IMMIGRATION: House takes up own fix, without path to citizenship. Page A2
WIN: Bad Boyz boxers take 9 of 12 bouts. PAGE A10
HARVEST: Local wheat growers report poor results. PAGE A3
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
75 cents
Volume 84, No. 152
1 section
12 pages
Go to GCTelegram.com for galleries from this weekend’s Miles of Smiles and Bad Boyz Boxing events.
Kansas concealed-carry changes begin today TOPEKA (AP) — Starting today, licensed gun owners will be allowed to bring their concealed weapons into more government buildings in Kansas and people who try to bring them into places where they are prohibited won’t face criminal penalties. The provisions are part of an expansion of Kansas’ concealed-carry law passed during last year’s legislative session as the federal government was discussing gun-control measures in the wake of a mass shooting at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school in December. The new rules allow people with concealed-carry permits to bring firearms into public buildings deemed not to have adequate security measures, such as metal detectors and trained guards. Those public buildings could include college and university campuses, though they — like local governments — can seek exemptions while they try to beef up security to a standard that would allow them to ban guns. Previously, concealed guns were generally
Wichita job losses drag down Kansas recovery
banned in courthouses, state offices and other public buildings where officials post notices. State Sen. Forrest Knox, chief architect of the new regulations, said the changes are meant to protect the “constitutional guaranteed individual liberties” of law-abiding citizens. More than 60,000 concealed-carry licenses have been issued in Kansas, including 16,000 in the first five months of 2013. “We should not tread on their rights while at the same time take no steps to prevent criminals from bringing illegal weapons in to public buildings,” said, Know, an Altoona Republican. “Good Kansans with guns make all of Kansas safer.” Cities and counties can seek six-month exemptions while they come up with new security measures. Colleges and universities can seek four-year exemptions. Critics have argued that the new regulations amount to an unfunded mandate on local governments and higher education. Compliance with the legal definition of ade-
quate security measures, opponents said during legislative debate, would cost millions of dollars to implement scanners and increase the number of guards. Legislators provided no state funds to offset the cost of security measures. The law also changed language in Kansas’ 2007 statute regarding efforts to carry a concealed weapon into a building declared free of guns. The change eliminates the possibility of a licensed concealed-carry permit holder being arrested for trying to gain access. Instead, the permit holder may be denied access or asked to leave without criminal penalty. The law also gives school districts the authority to allow certain designated teachers and staff to carry concealed weapons in buildings. The exceptions are the state schools for the blind and deaf. Knox and Republican Gov. Sam Brownback said they foresee little trouble implementing the changes, which apply to hundreds of pub-
lic venues statewide. “I think people will be able to navigate,” Brownback said Thursday. “I think it’s going to be able to worked through and it will be fine.” Patricia Stoneking, president of the Kansas State Rifle Association, said that cities and counties should abide by the decisions of state legislators. “We maintain that the state operates under the rule of law and individual jurisdictions must abide by that law regardless of their personal feelings about the law,” she said. People may also eventually be allowed to carry concealed guns into the Capitol. The Statehouse was given until July 1, 2014, to come up with what are deemed adequate security measures. The date allows for the completion of renovation to the Statehouse, which has been going on for more than a decade. It is anticipated that security to the building will be revamped to improve public safety, but details haven’t been announced.
Show of success
Small rural counties remain ‘bright spots’ By DAN VOORHIS The Wichita Eagle
(MCT) — Five years into recovery, Kansas still hasn’t regained all of the jobs it lost in the recession, and there is one big reason: Wichita. The Wichita metro area, as of May, remains 16,000 jobs down from 2008. Sedgwick County is by far the worst of the state’s 105 counties for job losses. Neighboring Butler County is second worst, and Harvey and Sumner are close behind. The Wichita area’s jobs drain pulls Kansas into the negative column. Counting the Wichita area, Kansas is down 9,000 jobs from May 2008; without it, the state is up about 7,000 jobs. Kansas has seen a 0.6 percent decline in jobs since 2008. In the same time period, the United States has seen a 5 percent gain. The numbers only hint at the cost for people’s lives. Barbara Hyle was laid off last year from Cessna Aircraft, where she was a marketing coordinator. Since then, she’s spent time networking, applying for jobs, interviewing and getting frustrated. She and her husband had just bought a house based on two incomes. Her unemployment check now goes to pay the mortgage. The first 26 weeks of checks are about to run out, and she’s anxiously waiting to see if she qualifies for an extension. “It’s just been rough,” she said. The good news for Kansas is that much of rural and small-town Kansas has seen job growth, driven by more oil drilling and services, and the growth in services because of the overall wealth increase from farming, as well as government transfers such as Medicare. Meanwhile, the state’s traditional growth engines, its bigger cities, have been down or flat. Johnson County is up about 2,700 jobs, or 1 percent over 2008 levels. Topeka is up 500 jobs and Leavenworth is up 400 jobs. But other populous counties Riley, Douglas, Reno and Saline all saw modest declines. Wyandotte County data show that it had exactly the same number of jobs in May 2008 as in May 2013. “Manufacturing is still soft, and Johnson County isn’t growing,” said Donna Ginther, director of the Center for Economic and Business Analysis at the University of Kansas. “And so what we have is a very slow recovery with some bright spots in small counties. It’s uneven growth, uneven distribution.”
Brad Nading/Telegram
A quote is shown on the back of a volunteer’s shirt as Audrey Mayo rides a horse around the arena Saturday during the Miles of Smiles Therapeutic Horseback Riding program’s showcase in the organization’s arena.
Miles of Smiles event showcases clients’ achievements By SCOTT AUST
saust@gctelegram.com
Brad Nading/Telegram
Reilly Schaffer grabs a ring off a pole from horseback Saturday while demonstrating an activity during the Miles of Smiles Therapeutic Horseback Riding program’s showcase.
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See Showcase, Page A5
Collecting salt and pepper shakers a family affair By BECKY MALEWITZ
bmalewitz@gctelegram.com
On a recent trip to Belize, recent GCHS graduate Ally Maynard kept her eyes peeled for a set of salt and pepper shakers to add to her grandmother’s collection. “See, I’m easy to shop for at Christmastime,” Maynard’s grandma Belva Rosenau said. “I say, ‘hey, just buy me a set of salt and pepper shakers.’” According to Rosenau, when anyone in the family goes on vacation, they are always on a mission to find a unique set of shakers to add to her collection of nearly
What’s Inside
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Leo and Neoma Davis drove down from Cozad, Neb., to watch their grandson, Kade Davis, 4, ride in Saturday’s Miles of Smiles annual showcase at the Miles of Smiles Arena in Garden City. Kade’s grin never wavered as he rode a horse called Twister around the ring, accompanied by three adults who made sure the little boy stayed in the saddle. “This is his second session. He did a fall session and then this spring. This is the first time we’ve been here,” Neoma Davis said. “We’re just looking forward to see what they do. We kept wanting to come and this was our perfect opportunity. He loves the riding. He’s very excited.” Miles of Smiles offers children and adults with physical, mental, emotional and social disabilities or injuries the benefits of therapeutic horseback riding, according to the organiza-
tion’s website. Its mission seeks to enhance health, independence and quality of life. The yearly showcase is an opportunity for clients to show the public the things they have learned to do, Sara Brown, director of programs, said. About 17 people, ranging in age from 4 to a man in his fifties, participated Saturday. “The turnout of the crowd, and the turnout of our clients, too, was good,” Brown said. “Not all of them rode, but I think probably more riders took part in the showcase this year than we’ve ever had.” Leo Davis was impressed with Miles of Smiles and what they offered the kids. Judging by all the beaming faces, Davis agreed the organization lived up to its name. “This is really something. My grandson, Kade, he loves it,” Davis said. Leon Hindman, Garden City, said he came down to support a friend, Patsy Brimm, whose
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4,000 sets totalling approximately 8,000 individual shakers. “See, this is what they do when they go someplace. She got me two more sets,” Rosenau said holding up the newest additions to her collection. A pair of brightlycolored shakers shaped like tropical fish and a more tradiSee Neighbors, Page A5
Market Prices Grain prices at the Garden City Co-op (as of Friday) Wheat...........6.63 Milo..............6.07 Corn..............6.82 Soybeans....14.91
Becky Malewitz/Telegram
Belva Rosenau and her granddaughter Ally Maynard stand in front of part of Rosenau’s collection of nearly 4,000 pairs of salt and pepper shakers.
Schwieterman Inc. reported Chicago Live Cattle Futures: (as of Friday) June Aug. Oct. High........... 120.87......122.92.....126.20 Low............ 118.15......121.95.....125.40 Stand......... 118.15......122.22.....125.95
Weather Forecast Today, partly sunny and nice, high 80, low 54. Tuesday, sunny, high 82, low 58. Details on page A12.
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
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House takes up own immigration fix, no citizenship WASHINGTON (AP) — The Republican chairman of the House Judiciary Committee said Sunday that any attempt at comprehensive immigration legislation cannot offer a “special pathway to citizenship” for those in the United States illegally. That approach could block the GOP’s hopes of ever winning the White House, the top Democrat in the House predicted. With last week’s Senate passage of a comprehensive immigration bill, the emotionally heated and politically perilous debate is now heading toward the Republican-led House, where conservative incumbents could face primary challenges if they appear too lenient on the estimated 11 million immigrants living in the United States illegally. Rep. Bob Goodlatte, the Virginia Republican who leads the House Judiciary Committee, said he does not foresee a proposal that could provide a simple mechanism for immigrants here illegally to earn full standing as U.S. citizens, as many Democrats have demanded. Goodlatte’s committee members have been working on bills that address individual concerns but have not written a comprehensive proposal to match the Senate’s effort. The House answer would not be “a special pathway to citizenship where people who are here unlawfully get something that people who have worked for decades to immigrate lawfully do not have,” he said. A pathway to legal standing, similar to immigrants who have green
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The following reports were taken from local law enforcement logs:
Garden City Police Department Arrests/Citations Tuesday Leonardo Vasquez Jr., 21, was arrested at 5:20 p.m. at Applebee’s, 3030 E. Kansas Ave., on multiple drug charge allegations stemming from a previous case.
Thefts/Losses Wednesday Between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. in the 400 block of East Spruce Street, an unknown person found a wallet. When the wallet was found, the money was missing. Estimated loss $640. Tuesday Between 5 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday at 2501 Campus Drive, Suite 100, an unknown person stole a small refrigerator that had been placed outside the business to defrost. Loss $150.
Miscellaneous Thursday Between 10:30 and 10:35 p.m. in the 1100 block of Safford Avenue, an unknown person was yelling obscenities at a person in a rude manner and throwing rocks at the vehicle. Investigation continues. Wednesday At 4:31 p.m. in the 4100 block of East U.S. Highway 50, a known person responded to a residence without permission and attempted to cause an argument. Investigation continues.
Finney County Sheriff’s Office Thursday Taina Santoyo, 23, 11350 Bluestem Lane, was arrested at 2:52 a.m. on an allegation of driving under the influence. Lizeth Hernandez, 28, 407 Florence Ave., was arrested at 11 a.m. on two warrants for failure to appear. Anthony Christopher
Report: Wiretaps up 24 percent WICHITA (AP) — A government report on court-authorized wiretaps acknowledges that encryption is thwarting authorities’ ability to obtain text from some communications. The annual surveillance snapshot released Friday by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts also reported federal and state judges approved 24 percent more wiretaps in 2012 than the previous year. A total of 3,395 wiretaps were authorized, including 2,041 issued by state judges. Two state wiretap applications were denied. All of the Kansas and Missouri wiretaps involved drug-related investigations. Federal courts in Kansas authorized 11 wiretaps, while courts in the two federal Missouri districts together approved 102
wiretaps, according to the report. The federal wiretap with the most intercepts in the nation last year occurred in the Western District of Missouri, where a narcotics investigation involving cellphones resulted in the interception of 34,261 messages over 60 days, according to the report. Encryption was found on 15 wiretaps last year across the nation, the report noted.
Beckstrom, 35, 1605 N. Sixth St., was arrested at 12:10 p.m. on three out-ofcounty arrest warrants. Wednesday Jose Luis RinconLira, 23, 503 Olive St., was arrested at 10:28 a.m. on allegations of exceeding maximum speed limits and driving while suspended. Gerhard Dyck Reimer, 39, 2325 W. Six Mile Road, was arrested at 8:45 a.m. on an out-of-county arrest warrant and for probation violation. Simy Bernarda GomezFranco, 35, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50, was arrested at 10:10 a.m. on an allegation of no proof of insurance. Sofia Yadira Mendoza, 27, 2501 E. Fair St., was arrested at 10:19 a.m. on allegations of exceeding maximum speed limits, child passenger safety and no proof of insurance. Ramiro Loera-Cruz, 18, 1303 Boots Road, was arrested at 10:16 a.m. on an allegation of operating a motor vehicle without a valid driver’s license.
