The bee

Page 1

WHERE TO BEE

HUTCHBEE.COM

OCTOBER 17, 2013

A MESSAGE FROM HUTCHINSON’S PAST... TOMBSTONES TO TALK AGAIN SEE STORY ON PAGE 9

GET OUT!

ZZ TOP (with THE BEN MILLER BAND) WHERE: Stiefel Theatre, 151 S. Santa Fe, Salina WHEN: 8 p.m. Sunday COST: $89.50-99.50 WEB: stiefeltheatre.org


PAGE 2 HUTCHBEE.COM

THE BUZZ

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

BEE ON TIME THURSDAY 10 a.m. Storytime, Bluebird Books, 2 S. Main St., Hutchinson. Open to children ages infant to 8 years. 7 p.m. Renew You!, Hutchinson Public Library, Room 2, 901 N. Main St., Hutchinson.

FRIDAY 9 a.m. Cultural Appreciation Day, Hutchinson Community College McPherson Center, 2208 E. Kansas Ave., McPherson. Large groups, please RSVP by calling (620) 2450202. 11:30 a.m. Drum Sax Axe at Cool Beans at the Depot 209 N. Walnut, Hutchinson.

WHERE: Downtown Wichita WHEN: Today through Sunday COST: Prices vary WEB: tallgrassfilmfestival.com

7:30 p.m. HCC Instrumental Jazz, Metropolitan Coffee, 1329 E. 17th Ave., Hutchinson.

THERE’S MORE! Check out page 8 to learn about the Hutchinson connection to Tallgrass.

7:30 p.m. Fred Hammond and the United Tenors, Century II Concert Hall, 225 W. Douglas Ave., Wichita. Tickets are $22 to $33. 8 p.m. Mike Epps, First Council Event Center, 12875 N. Highway 77, Newkirk, Okla. Also featuring Naughty By Nature. Tickets are $45 to $90.

WEEKENDER

SATURDAY 7:30 a.m. Reno County Farmer's Market, Famer’s Market Pavilion, Second Avenue and Washington Street, Hutchinson. 7:30 a.m. Partridge Pedal Party, city of Partridge. Breakfast from 7:30 to 9 a.m., 9:30 a.m. parade, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Silent Auction, carnival games, entertainment, antique tractor pull, Partridge High School dinner and all-school reunion and more. 9 a.m. 2013 Women’s Holiday Gift Fair at Madona Hall, Our Lady of Guadalupe, 612 S. Maple, South Hutchinson. There will be 40 vendors with many gifts. For more information, call (620) 665-7636. 9 a.m. Talents Galore: Lunch-Bake Sale-Crafts, New Gottland Lutheran Church, 1822 17th Ave., McPherson. 10:30 a.m. Storytime at Bluebird Books 2 South Main, Hutchinson. Storytime for kids, infant to 8 years. 2 p.m. Baked Brie Demo, Apron Strings, 201 S. Main St., Hutchinson. 6 p.m. Sock Hop, Hutchinson Moose Lodge, Lorraine and First, Hutchinson. The Women of the Moose will be serving hamburgers and fries with shakes for dessert at 6 p.m., and Sonny D will be playing at 8 p.m. 6 p.m. Apron Strings/Sunshine Meadows Julia Jubilee, Old Mill Theatre, 111 Old Mill Lane, Buhler. Tickets are $30. Call (620) 5432251 for reservations. 7 p.m. The Browns in concert, New Hope Evangelical Church, 501 Wickersham Drive, McPherson. A free will offering will be accepted. For more information, call (620) 245-0303 or (620) 242-4168. 7 p.m. Ballet Emmanuel, Salem United Methodist Church, 115 Old Main, Newton. 7: 30 p.m. “The Phantom of the

TICKET BOOTH ABBA MANIA NOVEMBER 18, 7:30 P.M. WHERE: The Orpheum, 200 N. Broadway St., Wichita ON SALE: 10 a.m. Saturday COST: $25-$49.50 PHONE: (316) 263-0884 WEB: wichitaorpheum.com LOGAN MIZE DECEMBER 31, 9 P.M. WHERE: The Cotillion, 11120 W. Kellogg St., Wichita ON SALE: 10 a.m. Friday COST: $20-$25 PHONE: (316) 722-4201 WEB: thecotillion.com GEORGE STRAIT APRIL 4, 7:30 P.M. WHERE: INTRUST Bank Arena, 500 E. Waterman St., Wichita ON SALE: 10 a.m. Friday COST: $76.50-$98.50 PHONE: (316) 440-9000 WEB: intrustbankarena.com

Opera,” The Fox Theatre, 18 E. First Ave, Hutchinson. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students. 7:30 p.m. Danny Schwartz, Metropolitan Coffee, 1329 E. 17th Ave., Hutchinson. 8 p.m. Big Joe Matthews, 14 North, 14 N. Main St., Hutchinson. Also performing are Izeal and Kattie Berry. 8 p.m. Hairball, The Cotillion, 11120 W. Kellogg St., Wichita. Also performing will be Prezence. Tickets are $12 to $22.

cinnamon rolls, lemon-berry cheese twirls, butterhorns and pesto twists. Cost: Pre-registration and fee of $35 is required.

Square Dance, Elmdale Community Center, 400 E. Ave. E, Hutchinson. Fall Festival – Mike Sikorsky will call the squares.

11:30 a.m. Drum Sax Axe, Cool Beans at the Depot, 209 N. Walnut, Hutchinson.

8 p.m. Ricky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby with Kentucky Thunder, Stiefel Theatre, 151 S. Santa Fe, Salina. Tickets are $45 to $65.

7 p.m. State Fair Promenaders Square Dance, Elmdale Community Center, 400 E. Ave. E, Hutchinson. Area callers and cuers will call the squares.

OCT. 26 7 a.m. Kiwanis Pancake Feed, First United Methodist Church, First and Walnut, Hutchinson.

THE ARTS

Courtesy photo

The Birger Sandzén Memorial Gallery, 401 N. First St. in Lindsborg, is exhibiting the paintings of Edmond, Okla., artist Michael L. Nicholson through Oct. 30.

SUNDAY 8 p.m. ZZ Top, Stiefel Theatre, 151 S. Santa Fe, Salina. Tickets are $89.50 to $99.50.

MONDAY 4 p.m. Baked Potato Bar at Fairview United Methodist Church, 9 miles west of Fun Valley on 4th Ave., Hutchinson. A free will offering will be accepted .

TUESDAY 6 p.m. Sew Cute: Sewing for your Children, Hutchinson Community College, 1300 N. Plum St., Hutchinson. Cost: $67.50. For more information or to enroll, call Ann Marie at (620) 727-2791.

WEDNESDAY 8 p.m. Charlie Robinson and Roger Creager, The Cotillion, 11120 W. Kellogg St., Wichita.

Tickets are $12.50 to $15.

OCT. 24 9 a.m. Coffee at the Cosmo “Eisenhower's Sputnik Moment: The Race for Space and World Prestige,” Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center, 1100 N. Plum St., Hutchinson. 10 a.m. Storytime, Bluebird Books, 2 S. Main St., Hutchinson. Open to children ages infant to 8 years. 7:30 p.m. Ring of Fire: The Life and Music of Johnny Cash, Fox Theatre, 18 E. First Ave., Hutchinson. Tickets are $30 to $40. 8 p.m. Gabriel Iglesias, Stiefel Theatre, 151 S. Santa Fe, Salina. Tickets are $55 to $65.

OCT. 25 10 a.m. Rolls and Twists at Apron Strings, 201 S. Main St., Hutchinson. Learn how to make

7:30 a.m. Reno County Farmer's Market, Famer’s Market Pavilion, Second Avenue and Washington Street, Hutchinson. 8:30 a.m. FSAS 5k Wagathon, Webster Conference Center, 2601 N. Ohio, Salina. Registration begins at 7 a.m. 8:30 a.m. Golden Belt Wood Carvers Annual Carve-n-Show, Great Bend Senior Center, 2007 Kansas St., Great Bend. 10 a.m. Space Out Saturday, Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center, 1100 N. Plum St., Hutchinson. Story time: 11 a.m. and 1p.m.; Explorer’s workshop: 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.; Space Trek: 12 and 3 p.m. 10:30 a.m. Storytime at Bluebird Books 2 South Main, Hutchinson. Storytime for kids, infant to 8 years. 11:30 a.m. Downtown Soup and Chili Festival, downtown Hutchinson.

OCT. 27 12 p.m. Golden Belt Wood Carvers Annual Carve-n-Show at Great Bend Senior Center, 2007 Kansas St., Great Bend. 5 p.m. Holy Name Parish Church Supper at Bushton Community Center, Bushton. Roast beef supper with homemade pies and salad bar. Cost: Adults $8, children 6 to 12 $4, under 5 free.

OCT. 30 5 p.m. Roast Beef Dinner, Grace United Methodist Church, 133 N. Gilmore Ave., Macksville. A free will donation will be taken.

OCT. 31 10 a.m. Storytime at Bluebird Books 2 South Main, Hutchinson. Storytime for kids, infant to 8 years.

NOV. 1 11:30 a.m. Drum Sax Axe at Cool Beans at the Depot 209 N. Walnut, Hutchinson. 5:30 p.m. Artist Reception, Bluebird Books, 2 S. Main St., Hutchinson.

NOV. 2

2 p.m. Lemon Chicken Rice Soup, Apron Strings, 201 S. Main St., Hutchinson. Join Zack Clobes in his debut at Apron Strings.

10:30 a.m. Storytime at Bluebird Books 2 South Main, Hutchinson. Storytime for kids, infant to 8 years.

3 p.m. Boo at the Zoo!, Hutchinson Zoo, 6 Emerson Loop East, Hutchinson. 7 p.m. State Fair Promenaders

2 p.m. Bread Machine 101 at Apron Strings, 201 S. Main St., Hutchinson.


