Iola Register 12-8

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Locally owned since 1867 www.iolaregister.com Saturday, December 8, 2012 55/40 Details, A8 WEEKENDER The IOLA REGISTER Vol. 115, No. 30 75 Cents Iola, KS BREAKING TRAIL By STEVEN SCHWARTZ [email protected] Dave Fontaine’s tractor backs up against the brush, pulling railroad ties from the soil and dragging them onto a nicely grated gravel pathway — the be- ginnings of a recreational trail that will connect Iola and Hum- boldt. The trail, which is tentatively named the “South Wind Trail,” will extend where the Prairie Spirit Trail ends at Riverside Park in Iola, and continue south for almost seven miles to end in Humboldt. Dave Fontaine, a local cyclist, and multiple other volunteers, including Jane and Lindsey Tweedy, have been volunteering their time since the first week in June to build the trail. Fontaine was involved in the construction of the Prairie Spirit Trail, and he said its success has been a motivator for the addition. They were hard at work on Thursday afternoon, pulling old railroad ties from the underbrush that will be used as bollards to block traffic from the points where the trail crosses the road. The Sunflower Foundation is funding the project through a $25,000 grant acquired by Thrive Allen County, along with anoth- er $25,000 grant from the Health- care Foundation of Greater Kan- sas City — which was acquired by Allen County. “We have our work cut out for us, we still have a lot to do,” Fon- taine said. He sported his Oakley cycling sunglasses along with his work attire, hinting that he is always a cyclist at heart. The volunteers, there are ap- proximately eight of them, have contributed nearly 560 man- hours of work with only about $2,500 of expenses. Don Burns, a Thrive board member and South Wind Trail volunteer, said when plans start- ed for the trail, Dave and Lisa Fontaine were two of the first people he went to. “I went to people I knew that were avid bike riders, and we have come up with a strong group of people,” Burns said. He said the counties of Neo- sho, Bourbon and Allen form the “South Wind” region, which is where volunteer Jay Kretzmeier got the idea for the name. The name is tentative due to the fact that it requires approval from the Sunflower Rail Trail Conser- vancy and Allen County. Lindsey Tweedy said the group started by driving through the property on 4-wheelers, scouting out the best area to start the con- struction of the trail. Fontaine said at the begin- ning, there wasn’t enough space to even drive the ATV’s they had to hold branches back and duck underneath them to get through. However, he said it has been worth the work to utilize the area. “The (Prairie Spirit) trail is pretty,” Fontaine said. “But this trail may be the prettiest six or seven miles in the whole area, mainly because it is covered.” Above, the South Wind trail volunteers pose for a photo after a day of working on the trail, posing next to a tree with their initials carved into the side. Front from left, Jane Tweedy, Lisa Fontaine and Jay Kretzmeier. Back from left, Dave Fontaine, Pat Haire, Don Burns, Tim Cox and Lindsey Tweedy. The photo was taken by Susan Weisen- berger, another trail volunteer. At left, Lindsey Tweedy, from left, Jane Tweedy and Dave Fontaine pull railroad ties from the remnants of the rail- road, next to the South Wind Trail. The ties will be used as bollards that will block mo- torized vehicles from entering the recreational path. Iola-Humboldt rail trail takes form Bullying sore spot for Iola High students Cleaver trial set By ALLISON TINN [email protected] Wednesday night Southeast Kansas (SEK) Regional Planning Commission board members dis- cussed “what has happened and the future challenges we face,” interim director Dennis Arnold said. The meeting, held at Neosho County Community College, was focused on the affect of new state and federal funding positions. The SEK commission’s focus is to improve the quality of life in southeast Kansas by providing tools to create and retain jobs and increase the services available within a community. The commission offers profes- sional development and assists in the administration of local pro- grams and projects. “The way the agency makes money is through the fees we get to administer grants,” Arnold said. The main concern for the com- mission is the lack of grant avail- ability. The organization has 35 percent fewer grants than in previous years, making it histori- cally low. The organization has been ex- isting on the remnants of a grant from 2009. The grant cycle runs every three or four years. Cutbacks starting hitting the grant funding in 2010. “We are looking for other rev- enue streams,” Arnold said. “We have to see how much we get next year. Fifteen applied this year and usually we get 60 percent so if that does happen then we will have eight (grants to adminis- By ALLISON TINN [email protected] What started as an informa- tive presentation turned into an emotional sore spot for Iola High juniors and seniors. Thursday three seniors, Kayla Knavel, Paiton True and Chloe Friederich, gave a presentation on the awareness of bullying as a project for their Career and Com- munity Connections and Early Childhood Development classes with Krystal Henderson. The girls knew it would be a subject some wouldn’t take seri- ously and went into the presenta- tion prepared. “We know it is hard to listen about (bullying) from people who are only a year older than you,” Combs said. “But if you aren’t going to take this seriously get up and get out.” Despite the warning there were still a few kids laughing and heckling. The girls used two national ex- amples of bullying. The first, a girl from Michigan, Whitney Kropp, was nominated as homecoming queen as a prank from her peers. She was able to turn the tables and with the support of her fam- ily, friends and community mem- bers she received a makeover and showed up to the homecom- ing game prideful. The next story didn’t end as well. Amanda Todd was a young high school student who made the mistake of showing her breast on camera once. An anon- ymous person got their hands on the picture and posted it on Face- book. After years of tormenting, changing schools and being beat up, she decided to end her life. She tried drinking bleach and overdosing on pills. Each time her parents rushed her to the emergency room and saved her life. One day her parents were too late. They walked into her room to find their daughter dead. She had hung herself. MANY students might think SEK regional panning board plans for future Garrett Cleaver, 27, Colony, whose confrontation with a po- lice officer led to a manhunt and his subsequent arrest more than a year ago, will be sentenced for his crimes Dec. 17. Cleaver pleaded guilty Nov. 28 in Allen County District Court to two counts of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer and one count of criminal possession of a firearm. In exchange for the guilty pleas, other charges of fleeing or eluding a police officer, criminal damage to property and reckless driving were dismissed. CLEAVER’S troubles in Allen County began the afternoon of Nov. 21, 2011, when a Humboldt officer stopped a car on Bridge Street when he noticed the occu- pants weren’t wearing seatbelts. Melissa Elder, 31, was driving the car. After the car stopped, Cleaver bolted, taking with him an as- sault rifle. The officer gave chase on foot and in a nearby alley was confronted by Cleaver, who then ran back to the car — Elder was standing outside — jumped in and sped away. Other officers joined the chase, which wove its way 8 miles to northeast of Humboldt, where Cleaver crashed the car near the intersection of Iowa Road and Thief caught through Facebook Allen County Sheriff Tom Wil- liams reported that a bow, quiver and arrow rest had been stolen from West Side Bait Shop on Sat- urday afternoon during business hours. Williams said the items, valued at approximately $1,300, were re- ported stolen by owner Leonard Barnett. After an investigation, it was reported to officers that a photo of the bow had been posted on a Facebook page belonging the suspect — whom Barnett named as C.J. Spiller. The officers re- sponded to Spiller’s residence, where the stolen bow was discov- Register/Allison Tinn Dennis Arnold, left, gives John Hotaling of Coffey County a certificate of recognition. Hotaling is retiring. See TRAIL | Page A5 See BULLYING | Page A5 See CLEAVER | Page A5 See SEK | Page A5 See THIEF | Page A5 ...this trail may be the prettiest six or seven miles in the whole area. — Dave Fontaine, local cyclist and volunteer BASKETBALL Area preseason tournaments conclude See B1 Courtesy photo Register/Steven Schwartz

description

Iola Register 12-8

Transcript of Iola Register 12-8

Page 1: Iola Register 12-8

Locally owned since 1867 www.iolaregister.comSaturday, December 8, 2012

55/40Details, A8 WeekenderThe Iola

regIster

Vol. 115, No. 30 75 Cents Iola, KS

BREAKING TRAIL

By STEVEN [email protected]

Dave Fontaine’s tractor backs up against the brush, pulling railroad ties from the soil and dragging them onto a nicely grated gravel pathway — the be-ginnings of a recreational trail that will connect Iola and Hum-boldt.

The trail, which is tentatively named the “South Wind Trail,” will extend where the Prairie Spirit Trail ends at Riverside Park in Iola, and continue south for almost seven miles to end in Humboldt.

Dave Fontaine, a local cyclist, and multiple other volunteers, including Jane and Lindsey Tweedy, have been volunteering their time since the first week in June to build the trail. Fontaine was involved in the construction of the Prairie Spirit Trail, and he said its success has been a motivator for the addition. They were hard at work on Thursday afternoon, pulling old railroad ties from the underbrush that will be used as bollards to block traffic from the points where the trail crosses the road.

The Sunflower Foundation is funding the project through a $25,000 grant acquired by Thrive Allen County, along with anoth-er $25,000 grant from the Health-care Foundation of Greater Kan-sas City — which was acquired by Allen County.

“We have our work cut out for us, we still have a lot to do,” Fon-taine said. He sported his Oakley cycling sunglasses along with his work attire, hinting that he is always a cyclist at heart.

The volunteers, there are ap-proximately eight of them, have contributed nearly 560 man-hours of work with only about

$2,500 of expenses. Don Burns, a Thrive board

member and South Wind Trail volunteer, said when plans start-ed for the trail, Dave and Lisa Fontaine were two of the first people he went to.

“I went to people I knew that were avid bike riders, and we have come up with a strong group of people,” Burns said.

He said the counties of Neo-sho, Bourbon and Allen form the “South Wind” region, which is where volunteer Jay Kretzmeier got the idea for the name. The name is tentative due to the fact that it requires approval from the Sunflower Rail Trail Conser-vancy and Allen County.

Lindsey Tweedy said the group started by driving through the property on 4-wheelers, scouting out the best area to start the con-struction of the trail.

Fontaine said at the begin-ning, there wasn’t enough space to even drive the ATV’s they had to hold branches back and duck underneath them to get through. However, he said it has been worth the work to utilize the area.

“The (Prairie Spirit) trail is pretty,” Fontaine said. “But this trail may be the prettiest six or seven miles in the whole area, mainly because it is covered.”

Above, the South Wind trail volunteers pose for a photo after a day of working on the trail, posing next to a tree with their initials carved into the side. Front from left, Jane Tweedy, Lisa Fontaine and Jay Kretzmeier. Back from left, Dave Fontaine, Pat Haire, Don Burns, Tim Cox and Lindsey Tweedy. The photo was taken by Susan Weisen-berger, another trail volunteer.

At left, Lindsey Tweedy, from left, Jane Tweedy and Dave Fontaine pull railroad ties from the remnants of the rail-road, next to the South Wind Trail. The ties will be used as bollards that will block mo-torized vehicles from entering the recreational path.

Iola-Humboldt rail trail takes form

Bullying sore spot for Iola High students Cleaver trial set

By ALLISON [email protected]

Wednesday night Southeast Kansas (SEK) Regional Planning Commission board members dis-cussed “what has happened and the future challenges we face,” interim director Dennis Arnold said.

The meeting, held at Neosho County Community College, was focused on the affect of new state and federal funding positions.

The SEK commission’s focus is to improve the quality of life in southeast Kansas by providing tools to create and retain jobs and increase the services available within a community.

The commission offers profes-sional development and assists in the administration of local pro-

grams and projects.“The way the agency makes

money is through the fees we get to administer grants,” Arnold said.

The main concern for the com-mission is the lack of grant avail-ability. The organization has 35 percent fewer grants than in previous years, making it histori-cally low.

The organization has been ex-isting on the remnants of a grant from 2009. The grant cycle runs every three or four years.

Cutbacks starting hitting the grant funding in 2010.

“We are looking for other rev-enue streams,” Arnold said. “We have to see how much we get next year. Fifteen applied this year and usually we get 60 percent so if that does happen then we will have eight (grants to adminis-

By ALLISON [email protected]

What started as an informa-tive presentation turned into an emotional sore spot for Iola High juniors and seniors.

Thursday three seniors, Kayla Knavel, Paiton True and Chloe Friederich, gave a presentation on the awareness of bullying as a project for their Career and Com-munity Connections and Early Childhood Development classes with Krystal Henderson.

The girls knew it would be a subject some wouldn’t take seri-ously and went into the presenta-tion prepared.

“We know it is hard to listen about (bullying) from people who are only a year older than you,”

Combs said. “But if you aren’t going to take this seriously get up and get out.”

Despite the warning there were still a few kids laughing and heckling.

The girls used two national ex-amples of bullying.

The first, a girl from Michigan, Whitney Kropp, was nominated as homecoming queen as a prank from her peers.

She was able to turn the tables and with the support of her fam-ily, friends and community mem-bers she received a makeover and showed up to the homecom-ing game prideful.

The next story didn’t end as well.

Amanda Todd was a young

high school student who made the mistake of showing her breast on camera once. An anon-ymous person got their hands on the picture and posted it on Face-book.

After years of tormenting, changing schools and being beat up, she decided to end her life.

She tried drinking bleach and overdosing on pills. Each time her parents rushed her to the emergency room and saved her life.

One day her parents were too late. They walked into her room to find their daughter dead. She had hung herself.

MANY students might think

SEK regional panning board plans for future

Garrett Cleaver, 27, Colony, whose confrontation with a po-lice officer led to a manhunt and his subsequent arrest more than a year ago, will be sentenced for his crimes Dec. 17.

Cleaver pleaded guilty Nov. 28 in Allen County District Court to two counts of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer and one count of criminal possession of a firearm.

In exchange for the guilty pleas, other charges of fleeing or eluding a police officer, criminal damage to property and reckless driving were dismissed.

CLEAVER’S troubles in Allen County began the afternoon of

Nov. 21, 2011, when a Humboldt officer stopped a car on Bridge Street when he noticed the occu-pants weren’t wearing seatbelts. Melissa Elder, 31, was driving the car.

After the car stopped, Cleaver bolted, taking with him an as-sault rifle. The officer gave chase on foot and in a nearby alley was confronted by Cleaver, who then ran back to the car — Elder was standing outside — jumped in and sped away.

Other officers joined the chase, which wove its way 8 miles to northeast of Humboldt, where Cleaver crashed the car near the intersection of Iowa Road and

Thief caught through Facebook

Allen County Sheriff Tom Wil-liams reported that a bow, quiver and arrow rest had been stolen from West Side Bait Shop on Sat-urday afternoon during business hours.

Williams said the items, valued at approximately $1,300, were re-ported stolen by owner Leonard Barnett. After an investigation, it was reported to officers that a photo of the bow had been posted on a Facebook page belonging the suspect — whom Barnett named as C.J. Spiller. The officers re-sponded to Spiller’s residence, where the stolen bow was discov-

Register/Allison TinnDennis Arnold, left, gives John Hotaling of Coffey County a certificate of recognition. Hotaling is retiring.

See TRAIL | Page A5

See BULLYING | Page A5See CLEAVER | Page A5

See SEK | Page A5 See THIEF | Page A5

...this trail may be the prettiest six or seven miles in the whole area.