Kansas Lottery TOPEKA (AP) — These Kansas lotteries were drawn Sunday: Daily Pick 3: 5-1-8 2 By 2: Red Balls: 3-25, White Balls: 7-16 These Kansas lotteries were drawn Saturday: Daily Pick 3: 7-1-5 Super Kansas Cash: 4-1516-28-30, Cash Ball: 25 2 By 2: Red Balls: 5-17, White Balls: 1-17 Hot Lotto: 10-32-39-45-46, Hot Ball: 3 Powerball: 8-28-30-53-56, Powerball: 16
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cards, could be an option, he said. That approach, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said, would bring electoral doom for Republicans looking to take back the White House after the 2016 elections. Republicans, she advised, should follow the Senate lead “if they ever want to win a presidential race.” In 2012, Obama won reelection with the backing of 71 percent of Hispanic voters and 73 percent of Asian-American voters. A thwarted immigration overhaul could again send those voting blocs to Democrats’ side. “We wouldn’t even be where we are right now had it not been that 70 percent of Hispanics voted for President Obama, voted Democratic in the last election,” Pelosi said. “That caused an epiphany in the Senate, that’s for sure. So, all of a sudden now, we have already passed comprehensive immigration reform in the Senate. That’s a big victory.” The Senate bill would provide a long and difficult pathway to citizenship for those living in the country illegally, as well as tough measures to secure the border. Conservatives have stood opposed to any pathway to full citizenship for those workers, and House lawmakers have urged a piecemeal approach to the thorny issue instead of the Senate’s sweeping effort. Illustrating the strong opposition among conservative lawmakers in the House, Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., said flatly: “The Senate bill is not going to pass.”
THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM
Police Beat
America Chapter 163 met June 18 at the Senior Center of Finney County, with four members attending the lunch and business meeting. For roll call, members named their favorite pie. Vera Lou Adam won the hostess gift. There were 79 sick calls made. For part of the chapter’s community service, members bought layette items to be given to the Godmothers of the First United Methodist Church. Members played bingo before taking items to the Community Day Care Center.
The next meeting is planned for July 8, with lunch at Ward’s Garden Cafe, followed by a business meeting at Alberta Mouser’s home (note the change of date and location of the meeting).
4-H Kourageous Kids The 4-H Kourageous Kids Club met June 16 in the grandstand meeting room on the Finney County Fairgrounds, with 11 members and one guest in attendance. For
roll call, members told what they are working on for the Finney County Fair and shared something good that happened to them this month. The leaders reported about signing up for concession stand volunteers during the county fair. The community service project for the club is serving a meal July 14 at Emmaus House. Following the meal, the club will meet to paint windows at local businesses advertising the county fair in Garden City.
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Fourth Annual Finney County Museum
FLE A MARKET
New Location 302 N. Fleming Suite 3 Garden City, Ks 67846 (620) 647-5096
Rose Bushes Bloom All Summer
SHRUB Roses
TODAY’S CARE-FREE ROSE Blooms Once a Month
No Summer Trimming Required Simply Plant in Sunny Location Add Water Fertilize with Ferti•lome Then Sit Back And Enjoy The Beauty
Bargain Festival 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. •Scentsy • Velata • Grace Adele • Crafts • Yard Art • Plants • Tupperware • Antiques • Collectibles • Artwork •CDs • Home items • Baked Goods • Primitives • Paintings
• Jewelry • Memorabilia • Decor items • Dishes • Electronics • Furniture • Appliances • Cookware • Clocks • Gadgets • Games • Toys • Glassware • Ceramics • Holiday items
Lots of other goods too!
Saturday
July 6
Just south of the Museum in Finnup Park
The Original! Garden City’s first and established open market in Finnup Park.
Supported by: FINNEY COUNTY
VE CON
NTION & VISITORS BUREAU
Stay for lunch
On-site meals available, fresh off the grill!
906 N. 10th • Mon.-Sat. 8:00-5:30 276-000 • 1-800-235-9244 Garden City, KS www.facebook.com/whartons 224524
Finney County Historical Society 403 S. Fourth at Finnup Park • 620-272-3664 www.finneycounty.org
Finney County Museum
Roundup Briefs Drainage District meeting rescheduled The Drainage District No. 2 meeting scheduled for July 9 has been moved to 8 a.m. July 23. The district will meet at the Finney County Administrative Center, 311 N. Ninth St., Garden City.
Journey of Hope visiting Garden City On July 8, a team of cyclists participating in the Journey of Hope, presented by KRG Capital, will arrive in Garden City as part of a nine-week, 4,000-mile cycling event across the country to raise funds and awareness for people with disabilities. The team will arrive at 1:30 p.m. at Mosaic of Garden City, where they will have lunch and a Friendship Visit. That evening, the team will have dinner sponsored by Grant Elpers at Golden Corral at 6 p.m. They will depart from Garden City the following morning for their 50-mile journey to Dodge City. The Journey of Hope is a program of Push America, the national philanthropy of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, which raises funds and awareness for people with disabilities. The Journey of Hope team consists of men from Pi Kappa Phi chapters across the country. The team will cycle an average of 75 miles per day, beginning in Seattle and ending in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 10. For the team, the real journey will not be on a bike, but spending time with the people for whom they are riding. The Journey of Hope team members will spend every afternoon with people with disabilities in many different community events and activities called friendship visits. These men are striving for community inclusion of people with disabilities and are helping to break the barriers of society that keep people of all abilities from living life to the fullest. The organization was founded in 1977 with the hope of committing its members to enhance the lives of people with disabilities. With the combined efforts of sponsors and individual team members, this year’s Journey of Hope will raise more than $500,000 on behalf of people with disabilities. Push America and Pi Kappa Phi have raised over $15 million to date and continue to be on the cutting edge of the disability movement. For more information about this event or more on Push America’s summer programs, contact Josh Sasek at (980) 3185393 or visit www.pushamerica. org.
GCCC still accepting early enrollment Garden City Community College is still accepting reservations for its July 15 early enrollment day, which is designed to give individual assistance to 2013 high school graduates and others in registering for classes. The schedule includes checkin at 8 a.m., individual assessments from 8:30 a.m. to noon, a lunch break from noon to 1 p.m., random drawings for two $250 scholarships at 1 p.m., and presentations on campus services for success from 1:05 to 1:40 p.m. At 1:45 p.m., students will enroll in their chosen courses and work out their first fall semester class schedules with the help of individual faculty advisors. To make reservations, call 276-9608. Summer and fall enrollment also are open on a walk-in basis at the GCCC Student and Community Services Center from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 8 a.m. to noon Friday.
THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM
By The Telegram The Garden City Area Chamber of Commerce has announced details for its upcoming annual banquet. This year’s event is set for Aug. 1, and will commemorate the 125th anniversary of the Chamber with the theme “Looking Back ... Moving Forward.” The banquet starts at 6 p.m. and will be held in the commons area of the Garden City High School, 2720 Buffalo Way. Each year, the Chamber recognizes its members for their support and dedication to the community by bringing them together for a night of dining and entertainment. “The banquet is a great opportunity to network with other business individuals in a relaxing setting,” Chamber President Steve Dyer said. “We invite our members to join us as we look back on the last 125 years and look forward to a prosperous future for the business commu-
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nity in Garden City.” During the banquet, the Chamber will present the “Award of Merit” to one person who has exceeded the standards in their commitment to the Chamber and its goal of promoting local business. This marks the 30th year of the award, which is kept secret from the recipient until the night of the event. The Chamber also will award “Ambassador of the Year” to one of the organization’s 24 ambassador volunteers. Following the banquet, the Chamber will move the festivities to the high school’s auditorium for the “Classic Comedy Live” show featuring entertainment from comedians Dick Hardwick, Mrs. Hughes, whose given name is Carol Hughes, and Jack Mayberry. The show starts at 8 p.m. The group is currently traveling across the country and is being billed as one of the best clean comedy shows in America, a press release said. Each of the entertainers has
made numerous appearances on Comedy Central, “The Tonight Show” and other well-known venues. Video highlights of each comedian is available to view on the Chamber’s website at www. gardencitychamber.net. Tickets to the banquet and comedy show are available to all Chamber members for $50 each and will be available for purchase starting July 1. Corporate tables, which seat eight, are available for $450. Banquet and comedy show tickets may be purchased at the Chamber office, 1511 E. Fulton Terrace, or via the Chamber’s website at www.gardencitychamber.net. General admission tickets to the “Classic Comedy Live” show go on sale beginning July 15. General admission tickets are for the comedy show only (no banquet) are $20 each and may be purchased at the Chamber office, or via the Chamber’s website at www. gardencitychamber.net. Tickets
may also be purchased at Baker Boot Company, 211 W. Kansas Ave., Garden City. The presenting sponsor for the event is Tyson Fresh Meats, which will provide the beef for the banquet. Other sponsors include: Platinum Sponsor: Samy’s Spirits & Steakhouse/Clarion Inn and Finney County Convention & Tourism Bureau. Gold Sponsors: Commerce Bank, Coldwell Banker, The Real Estate Shoppe, Palmer Manufacturing, a division of Worthington Industries, Golden Plains Credit Union, Black Hills Energy and Legacy Automotive. Silver sponsors: Finney County Community Health Coalition and Westlake ACE Hardware. Bronze Sponsors: United Wireless, Miller Rentals, VOLVO Rents, Garden Valley Retirement and Advanced Merchant Services. For more information, call 276-3264, or visit www.gardencitychamber.net.
Brad Nading/Telegram
Heat waves rise from a wheat field, distorting the view of Cassy Boyd dumping wheat from a combine to a grain cart driven by Diana Boyd Friday northeast of Garden City at Kansas Highway 156 and Finney County Feeders Road during this year’s wheat harvest.
Local farmers recording poor harvest numbers Growers agree this year is among worst dating back to 1950s. By SCOTT AUST
saust@gctelegram.com
There may be somewhere in southwest Kansas where wheat harvest numbers are good, but Darrell Goss of Garden City hasn’t heard where that might be. “Our wheat, it’s just not doing what it usually does. The yields are down,” Goss said. Goss said he didn’t have much wheat this year individually, though his brother, Larry, had quite a bit. Together, the two brothers also farm about 240 acres cooperatively, all of which had already been cut last week. “I helped him cut some dryland, making 15 to 17 bushels, up to 20. Irrigated was running 40 to 70. But the freeze hurt us pretty bad, and then the dry weather. No matter if you’ve got irrigation, it’s hard to keep enough water on it,” Goss said.
Other farmers agreed that this year’s crop is pretty poor, which wasn’t unexpected given the ongoing exceptional drought and a spring full of crop-damaging freezes. Lane County farmer Tanner Ehmke said his yields have been half of what they were last year. Instead of around 40 bushels an acre, many farmers are seeing anywhere from 15 to 30 bushels. “And there are a few people who are going to cut just four or five bushel wheat,” Ehmke said. “It’s not nearly what we hoped for. It’s bad all over, kind of the same story wherever you go. Hopefully this drought ends sooner rather than later.” Ehmke, who came back to farming about three years ago after a stint as a reporter covering the agriculture market and Chicago Board of Trade, said this is the worst wheat harvest he’s had, and thinks his dad, Vance Ehmke, who’s been a farmer much longer might also agree this year’s crop would rank right up there as one of the worst ever. “It’s definitely a result of years of drought, and it’s getting
old, fast,” he said. Ehmke said guys at his local grain elevator said over the weekend that harvest was already winding down, less than a week after it swung into high gear. “Harvest is pretty short this year. The elevator looked like a ghost town. There was like one truck dumping, and I never saw a line. It was that bad,” he said. Eugene Shapland, a Dightonarea farmer, tried to keep his sense of humor when asked how harvest was going. “It’s going pretty good. I don’t need many truck drivers, that’s for sure,” Shapland said. Shapland said Sunday he only has about 25 percent of his crop to cut, but there’s not much grain. Yields vary from field to field, but overall Shapland estimated his yields at 18 to 20 bushels per acre. “When you’ve got 20 bushel wheat, why, you can go through it a lot faster. If we had 50 bushel wheat we’d cut ‘til midnight or so, and be out there running by 8:30 or 9 (a.m.) if there was no dew,” he said. Shapland said he isn’t cutting
after dark this year because the wheat is only a foot to 18 inches tall at most and he doesn’t want to risk running a header into the ground. “I guess we’re not too enthused about starting real early, either,” he said. The combination of drought and freeze this year did the damage, Shapland said. At first, he thought the freezes would be the main cause of poor yields but after he started cutting he thinks the drought was a little worse. “But the combination really done us a job,” Shapland said. When asked how this year’s harvest compared to those in the past, Shapland couldn’t say it was the worst, though it would surely rank among the worst. “I’m 76. I’ve harvested wheat since the 1950s, and of course back then, we didn’t have any wheat for a few years,” he said. “In ‘63, the worms ate the wheat all up. Then last year we had a 31 bushel average and we’re worse off this year than last. I just don’t know, I can’t remember a poorer crop than this one, unless I go back into the ‘50s.”