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

THE BEE

ZEPPELIN FILM HEADS UP COS CONCERT SERIES BY THE BEE STAFF Have you always wanted to see Led Zeppelin in concert but never had the time, money or opportunity to do so? As the kickoff to its Concerts at the Cos series, the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center will screen “Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day” in its Carey Digital Dome Theater at 9:30 p.m. Saturday, bringing the band and its music to life like never before. The film was shot at London’s O2 Arena on Dec. 10, 2007, where the legendary British rock band -- founding members John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page and Robert Plant and guest Jason Bonham, son of the late Zeppelin drummer John Bonham – headlined a tribute concert for Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun, performing 16 songs from their extensive catalog, including “Whole Lotta Love,” “Rock and Roll,” “Kashmir” and, of course, “Stairway to Heaven.” In true rock concert fashion, adult beverages will be sold, and admission is limited to those 21 and older. The

Cosmosphere concession stand also will be open and serving it regular selection of snacks and drinks.

Tickets are $12, plus tax. They can be purchased in advance by calling (620) 665-9312 or 1 (800) 397-0330, ext. 312.

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 3


THE HIVE

PAGE 4 HUTCHBEE.COM

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

ROMANCE, HANKS, JFK THE ‘STUFF’ OF 3 STRONG FILMS

If you enjoy romantic comedies, especially those with an unexpected plot twist, you are almost certain to enjoy what I consider one of the better movies this year, “Enough Said.” This was the last lead role before “Sopranos” actor James Gandolfini died unexpectedly, and it certainly helped to broaden his appeal and show his range of abilities. A perfect match as his love interest is Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who proves that she is much more than a “Seinfeld” icon.

One of this movie’s strengths is the overall cast coupled with sharp and nearperfect dialogue that roots the story in real life through a combination of sometimes uncomfortable and perhaps embarrassing lines that are also quick, clever and charming. Revealing too much about the plot will spoil surprises for those who choose to make a Wichita Warren Theatre East trip, but the basics involve first and subsequent dates for the lead characters, who are divorced, both with college-bound daughters and reluctant but willing to get back into a romantic relationship. One is a masseuse, the other a slob, and they take you on an emotional ride highlighted by a series of uncomfortable but highly amusing scenes that involve children, friends, mistakes and deeply hurt feelings before an appropriate ending in which the audience can easily draw different conclusions. This movie barely nosed into the top 10 on its opening weekend, and although it’s not a big box-office attraction, it has plenty to offer serious movie-goers who appreciate good acting, near-perfect

character verbiage and unusual camera angles, all wrapped in warmth, awkward sexual situations and a story twist that will definitely keep your attention. Perhaps better deserving an R rather than its PG rating, leave the kids – including teens – at home because of crude content, partial nudity and language, but in the world of romantic comedies, “Enough Said” rates 4 stars and offers refreshing filmmaking. *** “Captain Phillips” is the real deal for high drama, good acting, character development and some amazing technical camera work every bit as good in an ocean setting as the much-touted stranded-in-space story “Gravity,” which set an opening October box-office record earlier this month. Tom Hanks and the first major acting roll for Barkhad Abdi (as a pirate captain who takes over Phillips’ ship) help this film live up to its hype. Anyone who followed the true story of Phillips and his crew being captured, then rescued by Navy SEALs, just four years ago, knows the ending, but director Peter Greengrass, a veteran of distress films, knows how to be both suspenseful and tense, even for those who remember the outcome. This is no easy trick in movie-making,

and it is one of the qualities that may lead to an Oscar nomination. The story unfolds not only as Captain Phillips’ life is in the balance, but it tries to show why those trapped in the poverty and hostility of Somalia would turn to such evil. Scenes of the pirates and the captured Phillips on the high seas in a small boat, along with the drama of boarding the cargo ship, are as realistic as anybody could expect, drawing the audience into both claustrophobia and extreme stress. The movie also amazingly captures the care and precision of U.S. naval ship medical personnel once Phillips is freed in a stunning rescue. Both of these factors may be the film’s greatest strengths. The violence and bloody images make this a PG-13 film, but both parents and teens should be able to comfortably watch and even go as a family without the fear of being embarrassed. Four stars and a strong recommendation to see “Captain Phillips” at the Mall 8 in Hutchinson before its ship sails.

*** If you are a history buff and are particularly interested in the Nov. 22, 1963, killing of President John F. Kennedy, it is well worth your time to visit the Warren East Theatre in Wichita for “Parkland,”

perhaps the year's best docudrama based on details of what happened on the day of the assassination and several days thereafter. Centerpiece in this fourstar film is a re-creation, apparently with considerable accuracy, of what happened in Dallas’s Parkland Hospital emergency room when both the president and, afterward, his murderer, Lee Harvey Oswald, were wheeled in. It is gripping and sobering, with a brilliant mix of actual news footage from that day interspersed with outstanding acting by such notables as Zac Efron, Billy Bob Thornton, Paul Giamatti and Tom Welling. Tom Hanks is a co-producer. The film is based on the book “Death of a President” by historian William Manchester, who spent years exhaustively reaching details that the movie brings startlingly to the screen. You’ll see and hear things about the assassination and surrounding events that you never knew or have forgotten during the 50 passing years. As you might expect from this penetrating look into a grim part of our history, there is bloody violence and gutwrenching pictorials that are not easy to watch but impossible to turn away from. A portrayal of William Zapruder, who shot the only film showing Kennedy’s limousine taking fire, also figures

prominently in “Parkland.” This won’t be coming to Hutchinson anytime soon, but it needs to be on a future list of Fox Theatre movies so that those not inspired to travel to Wichita will have an opportunity to see a truly outstanding although disturbing picture. Also playing in Wichita is a good Christian film called “Grace Unplugged.” It’s not the best inspirational film I’ve ever seen, but it is worthy of favorable recognition. The story focuses on the relationship between a teenage girl and her father, who raised her for religious songs and doesn’t want to let her go into the rough-and-tumble world of popular music. He fears she will succumb to similar mistakes he made when developing into a onehit-wonder professional singer before turning back to Christ and becoming a music pastor. The acting and script in Christian films are seldom as good as in regular movies, but this one does an adequate job and includes some inspirational music. It would be an excellent film for teenage church groups to see and discuss and, when available on DVD, for both families concerned about parent/child relations and pastors wanting a worthwhile movie for their programs, to consider. DAN DEMING Hutchinson

UNUSUAL STORY LINES, ONE FAIRY TALE-BASED, DRIVE THESE READS BY DAVINA JAMISON “Skin,” by Donna Jo Napoli, is one of those special reads: one so full of truth and pain that a book review simply cannot do it justice. The book surprised me in its intensity as it pulled me into the heart and mind of a teenage girl on the brink of the biggest, most terrifying change of her life. Sixteenyear-old Sep wakes up one morning with white lips – as in, completely absent of color. Naturally, she freaks out just a bit. But a bit of lipstick, and she can hide the oddity – until it spreads. Until she’s diagnosed with vitiligo, a rare skin condition for which there is no cure. Sep is horrified by the news, which has turned her expectations for the world upside down. But ironically, Sep’s new use of lipstick to hide her secret also draws out long-ago close friend Josh, who is suddenly offering her something good to hold onto as she confronts her changing reality. She engages in a whirlwind romance, eager to experience as much as she can before the vitiligo spreads and she has to let him go. Sep prolongs the inevitable as long as she can with concealers, scarves, lipstick and hand-drawn tattoos on her hand, but she knows she’s running out of time before she becomes the subject of ridicule. Napoli holds no punches as she takes the reader on this journey into a very difficult chapter in Sep’s life. She makes you feel every moment of fear, of grief, of bittersweet love and happiness

REVIEWS

as biology catapults Sep toward a reality she cannot change. There’s something so real about “Skin,” you’ll be convinced that the searing heartache is your own. Ultimately, Sep must find the inner strength not only to face her friends with this new condition, but to face herself. Her own hate and disgust are just as virulent, if not more so, than anything her loved ones or peers could ever throw at her. What she doesn’t expect, however, is that she may have underestimated the depths of the people around her, and in her fear of getting hurt, she may end up hurting the ones she loves. The book is available for $3.99 on Kindle. *** In February, Marissa Meyer released the second of her series, “The Lunar Chronicles.” If you’re like me, you’re always in the market for a good series, and you can’t go wrong with this one. I was hesitant to read it at first, despite the good reviews that the first book, “Cinder,” had received. The series has some decided fairy tale themes I wasn’t sure I

would enjoy. For one thing, I’ve come across many other stories using this approach. “Wicked” and “The Ugly Stepsister” are highly successful examples of the fairy tale spin-off, and too many tween movies are the examples of how wrong it can go. You can guess from the names what fairy tales “Cinder” and “Scarlet” draw from. Yet, I have to say, Meyer surprised me. Who in their right mind thinks, “I want to do a Cinderella spin-off. Hey, I know! I’ll write about a cyborg who meets a prince while there is a massive plague outbreak and enemies from the moon are trying to manipulate their way into a self-serving marriage alliance!” Meyer pulls it off with flying colors. “Cinder” gripped me from the first line. There was something very real about Cinder, a cyborg who is treated like a second-class citizen by other townspeople, including her own adopted family. She works as a mechanic, fixing androids, to support the family. Prince Kai, having heard that Cinder was the best mechanic in the area, brings an android containing

sensitive information to her for repair, and thus begins the saga of Cinder and Kai. They meet again after she is at the palace, having been drawn into a program working to find a cure for the plague. As you might expect, there is a ball, though it will not go as you might expect. Cinder and Kai’s “happily ever after” won’t be as neatly foretold as in the classic, and you have to read on in the second novel to find out how their saga plays out as Scarlet and Wolf are introduced into the story line. Scarlet, a young woman desperate to find her grandmother after she goes missing, accepts the help of a stranger in town who goes by the name of Wolf. She knows she shouldn’t trust him, but he seems her only hope in tracking down the gang that stole her grandmother. There’s a larger plot at work, which includes secret lunar agents who have undergone genetic mutation. Meanwhile, the Lunar leader continues to make trouble for Cinder and Kai, unleashing violence on the kingdom in an effort to get Kai to marry her. Even with the fairy tale parallels, the series never comes close to being anything but original. If you’re looking for a new series to read, I highly recommend it, even though you’ll be left waiting anxiously for the third book’s release. Davina Jamison writes a book blog at www.thereadeye.wordpress.com. Follow her book updates on Twitter @davinajamison2.