— Dave Fontaine, local cyclist and volunteer

BASKETBALLArea preseason

tournaments concludeSee B1

Courtesy photo

Register/Steven Schwartz

Page 2: Iola Register 12-8

A2Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

The Iola RegIsTeR Published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday afternoons and Sat-urday mornings except New Year’s day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas, by The Iola Register Inc., 302 S. Washington, P.O. Box 767, Iola, Kansas 66749. (620) 365-2111. Periodicals postage paid at Iola, Kansas. Member Associated Press. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to use for publication all the local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches. Subscription rates by carrier in Iola: One year, $107.46; six months, $58.25; three months, $33.65; one month, $11.67. By motor: One year, $129.17; six months, $73.81; three months, $41.66; one month, $17.26. By mail in Kansas: One year, $131.35; six months, $74.90; three months, $44.02; one month, $17.91. By mail out of state: One year, $141.35; six months, $76.02; three months, $44.97; one month, $17.91. Internet: One year, $100; six months, $55; one month, $10 All prices include 8.55% sales taxes. Postal regu-lations require subscriptions to be paid in advance. USPS 268-460 Postmaster: Send address changes to The Iola Register, P.O. Box 767, Iola, KS 66749.

Community of Christ East 54 Hwy., Iola

Sunday School.......9:30 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.

Wednesday Evening Prayer as announced

Gary Murphey, pastor (620) 365-2683

Covenant of Faith Christian Center

407 N. Chestnut, Iola

Sunday Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 a.m. Sunday Evening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 p.m. Tuesday Bible Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 p.m. Wednesday Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 p.m.

Rev. Philip Honeycutt (620) 365-7405

First Baptist Church

801 N. Cottonwood, Iola Sunday School........9:15-10:15 a.m.

Sunday Worship.........10:30-11:30 p.m. on 1370 KIOL 11-11:30

Sunday Evening Bible Study Youth/Adult............................6 p.m.

Wednesday Prayer Meeting...................... 6:30 p.m. Dr. Michael Quinn, pastor

(620) 365-2779

Carlyle Presbyterian Church

Sunday Worship............9:30 a.m. Sunday School immediately after

service

Steve Traw, pastor

St. Timothy ’ s Episcopal Church

202 S. Walnut, Iola

Holy Eucharist & Sermon at 9 a.m. followed by coffee and fellowship

Rev. Jan Chubb (620) 365-7306

Moran United Methodist Church First and Cedar Streets

Moran Sunday School...........8:45 a.m. Sunday Worship .........9:30 a.m.

EVERYONE WELCOME Rev. Young-Gil Bahng

(620) 237-4442

Independent & Fundamental Lincoln & Second Streets, Iola Sunday School (all ages)........9:45 a.m. Morning Worship...............10:50 a.m. Evening Worship..................6:00 p.m. Wed. Prayer & Worship.......7:00 p.m.

(Nursery provided, all services) Roger R. Collins, pastor

(620) 365-2833

Grace Lutheran Church

117 E, Miller Rd., Iola Sunday School.................9:00 a.m.

Adult Bible Class................9:00 a.m. Worship Service.............10:30 a.m.

Rev. Bruce Kristalyn (620) 365-6468

St. John ’ s Catholic Church

314 S. Jefferson, Iola Saturday evening................5:30 p.m. Sunday Worship....................10 a.m.

(at St. Joseph’s, Yates Center)8 a.m. Wednesday P.S.R. Classes...6:30 p.m.

(September through May) Confessions Saturday

4:30-5:00 p.m . Father John P. Miller

(620) 365-3454

Fellowship Regional Church

214 W. Madison, Iola Saturday:

CRUX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 p.m. Sunday:

Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:30 a.m.

Jeff Cokely, pastor Jared Ellis & Luke Bycroft

(620) 365-8001

First Presbyterian Church - Iola 302 E. Madison, Iola

Sunday Worship ........9:30 a.m. Sunday School...........10:45 a.m.

Wednesday Kids Club........3 p.m.

Rev. Kathryn Bell Interim Pastor (620) 365-3481

First Christian Church

1608 Oregon Rd., Iola “ Lead-Feed-Tend ” -

(John 21:15 - 17) Sunday School............9:30 a.m. Sunday Worship.........10:30 a.m. Bible Study.................6:00 p.m. Wed. Prayer...............6:30 p.m. Dave McGullion, pastor

Travis Riley, youth pastor [email protected]

(620) 365-3436

First Assembly of God 1020 E. Carpenter, Iola

Sunday School, All Ages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 a.m. Sunday Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 a.m. Sunday Afternoon Teens FIRST...2:30 p.m. Sunday Praise & Prayer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 p.m. Wednesday Kids FIRST.............6:30 p.m. Wednesday Bible Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 p.m. (620) 365-2492 iolafirstag.org Paul Miller, pastor

Trinity United Methodist Church

Broadway & Kentucky, Iola Sunday Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 a.m. Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30 a.m.

All Are Welcome! Leslie Jackson, pastor

(620) 365-5235

St. Peter ’ s Lutheran Church

910 Amos St., Humboldt

Sunday Worship 8:15 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30 a.m. David E. Meier, pastor

(620) 473-2343

Ward Chapel A.M.E.

Lincoln and Buckeye Streets Iola

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 a.m. Sunday Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00 a.m.

Joseph Bywaters, pastor

Wesley United Methodist Church

Madison & Buckeye Sun.Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00 a.m. Sun. School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:15 a.m. Middle School UMYF . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 p.m. High School UMYF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 p.m.

Rev. Trudy Kenyon Anderson

(620) 365-2285

For God so loved the world that He gave His only son, & whoever calls upon His nam e shall not

perish but have everlasting life. John 3:16

Calvary United Methodist Church

Jackson & Walnut St. Iola

“ The Cross Shines Brightly at Calvary ”

Sunday Worship.............9:15 a.m. Sunday School..............10:30 a.m. Rev. Gene McIntosh, pastor

Office: 365-3883 Parsonage: 365-3893

Friends Home Lutheran Church

Savonburg

Sunday Worship at 11 a.m

PMA Sidney Hose (620) 754-3314

Trinity Lutheran Church

430 N. Grant, Garnett

Saturday Women Bible Study.......... 9a.m. Sunday School..............9 a.m.

Sunday Worship...............10 a.m. Wednesday Bible Study.............7 p.m.

Ervin A. Daughtery Jr., pastor (785) 448-6930

LaHarpe Baptist Mission

901 S. Main, LaHarpe Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00 a.m. Sunday Evening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 p.m. Wednesday Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:00 p.m.

Duwayne Bearden, pastor (620) 228-1829

Poplar Grove Baptist Church 305 Mulberry, Humboldt

Come Let Us Worship The Lord Sunday School.....................9:30 a.m. Sunday Worship.................10:45 a.m. Thursday Service......................6 p.m.

Rev. James Manual (620) 473-3063

Harvest Baptist Church

401 S. Walnut, Iola Adult Small Group......9:15 a.m.

(no child-care provided) Fellowship Sunday Worship..10:30 a.m.

Tony Godfrey, pastor (620) 365-3688 (620) 228-2522

Humboldt United Methodist Church

806 N. 9th, Humboldt Sunday School..............9:30 a.m.

Morning Worship.............11:00 a.m. MS/HS Youth.....................5:00 p.m.

Nursery provided Marge Cox, pastor

(620) 473-3242

First Baptist Church 7th & Osage, Humboldt

Sunday School......................9:45 a.m. Sunday Worship.................10:50 a.m.

Sunday Evening Kids Bible Club...........5:30 p.m. Evening Service.....................7 p.m. Wed. Night Bible Study..........7 p.m. Rev. Jerry Neeley, pastor

(620) 473-2481

Salem United Methodist Church “ The Little White Church in the Country ”

3 miles west, 2 miles south of Iola Sunday School ......10:00 a.m. Sunday Worship....11:00 a.m.

Rev. Gene McIntosh Pastor (620) 365-3883

Northcott Church 12425 SW Barton Rd.

Colony Sunday School.....................9:00 a.m. Sunday Worship.................10:00 a.m. Sunday Evening.......................6 p.m.

Sharon K. Voorhees, pastor (620) 852-3077

Community Baptist Church 124 N. Fourth, Iola Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 a.m. Sun. Morning Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00 a.m. Sun. Evening Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 p.m. Wed. Prayer Meeting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 p.m.

Marion Sponseller, pastor Church . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Home (620) 365-6811 (620) 365- 3150

Indepedent KJV

Dwight CombsDwight Combs, 84, Al-

iceville, passed away early Thursday, Dec. 6, 2012, at St. Francis Hospital in Topeka.

He was born May 8, 1928, on the family farm north of Burlington, the son of Les-ter William and Ulah Leona (Noel) Combs.

On Feb. 15, 1953, he and Ina June Hunter were mar-ried in Le Roy. They became the parents of four daugh-ters.

Dwight has farmed and raised livestock all of his life. He also worked at many other jobs in the area over the years in addition to his farming.

He and Ina suffered the loss of their daughter, Kim-berly Sue Wallace, on Dec. 27, 1995.

He was also preceded by three brothers, Leonard, Robert and Troy Combs

Dwight leaves Ina, his wife of nearly 60 years, of the home in Aliceville; his daughters, Sandra Combs, Pittsburg, Terry Jo Combs, Iola, and Vicky Stout and husband, Bob, Iola; three grandchildren, James Da-vid Wallace, Rashawna Stripling and Hayley Wes-terman and husband Bran-don; and three great-grand-children, Lincoln Chance Stripling, Jaydie June Combs and Brodon Dwight Michael Westerman.

The family will meet with friends for visitation starting at 12:30 p.m. today at Jones Funeral Home in Burlington until proceed-ing to St. John Cemetery in Aliceville for graveside ser-vices at 2 o’clock.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Coffey County Cancer Support Group and may be sent in care of the funeral home.

Nadine PergesonNadine Pergeson, 65, Els-

more, passed away on Tues-day, Dec. 4, 2012, at Neosho Memorial Regional Medi-cal Center, Chanute.

She was born June 16, 1947, in P h o e n i x , Ariz., the d a u g h t e r of Theo-dore and Ethel Al-len. She married Kenneth Pergeson on Oct, 20, 1979 in Iola.

Her greatest joy was her grandchildren.

Nadine was preceded in death by her parents; one son, Rusty Wellman; one daughter, Penny Cox Well-man; three brothers, Bob-by Allen, Fred Allen, and Mitch Allen; and one sister, LaVerne Morgan.

She is survived by her husband, Kenneth Perge-son of the home; three sons, Kenneth Pergeson Jr. of Elsmore, Teddy Wellman of Emporia and James Well-man of Wichita; two daugh-ters, Bonnie Fangman of Sedalia, Mo., and Linda Pergeson of Elsmore; 12 grandchildren, seven great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.

You may send your con-dolences to the family at www.feuerbor nfuneral.com

Marion HessMarion Hess, 93, passed

away Dec. 6, 2012. Visitation will be Mon-

day Dec. 10 from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Funeral services will be held Tuesday Dec. 11, 2012 at 1 p.m. at the Van Ar-sdale Funeral Home in Le-Roy with burial at Quisling Cemetery new LeRoy.

Memorials are to the KU Cancer Center and may be sent in care of Van Arsdale Funeral Home P.O. Box 8 LeRoy, 66857.

Jake Galemore Jake Galemore, 16, Cha-

nute, passed away Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012, near his resi-dence.

J a k e was born in Chanute on Oct. 17, 1996, the son of Chris and Susan Kay ( G e h r t ) Galemore. He attended Chanute High School and was a member of the sophomore class.

He enjoyed snow skiing, hunting, football, baseball, power lifting and music, and playing with his dogs, Ozie and Nellie. He loved the outdoors and family hunting trips.

Jake was hilarious and sarcastic at times, but he had a heart of gold. Because of his compassion and plac-ing his family first he was a wonderful son, brother, cousin, grandson, nephew and friend. Jake was an amazing kid and his family was incredibly proud of the young man he had become. Our family’s love for Jake is so strong it will last forever.

Jake is survived by his parents of the home; two sisters, Nicole Galemore of Milwaukee, Wis., and Lau-ren Galemore of Topeka; grandparents, John and El-sie Galemore of Chanute, and Dr. Earl and Jody Gehrt of Joplin, Mo.; and numer-ous aunts, uncles, cousins, and friends.

Funeral Services will be at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Patrick Catholic Church.

Burial will follow in St. Pat-rick Catholic Cemetery.

Rosary will be recited at 6 p.m. Sunday at the church.

The family will receive friends on Sunday after the rosary from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the St. Patrick School gym.

Memorials in his name may be made to the Jake Galemore Memorial Fund and left with the funeral home.

Penwell-Gabel Gibson Chapel is in charge of ar-rangements.

Blake ChristyBlake Andrew Christy,

31, Lawrence, passed away Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012, at the Lawrence Memorial Hos-pital.

Blake was born April 8, 1981, in Bartlesville, Okla., the son of Marty J. and Cindy A. (Glidden) Christy. He grad-uated from Iola High School and made his home in Iola until moving to Lawrence in 2009.

Survivors are his wife, Amanda Garcia of the home, one daughter, Kylee Rose Christy of the home, his par-ents: Marty and Cindy Chris-ty, Gas, his twin brother, Billy Christy and wife Fanta, Lawrence, one sister Jenna Christy, Gas and grandmoth-er, Carol Christy, Iola.

He was preceded in death by grandparents, Buddy Christy, Bill and Jo Glidden.

Funeral services will be at 2 p.m., Monday, Dec. 10 at Waugh-Yokum & Friskel Chapel in Iola.

Burial is at Highland Cem-etery in Iola.

Memorial can be made to

the Blake Christy Memorial Fund

Memorial gifts may be left with Waugh-Yokum & Friskel Memorial Chapel in Iola, which is in charge of ar-rangements.

Online condolences for the family may be left on www.iolafuneral.com.

Ron Whitworth Ron Whit-

worth, 49, C h a n u t e , passed away Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012 at the Neo-sho Memo-rial Regional Medical Cen-ter in Chanute.

Ron was born in Chanute on March 11, 1963, the son of Dwaine and Judith (Kus-tanborter) Whitworth. He attended Humboldt High School. On June 3, 1983, he married Rhenda Griffith in Miami, Okla.

Ron was a member of the USRA (United States Racing Association) and the USMTS (United States Modified Touring Series).

He was the owner and op-erator of Whitworth Con-struction, Inc. for 32 years and owner, operator, and promoter of the Humboldt Speedway for 23 years. Ron loved working at the race track, watching his boys race, and was extremely proud of his daughter in college. Ron worked seven days a week and holidays to provide for his family and loved the time he got to spend with his three grand-children, children and wife.

Ron is survived by his wife, Rhenda of the home; three children, Ryan and Heather Whitworth, Humboldt, Ri-ley Whitworth, Humboldt, and Ravyn Whitworth, Pitts-burg; three grandchildren, Kaydence Whitworth, Cha-nute, Karson Whitworth, Independence, and Braydie Whitworth, Iola; his mother, Judy Whitworth, Chanute; one brother, Jerry Whit-worth, Santa Monica, Calif.; one sister, Traci Whitworth, Chanute; his mother-in-law, Connie Griffith, Chanute; his sister-in-law and husband, Rhonda and Dan McMillan, Chanute; and five nieces, sev-eral aunts, uncles, cousins, and his entire racing family.