Details spur attack on changes to Kansas abortion law Law would require abortion providers to link to KDHE site. AP Political Writer
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Chamber announces plans for annual banquet
By JOHN HANNA
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Region & State
TOPEKA (AP) — Anti-abortion leaders who helped push now-challenged restrictions through the Kansas Legislature this session say they’re taken aback by an attack on new rules for providers’ websites. A state judge Friday temporarily blocked a requirement that was set to take effect Monday, requiring providers to link to a Kansas Department of Health and Environment site on abortion and fetal development. It’s one of many provisions of the sweeping law, passed in April, that’s being challenged in a lawsuit by two Overland Park abortion doctors. Abortion opponents say the state’s four providers already link to the same site. But the crux of the issue is about specifics, proving that details matter to both sides. Under the law, providers must link to the KDHE site from their home pages and include a statement that the information is “objective” and “scientifically
accurate.” Kansans for Life, the most influential anti-abortion group at the Statehouse, view that as part of a larger effort to make sure women have multiple sources of information about abortion, its risks and its consequences. Providers, however, say they’re being forced to distribute anti-abortion statements they dispute, including one that says a fetus can feel pain by the 20th week of pregnancy. The American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said in a June 20 statement that a rigorous 2005 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association concluded that it’s unlikely a fetus perceives pain that early, adding, “no studies since 2005 demonstrate fetal recognition of pain.” “While it seems like a small deal and a handful of words in a statute, it is a big deal,” said Peter Brownlie, president and chief executive officer of Planned Parenthood of Kansas and MidMissouri, which performs abortions at its clinic in the Kansas City suburb of Overland Park. The provision is being attacked on two fronts. Planned Parenthood has filed a federal lawsuit, and Overland Park abortion providers Dr. Herbert Hodes and his daughter, Dr. Traci
NEWS ANALYSIS Nauser, filed a state lawsuit in Shawnee County, the one resulting in Friday’s ruling. In hearings last week in federal and state court, the state’s lawyers questioned why the mandate was important to Hodes, Nauser and Planned Parenthood now, well after they’d been linking to the health department’s site voluntarily. Other parts of the law garnered more debate as it was being passed, as it also bans sexselection abortions, blocks tax breaks for providers, prohibits them from furnishing materials or instructors for public school sexuality courses and declares, as a policy statement, that life begins “at fertilization.” Rep. Jan Pauls, a socially conservative Hutchinson Democrat who supported the new law, said the website requirements were part of the House’s contentious debate “kind of in passing.” “I didn’t think it was anything, really,” she said. Kansas enacted an “informed consent” abortion law in 1997, which gives women considering abortions written material about
fetal development. Until this year, the law didn’t mention the Internet, except to say that the health department had to publish its materials online. “In 1997, when this first passed, there wasn’t any Internet,” said Mary Kay Culp, executive director of Kansans for Life. But it’s become a convenient way for abortion providers to link women with the state’s materials — significant because in Kansas, a woman is required to wait 24 hours after receiving the information to obtain an abortion. The state’s attorneys argued that Kansas can require disclosures by physicians to protect patients and, in federal court, even likened the law to requiring health warnings on tobacco products. “There are a lot of times the government compels people to say things, especially when they’re selling a product or rendering a service,” Stephen McAllister, the state’s solicitor general, said in federal court. The state’s attorneys argued that whatever Kansas requires providers to put on their websites doesn’t preclude the providers from adding their own material — including disclaimers that contradict the state’s materials.
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Opinion
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
Dena Sattler, Editor/publisher
THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM
denas@gctelegram.com
Our View
Fired up
A justice’s contempt
Public fireworks shows offer safe and entertaining option.
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pected brightness to what had been commonly — and correctly — described as the boob tube. Because of “The Sopranos,” he became internationally famous and, like Armstrong, was neither intimidated nor changed by worldwide recognition. Long ago, I met the actor one evening at a dinner. We were at the Rainbow Room in a small party. Gandolfini was unaware that great fame was aiming at him. He was a warm guy, a man with a sense of humor and a very astute perception of others. He would go on to give heft to one of the greatest and most complex monsters ever conceived. As James Lipton of “Inside the Actors Studio” pointed out, writer and creator David Chase’s decision to have Tony’s sessions with a therapist parallel Shakespearean monologues was not only a supremely original decision, but one that was met by the enormity of the actor’s talent. Tony Soprano lived by Richard Pryor’s performance observation about some gangsters who used to take him out for dinner but always snatched the check. When asked by the comedian why he was never allowed to handle the bill, one gangster’s face took on an ominous look. “We’re crime,” the mobster said. “And crime don’t pay.” It had been said about a great jazz musician at his memorial, “You all may have known him better, but you could not have loved him more than we did.” That’s how people felt about Armstrong, all over the world, because of his ability to communicate his inner life, and thereby change music. Big James did the same thing to acting in his television world. Both of those men rose from humble beginnings and became American sunbeams. That’s the heart of the matter.
upreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy has contempt for a swath of his fellow citizens. If you disagree with him about gay marriage, indeed, if you merely think the federal government should continue to define marriage the traditional way while the states define it however they want, then you are a bigot. Your views deserve no political representation. They should be ground underfoot by the five mightiest and most broad-minded people in the land, presiding from their temple of rationality and tolerance at the United States Supreme Court. Kennedy wrote the majority decision striking down the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act, which defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman for purposes of federal law. The decision declared a position that had been held by President Barack Obama until the day before yesterday as being a relic of barbarism, and set the predicate for the court — in its wisdom, nay, in its heightened state of enlightenment — to enshrine its view of marriage as the law from sea to shining sea. The majority held that DOMA inflicts an “injury and indignity” on gay couples so severe that it denies “an essential part of the liberty protected by the Fifth Amendment.” It is motivated by a “’bare congressional desire to harm a politically unpopular group.’” There is, in short, nothing to be said for it or the point of view of its supporters. Period. Full stop. Kennedy mumbles about federalism concerns, but it’s hard to argue that the federal government can’t work from its own definition of marriage. As Ed Whelan of the Ethics and Public Policy Center points out, it has myriad programs that require such a definition. “Under provisions of the Internal Revenue Code,” Whelan writes, “a person who is legally separated from his spouse, but not yet divorced, is treated as unmarried, as is a person whose spouse is a nonresident alien. Likewise, under the immigration laws, a marriage entered into for the purpose of gaining an immigrant’s admission will be disregarded even though that marriage remains valid under state law.” Justice Antonin Scalia asks in his dissent, If a gay couple marries in Albany, where gay marriage is recognized, and moves to Alabama, where it is not, is the federal government supposed to defer to the law of New York or Alabama? DOMA settles the question. In the end, Kennedy simply declares the supporters of DOMA hateful people. The members of Congress who passed the act and the president who signed it are morally no better than members of the Westboro Baptist Church who picket military funerals with their heinous “God hates fags” signs. Bill Clinton, apparently, despised gays. So did 342 members of the House and 85 senators. Bill Clinton now wishes he hadn’t signed it. Like so many others, he changed his mind on the issue. Fine. There is nothing to stop Congress from overturning what Bill Clinton considers his mistakes. It did it with “don’t ask, don’t tell.” It could have done the same thing — eventually — with DOMA. But Justice Kennedy and his colleagues don’t want to wait for the democratic process to play itself out, not when they have such immense power to do whatever the hell they want. Properly understood, the court’s role here is minimal, and the decision could have been rendered in a sentence. To wit, as Scalia wrote, “It is enough to say that the Constitution neither requires nor forbids our society to approve of same-sex marriage, much as it neither requires nor forbids us to approve of no-fault divorce, polygamy or the consumption of alcohol.” The court stipulated that it still permits the states, if not Congress and the president, to debate and decide the issue themselves. This is a false assurance, though. Once the high court has declared that the traditional definition is a product of irrational animus, over time it won’t be allowed to stand anywhere. It is Anthony Kennedy’s country. We only live in it.
Email Stanley Crouch at crouch. stanley@gmail.com.
Email Rich Lowry at comments.lowry@ nationalreview.com.
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s usual, it’s dry and hot. With the Fourth of July drawing near, let’s hope people take time to consider the conditions if they decide to set off fireworks and other pyrotechnics. Safe use of fireworks has been a hot topic for years. Commissioners from Garden City and Finney County, along with Holcomb city representatives, Should the discharge of fireworks at private routinely residences be allowed in address the extremely dry conditions? fire risk of Add your comments at setting off the end of the online verfireworks. In sion of this editorial at rural parts GCTelegram.com/opinion. in particular, one errant spark could start a dangerous and costly grass fire. The issue has been in how to regulate, control and enforce the misuse of fireworks — and whether enforcement even is effective. Ideally, more local residents would exercise personal responsibility by taking the danger into consideration during the holiday. Statewide statistics point to the need for such caution. The Office of the State Fire Marshal received word of 197 fireworks-related injuries in Kansas during the week of the Fourth of July last year, The state agency also reported 199 miscellaneous fires directly related to fireworks between May and August in 2011 in Kansas. The toll on personal and commercial properties included 26 structure fires and 10 vehicle fires related to fireworks use during that time — all cause for officials to do what they can to encourage safety. Beyond the obvious threat to people and property, fireworks create other problems. Anyone determined to ignite noisy fireworks and other novelties should know that doing so at all hours annoys people trying to sleep — even in the county — and sends frightened pets scurrying from their homes. And every time emergency responders are called because of a fireworksrelated problem, there’s a cost to taxpayers. Everyone should celebrate Independence Day with gusto. As activities unfold, no one wants a negative outcome. So, with little relief from the dry conditions in sight, local and area residents should consider scaling down their own fireworks plans in favor of such public displays as Garden City’s annual Fourth of July fireworks show. Free, public fireworks shows, after all, offer more than enough to satisfy most anyone interested in a spectacular, star-spangled — and safe — celebration on the nation’s birthday.
Today’s quotes “Well, ready for the shootouts that will happen? I just hope for few deaths.” — Online remark selected by the editorial staff from comments at GCTelegram.com in response to a story on the local impact of Kansas’ new law allowing the carrying of concealed weapons into state and municipal buildings.
close.”
“I learned some new strategies on how to fight better. My key strategy was to just keep throwing punches but the fight was otherwise
— Carlos Lopez of GC Boxing, from a story in today’s edition on the final day of Bad Boyz Boxing in the Garden.
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Expected attack on Common Core L
eo Strauss coined the phrase reductio ad Hitlarum to describe the logical fallacy (error) of tying one’s opponent to Adolph Hitler by ridiculous means: a special kind of reductio ad absurdum. For example: Hitler was evil. Hitler had a mustache. Therefore, mustaches are evil! Hitler was one of history’s truly vicious agents, but similar fallacies can be used to tie an idea to anyone one dislikes, such as President Obama. A new term, reductio ad Obamnium, might best describe the backlash against Common Core standards. Recently, an amendment to defund Common Core failed by only four votes in the Kansas Legislature. Advocates vow a renewed effort next year. Common Core should be a conservative triumph. First initiated by a bipartisan group of governors, it aims to replace the convoluted, overlapping regime of state “No Child Left Behind” standards. Instead, it proposes a relatively straightforward set of principles, voluntarily and jointly adopted by multiple states. Supportive Republicans include current and former governors and education secretaries: Mike Huckabee, Jeb Bush, Bill Bennett, John Engler, Chris Christie, Sonny Perdue, Bobby Jindal, Rod Paige and Mitch Daniels. As
Insight Kansas Michael Smith for Democrats, the Obama administration supported grants for states to develop and implement the standards. While no consensus exists to repeal the decadeold NCLB law outright, the Obama administration found a work-around: granting the states waivers, upon approval of their own substitutes to the law. Conservatives have long championed such waivers, which portend less federal micromanagement. I have helped many students wade through the baffling array of professional jargon and detailed control making up many preCommon Core standards, no two states alike. Viewable at www.corestandards.org, Common Core is a breath of fresh air. For example, the English literature and social studies standards for high school juniors and seniors can be understood by a reasonable person with no education-school background. Summarizing briefly, English standards focus on students’ understanding of the texts they have read, including the author’s use of language. For social studies, students evaluate an argument, separate fact from
opinion and review evidence for a claim. Common Core opponents see the standards “paving the way to a federal takeover” and “taking control away from parents and communities.” I see little evidence for this in the actual standards. For example, regarding reading materials, the standards suggest a few books that are already classroom staples, but final decisions stay with teachers, communities, school boards or states. However, opponents rarely cite the standards themselves. Nor do they discuss Common Core’s beginnings as a voluntary, bipartisan state effort, its Republican supporters, or the waivers that soften NCLB’s controlling mandates. Only one thing matters: President Obama put his imprimatur on Common Core by including funding for it in the 2009 stimulus bill. Therefore, it must be stopped. Opposed by the conservative Americans for Prosperity, Common Core is also meeting resistance in Georgia, Utah, California and elsewhere. At this rate, the standards may need revisions to teach future students the identification and avoidance of reductio ad Obamnium. Michael A. Smith is an associate professor of political science at Emporia State University.