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013 SCIENCE, HALLOWEEN HORROR WILL MIX AT EXPLORATION PLACE BY THE NEWS STAFF Exploration Place in Wichita is offering a Halloween event that will plant scientific knowledge inside your brain ... so long as you can help turn back the hordes of zombies trying to eat it. This adults-only evening will take groups of “survivors” through the museum at 300 N. McLean Blvd. to repel the zombie invasion. Guests will learn Centers for Disease Control-approved survival skills, as well as the science of virology. But watch out – lurching zombies lurk around every turn. Those who make it through unscathed can enjoy food, drinks, music and more. Tickets are $20 for members and $25 for non-members and are available at www.exploration.org/undead.html or by calling (316) 660-0620. Each ticket includes access to the food and two free drinks. A cash bar also will be available. As a timeticketed event, guests who want to go through the museum together are encouraged to make their purchases at the same time. Only those 21 years or older may attend.

THE BEE

Follow us on Facebook STAY IN TOUCH at The Beehive

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 5


PAGE 6 HUTCHBEE.COM

THE BEE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

HCC SET TO OPEN JAZZ, CHORALE SEASON BY THE BEE STAFF The chorale and vocal jazz program of Hutchinson Community College will have its season opener at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The concert features the award-winning Badinage, Sonance and Hutchinson Community College Concert Chorale, and director Neal Allsup promises there is something for everyone at the B.J. Warner Recital Hall in the Stringer Fine Arts Center. “The literature they will perform is captivating, artistic, contemplative, engaging,� he wrote in an email. The HCC Concert Chorale will perform seven songs before a short intermission. Sonance will have three selections before Badinage performs four songs. General admission tickets are $8.


BEE MOVIES

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013 MOVIE

STARRING

RATING STARS (OUT OF 5)

TIME

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 7

SUMMARY

MALL 8 SHOWTIMES

2:33

Keller Dover faces a parent's worst nightmare when his 6-year-old daughter, Anna, and her friend go missing.

Friday: 4:30, 7:40pm Saturday: 1:15, 4:30, 7:40pm Sunday: 1:15, 4:30, 7:40pm

1:31

A medical engineer and an astronaut work together to survive after an accident leaves them adrift in space.

Friday: 7:00pm, (3D) 4:00, 4:30, 7:30, 9:10, 9:40pm Saturday: 1:00, 7:00pm (3D) 1:30, 4:00, 4:30, 7:30, 9:10, 9:40pm Sunday: 1:00, 7:00pm (3D) 1:30, 4:00, 4:30, 7:30pm

PG

1:35

Flint Lockwood learns that his most infamous machine is still operational and is churning out menacing foodanimal hybrids.

Friday: 4:10, 7:10, 9:30pm Saturday: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:30pm Sunday: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10pm

Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger

R

NA

1:56

When a structural-security authority finds himself set up and incarcerated in the world's most secret and secure prison, he has to use his skills to escape.

Friday: 4:00, 7:00, 9:40 pm Saturday: 1:00,4:00, 7:00, 9:40 pm Sunday: 1:00,4:00, 7:00pm

Captain Phillips

Tom Hanks, Barkhad Abdi, Barkhad Abdirahman

PG-13

1/2

2:13

The true story of Captain Richard Phillips and the 2009 hijacking by Somali pirates of the US-flagged MV Maersk Alabama.

Friday: 4:10, 7:10, 10:05pm Saturday: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:05pm Sunday: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10pm

Machete Kills

Danny Trejo, Alexa Vega, Mel Gibson

R

1:47

The U.S. government recruits Machete to battle his way through Mexico in order to take down an arms dealer who looks to launch a weapon into space.

Friday: 4:10, 7:10, 9:40pm Saturday: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:40pm Sunday: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10pm

Carrie

Chloë Grace Moretz, Julianne Moore, Gabriella Wilde

PG-13

NA

NA

A reimagining of the classic horror tale about Carrie White, a shy girl who unleashes telekinetic terror on her small town after being pushed too far at her senior prom.

Friday: 4:20, 7:20, 9:40pm Saturday: 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 9:40pm Sunday: 1:20, 4:20, 7:20pm

Prisoners

Hugh Jackman, Jake Gyllenhaal, Viola Davis

R

Gravity 3D

Sandra Bullock, George Clooney, Ed Harris

PG-13

Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2

Bill Hader, Anna Faris, Will Forte

Escape Plan

MOVIE

1/2

NOW SHOWING AT THE KANSAS COSMOSPHERE'S CAREY DIGITAL DOME THEATER STARRING RATING STARS TIME SUMMARY

SHOWTIMES

Le Daniel's The Butler

Forest Whitaker, David Oyelowo, Lenny Kravitz

PG-13

2:12

An African-American's eyewitness accounts of notable events of the 20th century during his tenure as a White House butler.

Hidden Universe

Miranda Richardson

NR

:45

Enjoy an extraordinary journey deep into space in the cinematic medium that transports audiences like no other.

Daily: See cosmo.org for showtimes

Jerusalem

Directed by Daniel Ferguson

NR

:45

A spectacular cinematic journey - soaring high above the Holy Land and plunging deep into the vibrant Old City.

Daily: See cosmo.org for showtimes

Friday, Sat., Sun. : See cosmo.org for showtimes


PAGE 8 HUTCHBEE.COM GET OUT!

DANNY SCHWARTZ WHERE: Metropolitan Coffee, 1329 E. 17th Ave. WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Saturday COST: Free WEB: metrocoffeehutch.com

THE BEE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

TALLGRASS ENTRY FEATURES LOCAL VOICE BY KRISTEN RODERICK For The Bee kroderick@hutchnews.com A voice on a short film at the Tallgrass Film Festival might seem familiar to some in Hutchinson. Patsy Terrell lent hers in a small part for “The Landing.”

The film focuses on a man who returns to the Midwestern farm of his childhood on a desperate mission to unearth the horrifying truth of what landed there in the summer of 1960, according to thelandingfilm.com. Terrell is the voice of an emergency dispatcher in the

movie, which was written, filmed and produced in Australia. “They ended up using the barn that was built there for the Superman movie,” Terrell said. The power of technology connected Terrell with director/co-writer Josh Tanner,

who found her voice demo online. The two exchanged emails and he sent her the script to read over. She recorded her lines via Skype with him on her headphones and her recording over a digital recorder. She sent Tanner the digital files via email for processing to add to the film. “It’s a testament to technology that you can partner with someone in Australia when you’re in Hutchinson,” she said. The film will make its American debut Friday at the Tallgrass Film Festival, Terrell said.

SILENT ‘PHANTOM,’ OTHER CLASSICS OFFER FRIGHTS BY THE BEE STAFF Take a trip back to another time, where movies were silent and Technicolor was state-of-the-art. At 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Hutchinson’s Fox Theatre will show the first movie version of “The Phantom of the Opera.” It will be complete with an organ score by Marvin Faulwell, percussion by Bob Keckeisen and a spooky prelude by Bill Shaffer. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students “The Phantom of the Opera” (1925) is one of the most well-known silent classic films. Lon Chaney Sr. plays a mysterious madman who lurks in the catacombs below the opera house of Paris, according to hutchinsonfox.com. Anything strange that happens there is always attributed to the Phantom. The elusive lunatic wants Christine to sing the lead at the opera and to get rid of Carlotta. In the process, the Phantom kidnaps Christine and takes her to his lair, where she discovers his secret. The film has many scenes in two-color Technicolor that were thought to be lost. They have been restored to film print. For more information on the film, visit hutchinsonfox.com. In the mood for more Halloween movies? The Orpheum in Wichita will play a 45th anniversary screening of “Night of the Living Dead” at 7 p.m. Oct. 24, plus the campy “Rocky Horror Picture Show” at 11:59 p.m. on Oct. 25.


THE BEE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 9

DECEASED RENO FIGURES COME ALIVE AT CEMETERY EVENT BY KATHY HANKS For The Bee khanks@hutchnews.com

IF YOU GO WHAT: The Hutchinson Theatre Guild presents Talking Tombstones, an annual fundraiser at Hutchinson’s historic Eastside Cemetery. WHEN: Saturday. At 5:30 p.m., the show will be presented in the mausoleum. At 7:30 p.m., the show will be presented at the gravesites, weather permitting.