He was preceded in death by his father, Dwaine Whit-worth; his grandparents, Chet and Mary Kustanbort-er, and Raymond and Lena Whitworth; one aunt, Kathy Kustanborter; and his father-in-law, Ronald Dean Griffith.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 10, 2012 at the First Bap-tist Church-Good News Cen-ter.

The family will receive friends on Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012 from 2 until 5 p.m. at the Penwell-Gabel Gibson Cha-pel.

Cremation will take place after the service and the fam-ily will have a private burial at Memorial Park Cemetery in Chanute.

Memorials may be made to First Baptist Church or the Ron Whitworth Memo-rial Fund for his grandchil-dren’s education.

Penwell-Gabel Gibson Chapel is in charge of ar-rangements.

Obituaries

Galemore

Pergeson

Whitworth

Walter SponsellerWalter Neal Sponseller,

73, Iola, passed away Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012, at Allen County Hospital.

Walter was born April 26, 1939, in Iola, the son of Har-vey Neal and Anna Eliza-beth (Myer) Sponseller. He grew up and made his home in Iola where he worked as a painter for Layles and lat-er on his own.

He is survived by a sis-ter, Bonnie Stout Perkins and husband, Dick, Iola; a brother, Marion Sponseller, Iola, and nieces and neph-ews.

He was preceded in death by his parents, a son, Cur-tis Sponseller, sister-in-law Marilyn Sponseller, broth-er-in-law Ron Stout and his companion of 40 years, Dorothy Friend.

Cremation has taken place and a private family inurnment will be later in Highland Cemetery in Iola.

Waugh-Yokum & Friskel Memorial Chapel of Iola as-sisted the family.

Online condolences for the family may be left on www.iolafuneral.com.

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Saturday, December 8, 2012The Iola Registerwww.iolaregister.com A3

Major Credit Cards Accepted. No Refunds Given. Bring Your Trucks & Trailers. Certain Restrictions Ma y Apply.

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Page 4: Iola Register 12-8

A4Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

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I OLA R EGISTER P RINTING D EPT. 302 S. Washington • Iola Call Kevin (620) 365-5861 or 365-2111 GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS WEDDING INVITATIONS

BUSINESS CARDS P rograms & B rochures

Appears 6 times per mo. at $ 90 per mo. or buy 3 mo. for $ 180 prepaid

Page 5: Iola Register 12-8

Saturday, December 8, 2012The Iola Registerwww.iolaregister.com A5

CASH ONLY NO CHECKS OR CREDIT CARDS

(620) 431-0784

4655 240th Rd., Chanute (2 mi. North of Chanute on Old 169)

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Bolling’s Meat Market 201 S. State, Iola • (620) 380-MEAT (6328)

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Cheddar Bay Biscuits Breadsticks

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B UNS

that problem doesn’t exist in the Iola community, but an informal poll conducted at Iola High says it is.

Sixty-six percent of the school population said they have been bullied. Fifty-two percent of the school popu-lation said they have bul-lied someone. Eighty-nine percent said they would stand up for someone and 67 percent said they would report bullying if they saw it.

Fifty-five percent of the Iola High student body said they believe bullying has become a problem at their school.

“Bullying is a problem in this school, whether you want to admit it or not,” Combs said.

“What’s it going to take for bullying in our school to stop,” Friederich added. “Is it going to take someone killing themselves? How would that make you feel?”

By the end of the presen-

tation three students had been asked to leave and the sound of sniffling noses filled the auditorium.

“We care. We might not get along with everyone, we don’t always see eye to eye, and after all we are human.” Combs said. “But if you need help we are here.”

Before the students left the seminar they were asked to sign a pledge to end bullying.

H BullyingContinued from A1

2000 Street. He disappeared into

brush and timber.Allen County Sheriff

Tom Williams said local of-ficers learned that Cleaver might be in the Springfield, Mo., area. Missouri offi-cers arrested him at a mo-tel near Springfield Dec. 5, 2011.

Cleaver also faces man-slaughter charges related to a fatal traffic accident in Neosho County in 2009. It wasn’t immediately clear if those charges had been resolved.

A call to the Kansas At-torney General’s office in Topeka, which is handling the Neosho County case, was not returned Friday.

H CleaverContinued from A1

ter).”

AMONG the programs the commission works with are the Housing Pi-lot Program, Downtown Commercial Rehabilita-tion Program and the Business Coaching Pilot Program.

Each of the programs are focused on improv-ing the quality of life and keep small towns thriving in southeast Kansas, with minimal fees.

Businesses are eligible to hire a consulting team

for $50 a month.“They work with the

company. They essentially become their employees,” Arnold said.

TWO board members are retiring and were hon-ored at Wednesday’s meet-ing.

John Hotaling of Coffee County and Dudley Feuer-born of Anderson County received certificates of recognition.

For more information on SEK Regional Planning Commission programs, call (620) 431-0080.

H SEKContinued from A1

Dudley Feuerborn of Anderson County, left, receives a certificate of recognition from Dennis Arnold for retiring.

Register/Allison Tinn

ered.Williams said Spiller

conceded to the crime, un-der consideration of the overwhelming evidence — including the photos of Spiller at his home and the bow with its quiver resting on his couch.

Barnett said he knew when the bow had been stolen, but just needed the evidence from a “hot tip” to confirm the tip.

Williams said it is some-times rare to have stolen items recovered so quickly. He attributed the expedited recovery to the evidence gathered off of Facebook.

He said he hopes to see the trail finished by the time spring comes, espe-cially if the weather holds its fair temperatures. He said the trail will allow access to the public at no charge.

Both of the Tweedys and Fontaine agreed that the construction would not have been possible if it weren’t for the support from the community. Joe Works, a Humboldt resi-dent and owner of B&W Trailer Hitches, lended the use of a side cutter and tractors for the construc-tion process. Before that point, Fontaine said his volunteers had cleared the first three miles by hand with chainsaws.

Jane said she thinks it is important to use the rail trail, to help carry on the historical legacy of the railroad in Allen County.

“It’s really important to protect the historical integrity of the railroad,” Jane said. “That’s why we are using the old railroad ties for bollards.”

Fontaine said he was saddened to see the old railroad torn out, and he hopes that the rail trail will allow the railroad to

be easily reconstructed in the future if the possibility arises.

Both Lindsey and Jane have lived in Austin, Texas, for 40 years. Lindsey said he grew up in Allen Coun-ty, but moved to Texas to raise a family and be near his brother. The Tweedys moved back to Allen Coun-ty to take care of Lindsey’s mother, who passed away last year.

He said it has been en-couraging to see an area flourish in hard times - and the South Wind trail is an example of a town thriving in its community.

Burns said he believes the trail will add another important amenity to Al-len County. According to Kansas Parks, Wildlife and Tourism, 41,850 people have used the Prairie Spir-it Trail from January to September. Burns said he hopes to see a high usage from people using the ex-isting trail, which should positively impact business-es in the area.

He said the Prairie Spir-it trail received some op-position in the beginning, due to concerns regard-ing littering, trespassing and criminal mischief — which seemed to have

been unwarranted. The volunteers have found the success of the trail useful in meetings with the land-owners bordering the new trail. The county sent let-ters to landowners affected by the construction, and Burns said “there hasn’t been much trouble at all.”

Overall, Burns said the construction of the South Wind Trail has been a col-laboration of three entities — the volunteers, conser-vancy and Allen county.

All of the volunteers said that pathways such as the South Wind Trail and the Prairie Spirit Trail are important for cyclists’ safety as well. Fontaine said he and his wife have cycled on the public road-ways before, and they can be very dangerous. He said that fact has given him some personal motivation for constructing the trail as well.

“We have taken a lot of pride in the trail, I still can’t believe how much we

have done.”Burns said while the

construction has been a lot of hard work, it wouldn’t have been possible if the volunteers didn’t enjoy what they have been doing.

“To be honest, we’ve really had fun doing it,” Burns said. “We’re anx-ious to use the finished product.”

The trail is completely cleared from Iola to Hum-boldt, with much of the pathway grated. Currently, the volunteers are working to “beautify” the trail. Fon-taine said the next step is to begin installing the bol-lards on the crossing, add signage and posted warn-ings.

All three volunteers agreed that the construc-tion has shown the power of community and volun-teerism.

“It just shows that with a little willpower, focus and a lot of poison ivy - you can do a lot,” Fontaine said.

H TrailContinued from A1

It’s really important to protect the historical integrity of the railroad. That’s why we are using the old railroad ties for bollards.

— Jane Tweedy, volunteer

H ThiefContinued from A1

What’s it go-ing to take for bullying in our school to stop. Is it going to take someone killing themselves? How would that make you feel?

— Chloe Friederich,Senior at Iola High

Members of Jeffer-son Elementary School’s staff are raising money to help Raef Casner and his mother, Lea, a single mom and paraprofessional at the school.

Raef, a fifth-grader at the school, was diagnosed with liver cancer earlier this year and has been out of school because of surgery and weekly treat-ments, which has created an obvious financial hard-ship for the family.

A fundraiser is in the works. Tickets are being sold for the chance to win one of 12 different gift

baskets, all filled with in-teresting and intriguing things. Two have K-State and KU themes, one is loaded with chocolate, another is designed for a couple’s “date night.”

Tickets are available for $1 apiece or six for $5, and are available from Stephanie Bycroft at the Jefferson office and also will be on sale at Iola High basketball games.

A drawing for baskets will be during halftime of the Iola High game here Dec. 18. A chili feed also is planned that from 4:30 to 8.

Guest Home EstatesMembers of the Lust family, including Todd and Becca,

Daniel, Maya and Max Lust, Pleasant, Texas; John and Andrea Carley, Alexa, Peyton, Cooper and Rodney and Janice Daniel, Larry and Cathy Lust, Olathe; visited John and Betty Lust. Clyde and Rita Roush, Chanute, vis-ited Fayette Walters.

Santa will set up a toy shop Dec. 20-24 on Jefferson where Audacious Boutique used to be located.

All children in the com-munity who want a toy can go to the shop and visit with Santa and pick up a toy.

Tracy Keagle and her husband, William, who came up with the idea, are accepting toy donations.

Parents cleaning out

their kids’ gently used toys and are looking to get rid of them they can call Tracy at (620) 228-7456. Toys also can be dropped off at the Ke-agle residence at 207 S. Elm St. or at Annie’s Attic.

The shop will be tempo-rarily decorated like an old-time Christmas toy shop. Cookies and hot chocolate will be served.

Santa’s Toy Shop is open and free to the public.

Iola Nursing HomeBarbara Stewart Mapleton visited Lila Church. Bill

Wolf, Manhattan, visited Elmer Nichols. Leona Holtz, Iola, visited Doris Rogers. Randy Bartlett visited Walter Bartlett. Roberta West, Lisa Sherwood, Colony, Lolita Johnson and Naomi Clounch, Iola, visited Rosie Neal. Joe and Jill Devoe, Gas, Shesi and Aren Taylor, Iola, and Steven, Lorie and Lexi Scott visited Dora Beachy.

Residential care newsJefferson studentsraise funds for classmate

Santa to make stop at Audacious Boutique

See us online at www.iolaregister.com You can contact any of the Iola Register staff at

[email protected]

Page 6: Iola Register 12-8

A6Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

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If you have not had a chance to visit the down-town square yet this holiday season I urge you to do so.

Santa will be in his house from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday and again Dec. 20.

Along with Santa, there are the free Kiwanis Train rides and the PSI Holiday Trolley rides. Outside San-ta’s house there will be a table of goodies set up for all to partake, sponsored by local businesses. Make sure you check out the business-es that are open and do some shopping.

Our second and final cash mob for the year will be at

5:30 p.m. Wednesday. Come inside; it is sup-

posed to be cold.There are several pro-

grams going on that eve-ning. We will leave right at 5:30, so folks can shop and hurry to the next event.

We had several men join us last time as we mobbed Classy Attic so don’t think

we are strictly a ladies’ night. Please join us and help us keep this new event going strong.

Holiday Lighting Trolley Rides are Dec. 15, 16, 22 and 23.

There will be music at 6:15 p.m. at the First Nazarene Church. Board the trolley at 7 p.m. Enjoy hot drinks

and goodies after the rides. Boarding will be at the Naz-arene Church. For tickets, call the Iola Area Chamber of Commerce at (620) 365-5252 for the advance ticket price of $6.

If you are a runner, make sure you check out the Jingle Bell Jog 5K Run /3K Walk at 1 p.m. Christmas

late registration begins at noon. You can register now at the Thrive Allen County

office or we have registra-tion forms in the chamber office as well.

Shop and play local to keep Iola businesses thriving SheliaLampe

ChamberMusings

Page 7: Iola Register 12-8

OpinionSaturday, December 8, 2012The Iola Registerwww.iolaregister.com A7

This season’s front page vis-its with Iola retail merchants are the 2012 version of “be lo-cal, buy local— a smart way to live. Each one of the stories gives Register readers shop-ping tips for Christmas and for all of the rest of the days in the year. Iola’s stores have an amazing variety of high qual-ity merchandise for sale.

But the economist in me wants to make a stronger pitch for the benefits gained from dollars spent in Iola.

When you spend $100 here at home — and, my, what a mod-est holiday budget that would be — about 75 percent of it stays in town. National studies show that every dollar spent lo-cally turns over four times in the community. Spend a hun-dred dollars in Iola and it be-comes a $400 boost right here. Spend $100 out of town and the muliplying takes place there.

And, for exactly the same reason, Humboldt shoppers should shop Humboldt and the good people of Moran should spend dollars there, start-ing, perhaps, with top drawer meats and other good things to eat at Moran Locker.

In today’s computer-domi-nated world, there will be those who never leave their homes to do their shopping. The Inter-net offers enticing purchases. All those Christmas catalogs invite us to buy over the phone or the ‘net. All it takes is a cred-it card and a few clicks on the keyboard.

But the temptation should prompt second thoughts. Add the cost of shipping first and see if the purchase is still that inviting. Then remember how disappointed you were when the last shipment arrived and the contents were not at all what you expected. Those en-trancing color photos often are the most attractive part of the merchandise offered.

Maybe the best reason to keep that credit card in the wallet is that on-line shopping is so quick and easy that it’s easy to over-do. Credit card balances carry a hefty interest rate. Yield to the temptation and those monthly additions to what was paid for stuff can become overwhelming.

Be local and buy local means you have a chance to look care-fully before you buy — to ac-tually hold the item in your hand, feel the fabric, switch the gadget on and see if it works, before you buy. Be local, buy lo-cal and you will become aware of the real bargains you can find right here in Iola.

