4th; 200-medley relay, 4:17.94, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 3:47.77, 2nd. Ivon Owen — 50freestyle, 42.22, 5th; 50backstroke, 53.78, 2nd; 100-freestyle, 1:45.41, 1st; 200-medley relay, 3:12.92, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:48.30, 1st. Kyle Palmquist — 50freestyle, 38.30, 3rd; 5046.75, 1stt; butterfly, 50-breaststroke, 47.81, 1st; 200-medley relay, 3:12.97, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:48.30, 1st. 13-14 Alex Bonebrake — 50freestyle, 42.07, 3rd; 100breaststroke, 2:20.92, 3rd; 100-freestyle, 1:49.51, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 3:12.92, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:48.30, 1st. Oakley Champlin — 50freestyle, 37.01, 1st; 100butterfly, 1:53.22, 1st; 100-backstroke, 1:40.41, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 3:12.92, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:48.30, 1st. 15-and-over — 50Paul Frost freestyle, 34.52, 4th; 100breaststroke, 1:45.34, 2nd; 200-individual medley, 3:32.16, 1st; 200-medley relay, 3:39.72, 1st; 200freestyle relay, 2:18.12, 1st. Bryson Johnson — 50freestyle, 35.80, 5th; 100backstroke, 1:38.91, 2nd; 100-freestyle, 1:28.85, 3rd; 200-freestyle relay, 2:18.12, 1st. Jacob Palmquist — 50freestyle, 31.38, 3rd; 100butterfly, 1:46.97, 1st; 100-freestyle, 1:15.04, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:18.12, 1st. Jared Knapp — 50freestyle, 30.92, 1st; 100breaststroke, 1:40.13, 1st; 200-medley relay, 2:39.72, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:18.12, 1st. Levi Sporing — 50freestyle, 31.33, 2nd; 100backstroke, 1:33.85, 1st; 100-freestyle relay, 1:15.05, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 2:39.72, 1st. Girls 6-and-under Hannah Nelson — 25freestyle, 1:25.40, 3rd. 8-and-under Eden Hart — 25-backstroke, 46.32, 6th. Lacie Duvall — 25freestyle, 31.20, 5th. 9-10 Tessa Christiansen — 1:01.59, 50-backstroke, 4th; 25-freestyle, 24.31, 6th; 200-medley relay, 4:09.73, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 3:49.32, 2nd. Shaelin Giersch — 25freestyle, 23.56, 5th; 200medley relay, 4;09.73, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 3:49.32, 2nd. Jordan Gilkeson — 50freestyle, 46.28, 2nd; 50 backstroke, 55.96, 2nd; 50 breaststroke, 1:01.47, 3rd; 200 medley relay, 4:09.73, 2nd; 200 freestyle relay, 3:49.32, 2nd. Kennedy Anderson — 50freestyle, 48.16, 3rd; 50butterfly, 1:04.78, 2nd; 50-backstroke, 1:00.64, 3rd. Ayla Collins — 50-backstroke, 1:05.62, 6th. Misty Collins — 50freestyle, 50.08, 5th; 50breaststroke, 1:12.16, 6th; 200-medley relay, 4:09.73, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 3:49.32, 2nd. Chloe Nelson — 50breaststroke, 1:09.02, 5th. 11-12 Chloe Conway — 50freestyle, 43.22, 6th; 50backstroke, 54.44, 5th; 200-individual medley, 4:26.55, 1st; 200-medley relay, 3:19.97, 2nd; 200freestyle relay, 2:57.69, 1st. Elizabeth Duvall — 50backstroke, 58.06, 6th. Liah Huff — 50-freestyle, 40.88, 5th; 50-butterfly, 56.73, 3rd; 50-breaststroke, 58.19, 5th; 200medley relay, 3:19.97, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 2:57.69, 1st. Emily Strommen — 200individual medley, 4:53.59, 4th; 200-medley relay, 2:57.69, 1st. Rachelle Anderson — 50butterfly, 56.34, 4th; 50breaststroke, 54.19, 4th; 200-individual medley, 4:27.99, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 2:57.69, 2nd. Terra Loeffler — 50freestyle, 37.05, 1st; 50backstroke, 47.96, 3rd; 200-medley relay, 3:19.97, 2nd; 200-freestyle relay, 2:57.69, 1st. 13-14 Janessa Ade — 100backstroke, 2:01.79, 6th; 200-medley relay, 3:50.72, 4th; 200-freestyle relay, 3:15.78, 4th. Grace Carder — 100backstroke, 2:01.79, 6th; 200-medley relay, 3:20.36, 3rd; 200-freestyle relay, 2:46.82, 3rd. Claire Conway — 200medley relay, 3:50.72, 4th; 200-freestyle relay, 3:15.78, 4th. Jessica Dethloff — 200medley relay, 3:50.72, 4th; 200-freestyle relay, 3:!5.78, 4th. Angel Hale — 200-medley relay, 3:50.72, 4th; 200freestyle relay, 3:15.78, 4th. Cydney Bergmann — 50freestyle, 34.46, 1st; 100breaststroke, 1:45.39, 1st; 100-freestyle, 1:22.11, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 2:54.69, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:29.24, 1st. Cassidy Brown — 50freestyle, 36.22, 3rd; 100backstroke, 