Register Sept. 10

Transcription

Register Sept. 10
The Grundy Register
2011, 2013
2014, 2015
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Serving Grundy County since 1928
www.TheGrundyRegister.com
Volume 91 – Number 37
AGWSR, G-R
also elect new
board members
Events kick off with
Sunday parade, rally
PARADE ROUTE — The parade will begin at the high school,
proceed east along M Avenue before
turning north two blocks on Fourth
Street to K Ave. From there the parade travels east four blocks on K to
First Street, where it will turn north
for two blocks to I Avenue and proceed west to Seventh Street where
it will turn north one final time to
Courthouse Square.
Grundy County Historian Lois Stork is shown inside her restored Fairfield No. 5 one-room schoolhouse. The
school was also known as The Center School and The Dane School. Stork is holding a Danish Reader used
during the summer months to teach the Danish language. Sylvia Schlamp attended this one-room school,
and has now donated the book to be displayed at the school. The hand-held school bell Stork is holding has a
“Tinker’s Dam” on it to prevent further damage to a crack in the bell. The bell was donated by Kathy Sundstedt. (Courtesy photo)
Project seeks to identify
local historical landmarks
Project will be
featured at
Pioneer Craft Fair
By JOHN JENSEN
The Grundy Register
MORRISON — A project of the
Grundy County Conservation Board
seeks to identify local historical
landmarks.
Historial Lois Stork is heading
the project which seeks to identify
structures that populated our landscape years ago, with the goal to
identify each with a marker at the
site.
“We are looking for volunteers in
every Grundy County township to
help identify the landmarks,” Stork
said.
Landmarks could include former
one-room country schoolhouses,
churches, creameries, post offices,
early churches, pioneer cemeteries,
prairie areas ... anything that could
help people identify with Grundy
County history or even history be-
What’s Happening
Thursday, September 10
Main Street Grundy Center Kickoff
Presentation @
Community Center • 10:30 a.m.
Showing of Presentation Video
@ Center Theatre • 11 a.m.
Grundy Center Farmer’s Market
Courthouse Square
4:30 - 6:30 p.m.
Friday, September 11
City Wide Garage Sales
Grundy Center
Most Sales open 4-7 p.m.
Saturday, September 12
City Wide Garage Sales
Grundy Center
Most Sales open 8 a.m. to Noon
Scott Walker campaign stop
Community Center • 10:30 a.m.
Grundy County Farm Crawl
11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Details on today’s Bulletin Board
$1.00 Newsstand Price
Gordon, Johanns
elected to GC board
GCHS plans
Homecoming
activities
GRUNDY CENTER — Grundy Center High School has set the
schedule for its 2015 Homecoming
week activities.
Events begin Sunday with a parade (route listed below), sidewalk
chalking
and
community pep
rally. The parade
runs from 4 to
4:30 and will be
followed by each
high school class
decorating sidewalks along G Avenue with colorful
chalk. At 5:15 p.m. the group will
gather at the Grundy County Courthouse Gazebo for a pep rally featuring the GCHS cheerleaders and
dancers as well as the announcement
of the Homecoming Court.
Special dress-up events are scheduled for throughout the week at the
high school. Monday will be “Ancient Sparta Day,” Tuesday is “Dress
like a Teacher Day,” Wednesday in
“Runner Day” while Thursday is
“Disney Day” and Friday “Spartan
Pride Day.”
Community events include a
community breakfast from 6:30 to
8 a.m. at the High School commons
and the King and Queen Coronation Thursday at 7 p.m. in the High
School gymnasium.
Friday’s football game pits the
Spartans against Aplington-Parkersburg at 7 p.m. at Spartan Stadium.
The game will be followed by the
annual Homecoming dance at the
High School commons from 9:30
p.m. to midnight.
Grundy Center, Iowa
fore the county was formed.
Stork said a good place to begin looking for landmarks is Linda
McCann’s book “Lost Franklin and
Grundy Counties.”
To date, Stork has restored the
Fairfield Township No. 5 Country Schoolhouse, the 145-year-old
Fairfield Chapel and a 115-year-old
Fairfield two-story farmhouse, all of
which are located on her farmstead
in Fairfield Township north of Dike.
“Books dating back to the late
1800s were located in the attic of the
school,” she said. “During the 1960s
and 70s the school was used as a
polling place and a ballot box was
found inside.”
She added that stained glass windows were found in the attic of the
chapel and were re-installed along
with the pews and hand-made furnishings.
“This has been a fun, interesting
and rewarding journey,” she said.
“I’ve learned some amazing facts
about Grundy County history.
Stork is working in conjunction
with Grundy County Barn Quilts to
further develop tourism in the county. She said historical landmarks
identified before Nov. 1 could be
included in the upcoming Grundy
County Barn Quilt Directory.
STORK WILL BE POSTED inside the Brick Schoolhouse Museum
during Sunday’s Pioneer Craft Fair
at the Grundy County Heritage Museum Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
This year’s incarnation of the
annual event will feature old-time
crafts and activities including timber
framing, a petting zoo, games for
children, flint knapping, beekeeping,
crocheting, spinning & weaving,
kettle corn, musical entertainment
from The Other Band and Celtic
Finger-style guitarist Jerry Barlow,
, butter churning, a buckskinner
camp, horse-drawn trolley rides and
more.
Exhibits in the Museum Building
and Ag Hall/Heritage Center will
also be open throughout the day. All
activities are free of charge. Food
and vendor items will be available
for purchase at the event.
More details are available on the
Grundy County Website. Check
www.grundycounty.org
Sunday, September 13
Pioneer Craft Fair
Grundy County Heritage Museum,
Morrison • 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
GCHS Homecoming Kickoff
Parade - 4 p.m.
Chalk the Walk - 4:30 p.m.
Court Announcement - 5:15 p.m.
Monday, September 14
Grundy County Supervisors
Courthouse • 9 a.m.
Grundy Center City Council
City Hall • 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, September 16
Grundy Center School Board
GCHS IMC • 5 p.m.
Thursday, September 17
GCHS Homecoming Coronation
Gymnasium • 7 p.m.
A family takes a ride on the Grundy County Heritage Museum railway
during the 2014 Pioneer Craft Fair. (Grundy Register file photo)
By JOHN JENSEN
The Grundy Register
GRUNDY CENTER — Grundy
Center citizens Tuesday voted to
support community-school partnerships, electing John Gordon, president of the Grundy Family YMCA,
and Bob Johanns, the incumbent
Board president, to terms on the
Grundy Center Community School
District Board of Directors.
Johanns, who was elected to his
third term, received the support of
nearly 70 percent of voters while
Gordon, who will replace Kelly
Mathews on the Board, received 64
percent.
“I was overwhelmed to say the
least,” Gordon said of the results.
“The masses have spoken, now its
time to do the job. It’s my job to listen to the community, be professional and do that best for the district that
I can.”
“I’m very humbled that the voters
would re-elect me to that position,”
Johanns said. “What I’m going to
do is continue to do what’s best for
the students, teachers, school and the
community.”
Johanns said the results of Tuesday’s election prove that the community wants the School Board to
work as a team.
“I think the voters want to make
sure that we continue to do the right
thing and to work together toward
solutions that are best for everybody,” he said.
Gordon added that the results emphasize that the electorate supports
community-school partnerships.
“Once a Spartan, always a Spartan,” Gordon said. “I’ve always been
taught the team concept. That’s what
I’m about.”
Retired teacher Wendy Muller received 33.5 percent support in Grundy Center while agronomist David
Hoy received 31 percent support.
Voter turnout was strong in Grundy Center, with more than 27 percent of eligible voters casting ballots
compared to 5.7 percent in the other
three school districts whose elections are overseen in Grundy County.
ELSEWHERE, AGWSR voters
in District 1 elected Steve Bartling
and Gary Heetland while Nathan
Vogel (District 2) and Megan Harms
(at-large) ran unopposed.
Gladbrook-Reinbeck
voters
chose four Board members from
among five candidates on the ballot
and three declared write-ins. Eric
Sieh, Matt Wyatt, Lisa Swanson
and Anne Boyer were elected with
between 58 and 60 percent support
each. Linda Reardon-Lowry was
fifth in the race with 49 percent support while write-ins Clark Gamble,
Ryan Bru and Ashley Steven each
received 45 percent support.
Both of Dike-New Hartford’s
candidates ran unopposed, with Jerry Nielsen elected in District 2 and
Melissa Hinde elected to an at-large
seat. Just 2.7 percent of eligible voters in the Dike-New Hartford Community School District cast ballots.
All results are unofficial pending
canvassing by County Boards of Supervisors.
John Gordon
Bob Johanns
Gary Heetland
Eric Sieh
Touchdown = $25 STATE
Anne Boyer
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Thursday, September 10, 2015
Grundy NEWS Register
www.thegrundyregister.com
Supervisors approve bond issuance,
donation to Dike sports complex
By JOHN JENSEN
The Grundy Register
DIKE — The Grundy County
Board of Supervisors Tuesday approved money for a pair of local projects.
Supervisors approved both the issuance of General Obligation Urban
Renewal Refunding Bonds for the
Grundy County Memorial Hospital
and a donation to the Kruger-Hemmen Sports Complex in Dike.
The $15 million in bonds for the
hospital will pay off the remaining
balance on bonds that were used to
fund a 2009 building project that included new Emergency and Inpatient
departments. The refunding will save
the hospital an estimated $800,000 in
interest payments over the life of the
bonds.
There was no public comment
on the project during a public hearing, and Supervisors unanimously
approved the project without discussion.
The Board also approved a $2,500
donation to the Kruger-Hemmen
Sports Complex in Dike. Katherine
Ollendieck of Advanced Development Services represented the Fields2Fields Committee at the meeting
and explained that the donation will
show County support for the project,
which will create a trail system that
will connect with the County’s system at the Grundy County Lake and
Campground. That support, along
with that of the City of Dike and private donors, will be used to assist the
group in its application for $100,000
in Vision Iowa funding for the project. Supervisors also approved signing a letter of support for the project.
The $2,500 donation would come
out of next year’s budget and would
only be spent if the project is awarded
Vision Iowa funding.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, Supervisors approved project plans for
re-grading 16 miles of County Highways D-17, D-25 and T-13 in the
northwest corner of Grundy County.
Mathy Construction, which was
awarded the bid for the project at last
week’s Board of Supervisors meeting, could begin work on the $2.796
million project by the last week of
September. If cold weather sets in
early, the project may not be completed until next year. County Engineer Gary Mauer said the roads will
remain open throughout the project,
though construction delays are possible.
Supervisors also approved a
Sworn Statement in Proof of Loss for
damage to the Sheriff’s Department
radio system caused by a lightning
strike. Sheriff Rick Penning said the
insurance deductible would likely
come out of either a building budget
or his department’s budget. Either
way, he said, a budget amendment
would be needed.
GNB Insurance agent Phil Johnson briefed the Supervisors on the
ICAP Property Valuation Program,
noting that its purpose was to see if
buildings were under-insured without
property owners’ knowledge. Supervisors gave Johnson the go-ahead
to have county-owned property inspected under the program free of
charge. Penning also asked Johnson
if he could research how much additional cost there would be to insuring
the Sheriff’s Department radio equipment for 100 percent replacement
cost.
Supervisors also approved a request from the Grundy Center High
School Student Senate for use of
Courthouse grounds Sunday, Sept. 13
for a Homecoming event. They also
approved a Certificate of Compliance
and Actuarial Certification of the
county’s health care plan.
Grundy NEWS Register
www.thegrundyregister.com
Grundy Register Bulletin Board
The Grundy Register wishes to announce new deadlines for news and
bulletin board items. Effective this
date, the deadline for news items and
obituaries will be 10 a.m. Monday.
Items for this bulletin board must be
received no later than 2 p.m. Monday.
No exceptions can be made for
these deadlines.
