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JAMES “JIM” WATERS, 77, of Cumberland (Svcs. 8/29/18)

Obituaries

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

JAMES “JIM” WATERS, 77, of Cumberland died Saturday, Aug. 25th on his farm south of his home. Funeral services for JIM WATERS will be held 10:30-a.m. Wed., Aug. 29th, at the Saint Timothy Catholic Church south of Cumberland. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

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Visitation at the funeral home is from 5:30-until 8-p.m. Tue., Aug. 28th with a Rosary at 5-p.m.

Memorials may be directed to the family.

Burial will be in St. Timothy’s Catholic Cemetery.

JAMES “JIM” WATERS is survived by:

Wife:  Barbara Waters of Cumberland.

Sons:  Donnie (Robin) Waters of Cumberland; Larry (Jo) Waters of Griswold, and Gary (Lori) Waters of Altoona.

Daughters:  Diane (Scott) Brook of Neola and Deb Misner of Griswold.

Brothers:  Frank (Sheryl) Waters of Cumberland; Ben (Tammy) Waters of Marne.

Sisters:  Eleanor Hopkins of Underwood; Marj Akers of Des Moines; Rita Waters of Washington, DC; Theresa (Sam) Voss of Chariton; Alice (Mike) Greise of Omaha; Patty (Leroy) Grieshaber of Cumberland, and Linda (Lance) Coles of Ankeny.

Sister-in-Law:  Chick Waters of Atlantic.

17 grandchildren

15 great-grandchildren.

KENNETH O. WESTER, 79, of Atlantic (Svcs. 8/30/18)

Obituaries

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

KENNETH O. WESTER, 79, of Atlantic, died Sunday, Aug. 26th, at the Allen Place, in Atlantic. Funeral services for KENNETH WESTER will be held 11-a.m. Thursday, Aug. 30th, at the Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home, in Atlantic.

Visitation with the family is from 5-until 7-p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 29th, at the funeral home.

Burial will be in the Layton Township Cemetery, in Walnut.

Memorials may be directed to the Shriners.

KENNETH WESTER is survived by:

His nieces: Linda (Brett) Fay, of Lewis, and Brenda (Derald “Bucky” Andersen) Buboltz, of Atlantic.

His sister-in-law: Gladys Thomas, of Atlantic.

LELAND R. WEBER, 86, of Panora (& formerly of Audubon) – Svcs. 8/30/18

Obituaries

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

LELAND R. WEBER, 86, of Panora (& formerly of Audubon), died Saturday, Aug. 25th, at the New Homestead in Guthrie Center. Funeral services for LELAND WEBER will be held 10:30-a.m. Thursday, Aug. 30th, at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church, in Audubon. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

Family visitation at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church will take place from 5-untol 7-p.m., Wednesday.

Burial will be in the Maple Grove Cemetery in Audubon.

LELAND WEBER is survived by:

His wife – Janet Weber, of Panora.

His daughter – Nanette (Lloyd) Schmidt, of Johnston.

His sons – Kent (Shirley) Weber, of Marne; Craig (Carol) Weber, of Elk Horn (IA), and Bradley (Ronda) Weber, of Audubon.

His brother – Dean Weber, of Audubon.

8 grandchildren, 4 great-great grandchildren, his sisters-in-law, other relatives and many friends.

DREW BOGAR, 29, of Audubon (Svcs. 8/29/18)

Obituaries

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DREW BOGAR, 29, of Audubon, died Aug. 22nd at his home in Audubon. Funeral services for DREW BOGAR will be held 2-p.m. Wed., Aug. 29th, at the Audubon Church of Christ. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home. The family visitation is at the Audubon Church of Christ, Wednesday, from Noon until the time of service at 2-p.m.

Burial will be held at a later date.

DREW BOGAR is survived by:

His son – Aiden Elias Brown, of Schaller.

His parents – Tim (Terri) Weilenman, of Audubon.

His sisters – Melody (Shaun) Weilenman, of Kimballton, and Tara (& partner Cheyenne) Bogar, of Council Bluffs.

His grandmother – Linda Brown, of Omaha.

other relatives, and many friends.