Here’s another thought: How many people does Amazon em-ploy locally? Zero. Iola workers pay taxes and because they do, they make it easier for the rest of the community to pay the cost of running the city with its utility systems, of keeping the streets in good shape, sup-port the Bowlus Fine Arts Cen-ter, keep the public schools and Allen Community College high quality to help Iola’s young-sters meet their potential. The more taxpayers there are, the less each taxpayer must pay.

But perhaps the very best reason of all to Be Local, Buy Local is to invest in the future of the community. The more support that Iolans give to Io-la’s merchants, the more cer-tain the future of those mer-chants becomes. Stores that aren’t patronized must close their doors. Those supported by the community expand their lines of merchanise, remodel to make their businesses more attractive and hire more clerks so they are able to offer better service.

Be Local. Buy Local. Build Iola. Make it a better place for you and your family to live.

Happy shopping.

WASHINGTON — Speaker John Boehner emerged from his weekly huddle with House Repub-licans on Wednesday morning to take his place behind a mahogany lectern in front of a brown back-drop. The dark tones provided ideal camouflage for the deeply tanned speaker — as though he were trying to vanish into the background.

Who could blame him? Right now, he is hoping to lead

his fractious GOP to an orderly surrender. The question is no longer whether Republicans will give on taxes; they already have. All that remains to be negotiated is how they will increase taxes, and whether they will do it before or after the government reaches the “fiscal cliff.”

“I believe that it’s appropri-ate to put revenues on the table,” Boehner told reporters. “Now, the revenues we’re putting on the table are going to come from — guess who? — the rich.”

Socialist! Redistributionist! Spreader of wealth!

One of Boehner’s lieutenants, Pete Roskam of Illinois, stepped to the microphones, essentially pleading for the president to show mercy. “President Obama has an unbelievable opportunity to be a transformational president — that is, to bring the country to-gether,” he said. “Or he can dis-solve into zero-sum-game politics, where he wins and other people lose.”

Those “other people” would be the House Republicans, because it is Obama who seems to be hold-ing all the cards right now. A poll by the Pew Research Center found that 53 percent of Americans would blame Republicans for sending the nation off the cliff and only 27 percent would blame Obama. And Republicans didn’t

help their cause by ending their workweek on Wednesday and go-ing home.

Earlier in the week, Boehner offered Obama an $800 billion tax increase with the blessing of Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, the Republicans’ vice presidential nominee this year, and other House leaders. The speaker is trying to hold out for making those hikes come from lower deductions rather than higher rates, but the White House is feeling so confident that it dis-missed Boehner’s offer out of hand. Obama Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer told Peter Baker of The New York Times that Obama “won’t sign a deal that doesn’t have higher rates for the wealthy. Until they cross that bridge, nothing else is relevant.”

Republicans are looking for face-saving ways to retreat, such as allowing a tax increase to pass the House by voting “present” in-stead of “no.” Jeb Hensarling of Texas, the outgoing chairman of the House GOP conference, ac-knowledged Wednesday on CNN that “the president is going to get his revenue one way or the other.”

As they prepare to accommo-date Obama, Republican lead-ers have begun to crack down on hard-liners in their ranks who routinely defy compromise. On Monday, two dissidents were re-moved from the House Financial Services Committee and two from

the Budget Committee. Outside their meeting in the

Capitol basement Wednesday morning, House Republicans were coming to grips with the in-evitability of the tax increase.

“We’re not looking at dooms-day,” the GOP whip, Kevin Mc-Carthy of California, assured CNN’s Dana Bash.

Ryan, who signed off on the hike, left the session with a wave. “I’m not doing press,” he said. “I’m just saying ‘hi.’”

Boehner emerged 17 minutes late and five minutes after his aides gave the camera crews a two-minute warning. “We made a good-faith offer,” he began, prom-ising that “our targets and frame-works are things that we can all agree on.”

A flustered McCarthy added his perspective. “The president now has to engage,” he said. “I think the sex” — he caught himself — “the next 72 hours are critical.”

A few on the leadership team repeated the old platitudes about taxes. “An obsession to raise taxes is not going to solve the problem,” said Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Virginia. Cathy McMorris Rod-gers of Washington state sounded the refrain that “Washington does not have a revenue problem.”

But the bromides couldn’t conceal the fact that House GOP leaders, with little dissent from the rank and file, had already ac-quiesced on some form of a tax increase. “House Republicans are prepared to get to yes,” Roskam said. “House Republicans are not prepared to get to foolish, and it is foolish to reject President Obama’s own self-described ar-chitecture of $3 in spending cuts for every dollar in new revenue.”

Coming from a bunch that liked to say they wouldn’t allow a dol-lar of new revenue even if it came

Be local, buy localand invest in Iola Kaitlyn Smutz is an honest and

caring young girl. No one is hap-pier than Alex Gumfory, a senior at Iola High.

Last month during a school

trip to Wichita, Gumfory dropped her wallet, unbeknown to her, on the bus. Later, she noticed it was missing and frantically searched through her room at home, and anywhere else she thought it might be.

No luck.Meanwhile, the next morning

Smutz, a fourth-grader at Jeffer-son Elementary, boarded the bus for a journey to Wichita, where she and other members of the school’s drumming circle, under tutelage of Karen Jesseph, were to perform at a Kansas Depart-ment of Education event.

Along the way, when the bus driver applied its brakes, the wal-let slid out from under Kaitlyn’s seat and hit her foot. Without hesitation, she handed the wallet to Jesseph, who found it belonged to Gumfory, who happens to be her cousin and daughter of Kelly Spears, of Diamond Daisy flower shop in downtown Iola.

When the group got home, Jesseph carried the wallet to the flower shop, which was met with tears of appreciation from Spears and grandmother Jackie Smith.

All realized that if someone with less integrity had found the wallet, Gumfory could have had a rough go. Not only did it con-tain her driver’s license, but also debit and credit cards and some cash.

Kaitlyn, second oldest of eight children of Justin and Sara Smutz, Gas, never had any

xthoughts about doing any but the right thing, including finding the wallet’s owner as quickly as pos-sible. She didn’t expect anything for being honest and upright, but did receive a stuffed animal and balloons from Gumfory and, when he heard the story, a coveted challenge coin from Allen County Sheriff Tom Williams.

The story also brought acco-lades — and a few tears — from Kaitlyn’s bus driver, Steffen Centlivre, when she arrived for a

ride home from school after re-ceiving Gumfory’s gift. Balloons aren’t allowed on buses, but Centlivre quickly gave his OK when he learned why Kaitlyn had them in tow.

KAITLYN’S story shouldn’t be considered an anomaly. Although some fall off society’s wagon, the lion’s share of today’s kids are just like her, eager and willing to do the right thing anytime the op-portunity presents itself.

A genuine ‘feel-good’ story

Register/Bob JohnsonKaitlyn Smutz gets a hug from her music teacher, Karen Jesseph.

At

Week’s End

White flag ready for GOP on tax deal

DanaMillbank

The WashingtonPost

By JOAN LOWYAssociated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Many motorists don’t know it, but it’s likely that every time they get behind the wheel, there’s a snitch along for the ride.

In the next few days, the Na-tional Highway Traffic Safety Administration is expected to propose long-delayed regula-tions requiring auto manufac-turers to include event data recorders — better known as “black boxes” — in all new cars and light trucks. But the agency is behind the curve. Automak-ers have been quietly tucking the devices, which automatical-ly record the actions of drivers and the responses of their ve-hicles in a continuous informa-tion loop, into most new cars for years.

When a car is involved in a crash or when its airbags de-ploy, inputs from the vehicle’s sensors during the 5 to 10 sec-onds before impact are auto-matically preserved. That’s usu-ally enough to record things like how fast the car was traveling and whether the driver applied the brake, was steering errati-cally or had a seat belt on.

The idea is to gather infor-mation that can help investi-gators determine the cause of accidents and lead to safer ve-hicles. But privacy advocates say government regulators and automakers are spreading an in-trusive technology without first putting in place policies to pre-vent misuse of the information collected.

Data collected by the record-ers is increasingly showing up in lawsuits, criminal cases and high-profile accidents. Massa-chusetts Lt. Gov. Timothy Mur-ray initially said that he wasn’t speeding and that he was wear-ing his seat belt when he crashed a government-owned car last year. But the Ford Crown Victo-ria’s data recorder told a differ-ent story: It showed the car was traveling more than 100 mph and Murray wasn’t belted in.

In 2007, then-New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine was seriously in-jured in the crash of an SUV

driven by a state trooper. Cor-zine was a passenger. The SUV’s recorder showed the vehicle was traveling 91 mph on a park-way where the speed limit was 65 mph, and Corzine didn’t have his seat belt on.

There’s no opt-out. It’s ex-tremely difficult for car own-ers to disable the recorders. Although some vehicle models have had recorders since the early 1990s, a federal require-ment that automakers disclose their existence in owner’s man-uals didn’t go into effect until three months ago.

The traffic safety administra-tion is also considering expand-ing the data requirement to in-clude as many as 30 additional types of data such as whether the vehicle’s electronic stability con-trol was engaged, the driver’s seat position or whether the front-seat passenger was belted in.

Despite privacy complaints, the traffic safety administra-tion so far hasn’t put any limits on how the information can be used. About a dozen states have some law regarding data record-ers, but the rest do not.

“Right now we’re in an en-vironment where there are no rules, there are no limits, there are no consequences and there is no transparency,” said Lillie Coney, associate director of the Electronic Privacy Informa-tion Center, a privacy advocacy group. “Most people who are operating a motor vehicle have no idea this technology is inte-grated into their vehicle.”

‘Black boxes’ proposed for cars

The idea is to gather in-formation that can help in-vestigators determine the cause of accidents and lead to safer vehicles. But privacy advocates say gov-ernment regulators and au-tomakers are spreading an intrusive technology without first putting in place policies to prevent misuse of the in-formation collected.

Page 8: Iola Register 12-8

A8Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

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Laura and Bret Hen-derson, Chandler, Ariz., are the proud parents of a baby girl Audrey Anne Henderson.

She was born on Oct. 30, 2012 in Gilbert, Ariz.

She weighed 8 pounds 1 ounce and 21 ½ inches long.

Her maternal grand-parents Wayne and Mary Dunn, Humboldt.

Her paternal grandpar-

ents are Dale and C o l e t t e H e n d e r -son, Min-neapolis.

H e r g r e a t -grandpar-ents are Marge Neely, Chanute, Marie Dunn, Meriden, and

Robert Kelsey, Sidney, Neb.

Audrey Ann Henderson

Audrey

Aubrey Folk and Shawn Sparks, Lawrence, were married April 21, 2012 at 5 p.m. at First Southern Bap-tist Church in Lawrence.

Rev. Randy Johnson offi-ciated the wedding.

Aubrey is the daughter of Mike and Cherie Folk, Santana.

Shawn is the son of Ter-ry and Cheryl Sparks, Iola.

Kelli Folk, sister of the bride was the maid of hon-or. The bridesmaids were: Amanda Merz, Holcomb, Amy Grant, Santana, Dani-elle Wurtz, Loveland, Colo. and Tiffany Jensen, Ed-mond, Okla.

The best men were Ryan and Eric Sparks, brothers of the groom.

The groomsmen were: Brett Larson, Manhattan,

Scott Rexwinkle, Grove-land, Calif., Dustin Brock and Antoine Polite, Law-rence, Brad Johnson, Silver Lake, and Josh Mellberg, Tucson, Ariz.

Aubrey graduated from Santana High School, got her bachelor of fine arts de-gree and master of science degree from Emporia State University. She is a realtor with Stephens Real Estate in Lawrence.

Shawn graduated from Iola High School and got a bachelor in business fi-nance from Kansas State University. He is the vice president of Marketing with Advisors Excel in To-peka.

They had their honey-moon in New Zealand and Bora Bora.

Births

Aubrey Folk and Shawn Sparks

Wedding Mostly cloudyTonight, mostly cloudy.

A slight chance of rain showers in the evening, then a slight chance of rain after midnight. Lows 35 to 40. South winds 5 to 10 mph becoming west af-ter midnight. Chance of rain 20 percent.

Sunday, mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain. Breezy, colder. Highs 40 to 45. North winds 10 to 15 mph increasing to 15 to 25 mph with gusts to around 30 mph in the afternoon.

Sunday night, mostly cloudy. Much colder. A slight chance of flurries in the evening. Lows near 15. North winds 15 to 20 mph with gusts to around 30 mph.

Sunrise 7:25 a.m. Sunset 5:02 p.m.

TemperatureHigh yesterday 59Low last night 42High a year ago 40Low a year ago 14

Precipitation24 hours ending 7 a.m. 0This month to date 0Total year to date 27.28Def. since Jan. 1 9.47

— NOTICE — Our carriers’ (under contract) deadline for home delivery of

The Iola Register is 5:30 p.m. weekdays and 9:30 a.m. Saturdays for Iola carriers.

DEADLINE FOR OUT-OF-TOWN CARRIERS IS 6:30 P.M. WEEKDAYS AND 9:30 SATURDAY.

If you have not received your paper by deadline, please call your carrier first. If unable to reach your carrier, call the

Register office at 365-2111. Rural Carriers 6:30 p.m. weekdays – 10:30 Saturdays

Page 9: Iola Register 12-8

Saturday, December 8, 2012The Iola Registerwww.iolaregister.com B1

Sports IMS girls battle Pittsburg

Details B2

By RICHARD [email protected]

BURLINGTON – Iola High Fil-lies head coach Becky Carlson sees flashes of improvement with her young basketball squad.

“We just need some consisten-cy,” she said.

On Friday, the Fillies battled toe-to-toe against Anderson Coun-ty in the third and final round of the Burlington Preseason Tour-nament.

The score stood in Anderson County’s favor, 22-19, when the Lady Bulldogs rang up seven straight points down the stretch.

Iola’s Lexy Long drained a 3-pointer in the final minute, but the Fillies could get no closer in a 29-22 loss.

The defeat drops Iola to 0-4 on the season and 0-3 in the Burling-ton tournament.

Despite the loss, Carlson left the Burlington Middle School gymnasium encouraged.

“We were more active on de-fense than we have been,” Carlson said, “and our 1-3-1 zone worked well.”

Carlson also lauded the work of bench players Addie Haar, Rea-gan Ford and Long.

“Reagan stepped up for us and did a good job,” Carlson said. “Lexie gave us a spark and Addie did a good job of getting around inside and drawing fouls.”

Both squad struggled on of-fense in the early going.

Labby Shay’s putback with 6:51

left in the first quarter was the only field goal either squad could muster in the game’s first 9½ minutes.

Anderson County was without

a field goal until Amanda Moody drained a short jumper early in the second quarter. The basket triggered a six-point run, giving Anderson County an 8-3 lead.

Ford scored twice in the final minutes of the half to cut the gap to 8-7, then Jo Lohman’s bucket

Fillies come up short in tourney finale

Register/Richard LukenIola High’s Lexie Long, center, weaves her way through Anderson County High defenders Macy Ad-ams, left, and Paige Scheckel Friday. Long scored six points for the Fillies in the 29-22 loss.

By RICHARD [email protected]

BURLINGTON — Stop us if you’ve heard this before.