The change is to accommodate earlier deadlines at our printing plant.
Main Street
Grundy Center to
kick off Thursday
GRUNDY CENTER — A public
press conference and celebration of
Grundy Center’s Main Street Iowa
designation will be held Thursday,
Sept. 10 from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.
The press conference and celebration will be held from 10:30 to
11 at the Grundy Community Center
and will be followed by a showing of
Grundy Center’s Main Street Iowa
presentation video at the Center Theatre from 11 to 11:30.
GC Fire Dept. to
host benefit for
Hawn family
GRUNDY CENTER — The
Grundy Center Fire Department
is having a benefit for Luverne &
Sandy Hawn. The event is the Department’s annual breakfast and is
planned for Sunday, October 4 at the
Fire Department from 7:30 a.m. to 1
p.m. All proceeds will go to benefit
the Hawns.
The event will also feature a silent auction and bake sale.
Dike Fire Rescue
to host annual
breakfast
DIKE — Dike Fire Rescue has
scheduled its annual pancake breakfast for Saturday, Oct. 3 and will be
serving from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
fire station. Cost of the meal is a free
will donation. Proceeds will be used
toward the purchase of equipment.
5K benefit run
planned for
Andrea Caplado
DIKE — A 5K walk/run/roll is
planned for Saturday, Oct. 3 in Dike
to raise money for a Andrea Caplado,
who has been stricken with infantile
spasms, which is a form of epilepsy.
Funds will be used to assist her family with the purchase of equipment
for her care.
Caplado, the daughter of Dike
High School graduate Brenda Hummel-Foreman, has been battling seizures since she was five months old.
Registration for the run will begin at 9 a.m. at the Grundy County
News tip?
Let us know!
(319) 824-6958
[email protected]
Lake. For more information about
the event contact event coordinator Kate Graham, 319-231-2185 or
[email protected].
Presidential
candidate to
make Grundy
Center stop
GRUNDY CENTER — Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, a candidate for the Republican nomination
for president, will make a Grundy
Center stop Saturday, Sept. 12 at
10:30 a.m. at the Grundy Center
Community Center.
Walker will host an Iowa-Iowa
State football pregame tailgate party
with free food and drink. Walker will
be arriving in his campaign camper
as he seeks to visit all of Iowa’s 99
counties prior to January’s Iowa
Caucuses. Grundy County will be
the 40th that Walker has visited.
Scarecrows to
return to Grundy
Center Main Street
GRUNDY CENTER — The
Grundy Center Chamber of Commerce is hosting its second annual
Main Street Scarecrow event Sept.
18 - Nov. 6.
Chamber Director Jodi Latwesen
said this is a fun way to keep our
Main Street decorated and active.
“Be creative,” she said. “We
would like for you to identify your
name/organization on your scarecrow.”
The Chamber Board and Committees will be voting for the best
scarecrow Sept. 19th, so scarecrows
must be displayed by Friday, Sept.
18 to enter the contest. The winner
will receive a donation from the
Chamber of $50 to the charity of
choice.
New this year, the Chamber iis
also encouraging people to display a
scarecrow at their residence in Grundy Center to celebrate being a Main
Street Iowa Community. You must
contact the Chamber office with the
address of where the participating
scarecrow is located in order to compete. The winner will receive $25 in
Grundy Center Chamber Bucks.
Information call the church office,
319-825-5408 or 515-418-0807.
The WOW program will kick off
Wednesday, Sept. 9 with a free family carnival in the west church parking lot from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Free food
will be offered as well is face painting and games.
New Hartford
gospel concert
series resumes
NEW HARTFORD — The annual gospel concert series will begin
at the New Hartford Community
Center, Tuesday September 29th.
This series of concerts occurs the
last Tuesday of every month from
September- November and from
January-March. Performing in September will be the group, “Restored”
consisting of members Ray and
Nancy Hemmer and Naomi Probert.
Restored sings a variety of gospel
music ranging from contemporary
to southern gospel. The free concert
will begin at 7PM with refreshments
served afterwards. Everyone is invited. Questions call Ray at 2774848.
Sweet Water
Revival to
present concert
ACKLEY — Sweet Water Revival will be presenting a concert at the
East Friesland Presbyterian Church
as the kick off celebration for the
church’s 150th Church Anniversary
Sunday, Sept. 13 at 4 p.m.
Sweet Water Revival has been
nominated for female group of the
year. The church’s address is 11121
150th St. Ackley, Ia. The public is
invited.
New Hartford
Lions to host
breakfast
NEW HARTFORD —The New
Hartford Lions Club will host their
monthly breakfast on Sunday, Sept.
20 from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
at the New Hartford Community
Building.
Parents, kids,
WOW program to
Money Matters®
kick off at GC
workshop set
Methodist Church
GRUNDY CENTER — The for Sept. 27
Grundy Center Community WOW
(Worship on Wednesdays) midweek
kids’ program will kick off Wednesday, Sept. 16 at the Grundy Center
United Methodist Church.
The program is open to all kids,
pre-kindergarten through sixth grade
regardless of church affiliation.
Reading time begins at 4:45 p.m.
and is followed by a free family
meal from 5 to 5:30 p.m. The Kids
Program begins runs from 6 to 6:30
p.m. and is followed by Kids’ Music from 6:30 to 7 p.m. Families are
invited for Kid’s Music. For More
GRUNDY CENTER — The
American Lutheran Church in Grundy Center will host a Parents, Kids
and Money Matters® workshop
Sunday, Sept. 27 from 3 to 5 p.m.
TV, movies, websites, friends …
all can affect your kids’ attitudes
about life and money. Find out how
to talk to your kids about influences,
choices and responsible money habits.
The program is free and designed
specifically for parents and their
children ages 6 to 16.
RSVP to Pam Wical at the church
3
Obituaries
Scot Alan Hunemuller
Brief placement is available to events that fall within The Grundy Register readership area, which includes all of Grundy County, Aplington and Parkersburg. Select events from the Ackley,
Eldora, Gladbrook and Hudson areas may be printed at the editor’s discretion. Any cost to participate will not be printed within the briefs, nor will any mention of menu items. Bulletin Board
placement is available to non-profit groups or for major community events.
Briefs must be received by 2 p.m. Monday for placement in that week’s paper. Briefs submitted at the office must be on standard 8 1/2 x 11 paper (no half pages please!). Please type briefs if
possible. The Register is not responsible for errors in hand-written submissions.
New newsroom,
bulletin board
deadlines
Thursday, September 10, 2015
office, 319-824-3557 by Sept. 13.
Grundy County
Public Health to
offer flu shots
GRUNDY COUNTY — Grundy
County Public Health will be offering flu shots at several clinics
throughout the county in September
and early October. There is a fee
for the shots. Those eligible should
bring their Medicare Card.
Shots will be available at the following locations and times:
September 16, 2015 — Grundy
Center Senior Center, 9-11 a.m.
September 17, 2015 Arlington
Place, Grundy Center, 9-11 a.m.
September 17, 2015 Wellsburg
Library, Wellsburg, 4-6 p.m.
September 18, 2015 Drive Thru
Clinic, Bethany Church, Grundy
Center, 8:30 a.m. – Noon
September 24, 2015 Wellsburger,
Wellsburg 6-8 p.m.
September 28, 2015 Dike Public
Library, 4-5:30 p.m.
October 9, 2015 Broad Street
Brewery, Reinbeck, 4-6 p.m.
Friends of the
Library collecting
used books
GRUNDY CENTER — The
Friends of the Kling Memorial Library in Grundy Center are collecting used books for their upcoming
book sale in October. Books may
be dropped off at the library. The
date of the October sale will be announced later this month.
Hunter Safety
Course to be
offered Sept. 19
The Grundy County Conservation Board will be sponsoring a
Hunter Safety Education Course on
Saturday, Sept. 19. The entire 10
hour class will take place that day.
Participants will meet at the Grundy
County Heritage Museum in Morrison beginning at 8 a.m. and the class
will end at the Izaak Walton League
Clubhouse in Reinbeck at approximately 6 p.m.
Students must be at least 12 years
old to receive the certification. Those
11-year-olds wishing to take the
course may do so but do not receive
their certification until they turn 12.
Pre-registration is required. Participants will receive instruction in
such areas as wildlife management,
firearm safety, game laws, ethics,
and survival.
There is no cost for this class.
Participants will be asked to bring
a sack lunch. You must pre-register
by calling the Conservation Board
office at 319-345-2688. When calling to register, have the following
information: participant’s full and
legal name including middle initial,
birthdate, and social security number. This course is made possible by
the Grundy County Conservation
Board, Iowa DNR, and Izaak Walton
League.
Scot Alan Hunemuller, 60, of Reinbeck passed away unexpectedly on
September 3, 2015, at his home in Reinbeck. A funeral service was held
on September 9 at the United Methodist Church,
505 Spruce St., Reinbeck. Visitation was held on
September 8 f at the French-Hand Funeral Home
in Reinbeck. Burial followed the funeral service
at the Reinbeck Cemetery. In lieu of flowers,
memorials may be directed to the family. Online
condolences may be left at www.abelsfuneralhomes.com.
Scot was born on August 22, 1955, in Waterloo, the oldest son of Virgil E. and Lucile (Arneson) Hunemuller. He grew up in Waterloo with
his three brothers, where he attended school. He
graduated from West High with the class of 1973.
During high school, Scot worked at Ridgeway
Hardware. After graduation, he began working at Mid-West Motor Bearing with his father. On March 20, 1976, Scot was united in marriage to
Marsheila Stelter at the 1st Lutheran Church in Waterloo. The couple welcomed daughter Angela and son Brian into their family.
Scot worked for many years as manager for ESCO Auto Supply Company
in Cedar Falls and when that branch closed, he transferred to their Waterloo
office as manager. He then worked for Klemp Supply in Waterloo and later
purchased the business, renaming it Scot’s Supply, fulfilling a lifelong dream
of owning his own successful business.
He enjoyed hunting, fishing and bowling with friends and he had a lifelong passion of tinkering and working on cars. Scot enjoyed drag racing
with close friends, with his wife by his side. On the weekends, Scot and his
brother, along with Scot’s children, operated a recycling business where they
were able to spend quality time with one another. Scot enjoyed staying busy.
He was always a help to anyone who needed it and would do anything for
anyone. Scot especially loved spending time with his family. He was more
affectionately known to his friends and co-workers as “Little Keebler” and
“Bolt Gnome”. For those who were lucky enough to know Scot, they know
that his leaving too soon will never fill the void they feel in their hearts.
Scot is survived by his parents of Waterloo; loving wife of 39 years,
Marsheila of Reinbeck; daughter, Angie Hunemuller of Reinbeck and son,
Brian (Megan) Hunemuller of Waverly; grandchildren, Aiden Hunemuller
and Kamden and Maklyn Hunemuller and grandson, Kipten due in December; brothers, Neal (Maureen) Hunemuller of Las Vegas, NV, Jay Hunemuller of Norfolk, VA and Chet Hunemuller of Story City; several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by both his maternal and paternal grandparents.
Richard Bonnett
Richard Bonnett, 84, of Grundy Center passed away on September 8,
2015, at the Grundy County Memorial Hospital in Grundy Center. Funeral
services are pending at the Engelkes-Abels Funeral Home in Grundy Center.
For more information visit www.abelsfuneralhomes.com.
Grundy County Farm Crawl set for Sept. 12
The Grundy County Wellness
Coalition will host the 2015 Grundy
County Farm Crawl Saturday, Sept.
12.
Presentations will be from 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Grundy Center
Community Gardens (presentations
at noon at 1:30 p.m. by Tim Laughlin, Laughlin Honey) and Fountain
on Main in Reinbeck.