Red Oak man arrested on assault charge, Sunday night

News

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Police in Red Oak arrested a local man, Sunday night, on an assault charge. 20-year old Dawson Allen Squires, of Red Oak, was taken into custody at around 8:25-p.m., for Simple Assault. Squires was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $300 bond.

Skyscan Forecast and weather stats for Atlantic 8/27/18

Weather

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Today: Isolated showers & thunderstorms ending this morning; Becoming partly cloudy, warm & humid. High around 91. Winds south at 10-20 mph.

Tonight: Partly cloudy to cloudy w/scattered shwrs & tstrms. Low 74. S @ 5-10.

Tomorrow: Mo. cloud w/scattered showers & tstrms. High around 80. N @ 5-10.

Wednesday: P/Cldy. High 78.

Thursday: P/Cldy w/showers & tstrms possible. High around 80.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 85. Our Low this morning, 71. We received .32″ rain at the KJAN studios yesterday into early this morning. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 81 and the Low was 55. The All-Time Record High on this date in Atlantic, was 101, in 1913, 1936, and 1937. The Record Low was 36 in 1906.

1 teen dead, 2 adults injured in northern IA crash, Sunday

News

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A crash between two SUV’s Sunday afternoon in northern Iowa’s Humboldt County, left a teenager dead and two adults injured. All three were from neighboring Kossuth County. The Iowa State Patrol reports a 2008 Pontiac Torrent driven by 16-year old Olivia Bachman, of Whitemore, was traveling west on Humboldt County Road C-54 at around 4:50-p.m., Sunday, when she failed to stop at the intersection with County Road P-66, south of Thor.

Her SUV collided at the intersection with a northbound 2010 Toyota Highlander, driven by 64-year old Paul Doster, of Algona. Both vehicles entered the northwest corner of the intersection, where the Pontiac struck a utility pole and rolled onto its top. The Toyota came to rest in the ditch.

Bachman, who was wearing her seat belt, died at the scene. Doster, and his passenger, 63-year old Susan Doster, of Algona, both of whom were wearing seat belts, were transported to separate hospitals. Paul Doster was taken to the Humboldt Hospital by Humboldt Ambulance, while Susan Doster was flown by Mercy Air Ambulance to the Mayo Hospital, in Rochester, MN.

Bachman had just begun her Junior year at Algona High School. In an email sent to parents late Sunday night the school says that grief counselors will be on hand over the next few days to assist students in any way needed.

Assisting the State Patrol at the scene, was fire crews from Humboldt, Renwick and Thor, and the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Department.

 

Midwest Sports Headlines: 8/27/18

Sports

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

DENVER (AP) — Matt Carpenter tied a St. Louis record with four doubles, pitcher Austin Gomber had a two-run infield single in a six-run first inning and the Cardinals routed the Colorado Rockies 12-3. Carpenter matched a franchise mark that Joe “Ducky” Medwick set on Aug. 4, 1937.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jason Kipnis hit an inside-the-park homer and finished with four RBIs, Edwin Encarnacion added a two-run shot and Cleveland beat Kansas City 12-5. Shane Bieber only went 5 1/3 innings, but he was good enough to help the Indians snap a four-game skid. The Royals got homers from Whit Merrifield, Salvador Perez and Lucas Duda.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — True freshman Adrian Martinez has been named Nebraska’s starting quarterback for the opener against Akron. Martinez beat out redshirt freshman Tristan Gebbia in a close competition. He was the prize of Scott Frost’s first recruiting class at Nebraska, signing with the Cornhuskers after de-committing from Tennessee. The 6-foot-2, 220-pounder from Fresno, California, will be the first true freshman in program history to start an opener at quarterback.

MADISON, Ill. (AP) — Scott Dixon hasn’t done anything wrong the past three IndyCar races, finishing in the top five in each of them. But that hasn’t prevented his lead in the IndyCar championship chase from shrinking from 62 to 26 points over fast-finishing Alexander Rossi, or from allowing Indy 500 winner Will Power to sneak into contention.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Robert Streb won the Web.com Tour Finals-opening Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship to regain full PGA Tour status, beating Peter Malnati with a par on the first hole of a playoff.