On Friday, the Iola High Mus-tangs struggled mightily in the early going, the third such occur-rence in four games in the young 2012-13 season.

Iola was sluggish on offense and defense as Chanute High blasted its way to a 19-4 lead.

“I was happy with how we put ourselves in position to come back, but it’s hard to come all the way back from 15 down,” Mus-tang head coach Bill Peeper said. “We’re just killing ourselves by coming out not ready to play.”

Iola got no closer than four points down the stretch in a 50-42 defeat.

The loss comes in the fifth-place contest of Burlington’s pre-season tournament. Iola went 1-2 in tournament play and stands at 1-3 overall.

“I don’t know how it happens,” Peeper said. “I thought we fixed this last time out (in a win over Louisburg.) Tonight was a step backward for us.”

Iola held a 2-0 lead before Cha-nute’s Caleb Dietsch drained a 3-pointer for the Blue Comets to trigger a 10-0 spurt. The Mus-tangs’ Tyler Powelson stopped the run with an inside basket. Chanute responded with another nine-point flurry in the final 1:41 of the period.

Iola’s Tyler McIntosh scored to start the second quarter, followed

in short order by two Powelson buckets to close the gap to 19-10.

The lead was 21-10 when Pow-elson scored again, followed by a field goal by Andrew Kauth to cut the gap to seven.

But the momentum was snuffed when Dietsch hit from 3-point range at the halftime buzzer to push the Chanute lead back into

Register/Richard LukenHumboldt High’s Hunter Murrow (4) is sandwiched between Crest High defenders Brock Ellis (33) and Jesse Boone Thurs-day.

Chanute holds off Mustang rally

By RICHARD [email protected]

HUMBOLDT – Athough the basket seemingly had an invisi-ble lid preventing outside jump-ers, free throws and occasional layups from dropping, Thurs-day’s matchup between two of the area’s most highly regarded basketball teams lived up to its billing, and then some.

It wasn’t until Crest High’s Brock Ellis’ desperation 3-point-er from near midcourt came tantalizingly close to falling –

the shot had the right distance, but was a tad to the left – that Humboldt High came away with a 43-40 win over the Lancers.

The victory came in the sec-ond round of Humboldt’s pre-season tournament.

Both schools completed tour-nament play Friday night, Hum-boldt routed Erie 51-17. Crest de-feated Uniontown.

“This was the type of game that had either of us not played well, the other team was going

Register/Richard LukenChanute High’s Derek Sharp (32) attempts to corral a loose basket-ball in front of Iola High’s Tyler McIntosh Friday.

Yates Center High’s boys doubled-up on wins for Thurs-day and Friday in their pre-season tournament at home, topping Altoona-Midway first, then Cherryvale.

For Thursday’s victory, the Wildcats came out strong in the second half after holding a close match in the first, edging out the 66-49 win.

The Wildcats 35-33 over the Jets at halftime. They came out with a 21-11 third quarter spurt to seize control.

Cameron Brown led the way with 24 point performance, along with Caleb DeNoon with 18.

In Friday night’s victory for Yates Center High over Cher-ryvale, the conclusion came down to the wire, ending in a 73-72 nail-biting finish.

The first quarter started close and would set the tone for the entire game.

The Chargers led 20-19 after one quarter before Yates Cen-ter took the upper hand at half-time, 44-41.

HUMBOLDT — While both teams’ defenses had their mo-ments Thursday evening, Hum-boldt High’s defense was particu-larly stifling from start to finish.

“Our defense would stop them on 10 straight possessions, then we’d give up points on 10 straight possessions,” Crest High Lady Lancers coach Ben Vaughn said.

The Humboldt girls pushed to-gether several key runs to grab their first win of the season, 55-30.

The victory came in the second round of Humboldt’s preseason tournament.

Both teams also played Friday, but results were not immediately available by press time.

“I was very proud of our de-fense,” Lady Cub head coach Sherri Nelson said. “We got the players where they needed to be.”

Whitney Strack played the piv-

otal role in a second-quarter flur-ry that turned a 10-8 lead into a 25-16 advantage at halftime. Strack provided several steals and drives to the basket that resulted in sev-eral free throw attempts.

When Strack wasn’t making noise, Sheri Middleton was at times dominating the middle by swatting away field goal attempts inside or altering passes across the lane. Middleton scored four in the quarter. Megan Hudlin drained a pivotal 3-pointer as well.

The Lady Cub defense clamped down in the third period as Hum-

Lady Cubs down Crest

SEE FILLIES | B2

YC boysdoubletheirpleasure

SEE YC | B3

SEE MUSTANGS | B2

SEE LADY CUBS | B2

Crest High’s Emmalee Seabolt (24) pressures Humboldt High’s Sheri Middleton (10) Thursday.

Register/Richard Luken

Humboldt downs Lancers

SEE HUMBOLDT | B3

IHS JV squadscompete in Fort Scott

Details B3

Page 10: Iola Register 12-8

Iola Middle School’s teams came up short on the scoreboard but showed plenty of hustle and ef-fort in their home contests Thursday against Pitts-burg.

The eighth-graders were even with Pittsburg “for all but about 45 seconds in the second quarter,” Ponies coach Marty Taylor said.

That discrepancy was enough for Pittsburg to take a small lead, maintain-ing that advantage the rest of the game in a 28-21 vic-tory.

Iola led 10-8 after one quarter before Pittsburg crept in front 16-14 at half-time. The Purple Dragons pushed their lead to 23-17 after three quarters.

Toni Macha led Iola with eight points and four re-bounds, followed by Lexi Heslop with seven points and five rebounds. Sydney Wade had six points and two boards.

“I just can’t say enough about how hard the girls play,” Taylor said. “Pitts-burg is a very good basket-ball team.”

The Pony seventh-grad-ers were nip and tuck with Pittsburg for three quarters before the Purple

B2Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

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High School BasketballTuesday vs. FREDONIA, 6 p.m.

JV BasketballToday at Fort Scott Tour-nament, 9 a.m.High School Wrestling

Today at Anderson Co. In-vitational, 9 a.m.Today at Coffeyville Invita-tional (JV)Thursday at Erie, 5:30 p.m.Middle School Basket-

ballToday IMS Invitational, 9 a.m.Monday 7th, 8th girls vs. PARSONS, 3:30 p.m.

Iola

BasketballTuesday vs. YATES CEN-TERFriday at Neodesha

Humboldt

BasketballTuesday vs. JAYHAWK-LINN

Marmaton Valley

BasketballTuesday at Pleasanton

Crest

BasketballTuesday at HumboldtFriday vs. EUREKA

Yates Center

BasketballTuesday vs. MADISONFriday at Lebo

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Allen

SportsCalendar

gave Iola a 9-8 lead early in the third quarter — Iola’s first post-halftime lead of the season.

Anderson County promptly responded with a 10-0 run over the next four minutes to lead 18-9.

Iola’s Kyra Moore scored at the 3:07 mark of the pe-riod, followed by a 3-pointer with Long to close the gap to 18-14.

Haar exerted herself

early in the fourth quarter, scoring a bucket before hit-ting 1 of 2 free throws to close the gap to 22-19 with 5:13 left in the game.

But Anderson County clamped down on defense from there, holding Iola scoreless until Long’s final trey.

Long had six points to lead Iola, followed by Ford with four.

Jaime Mersman scored nine points — all in the sec-ond half — to lead Ander-

son County.Iola resumes regular sea-

son action Tuesday at home against Friday.

Iola (3-4-7-8—22)Anderson Co. (2-6-12-9—29)Iola (FG/3pt-FT-F-TP): Piazza

0-0-2-0, Shay 1-0-1-2, Endicott 0-0-4-0, Driskel 0-1-0-1, Long 0/2-0-1-6, Moore 1-0-1-2, Ford 2-0-1-4, Haar 1-1-0-3. TOTALS: 7/2-2-10-22.

Anderson Co. (FG-FT-F-TP): Prater 1-0-0-2, Stevenson 2-0-3-4, Adams 1-0-2-2, McCullough 0-0-1-0, Yoder 0-0-1-0, Ratliff 2-0-3-4, Moody 0-2-2-4, Scheckel 1-2-2-4, Mersman 4-0-3-8. TOTALS: 13-3-17-29.

boldt put the game out of reach with a 13-3 run.

Bre Kline took over the scoring duties in the sec-ond half, scoring 13 of her game-high 15 points in the third and fourth quarters. Strack chipped in with 10 points and three steals, although Nelson said she had a hand in several oth-er deflections that wound up as steals for team-mates.

Middleton followed with eight points, six re-bounds and four blocks. Kline and Delaney Um-holtz also had three steals.

Brytton Strickler, Kur-

ston Gilliland and Madi-son Kellar each scored seven points to lead Crest. Madison Covey added six.

Humboldt resumes play at home Tuesday against Yates Center. Crest heads to Pleasanton Tuesday.

Crest (8-8-3-11—30)Humboldt (10-15-13-17—55)Crest (FG/3pt-FT-F-TP):

Covey 2-2-4-6, Strickler 2-3-1-7, Sherman 0-0-1-0, Gilliland 3-1-4-7, LaCross 1-0-5-2, Seabolt 0-1-4-1, Kellar 1/1-2-4-7, Sedlak 0-0-2-0. TOTALS: 9/1-9-25-30.

Humboldt (FG/3pt-FT-F-TP): Kline 4/1-4-4-15, Middleton 3-2-2-8, Maxton 0-1-4-1, Riebel 1-0-1-2, Hudlin 1/1-0-4-5, English 0-0-1-0, Beeman 0/1-0-0-3, Strack 4-2-2-10, Wilson 0/1-0-2-4, Menzie 2-0-2-4, Umholtz 0-0-1-0, Morris

IMS squads fall to Pittsburg

double digits, 24-14.The Blue Comet advan-

tage yo-yoed between 11 and 15 points throughout the third quarter until Iola’s Levi Ashmore hit a buzzer-beater of his own to cut the gap to eight, 35-27.

The lead swelled back to double digits at 42-32 be-fore Iola’s final real salvo of the night.

Powelson converted a three-point play with 5:05 left in the game. Two Di-etsch free throws were countered by another Pow-elson bucket with 3:25 left.

The teams traded missed baskets and turn-overs on their next two possessions before Mason Coons hit a 3-pointer for the Mustangs to cut the gap to 44-40.

Chanute’s Derek Sharp scored before Iola came up empty on its next two pos-sessions.

Two Sharp free throws put the game out of reach.

Powelson led Iola with 15 points, 11 rebounds, four steals and three blocks. Ashmore added eight points and two as-sists, while Coons had six boards. Trent Latta had five steals for the Mus-tangs.

“I don’t think our slow start had anything to do with tired legs,” Peeper said. “I think it had a lot to do with leadership. Other teams aren’t going to lay down and let us do what we want. We have to take it.”

Brock Gilmore paced the Blue Comets with 18

points. Dietsch scored 13.In other tournament

action Friday, Louisburg defeated Baldwin 50-41 to win the tournament championship. Burling-ton knocked off Anderson County 80-73 in the third-place game.

Iola returns to action Tuesday in its home-open-er against Fredonia.

Iola (4-10-13-13—42)Chanute (18-5-11-15—50)Iola (FG/3pt-FT-F-TP): Latta

2-2-3-6, Ashmore 1/2-0-1-8, Coons 1/1-0-2-5, McIntosh 1-2-0-4, Macha 1-0-1-2, Kauth 1-0-0-2, Powelson 7-1-2-15. TOTALS: 14/3-5-12-42.

Chanute (FG/3pt-FT-F-TP): Fairchild 0-0-3-0, Martin 2-0-0-4, Gilmore 7-4-Richards 0-2-2-2, Di-etsch 2/2-3-2-13, Sharp 4-2-1-10, Ellis 1-1-2-3. TOTALS: 16/2-12-50.

* FilliesContinued from B1

Iola Middle School’s Karly McGuffin, left, puts up a shot in an earlier home game. McGuffin scored four points for the IMS seventh-graders in a loss to Pittsburg.

* MustangsContinued from B1

Register/Richard LukenIola High’s Emma Piazza looks for room to maneuver against an Anderson County defender Friday.

Iola High’s Adam Kauth (32) goes up for a shot Friday between Chanute defenders Derek Sharp (32) and Brock Gilmore (5).

* Lady CubsContinued from B1

Photo by Mike MyerHumboldt High’s Megan Hudlin (15) puts up a shot Friday against Erie High.

Dragons closed the game with an 11-3 run in a 29-22 victory.

Iola led 4-2 after one quar-ter and 13-8 at halftime. Pittsburg closed the gap to 19-18 after the third period.

“These girls have im-proved so much from day one,” Taylor said, “but we need to take the next step and beat a good basketball team.”

Colbi Riley scored 12 points to lead the IMS seventh-graders, followed by Eliza Hale and Karly

McGuffin with four points each and Katie Bauer with two.

“Our effort was great tonight, but a two-minute stretch in the third quarter hurt us. Colbi was aggres-sive and got some shots to fall.”

Pittsburg triumphed in the B team contest 16-3. Carley Cescon scored two points for Iola. Kayla Un-derwood had one.

The Pony eighth-graders host the IMS Winter Classic this morning.

Page 11: Iola Register 12-8

B4Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

Diesel & Turbo Diesel & Turbo of Iola of Iola

David & Justin

As we celebrate the season, may we be reminded of the wondrous gift God sent to earth. A blessed Christmas

to you and yours.

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Doors Open 30 Minutes Before The Show

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Don’t miss this show that will leave you Don’t miss this show that will leave you wondering “How’d he do that?” wondering “How’d he do that?”

C ASSEROLE C ARAVAN & B AKE S ALE

St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church is having a

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Pick up is Sat., Dec. 8 • 10 a.m.-Noon (or until gone)

at St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church 202 S. Walnut, Iola • 620-365-7306

All proceeds go to St. Timothy’s Community Outreach Program

Casseroles including but not limited to: Lasagna, Chicken Frito Pie, Beef Frito Pie, Hamburger Macaroni

KICKS COUNTRY IN IOLA Trading Post — 8 a.m. - 9 a.m.

BANKERS LIFE AND CASUALTY CO. Raymond “Skeet” George

Representative Insurance for: Life Medicare Supplement Annuities Short & Long Term Care Res: (620) 756-4598 1-800-98 SKEET

(987-5338) 4206

DISTRICT COURTJudge Daniel Creitz

Civil cases filed:CitiMortgage Inc. vs.

Brad E. Vyhlidal, et al, mortgage foreclosure. Pi-qua State Bank vs. Brit-ton C. Klotz, et al, mort-gage foreclosure. Roger A. Jones vs. Guy Young, contract. Community Na-tional Bank and Trust vs. Diebolt Lumber and Sup-ply, et al, mortgage foreclo-sure. John W. Hughes vs. Helen I. Leckrone, protec-tion from stalking. Crys-tal Haynes vs. Helen I. Leckrone, protection from stalking. Rebecca J. Chap-man vs. Johnathon Bur-ris, protection from abuse. Morgan L. Dewey vs. Piet-ro Short, protection from abuse. State of Kansas vs. Marita R. Lehman, non-di-vorce visitation, custody. State of Kansas vs. Levi K. Martin, non-divorce visi-tation, custody. State of Kansas vs. Misty Dewey, non-divorce visitation, custody. State of Kansas vs. Amber D. Gray, et al, paternity. State of Kansas vs. Annie J. Henry, non-di-vorce visitation, custody. State of Kansas vs. Rob-ert Vargas Jr., non-divorce visitation, custody.