Courtesy Photo

Amy Sallee will portray Eliza Wallace, co-founder of Castleton, during Talking Tombstones, presented by the Hutchison Theatre Guild.

will recognize some of the names and come forward with more information about them. “Each year we do different characters who have been buried in the cemetery,” said Livingston. That’s the one precept: The people they portray must be buried in Eastside. As the actors prepare to

PEDAL PARTY

BY THE BEE STAFF Pump up your bicycle tires: It’s time for the Partridge Pedal Party. The family festival, which is always on the third Saturday in October, celebrates bicycles of any kind, according to partridgecommunity. wordpress.com. There are regular bicycles, three-wheeled bikes, bicycles built for two and more. There are even unicycle hockey games and bike jousting. You can also design your own miniature golf hole. Participants pay $1 to play miniature golf and choose which hole is the best. Dimensions are 6 feet by 16 feet and should have a par of 3-5 shots. The hole with the most shots gets the prize money. There must be at least six entries. For more information on the mini-golf contest, call Chris Terrill at (620) 567-2723. Schedule of events 7:30 to 9 a.m. Breakfast sold at Paul’s Garage on North Main 8:30 a.m. Parade participants line up at King Street Center 9:30 to 10:15 a.m. Pa-

rade down Main Street; 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Silent auction/raffle in the bus barn 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Entertainment by local talent on the stage south of the bus barn 11 a.m. to noon Unicycle hockey in the school parking lot 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Miniature golf by the picnic shelter 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Pulled pork lunch sold by Plainview Church/JAM youth group in the bus barn; carnival games for younger children north of the bus barn Noon to 2 p.m. Pedalin’ zoo for inventive pedaling contraptions on the east side of the gym Noon to 3 p.m. The photography booth is back 1 to 5 p.m. Antique tractor pull by city office on Main Street 2 to 2:30 p.m. Announcement of winners 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Minute to Win It 5 to 8 p.m. Partridge High School dinner and all-school reunion in grade school gym All day – History exhibits and poetry entries on display in the art room

sissippi. When the Civil War began, the plantation owner took his slaves to Texas. “At some point he heard the war was over and let them all go free,” Woodson said. Already a grandmother by then, Owens made her way to Hutchinson and lived with her son at 217 Ave. D. For Woodson to understand Owens, she has tried to get into the mind of someone who had been a slave most of her life. “She didn’t have independence until she was old and she was living with her son, so she wasn’t really independent,” Woodson said. “I see her as content to be where she was, but having a life that was pretty controlled.” Through research, Woodson learned that Owens had a harsh life. There was no education. In fact, Owens told The Hutchinson Daily News in 1906 that if slaves were seen with a piece of paper in

HOLE UP IN THE HAUNTS AT FORT LEAVENWORTH 73

AD TRI RO

Fort Leavenworth

P

Festival will send Partridge spinning

get into their characters, they also are becoming familiar with the period in which they lived. “Ann Owens was a slave who was freed after the Civil War,” said Jocelyn Woodson, who portrays her. “She was born in Maryland and sold when she was 9 months old.” Records showed she was a slave in Tennessee and Mis-

Leavenworth

7

By

ic

k

Freed slave Ann Owens lived to be the oldest woman in Reno County, and possibly Kansas, when she died Oct.17, 1906. She was buried in Eastside Cemetery in an unmarked grave next to her son, Hiram. Seven years later, in 1913, James O’Loughlin became Hutchinson’s first firefighter to be killed in the line of duty. He was buried in Eastside Cemetery. O’Loughlin and Owens may be long gone, but they are not forgotten. Their stories, and the stories of five other deceased Reno County residents, will come to life Saturday during the annual live performance of Talking Tombstones, in Hutchinson’s Eastside Cemetery. Dan Stafford, who will portray O’Loughlin, has been researching his character, learning as much as possible about the firefighter so the audience will feel they are meeting O’Loughlin. This will be the seventh year for the event, produced as a fundraiser for the Hutchinson Theatre Guild. Each year the actors rely on the Reno County Genealogical Society to research the backgrounds of the characters portrayed. Then the actors do their homework, developing a script and turning names and dates into real people. Director Peggy Livingston is hoping people

K ris

ten R od

er

FORT LEAVENWORTH – OK, this road trip might take more than a tank of gas, but it looks to be well worth it. Especially after the government shutdown canceled a history tour through Fort Larned. Why not take a journey through 186-year-old Fort Leavenworth? This trip might get a little spooky. According to the fort’s folklore, there are more than 30 documented hauntings around the post. There are many more undocumented hauntings, according to Friends of the Frontier Army Museum. The museum will present its newly redesigned Haunted Fort Leavenworth tour. Bring an ID to enter the fort for a walking tour through some of the oldest and most historic buildings on the fort, with stops in front of some of the most haunted buildings.

Leavenworth County

70 Leavenworth County Salina Hutchinson

KANSAS

Campfire stories in the park also share more of the ghostly folklore. Tours are for adults, so leave children under 10 at home. Guests should meet at Zais Park at Grant and Kearney streets. Tours are every 10 minutes for a 1 ½- to 2-hour walk. While you’re there, check out some of the amenities. After all, you did drive more than 200 miles. There is also the Buffalo Soldier Memorial Park, a national cemetery that has been the final resting place for veterans since the War of 1812, and selfguided tours through the fort. For more information about the fort, visit garrison.leavenworth.army.mil.

front of their faces, they would be punished. But that life was all in her past, and she seemed at peace during the 1906 interview, Woodson said. All of these details will add to the character as Woodson gives Owens depth. The audience will come upon Woodson dressed in a period costume, standing by a tombstone, and she plans to make it informal. “It will be like people dropping by, and I am Ann Owens,” Woodson said. Meanwhile, on his fateful day, O’Loughlin was rushing to a fire in the city’s first motorized fire truck. He was standing on the back of the truck and was thrown from the vehicle at the corner of Avenue A and Main Street when a wheel of the truck got stuck in a trolley-car track, causing the vehicle to flip on its side. No longer relying on slow-paced horses and buggies, the driver was speeding to the fire, which caused the accident. Maureen Hill, O’Loughlin’s great-great-granddaughter, has heard the story of the tragedy all her life from family members. He left behind 10 children; one was just weeks old when her father died. “He was a family guy,” Hill said. “When this all happened, the city paid my great-great-grandmother benefits, but stopped because they couldn’t afford it anymore. For a long time he didn’t have a tombstone. In 1998 or 1999, my grandmother

GET OUT! MIKE EPPS (with NAUGHTY BY NATURE) WHERE: First Council Event Center, 12875 N. Highway 77, Newkirk, Okla. WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday COST: $45-$90 WEB: firstcouncilcasinohotel.com

was having her window fixed by a volunteer firefighter. She told him the story, and the fire department got him a tombstone.” Guests at the cemetery will also learn about Fred and Minerva Forsha. The couple were associated with the large Forsha Ranch 11 miles south of Hutchinson, near Castleton. Marcie McKinnell will portray Minerva, who lived to be 90. She had been married to Fred for 30 years when he died in New York City. He had disappeared for three years and she had no idea where he was. “The impression you get was he liked the high life,” McKinnell said. “He was the money spender. Speculation was that he disappeared and claimed amnesia.” Fred was the scoundrel and Minerva the long-suffering wife, so McKinnell and Mark Zimmerman will bring the unhappy marriage back to life. Other cast members include Amy Sallee portraying Eliza Wallace, who co-founded Castleton with her husband. And A.B. Caldwell, a plainsman and Gettysburg survivor, will appear, portrayed by Steve Dechant. Also, Lerlowe Howard, who died in World War I, will be portrayed by Chad Howard. “Hutchinson has plenty of characters,” Livingston said. “And all of the characters are really interesting this year. You have to go see who these people are.”


PAGE 10 HUTCHBEE.COM

THE HIVE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

GHOSTS, GHOULS, GOBLINS TO LURK AT THIRD THURSDAY BY KRISTEN RODERICK For The Bee kroderick@hutchnews.com

Get your Halloween costume out for some goodies at the first-ever Hutch-O-Ween. Third Thursday will be for the witches, cowboys, ghosts, ghouls and other friendly beasts as children and maybe some adults will march their way downtown from 5 to 9 p.m. A costume contest for children starts at 7 p.m. at the Avenue A Park Gazebo. There are prizes for first,

second and third place. During the evening, a photo booth will be near Smith’s Market. The market will have a Jelly Belly counting contest for children. Guess how many jelly beans are in a jar, and the winner receives a prize. Trick-or-treating will be at participating business. Just look for the smiley paper pumpkin signs at the doors or windows of businesses. Dress like your favorite dead author for a reading at Bluebird Books. Read from your favorite dead author’s

work. Purchase a book by any dead author and receive a 20 percent discount. Other events include: ● “It Gets Better” spirit day with speakers and a candlelight vigil in Grasshopper Park. A free T-shirt design contest is this year. ● Day of the Dead at Gallery 7, 11 W. Ave. B. There will be an art exhibit with local artists and a Day of the Dead altar either inside or outside, depending on the weather. For more information, visit thirdthursdayhutch.com.

us on STAY IN TOUCH Follow Facebook at The Beehive

THE BEE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

GET OUT! BIG JOE MATTHEWS (with IZREAL and KATTIE BERRY) WHERE: 14 North, 14 N. Main St. WHEN: 8 p.m. Saturday WEB: 14northsports.com

HCC INSTRUMENTAL JAZZ WHERE: Metropolitan Coffee, 1329 E. 17th Ave. WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Friday WEB: metrocoffeehutch.com

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 11


PAGE 12 HUTCHBEE.COM

THE HIVE

BEE A CONTRIBUTOR A selection of news, reviews, photos and video submitted by the public will be chosen for publication in The Bee each week. For news and reviews, email beehive@hutchnews.com or visit www.hutchbee.com and click on “Post your news & reviews.” Categories include movies, music, art, theater, food, books and other activities. To submit photos and video, email us, click on “Post your photos” on The Bee website or go to “The Beehive” Facebook page and click on the photo/video button. Deadline for all submissions is noon Monday for Thursday publication.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

MINNESOTA VOCAL GROUP ‘SPOKE’ TO THIS SPECTATOR

I saw the most delightful vocal men’s group Saturday night at the McPherson Opera House. The nine members of Cantus (pronounced “CAN-toose”) hail from the Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minn., area, and they sang all their songs a cappella. The group was comprised of tenors, baritones and bass voices, and if you missed this show, you missed a wonderful evening. The theme of the show was “A Place for Us,” and it was dedicated to all the people who immigrated to America from all over the world and the native peoples who were here when those immigrants arrived. The song choices included Native American chants,