Satchmo, Soprano and humanity L
ast week, I went to Washington and saw “The Heart of the Matter,” a short film about the pressing need to enrich the nation by strengthening our common understanding of the humanities and social sciences. Ken Burns, George Lucas and John Lithgow were among the most eloquent of those speaking on film with the depth and intensity the subject demands, but is too rarely given in contemporary American life. Before the evening was over, it was announced that James Gandolfini had just died in Italy at 51 years old. And somehow it made sense to learn of that particular tragedy on that particular night. The event in Washington, organized in conjunction with the release of a new report, focused on the importance of arts, culture and education to the American experience. It was a production of the Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences, which was organized by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. The commission itself is a heartening expression of bipartisanship; it got its money from a Congress that’s perpetually divided on core national priorities. Democrats and Republicans were both well-represented in the program, and they are united on the report’s core message. The report begins by asking a basic question: “Who will lead America into a bright future?” It then answers: “Citizens who are educated in the broadest possible sense, so that they can participate in their own governance and engage with the world. An adaptable and creative workforce. Experts in national security, equipped with the cultural understanding, knowledge of social dynamics and proficiency to lead our foreign service and military through complex global conflicts. “Elected officials and a broader public who exercise civil political discourse,
COMMENTARY Stanley Crouch King Features Syndicate founded on an appreciation of the ways our differences and commonalities have shaped our rich history. We must prepare ourselves and invest in the next generation to be these enlightened leaders.” That was a heartful as much as it was a mouthful. I was there as president of the Louis Armstrong Educational Foundation, which made sense. Because Armstrong embodied so much of the spirit of the celebration that undergirds the empathetic human will fundamental to jazz. His impact came through the new technology of recording and film, giving fresh lanes to the sound and the power of the moving image — quite touching and unprecedented alone but far more important when combined. Armstrong and other Americans were somehow able to contribute through the arts something that was revolutionary in aesthetic terms, in feeling and in humanity. That art form, jazz, took its place in our national memory and in our soul, and it contributed to cultures around the world. The trumpeter was essential to the creation of the only form begun and still improvised at digital speed. It proves a stillnew possibility of the perceptive power of the brain. He stood tall during the civil-rights struggle when few were willing to come out against segregation and was always a humanitarian who knew the importance of education to our unbiased development here and abroad. And this is what brings me to Gandolfini, whose life we continue to remember and whose death we continue to mourn. I knew Gandolfini before the role of Tony Soprano made him famous — and brought an unex-
THE Garden City Telegram
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
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Showcase: Miles of Smiles event displays clients’ successes Continued from Page A1
great-granddaughter Tabitha Redden, 11, of Holcomb, was one of the riders. “I enjoy watching them. I go to their auction every year. I don’t really participate, but I enjoy seeing people. It’s a really good program,” he said. All riders received a trophy marking their accomplishment. Most were enthusiastic about the award, like nine-year-old Jakobe Haunschild, who started riding horses through the program just this year. “It’s my first trophy ever,” Haunschild said as he proudly showed off his trophy to his grandmother, Gloria Diaz. Diaz said she and Jakobe’s mom, Katelyn Woods, have
worked hard with Jakobe on some behavioral issues, and she has noticed much improvement since he started participating in Miles of Smiles. “He’s had some anger management-type issues,” Diaz said. “But now he has more patience, he’s learning to wait. We’ve noticed a lot of changes in his behavior. We’re so proud of him, and so proud of his progress. He loves it.” Richard Collins, president of the board of directors, manned the PA system during the event, walking the crowd through some of the things going on. Collins urged people to show support, but not to clap or make sudden movements so as not to spook the horses, some of which he said were sensitive to
loud noises. “If you want to give a blank high five in the air, that’s great,” he said. Collins said therapy horses run the gamut in size and breed, but must be well broke, with good dispositions and be in relatively good health. While they rode around various obstacles and performed actions like moving a ring from a pole on one end and moving it to the other end of the arena or shooting a toy basketball at a hoop, riders were accompanied by walkers on either side. Collins explained that side walkers are volunteers who walk along both sides of the horse to make sure the rider stays on the horse and gets the full riding experience and enjoyment of the
activity. Therapeutic horseback riding can help people with physical or emotional disabilities. Physically, it can help improve a person’s flexibility, trunk control, balance and muscle strength. Emotionally, the connection with the horse can help improve confidence, patience, self-esteem and help develop social skills. “There’s just a variety of things they can benefit from,” Brown said. “Some of the school age kids who maybe have problems learning, one of the games I play with them is the dice game, and some of them are learning to even count the dice. That’s a big feat for some of them.” In dice, the student tosses a
large stuffed dice to determine which obstacle in the arena to go to. Brown said it would be easy for a volunteer or teacher to tell a student what number they rolled, but it’s more challenging for the student to determine the number by counting the dots. In past years, the showcase was held in the evening and it was always hot. This year, it was switched to the morning and Mother Nature kept the temperature down. “We were very lucky to have a nice, cooler morning than we’ve had lately. It was just very pleasant,” Brown said. More information about Miles of Smiles can be found on the organization’s website: www.miles-of-smiles.org.
Neighbors: Salt and pepper collection a legacy for local family Continued from Page A1
tional looking set both found at airport gift shops in Belize. “My (other) granddaughter that just got married, her husband’s job was to go ask where the salt and pepper shakers were and so I got the whole family looking for me,” she said. Walking into Rosenau’s basement is almost like stepping foot into a salt and pepper shaker museum. Shelves line the walls packed with shakers in every shape and size for every season, holiday or occasion imaginable. “This is my little world down here,” she said, looking around the room
where all of the shakers are lined up and on display for anyone who visits her home. “I don’t want them packed in boxes. If you can’t have them out to look at them you don’t need them.” Rosenau inherited her grandmother’s shaker sets after she passed away in 1977. She remembers playing with them as a kid and has been adding to the collection ever since. “I remember as a little girl saying ‘I want these someday’ and being the only granddaughter I got them,” she said. She picks up a set of shakers that look like a lemon sitting on a bookcase filled with food shaped shakers.
“This set here was kind of special,” Rosenau said. “It was always special to my grandma. I remember she always let me play with them but (said) ‘Belva Gene don’t break them’ and they’re chalk. My uncle gave them to her just before he went to Germany in World War II and he got killed over there, so they were very, very special to her.” She then reaches for another one of her grandmother’s shakers. This one is shaped like a slice of watermelon sitting next to several other sets that look exactly the same. “I broke this one right here and she scotched taped it back together and we’ve had it all these years,” she
said, showing the hole in the bottom covered with a layer of clear tape. The shakers are something Rosenau’s own grandkids looked forward to playing with each time they visited her home in their younger years. “They used to come over and play with them,” she said. “I never told them no because my grandma never told me I couldn’t play with them.” Rosenau plans to keep the shakers in the family,
already having promised them to Maynard. “This one right here is going to take them,” she said gesturing towards Maynard, who will be a freshman at Wichita State University in the fall. “It’s in the will,” Maynard added. “Yep,” Rosenau said. “This one’s going to take them. She always said since she was a little girl ‘I want those someday’ so I said okay.” Rosenau is working
Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. 2 Corinthians 3:1
to catalogue all of her shakers in a book so that future generations will know where they came from. For now, the shakers are proudly displayed on shelves for her and her family and friends to enjoy. “Grandma’s house wouldn’t be grandma’s house without the salt and pepper shakers,” said Maynard. “Ever since I was a little girl this is what I remember seeing all the time.”
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Monday July 1, 2013 HAPPY BIRTHDAY The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Use the morning through lunchtime for important matters. Avoid making any formal agreements, as communication could be confusing today. You even might have to repeat a conversation at a later date. Be aware of others’ negativity. Tonight: So what if it is Monday? TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Though you might have a problem getting energized in the morning, by midafternoon, you’ll be close to unstoppable. You greet warmth from your inner circle, but negativity from a key person. You can turn around a difficult situation, if you so choose. Tonight: All smiles. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Get an early start. By midafternoon, you’ll have a lot to think about. Whether you are doing research or speaking to an expert, you could come to a conclusion slower than you might like, but you will be on solid footing. Realize the possibilities. Tonight: Do your own thing. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Many responsibilities could be dropped on you. You might be exhausted and looking for less to do, but you’ll get the opposite. A late-afternoon meeting helps you find a way out of the present problem. Know that luck is on your side right now. Tonight: Where the crowds are. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH You have an innate glow that others notice, despite themselves, and you’ll sense this vitality. Communication easily could get messed up, so you might want to take your time dealing with a change. Realize that others will be watching you carefully. Tonight: In the limelight. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Make it a point to step away from the group, as you need to get a bigger picture of what is going on. Don’t accept quick conclusions that are not well thought-out. A meeting is not only provocative, but it also indi-
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rectly gives you support in your quest. Tonight: Follow the music. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Stop pushing so hard. A partner would be more than happy to pitch in and help. This person loves spending time with you -- allow this to happen. Close relating brings better results in both the professional and personal world. Tonight: Follow someone else’s suggestion. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Someone could be very challenging, and you might want to avoid this person. However, the ramifications could be an issue. In either case, there is a lot to figure out. There is no reason not to hope for the best, as long as there are guidelines in place. Tonight: Head home first. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH You might want to understand exactly what is happening behind the scenes with a loved one. Know that you could be more negative than you realize. Let events play out, but choose not to verbalize your reactions. You could see events far differently, given time. Tonight: Relax. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Let your creativity emerge. Understand what is happening with a child or loved one who could be rejecting every solution that comes forward. Go back to the creative cauldron; you will be surprised at how much you learn. Tonight: Be less disciplined. Let go and enjoy yourself. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Tension builds. Understand what is happening with a family member. Your mind keeps returning to this situation. The smart decision would be to stay close to home. A situation surrounding work can’t be postponed indefinitely. Tonight: In the middle of everything. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You will open up to conversations. Listen to your inner voice, and figure out what needs to be done. You have to be OK with your ideas and plans, because someone easily could run interference. Laughter surrounds a situation, once you relax. Tonight: Catch up on others’ news.
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Help Wanted
GARDEN CITY 12 x 12 Al-Anon Family Groups TODAY’S NEW ADS (For families and friends of alcoholics/addicts) Thursday @ 7:00 Miscellaneous for Sale pm. 116 Chestnut (A.A. FOR SALE: 15,000 Hall) BTU 110V Frigidaire Attention Parents: window air conditioner Does your day care with remote. $150. Call provider have a license 620-872-4054 to watch children?. It!s Real Estate the law that they do! Li1 ACRE for sale. Hill- censed daycare providcrest Rd, lot 4760. Just ers give positive discipline, enjoy working minutes east of G.C. with children, and have Special Notices been screened for any 179422 history of physical or sexual assault against children or substance abuse. Illegal care is against the law. Want to become licensed? AT THE Call Maggie Baker RN, child care Surveyor, Finney CO Health Department (620) All Private Party 272-3600. ClassiďŹ ed Pre-Paid
TELEGRAM
Narcotics Anonymous (NA) Meetings. Monday & Saturday 7pm; Saturday Book Study 6pm. St. Catherine Hospital Classroom 1. [North entrance west of Emergency room — follow hall to 1st elevator go to LL exit elevator turn left then right 1st room on right.] or call 620-899-5420. Children welcome, parents are responsible for their children.
Come to the Telegram on
TUESDAY! 7:30 am- 5:30 pm Private Party Prepaid Ads Only! Garden City Telegram
310 N. 7th Garden City, Kansas
WE ARE all created to serve.! Come and join the Volunteer Team at St Catherine Hospital and enjoy giving back. Lost For more information LOST! WHITE gold call 272-2522. wedding /engagement ring, welded together. Help Wanted Engagement ring has ANTHONY, KANSAS is diamond in middle and seeking Water/Waste1 on each side. Wed- water Operator. High ding ring has 3 dia- School Diploma/GED monds across. Also and valid drivers limissing gold ring with 2 cense required. Applidiamonds and 1 ruby. C cations and complete engraved on inside. Re- j o b description: ward offered, no ques- www.anthonykansas.or tions a s k e d . g. 620-842-5434. EOE. 620-275-2152 Open until filled. Terrific Tuesday Discounts are offered ONLY on Tuesday! Discounts cannot be combined.
MISSING!! 2 year old red & white female Austrailian Shepherd named Tess. Lost from Towns Riverview on March 14th. Wearing a brown collar, recently shaved. $500 reward offered if found or for valid information leading to her return/recovery. Call Lonnie or Justin at (620) 260-7042.
Public Services 12 STEP Group of Alcaholics Anonymous meets daily at 116 1/2 E. Chestnut. Call 272-5623. EMMANUEL UNION Free clothing & Household Items Available on Wed 10am - 6pm. 509 Chesterfield DR. All donations / non-perishable items gratefully accepted (620) 290-2616
Shop The Classifieds!
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Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
APPLY IN PERSON BETWEEN 9AM-11AM NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
705 W. Kansas • Garden City, KS
Garnand Fine Furniture is looking for a full-time delivery/setup person. Must have clean DL & strong work ethic. Top pay with benefits. Apply at 1401 E. Kansas Ave., Garden City. 224700
MED/SURG Supervisor
CONSTRUCTION SALES Cleary Building Corp, is hiring a Building Sales Specialist at our Garden City location. Base salary plus bonus and a full benefits package including a company vehicle. Join a debt-free company with a 98.7% customer satisfaction rating. EOE/AA. Please apply online:
www.workforcleary buildingcorp.com
or stop in today! 2840 Schulman Ave Ste A Garden City KS 67846 (620)271-0359
224706
BIG HEADLINES GET THE JOB DONE! Advertise the right way in the classifieds.