MAGISTRATE COURTJudge Thomas Saxton

Convicted of speeding or other violations with fines assessed:

Laron L. Mitchell, Kan-sas City, transporting an open container, 30 days jail suspended for six months probation, $523. Judith Pace, LaHarpe, maintain-ing a public nuisance, 30 days jail suspended for six months probation, $535. Lisa N. Deweese, Chanute, disorderly conduct, 14 days jail suspended for six months probation, $485. Robert C. McDown, LaHa-rpe, no hunting license, authority over wildlife and recreation resources, $323. Noe Bernal-Gutierrez, Kansas City, transporting an open container, $798. Darren L. McChesney, Overland Park, 81/65, $179. Robert J. Eschman, Tulsa, 78/65, $161. Terry W. Friend, Iola, 47/35, $155. Tyler D. Forrest, Osawato-mie, 75/65, $143. Steven R. Chasteen, Lawrence, 80/65, $173. James L. Lo-gan, Louisburg, 75/65, $143. Scott M. Danielson, Fort Collins, Colo., 65/55, $143. Jerri L. Ellis, Hum-boldt, 65/55, $224. Chay Her, Olathe, 80/65, $173. Brian K. Bilyeu, Ches-terfield, Mo., 75/65, $143. Eduardo B. Barraza, El Paso, Texas, improper u-turn, $173. Nyala P. Bu-lock, Kansas City, 89/65, $221. Charles M. Tonkin, Shawnee, 80/65, $198. Ra-chel A. Pryor, Fort Worth, Texas, 78/65, $161. Jimmy H. Murr, Olathe, 76/65, $149. Maureo M. Wilson, Collinsville, Okla., 94/65, $284. Justin R. Shields, Le Roy, 90/55, $368. Jordan L. Trimble, Platte City, Mo., 75/65, $168. Todd C. Granere, Iola, 47/35, $155. Stephen J. Thannickal, Broken Arrow, Okla.,

75/65, $143. Ricky D. Rid-out, Humboldt, 75/65, $143. Benjamin R. Johnson, Vian, Okla., 76/65, $149. Joseph. F. Amir, Shaw-nee, 75/65, $143. Rebecca R. Armstrong, Owasso, Okla., 75/65, $143. Casey Kidwell, LaHarpe, failure to yield, $173. Brianna E. Jett, Iola, traffic control signals, driving without a license, $293. Cody San-ford, Kincaid, 74/55, $197. Kevin W. Janke, Tulsa, 75/65, motor carrier safe-ty and regulations, $258. Taylor J. Serpan, Olathe, driving on left in no-pass-ing zone, $173. Tiffany L. Peacock, Chanute, follow-ing another vehicle too closely, $173. Lacy J. Jack, Tulsa, 78/65, $161. Michael R. Moore, Shawnee, 77/65, $155. Cody A. Lunsford, Fort Scott, 75/65, $143. Robert C. Coble, Savon-burg, disturbing a pub-lic meeting, 10 days jail suspended for six months probation, $360. Ezra W. Bartlett, Humboldt, trans-porting an open container, 14 days jail suspended for six months probation, $485. Patricia A. Hickman, LaHarpe, disorderly con-duct, 30 days jail suspend-ed for six months proba-tion, $535. Deborah Smail, Iola, official traffic control devices, $173. Convicted of no seat belt and fined $10:

Ramon Ballin, Chanute.Diversion agreements with fines assessed:

Tanner E. Lee, Iola, driving under the influ-ence, failure to submit a preliminary breath test, alcohol/drug evaluation, $1,560. Gabriel P. Swope, Iola, purchase and con-sumption of liquor by a minor, $610. Shane M. Sicka, Humboldt, giving a worthless check, $270. Christol L. Lind, Iola, driving under the influ-ence, drug/alcohol evalua-tion, $1,273. Christopher S. Keidel, Humboldt, driving under the influence, drug/

alcohol evaluation, $1,098. Barbara Gregg, Yates Cen-ter, giving a worthless check, $270. Leo D. Conn, Independence, transport-ing an open container, $510. Dustin J. Hicks, Els-more, driving under the influence, drug/alcohol evaluation, $1,273. Monica Fraker, Moran, transport-ing an open container, $388. Failing to appear:

Sara E. Adams, Gas City, permitting unauthorized person to drive, notice of change of address or name.Criminal cases filed:

John R. Hill, Iola, driv-ing under the influence, furnishing alcohol to a mi-nor, no liability insurance, operating without a valid license. Civil contract cases filed:

Johnson Law Office vs. Eduardo Bautista Jr., con-tract. Capital One Bank vs. Shawn O. Winner, debt col-lection. Blackshine, LLC vs. Sean A. Cullison, con-tract. Small claims filed:

D&D Propane Inc. vs. Joey Marshall, et al. Diebolt Lumber and Sup-ply Inc. vs. Klotz Rentals. D&D Propane Inc. vs. Ra-ven Jansen. D&D Propane Inc. vs. Merle E. Laver Jr. D&D Propane Inc. vs. Lisa J. Johnson. Howard A. Dillow vs. Velma Morgan. Howard A. Dillow vs. Jer-emy Trester.

IOLA MUNICIPAL COURT

Judge Thomas SaxtonConvicted of speeding of other violations with fines assessed:

Christine M. Beagel, Iola, criminal damage to property, 30 days jail sus-pended for six months

probation, $180. Kayla N. Blackburn, Iola, driving in violation of restrictions, license suspended, $180. Dylan C. Blanchard, Hum-boldt, no seat belt, $10. Mat-thew D. Bycroft, Gas City, 40/30, $140. Chase L. Dil-lon, St. James, Mo., theft, 30 days jail suspended for six months probation, pur-chase and consumption of liquor by a minor, $600. Au-tumn L. Douglas, Toronto, Kan., no seat belt, $10. Stephanie D. Garber, Iola, no seat belt, $10. Saman-tha J. Genoble, Iola, no li-ability insurance, $410. Wendy D. George, no seat belt, $10. Ivan P. Goins, Iola, 46/35, $146. Lisa L. Griffith, Neosho Falls, 40/35, $140. Christina N. Hedstrom, Iola, driving with suspended license, no seat belt, no liability insurance, child safety restraints, five days jail suspended for six months probation, $640. Lauren E. Heslop, Iola, criminal trespassing, 30 days jail suspended for 12 months probation, $300. Garrett A. Hess, Iola, obstructing le-gal process, criminal dam-age to property, disorderly conduct, purchase and consumption of liquor by a minor, $300. Luke J. Hopkins, Iola, 44/35, $140. Marla S. Hough, Bron-son, 45/35, $140. Amber L. Hudson, Chanute, theft, 30 days jail suspended for six months probation, $300. Kristen A. Jenkins, Park-er, Colo., 45/35, $140. Mary M. Joseph, Iola, 55/45, $140. Michael R. Kaufman, Humboldt, no seat belt, $10. Richard E. Keeler, Gas City, violate protective or-der, disorderly conduct, 30 days jail suspended for 12 months probation, $300. Kimberly A. Knavel, LaHa-

rpe, inattentive driving, $180. Garrett C. LaFever, Wichita, theft, purchase and consumption of liquor by a minor, 30 days jail suspended for six months probation, $600. Trenton D. Latta, Iola, no seat belt, $60. Tyler W. Lewis, Mo-ran, 50/40, $140. James A. Myers, Iola, no seat belt, $10. Annette M. Morris, Iola, disorderly conduct,

30 days jails suspended for six months probation, $180. Amanda R. Pollock, Iola, driving with a suspended license, 5 days jail sus-pended for six months pro-bation, $180. David V. Pool, Emporia, 45/35, $140. Sam-uel L. Shallah, Iola, 36/30, $140. Breanna J. Stout, Iola, 45/35, inattentive driving, $320. Alyssa R. Zimmer-man, Iola, 40/30, $140.

Court reports

Wishing all our friends and customers joy at Christmas and throughout the new year!

Your friends

at

Page 12: Iola Register 12-8

Auctions

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Help Wanted Windsor Place is taking applica-tions for a PART-TIME DIETARY AIDE. Apply at 600 E. Garfield, Iola. Ask for Andrea Rogers, Dietary Manager. EOE

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Child Care Day care now has openings, Jef-ferson District, Cindy Troxel 620-365-2204. Farm Miscellaneous

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Member/Senior Discounts 20% Discount New Customers Every purchase earns a chance

for free gift on Fridays.

AMERICAN HARVEST PELLET STOVE, in very nice condition, 620-363-0856.

Musical GUITARS, AMPS, KEYBOARDS, DRUMS, PAs, 10% off sale price through 12/31/2012, Kutz Music, 601 N. Broadway, Pittsburg.

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Wanted to Buy Want to buy raw furs Thursday evenings 8p.m. at Jerred Brutchun residence, 2049 Minnesota Rd., Iola, Rick Bunyard 620-736-1106.

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Mobile Home for Rent 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH in Gas, $400 monthly. 620-228-4549

Serviced Offered

Help Wanted

The SEK Multi-County Health Department that services Wood-son, Bourbon, Anderson, and Allen counties has POSITIONS AVAIL-ABLE for a CFO & CNO. Job de-scriptions are available at the health departments. Please send resumes before December 31st to: SEK Multi-County Health, 318 East

ADJUNCT INSTRUCTOR NEED-ED to teach Dreamweaver and Flash classes at Allen Community College for the 2013 semester on the Iola Campus. Classes are of-fered on Monday, Wednesday, and Fridays from 11a.m. to 1p.m. Mas-ter’s degree with at least 18 gradu-ate hours in Computer Science or a related discipline preferred. Review of applications will begin immediate-ly. Come be a part of our great team! Send letter of interest, resume, un-official college transcripts and three professional references to: Person-nel Office, Allen Community Col-lege, 1801 N. Cottonwood, Iola, KS 66749. Fax to 620-365-7406, email: [email protected]. Equal Op-portunity Employer.

PART-TIME WAIT STAFF, BAR-TENDER, KITCHEN HELP, call Cindy 620-228-2818.

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Auctions

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PSI, Inc. PSI, Inc. Personal Service Insurance Personal Service Insurance

Loren Korte 12 licensed insurance agents to

better serve you HUMBOLDT HUMBOLDT

473-3831 MORAN MORAN 237-4631

IOLA IOLA 365-6908 Life • Health • Home • Auto • Crop

Commercial • Farm

MIKE’S GUNS 620-363-0094 Thur.-Sat. 9-2

Good idea to call!

Saturday, December 8, 2012The Iola Registerwww.iolaregister.com B5

SEK-CAP

SEK-CAP, Inc. is accepting applications:

Iola - Assistant Teacher 3 - 5

Applications must be submitted online at

www.sek-cap.com under “SEK-CAP Online

Employment Applications. ” EOE.

This position is funded with federal health and human

services grants Amazingly good sound quality. In same family since

purchased new locally. $ 295

620-228-4642

CONSOLE PIANO 1955

Wurlitzer Serial #570285 blonde finish & matching

bench

Price Reduced To

leave message

Production

Think Inside The Box Think Inside The Box Since 1923, our products have played a unique role in making some of life’s special moments even sweeter. Our Iola, KS facility has the following position available:

PRODUCTION PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR SUPERVISOR

In this fast-paced envi - ronment, the successful candidate will have a pro - gressive track record of managing people in a food processing or related facility. Strong lead - ership skills & the ability to communicate with all levels in a hands-on envi - ronment are required. HS Diploma & 3 yrs. super - visory exp. is required. Russell Stover offers a competitive salary & benefits pkg. including medical, dental, vision, 401K. Please send your resume with salary his - tory to:

Russell Stover Russell Stover Candies Candies

Attn: Human Attn: Human Resources Resources

1995 Marshmallow Ln. 1995 Marshmallow Ln. Iola, KS 66749 Iola, KS 66749

Individuals expressing interest in this position must meet the minimum position qualifications, as defined by the Company, in order to be considered an applicant for employ - ment opportunity. EOE

PUBLIC AUCTION Wed., Dec. 12, 2012 • 9:30 a.m.

209 N. Fry, Yates Center, KS Real Estate Auction • 11 a.m.

Huge commercial building (286’ x 80’) warehouse/manufacturing building with attached 30 x 50 office building. Also a 101’ x 20’ open sided storage building. All located on 4.5 acres on the north side of Yates Center, KS. 06 Dodge 3500 Cummins turbo-diesel dually 4-door- 216,700 miles- heavy duty oilfield utility bed; ‘05 Chevy 2500 4x4- 243,000 miles; ‘98 Chevy 3500 dually 454 5-speed B&W FB-solid truck; ‘91 F350 diesel 4x4 Tulsa-style wenchbed w/Ramsey wench; 19?? Chevy 3500 gas dually- welding bedcattleguard; 88 Chevy Cummins diesel truck- Leland bed- Ramsey winch- 268,000 miles; 85 F350 XL diesel Tulsa- style wenchbed w/ Ramsey wench; ‘83 KW CO truck -235,000 miles; ‘85 Frtlnr. w/ 3306 Cat diesel water truck w/3” pump; ‘99 Int. 4700 DT466E Int motor 5 speed w/ Tulsa 23L wench and bed, sharp truck; ‘97 Volvo w/’08 Semco pulling unit good rubber -135,000 miles- 30000# single line pull, Lift height 52’, will pull doubles -3000ft sand line- double drum; 1979 Int. Paystar 5000 truck w/Chicago pneumatic 700 airdrill rig deep hole kit- 70000# pull back - 3306 Cat deck engine, top head drive, rod carousel. Heavy Equipment: Weber 5000lb rough terrain forklift; Hyster 40LP forklift-needs repair; JCB 930 diesel 6000lb forklift; Case 580 backhoe/loader w/ side boom runs-needs hydraulic work; Case 580 Super L backhoe/loader w/cab, 6200 hrs; Ditchwitch RT40 backhoe/trencher-891 hrs- good working condition; Cat D6M XL high-track lgp dozer 6-way blade w/ ripper and winch- 8063 hrs- freshly, rebuilt engine- records available-70%+ undercarriage; D4 Cat dozer -ropes canopy -lgp high track- runs & operatesgood- 50% undercarriage, 5027 hrs- 6-way blade; Cat 287B Skidsteer- rubber track-w/cab and air; Very Good 11000 lb fork lift,11,000 hrs, propane; MACK semi watertruck w- 3” pump; 35 tonLowboy doser trailer; Vermeer Trencher for parts; Trailers and Truck Beds: ‘92 S&H 8x26’ enclosed cargo trailer high, sidedextended roof; JJN GN 20’ FB trailer w/fold down ramps; 2000 Titan GN FB 8’x20’ trailer w/4’ dovetail fold-up ramps- tandem duels- 10,000lb axles; 30’ pipe trailer- bumper hitch; Yard pipe trailers; Leland truck bed w/Tulsa wench & 5th wheel plate; 8’ Teague utility truck bed. Many more items too numerous to mention.