Courtesy of Lydia Lowe

Minneapolis vocal group Cantus performs Saturday night at the McPherson Opera House.

hymns, Appalachian folk songs, songs from Canada and Mexico, a Leonard Bernstein show tune, and even a song written by Dave

Matthews of the Dave Matthews Band. When I say this show had it all, as you can see from the list, it did. I had several favorites: “Hole Waimea,” a traditional Hawaiian tune, really spoke to me. I also enjoyed “Ain’t Got Time to Die” and “Simple Gifts,” which everyone knows. The Dave Matthews song “Gravedigger” also was impressive. (True, this was a unique arrangement, but I could still find Dave Matthews’ influence in the music.) And, of course, who doesn’t like “Somewhere” by Leonard Bernstein? It sums up the entire human experience in this land of immigrants and native peoples. If you didn’t get a chance to see the live performance, you can still check out the group’s music by going to their website at http://www.cantussings.org and also check them out on SoundCloud. Every month they give away a free track of their music. LYDIA LOWE Salina


THE BEE

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 13

LOUIS ARMSTRONG HOUSE MARKS 10 YEARS AS NYC MUSEUM BY ULA ILNYTZKY Associated Press NEW YORK – To mark the 10th anniversary of the Louis Armstrong museum in the modest brick house where he lived for 28 years, curators are unveiling one of the jazz trumpeter’s most unusual artifacts – a plaster mask that had been stored in a cupboard for decades. Armstrong, who documented his career in unusual ways, had the life mask with a painted bronze-patina finish made in the 1950s. David Reese, curator of the Louis Armstrong House Museum, said it reveals creases on his forehead, bags under his eyes and scars on his lips from a lifetime of horn-playing. Museum officials still aren’t sure who made the mask, but a photo of Armstrong proudly holding it alongside an unidentified couple may provide clues. Armstrong must have been pleased with it because there are photos showing it hanging in the house at the top of the stairs. His two-story home in the Corona section of Queens is remarkably understated for the charismatic performer whose improvisational playing style and raspy singing won him fame as far back as the 1920s. The house and its furnishings, including a funky, blue

Frank Franklin II/Associated Press

The Den is on display at the Louis Armstrong House Museum on Oct. 9 in the Queens borough of New York.

wood-lacquered kitchen, are virtually unchanged from when Armstrong lived there with his wife, Lucille, from 1943 to 1971, when he died from a heart attack in his bedroom at age 69. The man known as Satchmo could have lived in a house with “a pool in the shape of a trumpet” but

chose to stay in the workingclass neighborhood, said Michael Cogswell, director of the national and city landmark. “Louis wasn’t treated as a celebrity here,” Cogswell said. He could go to the corner barbershop and “wait his turn in line with the other men from the community.”

Pearl Jam’s ‘Lightning Bolt’ fizzles out BY MATTHEW KEMP Associated Press Pearl Jam, “Lightning Bolt” (Monkeywrench/Republic) Pearl Jam’s “Lightning Bolt” is a rock jukebox set to shuffle. The Seattle survivors’ 10th studio album is erratically paced and skips from punk rock attacks to power ballads to AOR offerings in a schizophrenic playlist. Recorded over two years with longtime collaborator Brendan O’Brien and with four songwriters writing independently, it’s no surprise the LP often feels like a compilation album rather than a fully realized collection. Like its 2009 predecessor “Backspacer,” “Lightning Bolt” kicks off with three stadium-leveling belters. The solid “Getaway” is piggybacked by furiously kinetic first single “Mind Your Manners” – a close cousin to the band’s 1994 track “Spin the Black Circle” – and accusatory scream-a-long “My Father’s Son.” Then comes “Sirens,” a slow-burning torch song built around the importance of love in the face of mortality. This is the most unashamedly sentimental song the band has ever released and stands to become a first dance fixture at weddings across the globe. Equally surprising is state-of-the-nation address “Infallible,” which

REVIEW

somehow manages to ape both the keyboard line from The Dead Weather’s “Treat Me Like Your Mother” and the melodic line from Christina Aguilera’s “Beautiful”. Elsewhere, there’s the Eddie Vedder-penned title track and “Swallowed Whole” – two enjoyable, mid-tempo rockers about the majesty of nature – and the ethereal “Pendulum”, which marries echo-laden, snaking guitar work and a whispered, conspiratorial vocal to stunning effect. Sadly, “Lightning Bolt” loses its spark during its closing quartet, including hackneyed stomper “Let

The Records Play” (lyrics include, “With the volume up, he goes and fills his cup and lets the drummer’s drum take away the pain”) and ballads “Sleeping By Myself,” “Yellow Moon” and “Future Days” – tracks that will provide plenty of opportunities for fans to trek to the bar at their upcoming gigs. Pearl Jam’s recent albums have started with a bang, but ended with a whimper and “Lightning Bolt” is no exception. As Vedder intones on “Getaway,” “Sometimes you find yourself being told to change your ways – there’s no way.”

When Armstrong’s bus would return from a tour, children from the block would help carry his trumpet and suitcases inside the house. “Then Lucille would fix up bowls of ice cream for everybody, and they would watch Westerns together on TV,” Cogswell said. After Lucille died in 1983,

Armstrong’s vast collection of home-recorded tapes, photographs, scrapbooks and other material was donated to Queens College by the Louis Armstrong Educational Foundation. It is the largest publicly held archival collection devoted to a jazz musician in the world. “The house was frozen in

time. It was stuffed,” Cogswell said. “Louis was a packrat.” Queens Councilwoman Julissa Ferreras said the museum has a long-standing history “as being a minimecca for jazz lovers” and that Armstrong’s “spirit and love of music is still very much a part of the community.” Along with the life mask, a 10th anniversary exhibition focuses on Armstrong’s six-week tour of South America in 1957. Armstrong was still reeling over the “Little Rock Nine” school integration crisis in Arkansas weeks earlier, and a photograph shows him in his Buenos Aires hotel room defiantly hanging up on the U.S. ambassador, who had asked him to sing “The StarSpangled Banner” at that evening’s concert. More than 100,000 people have visited the museum since its opening. A new visitor and stateof-the-art multimedia exhibition center with a 72-seat jazz club across the street is scheduled to open in 2016. The massive archive will be moved there, allowing its current exhibition space – the Armstrongs’ basement recreation room – to return to the way it looked originally. “We want to be in our own way the Graceland of New York City,” Cogswell said.

MCCARTNEY STAYS FRESH, FAMILIAR ON ‘NEW’ BY SCOTT BAUER Associated Press Paul McCartney, “New” (Hear Music) For his 16th solo record, and first of original material in six years, Paul McCartney turned to a team of four hot producers to come up with something “New.” The result is both fresh and comfortably familiar. McCartney, a master of the catchy 3-minute pop song, isn’t reinventing himself here as the title may suggest. Rather, he’s once again compiling an enjoyable 45 minutes or so of toe-tapping pop songs that are sure to please his longtime fans while doing little to break much truly “new” ground. Just try listening to “On My Way to Work” or “Queenie Eye” without bobbing your head along to the beat. Really, love him or hate him, few can pump out these types of ditties quite like McCartney. Still, he’s no Bob Dylan. There are flirtations with material with some gravitas here, but it’s just

REVIEW

that – a flirtation. McCartney may toy with addressing in song whatever demons he may have, but he certainly doesn’t linger. That said, the mere fact that McCartney is able to come up with something that isn’t a simple retread of his past successes must be considered a success – especially when that would be the easy way out, and one that he’s taken many times over his storied career. Much of the credit for

the success of “New” goes to McCartney’s four producers – especially Paul Epworth (Adele) and Mark Ronson (Amy Winehouse). The other two, Giles Martin and Ethan Johns, are the sons of famous Beatles producers George Martin and Glyn Johns. While the multi-producer approach could have resulted in a hot mess, the end result is surprisingly cohesive, modern-sounding and, most of all, fun to listen to.

BEE A CONTRIBUTOR A selection of news, reviews, photos and video submitted by the public will be chosen for publication in The Bee each week. For news and reviews, email beehive@hutchnews.com or visit www.hutchbee.com and click on “Post your news & reviews.” Categories include movies, music, art, theater, food, books and other activities. To submit photos and video, email us, click on “Post your photos” on The Bee website or go to “The Beehive” Facebook page and click on the photo/video button. Deadline for all submissions is noon Monday for Thursday publication.


