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Heartbeat Today 10-6-2022

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

October 6th, 2022 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Shane Anderson, who tours in a converted school bus with his wife, Emily, performing Indi/Folk music as Arbour Season.  They will perform Saturday, October 8, 2022 at 7:00 pm at the Warren Cultural Center in Greenfield.

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Cass County Master Gardeners Fall Bulb Sale Returns: Tulip and Daffodil Bulb Preorders Now Open!

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Bulbs bring spring color! The shorter days and more moderate temperatures make this fall a great time for gardening projects, including planting spring flowering bulbs.  The Cass County Master Gardeners are again selling bulbs for fall planting!  Preorders are open for the annual bulb sale, featuring tulip and daffodil bulbs in 2022. You can place your pre-order now to reserve your bulbs before they run out. Pay just $5 for a variety assortment of 5 colorful bulbs for your garden, with delivery by the end of October, in plenty of time for fall planting. Order forms with additional details are available at the Cass County Extension office, or online at www.extension.iastate.edu/cass.

The bulbs will be freshly dug from the gardens of Van Engelen, Inc., in Connecticut, and shipped in bulk to the Cass County Master Gardeners.  The Master Gardeners have ordered 500 tulip and daffodil bulbs, which they hope to pre-sell by mid-October.  The bulbs are expected to arrive by the end of October, for packaging five bulbs to a bag, and each bag of tulip mixture or daffodil mixture will sell for only $5. Pre-payment is requested at the time of order to guarantee your bulbs.

The Master Gardeners carefully select mixtures each year that are unique to those sold in previous years.  The tulip mixture offered this year, A Rainbow of Triumph Tulips, will produce plant heights from 16 to 20 inches, flowering in late April, and includes:  Bastogne (blood-red), Don Quixote (deep rose), Michael (reddish-orange), Negrita (deep purple), Pays Bas (Meringue-white), and Strong Gold (Primrose-yellow).

The daffodil bulbs include a mixture of multi-flowering Fragrant Naturalizing Jonquilla Narcissi and Miniature Narcissus bulbs:  Baby Moon (canary yellow), Hillstar (lemon-yellow), Golden Echo (white with golden halo and cup), Sweet Love (ivory-white), Kokopelli (greenish-yellow), Minnow (white-to-ivory-to pale yellow), Sun Disc (ivory and yellow), Jetfire (golden-yellow), Tete-a-Tete (buttercup-yellow with dark yellow trumpet) and N. canaliculatus (white with yellow cup).  The daffodils should bloom from April to May, ranging from 6 to 16 inches in height.

The Master Gardeners will package your bulbs 5 bulbs to a bag, along with planting instructions. Please keep in mind we are unable to guarantee any specific color mix. Tulips and daffodils will be packaged separately. You will be notified when your bulbs are available for pickup at the Cass County Extension Office in mid-late October.

The goal of the Master Gardener program is to provide community service and education in horticulture.  The Cass County Master Gardeners utilize the funds raised from the bulb sale, along with their spring garden seminar, and annual spring and fall plant sales (held the second Saturdays of May and September) for local community horticultural projects. These projects include maintaining community garden spaces around the county, providing education programs to youth and adults, providing an annual scholarship, and making horticulture grants available to non-profit groups.

To order bulbs, or for more information about Master Gardener activities in Cass County, please call the Cass County Extension Office at 712-243-1132, email Cass County Extension Director and Master Gardener Coordinator Kate Olson at keolson@iastate.edu or visit www.extension.iastate.edu/cass.  You are also invited to follow the Cass County Master Gardeners Facebook page at www.facebook.com/CassCoMG to keep up with local events and tips for gardening!

Shelby County Supervisors set dates for County Farm auction & proposed pipeline Ordinance

News

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Harlan, Iowa) – The Board of Supervisors in Shelby County met Tuesday morning. According to the meeting minutes from Auditor Mark Maxwell, the Board set December 20th as the date for an auction of the County Farm and Solid waste ground rental. The auction will tentatively take place at the Therkildsen Center, in Harlan.

Shelby County Sheriff Neil Gross reported to the Supervisors that K9 “Corty” was recovering from injuries he suffered injured during a call for service, as he was performing his duties. The dog had to undergo surgery to repair an ACL. He was released from the veterinary hospital on August 29th and is undergoing therapy along with a well deserved rest. Sheriff Gross reported also, the SRO (School Resource Officer) has been very busy with his duties.