1:43.50, 2nd; 100-freestyle, 1:23.41, 3rd; 200-medley relay, 3:20.36, 3rd; 200-freestyle relay, 2:29.24, 1st. Jaden Champlin — 50freestyle, 38.28, 5th; 200butterfly, 1:50.49, 3rd; 100-breaststroke, 1:50.97, 2nd; 200-medley relay, 2:54.69, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:29.24, 1st. Britney Gilkeson — 50freestyle, 38.54, 6th; 100breaststroke, 1:58.00, 4th; 100-freestyle, 1:32.55, 5th; 200-medley relay, 3:30.36, 3rd; 200-freestyle relay, 2:29.24, 1st. Roylynn Madden — 100breaststroke, 1:55.07, 3rd; 200-medley relay, 2:54.69, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:46.82, 3rd. Zaide Thoman — 50freestyle, 37.78, 4th; 100backstroke, 1:45.54, 3rd; 100-freestyle, 1:28.78, 4th; 200-medley relay, 2:54.69, 1st; 200-freestyle relay, 2:46.82, 3rd. Nicole Timme — 100freestyle, 1:37.57, 6th; 200medley relay, 3:20.36, 3rd; 200-freestyle relay, 2:46.82, 3rd. 15-and-over Kaelyn Ade — 100-backstroke, 1:54.59, 3rd; 100breaststroke, 1:58.74, 4th; 100-freestyle, 1:35.27, 4th. Concordia Swim Team hosts meet 6 Blade-Empire, Wednesday, June 4, 2014 For the Record Police Dept. Report Damage to property— Richard L. Wendelken, Concordia, reported Damage to Property at 10:30 a.m., June 2. Damage occurred in the 300 block of West 17th St. Amanda Townsdin, Concordia, reported Damage to Property June 2 at 6:45 p.m. in the 100 block of West 6th Street. Accidents—Officers investigated a non-injury Accident at 10:40 a.m., June 2, in the 100 block of East 7th Street involving vehicles driven by Quentin Breese and Norman Christian, both of Concordia. Officers investigated a two vehicle accident at 5:20 p.m., June 2, in the 300 block of West 11th Street involving vehicles driven by Amber L. Desario and Cassandra Marie Stuber, both of Concordia. Officers investigated a two vehicle accident at 11:45 a.m., June 3, in the 100 block of East 6th Street involving vehicles driven by Jennifer L. Flavin, Courtland, and Travis Aaron Lawrence, Concordia. No injuries were reported. Arrest—Officers arrested Thomas William Dunn, 44, Concordia, at 3:55 p.m., June 3, in the 800 block of East 5th Street. Dunn was transported to Cloud County Law Enforcement Center and charged with Attempted Domestic Battery, Criminal Threat, Felony Theft, and Possession of Stolen Property. Online pirates thrive on legitimate ad dollars Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contain the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Friday. 7 2 2 6 5 Markets LOCAL MARKETS -EAST Wheat ...........................$6.93 Milo ......(per bushel) ....$4.22 Corn .............................$4.37 Soybeans ...................$14.33 Oats ..............................$4.50 AGMARK LOADING FACILITY LOCAL MARKETS - WEST Wheat ..........................$6.93 Milo .....(per bushel) .....$4.22 JAMESTOWN MARKETS Wheat ...........................$6.87 Milo ...(per bushel) ........$4.22 Soybeans ...................$14.28 Nusun .........................$16.25 9 8 7 3 6 4 1 5 2 5 1 6 2 7 9 3 4 8 Difficulty Level 4 6 7 2 3 4 8 1 5 7 9 6 3 7 9 6 2 1 4 8 5 8 5 2 7 4 3 6 1 9 4 6 1 9 5 8 2 7 3 7 4 3 5 9 2 8 6 1 6 2 5 1 8 7 9 3 4 6/03 By Dave Green 6 3 9 5 7 4 9 6 8 6 5 5 1 8 7 3 9 1 Difficulty Level 1 9 8 4 3 6 5 2 7 2014 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. SUDOKU “Good Money Gone Bad.” The study, commissioned for the Digital Citizens Alliance, a Washington-based group that advocates for a safer Internet, sampled 596 of the worst-offending websites. Researchers discovered that the infringing websites were displaying ads from 89 premium brands like Walmart, McDonald’s, Google, Microsoft and Ford. “It’s certainly fair to say that millions of dollars in revenue from premium brand ads are supporting content theft sites,” Berns said. That’s similar to an estimate from DoubleVerify, an online fraud protection company. According to a DoubleVerify report released last May, rogue website operators cheat mainstream advertisers out of $6.8 million each month, mainly by “laundering” ad traffic in ways that are hard to detect. 