PAGE 14 HUTCHBEE.COM Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED 120

Carriage Crossing Restaurant is taking applications for the following positions: Waitstaff - Evenings - full or part time. $2.35 plus tips

Positions Wanted

105

Healthcare needed urgently for a 64yr old man ,no qualification required, We offer ($590 per week). please contact to schedule interview ellenramiregmail.com

Help Wanted

120

6 Car Dealers in Western KS are looking for GM’s, Service, Parts & Sales Mngrs & Sales Staff. Email resume to jobs@buylewis.com 401K, Health, Disability, Life, Vacation & Sick Leave. All employment advertisements in this newspaper are subject to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, which makes it illegal to advertise “indicating any preference, limitation, specification, or discrimination, based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin,” except where such is a bona fide occupational qualification for employment. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Amendments, effective March 12, 1969, added ‘’handicap’’ and ‘’familial’’ status to discrimination categories. Business office assistsnt Friendly, high tech dental practice in search of new business assistsnt. The ideal candidate will be intelligent, friendly, self motivated and enjoy dealing with people. Experience in the dental/medical field helpful, but not necessary. Send resumes to: BOX 70B c/o The Hutchinson News P.O. Box 190 Hutchinson, Ks 67504

Host - Evenings – part time. $7.25 start Benefits include: Competitive pay rate, set schedule, one week paid vacation, free meals, closed on Sunday. Apply in person at Carriage Crossing Restaurant in Yoder, KS K-96 & Yoder Rd. or online at http://ccr.yoderkansas.com E.O.E. Construction Company Needing Person to preform maintenance on cranes & general construction equipment, also preform general construction duties. Must have mechanical skill. Driver license needed, Please call 620-663-4812 DRIVERS WANTED for the Hutchinson and Lyons area for Mid-America Redi-Mix, Inc. Temporary, part time and full time. Retirees, college students, and others. Driving will be all local. Must have current CDL and Medical Card. Apply in Person at: 2510 West Blanchard in South Hutch or Call: 620-663-1559. Eck Electric is Hiring $15 -$25 per hour plus benefits. DOE. Service/Install technician. Must have experience in HVAC, plumbing, or electrical work in homes and/or commercial buildings. Full time position with 401k, company cell phone, paid vacation/sick time, and paid heath/dental insurance. Send resume to eckelectric25@yahoo.com apply in person at 1030 East Hwy 54, Kingman, KS, or call 620-491-0065.

Help Wanted 120 EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES DIRECTOR Stafford County Board of Commissioners is accepting applications for an Emergency Medical Services Director. This position will require a motivated individual with good personnel, computer and managerial skills. Qualified applicants should possess a Kansas or National Paramedic certification and a working knowledge of incident command or be willing to be trained in this discipline. Applicant must be certified as a Kansas EMS Training Officer or Instructor Coordinator, or be willing to attain the certification within the first year of employment. Applicant must be willing to reside in Stafford County. Salary is commensurate with experience and education. Stafford County offers an excellent fringe benefit package. The job description and application are available at the Stafford County Clerk’s Office, 209 N. Broadway, St. John, Kansas, (620) 549-3509. Applications will be accepted until position is filled. Stafford County is an Equal Opportunity Employer. First United Methodist Church of Hutchinson has an immediate opening for the part time position of Director of Music Ministry, Wednesday evening and Sunday morning availability is required. You may request a complete job description & application by emailing the church office at fumhutch@sbcglobal.net. Heavy Equipment Mechanics. Ag Service Managers & Technicians. No contact to current employer. 620-272-2031 I AM looking for a highly motivated individual with good communication skills. He/She must be a self-starter with

of my insurance business.

Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Laws: Prohibit employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Also employment discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities.

Check Into Cash

No Shortage of work ASE Certified Technician Up to $5,000.00 sign on/ relocation bonus. Earnings based on knowledge, productivity, efficiency & attitude. Contact Jim at 1-800-794-4675 or gmmessages@deedove.com

Now hiring for Overnights at McDonald’s South Hutchinson. Wages $8.50-$10.50 per hour. Availability 9pm-7am. Apply at the restaurant or on-line at McState.com

OPPORTUNITIES: ŸPainting/Remodeling Ÿ Maintenance/Repairs Must have transportation. Rane Management 14 East 2nd, Hutchinson pnpnpnpnp Skaet’s Steak Shop 2300 N. Main, Hutchinson Immediate Opening Part- time Cashiers/ Back-up Weekends included Accepting Applications Anytime! No Phone Calls Please! npnpnpnp Packers Sanitation Services, Inc., a contract cleaner of food processing facilities is currently seeking applicants for 3rd (11PM-6AM) shift sanitation at our South Hutchinson, KS location. Position starting pay is $8.50 per hour. Company benefits paid vacations & holidays. Group health/dental/vision/life insurance & 401(k) available. You can apply in person at 400 N. Main St. South Hutchinson, Kansas 67505 or call Jennifer 620-665-6888.

a positive attitude. First year income $35k plus, with unlimited upward mobility. You will be trained in all areas

Construction Company Needing Person to preform maintenance on cranes & general construction equipment, also preform general construction duties. Must have mechanical skill. Driver license needed, Please call 620-663-4812

Help Wanted 120 Looking for Customer Service Representative / Assistant Manager full time. Applicants apply in person from 10:00AM to 5:00PM at 1918 East 17th, Hutchinson, Kansas 67501.

620-664-4628 or 620-665-1490 for an interview.

Jim’s Painting Service seeking an experienced PAINTER. References required. 620-694-9107 or 620-465-2417

Prairie Dunes Country Club is looking for a Dining Service Manager. Applicants must be 21years minimum for alcohol service requirements. 2-3 years of managing service staff experience is preferred. Salary range of $30,000-$40,000/yr depending upon experience and ability. Apply in person, Tuesday thru Friday 9am-4pm. 4812 East 30th Hutchinson. No phone calls please. Club is closed on Mondays.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013 Help Wanted 120 PRAIRIE DUNES COUNTRY CLUB Servers (18yrs min) Bev Cart (21yrs min) Cooks Experience preferred. Flexible hours and nights and weekends. Apply in person, Tuesday – Friday 9am-4pm. 4812 East 30th Hutchinson. No phone calls Closed on Mondays. Prairie Independent Living Resource Center, Inc. (PILR) is accepting applications for 2 part-time positions based in the Hutchinson office. The Independent Living Specialist will assist people with disabilities in achieving their goals for independence including teaching daily living skills, assisting with completing paperwork, locating housing, advocacy, peer support etc. The Employment Specialist assists people with disabilities to locate and maintain competitive employment and works closely with vocational rehabilitation counselors and employers. Both applicants must possess excellent verbal and written communication skills, competent in the use of Microsoft Office, have knowledge of community resources and employers, able to keep accurate documentation, data entry, be able to travel in Reno and surrounding counties and experience

Help Wanted

120

SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME? ¿¿¿¿¿¿ Pay Off Those Extra Bills

DELIVERY ROUTES AVAILABLE Please contact Monica at mmosqueda@hutchnews.co m or call 694-5700 ext. 126 for the following areas: Canton, Galva City & Motor routes, & McPherson. ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® Contact Shawn at smears@hutchnews.com or call 620-694-5700 ext. 122 for the following areas: ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® Contact Artie Randalls at arandalls@hutchnews.com or call 694-5700 ext. 133 for the following areas: Coldwater, Fowler, Liberal, Minneola, ®®®®®®®® Contact Pam at pmiller@hutchnews.com or call 694-5700 ext. 132 for the following areas: Leoti & Spearville ®®®®®®®® Contact Brian at bpearson@hutchnews.com or call 694-5700 ext. 121 for the following areas: Medicine Lodge & Nickerson route We Welcome route inquiries in all areas! For more information or to Subscribe to...

working with people with disabilities. Please email resumes to cowens@pilr.org or mail to Christine Owens 17 S. Main St. Hutchinson, KS 67501. PILR is an equal employment opportunity employer. People with disabilities are encouraged to apply.

RAMADA INN POSITIONS AVAILABLE BANQUET SERVER BANQUET SET UP ROOM ATTENDENTS Apply in person at 1400 N. Lorraine Hutchinson Ks. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

THE BOLDER THE BETTER! Use our bold options to bring more attention to your classified ad. Ask Your Classified Advisor for details.

694-5704 800-766-5704 White Lightning Pipe Testing is looking for a worker to work on a pipe testing truck. Must be able to get up early in the morning and requires heavy lifting. Call 620-960-2646

The SEK Education Service Center - Greenbush is accepting applications for an Electrical Trades Teacher for the education program located at the Hutchinson Correctional Facility. The teacher will be responsible for teaching classes relating to the Kansas WorkReady certification. Qualified applicants must have 2,000 hours experience as a licensed electrician. A current Kansas teaching license with a technical education endorsement and a NCCER Instructor endorsement is preferred. Prior experience in high/alternative/technical school teaching, behavior management, data analysis, and computer technology preferred, but not required. The position is full-time, 188 days annually. Position approximate start date is immediate. Open until filled. EOE TO APPLY, GO TO: http://greenbush.school recruiter.net

CALL: 620-694-5700 or 1-800-766-3311

“Serving the Better Part of Kansas” The McPherson Police Department is now accepting applications for the position of Police Patrol Officer. The applicants must be at least 21 years of age, have a High School diploma or GED, valid & current Kansas driver’s license, and be able to successfully pass the following tests: 1.Written test 2.Physical agility test 3.Background investigation 4.Oral interviews 5.Psychological examination 6.Polygraph examination 7.Drug screen and medical examination 8.Correctable vision to 20/20. To fill out application go to www.hrepartners.com. Certified law enforcement applicants must not have any Brady/Giglio material in background to be eligible for hiring. Applications accepted thru October 21, 2013. We are an equal opportunity employer. EOE

Drivers

123

Class A CDL Drivers Earn as much as $45-50,000/year + Full benefits! Home daily. 888-476-7359. www.neatruck.com/ drivers/ksco

Class A Owner Operators Home Daily, All Miles Paid + fuel @ 45+ c/mile on fuel card, paid every week. 888-391-0339 www.neatruck.com/ drivers/ksoo

Owner Operator Wanted In & out freight into Central KS area. Home weekly, Reefer experience helpful, Your trailer or ours. (580) 628-4400


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013 Drivers 123 Looking for a CDL Driver. Local Deliveries, home every night, good benefits and competitive pay. If interested e-mail resume to craigz@bzbeeinc.com<mailto:c raigz@bzbeeinc.com>, or mail to Calm Creek Carriers PO Box 556 Lyons KS 67554. Questions please call 620-257-2265. Food Services/ Restaurants 125 HUTCHINSON TOWN CLUB Now hiring for Part-time Wait Staff/ Bartender: Good pay and benefits. Apply in person, 200 East Sherman 620-662-0209.