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Deadlines! Publication:
• Self Motivated • Friendly Attitude • Valid Driver’s License • 18 Yrs. or Older
KEARNY COUNTY HOSPITAL LAKIN, KANSAS The ideal RN candidate for this fulltime position is responsible for providing quality patient care in a critical assess hospital setting which provides OB, surgical services and ER services. Other duties include, but not limited to scheduling and managing staff; quality projects, manage EHR in this department and being a productive member of the facility’s management team.
Help Wanted Office FULL-TIME OFFICE ASSOCIATE NEEDED: Computer skills necessary. Apply in person or mail resume to: Credit Bureau Services. 1135 College Dr., Suite L, Garden City, KS 67846.
Miscellaneous for Sale
FLORAL WALK in Cooler. Outside measurements 69 1/2 in. by 69 1/2 in. Inside measTRUCK DRIVERS urements 61 in. deep wanted to haul boxed by 61 1/2 in across. meat and general comThree shelves included. modities in the Midwest Located in Leoti, KS. region. Excellent Call Jeannine Hassell wages and benefits inat 620-874-5181 for cluding non-taxable per price. diem. CDL required. Home once per week FOR SALE: 15,000 plus weekends. Experi- BTU 110V Frigidaire enced drivers are eligi- window air conditioner ble for hiring bonus. with remote. $150. Call Contact Larry at 620-872-4054 800-835-0193 for deSTEEL BUILDINGS. tails. Big or Small. Save up to 50% For best deal KINDSVATER with contract construcTRUCKING tion to complete DODGE CITY, KS Source#18X WARD!S GARDEN 800-964-8335 C afe is now hiring for BARGAINS PLUS an experienced waitCONSIGNMENT ress. 7.25 hourly plus 308 N. 7th tips. Apply at Wards Garden City. Garden Cafe. North Tuesday- Saturday Hwy 83. 10am-4pm HELP US HELP YOU! gctbargains.com Advertise in the classifieds.
Irsik & Doll
Pen Riders Feed Mill Operator
International Paper, The premier manufacturer of linerboard, medium, and corrugated packaging products is currectly hiring for the following positions:
Production Worker
Starting Pay $15.37 + Shift Differential (When Applicable)
Successful candidates should posses the following: t 5XP ZFBST PG XPSL FYQFSJFODF JO B NBOVGBDUVSJOH environment with at least one year with the same employer t .BOVGBDUVSJOH FYQFSJFODF DPSSVHBUFE JOEVTUSZ B plus. t "CJMJUZ UP XPSL WBSJPVT TIJGUT JODMVEJOH OJHIUT BOE weekends.
Beefland Feed Yard is now taking applications for Pen Riders and a Feed Mill Operator. Applicants should be reliable, hard working, and self motivated. Individual must have previous experience and knowledge.
All candidates must pass pre-employment screenings to be considered for a position. IP offers competitive benefits and wages. "DDFQUJOH BQQMJDBUJPOT M-F from 10:00 am - 4:00 pm at International Paper, 2502 East Hwy 50, Garden City, Ks 67846 & Garden City Workforce Center, 107 E. Spruce Streeet, Garden City, Ks 67846 Equal Employment Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V
Competitive wages are offered with a full benefits package including: 401(k) with company match, profit sharing plan, 100% paid medical and dental insurance for employee, paid short/long term disability insurance, life insurance, paid vacation, sick leave, and career advancement opportunities.
224673
To apply for this outstanding opportunity, apply in person at Beefland, 12500 S Beefland Road, Garden City, KS, or call 620-275-2030 to schedule an appointment. Irsik & Doll is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
www.irsikanddoll.com
Applications may be picked up at the KCH Business Office or downloaded at www.kearnycountyhospital.com Contact: Sue Stingley, Director of Nursing Services 620-355-1388 or Donna Winright, human resource Director 620-355-1520
Excellent Benefits Loan/Scholarship Group Health Insurance Pension Plan
Need Money? SELL YOUR STUFF No Calls to Make No Visits to Your Home, No Hassles! It’s Fast, Easy & Fun! We’ll sell your items and send you a check. Call 271-7484 for more information on adding your items, valued at $100 or more, to our Bargains Plus Consignments Store, or stop by 308 N. Seventh St. between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. t -PDBUFE +VTU 4PVUI PG UIF (BSEFO $JUZ Telegram. t 0QFO BN QN t 5VFTEBZ 4BUVSEBZ t / 4FWFOUI 4U (BSEFO $JUZ ,T
XXX HDUCBSHBJOT DPN A Division of the
A PICTURE IS
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Competitive Wages
EOE. Physical exam and drug testing required.
2pm Tuesday 2pm Wednesday 11am Thursday 2pm Thursday
Classified Advertising
Help Wanted TRUCK DRIVERS needed. Must have 3 years OTR, clean MVR, able drug, alcohol & physical tests. Top wages paid. Home weekly. Paid vacations. Must bring current MVR, driver!s license, physical and social security cards to R&R Pallet, 2008 W. Mary St, Garden City. 8am-4pm Monday - Friday
Qualification will include but not limited to supervisory experience with 3+ years of RN acute care experience and a current RN license in Kansas.
Deadline Is:
/ 4FWFOUI 4U t (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 Z Z ,4 FYU DMBTTJĂśFET!($5FMFH 5 5FMFH SBN DPN
Help Wanted
SALES POSITION in DIRECTOR OF the Ulysses, KS & DuNURSING SERVmas, TX area. Center ICES Hodgeman Pivot Systems, PVC County Health Center Pipe, & other Ag related is accepting applicaequipment. Paid emtions for the above ployee medical, paid full-time position. vacation, 401K pension This individual would plan, salary plus comdirect the overall opmission based on expeeration of our Acute rience. Excellent opporCare Nursing Service tunity for aggressive, Department to ensure self motivated person. that the highest deExperience helpful, but gree of quality care is will train the right permaintained. Requires son. Contact: Kevin as a minimum a RN Classen @ T-L Irrigawith associate degree tion Co. L JCT. HWY from an accredited 83 & 56, Sublette, KS. college or university, (620) 675-2253 or Mo5 years nursing expebile: (620) 353-0018 or rience as RN in hospipick up an application tal or other related NEED CLASS A CDL at your local T-L Irrigahealth care facility, TRAINING? Start a CA- tion stores. EOE/AAE and at least (6) REER in trucking today! months previous Swift Academies offer THE FINNEY County management experiPTDI certified courses Farm Service Agency ence. An application and o f f e r (FSA) is accepting apmay be obtained from "Best-In-Class"!training. plications for a tempowebsite: New A c a d e m y rary full-time Program hchconline.org, print Classes Weekly!-!No Technician position beapplication, complete Money Down or Credit ginning at a Grade 3 and fax to Human Re- Check - Certified Men- with promotion potential sources tors Ready and Avail- to a Grade 7. Salary (620-357-6120), or able! -!Paid (While range is $24,933 to mail to: P.O. Box 310, Training With Mentor) - $50,431 depending on Jetmore, KS 67854. Regional and Dedi- knowledge and experiIf more information is cated Opportunities - ence. Application packneeded, contact Great Career Path - Ex- ets may be picked up at 620-357-8361. cellent Benefits Pack- the 2106 E Spruce, DRIVERS: TRAINING, age!! Please Call: (602) Garden City, KS between 8:00 am and Class A-CDL. Train and 714-9455 4:30 pm Monday work for us! Professional and focused PARTNERS IN Excel- through Friday. Applicatraining for your Class lence!OTR Drivers APU tion deadline is 4:30 A-CDL. You choose be- Equipped Pre-Pass pm, Monday, July 8th, tween Company Driver, EZ-pass passenger pol- 2013. Owner Operator, Lease icy. 2012 & Newer Bring more shoppers to Operator or Lease equipment. 100% NO Trainer. (877) 369-7885 touch. Butler Transport your garage sale. Place www.centraltruckingyour garage sale ad in 1-800-528-7825 drivingjobs.com The Telegram, Classifieds Work! 620-275-8500. GARDEN CITY Vision 224240 Source is now accepting resumes for an Optician. Prefer someone with experience, but willing to train the right person. Bilingual in Spanish a must. Apply in person at 410 Campus Dr, Garden City KS
ETHANOL PLANT Operators – Pratt Energy is seeking candidates for ethanol plant operations with good work ethic and teamwork skills. Process plant experience or 2 years of post-high school technical education desired. HELP WANTED Normal shift is 12 hours, 4 on/4 off. Send Waitresses nights and weekends. Apply atresume to Pat Breeding BARTENDER, EXPE- pbreeding@prattenHannah!s Corner RIENCED COOK, & ergy.com Taylor Ave & Mary St. WAIT STAFF needed. Garden City Must be 18 years old or EXP. FLATBED Drivolder. Apply in person ers:! Regional opportu- NOW HIRING for Lube at TIME OUT SPORTS nities now open with Technician. Experience plenty of freight & great preferred. Apply in perCLUB pay! 800-277-0212 or son at Burtis Motors. COMPANY LOOKING primeinc.com Classifieds do the for a driver with CDL. 2 yrs experience needed. www.gctelegram.com work! (620) 640-4489
2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
LOST: BLACK MINIATURE Poodle. Wearing a pink collar with tags. Answers to Molly & is 4-5 lbs. Has breathing problems & requires special care. Lost in the Theron Place/Pats Dr. neighborhood. Reward being offered! (620) 640-4890
DELIVERY
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
MID STATE Farmers Coop, Inc. is seeking applicants for a Full Time Chemical Applicator.! The applicants must possess the following:, a Class A CDL, 1A chemical applicator license, chemical applicator experience preferred, clean background with no felonies, and a good driving record.! Mid State Farmers Coop, Inc. has competitive wages and benefits.! Please send resume to PO Box 195, Rush Center, KS 67575 or Call 785-372-4239 for an application EOE.
224719
ClassiďŹ ed Line/ Word ads are 50% OFF
BRUNGARDT HOWER Ward Elliott & Pfeifer L.C. is seeking CPA or CPA candidate with 3+ years experience for our Garden City office. Experienced tax professional with strong tax background needed. Knowledge of agriculture or oil and gas taxation beneficial. Competitive salary and benefit package. Please send resume to Personnel Coordinator, 302 N. Fleming, Suite 6, Garden City, KS 67846 or email to rogerb@bhcpa.com
212877
Public Services
THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM Help Wanted Help Wanted
~Fred R. Barnyard
IT COULD BE WORTH MORE TO YOU TOO!
$
5
Add a PHOTO to your car, pet and general merchandise word ad
Vehicles
2010 Chevy. Red, 5k. All power options. Fun, Fast & Fabulous. Call 555-555-5555 Miscellaneous
Very nice & in like new condition. Sofa, neutral colors. Great price. Call 555-5555.
Add your photo for $5 plus the cost of your ad
310 N. Seventh, Garden City, KS 620-276-6862 ext. 501 classifieds@gctelegram.com
CLASSIFIEDS THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM
Vehicles
Art
Great Decorator Art: Lovely portrait painting, neutral background. Unknown female with interesting smile. Call 555555-5555.
OR
WHAT A DIFFERENCE! GET IT SOLD FASTER - ADD A PHOTO Email your photo with ad text to: classifieds@gctelegram.com
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Art
2010 Chevy. Red, 5k. All power options. Fun, Fast & Fabulous. Call 555-555-5555 Miscellaneous
Very nice & in like new condition. Sofa, neutral colors. Great price. Call 555-5555.
Great Decorator Art: Lovely portrait painting, neutral background. Unknown female with interesting smile. Call 555555-5555.
203669
Garden City Telegram Wedding Gowns, Prom Dresses & Quinceañera Dresses!
We currently have a wide variety of wedding and prom dresses! Come in and see our beautiful selection! We are now accepting formal gowns & dresses for consignment. Items must be freshly clean and in “ready-to-wear” condition.
Bargains Plus Consignment 308 N. 7th, Garden City Tue-Sat 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com
Sporting Equipment
Bargain Blowout BEAUTIFUL CHERRY ENTERTAINMENT C ENTER, LAMPS, BAR STOOL, ANTIQUE ROCKING CHAIR AND MORE! Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. Tuesday- Saturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com
Residential Rentals
2005 CHEVY Suburban 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath. LT. Loaded. Excellent 210 S Farmland Rd. vehicle at reasonable $450 / $350. No pets. price. Call (620) Call Kim @ (620) 290-9691. 640-1514.