Owner: BC Steel Terms: Cash or approved check. Not responsible for

accidents or theft. For real estate information prior to sale date contact: Thompson Realty, 15 N. State St. ~ Iola, KS 66749.

Auctioneer: Kent Thompson, Broker - Charly Cummings, Sales Associate

Office: 620-365-3197, Mobile: 620-496-7200 E-Mail: [email protected]

CC Auctions Auctioneers: Charly Cummings - 620-496-7108

BC Steel Real Estate Auction•Tuesday, Dec. 11, 12 - 10 a.m.•Burden, KS

By HOWARD MINTZSan Jose Mercury News

CAIRO (AP) — The Egyptian army deployed tanks and gave both sup-porters and opponents of Mohammed Morsi a deadline to leave the area outside the presidential palace Thursday follow-ing fierce street battles that left five people dead and more than 600 injured in the worst outbreak of violence between the two sides since the Islamist leader’s election.

The intensity of the overnight violence, with Morsi’s Islamist backers and largely secular pro-testers lobbing firebombs and rocks at each other, signaled a possible turn-ing point in the 2-week-old crisis over the president’s assumption of near-abso-lute powers and the hur-ried adoption of a draft constitution.

Opposition activists de-fiantly called for another protest outside the pal-ace later Thursday, rais-ing the specter of more bloodshed as neither side showed willingness to back down.

But the army’s Repub-lican Guard, an elite unit assigned to protect the president and his palaces, gave protesters on both sides until 3 p.m. (1300 GMT, 8 a.m. EDT) to clear the vicinity, according to an official statement. The statement also announced a ban on protests outside any of the nation’s presi-dential palaces.

Morsi was in the pal-ace Thursday conduct-ing business as usual, according to a presiden-tial official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not au-thorized to address the media.

Egypt has seen sporadic clashes throughout nearly two years of political tur-moil after the ouster of autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak. But Wednes-day’s street battles were the worst between Morsi’s supporters and followers and came after an implicit call by the Muslim Broth-erhood for its members to go to the palace and evict anti-Morsi protesters who had camped out there.

Unlike Mubarak, Morsi was elected in June after a narrow victory in Egypt’s first free presidential elec-tions, but many activists who supported him have jumped to the opposition after he issued decrees on Nov. 22 that put him above oversight and a draft charter was later rushed through by his Islamist al-lies despite a walkout by Christian and liberal fac-tions.

Compounding Morsi’s woes, four of his advisers resigned Wednesday, join-ing two other members of his 17-member advisory panel who have aban-doned him since the crisis began.

Six tanks and two ar-mored vehicles belonging to the Republican Guard, an elite unit tasked with protecting the president and his palaces, were sta-tioned Thursday morning at roads leading to the pal-ace in the upscale Cairo district of Heliopolis. The guard’s commander, Maj. Gen. Mohammed Zaki, sought to assure Egyp-tians that his forces were not taking sides.

PUBLIC AUCTION PUBLIC AUCTION At the Fire Station in down town Westphalia, KS At the Fire Station in down town Westphalia, KS

Sat., Dec. 15, 2012 • 10 a.m. Sat., Dec. 15, 2012 • 10 a.m. Because of the death of my husband Don Drum, I have sold the farm and moved

to The Meadows and will sell our liftime accumulation. 2004 Chevy Silverado Z71 ext cab pkup, 51K actual mi.; 1991 John Deere 2755 tractor (C-A-H) Sells w/JD 245 Ldr,nice; 3 pt equipment; 12 ft BushHog hvy disk; Poulan hydrostrat riding mower, 2 yrs old; near new Poulan chain saw; lots of old books & paper items; coins; guns; old German army helmet; old US army knives; old sword; good clean furniture & household items; collectible glassware; antique marble top dresser; dinning table & buffet; Aladdin glass lamp; lots of other antiques & collectible; stockyards bullet pencils; Old DeLaval sign; Old Lucky Strike tin sign; lots of misc tools; saddle and tack.

Complete sale bill at kansasauctions.net/kurtz Mary A. Drum, Owner

TERMS: Cash or good check. Not responsible for accidents or loss. Announcements made sale day take precedence over printed advertising.

Darwin W. Kurtz (785) 448-4152 Col. Ben Ernst (620) 364-6786

Apartments for Rent

Real Estate for Rent QUALITY AND AFFORDABLE HOMES available for rent now, http://www.growiola.com/

610 N. COTTONWOOD, 1 BED-ROOM, $250 monthly, $250 de-posit, no pets, 620-365-0090.

616 N. FIRST, 3 BEDROOM, $650 monthly plus deposit, 620-363-0563.

IOLA, 818 GARFIELD RD. N., 3 BEDROOM, CH/CA, appliances, large backyard, single attached ga-rage w/auto opener, $795 monthly, 620-496-6161 or 620-496-2222.

205 S. CHESTNUT, 2 BEDROOM HOUSE, 913-592-3885.

New Duplex, 2 Bedroom, CA/H, garage, appliances. Ready Now! Taking applications. 620-228-2331.

Real Estate for Sale Allen County Realty Inc.

620-365-3178John Brocker ........... 620-365-6892Carolynn Krohn ....... 620-365-9379Jim Hinson .............. 620-365-5609Jack Franklin ........... 620-365-5764Brian Coltrane.......... 620-496-5424Dewey Stotler............620-363-2491

www.allencountyrealty.com

624 N. ELM, 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, large living room, attached garage, 620-365-0468.

LOT FOR SALE, formerly 1102 East St., located on corner of 4th and East St., has all utilities, house still on it but coming down, $7500 OBO, call Rodney 620-228-1816 or Rick 620-228-2210.

DREAM HOME FOR SALE. 402 S. Elm, Iola, Grand 3-story 1897 home on 3 lots. 4,894 sq. ft. $190,000. call 620-365-9395 for Susan Lynn or Dr. Brian Wolfe [email protected]. More info and pictures at iolaregister.com/classifieds

Price reduced

Tanksdeployedin Egypt

People are talking . . .

www.iolaregister.com

You’ll find: ~ Front page

news ~ Classifieds

~ Editorial opinions ~ Sports

~ Entertainment ~ Community

Calendar ~ Register Archives

Now you can e-mail your comments and

question to any Iola Register staff

member at [email protected]

Iola Register’s Web site

is updated daily!

Page 13: Iola Register 12-8

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE by Chris Browne

ZITS by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

HI AND LOIS by Chance Browne

BABY BLUES by Kirkman & Scott

BEETLE BAILEY by Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk

BLONDIE by Young and Drake

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Here’s how to work it:

Sudoku is like a crossword puzzle, but uses numbers instead of words. The puzzle is a box of 81 squares, subdivided into 3x3 cubes of 9 squares each. Some squares are filled in with numbers. The rest should be filled in by the puzzler.Fill in the blank squares allowing the numbers 1-9 to appear only once in every row, once in ev-ery column and once in every 3x3 box. One-star puzzles are for begin-ners, and the difficulty gradually increases through the week to a very chal-lenging five-star puzzle.

CarTalkTomand RayMagliozzi

B6Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

(First published in The IolaRegister, December 8, 2012)

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ALLEN COUNTY, KANSAS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF:

CASE NO. 2012-PR-45Geraldine C. Lacy, DECEASED

NOTICE OF HEARINGTHE STATE OF KANSAS TO

ALL PERSONS CONCERNED:You are hereby notified that on

November, 28, 2012, a Petition was filed in this Court by L.C. Lacy pray-ing that descent be determined of the following real estate situate in Allen County, Kansas:

Lot 9, 10, 11, 12, Block 115, City of Iola, and Lot 2, Block 115, Origi-nal Townsite, City of Iola, and Lot Number Three (3), Block Number One Hundred Fifteen (115), City of Iola,

and all personal property and other Kansas real estate owned by decedent at the time of death; and that such property and all personal property and other Kansas real es-tate owned by the decedent at the time of death be assigned to the persons entitled thereto.

You are hereby required to file your written defenses thereto on or before January 2, 2013 at 8:30 a.m. in the District Court, Allen County, Kansas, at which time and place the cause will be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon said petition.

L.C. LacyPetitioner

William N. LacyAttorney for Petitioner111 S. StateP.O. Box 202Yates Center, KS 66783(620)625-2145

Public notice

Dear Drs. Donohue and Roach: I have been diagnosed with GERD and Barrett’s esophagus. My doctor put me on 20 milligrams of omepra-zole once daily, and it seemed to work well. I read about the bone problems with omepra-zole and stopped taking it because I also take phenytoin (Dilantin), and I have a bal-ance problem: My fear is that I could fall and break a bone.

I started using aloe ex-tract. I take it twice daily, and it works great. I have had no problems with my GERD since I started taking the aloe. I told my doctor about this, and he did not seem too happy with me for stopping the omeprazole. I would ap-preciate your opinion about this problem. — R.G.

Answer: GERD, gastro-esophageal reflux disease, is a condition in which stomach acid goes up into the esopha-gus, the muscular tube that carries food from the mouth to the stomach. Acid doesn’t belong in the esophagus, so it can cause sensations of

burning, or can bring about a cough in some people. Many people have no symptoms.

A few people, after years of acid going up into the esoph-agus, will develop Barrett’s esophagus — the lining of the esophagus starts to look like stomach lining. This puts the esophagus at higher risk of developing adenocarcinoma, a type of cancer. Researchers believe, but haven’t proven, that reducing the acid in the esophagus can prevent can-cer. Studies have proven that the abnormal lining of the esophagus can start to return to normal with high doses of medicines like omepra-zole, so it makes sense that omeprazole can prevent can-cer in those cases.

Unfortunately, stopping symptoms doesn’t always mean that the lining is re-turning to normal. Even though the aloe may be help-ing your symptoms, there is no guarantee that it is helping to stop the Barrett’s esophagus and protect you against esophageal cancer. I suspect that is why your phy-sician seemed unhappy.

You are quite right that both phenytoin and omepra-zole can affect the bones and make them more likely to fracture. But I would recom-mend asking your physician to test your bones for fracture risk before you stop these medicines, since they are both doing very important jobs.

Dear Drs. Donohue and Roach: Can you please ad-dress Moyamoya disease? My husband’s cousin was recent-ly diagnosed with it following a stroke and is undergoing surgery. We heard that there may be a genetic component to the disease through the mother. Is this true? What are the cousin’s chances for a full recovery? — K.O’C.

Answer: Moyamoya dis-ease, despite its odd-sound-ing name (Japanese for “puff of smoke”), is a serious dis-ease involving blockages of the major blood vessels in the base of the brain, called the circle of Willis. It is most prevalent in Japan but is rarely found in this coun-try. Only about 10 percent of Moyamoya is familial, and the genetics are not related to gender, even though the condition is a bit more com-mon in women. Surgical treatment for this condition is designed to increase blood flow to the affected part of the brain. In expert hands, the results can be very good.

Stopping symptoms of GERD does not signal cureDr. Paul Donohue

To YourGoodHealth

Dr. Keith Roach

To YourGoodHealth

Dear Tom and Ray: My 16-year-old son drives a 2008 Honda CR-V. He wants to play the car’s radio while the engine is off. He wants to sit in the car with the radio on while he is killing time, or while waiting for me while I am in the store. I have told him it’s not a good idea, since it could kill the battery. He doesn't believe me, since his friends sup-posedly listen to the radios in their cars without the en-gines running. He says they do it “all the time” — listen-ing from 10 minutes to half an hour — and have “nev-er” had a problem with kill-ing the battery. What’s your opinion? Can you resolve

this standoff ? — SarahTom: Is it his car? If it

is, what do you care? If he kills his battery, you can refuse to give him a jump-start until he writes “I will always listen to my sainted mother” 1,000 times.

Ray: Of course, if it's your car he's driving, then I understand why you're con-cerned. But you really don't need to be.

Tom: The radio uses a very small amount of cur-rent — maybe a couple of amps. That's not enough to kill a battery that's in good condition. Not even close. So, as long as the battery is sound, he can play the radio for an hour or two at a time

without doing any harm.Ray: If your battery IS

weak and near the end of its life, then, sure, he might kill it by playing the radio. But in that case, it would have died and stranded you soon anyway. And now you can blame it on him.

Battery won’t be drained by radio

Page 14: Iola Register 12-8

Saturday, December 8, 2012The Iola Registerwww.iolaregister.com B7

THE BOLLINGS: MITCH, SHARON & CARA

Bolling’s Meat Market 201 S. State, Iola • (620) 380-MEAT (6328)

& Moran Locker H wy. 59 S outh, D owntown M oran • (620) 237-4331

I T ’ S T HE G IFT T HAT I T ’ S T HE G IFT T HAT K EEPS O N G IVING ! K EEPS O N G IVING !

2661 Nebraska Rd., LaHarpe

Shop Online at www.dieboltlumber.com

1-888-444-4346

COMPLETE FINISHED PACKAGE With 5 ” Concrete Slab on Level Ground

60 ’ x100 ’ x12 ’

(1) 16’x10’ Overhead Door & (1) 3’ 9 Lt. Door $ 66 , 900 80 ’ x160 ’ x14 ’

(1) 16’x12’ Overhead Door & (2) 3’ 9 Lt. Doors $ 137 , 700 96 ’ x220 ’ x18 ’

(1) 24’x14’ Overhead Door & (2) 3’ 9 Lt. Doors $ 223 , 400

Commercial Buildings

COMPLETE FINISHED PACKAGE

With 4 ” Concrete Slab on Level

Ground & Your Choice of

Overhead or Full Height

Sliding Door

24 ’ x24 ’ x8 ’ (1) 16’x7’ Door & (1) 3’ Entry Door $ 8 , 800 24 ’ x32 ’ x10 ’ (1) 16’x8’ Door & (1) 3’ Entry Door $ 11 , 500 30 ’ x40 ’ x10 ’ (1) 16’x8’ Door & (1) 3’ Entry Door $ 16 , 400 40 ’ x40 ’ x12 ’ (1) 18’x10’ Door & (1) 3’ Entry Door $ 22 , 300 40 ’ x64 ’ x14 ’ (1) 18’x12’ Door & (1) 3’ Entry Door $ 33 , 400

Multipurpose Barns

COMPLETE FINISHED PACKAGE

With Dirt Floor (No Concrete)

Open-Sided Buildings

30 ’ x50 ’ x12 ’

$ 11 , 500

COMPLETE FINISHED

PACKAGE with 4 ” Concrete Slab on

Level Ground

(3) 9’x8’ Doors (1) 3’ Entry Door

(3) Windows 12” Overhang

20 ’ x40 ’ x10 ’ $ 14 , 900 24 ’ x40 ’ x10 ’ $ 15 , 950 30 ’ x40 ’ x10 ’ $ 18 , 900

Garages

Special Thrifty Package COMPLETE FINISHED

PACKAGE With 4 ” Concrete Slab

on Level Ground (1) 16’x8’ Overhead Door

(1) 3/0x6/8 Steel Walk Door 10 Year Metal

30 ’ x40 ’ x10 ’ $ 14 , 900

POST FRAME BUILDINGS - 40 Yr. Metal COMPLETE! Price Includes Material & Labor - Location Could Affect Pricing

ATTENTION FARMERS! New Farm Tax Laws Allow 50% Purchase

Price To Be Expensed In 2012. Ask about Lease to Own through for as low as

$ 167 mo. with approved credit

Sturdy Wood Frame

Construction

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• Lifetime Warranty On Posts

The Diebolt Advantage • 40-Year Warranty On

Metal • 22 Colors Available • 29 Gauge & 26

Gauge Available • Delden Steel Garage

Doors • Silverline Windows

THE BOLLINGS: MITCH, SHARON & CARA

Bolling’s Meat Market 201 S. State, Iola • (620) 380-MEAT (6328)

Open Monday - Saturday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

& Moran Locker H wy. 59 S outh, D owntown M oran • (620) 237-4331

Open Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Saturday 8 a.m. - 11 a.m.