Server/Waitstaff Needed-Day Time Hours. Saturdays required. Previous Experience Required. NO Phone Calls Apply in Person at 25 N Main Hutchinson, KS

Sales Help

130

HTMC, TELEPHONE Sales Representatives needed. Paid training, to work from our Hutchinson office. $8-$15/hr possible. Stop by 1803 N. Landon, Hutchinson. 620-663-7676

Medical Help

140

Director of Clinical Services Mcpherson Hospital, managed by Via Christi Health Requirements: — Master’s Degree — Three years manage perience & two

ment ex-

years acute care

experience Offers competitive benefits For job description and to apply, go to

viachristi.org/external-applicants

CLASSIFIED

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 15


PAGE 16 HUTCHBEE.COM Businesses for Sale 210 Automotive Truck Repair Shop. Fowler, Ks. 620-253-1109

CLASSIFIED

Coming Events

370

Food

FLEA MARKET

KS Coliseum-Wichita October 20 & November 17 Fairgrounds-Hutch November 3 & December 1 9am–4pm. 620-663-5626 midamericafleamarkets.com

420

Michigan Apples Variety of choices. Frozen fruits available, Ropps 620-669-9603

POLKS IN MEDORA TASTY PEACHES apples, plums, pears, apple cider slushes, gourmet chocolates, & alot more Open 1-7 everyday 620-543-6628

Home Furnishings 460 Blue sofa/hide a bed, made in the USA, excellent condition, $250, 620-960-3292

Special Notices

Appliances

350

Anyone who witnessed the accident at 23rd & Lorraine on 9-3-2013 around 11:30, or the individual who talked to both parties involved, please call 620-960-3022

Auto Repair/Service QUALITY BODY SHOP Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com Bars/Restaurants Polo Bar & Grill 25 East 30th Hutchinson, KS 620-259-4313

Fireplace/Chimneys Chimney Sweeps & WEB Firewood Service. Seasoned Oak. Call 620-663-0733.

Handyman Handyman: Roofing, Concrete work, Sheet rock, Textures, Carpet, Vinyl Flooring, painting, windows, doors & siding. Privacy fence & Cleanup. We finish basements. No job too Small or big 20 Years Experience. Call 620-960-8250

Food

420

Baskets & Baskets Of ¬ JONATHAN ¬ Red & Golden Delicious Polk’s in Medora

Home Improvement

461

REFRIGERATORS; Gas & Electric Ranges; Washer & Dryers; Freezers; 1212 W. 4th. 663-3195 Washer, $125, Dryer $85, Range, $100, Refrigerator, $119. 620-662-8648.

Lawn Care

L.R.S. Construction LLC, Local Contractor, Concrete all types done, basements, foundations, storm shelters, fences all types, metal buildings, roofs, shingles, siding & landscaping, Blow in insulation & spray foam insulation, Barns etc. ¬Everything from A to Z¬ «Quality Work Done« «Cheaper Than Most!« «Free Estimates!« Nobody beats our prices! Guaranteed! Licensed - Insured - Experienced. Lots of References! 620-204-0365 or 620-204-8456

Perfect Time To Overseed, Power Rake. Stump Grinding, Tree Trimming/Clean-up, Reasonable Rates on Skid Steer Work & Sprinkler Systems FREE ESTIMATES QUALITY LAWN CARE 620-727-5777

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

Appliances 461 WE BUY USED appliances. Call 620-665-8951. Lawn & Garden

Perfect Time To Overseed, Power Rake. Stump Grinding, Tree Trimming/Clean-up, Reasonable Rates on Skid Steer Work & Sprinkler Systems FREE ESTIMATES QUALITY LAWN CARE 620-727-5777

PAYING CASH For vehicles, running or not, batteries & scrapmetal,

620-727-4203

Plumbing PREFERRED PLUMBING 620-960-1448 Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com

Interior/Exterior Free estimates Residential/Commercial

Remodeling Penner Remodeling

Interior/Exterior

620-664-7990 or 662-6957

SPANGLER CUSTOM BUILDING & REMODELING Help with all your projects. FREE Estimates.

Over 30 years of

Ken Spangler, 663-7890

Experience 620-694-9107 or 465-2417

Roofing Lawn Care

Pest Control

KH MOWING Residential or Commercial

Free Es-

timates Call 620-664-7541.

ADVANCE TERMITE & PEST CONTROL Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com

SILAS IS

L.R.S. Construction LLC. Local Contractor ROOFING: Metal, Shingles or Coatings etc! Siding, Windows, Doors, Facia or Sofit wraps. Blow in insulation & Spray Foam insulation! ¬Everything from A to Z!¬ ¬Quality Work Done!¬ ¬ Cheaper than most!¬ Nobody beats our prices Guaranteed! Will work with most insurance companies, Licensed, Insured & Experienced. Many references. Save money - Call now! We have Crews Ready to Work! 620-204-0365 or 620-204-8456

480

ÞÞÞÞÞÞÞÞ

autos, trucks, and tractors. in any condition. Best Prices Paid!! 620-665-4040

Automotive Shop Equipment: Tire machine, wheel balancer, air compressor, brake lathe, high pressure washer, 2 post lift, 4 post lift. Misc other shop tools & equipment. 620-253-1109

The Hutchinson News Online Edition

Delivering Your Story. Today.

Schools/Education EARLY EDUCATION CENTER Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com Services

Arlan Penner

Jim’s Painting Service

Ž Ž Ž Ž Ž

Merchandise

480

Remodeling Since 1979.

Painting/Papering

480

Buying and Hauling running or not

465

Lawn mower Sales/Repair. Riders/Push & Tillers. Pickup & delivery. 7103 Back Acres Rd 620-960-8262

Merchandise

Merchandise

AMERICAN RED CROSS Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com BIG BROTHERS & BIG SISTERS Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA - CAMP KANZA Check us out at hutchmarketplace.com ELMDALE WELLNESS CENTER Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com EMERGENCY ENERGY FUND Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com FIRST CALL FOR HELP Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com FOOD BANK OF RENO COUNTY Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com GIRL SCOUT WHEATBELT COUNCIL Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com HEALTHY FAMILIES Hutchinson Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com INTERFAITH HOUSING SERVICES, INC. Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com KANSAS LEGAL SERVICES Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com

Classified Dept. Monday thru Friday 8:00am to 5:00pm

CLOSED Saturday & Sunday Tuesday through Saturday’s Deadline for Classified ads, 3:30pm the day before. Sunday’s and Mondays Deadline for Classified ads, 4:30pm, Friday Call 1-800-766-5704 or 620-694-5704 to place your ad. ÞÞÞÞÞÞÞÞ

Services MEALS ON WHEELS Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com NEW BEGINNINGS, INC Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com SALVATION ARMY Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com SEXUAL ASSAULT & DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com SIGN SOURCE Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com UNITED WAY Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com YMCA Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com

To Place An Ad in the Service Directory Call: 620-694-5704 or Toll Free 800-766 5704


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013 Merchandise

480

nnnnnnnn

SELL YOUR STUFF FOR FREE ON...

The New On-Line Classified Site! It’s Fast, It’s Easy & It’s Convenient! All FREE ads must be placed on-line at hutchads.com or there will be a $5 setup fee. No business accounts. Private Party Only.

nnnnnnnn Wanted To Buy

481

CLASSIFIED

Feed/Seed 640 Neufeldt Seed Farms •Everest •1863 •Southwind •T158 •Seed Treating Available 620-747-0404 or 620-728-8337 Seed Wheat, 1863, $10 a bushel & Everest $12 a bushel, treating available, Newton, KS, 316-990-6144

Livestock

650

Trailers 720 Equipment, Utility, & Enclosed Trailers of different sizes. Doolitle-made in Missouri, Look at 2021 E. 4th or call 663-6150 for information RVs/Campers

740

2011 Tracer Ultra Lite by Prime Time, Model 195 Micro, 22’ self contained, never used, many extras, mini van towable, 620-669-9350

Paying $28 per acre for 160 acre minimum, grass pasture w/good fence & water, 620-285-5323

Game Leases

690

I pay $10 - $100 for Catalytic Converters, junk starters, alternators & transmissions. 316-210-6027

SEE OUR CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE AT www.hutchnews.com

Mobile Homes

810

1971 Mobile Home, 12’x50’, Central H/A, New Roof. To Be Moved, 620-546-3929

FREE Pets

Apartments - Furn. 820

510

Free Healthy Happy Kittens, Call Brenda 620-727-2926

Domestic Auto

700

Ž Ž Ž Ž Ž

SILAS IS

Buying and Hauling running or not autos, trucks, and tractors. in any condition. Best Prices Paid!! 620-665-4040

2005 Chevy Monte Carlo, Maroon, V6, 28K Actual, Alloy wheels, Spoiler, $8,450. 316-640-3921

Farm Equipment

620

Ž Ž Ž Ž Ž

SILAS IS

Buying and Hauling running or not autos, trucks, and

2007 Chrysler 300C Hemi, Loaded with only 80,000 Miles, Metallic Dark Blue with Gray leather interior, Good Tires, Great condition, Runs great $13,000 OBO Call 620-727-5525 or 620-727-1861 for more details

tractors. in any condition. Best Prices Paid!! 620-665-4040

Farm Services

630

Build pasture fences, clear pastures, custom brush mowing, Veteran Owned & Operated, Fischer Bobcat Service, 620-770-9280 ENSZ Harvesting, All fall crops wanted. JD Equipment. 620-960-3863 or 712-370-1348 FALL HARVESTING Milo & Soybeans, Inman, KS, Cell #620-694-9610 or Home #620-489-6450 Harley’s Fencing Pasture Clearing and Fencing Supplies, YODER FENCE 620-465-3446