2 1 6/04 2014 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. LOS ANGELES (AP) –Movie and music piracy thrives online in part because crafty website operators receive advertising dollars from major companies like Comcast, Ford and McDonald’s. That’s the conclusion of several recent reports that shed light on Internet piracy’s funding sources. Content thieves attract visitors with the promise of free downloads and streams of the latest hit movies, TV shows and songs. Then they profit by pulling in advertising from around the Internet, often concealing their illicit activities so advertising brands remain unaware. Pirate websites run ads that are sometimes covered up by other graphics. They automatically launch legitimate-looking websites as pop-up windows that advertisers don’t realize are associated with piracy. At the end of the day, the pirate website operators still receive a check for serving up a number of views and clicks. The illicit activity is estimated to generate millions of dollars annually. That’s only a small portion of the roughly $40 billion of online ad spending every year. Yet it is helping to feed the creation of millions of copyrightinfringing websites that provide stolen content to a growing global audience. “(Companies) placed their ads on the assumption that they were going to be on high-quality sites and they’re not,” said Mark Berns, vice president of MediaLink LLC, a consulting firm that produced a study looking into the practice called Two girls charged Weather in adult court for alleged stabbing WAUKESHA, Wis. (AP) – Neighbors of two Wisconsin girls accused of stabbing a friend nearly to death say they’re struggling to reconcile the allegations with what they know about the 12-year-olds and their upbringings. Waukesha County prosecutors have charged the two girls in adult court with attempted homicide for allegedly stabbing a girl the same age in the woods. The girls told detectives they conspired for months to kill the other girl in hopes of pleasing Slenderman, a fictional character they read about on a horror website. Most residents in their Waukesha neighborhood didn’t want to talk to reporters Tuesday. They said they were still trying to wrap their minds around the allegations. But neighbors who did agree to talk said the girls came from good families and that the parents were responsible guardians who doted on their children. Emily Edwards, 15, baby-sat one of the girls for about two years. She told The Associated Press the girl seemed to be a well-adjusted child who was never mean or violent. She said the girl never even picked on her younger brother, and if anything acted as a peacekeeper whenever others teased him. “She was completely normal, nothing off about her. She was very social, friendly, outgoing,” Emily said, “which is what makes this whole thing so weird.” Prosecutors say the two girls lured the victim into the woods Saturday and stabbed her 19 times, with one of the wounds coming within a millimeter of piercing a major artery near her heart. The AP isn’t naming either girl because their cases could end up in juvenile court, where proceedings are closed to the public. The victim is identified in court documents only by her initials. Emily said that as far as the girl she baby-sat, she often saw her family laughing and smiling together. She described the girl’s parents as “such nice people” who seem devoted to their two kids. Paul Plotkin, another neighbor close to the father of one of the girls, said he was troubled by comments he’s seen online suggesting the parents must have been absent, negligent, addicted to drugs or worse. “Anyone who knows them knows these are good people, a normal middle-class family,” said Plotkin, 44. “It just goes to show, no matter how hard you try to instill good morals, good values, things can still go wrong.” The two girls live in the same apartment complex, which has about a dozen buildings scattered in an open layout with leafy trees. About a dozen small children played on a small playground in the center of the complex Tuesday afternoon, as parents watched from a distance. Your Birthday By Stella Wilder Born today, you enjoy dabbling in all kinds of things, and you can often be found in the most unexpected or unlikely of places. Indeed, exploring is what you enjoy most and, to a large degree, what you do best. If there’s an issue that needs to be uncovered, a mystery exposed or anything else