SPECIAL GOVT Programs for Mobile Homes $0 Down for Land Owners.! FREE Construction Loans.! Basements, Garages, Commercial Rentals 2006 HONDA Accord Storm Shelters, etc. LX - V6, 4 Door, 76K 4375 E HWY 50 just U s e d Homes Great Car in!Great east of Morton Building $19,900-$69,900.! All Condition.!White w/Tan 50 X 50 W/ BATH- C r e d i t Types Cloth Interior.!Asking ROOM , HOT WATER Accepted.! Habla Espa$9,900. Please call HEATER, 12 FT OVER nol!!! 866-858-6862 (620) 277-8070. Don"t HEAD DOOR, SMALL miss this deal! OFFICE, INSULATED, VERY NICE. Metz LOCAL TRUCK parkRentals LLC. ask for ing. Call 620-290-0582 DAVE 620-874-4043 or 620-272-1892 Selling your vehicle? FOR RENT: 40! x 123! Did you know parking x 14! Warehouse/Shop your vehicle on city Building with offices, streets, right-of-ways bathrooms, and 20! x and other public prop- 13! D.S. door. 150 N Inerty is prohibited in dustrial Drive. (620) Garden City? The City 275-6142 or (620) of Garden City ordi- 640-4149 nance No 86-2 (88) Real Estate states in part “No per- 1 ACRE for sale. Hillson shall park a vehicle crest Rd, lot 4760. Just upon any roadway for minutes east of G.C. the principal purpose 1004 N 6th St. of: (a) Displaying such vehicle for sale (b) Beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 Washing, greasing or bath, stucco bungalow. Lovely kitchen with repairing such vehicle granite. New inside & except repairs necessitated by an emer- out. English garden & koi pond. $149,500. gency”. Violations of (620) 275-7544 this ordinance May result in a $40 fine and 101 Lakeview Court, court costs. Cimarron
Submit Ads Online
STAPP’S AUTO SALES Check us out at
214157
2006 HARLEY DAVIDSON Fatboy Motorcycle. Sunburst candy red. Only 6,622 miles. Always garaged, Willie G. skull accessories, Wide variety of collect- lots of chrome, leather able State dishes. Only saddle bags & all origi$2 each! See at Bar- nal parts included. gains Plus Consign- $ 1 0 , 5 0 0 . (620) ment, 308 N. 7th, Gar- 640-1954. den City. TuesdaySaturday 10am-4pm. 2006 HONDA Goldwing, new tires, lots of www.gctbargains.com extras, only 9,200 Business Opportunities m i l e s , $16,950! FOR SALE! Women!s 620-339-9634 Fitness Center. Call Sonya @ 620-290-2517 2009 YAMAH TTR 230. Autos Very clean stock bike, 1989 FORD Econoline. good tires. Good condiFully equipped, handi- tion. $2100 OBO. (620) capped van. Hand con- 335-0180. trols, wheelchair lift, FOR SALE: 2009 a/c. $5000. (620) Honda Shadow Spirit. 295-0164. Serious inBlack, windshield, only quiries only. 2200 miles. Call or 1989 WHITE Pontiac 6 2 0 - 2 9 0 - 7 0 8 0 Lemans. 4 door. Good 620-335-5515 running condition. $900 YFM200 Yamaha 4 OBO. Call (620) wheeler. Shaft drive, re290-9775 or leave a verse, front & rear message at (620) racks, good tires, good 275-7897. battery. $1200. (620) 1996 F350 Utility truck. 355-6204 220,000 miles. New Auto Parts & Services tires. Good for someone in the electrical or Cargo cover and c o n s t r u c t i o n f i e l d . sliding cargo divider. $2500 OBO. (620) Fits Nissan Xterra. Great for traveling. Ex937-0625 cellent condition. See 2000 FORD Windstar.. at Bargains Plus ConCall after 6pm. (620) signment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. Tuesday275-4245. Saturday 10am-4pm. 2000 GMC Sierra SLE www.gctbargains.com 1500 5.3 Litre V-8, 75,000 miles, silver RVs & Campers w/cloth interior, ex- 1982 29! WINNEBAGO tended cab, 3 door, Chieftain. 454 Chevy, power seats, bedliner, 54K miles, new tires & new tires, excellent batteries. Very clean, condition. excellent condition. 620-271-3514 Asking $10,000. Call cell 620-287-3664 or 2001 DODGE Grand home 620-275-1515. Caravan ES. Fully loaded - all bells! VERY Is it Junk? Or is it CLEAN! $4800 OBO. Retro Cool? Don’t (620) 640-8611. think about it - Place an ad with us today!
4 bedroom, 3 bath, 3 car garage, granite countertops, wood floors, beautiful landscaping. Close to schools. Quiet Neighborhood. (620) 855-0460 (620) 357-4067 107 Hampton Court Southwind 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, 1500 sq.ft. up, 1500 sq.ft. down. Finished basement, hardwood floors, screened-in patio, 3 car garage, Cul-de-sac. $258,500. (620) 290-8254
108 Ryan Ave, Holcomb 5 bedroom, 2 bath, D/A garage, 1260 sq.ft., full finished basement, covered patio. Call to view (620) 805-2503, (620) 805-2809. 1713 PEPPERWOOD Ct. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 1548 sq ft home. $295,000 (620) 640-2951 2615 Coachman Ln 5 bed, 3.5 bath, 1690 Sq Ft, full fin basement, brick, open flr plan, lg fam rm, main flr laundry, covered patio, D/A garage, landscaped, walk to great schools, quiet NE neighborhood.. $235,000. Gus & Sandra Martinez, 620-272-7903. 912 ANDERSON 3 bedroom, 2.25 bath.Nice, quiet neighborhood. 2 car garage. (620) 271-2225
203 E. Laurel, Garden City, 275-0284 www.HeritageRealty.biz Yo Si Hablo Español
Send cover letter and resume to — Vice President, HR Services Golden Plains Credit Union PO Box 459, Garden City, KS 67846
LINK Inc. has an opening for an
Independent Living Specialist (ILS)
in the Garden City area. This is a full-time position with benefits. The ILS will be responsible for providing independent living skills to persons with disabilities in Southwest Kansas. High School diploma required with a degree in Human Services encouraged. Bi-lingual and life experience or experience with individuals with disabilities preferred. Computer knowledge required and applicant needs to be proficient in data entry as job requires case notes. Base pay starting at $10.00 an hour with pay increases negotiable based on experience and/or education. This position is based out of Garden City and does require travel 60 – 80 % of the time. Company car will be provided. Send letter of interest and résumé to Human Resources, LINK, Inc., 2401 E. 13th St., Hays, KS 67601. EOE
Mobile Homes 1999 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, $17,000; 1998 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $15,000. Call (620) 276-6860. An addition to the family on the way? Check out our van and SUV classifieds.
Call Helena for rates and references (620) 521-7073.
MJT CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding, Remodeling, Windows, doors & concrete. Free estimates.
Call Tim at (620) 521-2181
Call (620) 390-9768 for estimates
OPTIMUS COMPS USA. Total Optimization only $150. Anti-virus, Malware, & Rootkit Removal & More. Call Scott at 290-8302.
LAWN RANGER Landscaping, Stone Edging, Planting, Mulch & Rock Laying, Shrub Trimming, Mowing & Fertilizing. Insured. Free Estimates. Call Alonzo 290-9406.
General Construction & Repair Residential & Commercial Licensed & Insured (620) 640-2010
Roofing, Siding, Framing
A+ Certified
WILLIAMS
224740
28090
is looking for a
Licensed Plumber Adam’s Electric and Plumbing is now taking applications for a position open in the plumbing department. This position is for a licensed plumber. Competitive wages as well as full benefits and guaranteed 40 hours a week will go along with this job. Wage will be determined on experience. Must pass a drug test as well as have a current Kansas drivers license.
Please email tsanders@adamsep.com or call (620) 672-7279, or stop by 606 N Main, Pratt, KS for any questions.
• Tree Service • Snow Removal • Firewood Lowest Prices Free Estimates Licensed & Insured Workers Compensation
Troy Hawker, Owner Operator
271-0478 • (cell) 640-1605
Help Us Cover Your Town. Call Your News Tips
In At: (620)275-8500 1-800-475-8600
How to write an ad...
THAT WORKS!
OPEN HOUSE Sat., July 6 1-2pm 131 Parkview Lane Cedar Bluff Estates Cedar Bluff Reservoir 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, 1260 sq.ft., mostly furnished. (620) 227-8007
ARE YOU NEEDING A CAREGIVER IN YOUR HOME?
GENERAL CONSTRUCTION 224691
214995
HOLCOMB-RURAL 4 bdrm, 2 bath with fenced backyard. Updated kitchen, baths, new water heater, furnace and carpet . Call(620) 2908317.
Call the Classified Department to Advertise. 620-276-6862 ext. 501
Golden Plains Credit Union is currently seeking a qualified individual to fill a full time position as a Teller for the 9:45am-6:15pm shift. Previous Teller experience preferred. Strong customer service skills essential.
EOE
A9
Service Directory
TELLER
224602
COMPLETE SET of G reen Depression Glass, Tea Cart, Beautiful 8-seat Cherry wood table with mother of pearl inlaid design, lamps and more!!! See www.stappsautosales.com at Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Pickups & Trucks Garden City. 2003 GMC Z71 pickup. Tuesday-Saturday 180,000 miles, extra 10am-4pm. clean, runs great, evewww.gctbargains.com rything works. $8000 Love seat in beautful OBO. (620) 277-8441. condition $250. CHEVY AVALANCHE Couches $100-$200. 2003 Red 110K miles. Vintage, cool green 5.3L V8, 20" Chrome sofa sleeper! See at wheels, 2 new tires. Bargains Plus ConsignCall or text ment, 308 N. 7th, Gar620-805-9462 for pics. den City. Tuesday$10,750 Saturday 10am-4pm. Motorcycles & ATVs www.gctbargains.com 02 HARLEY Wide Glide, purple. 22k FREE! YOU HAUL! miles. Priced under WOOD PALLETS book $7,500. 01 Harley Pick up in the alley Sportster, Candy Red. behind The Telegram 12k miles. Lowered for lady rider. $4,500 OBO. 310 N. 7th Street 620-384-5377 Garden City Give AWAY - Ink Barrels. Pick up on the east side of The Telegram, 310 N. 7th, Garden City.
Mobile Homes
www.gctelegramads.com
FOR SALE: 16 FT Lund Pike 1979 model. Aluminum V-hull, 35 HP Evinrude, fish finder, live well, trailer. Everything works and runs great! Asking $1500. 620-640-2848
Autos
Call Today To Place Your Ad!
When placing a Classified ad, include all of these elements for a message that sells!
✓ Start the ad with the item, service or job you are advertising. ✓ Provide as much information as you can. The more information, the better response. ✓ Always include the price of the item. ✓ Use large type, white space, borders or graphics-anything that will make your ad stand out.
Office Accountant
Outstanding career opportunity with a progressive Southwest Kansas feedyard for an experienced accountant. The ideal candidate will have a strong accounting background and experience in the feed yard industry would be helpful. Excellent computer and communication skills will be required and a college degree is a plus. This position offers a competitive salary and benefits package. Resumes will be kept strictly confidential. Please send your resume to: Lewis, Hooper & Dick, LLC, Attention: Personnel, PO Box 699, Garden City, KS 67846.
224699
✓ To get the maximum exposure, run your ad for seven days. There are new readers everyday. ✓ Use only standard abbreviations to avoid confusion. ✓ Most important, call 620-276-6862 x 501 to place your ad.
140524
Check out the classifieds!
33622
Wearing Apparel
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
TV/LOCAL: Check out television and local sports events in Scoreboard. PAGE A11
Sports
SCORES/STANDINGS: Auto racing, baseball, golf, tennis updates. PAGE A11
THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
GCTelegram.com/Sports
SWKPrepZone.com
A10
Night at the fights Bad Boyz wins 9 of 12 fights. By GRANT MELIN
sports@gctelegram.com
After the second and final day of Bad Boyz Boxing in the Garden Show came to an end on Saturday night, Bad Boyz Boxing, one of the two Garden City teams, emerged as the top winning squad with nine of 12 matches won. However, it is customary to not have the local team keep the team trophy and as a result, runnersup Los Lobos from Ulysses, with six match wins, took home the team championship trophy at the New Garden on the campus of Garden City High School. Los Lobos had Allen Garcia, Benny Parras, Eduardo Mendoza and Paul Garcia get match victories on Saturday while host team Bad Boyz had Jason Garza, Jesus Loya, Joseph Garza, Marcus Irsik, Victor Bravo, and Brevin Woydziak took in match victories as well. Jesse Smith of Ybarra Boxing from Dodge City was voted the Outstanding Boxer award after winning by decision against Adam Marquez of the Los Lobos Club.
Brad Nading/Telegram
Bad Boyz Boxing’s Jesus Loya, right, connects with a shot to the face of Garden City Boxing’s Alex Mier on Saturday in a super heavyweight bout at Garden City High School during a Bad Boyz Boxing Show. Loya won the fight. Despite the Bad Boyz’ success over the two nights of fights, both Bad Boyz and Garden City Boxing Club had a handful of players falling in their bouts on Saturday. One local boxer who struggled on Saturday was two-year boxer Ronnie Rodriguez of Bad Boyz Boxing as he fought Liberal’s Eric Orosco in the 122-pound match. Rodriguez withstood charges by Orosco in round one before going close to the ropes in the second and third rounds to allow Orosco to pull away with the decision.