Feed/Seed

640

CERTIFIED & REGISTERED: Everest, SY Southwind, Seed Treating Available, Jacques Farms, Hutchinson, KS 620-727-1093, 620-960-3270, 620-694-9563 Certified Wheat WBCedar, SYSouthwind, 1863 & Everest Lyons 620-562-7783 CERTIFIED: CJ, Jackpot, TAM111, SY Southwind, Larned, Everest, Fuller, Denali, Treating Available, Seeman Farms, Larned, KS 620-285-5288, 620-285-1357, 620-285-3471

Certified: Duster, Everest, Jagger, Southwind, Overley. James HarrisLangdon 620-596-2363

2007 Gran Prix, 86K, Automatic, V6, runs & drives great, some hail damage, $4500. 620-200-5399, Dealer 2011 VW Jetta, 4dr, 2.5L, 5 cylinder, 38k, leather seats, good gas mileage, very good condition, $8,900 620-532-6450 PAYING CASH For vehicles, running or not, batteries & scrapmetal,

620-727-4203

Vans

708

2005 Honda Odyssey EX-L, heated leather seats, new tires, sunroof, auto doors, well maintained $7,800 OBO, 620-728-4069

SUVs

709

2008 VW Toureg, all wheel drive, excellent condition, NADA $18,050, sell for $16,950 620-662-2346

Domestic Trucks

710

2007 Chevy Classic1500, ext. cab, V8 5.3L, AA wheels, running boards, toolbox, extra wheels/snow tires, 60K, very clean. 20 MPG, $16,700. 620-727-2313

Trailers

720

5’ x 10’, ATV’s, 16 ‘ Utility, 18’ Car hauler, 20’ 7K Car hauler, 25’ 7K and 25’ Dually tandem & Enclosed. FTS Trailer Sales 124 N. Main, South Hutch 620-474-1001

ALL RENTAL or real estate property advertisements in this newspaper are subject to The Federal Housing Act of 1968, as amended, which makes it illegal to advertise any ‘’preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin, or an intention to make any discrimination.’’ This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Amendments, effective March 12, 1989, added ‘handicap’ and ‘familial’ status to discrimination categories.

THE BOLDER THE BETTER! Use our bold options to bring more attention to your classified ad. Ask Your Classified Advisor for details.

694-5704 800-766-5704 Apartments - Unfurn. 821 1 bedroom, upstairs, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, & disposal, washer /dryer on site, water & trash paid, $350 month plus deposit , one year lease, see at 815 N Adams for application call 620-662-5238 1410 N. Washington, Apt 3 2 bedroom , washer/dryer hook-ups, $425/$425. 620-664-5358 or 200-7785 Apartment for Rent 10 W. Ave A. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Living Room, Kitchen. Upstairs Apartment. $450/month. Call 662-7152. EXTRA NICE 4-PLEX 2 BEDROOMS W/D HOOK-UPS NEW CARPET, D/W, STOVE & FRIDGE. CARPORTS AVAILABLE $550 & $600 WATER & TRASH PAID 620-200-2311 ROYAL APARTMENTS One half month free rent with 12 month lease. One and two bedrooms available. Remodeled, Clean, New Appliances, Spacious. LEASE-DEPOSITNO PETS

¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬ Pool, Storm Shelter Balcony. 326 East 1st, Suite D 669-5008, After Hours669-7777/ 669-7070

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 17

Apartments - Unfurn. 821 STUDIO, 1 & 2 BEDROOMS $350 TO $450 YOU PAY ELECTRIC 401 E AVE A, HUTCH 620-200-2311

t618 E Ave A, 2 bedrooms, $400, t203 E Ave A, 1 bedroom $360, NO PETS 620-663-8906

Homes - Unfurn. 831 41 Halsey, 2 bedrooms, garage, central heat/ac, $500 month; 812 Gene St., 3 bedrooms, 2 car garage, central heat/ac, &600 month. Call Jenny 620-665-1007 or 620-662-0583

Homes - Unfurn. 831 518 S. Maple, 2 bedroom, storage shed, central heat/air, $465/400. 620-474-0369 601 W Washington, Nickerson, 3 bedroom, garage, central heat/air, $500/500, 620-474-0745

314 W 7th, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, clean, $475/475, NO Pets, 620-386-0624

807 W 11th, 1 bedroom, No Pets, $345/200, Limit 2 620-663-9067

534 E 1st, large 1 bedroom, detached 1 car garage, water paid, NO Pets, $320/300, 620-474-0369

325 W 6th, Very nice, 4 bedrooms, 1 bath, central h/a, fireplace, fenced yard, $685, 664-2790

1002(A) E. 23rd, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, basement, no pets, $700/$700. 620-960-3624

405 Crystal, 3 bedroom, central heat/air, $525/525, 620-474-0745

818 E 7th, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, hardwood floors washer/dryer hook-ups, central heat/air, garage, fenced yard, $585/585 620-662-2579 or 560-2514

Duplexes

822

1612 W 4th, House H, 3 bedroom, central h/a, water paid, $475/475, 620-474-0745


PAGE 18 HUTCHBEE.COM

CLASSIFIED

Homes - Unfurn. 831 BUHLER: 311 S Wall, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, basement, $500/$500 Call 620-664-7221

Homes - Unfurn. 831 One bedroom house, single garage, $325 monthly, $300 deposit, 620-931-0599

Clean 2 bedroom, central air, $475. No Pets. 1521A West 4th. 620-665-0099 / 727-5306

6,000sq.ft. Warehouse with office and overhead doors. $600/month. 620-664-1916

Haven: Large Extra nice 3 bedroom, 1 bath, kitchen with dishwasher & oak cabinets, utility room with washer/dryer hookup & storage, central heat/air, Pergo tile & carpet flooring, small basement, large deck, single car garage with workshop, $775/775. 620-465-7748 www.backrentals.com Landmark Management No Pets, u55 Halsey, 3 bedroom, $650/650, available 11-1, u823 E 4th Ave, 2 bedroom, patio, family room, $550/550, available 11-1, For more information call 620-663-7676 or 620-708-0245

Storage for Rent

900 725 E Sherman, Duplex with 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, upper unit is also 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, Newly renovated, $65,000, 620-899-4410

851

Shop, Warehouse, 40x100, 309-S-Washington $450.00 month 620-6639539 ext 209

Offices For Rent

Homes

Homes

900

861

2 small office spaces, $200 or $300 a month, 620-694-9036 112 N Poplar, 1100 Sq. Ft., water & trash paid, $450 mon., Call R.E.I.B, Inc @ 662-0583 Office and shop. For rent or for sale, 3106 S Broadacres Rd. 620-921-5586

Profession office space For Rent, 1200 sq ft, Call 620-669-8000

517 W 16th, Hutchinson, 2 bedroom, 1bath, Very nice single family property that is totally move-in ready. There are 2 nice sized bedrooms, partial basement, large updated bathroom and an oversized 2 car garage. Newer paint, carpet, and roof. $71,500. 620-960-3295 Land Contract, 306 W 13th, Remodeled, 2 bedroom, Central Air, $2000 down, $400 monthly, 620-474-4247

Fair Housing Act Sale and Rental of Housing: No one may take any of the following actions based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status or handicap.

Sylvia, KS, 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath. Owner will finance, with $1000 down and $400 month for only 180 months, A GREAT FIXER-UPPER call 620-532-1093

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

Homes

900

Investment Property 960

uvuvuvuvu

ADD PIZZAZZ TO YOUR CLASSIFIED AD! Use Our Ding Bat Options: ¬(l♥♣♦♠✿☛➙

(many more to choose from) Ask your Classified Advisor for details. 694-5704 800-766-5704 uvuvuvuvu

Lots/Tracts

931

Cimarron, Kansas Own one of only four authentic landmarks from Dodge City’s Old West history, the Cimarron Hotel, established in 1886 as The New West Hotel. Where the cowboys went to get the heck out of Dodge. $385,000 www.oldwestproperty.com. Brent at

614-827-1181.

sylvia ks If you are paying high lot rent in a park you can own my 140ftx50ft lot, mobile homes ok less than 30min from Hutchinson owner will finance with zero down and zero interest only 100 mo.x36mos 620-532-1093 or www.feemseth@yahoo.com

Cabins/Resorts

970

Cozy cabin at Kanopolis. Fully furnished, 2 bedroom with porch & deck that can be used year round. 2 garages. 620-585-2620


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

Garage Sales 410 440 Kisiwa Village Road: Sat, Oct.19th - 8-12 Roll top desk, buffet, end tables, lamps, lots of miscellaneous. 1016 East 12th: Friday & Saturday, 7am-? Pipe threader, big roll top desk, big pipe wrenches, electric drill, 2-ladders, office chair, toys, 5 gal buckets with lids. 1017 E. 23rd: Hutchinson Friday, Oct. 18 (5 - 7 pm); Saturday, Oct. 19 (7 - ?) GARAGE SALE Lots of clothes, miscellaneous, antiques

Garage Sales

410

1704 A Coventry Ct.: Saturday 7am-1pm, New electric stove, leather sofa, recliners, end tables, kitchen stuff, boys bike, treadmill, rugs, bedding, lots of misc

CLASSIFIED

Garage Sales

410

RAIN OR SHINE 1101 West 4th: Saturday 7am-? Multi Family Yard Sale COLLECTABLES: Beanie Babies, Dolls and Stuffed Animals, Record Albums 5 for $1

3101 Northwestern: Saturday 8am-2pm, Downsizing-Lots, Sunbeam mix master with 3 bowls, pillows, bedspreads, golf clubs and wet dry vac.

ALSO: Household items, TV’s, Bedding, Fishing Equipment and Much More. GOOD STUFF GREAT PRICES. DON’T MISS THIS ONE

HUTCHBEE.COM PAGE 19


PAGE 20 HUTCHBEE.COM

CLASSIFIED

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.