Three local farms will be open to
the public from 1 to 4 p.m. at Fleshner Farms (26739 270th Street, Re-
inbeck), Cracked Up Farm (24354 S
Avenue, Reinbeck) and Arnka Acres
(25687 170th Street, Dike). Fleshner
Farms will feature presentations on
Family Farms at 1 and 2:30 p.m.,
Cracked Up Farm will have presentations on Chickens at 1:30 and 3
p.m. and Arnka Acres will have presentations on Maximizing Garden
Produce with Little Space at 2 and
3:30 p.m.
The event is free of charge.
News tip?
Let us know!
(319) 824-6958 [email protected]
4
Grundy OPINION Register
Thursday, September 10, 2015
www.thegrundyregister.com
Memory Lane
A Look back through
The Grundy Register
Compiled by Lisa Kanagy
10 Years Ago This Week - 2005
• To celebrate National Assisted
Living Week at Arlington Place
Henrietta and Harold Mutch were
crowned king and queen and will
reign over activities this week.
• The new memorial is in place
at the Orion Park in memory of Austin and Whitney Tjepkes, it is a large
sign with the school logo and L.E.D.
panel to display school information.
• The fall open houses hosted by
several Grundy Center merchants
last week is being labeled as a huge
success for all involved.
• Former BCLUW student and
All-State Cheerleader, Lezlie Callaway was selected to the University
of Iowa Gold Squad Dance Team.
• A six generations picture of the
Schuck family was taken and includes Adeline Schuck Meyer and
Woodrow Schuck, Hydi Schuck,
Marjorie Schuck, Daniel Schuck,
Dr. Scott Schuck & Gaylen Schuck.
• Spartans come back from first
win against Wolverines in years with
a score of 14-10.
• CA. seedless grapes - $1.29.
• Theatre – March of The Penguins & Dukes of Hazard.
25 Years Ago This Week - 1990
• 75 Grundy county residents
were selected this week as candidates for petit jury duty during the
Oct., Nov. & Dec. term.
• The eighth annual Grundy
Center ‘Trade Fair’ will be held at
the Grundy Community Center on
Thursday with 30 exhibitors.
• Pictured is the members of the
Voss & Roberts Racing team who recently won the World Series of Drag
Racing at Cordova, IL. reaching 188
MPH in 7.65 seconds.
• The National Guard helicopters
were here to help Grundy County
Sheriff’s Dept. conduct an aerial
search of the county for marijuana.
• A crowd of over 375 attended
the 54th annual REC meeting.
• Lady Warriors triumph over
Lady Spartans.
• The Lester Neymeyer family
farm of rural Aplington recently was
honored as an Iowa Century Farm.
• Minute Steaks - $2.29/ lb.
• Theatre–Pretty Woman & Disney’s The Jungle Book.
50 Years Ago This Week - 1965
• Grundy county farmers can
obtain a price support loan on 1965
soybeans as soon as they have combined & stored their crop, the ASCS
office announced this week which
has been set at $2.23 a bushel.
• A 1000-pound steer owned by
Eugene Plager was hit by a car and
killed on Tuesday as it had broken
out of the feedlot and was crossing
the road as Carroll Doak hit it.
• County, Grundy Center annual
retail sales reach record breaking
highs.
• We have had 6-1/4” of rain here
during the past week.
• Pictured is J. Vanderwicken as
he receives a certificate and pin commemoriating 50 years of membership in the Masonic Emerald Lodge
No. 334.
• Over 1,800 attended the 29th
annual REC meeting at the Grundy
Center Community School.
• Mrs. Maude Ditch has purchased the Grundy Hotel from her
son William and will be making extensive improvements.
• Instant Coffee - 10 oz. jar $1.19
• Center Theater – Up From The
Beach & Lord Jim.
75 Years Ago This Week - 1940
• There will be 1,400,000 bushels of 1939 corn on Grundy county
farms that farmers will have to find
storage room for and resealed.
• The high Grundy county beef
auctioned off at the baby beef sale
at the fair brought 19¢ a lb. and
weighed in at 1,080.
• The Grundy high school football season opens on the new Grundy field Friday evening.
• Free coffee & doughnuts for
community on court house lawn on
Saturday.
• Pork & Beans - 4-1# cans 19¢.
• Reinbeck Theatre–Hidden
Gold; Opened by Mistake; He stayed
For Breakfast & Ghost Breakers.
From The
Cheap Seats
Labor Day marks the unofficial end of the summer season. In a sense it’s
a little sad knowing that the lazy, crazy, hazy days are gone for another year,
yet in another sense it’s a bit exciting
to look ahead to another fall, winter
and spring season.
This is a time when I like to look
back and see if the summer met what
I had hoped it would ... if I had done
the things I needed to as well as those
that I wanted to. I have to confess that
it was a little of both this year, in that
my home projects for the most part
are still waiting to be finished (one of
these days I will have to break down
and clean the garage) while I was able
to do a lot of the things I hoped to.
Sunday I had to opportunity to
do one of the things I had really
looked forward to, which was share
By JOHN JENSEN
a baseball game with Lynnette for the
first time at my favorite place to see a
game, Veterans Memorial Stadium in Cedar Rapids. It was perfect baseball
weather (hot and humid) and a nice competitive game that we could enjoy.
As I’ve told Lynnette with any of the sports I’ve introduced her to, I suggest
watching some of the things associated with the game as much as the game
itself. I tell her to watch the people, enjoy the silly games between innings
and laugh when the tooth fairy comes out to clean the bases at the end of the
third inning. I know Lynnette will never enjoy sports as much as I do, but
she seems to enjoy it enough that it’s something we can attend together a
few times per year.
Fall tends to be right up there with spring among my favorite seasons of
the year. It’s a time when I really enjoy my work here at the paper, with a lot
of opportunities for new stories and sports that I truly enjoy watching and
covering, and a time when its fun to take pictures as the trees and crops turn
colorful shades of browns, yellows and reds.
Last year I rediscovered how much fun going to UNI football games can
be, and I can’t wait to return this year ... probably as early as Saturday. A
trip north to see some of the colors along the northern Mississippi River is
probably in the cards as is, maybe, a quick trip to northeast Iowa where one
of the prettiest pictures I’ve ever taken is from a small roadside park north
of West Union looking down into the tiny town of Eldorado in the valley
below.
• • •
For most of us, Dave Bartlett was anything but a household name
prior to this summer. A few of you knew of him as a senior leader at
Orchard Hill Church or perhaps through his other local connections. That,
however, changed one tragic day this summer when his son and two of his
grandchildren were killed in an automobile accident in Florida.
Since that day, Bartlett has not hidden. He has continued to deliver
God’s message, including during the ground breaking for Orchard Hill’s
new Grundy Center campus several weeks ago. Two weeks ago he spoke
about the accident publicly for the first time during Orchard Hill’s annual
Gathering Service at the Gallagher-Bluedorn Performing Arts Center on the
UNI campus.
I confess that I didn’t realize how special a service this would be when
Lynnette suggested we attend. Though we both have church homes we
love, mine at the United Methodist Church here in Grundy and her’s in the
church where she’s attended since childhood, we have both also enjoyed our
interaction with Orchard. Knowing that it would be a larger service at the
Gallagher, it was a service I looked forward to.
A couple of Lynnette’s friends saved us seats near the front of the
auditorium, and I confess that I was a little concerned that we might be too
near the front after a spirited opening set of praise songs. It was only after
Dave was introduced that I realized he had been sitting just in front of me,
silently meditating over the difficult message he was about to deliver.
Dave stepped up and began talking about The Storm, noting that everyone
would go through one and that God be with us as we did. He spoke about
the terrible phone call he received from his daughter-in-law Erin ... of how
hearing that his son Ben, grandson Charlie and granddaughter Bailey had
not survived. He spoke of dropping everything and heading with his wife to
Florida within the hour.
Bartlett got real as he candidly did not speak of how God had eased the
family’s grief, but of how he had led them through it.
As the Orchard Hill praise team played one of its final songs I watched
Bartlett rise from his chair in front of me and walk to the piano sitting
unoccupied at the back of the stage. I wondered if he would sit to play a
favorite song. Yet that’s not what happened at all. That was Ben’s seat, left
open much the same way a precision military flying team would leave a
space open in the Missing Man Formation.
An hour after I had been concerned that I might be too close to the front
of the service to enjoy it, I felt more filled with the spirit of Christ than I
had in a very long time. It was an incredible feeling that I was able to carry
throughout the day and even into this morning as I write these words. It’s
a feeling that I truly wish I could bottle and call upon whenever I need it
again.
Driver’s License Station Hours
Wednesday and Thursday
Grundy County Treasurer’s Office, Grundy Center
Telephone: (319) 824-1212
Hours: 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. (Driving tests by appointment only)
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
Butler County Treasurer’s Office, Allison
Telephone: (319) 267-2145
Hours: 9 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. (Driving Thursday by appointment, 1 - 3 p.m.)
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
Hardin County Treasurer’s Office, Eldora
Telephone: (641) 939-8238
Hours: 9 a.m. - 4:15 p.m. (Driving tests by appointment)
Tuesday - Saturday
The danger of
a full freezer
By ROBBY GRAMMES
Colfax Center Presbyterian
Church
This idea came from Ken Wingate and his excellent book entitled, A
Father’s Gift.
Do not toil to acquire wealth; be
discerning enough to desist.
When your eyes light on it, it is
gone,
for suddenly it sprouts wings,
flying like an eagle toward heaven
(Proverbs 23:4-5).
A friend recently asked me this
question: “Is your freezer was full?”
Like many other families I know,
around our house, neither freezer
nor pantry is ever full for very long.
With his question, my friend was
probing the level of our neediness.
Yet, if we consider his same question at a broader level, there can be a
danger in having a full freezer. Consider these words that were spoken
to the Israelites of old: “Take care
lest you forget the Lord your God
by not keeping his commandments
and his rules and his statutes, which
I command you today, lest, when
you have eaten and are full and have
built good houses and live in them,
and when your herds and flocks multiply and your silver and gold is multiplied and all that you have is multiplied, then your heart be lifted up,
and you forget the Lord your God,
who brought you out of the land of
Egypt, out of the house of slavery…
Beware lest you say in your heart,
‘My power and the might of my
hand have gotten me this wealth.’
(Deuteronomy 8:11-17)
There is a real temptation that
comes with prosperity. In fact, prosperity can be more of a faith-test
than poverty. For instance, whenever you struggle; whether financially, emotionally, physically, or
spiritually—you are much more intune with the reality of your need for
grace and help. Prayer and crying
out to God often come when a person is hurting and struggling. Prosperity, however, has a tendency to
insulate people from the reality that
they too are needy. So when one is
prosperous, there is a temptation to
think that My power and the might
of My hand have gotten me this
wealth. Whenever this is the case—
this person believes in the power of
self-sufficiency, instead of understanding their own need for God’s
daily grace through Jesus Christ. At
times, riches can deceive and blind
to this reality. Because God has
given prosperity to be both enjoyed
and used for His good and the good
of others, whenever someone puts
their trust in their wealth, strange
things happen. Strange things like
this: “Their wealth sprouts wings
and flies like an eagle to heaven.”
Another way of saying this is the
way Job does: “The Lord gives and
the Lord takes away, but blessed be
the name of the Lord.” If you have a
full freezer, thank the Lord for it. All
good gifts come from the Father of
Lights. Yet at the same time, don’t
tie your joy to your possessions or
wealth. According to the Bible, true
joy is always anchored in the person
of Christ. The Apostle Paul had both
a full and empty freezer at times, but
his joy was found in knowing Christ:
Not that I am speaking of being in
need, for I have learned in whatever
situation I am to be content. I know
how to be brought low, and I know
how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret
of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things
through Christ who strengthens me
(Philippians 4:11-13).
Driver’s License Station, 103 Crossroads Center, Waterloo
Telephone: (319) 235-0902 – A Full-Service Site
Hours: Tuesday 8:30 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Wednesday-Friday 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.;
Saturday 8 a.m. - 1 p.m.; Closed Monday.