revealed, you are the one for the job -- as long as it requires exploring! You love getting involved in the nittygritty of things; you’re not the kind to enjoy a “broad strokes” approach to anything because you prefer examining the details quite closely. You like knowing how things work -- and why -- and that goes for people as well as devices! You can be quite blunt -- often disarmingly so. You have your own way of doing things, and of saying things, and this comes from your unique way of thinking about things. Your perspective is uniquely your own. You are no copycat; you look at the world through a lens of your own making. Also born on this date are: Angelina Jolie, actress; Russell Brand, actor; Noah Wyle, actor; Bruce Dern, actor; El DeBarge, singer; Dennis Weaver, actor; Parker Stevenson, actor; Dr. Ruth Westheimer, sex expert; Michelle Phillips, singer; Joyce Meyer, televangelist; Rosalind Russell, actress; Sam Harris, singer and actor; Scott Wolf, actor. To see what is in store for you tomorrow, find your birthday and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide. THURSDAY, JUNE 5 GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- It is best that you put yourself in fine array, as others will be judging you on style as well as substance. This is a strength! CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- You don’t want to borrow from yourself as much as you have been in the past; you’re more interested in forging a new, original “you”! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Others will swing into your orbit -- and out again -- all day long. There is something about you that attracts all kinds. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- What you see is, indeed, what you will get -- at least in most cases. Where love is concerned, get ready for a wild ride. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Take care that you don’t confuse the emotional with the intellectual. Your best bet, in fact, is to get out of your head for now. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- You have what it takes to impress someone who is not easily impressed. The results, particularly after dark, are more than you imagined. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- You may be haunted by a notion that has recently kept you up at night -- but today you’ll find a way to free yourself from it for good. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- There is a certain attraction that cannot be denied, yet you may not be ready to make the changes required if you explore further. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Certain mysteries prevail, and you’re eager to get to the bottom of at least one of them. Clues abound; interpretation is key. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) -- You may want to let your turn pass at this time, to give yourself a greater opportunity to prepare for the next round. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- You’re seeking something that cannot be found in the usual ways. The moment you release yourself from its thrall, it may well become available. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- You’re ready to begin what some would call a “working vacation,” but you really don’t see anything but fun in what lies ahead -- or do you? Today’s weather artwork by Taley Murdock, a 4th grader in Mr. Brown’s class Girl, dog who were abandoned form bond TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) – A 5-day-old baby, umbilical cord still attached, abandoned at a bus stop in China. A puppy, worm-infested, vomiting blood and starving to death on a porch in Topeka. Two creatures born to misery worlds apart but brought together to teach each other about love, family, faith and, above all, about trust. “It’s OK,” the little girl would whisper in his floppy ear the first time they meet. “Marvin, I got left behind, too, once. But sometimes, God does that so you can end up in the family you’re supposed to be in.” When Kathryn and Kirk White brought their 9-month-old baby home from China in August 2005, the 33-year-olds decided to name their second daughter Eden. “As in the Paradise,” Kathryn White said Tuesday. “Because she was so beautiful.” The early