Our Traditional Our Traditional MEAT BUNDLES MEAT BUNDLES

For everyone’s benefit, we urge you to please call ahead for please call ahead your bundles and/or large and special orders. This reduces wait time for you and ensures that anything you want will be in stock.

All Choices Available At Bolling’s In Iola. Some Items Not Available At Moran Locker.

*Prices and quantities subject to change without notice due to market fluctuation.

Choose Choose any 5 items any 5 items

$ 146 $ 146 Choose Choose

any 6 items any 6 items $ 169 $ 169

10 lbs. Pork Chops

10 lbs. Spare Ribs

12 lbs. Pork Sausage

12 lbs. Ground Pork

12 lbs. Pork Roast

6 lbs. Bacon

10 lbs. Ground Beef

(add $5 for extra lean)

6 lbs. Top Sirloin

4 lbs. T-bone Steak

4 lbs. KC Strip Steak

7 lbs. Round Steak

8 lbs. Beef Roast

5 Whole Chickens

9 lbs. Chicken Breast

8 lbs. Choice of Beef or

Pork Patties 10 lb. Box of

Hot Dogs

Choose Choose any 4 items any 4 items

$ 119 $ 119

Together, we can make

come true

Dear

Santa

Write a letter to Santa and

The Iola Register will contribute $ 1 to your community’s

Adopt-A-Child holiday gift-giving program.

We BELIEVE good things are right around the corner for our communities. We’ve invested in a new

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Letters to Santa will be published as they are received. We ask that they are legible, signed and include your address.

Letters may be mailed to or dropped off at The Iola Register. (After hours drop slot available) Letters may also be dropped off at Santa’s house on the Iola Square.

T HE I OLA R EGISTER 302 S. Washington

PO Box 767 Iola, KS 66749 620-365-2111

M e rry Ch ristm a s!

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is the gift is the gift they can they can enjoy all enjoy all

year long! year long!

Current Rates: Current Rates: Current Rates: (Including Tax)

Within Iola City Limits - Carrier 1 Month - $ 11.67 3 Months - $ 33.65 6 Months - $ 58.25 1 Year - $ 107.46

Motor Rates 1 Month - $ 17.26

3 Months - Sale $ 41.66 6 Months - Sale $ 73.81 1 Year - Sale $ 129.17

Mail Rates - In Kansas 1 Month - $ 17.91

3 Months - Sale $ 44.02 6 Months - Sale $ 74.90 1 Year - Sale $ 131.35

Mail Rates - Out of State 1 Month - $ 17.91

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Page 15: Iola Register 12-8

B8Saturday, December 8, 2012 The Iola Register www.iolaregister.com

BEST RACES1. Texas, Nov. 42. Phoenix, Nov. 113. Watkins Glen, Aug. 124. Martinsville, April 15. Bristol, Aug. 256. Daytona, July 7

BIGGEST STORIES1. Brad Keselowski defi es all expectations to win the title.2. Owner Roger Penske fi nally wins a title.3. Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s winless streak ends.4. Bottom falls out on Carl Edwards.5. Dodge wins the championship on its way out the door.

MOST INTERESTING DRIVERS

1. Tony Stewart2. Brad Keselowski3. Dale Earnhardt Jr.4. Clint Bowyer5. Jeff Gordon

MOST MISUSED AND REDUNDANT WORDS AND

PHRASES BY NASCAR DRIVERS:1. To be honest?2. Like I said3. Myself4. We (as in “we hit the wall”)5. Fence

BEST TEAMS1. Hendrick Motorsports2. Penske Racing3. Michael Waltrip Racing4. Joe Gibbs Racing5. Roush Fenway Racing

LEAST EXAGGERATED CROWDS1. Darlington2. Talladega3. Martinsville4. Bristol5. Dover

MOST EXAGGERATED CROWDS1. Texas2. Pocono3. Charlotte4. Phoenix5. Sonoma

MOST MISUSED WORDS BY NASCAR BROADCASTERS:

1. Carnage 2. Irony3. Literally4. Quick (as in “fi fth quick”)5. Bypass (as alternative to “pass”)

MOST OVEREXPOSED

1. Danica Patrick2. Carl Edwards3. Kurt Busch4. Michael Waltrip5. Twitter

If you have a question or comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053 or send an e-mail to [email protected]. You can also send your NASCAR questions to Monte on Facebook at Facebook.com/monte-dutton and at Twitter.com/MonteDutton. Please specify you are submitting them for the NASCAR This Week page.

Monte Dutton’s good ol’ NASCAR list of 2012

LOOKING TO NEXT SEASON

� Yes, Howie Mandel came close to losing it when he had Teleprompter problems at the Sprint Cup Awards. It was edgy, but he didn’t go off the edge. He was a flawed choice as emcee, but he tried. He did some homework. The stands at races aren’t generally filled with comedians, at least not professional ones.� Had he not been tragically

killed in 1998, Phil Hartman would have been the perfect choice.� NASCAR is in a tough spot. Its

banquet isn’t big enough to draw a Billy Crystal. Mandel was prob-ably the best it could do. Frank Caliendo might have been better, but he’s done the gig before.� The champion’s speech was

one of simple and unrehearsed eloquence. It wasn’t polished, but it was genuine.� Few race drivers take

public-speaking classes, as the painful remarks of Kasey Kahne attested. He’s a nice guy but so ill at ease in a formal setting.� The entertainment was fine,

but the show still seems too much like the People’s Choice Awards, which some in NASCAR might consider a compliment.� At the end of his speech,

Clint Bowyer said he was “clock-ing out” on the season. It’s a good thing. The next one will be here before long, not to mention the testing that leads up to it.� Did we mention that Danica

Patrick is going to be competing fulltime in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series next year?� Chevy’s new SS drew

positive reviews when unveiled in Las Vegas. Meanwhile, many teams are fretting about the final configurations of the new cars, which still haven’t been finalized.� Jimmie Johnson said the

cars have been changed enough. He wasn’t specific but said it was time to look at changing the tracks in order to provide better competition.

� Who’s hot: The champ can’t relax. Brad Keselowski will be in a Ford come Daytona. ... The runner-up, Clint Bowyer, is set in his MWR Toyota.

� Who’s not: Awards emcee Howie Man-del went into a snit over a Teleprompter and its operator. ... Kasey Kahne’s speech wasn’t exactly reminiscent of Shakespeare, or even Keselowski.

VERSUS

Both were graceful during the Sprint Cup Awards. Both endured numerous quips at their expense. Relations are still strained, though, and two of the sport’s premier performers enter 2013 in what at best can be described as an uneasy truce.

NASCAR This Week’s Monte Dutton gives his take: “The bitterness is too deep. It can’t be resolved with words. It takes time, and in this case, quite a bit of it. For one thing, they will be constantly watched on the track, particularly when in close proximity.”

JEFF GORDON VS. CLINT BOYWER

They’ll Second, Third ThatThis Week welcomes letters to the editor, but

please be aware that we have room for only a few each week. We’ll do our best to select the best, but individual replies are impossible due to the bulk of mail received. Please do not send stamped and self-addressed envelopes with your letters, which should be addressed to: NASCAR This Week, The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, N.C. 28053. Send emails to [email protected], ATTN: NTW question

Dear NASCAR This Week,Mrs. Joan Wilkerson, in her letter … of

Thursday, Nov. 28, hit the nail on the head with her comments regarding the Gordon/Bowyer incident. I completely agree with her.

N. VlietstraKalamazoo, Mich.

Dear NASCAR This Week,I feel the same as the letter of Joan Wilkerson.

I couldn’t have said it better myself. “Bowyer has wrecked Gordon many times. It was about time Gordon stood up for himself.”

Glenn VlietstraKalamazoo, Mich.

It could be that these two notes are related.

There is Superstition ...Drivers were much more superstitious in the

old days than they are now. Joe Weatherly, who won championships in 1962 and ’63, hated the number 13 so much that, in 1962, he proclaimed that he would not compete in the Southern 500 because it was being advertised as the 13th running of the event (which, of course, it was). Darlington Raceway President Bob Colvin solved the problem by determining that it was “the 12th Renewal Southern 500.” (Source: The Official NASCAR Trivia Book)

A Beginner’s Book Want to teach your kid about NASCAR. Check

out “My First NASCAR Book.” Actually, there are four of them: “123,” “Colors,” “ABC” and “Shapes.” They teach kids about NASCAR … and that other stuff, too. The “author” – there’s really not much writing to it – is Christopher Jordan, and the four volumes are available for $7.95 ($8.99 in Canada) each from Fenn/Tundra.

John Clark/NASCAR This WeekWhat lies ahead for Carl Edwards in 2013? The Roush driver would love to have an infinitely better season than he had in 2012.

2013 CUP SCHEDULEFeb. 16 Daytona Shootout FoxFeb. 17 500 qualifying FoxFeb. 21 Daytona Duel SpeedFeb. 24 Daytona 500 FoxMarch 3 Phoenix FoxMarch 10 Las Vegas FoxMarch 17 Bristol FoxMarch 24 Fontana FoxApril 7 Martinsville FoxApril 13 Texas FoxApril 21 Kansas FoxApril 27 Richmond FoxMay 5 Talladega FoxMay 11 Darlington FoxMay 18 Charlotte All-Star SpeedMay 26 Charlotte FoxJune 2 Dover FoxJune 9 Pocono TNTJune 16 Michigan TNTJune 23 Sonoma TNTJune 29 Kentucky TNTJuly 6 Daytona TNTJuly 14 New Hampshire TNTJuly 28 Indianapolis ESPNAug. 4 Pocono ESPNAug. 11 Watkins Glen ESPNAug. 18 Michigan ESPNAug. 24 Bristol ABCSept. 1 Atlanta ESPNSept. 7 Richmond ABCSept. 15 Chicagoland ESPNSept. 22 New Hampshire ESPNSept. 29 Dover ESPNOct. 6 Kansas ESPNOct. 12 Charlotte ABCOct. 20 Talladega ESPNOct. 27 Martinsville ESPNNov. 3 Texas ESPNNov. 10 Phoenix ESPNNov. 17 Homestead ESPN

Stewart

Waltrip

Hendrick

Gordon Bowyer

As a group, they’re not notable for their book learning, but NASCAR figures learn to turn a phrase, as collected

during another grueling Sprint Cup season:

“What’s surprised me is just how much I truly enjoy driving these cars.” — Danica Patrick.

“I have hit a lot of things, but a jet dryer? I mean, no …” — Juan Pablo Montoya, after the Daytona 500.

“I don’t think that it’s reasonable for any young driver to not make mistakes, but I think that it’s important to learn from them.” — Brad Keselowski, before embarking on a championship.

“One of the goals in my life is to sit up on that stage (as champion) in Las Vegas, and I think he’s the guy who can make it happen.” — Roger Penske, on Brad Keselowski, May.

“I could win at a lot of tracks, but I just try to spread them out and give some other drivers a chance.” — Ryan Newman, in jest, after winning his 16th race on his 11th different track.

“There isn’t a car more scrutinized in this garage area than the No. 48. It’s been that way for the last decade.” — Jimmie Johnson.

“All things must come to an end, and this surface has come to an end …” — Clint Bowyer, at Kansas.

“Richard Petty got quite an ovation when he ran his last race in Atlanta, but nothing like this.” — MRN’s Barney Hall, after Dale Earnhardt Jr. ended a 143-race winless streak

“I was never taught to give and take. I was taught to race hard.” — Newman.

THEY SAID IT DURING THE SEASON

John Clark/NASCAR This Week2012 got off to a wild start when driver Juan Pablo Montoya hit the Daytona International Speedway track jet dryer. The crash set off an explosion involving 200 gallons of fuel. Montoya finished 36th after starting 35th in the race.

Uncertain TimesLook out for some changes for 2013 Cup season

John Clark/NASCAR This WeekClint Bowyer’s switch from Richard Childress Racing to Waltrip Racing was a huge gamble, but it seemed to pay off as he finished runner-up to Brad Keselowski in this season’s Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship. What’s in store for next season amid more NASCAR and team changes?

By Monte DuttonNASCAR This Week

It’s possible that the next NASCAR season will be similar to the one just completed, but it’s not as likely as in the past for 2013 to link seamlessly with 2012.

Brad Keselowski is the Sprint Cup champion, and his first will probably not be his last. Keselowski is just 28, with a future as bright as the noonday sun. He drove a Dodge Charger to his title. Next year he’ll be in a Ford Fusion, which, at the very least, requires some adap-tation, and at the very most, a bit of uncertainty that wasn’t in place a year ago.

Keselowski’s gamble isn’t as great as Clint Bowyer’s a year ago. Bowyer switched teams, moving from Rich-ard Childress’ Chevy into Michael Waltrip’s Toyota. Bowyer finished runner-up to Keselowski.

Really, though, all the cars are going to be different. NASCAR is implementing a design change, the most noticeable development being that the cars will look less like one another and more like cars that actually sit in showrooms and roll around streets.

Teams will shake down their cars and pore over data from tests sanctioned by NASCAR, but in the short run, the balance of power will almost surely shift. Some teams will adapt better than others at the outset. In time, it will even out. Early on, one manufacturer might appear to have a slight advantage. That, too, will pass, but in a sense, the change might make the early part of next season more crucial than last.

NASCAR officials have also made changes in the qualifying process, reducing the number of automatic spots in the starting fields.

In fairness, it should be added that 2012 was hardly a carbon copy of 2011. The championship changed hands. Keselowski surprised the experts, most of whom expected him to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup but gave him little chance of winning it.

A driver who almost won the 2011 championship, Carl Edwards, didn’t even make the Chase. Neither did Kyle Busch, who is almost unanimously considered one of the sport’s great talents.

Stay tuned. February is going to be very interesting.

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