The Grundy Register
Phone: (319) 824-6958 Fax: (319) 824-6288
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Official Paper of Grundy Center and Grundy County. Published weekly,
every Thursday, by The Grundy Register (601 G Ave., PO Box 245, Grundy
Center, IA 50638-0245). Periodical postage paid in Grundy Center, Iowa. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Grundy Register, 601 G Avenue, PO
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Grundy SOCIAL EVENTS Register
www.thegrundyregister.com
Nutrition site menu
Thank you to the Grundy County Fair Board and First Responders,
the Ambulance Crews and Grundy
Memorial Hospital for the care I
was given after my fall at the Fair
Grounds in July. The fall resulted
in a broken femur, and the First
Responders had to put my leg in
traction. I thank them for the professional and knowledgeable way
in whichthey handled themselves
while tending to my needs. Thank
you too to the Ambulance Crew for
getting me to the hospital quickly
and to the Grundy Memorial Hospital staff for recognizing quickly
that I needed to be transferred. Also
thanks to the second Ambulance
Crew for getting me safely and
quickly to Waterloo. I appreciate
all of the professionalism and competence and friendliness that each
one of you possess and showed
to me. Grundy Center should be
proud of the people they have helping when emergencies arise!
Thank you also to Chelsea, Shari
and Andrea for getting help quickly
and for helping with all the details.
Kelly, thank you as well for being
right there and keeping me calm!
I appreciate your knowledge and
kind words!
Thanks to my husband who
played nurse and go-fer since July,
and to my kids and sister for rides
back and forth to work. They are
all THE BEST and I love them
dearly!
I thank everyone for the kind
words, prayers, visits, cards, calls
and meals. I appreciate all the
kindnesses! But most of all, I thank
God for the healing that has and
will continue to happen!
Loretta Arends ~
Grundy County Extension
& Outreach Office Assistant
Chapter AR, P.E.O.
meeting held
The regular meeting of Chapter
AR, P.E.O.was held on Thursday,
September 3, at 1:30 p.m.at the home
of Ardelis Miller with Cheryl Miller
serving as co-hostess. The theme
of the meeting was “Our Heritage
Shines On Through Nature.” Ann
Smith presented an interesting and
informative program on the Grundy
County prairie.
The next meeting will be October
1 at 1:30 p.m.at the home of Mary
Doak.
A Note About Weddings
Weddings are times of
cele­b ration for family and
friends. The Grundy Register
wants to share this special
event with our readers, but
we need your help.
Wedding information and
a photograph should be submitted for publication within
eight weeks of the ceremony. We can use a color proof
photograph, as it will not be
damaged in any way. News
submitted later than eight
weeks will be reduced to a
photo and cutline format.
The Brower reunion will be Sunday, Sept. 13 at Lone Tree Inn at
Holland at 12:30 p.m.
GRUNDY CENTER – The manager of Surgery Services at Grundy
County Memorial Hospital (GCMH)
has achieved recognition as a Certified Nurse – Operating Room. Jessica Eilers RN BSN has earned the
certification after study and examination, and joins a worldwide community of surgery nurses who have
validated their knowledge and skills
to provide the highest quality care to
their patients.
“Our hospital is proud of Jess for
achieving this milestone,” says Jennifer Havens, GCMH CEO and Director of Nursing. “Achieving certification acknowledges her extensive
knowledge of the Operating Room
and a commitment to the highest
standards of patient care.”
The Certified Nurse – Operating Room credential is recognized
worldwide among health care professionals as the gold standard for
nurses who are leaders in the operating room community, and is aimed
at strengthening the assurance of
the qualifications of those who are
providing surgery services. “We are
very fortunate to have this level of
leadership among nurse managers at
our hospital,” remarks Havens. Eilers has served as Surgery manager
at GCMH for the past eleven years.
Over 5000 Gallons
of Fish Tanks
Bosco says,
“Where quality is
always less expensive!”
Visit Wet Pet at 1321 Edgington Avenue in Eldora
Located in Downtown Eldora 1/2 block west of the courthouse.
Open Evenings and Saturdays: Closed Sunday & Monday
641-939-3051
STARTING
SEPTEMBER11
ADULTS: $3 – KIDS & SENIORS: $1
7:00 P.M. –
SELF / LESS
• Type: Thriller • PG-13 • 120 min.
At the Center Theatre on Friday, September 11 at 7 p.m. will
be the thriller Self/Less, starring
Ryan Reynolds, Ben Kingsley,
Matthew Goode and Victor Garber. This movie is rated PG-13 for
language, running approximately
120 minutes in length. At 7:30 will
be the action/adventure The Fantastic Four, starring Miles Teller,
Michael B. Jordan, Kate Mara and
Jamie Bell. This movie is rated
PG-13 for violence, running approximately 100 minutes in length.
There will be no matinees this
weekend.
* FRIDAYS ARE 50 cent Fridays at the Center Theatre! receive
your choice of MEDIUM popcorn
or any drink for just 50 cents! *
The intriguing thriller Self/Less
follows an extremely wealthy man
(Academy Award® Winner Ben
Kingsley) dying from cancer, who
undergoes a radical medical procedure that transfers his consciousness to the body of a healthy young
Five generations
Pictured are: Gladys Van Deest (age 99), Norman Van Deest (age 78),
Nancy Jungling (age 50), Haley Jungling (age 20), and Emma Jungling
(2 months).
4th annual
Local student is
graduate
Reinbeck Art Baylor
Baylor University conferred deon more than 480 graduates
Festival to be grees
during a summer commencement
exercise Aug. 15 in the Ferrell Cenon the Baylor campus.
held Sept. 26 ter Grundy
Center: Anne Cadence
Eilers achieves
elite nursing
certification
REINBECK — The Fourth Annual Reinbeck Art Festival will have
indoor/outdoor locations in Downtown Reinbeck on Saturday, Sept.
26, 2015, from 9 am to 4 pm. The
indoor location is the Memorial
Building at 208 Broad Street. An inclement weather location for outside
artists is planned if needed.
With 26 artists both indoors and
out, this juried festival is walkable
and strives to feature a variety of
media. There are children’s art activities, a community painting project, a chainsaw art demonstration
and live music. It promises to be an
art-filled da.
New this year is the Buy Great
Art program, which awards a $25
gift certificate every hour for an art
purchase during the festival. It is a
drawing that need only be entered
once. The downtown businesses will
open their doors and food will be
available in several locations. Becktoberfest at Broad Street Brewing
Company is taking place in Reinbeck the same day.
The Reinbeck Community Development Board is proud to encourage
appreciation of the arts in the community by providing the Reinbeck
Art Festival event, a day to see and
buy high-quality work, enjoy music,
keep the kids busy with children’s
art activities, and support art in the
community in a visible way.
For more information, please
contact Dana Schoenbeck cityasst@
reinbeck.net.
Chiquitucto, Master of Health Admin, Health Care Administration
News from Ivester
SEPTEMBER 13
Fall Sunday School will begin at
9:30 am
Noon Potluck
1 pm Leadership Team
SAVE the DATE
Community Picnic will be on the
evening of September 26
CAMP PINE LAKE
A blessing of the solar panels was
held on Saturday and information
given on their use.
Moderator of the Church of the
Brethren, Andy Murray, spent the
weekend at Camp Pine Lake sharing
songs and stories. Guests attended
from Lewiston, MN, South Waterloo, Panther Creek, Ivester, Des
Moines, Ankeny, IA City, Marshalltown, and Rochester, MN. $440 was
raised at the
pie auction. Pies were shared at
the ice cream social on Saturday.
Sunday Worship included guitar
music. Children’s story included
a song by Andy Murray about Dan
West and the heifer project.
Sermon by Andy Murray was
about Christianity in past and present, followed by noon lunch.
Outdoor activities, including canoeing, were enjoyed by youth and
adults alike.
Grundy CounTy farmerS markeT
2 Markets Left
of The SeaSon
Thursday, September 10 & 17
4:30 - 6:30 p.m. at
Grundy Center Courthouse
Vegetables, Baked Goods, Crafts
man (Ryan Reynolds), but all is not
as it seems when he starts to uncover the mystery of the body's origin
and the secret organization that will
kill to protect its cause.
The Fantastic Four, a contemporary re-imagining of Marvel’s original and longest-running
superhero team, centers on four
young outsiders who teleport to an
alternate and dangerous universe,
which alters their physical form
in shocking ways. Their lives irrevocably upended, the team must
learn to harness their daunting new
abilities and work together to save
Earth from a former friend turned
enemy.
For the most up-to-date movie
information, please check out our
new website at www.grundycentertheatre.com. If you are interested
in gift certificates to the Center
Theatre, they may be purchased at
GNB bank locations during the day
or at the Center Theatre during evening business hours.
ARC/PLC deadline approaching
GRUNDY CENTER — The
Grundy County Farm Service Agency (FSA) Office is currently enrolling
producers for the 2014 and 2015 Average Revenue Coverage/Price Loss
Coverage (ARC/PLC) programs.
Many producers think they were
finished with signing up for these
programs after they updated bases
and yields for their farms and then
made a selection between the PLC,
ARC-CO and ARC-IC programs.
This is not the case! Producers still
must ENROLL their farm(s) for both
2014 and 2015 in order to receive a
payment for those years. ENROLLMENT is the actual signing of the
ARC/PLC contract that contains the
payment shares for 2014 and 2015.
This enrollment step determines
which producers on a farm will be
paid and their share of the payment
if one is earned on a farm. In addition, many farms changed hands or
had different operators in 2014 than
in 2015 so this process determines
that payments are made to the correct producers for the year they were
farming a farm or had a share of a
crop on a particular farm.
Once again we are using an appointment system for this sign up
so please contact our office to make
an appointment if you do not have
one already or missed the one that
was scheduled for you earlier. If you
want to change your appointment,
please contact our office prior to
your scheduled appointment time.
We will try to have the enrollment
paperwork ready for you by the day
of your appointment.
The deadline to enroll for 2014
and 2015 ARC/PLC is September
30, 2015. There are no late file provisions at this time. Any producer
that receives a share of the payment
greater than zero on a farm in 2014
or 2015 must submit the signed enrollment contract indicating their
share of the payment by that date.
Many, many producers are asking what the farm program payment
will be and how soon they will get
it. The final payment amounts for
the 2014 crop have not been determined at this time. That is because
at this time the Marketing Year Average (MYA) prices and even the 2014
County yields that will be used to
make the determination of the payment amounts for the ARC and PLC
programs are not yet final.
Also, payments, if earned, are
made on 85% of the farm’s base for
that commodity for the PLC and
ARC-CO programs. For the ARCIndividual Coverage program, payments if earned, are made on 65%
of the farm’s base. Any payments
that are made for the 2014 crop year
will be made after October 1st, 2015
and will also be subject to a 7.3%
sequestration payment reduction
amount.
So remember, if you are not enrolled, you will NOT receive a payment! Even if you did the first 2 steps
– base and yield update, then the
election – you still MUST complete
the third step, enrollment, by September 30th, 2015. If you have any
questions or need more information,
please contact the Grundy County
FSA Office at 319-824-5416.
7:30 P.M. –
FANTASTIC FOUR
• Type: Action / Adventure
• PG-13 • 100 min
CENTER
THEATRE
CENTER
THEATRE
* NO Weekend Matinees this week *
602 602
7th St.,
Center • Center
1-800-682-6345
7thGrundy
St • Grundy
• 1-800-682-6345
www.grundycentertheatre.com
www.grundycentertheatre.com
Gladbrook
TheaTer
Gladbrook, IA ~ 888.473.3456
STarTinG ~ Friday
September 11
Fantastic Four
• PG-13 • 105 min.
* 7:30 pm – Friday- Wednesday
* 3:15 pm – Saturday Matinee
* 1:30 pm – Sunday Matinee
Fall Into $avIngs!