years were a breeze, compared to the stories the Whites had heard about other abandoned babies. Eden was all smiles, even with Kirk – likely one of the first men who had ever held her. It wasn’t until she was about 3 years old that she started waking up screaming in sheer panic, The Topeka Capital-Journal reported. White had read that for some children, night terrors were the manifestation of the abandonment they knew as a child. But that didn’t make them any easier to handle. “She was in a constant state of being afraid, of being left,” White said. “She couldn’t calm down enough to get a good sleep.” Sometimes, Eden would be sleep walking, repeating the same phrase “I don’t want you to leave.” This went on for years, progressively getting worse and more frequent until it was just about every night. “No one was sleeping,” White said. “You don’t realize how important sleep is until you stop getting it.” The Whites tried everything, from taking turns sleeping with her to waking her up every time someone was going to leave the house. She would want to give her dad and sister, Peyton, tons of kisses, in case they didn’t come back. Last summer the couple, firmly against the idea but at their wits’ end, finally started to cave. It was time to look into getting Eden what she always wished upon a star for: A dog. Meanwhile, a 1-year-old brindle mix, then named Pork Chop, laid starving and vomiting blood on a porch across Topeka. He had been abandoned by his former owners, left as a neighbor’s problem. The neighbor, out of money, phoned who people call in such instances: Maureen Cummins, co-owner of Second Chance Animal Refuge Society in Auburn. “This dog is dying,” Cummins said when she saw Pork Chop, noting to herself the dog had never even seen the food of his namesake. She immediately took him to the nearest veterinarian, who diagnosed him with three types of worms, possibly a bleeding ulcer and acute diarrhea, which was compounded by starvation. He weighed less than 20 pounds. Marvin was given the OK to leave one week later, but he wasn’t out of the woods yet. The next two months were a blur of feeding, antibiotics, vitamins and exercise, Cummins said. And she renamed him Marvin – as in Starvin’ Marvin. By August, Marvin was up to 50 pounds and, while still shy, he was more energetic and active with the other 50 dogs at the refuge. “Someday,” Cummins assured him, staring into his gentle eyes, “you will be strong, and you will be someone’s hero.” Then, the Whites called. All Cummins knew about Eden was that she was adopted and she needed to feel safe – not that she had been abandoned as an infant or suffered horrific night terrors. With that information, the refuge workers came up with a list of qualities Eden needed in a dog: Calm, good with children, never shown any sign of aggression, no accidents, big enough to intimidate strangers, but safe and loving. Marvin fit the ticket. But when he bounded out of Cummins’ vehicle that fateful August day last year, White was having second thoughts. “I was thinking something small she could put bows on,” White said. At 50 pounds, Marvin weighed more than Eden, and he had a face like a pit bull – White had heard the stories. But Eden took to him immediately, and the two started playing and running around in the backyard while both women watched with careful eyes. Cummins hadn’t known Eden’s background, but as White described it, she started to cry. It was then Eden pulled Marvin aside, when she told him bad things happen sometimes so God can bring the right families together. “To me, that is what rescue is about,” Cummins said. In the past nine months, Marvin has become an central figure in the White family, despite breaking all of Kathryn’s rules about being inside, sleeping on the bed and sitting on the furniture. Family members describe him differently: For Eden, he is a best friend, a baby, a cuddle buddy. For White, he is her child’s protector. For Peyton, 13, he is a brother. But as much as everyone loves Marvin, there is something special between him and Eden. “They’ve been like this from the start,” White said, nodding to where her daughter laid on top of Marvin, showering him with kisses. “He loves all of us, but he and Eden have A Thing.”