The Supervisors considered and subsequently passed a Resolution to become a Home Base Iowa Initiative County. The resolution explains the Home Base Iowa initiative is an effort to match military veterans with jobs available across Iowa. One of the requirements is that the Board of Supervisors adopt a resolution of support. Residents and businesses are encouraged to take whatever actions are necessary to become and continue to be a Home Base Iowa County and Home Base Iowa Business.

The Shelby County Supervisors approved a resolution fixing the dates for three public hearings on the proposition to amend various sections of the Shelby County Zoning Ordinance for the purpose of regulating and restricting the use of land for the transport of hazardous liquid through a hazardous liquid pipeline. The proposed amendment to the ordinance would establish a general requirement to obtain a conditional use permit for hazardous liquid pipelines that would apply county-wide and that would affect the use of land for such purposes in each zoning area or district in the county.

The Board will meet in the Therkildsen Center in Harlan Oct. 18th and 25th at 10:00-a.m., and at that same time on November 1st, to receive public comment on the proposed amendment. The November 1st comment period will be followed by a vote on passing the proposed amendment as presented.

Voters can see how election machines work

News

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate and Polk County Elections Director John Chiodo are allowing the public to view the testing that’s done on voting machines. Pate says they want to be sure everyone knows how the process works. “Because there’s a lot of people who don’t know what happens — I mean literally — they’ll fill out paper ballot and then they stick it into the machine and they’re going, where did it go, what did they do?,” Pate says. “And with some of the misinformation and disinformation has been going out, we thought it’d be very well thought through at least to give you the facts.”

Chiodo says “This goes on for many weeks and months preparing for this, it’s just not like I was telling the gentleman earlier, it’s not like we wake up on Election Day and throw everything against a wall and hope it sticks. I mean, we test and test and test and test. So you have that comfort, waking up on election day that things are gonna go right. If you get the doors open, you’re in good shape.”

Polk County Elections Director John Chiodo

Pate says they’re testing different kinds of ballots, because each precinct might have a different ballot for the different offices that are up for election. “This machine is also designed to assist the voter because let’s say for example, they caught a double vote, they actually voted for two people for the same office, the machine will catch that, and we’ll push it back out and alert you there’s a problem. Well, this can be resolved, right while the voters there, we don’t want to spoil their ballot, we don’t want to, we want to make sure your vote gets counted,” Pate says.

Chiodo ran a number of different ballots through a machine as reporters watched.

Pate says the machines are all clean when voting begins on election day. “Meaning there’s no information in here, they have a designated stick that we put in those. They’re sealed so that again, they’re only used this time. And that’s how it works,” Pate says. “That is really a big part of this — because at the end of the night they’ll take the stick out and the ballots and they’re all sealed. And now we have two ways to audit you have stick and you have the physical ballots to go off of.”

Pate says his office will identify a precinct in all the 99 counties that has to be manually audited with a hand count of the ballots for the top office against what the machine’s tabulator says. He says they’ve been doing that for three election cycles and it’s checked out 100 percent in all 99 counties. Chiodo says the machines are not connected to the internet during voting. “The only time that it has any connection whatsoever is at the end of the night when we enable a modem to transfer the results from the point place to here (county election office). And it’s outgoing only. And that’s only live for when they close the machine out — and there safeguards on both ends as far as who can get in who can get out. And it’s only outgoing data,” Chiodo says.

Pate says those numbers are only unofficial results and the numbers reported by the machines are checked against the paper ballots.

Can Iowa’s offense score against Illinois?

Sports

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Iowa’s offense ranks last in the Big Ten in scoring, rushing and passing. The goal this week is to find a way to score points against an Illinois defense that is giving up just over eight points per game in a 4-1 start to the season. Despite the dismal numbers with the ball sophomore center Logan Jones feels progress is being made.

The Illinois defense has given up only three touchdowns in five games. Hawkeye sophomore receiver Arland Bruce.

Bruce says the offense is focused on what is ahead and not on past failures.

Iowa basketball Media Day

Sports

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Iowa basketball coach Fran McCaffery says it is Kris Murray’s time in the spotlight. The junior forward will be looked on to replace his twin brother Keegan, who is now in the NBA after an All American sophomore season.

It will be the first time Kris has been on a team without his brother.

McCaffery says big things are expected from Kris.

Several veteran players return from last year’s team that won the Big Ten Tournament and McCaffery feels the pieces are in place to continue the upward trajectory of the program.