Antiques – Books
Clothing – Crafts
Furniture – Home Décor – Toys
Jeralyn’s School of Dance
Dance
• ReinbeckStudios in
•B
• Tama-To elle Plaine •
ledo •
Adults: ~ 50¢ FRIDAYS
INTRODUCING
* For a limited
time, attend a
$3
movie
on
Friday
evening
Kids &
& receive your choice of
Seniors:Popcorn OR Any
a Medium
Drink
$1 for just 50¢
5
Center Theatre’s Reel-to-Reel
Friday, September 11— Spaghetti Casserole, Mixed Green Salad,
Seasoned Green Beans, Wheat Roll/
Margarine, Peach Cranberry Crisp,
Salad Dressing
Monday, September 14 — Savory
Beef Casserole, Seasoned Green
Beans, Glazed Beets, Multi Grain
Bread/Margarine, Sliced Pears
Tuesday, September 15— BBQ
Pork, Chuckwagon Corn, California
Vegetable Blend, Hamburger Bun,
Fresh Banana
Wednesday, September 16 —
Mushroom Chicken, Baked Potato
with Sour Cream, Spinach, Wheat
Bread/Margarine, Fruited Gelatin
Thursday, September 17 — Roast
Beef with Gravy, Whipped Potatoes,
Italian Vegetable Blend, Multi Grain
Bread/Margarine, Fresh Fruit
Each meal includes milk. All
meals must be ordered by 9 a.m.
the day before receiving a meal. For
more information, to reserve a place
or order a meal, call the Grundy Center Senior Center at (319) 824-3843.
Brower reunion
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Voted 2013 & 2014 & 2015
Best Dance Studio
in Tama & Grundy Counties
Classes start soon!
Masonic Lodge• 118 Broad St • Reinbeck
For More Information Call
641-751-4875
Jeralyn J. Smith
Ages: 2-1/2 to Adult Beginner thru Advanced Certified Teacher
37 years
Classes Offered: • Tap • Ballet • Jazz •
• Pointe • Tumbling • Ballroom • Adult Dance •
www.jeralynsschoolofdance.com
Teaching
Experience
6
Thursday, September 10, 2015
2015 All-State Bar n Tour
scheduled for Sept. 26-27
Editor’s Note: This information
is courtesy of the Iowa Barn
Foundation.
Historic restored barns,
throughout Iowa, will be opened
to the public during the Iowa Barn
Foundation’s free, self-guided, 2015
All-State Barn Tour on Saturday,
Sept. 26 and Sunday, Sept. 27.
Barns will be open from 8:30 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. each day.
Most barns on tour have been
restored with matching grants from
the Iowa Barn Foundation. Other
property owners received awards
of distinction from the foundation
for restorations they undertook
themselves.
The Iowa Barn Foundation,
a n a l l - v o l u n t e e r, n o n - p r o f i t
organization founded in 1997 by
a group of folks with Iowa roots,
raises money from individuals,
foundations, and corporations to
give matching grants to property
owners to restore their barns. The
barns must be restored as closely as
possible to original. The property
owner must sign a perpetual
easement when receiving a grant.
This is the only group of its kind
in the country.
The purpose of the tour is to
encourage barn preservation in the
state, to teach young people about
Iowa's rich agricultural heritage,
and to renew pride in this unique
heritage. Owners will discuss the
barns and their histories at many
stops. Visitors are expected from
around the country. The effort
has encouraged barn preservation
throughout Iowa and beyond.
The tour is free although
donations to support the
foundation's work are appreciated.
Barns on the tour from Grundy,
Butler, Black Hawk, Marshall Tama
and Hardin Counties include:
Hamann barn, 21461 240th
Street, Grundy Center (Grundy
County)- On Highway 175
just west of Highway 14. This
distinguished landmark barn was
Grundy NEWS Register
Iowa Barn Foundation plans 2015 tour
built in 1907 and served for years
as the Worthwhile Frost Dairy
Farm. It has dowel or wooden
pin type construction on the upper
beams and cross members. It has
post and beam construction. The
silo was constructed after the top
window and roofed structure were
completed.
Younker Family Heritage
Farm barn, 25734 Highway 57, 3
miles east of Parkersburg, (Butler
County)-Take Highway 14 north
of US 20 to Highway 57 and turn
east. This large (112'x30') barn has
been in the same family since the
barn was built in the late 1800's. Inside the barn is a 16'x24' wooden
silo that was manufactured by the
Indiana Silo company and was
built around 1909. This landmark
barn was recently lovingly restored
by Eleanor Tostlebe Peterson and
family. (Award of Distinction).
Sparks barn, 15737 E. Avenue,
Alden (Hardin County) - Take
Alden/Buckeye exit off US 20. Go
north to D25. Go west to Avenue. E. G. Herman, 1923, Dubuque, is
painted on west inside wall of this
very large barn.
Hayward barn, 1520 Hwy
V37, Dysart (Tama County) 3.5
miles north of Dysart on Hwy
V37. Owner’s great-grandfather,
Charles Hayward, purchased farm
in 1881. Barn, built in 1916, is 66
feet in diameter. It may have been
constructed by Johnston Brothers
Clay Works, Ft. Dodge because of
size of clay bricks used.
Welter barn, 13725 X, Avenue,
Cedar Falls (Black Hawk County). Original blueprints developed
by Agricultural Engineering
Department, Iowa State. It was
built in 1947. Working farm was
purchased in 1867 by Ole Johnson
and has been in the same family
since.
Others within a short drive of
Grundy County include:
Bennett barn, 1664 Eagle
Avenue, Latimer (Franklin County)
- Take I-35 to State Highway 3.
Turn west on 3 and go one mile to
Eagle Avenue. Turn north and go
2.5 miles. This handsome clay tile
barn, with round laminated rafter
roof, was built in 1950 by Henning
Construction Company, Latimer, for
a dairy herd. The cow stanchions
had drinking cups; there is a chain
lift manure carrier.
Dodd barn, 1854 40th Street,
Ackley (Franklin County) - Travel
four miles west of Ackley on
Highway 57. Turn north on S55 for
two miles to 40th Street. Go 1/2mile west. Barn was built by Ernest
Aldinger, one of three Aldinger
brothers who built farms within a
mile of each other. The Miller barn, 310 20th
Street, SW, Waverly (Bremer
County) - The Miller barn is on
highway 3 on the west edge of
Waverly. It is south of Redeemer
Lutheran Church, east of CUNA
Mutual campus, and west of
Bremwood and Lutheran Services
of Iowa. This barn was built in
1914 by W.H Miller and his brother,
Gilbert, and constructed with
locally grown cedar and native oak. The Miller Guernsey Dairy was
one of over 20 dairies in Bremer
County from 1920 to 1940. The
Miller dairy helped supply the local
Carnation Company with milk for
condensed milk. Klousia barn, 1766 165th St.,
Hampton (Franklin County) - At the
intersection of Highways 65 and 3
in Hampton, turn east for two miles.
Then travel north for two miles and
finally west a fourth mile to the
barn. The barn of peg construction
is on a hill on a gorgeous farmstead. The owner copied a Wisconsin
dairy barn when he built it in 1888. The barn was proudly placed on
the most prominent position on the
farm.
Boriskey Barn, 2115 230th
Street, Marshalltown (Marshall
County) - At intersection of
Highways 30 and 330, go north
on 330 1.3 miles and turn left onto
short gravel drive that crosses to
county road E41 (230th Street).
Turn left again (west) and go 0.7
miles. Barn is on the right (north). Barn known as "long horse barn
on 30" was manufactured by Super
Structures, Albert Lea, and built in
1958. Has laminated curved rafters. Native lumber in horse stalls.
Buck barn, 1271 285th Street,
State Center (Marshall County
- From State Center, go west one
mile to Cooper Avenue. Go 4.5
miles south to 285th Street. Turn
left on gravel. Barn is at first place
on left. Barn is an example of how
a potential tear-down can be turned
into a jewel. It has a wonderful
cupola.
D o b b i n ro u n d b a r n , 2551 Brown Avenue, State Center
(Marshall County) - From State
Center, go west one mile to Cooper
Avenue, and turn south. Turn right
(west) onto 255th St, then left onto
Brown Ave 1917 barn was a precut structure designed and made
to order by Gordon Van Tine,
Davenport, for $6000. Carpenters
like Ike Ingersol and Amos
Thompson assembled the numbered
pieces into the 65-foot diameter
barn with silo in the middle. (Award of Distinction).
Mulcahy Farm, 25623 710th
Ave, Colo (Story County) - Take new
US 30 to US65. Go east to 710th
Street. Turn south for a long block. Barn is on the west side of the road.
The owner is Tony Bianchini. This
barn, part of a lovely farmstead,
was built in 1885 for horses. Barn
is on National Register.
Hamann barn
Younker barn
Law Offices of
C. KEVIN McCRINDLE
Attorneys:
C. Kevin McCrindle,
John W. Harris and Henry E. Edsill
PrActicing in the AreAs of:
• Agricultural Law • Education Law • Elder Law
• Business Law • Estate Planning • Real Estate
• Taxation • Tax Returns • Trusts and Estates
• Wills and Probate Estate Administration
We have offices in Waterloo, Hudson and Grundy Center.
Call us locally at 319-825-4488 or
our Waterloo office directly at 319-234-0535.
Belts & Hoses
Domestic &
Imports Available
Napa
auto
parts
707 G ave., Grundy Center
319-824-6917
Hours: Mon.-Fri., 8-5: sat., 8-12
Dike Register
The Grundy Register
Diane Paige, Correspondent
Phone: (319) 989-2163
About Dike
Dedication Sunday
Sunday, September 13th is the
date the congregation of the Dike
United Methodist Church will celebrate the completion of their remodeling project. Service time for
Sunday’s dedication is 10:15am.
Members and visitors will be worshiping in the new sanctuary. Dedication will be directed to everything
new in our sanctuary. Pastor Dan
Ridnouer and District Superintendent Jackie Bradford will conduct
the worship. This will be a celebratory service with special music selections.
Following the dedication service,
everyone is encouraged to stay for a
time of coffee, refreshments, and fellowship.
The Dike United Methodist
Church has been undergoing a six
month remodeling project. A building committee was formed which
identified the needs of our growing
congregation. At a church conference in October the church members
voted overwhelmingly to begin this
project which would allow for the
remodeling of the sanctuary and
education wing. Please join us for a
celebration during worship, Sunday,
September 13, at 10:15am as we
dedicate the sanctuary.
Volume 91 – Number 37
7
Dates for Dike
Birthdays
Rainfall and gauges
By DIANE PAIGE
The Grundy Register
My interest in the news has expanded and now I am into recording
rain fall amounts. I bought myself a
small rain indicator and was thinking about where to place it according to instructions.
The first rain fall after I had made
my purchase, of course happened in
the middle of the night and, yes, you
guessed it, my rain gauge was still
in the package. I hurried to get ready
for the next rain fall and did we get
rain. My new rain gauge measured 5
inches of precipitation . Not being a
seasoned rain collector, I decided to
drive around town and look for others who might have their gauge in a
visisable stop for comparison.
Look what I found. This just happens to be about the best in town. I
will make great rain fall reportings
only after I have done the comparison with this rain gauge family.
Dennis and Mary Coleman are
the owners of rain gauge elite state
of the art technology.
Al Roker would be proud.
Dennis and Mary are newcomers to Dike from Ankeny Iowa.