“I was just playing hard and going hard,” said Rodriguez. “He was pretty good because he was working harder but I hope I get better this season.” Another local boxer, this time Carlos Lopez from Garden City Boxing, who has boxed for three years, also had struggles in his 80-pound bout against Paul Garcia from Los Lobos of Ulysses. After hanging with Garcia in round one, Lopez and Garcia both got close to the ropes in round two before Garcia pushed ahead in round three as Lopez was the one getting onto the ropes a couple
Brad Nading/Telegram
Ulysses Los Lobos’ Eduardo Mendoza, right, connects with a set of combination punches to Bad Boyz Boxing’s Fernando Valdespino Saturday in a 105-pound bout at Garden City High School during a Bad Boyz Boxing Show. Mendoza won the fight. times. “I learned some new strategies on how to fight better,” said Lopez. “My key strategy was to just keep throwing punches but the fight was otherwise close.” This was not the first time Lopez had fought against Garcia.
“I have fought against Garcia before in Ulysses and I won,” said Lopez. “Garcia is a good boxer.” For Bad Boyz official Robert Gonzales, the show’s organizer, the two-night show was successful with the number of fights conducted over the Friday-Saturday
U.S. Women’s Open is a ‘Walk for Park’ SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) — Inbee Park set many golfing goals. Etching her name alongside Babe Zaharias was never one of them. Yet now they’re the only two players to win the first three majors of the year. Park became the first to accomplish the feat in the modern era Sunday with her second U.S. Women’s Open title. “Trying to put my name next to hers means just so much,” Park said. “I would think I would never get there; it’s somewhere that I’ve never dreamed of. But all of a sudden, I’m there.” The world’s top-ranked player finished at 8 under to win by four strokes. Her 2-over 74 in the final round was more than enough, with Sebonack’s trying conditions keeping any rivals from making a run. Only three players were under par for the tournament. Fellow South Korean I.K. Kim also shot 74 for her second runner-up finish at a major.
Zaharias won the year’s first three majors in 1950 — back when there were only three. Now there are five, so Grand Slam might not quite be the right term if Park wins all of them. Ahead by four strokes at the start of the round, Park birdied the ninth and 10th holes to extend her lead. She has won six times already this year, including three straight tournaments. Park added to another historic U.S. Women’s Open victory in 2008, when she became the event’s youngest champion at age 19. “I didn’t know what was going on at that time,” Park said. “I played very good golf then, but I didn’t know what I was playing for, and that was just my first win. It was a great championship then, but now I think I really appreciate more and I really know what this means.” So Yeon Ryu shot 72 to finish third at 1 under. South Korean players took the top three spots and have won the last five
Kenseth wins Sprint race
New names emerge at Wimbledon
SPARTA, Ky. (AP) — Matt Kenseth has raced long enough to know that rough starts can still have good outcomes. Especially when his crew chief takes chances. Case in point was Kenseth’s fuel-only pit stop gamble that helped him beat Jimmie Johnson late to win the rescheduled 400-mile NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race Sunday at Kentucky Speedway. A race that was Johnson’s to lose ultimately became Kenseth’s series-high fourth victory of the season — and third on a 1.5-mile track — after crew chief Jason Ratcliff passed on putting new tires on the No. 20 Toyota following the race’s ninth caution. “I thought he was slightly crazy when that happened,” said Kenseth, who widened his lead when the field went fourwide after the restart.
Associated Press
South Korea’s Inbee Park holds the championship trophy after winning the U.S. Women’s Open Sunday at the Sebonack Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y. majors. Ryu and Na Yeon Choi, the last two U.S. Women’s Open champs, sprayed Park with champagne after she made her final putt on the 18th green. With lashing wind and devilish greens, Sebonack was a classically troublesome U.S. Women’s Open
LONDON (AP) — Get ready for some unfamiliar names at Wimbledon. With Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal long gone, and Maria Sharapova out, too, after a havoc-filled Week 1 at the All England Club, Week 2 begins Monday with a schedule that includes participants such as Kenny de Schepper and Adrian Mannarino, Ivan Dodig and Jerzy Janowicz, Karin Knapp and Monica Puig. None of that group has played in a fourth-round match at any Grand Slam tournament. Members of the usual cast of characters are still around, of course, such as Serena Williams, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray. None of that trio has dropped so much as a single set yet; all are expected to be around by next weekend. Still, Djokovic likes the idea of some players getting a chance to introduce themselves to a wider audience. “It’s interesting ... to see new faces — for the crowd, for (the) tennis world, in general,” said Djokovic, who might not feel quite the same way if he were among the 11 men and women seeded in the top 10 who no longer are playing. Truth is, there hasn’t been much
course. And once Park built a lead, nobody could mount a charge. She certainly wasn’t going to make enough mistakes to come back to the field. Park had just 10 bogeys and no double bogeys in four rounds. She predicted Saturday that shooting even par in
variety of late at Grand Slam tournaments, especially at the very end: Federer, Nadal and Djokovic have won 31 of the past 33 titles. “It’s good (to have) change, in a way, because it’s always expected, obviously, from top players to reach the final stages of major events. When it doesn’t happen, it’s a big surprise,” said the top-seeded Djokovic, whose six Grand Slam titles include Wimbledon in 2011. “It’s a bit (of a) strange feeling not to have Federer or Nadal at the second week of a major. In the last 10 years, it was always one of them.” Over a shorter stretch, it’s also always been Djokovic, who meets 35year-old Tommy Haas on Monday. Djokovic has played in 16 consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinals — the longest active streak, now that Federer’s 36-major run is done. At the past 10 Slams, Djokovic has reached the semifinals every time, picking up five trophies and three runner-up finishes. Murray, meanwhile, has been a finalist at the last three major tourna-
the final round would be enough, and she sure was right. All of four players were under par Sunday — though that was still more than the third round, when only Park achieved it. Kim birdied No. 2 to pull within three strokes; she couldn’t claw closer. And when she bogeyed the fourth hole, the deficit was back to four shots. Park bogeyed the sixth and seventh, but so did Kim. Kim had what would have qualified as a sensational week if not for Park, finishing at least three strokes better than everyone but the player currently dominating the sport. “You can obviously feel for someone like I.K. Kim who would be winning any other U.S. Open on this golf course if it weren’t for Inbee,” said seven-time major champion Karrie Webb. This was Kim’s fourth top-four finish at a U.S. Women’s Open.
ments he entered and won the U.S. Open in September, only increasing the expectation among the locals that he can deliver Britain’s first male champion at Wimbledon in 77 years. Nothing is guaranteed right now, though. “Second week of a Grand Slam is a new start, especially here, where you have (time) off,” said 15th-seeded Marion Bartoli, the 2007 Wimbledon runner-up who faces the 104th-ranked Knapp, an Italian making her first appearance in a major’s fourth round. “It’s really a new tournament starting.” So on the traditional middle Sunday’s day of rest, there they were on the practice courts — six-time Grand Slam champion Djokovic, but also Janowicz, who’d won a grand total of six matches at major tournaments until this one; 2011 French Open champion and two-time major runner-up Li Na, but also 19-year-old Laura Robson, the first British woman to get this far at the All England Club since 1998. Juan Martin del Potro, the 2009 U.S. Open champion, wore thick wraps of white tape around his left knee, which he hyperextended in a tumble Saturday, and a strip of black tape down the back of that leg.
event. “We had a lot of good fights and I’m happy with the turnout we had from other clubs,” Gonzales said. “We would liked to have had bigger crowds, but with this being our first big show here at the new gym, I thought it went pretty well.”
Lough’s bat leads KC MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Last in the American League in home runs, the Kansas City Royals connected twice Sunday at the most opportune times. David Lough hit three doubles, then launched a tie-breaking homer in the eighth inning that led the Royals over the Minnesota Twins 9-8. Lough hit his second homer of the season, sending a solo drive off Jared Burton (1-5) into the right-field seats for an 8-7 lead. Eric Hosmer added a solo homer in the ninth for the Royals. Johnny Giavotella had three hits. “We’re just trying to find ways to score runs, and if that comes from the home run or through small ball, we honestly don’t care,” Hosmer said. The Royals have just 49 homers this year, 24 fewer than the next-closest team in the league: Minnesota. Hosmer and Alex Gordon have seven home runs, Billy Butler has six and Mike Moustakas five. The quartet combined for 77 last season. “They’ve got some hitters over there. Those guys can swing the bats. I know they haven’t been consistent doing it, but they’ve got some good young hitters who can pop a baseball,” Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire said. Aaron Crow (5-3) pitched 1 2-3 scoreless innings for the Royals. Greg Holland got his 17th save in 19 chances despite giving up a home run to Trevor Plouffe in the ninth. Minnesota, which trailed 5-1 after four innings, got a two-run homer from Justin Morneau and an RBI double by pinch-hitter Josh Willingham to tie it at 7 in the seventh. Ervin Santana allowed three earned runs and five hits in six innings for Kansas City. He has gone at least six innings in each of his 16 starts this season, the longest active streak in majors.
THE Garden City Telegram
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
Scoreboard
Becker’s Bridge
Television
NASCAR Sprint CupQuaker State 400 Results By The Associated Press Sunday At Kentucky Speedway Sparta, Ky. 1. (16) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 267 laps, 131.6 rating, 47 points, $200,451. 2. (23) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 267, 104.1, 42, $153,915. 3. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 267, 117.4, 41, $146,078. 4. (11) Joey Logano, Ford, 267, 113.2, 40, $130,338. 5. (4) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 267, 109.5, 39, $139,743.
On Tap
Today Pro Baseball — 6 p.m., ESPN, San Francisco Giants at Cincinnati Reds. Pro Tennis — 6 a.m., ESPN2, Wimbledon Championships, Round of 16, from Wimbledon, England; 7 a.m., (Keuchel 4-4), 7:10 p.m. ———
Royals 9, Twins 8 Kansas City Minnesota ab r h bi ab r AGordn lf 1 0 0 1 Thoms cf 4 1 AEscor ss 5 0 1 2 Mauer c 5 0 Hosmer 1b 5 1 1 1 Doumit dh 4 2 BButler dh 4 1 2 0 Mornea 1b 4 2 Dyson pr-dh 0 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b 4 1 S.Perez c 4 0 0 0 Arcia lf 4 1 Mostks 3b 5 1 1 0 Parmel rf 4 0 L.Cain cf 4 1 1 0 EEscor 2b 3 0 Lough rf 4 4 4 3 Wlngh ph 1 0 Giavtll 2b 4 1 3 2 Dozier pr-2b 1 0 EJhnsn 2b 0 0 0 0 Flormn ss 4 1 Totals 36 9 13 9 Totals 38 8
BASEBALL American League By The Associated Press East Division W L Pct GB Boston 50 34 .595 — Baltimore 47 36 .566 2.5 Tampa Bay 43 39 .524 6 New York 42 39 .519 6.5 Toronto 40 41 .494 8.5 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 43 37 .538 — Cleveland 44 38 .537 — Kansas City 38 41 .481 4.5 Minnesota 36 42 .462 6 Chicago 32 47 .405 10.5 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 48 34 .585 — Oakland 48 35 .578 .5 Los Angeles 39 43 .476 9 Seattle 35 47 .427 13 Houston 30 52 .366 18 ——— Saturday’s Games St. Louis 7, Oakland 1 Toronto 6, Boston 2 Cleveland 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Minnesota 6, Kansas City 2 L.A. Angels 7, Houston 2 Chicago Cubs 5, Seattle 3, 11 innings Cincinnati 6, Texas 4, 11 innings Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 3, 10 innings Baltimore 11, N.Y. Yankees 3 Sunday’s Games Boston 5, Toronto 4 Tampa Bay 3, Detroit 1 Cleveland 4, Chicago White Sox 0 Kansas City 9, Minnesota 8 L.A. Angels 3, Houston 1 Texas 3, Cincinnati 2 Oakland 7, St. Louis 5 Chicago Cubs 7, Seattle 6 Baltimore 4, N.Y. Yankees 2 Today’s Games Detroit (J.Alvarez 1-1) at Toronto (Dickey 7-8), 12:07 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 5-6) at Minnesota (Diamond 5-7), 7:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (M.Moore 10-3) at Houston
Kansas City Minnesota
h bi 1 2 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 9 8
002 302 011 — 9 010 030 301 — 8
E—A.Escobar (10), Moustakas (10). DP—Minnesota 2. LOB—Kansas City 6, Minnesota 9. 2B—Lough 3 (9), Giavotella (1), Parmelee (9), Willingham (13). HR—Hosmer (7), Lough (2), Thomas (3), Morneau (4), Plouffe (7). SB—A.Gordon (4). CS—Dyson (2). SF—A.Gordon. IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City E.Santana 6 5 4 3 4 5 Collins H,10 1/3 2 3 3 2 0 Crow W,5-3 BS,2-3 12/3 1 0 0 0 2 G.Holland S,17-19 1 1 1 1 0 3 Minnesota Correia 5 7 5 5 3 3 Pressly 2 3 2 2 1 0 Burton L,1-5 1 1 1 1 1 1 Roenicke 1 2 1 1 0 0 ———
National League By The Associated Press East Division W L Pct Atlanta 48 34 .585 Washington 41 40 .506 Philadelphia 39 44 .470 New York 33 45 .423 Miami 29 51 .363 Central Division W L Pct Pittsburgh 51 30 .630 St. Louis 49 32 .605 Cincinnati 46 36 .561 Chicago 35 45 .438 Milwaukee 32 48 .400 West Division W L Pct Arizona 42 39 .519 Colorado 41 42 .494 San Diego 40 42 .488 San Francisco 39 42 .481 Los Angeles 38 43 .469 ——— Saturday’s Games N.Y. Mets 5, Washington 1 Atlanta 11, Arizona 5 St. Louis 7, Oakland 1 Colorado 2, San Francisco 1
ESPN, Wimbledon Championships, Round of 16, from Wimbledon, England; 2 p.m., ESPN2, Wimbledon Championships, Round of 16, from Wimbledon, England.