The Hawkeyes take on Truman State on October 31st in an exhibition game.

Adams County Sheriff’s report, 10/6/22

News

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Corning, Iowa) – The Adams County Sheriff’s Office reports five arrests took place over the past couple of weeks. Most recently, on Monday (10/3/22), Deputies in Adams County conducted a traffic stop at Highway 34 and Vanilla Avenue, and upon further investigation, arrested 18-year-old Kiaraliz Rodriguez Rosario, of Creston, for Possession of a Controlled Substance (Marijuana), and Poss. of Drug Paraphernalia. Rosario was being held in the Adams County Jail on a $1,300 bond.

On Sept. 30th, Deputies in Adams County conducted a Welfare Check and subsequently arrested 38-year-old Mandy Simpson, of Corning, for Violation of a No Contact Order. She was being held on a $300 bond. During the same incident, 34-year-old Michael Simpson, of Coin, was arrested on the same charge, as well as for Possession of a weapon in a Correctional Facility. His bond was set at $10,300.

On the 24th of September, a traffic stop at Highway 34 and the Avenue of the Industries, west of Corning, resulted in the arrest of 50-year-old Robert Dennis Gard, of Corning, for OWI/2nd offense. His bond was set at $2,000. And, on the 23rd, 53-year-old Michael Newsome, of Woodbine, was arrested in Adams County for OWI/1st offense. His bond was set at $1,000.

KEVIN E. BLUNT, 58, of Stanton (Svcs. 10/8/22)

Obituaries

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

KEVIN E. BLUNT, 58, of Stanton, died Tuesday, Oct. 4th, at home. Funeral services for KEVIN BLUNT will be held 10:30-a.m. Saturday, Oct. 8th, at the Mamrelund Lutheran Church, in Stanton. Sellergren-Lindell-DeMarce Funeral Home in Red Oak has the arrangements.

Visitation at the church will be held Friday, Oct. 7th, from5-until 7-p.m.; Online condolences may be left at www.sldfuneralhome.com.

Burial is in the Mamre Cemetery in Stanton.

Memorials may be directed to the family for either a scholarship fund in Kevin’s name, or step project on the Hole 7 tee box at the Villisca Golf Course.

KEVIN BLUNT is survived by:

His wife – Tami Blunt, of Stanton.

His sons – Easton Blunt, and Justin (Katie) Miller, all of Stanton. and Shane (Jessica) Miller, of Grain Valley, MO.

His father – Larry (Denise) Blunt, of China Spring, TX.

His mother – Sharon (Lynn) Lightner, of Lincoln, NE

His sister – Karmin Wilson and fiancé, Jim Ellinger, of China Spring, TX

5 grandchildren, many other relatives, his brother-in-law, and friends.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022

Weather

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly Cloudy. High 68. N Winds @ 15-25 mph.
Tonight: P/Cldy. Low 35. N @ 5-10.
Tomorrow: P/Cldy. High 56. N @ 10 mph.
Saturday: Mostly sunny. High 65.
Sunday: P/Cldy. High near 70.

Wednesday’s High in Atlantic was 75. Our Low this morning was 43. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 76 and the Low was 53. The Record High on this date was 91 in 1963 & 1997. The Record Low was 15 in 2012.

Only Grassley-Franken debate of campaign is tonight at 7 p.m.

News

October 6th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican Senator Chuck Grassley and his Democratic opponent, Mike Franken, will meet in their only televised debate tonight (Thursday). The two have been debating from afar in comments this summer and fall. Grassley, who is seeking his eighth term in the U.S. Senate, has been telling audiences his opponent would be an ally of President Biden.

“What you’re seeing is a candidate that’s going to be a rubber stamp if he’s in the United Senate for everything this administration wants because it seems like he’s backed it to this point.” Franken, a retired Navy Admiral, often cites Grassley’s longevity in office. “We’ve got real problems, but fixable problems and it’s not too late,” Franken said. “It’s never too late. Why? Because Iowans are resilient. We deserve better than a senator for life who voted against our needs.”

Tonight’s debate between Grassley and Franken starts at 7 p.m. on Iowa P-B-S.  There’s a debate tonight (Thursday) between the candidates in Iowa’s third congressional district on K-C-C-I Channel 8, the C-B-S affiliate in Des Moines. Congresswoman Cindy Axne, a Democrat from West Des Moines, and Zach Nunn, a Republican from Bondurant, are scheduled to debate again Sunday at 6 p.m. on K-M-A Radio.