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Thursday, September 10: Marcy
Borwig
Friday, September 11: Aaron Olsen
Saturday, September 12: Jean
Doorley
Sunday, September 13: Nick Weber, Steve Woodley
Monday, September 14: Darren
Brandt, Tim Bixby
Tuesday, September 15: Jim
Campbell, Wayne Whipps
Wednesday, September 16: Axel
Bern, Travis Druvenga, Jocelyn
Druvenga, Kyle Carlson
Thursday, September 10
5 pm CC at Marshalltown
6pm JV Var VB at Denver
El Parent /teacher conference
4:15 JH FB at BMAP
Friday, September 11
7 pm Football at Dike
Saturday, September 12
ACT tesam VB at Osage
9am JH VB at Janesville
Sunday, September 13
Local Church services
Dedication SUnday at Dike United Methodist Church
Cube voice
City audit released The
The Dike New Hartford school
They purchased the Bill and Connie Coyne. Bill and Connie moved
to Marshalltown. Dennis works in
waterloo Ia and Mary Bixby Coleman runs the household. They are
extremely happy in Dike and Mary
is now accessible to her Bixby family. Mary is the Mother of Tim, Tony
and Chad. Three Daughter in laws
and Grandkids and the boys fill their
lives with pure joy!!!
Auditor of State Mary Mosiman
recently released a reaudit report on
the City of Dike for the year ended
June 30, 2015. The reaudit also covered certain items applicable to prior
and subsequent fiscal years. The reaudit was performed at the request
of an elected City official pursuant
to section 11.6(4)a(2) of the Code of
Iowa.
The reaudit report included a recommendation to the City to consult
legal counsel regarding certain costs
reimbursed to the developer of the
Fox Ridge Addition project.
A copy of the reaudit report is
available for review in the City
Clerk’s Office, in the Office of Auditor of State and on the Auditor
of State’s web site at http://auditor.
iowa.gov/reports/1021-0355-T00Z.
pdf.
The Grundy
Register
Street Curb and Gutter
The work is in progress and because this Labor Day weekend, the crews
were off the job. Curb and gutters are poured and next we will see the
street work completed. West Elder is getting the new look and we will
watch for more street ready to take on a beautiful new look. Take a look
at the completed North St. project on your next drive through town.
Ad Deadline
Noon Friday
(319) 824-6958
has done an excellent job of providing a way for viewers to watch school
events on the CUBE. We have had
the streaming capabilities and for a
while but we have not had a voice
behind the pictures. That voice we
now hear is that of Travis Kiewiet.
Travis took his idea of broadcasting
to Miah Lehr and with his assistance
and help from the school and DNH
Booster club the necessary equipment was purchased.
Travis has never had experience
in broadcasting but is enjoying the
opportunity providing a voice to
each of the events shown on the
Cube. His goal is to turn the entire
broadcasting over to students with
an interest in broadcasting or technology and give them a real experience and to possibly persue in college.
Travis is a Dike New Hartford
1990 grad and has been a K-12
teacher in Hudson since 2000.
We remember Travis with the
Waterloo Bucks organization but
says now he is just a loyal fan.
Travis is married to Teresa, and
father to Marley 15, Parker 13 and
Taylor 11.
We can't forget his parents, Craig
and Mary Kiewiet.
DNH Fans near and far are enjoying your broadcasts so keep up the
good work.
Church Worship Services
Grundy Center
American Lutheran Church
Luther Thoresen Pastor - www.alcgc.org
319-824-3557
8:45 a.m. Worship Service
Bethany Presbyterian Church
Tom & Jean Bower, Pastors
319-824-5471
10:00 a.m. Worship Service
First Baptist Church (GARBC)
Nathan Barkley, Pastor
319-824-3324
www.firstbaptistgrundycenter.com
9:15 a.m. Sunday School
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship Service
6:30 p.m. Sunday Evening Service
First Presbyterian Church
Rev. Mike Campbell, Pastor
Rev. Sheryl Campbell, Parish Associate
319-824-3152
9:00 a.m. Worship
10:30 a.m. Adult Study in Chapel
•Teens lead worship 3rd Sun. of month
United Methodist Church
Phil Dicks, Pastor - 319-825-5408
9:00 a.m. - Sun. - ‘Full Charge Service’
5:30 p.m. - Wed. - Kid & Family WOW
meal & Sunday School
6:30-7p.m.-Wed. ‘Quick Charge Service’
Orchard Hill Church (Center Theatre)
319-824-3039
9:45 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. Worship Service
Orchard Hill - Lincoln Center
Jesse Henkle, Host Pastor
319-824-6178
9:00 a.m. Morning Worship
10:30 a.m. Sunday School
Holland
Colfax Center Presbyterian
Robbie Grames, Pastor
319-824-5231
9:30 a.m. Morning Worship
10:45 Sunday School
Pleasant Valley Reformed Church
Rev. Rick Vollema
319-346-1090
9 a.m. Worship Service
10:30 a.m. Discussion Group
WellsburG
East Friesland Presbyterian
Lynn Arends, Supply Pastor
641-847-2896
9:15 a.m. Sunday School
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship
Faith Presbyterian Church
641-847-3188
9:00 a.m. Morning Worship
10:30 a.m. Sunday School
First Christian Reformed
Thomas Vos, Pastor
641-869-3305
9:30 a.m. Morning Worship
10:30 a.m. Sunday School
Pleasant Valley United Methodist
Dot Geersema, Pastor
641-869-3637
8:45 a.m. Morning Worship
Reformed Church
9:30 a.m. Morning Worship
10:45 Sunday School
6:30 p.m. Evening Bible Study
St. John Lutheran Church
Bruce Zimmerman, Pastor
9:00 a.m. Morning Worship
9:45 Sunday School & Bible Class
St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran
Intern - Kristen Briner-Whipperman
641-869-3992
8:15 a.m. Sunday School
9:30 a.m. Worship Service
St. Peter’s Country Church
Rev. Michael McLane, Pastor
563-581-2866
8 a.m. Morning Worship
United Reformed Church
Matthew Nuiver, Pastor
641-869-3633
9:30 a.m. Morning Worship
10:45 Sunday School
7 p.m. Evening Worship
Steamboat Rock Baptist Church
Harrison Lippert, Pastor
Bryce Roskens, Associate Pastor
641-868-2458
107 2nd Street in
Steamboat Rock
8:45 a.m. Traditional Service
10 a.m. Fellowship Hour - No S.S.
11 a.m. Contemporary Service
dike
United Methodist Church
Dan Ridnouer, Pastor
319-989-2535
9 a.m. Sunday School
10:15 a.m. Worship Service
Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church
Mark Decker, Pastor
319-988-3967
9:00 a.m. Worship
10:15 a.m. Sunday School
Fredsville Lutheran Church
Rev. Lisa Dietrich, Pastor
319-989-2065
8:15 a.m. Adult Sunday School
9:30 a.m. Traditional Worship
10:30 a.m. Sunday School
Liberty Baptist Church (GARBC)
705 1st Street
319-989-2141
9:00 a.m. Morning Worship
10:15 a.m. Sunday School
6 p.m. Evening Praise Service
beaman
United Methodist Church
641-366-2142
9:30 a.m. Sunday School
10:45 a.m. Morning Worship
Conrad
Alice Church of God
Jim Hartman, Pastor
641-623-5641
9:15 a.m. Sunday School
10:30 a.m. Worship Service
First Presbyterian Church
Kerry Carson, Pastor
641-366-2342
8:45 a.m. Sunday School
11 a.m. Fellowship
United Methodist Church
Rev. Gene Kubli
641-366-2325
9:30 a.m. Sunday School
10:45 a.m. Worship
area CHurCHes
Holy Family Catholic Parish
Rev. David Kucera
319-345-2006
Mass: 5:30 p.m., Sat. - Parkersburg
9:30 a.m., Sunday - Reinbeck
Salem Church of Lincoln
Rev. Barb Muhs, Pastor
641-473-2450
10:00 a.m. Worship Service
No Sunday School (in summer)
Now all has been heard; here is the
conclusion of the matter: Fear God
and keep his commandments, for this
is the duty of all mankind. For God
will bring every deed into judgment,
including every hidden thing, whether
it is good or evil.
~ Ecclsiastes 12:13-14
Bethel Reformed Church
319-347-6219
9 a.m. Worship Service
10 a.m. Sunday School
Ivester Church of the Brethren
Katie Thompson, Pastor
641-858-3879
9:30 a.m. Christian Education
10:30 a.m. Worship Service
Noon potluck
Reformed Church of Stout
Stephen and Olga Shaffer, Pastors
319-346-1487
9:30 a.m. Morning Worship
10:30 a.m. Fellowship Time
10:45 Sunday School
******************************************************************************************
Space for this series of religious messages for all faiths is provided by The Grundy
Register and these community-minded business and professional people:
Grundy Center
Engelkes-Abels Funeral Home & Monument Co.
GNB Bank
Grundy Center Municipal Light & Power Dept.
Grundy County Rural Electric Cooperative
The Grundy Register
Heartland Cooperative
Richelieu Foods Inc.
Rouse Motor Co.
WellsburG
Doyen-Abels Funeral Home & Monument Co.
The Wellsburg Herald
dike
Beninga Sanitation
Dike Funeral Chapel & Monument Co.
The Dike Register
Ubben Building Supplies, Inc.
8
Thursday, September 10, 2015
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS PROCEEDINGS
The Grundy County Board of Supervisors met
in regular session on August 31, 2015, at 9:00
A.M. Chairperson Schildroth called the meeting
to order with the following members present:
Smith (by conference telephone) and Bakker.
Absent: Ross and Riekena.
Motion was made by Bakker and seconded by
Smith to approve the minutes of the previous
meeting. Carried unanimously.
At 9:01 A.M., the chairperson opened the public hearing regarding the vacation of a portion
of 210th Street in Sections 30 and 31 in Lincoln
Township. Kody Kruger spoke in favor of the
vacation as did Jason Kirkpatrick, representing
the Zingg Trust and GNB Bank. No one was
present to speak against the vacation. After
hearing everyone desiring to speak in favor of
or against said vacation, the chairperson closed
the hearing. It was noted that no written comments had been received.
Motion was made by Bakker and seconded by
Smith to introduce Resolution #12-2015/2016
as follows: WHEREAS, a public hearing was
held at 9:00 A.M. on the 31st day of August,
2015, in the office of the Grundy County Board
of Supervisors and, WHEREAS, There being no
objections to the vacating of part of the Grundy
County road right-of-way as advertised and,
WHEREAS, There being no claim for damages.
NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT
Grundy County vacates that portion of 210th
St. original with modifications in Sections 30 &
31 of Lincoln Township, originally established
on June 8th, 1869 and by use. (See Road #67,
Page 214), more particularly described as: The
south 33 feet of the South One-half (S1/2) of
Section Thirty (30) Township Eighty-eight (88)
North, Range Sixteen (16) West of 5th P.M.,
Grundy County, Iowa AND the north 33 feet of
the North One-half of Section Thirty-one (31),
Township Eighty-eight (88) North, Range Sixteen (16) West of 5th P.M., Grundy County,
Iowa; EXCEPT the east 33 feet thereof. Easement access rights shall be granted to all existing utilities on said described road vacation
to allow access to their current facilities, now
and in the future, for maintenance, repair patrol,
operation and reconstruction to said facilities.
The vote on the resolution was as follows: Ayes
– Smith, Bakker, and Schildroth. Nays – None.
Resolution adopted.
Motion was made by Bakker and seconded
by Smith to approve final payment voucher
with Vogel Traffic Services of Orange City,
Iowa, on pavement markings project no. FMCO38(99)—55-38 and to authorize the chairperson to sign said document. Carried unanimously.
Motion was made by Bakker and seconded
by Smith to approve Utility Permit Application
No. 8-31-15 submitted by Telcom Construction
of Clearwater, MN, for Century Link on service
line to 26466 110th Street and to authorize the
chairperson to sign said Utility Permit Application. Carried unanimously.
Motion was made by Smith and seconded
by Bakker to approve low bid by Mathy Construction of Onalaska, WI, on HMA overlay
project nos. FM-CO38(96)—55-38 and STPS-CO38(97)—5E-38 for combined amount of
$2,796,827.79. Carried unanimously.
Gary Mauer, County Engineer, reviewed department matters with the Board.