Iowa early News Headlines: Monday, 8/27/18

News

August 27th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

BROOKLYN, Iowa (AP) — The father of the 20-year-old Iowa woman whose body was found in a cornfield last week wants people to remember her by “celebrating something wonderful.” Rob Tibbetts urged the hundreds of people at his daughter, Mollie Tibbetts’, funeral on Sunday afternoon to remember her passion for life and her desire to help others.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An elections worker with the Iowa Secretary of State’s Office says a petition seeking to add a conservative candidate for attorney general to the November ballot appears to have fallen short of the 1,500 signatures needed. Elections assistant Wes Hicok says the group turned in pages of signatures ahead of the 5 p.m. Saturday deadline, with a formal review of the paperwork taking place Monday. The effort aimed to put attorney Patrick Anderson, of Des Moines, on the ballot.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska lawmakers are looking for new ways to fight a fast-spreading tree species that crowds out other plants, destroys valuable ranchland and threatens the Great Plains from Texas to the Dakotas. Eastern red cedar trees are native to the Plains but have spread out of control without the natural prairie fires that kept them in check centuries ago. The issue has caught the attention of Nebraska lawmakers, who will convene a hearing Friday at the state Capitol.

PLEASANT HILL, Iowa (AP) — A Pleasant Hill man has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for killing his girlfriend’s father. The Des Moines Register reports that 27-year-old Ricky St. John was sentenced Friday. In a deal with prosecutors, he pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter in the November death of 46-year-old Timothy Neal. St. John had been charged with first-degree murder in the case.

Iowa politicians remember McCain as patriot, hero, statesman

News

August 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa’s political community is mourning this weekend’s death of Arizona Senator John McCain. McCain ran for president twice. His 2000 “Straight Talk Express” mostly by-passed the Iowa Caucuses, but in early 2007 McCain brought his second campaign for the White House to Iowa. He was in Iowa on October 26th of that year. It was the 40th anniversary of his capture as a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

During an interview with Radio Iowa that day, McCain credited Colonel Bud Day of Sioux City — one of the other P-O-Ws in the “Hanoi Hilton” — with literally saving his life. “Bud Day was the senior ranking officer in almost every situation and he inspired us to do things that we otherwise were incapable of,” McCain said. “And so it’s not that these are bad memories. Many of them are the most wonderful memories of my entire life.”

McCain has written that it was during those years as a P-O-W that he “fell in love with his country” and he voiced the same sentiments during that Radio Iowa interview. “You don’t appreciate America until you’re parted from her company,” McCain told Radio Iowa that day. “And then you really appreciate what a wonderful nation we live in.” Nearly four decades after he returned to American soil, McCain had landed the G-O-P’s presidential nomination. McCain finished fourth in the 2008 Iowa Caucuses, then he kept campaigning here in the spring, summer and fall of 2008.

“I want to be president because I want to inspire a generation of Americans to serve a cause greater than their self-interest,” McCain said in most speeches. At a McCain rally in September of 2008 in Cedar Rapids, a group of protesters began yelling and McCain’s supporters in the crowd started chanting to drown them out. “You know what, my friends? The one thing Americans want us to do is to stop yelling at each other, don’t they?” he asked, chuckling.

McCain returned to the Iowa campaign trail once more, in 2014, to campaign with Joni Ernst. Ernst, who won that U.S. Senate race, this weekend called McCain “a true American hero” and praised his “tenacious spirit.” Senator Ernst said McCain was a mentor who “personified service to our country.” Senator Chuck Grassley also praised McCain’s tenacity and courage, including his years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Grassley and McCain have served in the senate for the past 32 years and Grassley noted McCain’s humor, saying McCain often greeted him by saying: “Nothing runs like a Deere” or joking about having a daily glass of ethanol.

McCain was an outspoken critic of what he called “ethanol subsidies.” All four of the Iowans serving in the U.S. House have issued statements on McCain’s passing, describing McCain as a statesman, hero and patriot. Congressman Steve King praised McCain for using “every day of his life in preparation for or actively serving our country. Congressman David Young said McCain was a patriot who “inspired many to give the best they could to make community and country better.”