Miami 7, San Diego 1 Chicago Cubs 5, Seattle 3, 11 innings Cincinnati 6, Texas 4, 11 innings Pittsburgh 2, Milwaukee 1 L.A. Dodgers 4, Philadelphia 3 Sunday’s Games Miami 6, San Diego 2 Washington 13, N.Y. Mets 2 Atlanta 6, Arizona 2 Pittsburgh 2, Milwaukee 1, 14 innings Texas 3, Cincinnati 2 Oakland 7, St. Louis 5 Chicago Cubs 7, Seattle 6 L.A. Dodgers 6, Philadelphia 1 San Francisco 5, Colorado 2 Today’s Games Milwaukee (Gallardo 6-7) at Washington (Zimmermann 11-3), 6:05 p.m. Arizona (Miley 4-7) at N.Y. Mets (Marcum 1-9), 6:10 p.m. San Diego (Marquis 9-3) at Miami (Fernandez 4-4), 6:10 p.m. San Francisco (Kickham 0-2) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 6-6), 6:10 p.m.
GOLF All Sunday By the Associated Press U.S. Women’s Open Scores Sunday At Sebonack Golf Club Southampton, N.Y./(a-amateur) Inbee Park, $585,000 67-68-71-74 — 280
GB — 6.5 9.5 13 18
Today Baseball — 6 p.m., Hooker, Okla. at Finney County Blues (Lightner Stadium).
I.K. Kim, $350,000 68-69-73-74 — 284 So Yeon Ryu, $217,958 73-69-73-72 — 287 Paula Creamer, $127,972 72-73-72-72 — 289 Angela Stanford, $127,972 73-68-74-74 — 289 Jodi Ewart Shadoff, $127,972 70-69-74-76 — 289 Brittany Lang, $94,357 76-69-73-72 — 290 Jessica Korda, $94,357 70-71-76-73 — 290 Shanshan Feng, $79,711 71-75-75-70 — 291 Brittany Lincicome, $79,711 72-72-74-73 — 291 ——— AT&T National Scores Sunday At Congressional C.C. Bethesda, Md./Purse: $6.5 million FedEx Cup points in parentheses Bill Haas (500), $1,170,000 70-68-68-66 — 272 Roberto Castro (300), $702,000 66-69-71-69 — 275 Jason Kokrak (163), $377,000 71-66-70-69 — 276 D.H. Lee (163), $377,000 71-66-75-64 — 276 Stewart Cink (110), $260,000 70-69-71-67 — 277 Jordan Spieth, $234,000 69-66-74-69 — 278 Charlie Wi (90), $217,750 72-71-65-71 — 279 ——— Constellation Senior Players Championship Scores Sunday At Fox Chapel Golf Club Pittsburgh Kenny Perry (810), $405,000 71-63-63-64 — 261 Fred Couples (432), $216,000 66-62-67-68 — 263 Duffy Waldorf (432), $216,000 66-67-66-64 — 263 Michael Allen (288), $144,450 67-68-68-65 — 268 John Huston (288), $144,450 65-67-68-68 — 268 Jeff Hart (206), $102,600 68-65-70-67 — 270 Morris Hatalsky (206), $102,600 70-67-66-67 — 270 Bernhard Langer (172), $86,400 72-69-63-67 — 271
Customer
GB — 2 5.5 15.5 18.5
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APPRECIATION DAY Come Celebrate Independence Day
July 4th • 11am-3pm
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COMPLIMENTARY HAMBURGERS & HOTDOGS
A Helpful Moving Tip
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Southard Home Improvement 606 East Kansas Ave.
Weekends are a prime time for truck rentals and moving companies. Move mid-week, and you’re much more likely to find an available moving service (even during peak moving months); you may even be able to negotiate a lower rate.
By Dave Green
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2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
AUTO RACING
107 Jenny, Holcomb • $105,000
A11
7/01
Difficulty Level Solution in next edition
Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given number. The objext is to place the numbers 1to 9 in the empty squates so that each rowm each columb and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increase from Monday to Saturday.
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will be O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using any apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels.
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Solution is by trial and error. C 2011 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
MONDAY EVENING 6:00
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(PG-13) (Adult situations, violence) (cc) 55 AMC Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Call of Wildman Call-Wildman Off the Hook Off the Hook Top Hooker “Squaring Off” (s) Call of Wildman Call-Wildman Off the Hook Off the Hook 56 ANPL The Game (cc) The Game (cc) The Game (cc) The Game (cc) The Wendy Williams Show (N) (cc) 106 & Park: Top Movie: ››‡ Deliver Us From Eva (2003, Romance-Comedy) (LL Cool J, Gabrielle Union) 57 BET Colbert Report Daily Show Key & Peele (cc) Futurama (cc) South Park (cc) South Park (cc) Brickleberry (cc) South Park (cc) Daily Show Colbert Report South Park (cc) Amy Schumer 58 COM Chelsea Lately (N) E! News Chelsea Lately E! News (N) Movie: ›››‡ Sleepless in Seattle (1993, Romance-Comedy) (Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan) 59 E! The Real Housewives of New Jersey Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Below Deck “Cool Your Jets” (N) Housewives/OC Below Deck “Cool Your Jets” 61 BRAVO King of the Hill (s) King of the Hill (s) Bob’s Burgers (s) American Dad (s) Family Guy (cc) Family Guy (cc) Robot Chicken China, IL Regular Show Adventure Time Regular Show MAD 63 TOON Little House on the Prairie (cc) Movie: ››‡ Hachi: A Dog’s Tale (2009) (Richard Gere, Joan Allen) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) The Golden Girls The Golden Girls 217 HALL PREMIUM CHANNELS HBO MAX SHOW
(5:45) Movie: ›› Battleship (2012) (Taylor Kitsch) (s) (PG-13) (cc) Movie: ››› Gideon’s Army (2013) (NR) (cc) The Newsroom True Blood “You’re No Good” (cc) Movie: ››‡ Just Like Heaven (2005) (s) (PG-13) (cc) Movie: ››› Ocean’s Twelve (2004) (George Clooney) (s) (PG-13) (cc) (5:35) Movie: ››‡ Two Weeks Notice (2002) (PG-13) Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Dexter “A Beautiful Day” (s) (cc) Ray Donovan “The Bag or the Bat” Dexter “A Beautiful Day” (s) (cc) Ray Donovan “The Bag or the Bat”
Boxing Banshee “The Kindred” (s) (cc) Movie: Def Jam’s How to Be a Player
A12
MONDAY, July 1, 2013
the Garden City Telegram
Reconnecting with old flame may jeopardize marriage Dear Annie: My wife of 38 years recently reconnected on Facebook with the guy she was seeing before we started dating. She spent a lengthy amount of time catching up with him on the phone and then asked whether I would be upset if she met with him to discuss the past 40 years. I didn’t tell her “no,� but I did say I wasn’t crazy about the idea. She met with him anyway, but didn’t tell me until I asked directly. We briefly talked about their conversations, which included him saying that his wife told him their marriage would survive a one-night stand. Over the next two weeks, I discovered (via our cell phone bill) that he and my wife had had multiple long conversations. When I told her this upset me, she said she initiated the contact, adding, “I always cared for him and always had feelings for him.� She saw nothing wrong with her behavior, claiming I would feel the same about my old flames. I was angry and hurt. I said I could not accept her being in touch with this guy
ANNIE’S MAILBOX KATHY MITCHELL MARCY SUGAR
knowing she still has feelings for him and that they have discussed intimate matters. Although I did not forbid contact, I made it clear that she was crossing a line and jeopardizing our marriage. To my knowledge, she has not met with him again. However, she insists there is nothing wrong with messaging him on Facebook. I am still bothered to know she is routinely in touch with this man. What do I do? — Losing My Patience Dear Losing: Your wife is flattered by this man’s attention, and he makes her feel young again. This is a powerful draw, but it doesn’t mean she is looking to have an affair. However, it is a betrayal for your wife to continue to be in contact with a man for whom she has feelings and who has made it clear that he is open to an affair. It
is also disrespectful to you. If she cannot understand what a threat this is to your marriage, please ask her to go with you for counseling. Dear Annie: My 34year-old daughter is a cyclist and is incredibly dedicated to her sport. She is good at it, but not great, and I think she has sacrificed more than is healthy. She is currently unemployed and homeless because she won’t take time away from her bike. When I bring up how concerned I am, she refuses to discuss it. This is taking a toll on my mental health. I’ve been told that my daughter has some kind of eating disorder, but I think more than food is involved. I think she’s addicted to endorphins. Is there a support group for parents similarly concerned about their athletically obsessed children? I cannot possibly be the only one. — Heartsick Mother Dear Mother: Overexercise is connected to eating disorders because both are about body image and control, and both involve compulsive behavior. In
some instances, exercising is a way to purge food from the system, which is a form of bulimia. There are physical dangers in this, as well as mental health issues. Please contact the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders (anad.org) and ask for help. Dear Annie: I can relate to “Native New Yorker,� whose voice is gravelly. My Southern accent was so pronounced and slow that when I moved west, people could hardly understand me. Wanting desperately to blend in, I sought the services of a speech therapist. Her counsel began with a reminder that our voice makes us unique in a world of millions of people. She said to embrace the difference, adjust the tempo, think before you speak and enjoy the power of communication. For the record, I find “hoarse and gravelly� very sexy. — Back in Jacksonville, Texas Dear Texas: No one need be ashamed of his or her speaking voice. Thanks for expressing it so well.
Reader’s palpitations and menopause symptoms overlap DEAR DR. ROACH: I’m 66 years of age and fit. In 2012, I was admitted to a local hospital because I thought I was having a heart attack. The doctor ran many lab tests, including a chest X-ray and EKG. I had palpitations during my hospital stay. My blood pressure would fluctuated, as did my pulse rate. None of my tests showed any problems with my heart. The doctor wanted to prescribe a beta blocker before going home. I refused. My family doctor saw me the same day and ordered an event monitor, which I wore for one month, and a stress test, both of which were negative. Two weeks later I was admitted to another emergency room for severe heart palpitations. The ER doctor ran many more tests, -10s
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all normal. He diagnosed ing all the time, and some me as having Lyme disease seldom, but palpitations and asked me to make an by definition are different appointment with my family from the norm. physician, who prescribed I do think a consultation doxycycline for two with a cardioloweeks. gist might be in I started keep- TO YOUR order, since your ing records of my GOOD HEALTH degree of palpiepisodes, and have tations is greatnoted that my paler than usual. pitations occur (On the other when I’m having hand, you’ve menopause sympalready had toms — hot flashabout every test es, mood swings, known). I am a sleeplessness, etc. Keith Roach, M.D. bit concerned What can I do to North America Syndicate about the combidecrease or stop nation of Lyme my heart palpitadisease and paltions? Would you recom- pitations, since Lyme dismend magnesium, calcium ease can affect the conducand vitamin D? — A. tion system of the heart. The sensation of However, that should have palpitations is an unpleas- been seen on the EKG. ant awareness of your own You may want to considheartbeat. Some people are er treatment for your hot aware of their heart beat- flashes, especially if your
palpitations are so closely associated with them. Estrogen is by far the most effective, and generally is safe to use, at least for a short while. Calcium, magnesium and vitamin D, while good for your overall health, may have only a minimal effect on palpitations/hot flashes. Some people get benefit, but most don’t. Palpitations can be sign of heart trouble. The booklet on heart attack explains what happens, how they are treated and how they are avoided. Readers can order a copy by writing: Dr. Roach — No. 102, Box 536475, Orlando, FL 328536475. Enclose a check or money order (no cash) for $4.75. with the recipient’s printed name and address. Please allow four weeks for delivery.
Some parking perspectives Dear Readers: Here is a response that came in to a recent sound off about handicapped parking spots: “I do not want to leave my mom out in the parking lot by herself. I feel it is safer to have her closer to the store, where there are more people around. — Margaret in California� Thanks for your letter and showing us a different point of view on the subject. — Heloise
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