At 9:15 A.M., the chairperson opened the
public hearing regarding an amendment to the
County Development/Zoning Ordinance. No
one was present to speak in favor of or against
the amendment. The chairperson closed the
hearing. It was noted that no written comments
had been received.
Motion was made by Bakker and seconded by
Smith to accept the first reading of Ordinance
#2016-2, an ordinance amending Ordinance
No. 2004-3 - Grundy County, Iowa, Develop-
Grundy FOR THE RECORD Register
ment Ordinance, as follows: Be it enacted by
the Grundy County, Iowa Board of Supervisors:
SECTION 1. Purpose. The purpose of this Ordinance is to amend section 7.02 Code of Ordinances, regarding on-site wastewater treatment and disposal system rules. SECTION 2.
AMENDMENT TO COUNTY CODE. Section
7.02 of the 2003 Code of Ordinances is hereby amended by adding the following: 7.02.4A
Fines and Penalties- Fines and Penalties- Upon
violation of the terms of any part of this ordinance or Iowa Code Environmental Protection
[567], Chapter 69, any person issued a contractor’s license in Grundy County to install onsite
waste water systems, shall be issued a citation
for a first time offense of the Ordinance. Said citation shall be issued as a county infraction with
the penalty being set at $750 for the first violation. If said fine is not paid within time allowed
by court, a $1000 fine each day thereafter shall
be assessed. Upon a second violation of this
Ordinance or Chapter 69 of the Iowa Code, the
Contractor’s License shall be revoked. Section 3. REPEALER. All ordinances or parts of
ordinances in conflict with the provisions of this
ordinance are hereby repealed. SECTION 4.
SEVERABILITY CLAUSE. If any section, provision, or part of this ordinance shall be adjudged
invalid or unconstitutional, such adjudication
shall not affect the validity of the ordinance as a
whole or any section, provision, or part thereof
not adjudged invalid or unconstitutional. SECTION 5. EFFECTIVE DATE. This ordinance
shall be in full force and effect from and after
its passage and publication as provided by law.
Roll call vote was as follows: Ayes – Smith,
Bakker, and Schildroth. Nays – None.
Motion was made by Smith and seconded by
Bakker to suspend the rules and move Ordinance #2016-2 from first to third reading and
adoption. Roll call vote was as follows: Ayes –
Smith, Bakker, and Schildroth. Nays – None.
Ordinance adopted.
Katherine Ollendieck, Mike Soppe, Mike Williams, and Joe Becker reviewed the proposed
Kruger-Hemmen Sports Complex with the
Board. Ollendieck specifically requested that
the supervisors write a letter supporting the
project and that they approve financial support
for the project to be paid in fiscal year 20162017.
Carie Sager, Zoning Administrator and Sanitarian, and Larry Steinbronn of Building Works
USA reviewed the results of the air quality tests
which have been performed in the courthouse.
Steinbronn will submit an estimate of the cost of
further testing for review by the Board.
Motion was made by Bakker and seconded by
Smith to introduce Resolution #11-2015/2016
as follows: BE IT RESOLVED BY THE BOARD
OF SUPERVISORS that the Grundy County
Treasurer, pursuant to 2015 Iowa Code Section 455.63, abate all taxes and strike from the
tax books the following parcel: Owner: Grundy
County. Parcel Number: GCGC87172408014.
Tax Year 2014. Receipt #039259. Original
Amount $334.67. The vote on the resolution
was as follows: Ayes – Smith, Bakker, and
Schildroth. Nays – None. Resolution adopted.
Motion was made by Bakker and seconded
by Smith to accept and order filed the FY2015
Pleasant Valley Township Annual Report and
the FY2015 Black Hawk Township Annual Report. Carried unanimously.
Motion was made by Smith and seconded by
Schildroth to approve the application for fireworks permits of Charles Bakker of Dike. Carried unanimously.
Motion was made by Smith and seconded by
Bakker to adjourn. Carried unanimously.
Mark A. Schildroth, Chairperson
Rhonda R. Deters, County Auditor
IN THE IOWA DISTRICT COURT FOR
GRUNDY COUNTY, STATE OF IOWA
Docket No. (Sale No.): 15-0451(1)
Court No. EQCV059173
Sheriff Execution
PLAINTIFF: DEUTSCHE BANK TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR MORGAN STANLEY ABS CAPITAL 1 INC. TRUST 2003-NC6,
MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2003-NC6
VS.
DEFENDANTS: STEVE KIEWIET - IN REM;
JENIFER KIEWIET - IN REM; PARTIES IN
POSSESSION - IN REM; STATE OF IOWA,
CHILD SUPPORT RECOVERY UNIT - IN
REM; UNKNOWN SPOUSE, IN ANY, OF
STEVE KIEWIET - IN REM; UNKNOWN
SPOUSE, IF ANY, OF JENIFER KIEWIET - IN
REM; MIDLAND FUNDING, LLC - IN REM;
DENNIS BRUBAKER - IN REM; MIA R. BOELMAN - IN REM
As a result of the judgment rendered in the
above referenced court case, an execution
was issued by the court to the Sheriff of this
county. The execution ordered the sale of
defendant(s) Real Estate Property to satisfy the
judgment. The property to be sold is: Lot Six (6)
in Block “I” of Methfessel’s original plat of the
Town of Reinbeck, Grundy County, Iowa.
Street Address: 312 Broad Street, Reinbeck,
Iowa 50669
The described property will be offered for sale
at public auction for cash only as follows: Date
of Sale is December 15, 2015 at 10 a.m., at
the Grundy County Sheriff’s Office, 705 8th St.,
Grundy Center, Iowa 50638 Phone (319) 8246933
Homestead: Defendant is advised that if the
described real estate includes the homestead
(which must not exceed 1/2 acre if within a city
or town plat, or, if rural, must not exceed 40
acres), defendant must file a homestead plat
with the Sheriff within ten (10) days after service
of this notice, or the Sheriff will have it platted
and charge the costs to this case.
This sale not subject to redemption.
Property exemption: Certain money or property
may be exempt. Contact your attorney promptly
to review specific provisions of the law and file
appropriate notice, if applicable.
Judgment Amt - $61,073.70; Costs - 235.00;
Accruing Costs - Plus; Interest - 8.1% of
$61,073.70 from May 12, 2015 = $2,941.08.
Attorney is Brian R. Hazel (913) 663-7600.
Date: September 4, 2015
Sheriff: Rick D. Penning
Deputy: By Chief Deputy Tim Wolthoff
PUBLIC NOTICE OF STORM WATER DISCHARGE
Orchard Hill Reformed Church plans to submit a Notice of Intent to the Iowa Department
of Natural Resources to be covered under the
NPDES General Permit No. 2 Storm Water
Discharge Associated with Industrial Activity for
Construction Activities
The storm water discharge will be from Grading, Building Construction, and Parking Lot
Construction located in
SE1/4 Sec. 11, T87N, R17W, Grundy County
Storm water will be discharged from 1
point source(s) and will be discharged to the following streams: Minnehaha Creek
Comments may be submitted to the Storm Water Discharge Coordinator, Iowa Department
of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division, 502 E. 9th Street, Des Moines,
IA 50319-0034. The public may review the Notice of Intent from 8:00am to 4:30pm, Monday
through Friday, at the above address after it has
been received by the department.
www.thegrundyregister.com
Grundy County District Court
Eric Michael Bostwick, Franklin,
Wis., Speeding, Over 55 zone (6-10
over), $114;
Taylor Ann Ahrenholz, New Hartford, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(6-10 over), $114;
Larry Dean Stanley, Conrad,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $119;
Amanda Kristine Gleissner, Reinbeck, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(6-10 over), $114;
Gary Alan Heggen, Conrad,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $114;
Spencer Lee Simpson, Hudson,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $114;
Merle James Patterson, Eldora,
Speeding, Over 55 zone (6-10 over),
$114;
Taylor Rae Sams, Union, Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10 over),
$119;
Lia Pe, Waterloo, Speeding, 55
and under zone (6-10 over), $119;
THE IOWA DISTRICT COURT
GRUNDY COUNTY
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF
Mary Jane Sieh, Deceased.
Probate No. ESPR101991
NOTICE OF PROBATE OF WILL, OF
APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTOR,
AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To All Persons Interested in the Estate of
Mary Jane Sieh, Deceased, who died on or
about 23rd day of July, 2015:
You are hereby notified that on the 1st day
of September, 2015, the last will and testament
of Mary Jane Sieh, deceased, bearing date of
the 10th day of August, 2010, was admitted
to probate in the above named court and that
Cindy Cutler was appointed executor of the estate. Any action to set aside the will must be
brought in the district court of said county within
the later to occur of four months from the date
of the second publication of this notice or one
month from the date of mailing of this notice to
all heirs of the decedent and devisees under the
will whose identities are reasonably ascertainable, or thereafter be forever barred.
Notice is further given that all persons indebted to the estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned, and creditors having claims against the estate shall file
them with the clerk of the above named district
court, as provided by law, duly authenticated,
for allowance, and unless so filed by the later to
occur of four months from the second publication of this notice or one month from the date of
mailing of this notice (unless otherwise allowed
or paid) a claim is thereafter forever barred.
Dated this 3rd day of September, 2015.
Cindy Cutler
210 Park Street
Garwin, IA 50632
Executor of estate
Barry S. Kaplan, ICIS PIN No: AT0004090
111 E. Church
Marshalltown, IA 50158
Date of second publication 17th day of September, 2015.
37-2
Matthew James Schaffner, Cedar
Falls, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(1-5 over), $87;
Aaron Campbell Bullock, Marshalltown, Speeding, 55 and under
zone (6-10 over), $119;
Rodney D. Cordes, Cedar Falls,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $119;
Samantha Rae Kirby, Waterloo,
Speeding, Over 55 zone (6-10 over),
$119;
Lisa Frances Opheim, Grundy
Center, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(1-5 over), $100.50;
Lathan M. Good, Aplington,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $185.63;
Keya Renee Smith, Gladbrook,
Violation financial liability coverage, $707.81;
Lisa Marie Pearce, Reinbeck, Unsafe backing on highway, $337.50;
Saunya Ranee Knorr, Eldora,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (11-15
over), $277.50;
Sanuya Renee Knorr, Eldora, Violation financial liability coverage,
$707.81;
Sanuya Renee Knorr, Eldora, No
valid driver’s license, $581.25;
Shanna Danyel O’Clair, Conrad, Operation without registration,
$168.75;
Trinidad Alvarez, Des Moines,
Open container (passenger over 21),
$472.50;
Jose Luis Marino, Des Moines,
Open container (passenger over 21),
$472.50;
Travis Jon Schwartz, Independence, Seat belt violation, $161.25;
Brandon Michael Clark, Altoona,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $176.50;
Demetrius James Woolridge, Des
Moines, Speeding, 55 and under
zone (16-20 over), $186.50;
Rosibel Andrade, Marshalltown,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $148.50;
Jeri Ann Foreman, Hampton,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $148.50;
Michael Bruce Johns, Grundy
Center, Open container (passenger
over 21), $335;
Brian Jeffery Miller, Marshalltown, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(6-10 over), $119;
Tashieyanna Loretta O’Neal, Waterloo, Speeding, Over 55 zone
(More than 20 over), $220.25;
Jared Ashley Boyd, Waterloo,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $114;
Levi Hunter Pratt, Waterloo,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (16-20
over), $186.50;
Zachary Lawrence Henningsen,
Grundy Center, Speeding, 55 and
under zone (More than 20 over),
$227;
Trent A. Murra, Wellsburg, Seat
belt violation, $127.50;
Eddie Charles Riley, Waterloo,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $120;
Leona Mae Vibbard, Liscomb,
Failure to yield upon entering
through highway, $200;
Clarke William Macy, Conrad, Use of light restricting device,
$93.75;
Elizabeth Jean Frazier, Marshalltown, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(6-10 over), $119;
David Lyle Leinbaugh, Cedar
Falls, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(6-10 over), $119;
Derek A. Hansen, Dike, Speeding, 55 and under zone (1-5 over),
$87;
Lwin Min Thet, Waterloo, Speeding, 55 and under zone (1-5 over),
$87;
Dustin Eugene Brown, Garwin,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $114;
Sadie Marie Walton, Cedar Falls,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $114;
Tanner James Buenting, Ankeny,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $119;
Chad Allen Cramer, Grundy Center, Speeding, 55 and under zone (610 over), $119;
Beverly Ann Swenson, Marshalltown, Speeding, 55 and under zone
(6-10 over), $119;
Ginna Dyan Vanderholt, Parkersburg, Operation of motor vehicle
with expired license, $127.50;
Adam M. Miltenberger, Waterloo,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $119;
Colin Gregory Reese, Windsor
Heights, Speeding, Over 55 zone (610 over), $114;
Roger Dennis Hazen, Cedar Falls,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $114;
Laurie Jo Giunta, Cedar Falls,
Speeding, 55 and under zone (6-10
over), $119;
Nikolaus Paul Scheid, Conrad,
Stop light violation, $195.
Grundy CLASSIFIEDS Register
www.thegrundyregister.com
OPEN HOUSES
OPEN HOUSES
OPEN
HOUSE
REAL ESTATE
CITYWIDE GARAGE SALES:
FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Grundy Center, September 11th 4-7
& September 12th 8-12. Maps available at Family Foods & Casey’s.
~ 1104 13 St.
th
Sunday
Grundy Center
Sept. 13
th
GARAGE SALE: 1104 H Avenue,
2:00-4:00 pm
LARGE, COMFORTABLE AND UPDATED!
4 bedroom, 1.75 bathroom with 2,344 finished sq. ft. and an oversized
2 car garage. Recent updates: roof, dishwasher, water heater, disposal,
radon mitigation, paint throughout. Newer foundation, basement, garage,
appliances, carpet, sump pump, tiling, more. * Price: $165,000 *
Contact: Trina Dirks, Phone: 319-243-5674.
Additional information at: www.zillow.com
SCHUCK REALTY CO.
OPEN HOUSES
MONDAY • SEPTEMBER 14
5:00 - 6:00
6:00 - 7:00
907 13th St • Grundy Center
Move in tomorrow
– A Must See!
1003 H Ave • Grundy Center
Check out the new updates!
Lori Burmester, Broker Associate/Realtor
• Call Lori @ 319-415-9980 cell or 319-824-3293 office
CHECK OUT ALL OUR OTHER NEW & GREAT LISTINGS
@ www.schuckrealtyco.com
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE ~ 32521 HOLLY AVE • APLINGTON, IA
• Call 319.346.1284
BEAUTIFULLY REMODELED - ACREAGE
for more information
w/1.73 acres m/l. • 2 story home w/1,896 sf.
www.campbellmellema.com • 4 bdrms • 1 ½ baths ~ UPDATES INCLUDE ~
• new septic system • roof • siding
• windows • kitchen • baths • flooring.
City water/utilities.
* YOU WON’T WANT TO MISS THIS ONE*
SERVICES
SERVICES
Radiator Repair
MCMARTIN TIRE
S & S AUTO REPAIR
Office: 319-824-3737
Austinville, Iowa
319-347-6237
Hours: 7 AM - 5 PM
“On Farm Pitstop Tire Service”
Small machine, will not track
yards. Also large machine for large
stumps. Call Jerry Zehr in Conrad,
Iowa at 641-366-2241.
Dunlop Signature II
$11000 ea
TREE
STUMPS
Removed.
IT. PAYS. TO –
ADVERTISE!
NEW! 409 K Avenue
Grundy Center
4 BR ranch with open Liv. Rm. & kitchen. 3 nice BRs & full BA. Newly finished basement with rec room, 3/4 BA
& BR with egress window. New water
heater, windows, garbage disposal,
breaker box, carpet & kitchen flooring.
• $97,900 •
215 / 70-15
Mounted, balanced, and new stem
Free Pickup & Delivery
In Holland and G.C.
Call ahead for Oil Changes
Check out our new tires.
THIS PUBLICATION DOES NOT KNOWLINGLY ACCEPT – advertising which is deceptive, fraudulent or which might otherwise violate
the law or accepted standards of taste. However, this publication does not
warrant or guarantee the accuracy of any advertisement, nor the quality of
the goods or services advertised. Readers are cautioned to thoroughly investigate all claims made in any advertisements, and to use good judgment
and reasonable care, particularly when dealing with persons unknown to
you who ask for money in advance of delivery of the goods or services
advertised.
Grundy Center. Fri. Sept. 11 from
12:00 - 7:00 p.m. & Sat. Sept. 12
from 8:00 - noon. Boys bike, womans clothing, toddler boys clothing
& 6-7 girls clothing, Noahs Ark &
Kim Anderson Collectibles. Toys
and misc. decorating items.
WANTED
WANTED:
NEW! 206 8th Street
Grundy Center
3 BRs, 1 BA home. Mudroom with
brick tiles. Great Living / Kitchen areas. Upper level with remodeled BA &
3 BRs. Lower level has many possibilities. Off of the kitchen is a gorgeous
bar and entertaining area with metal
ceiling tiles.
• $91,900 •
*ALSO – WANTED TO BUY:
40 Acres +/- in South Butler
County or North Grundy County.
Call – 319.346.1364.
Joyce Harrenstein, Broker/Owner
GARAGE SALES
NEW! 803 10th Street
Grundy Center
Great location & price on this 3 BR
home. New flooring in living room.
Main floor master BR & BA with 2
additional BRs in finished attic. Oversized detached garage. Nice front deck
and new roof.
• $79,500 •
See more listings:
www.gnbrealestate.com
Phone 319-825-3633
603 7 St • GRUNDY CENTER, IA
th
Mike Cooper • 319-269-3391
Tiffany Carson • 712-210-3545
Matthew Wikert • 575-323-4567
Brent Wilson • 319-939-9268
Roger Engelkes • 319-269-3434
Phil Johnson • 319-404-5561
HELP WANTED
Old seed corn signs,
sacks, Farmer’s Hybrids, Tomahawk, Mallard, Pioneer, Blackhawk,
etc. Also buying old feed signs. Good
condition. Bryan Paul, Thompson,
Iowa. 515-538-0187.
BEE
EARLY...
CLASSIFIED ADS
DEADLINE IS
MONDAY @ 10 a.m.
THE
GRUNDY
REGISTER
319-824-6958
HELP WANTED
POSITIONS AVAILABLE: We are now taking applications for
~ SEASONAL TEMPORARY HELP - ON ALL SHIFTS
• Positions available immediately based on pre-employment
testing • Season runs mid Sept-April
• Must be 18 years of age • Must possess a valid drivers
license • Must pass a pre - employment drug test.
APPLY AT: Monsanto, 410 Center Street, Beaman, IA 50609
For more information • 641-366-2606
• EOE/AA Employer. M/F/D/V
Thursday, September 10, 2015
HELP WANTED
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
JOIN OUR TEAM–Now hiring semi
& gravel truck drivers. Must have a
current Class A CDL & DOT physical. 1 yr. of driving experience preferred. Home most nights & weekends. Paid holidays & vacations.
Competitive wages-Bonuses-Health
Ins. Benefits. Call Todd 515-6898473 or Melanie 641-648-3959.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Ap-
prentices wanted– Tony’s Plumbing
in Cedar Falls is looking for career
minded individuals to start immediately. 100% on the job training and
schooling paid. We offer bonuses,
health, life and disability insurance,
vacation, holiday pay and 401k. Call
319-277-2750 to inquire.
HELP WANTED: The Grundy
Center Community School is
seeking individuals to serve as
substitutes for custodial positions
in the elementary and secondary
buildings. Rate is $10/hour to
start, negotiable depending on
qualifications.Applications
can
be filled out at the administration
building located at 1301 12 St.
Grundy Center, IA 50638. Grundy
Center CSD is an equal opportunity
employer.
9
HELP WANTED
POSITION AVAILABLE: FULL
-TIME PROTEIN TRANSPORT
IN ELDORA: Class CDL-A Tanker
Endorsement. Earn up to $45,000
or more a year. Home almost every
night and very few weekends. PreDrug Test. Call Dave at the office
(641)868-2049 or (641)485-5867.
POSITION AVAILABLE:
Arlington Place is seeking a
P/T UNIVERSAL WORKER
This is a rewarding position
working in a comfortable
environment helping seniors
with activities of daily living,
light housekeeping & laundry.
For further information please
call Kaylene at 319-824-5674
or stop in for an
application & a tour at
95 D Ave • Grundy Center
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
• Kitchen Help
• Daytime Cashiers
Pick up an Application or
Apply in person to:
GRUNDY CENTER
FAMILY FOODS
1400 G Ave.,
Grundy Center, IA.
or email your resume to
[email protected]
FULL-TIME POSITION AVAILABLE
Law Firm in Reinbeck, IA. seeking experienced legal secretary
to perform work, to include general typing, preparation of legal
documents, and maintenance of case files. Types of law would
include general legal, probate and real estate. Must be proficient in
Word Perfect, MS Word, Excel and have good proofreading skills.
Experience with Iowa Docs and Document Production Systems
preferred but not required. Candidate must be highly organized and
able to work independently. Salary commensurate with experience.
* Please send resume and references to
Rickert & Wessel Law Office, PO Box 193, Reinbeck, IA 50669
COME work for a small 40 bed facility in rural Iowa,
only 20 miles from the heart of the Cedar Valley
(Waterloo/Cedar Falls). Get to know your residents
and become part of our culture where our values
are family, service and stewardship. Staffing ratio
is 1 charge nurse to every 20 residents on first and
2nd shift. CNAs are staffed at 1 to every 8-10 residents on first and 2nd
shift. Call for openings or see us on our website www.parkviewreinbeck.com.
CURRENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
* PT DIETARY AIDE * P/T NURSE - 3RD SHIFT* C.N.A. - ALL SHIFTS
* EOW NURSE - 2ND SHIFT * P/T 3RD SHIFT FOR RA AT THE ELMS
PARKVIEW MANOR • 1009 3rd St • Reinbeck, IA • 319-345-6811
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MID AMERICA MARKETPLACE
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CITY OF BUFFALO CENTER
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
GARAGE SALE
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Sept. 12. Maps: Kwik-Star, Brothers Market,
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HELP WANTED - PROFESSIONAL
Seeking Area Coordinator Manage successful
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back room expenses/payroll. Great business
opportunity for dedicated entrepreneur.
$FDGHPLF7XWRULQJ6HUYLFH#
gmail.com (INCN)
HELP WANTED- EDUCATION
BELLEVUE UNIVERSITY College of
Business is seeking Adjunct Instructors to
teach in the Bachelor of Science in Business
SURJUDP LQ VHYHUDO FLWLHV DFURVV 1HEUDVND
Iowa and South Dakota. Applicants must
possess an MBA or Ph. D., 5 years of
professional business experience, and a
demonstrated record of teaching experience.
Applicants will teach in classroom.
Position description and application can
be found at: https://home.eease.adp.com/
recruit/?id=7885641. (INCN)
HELP WANTED- SKILLED TRADES
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5XQQLQJ%XOOGR]HUV%DFNKRHV([FDYDWRUV
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1-866-362-6497 (INCN)
HELP WANTED- TRUCK DRIVER
DRIVER TRAINEES- PAID CDL TRAINING!
%HFRPHDQHZGULYHUIRU6WHYHQV7UDQVSRUW
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Earn $800 per
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Butler Transport Your Partner in Excellence.
&'/&ODVV$'ULYHUV1HHGHG6LJQRQ%RQXV
All miles paid. 1-800-528-7825 or www.
butlertransport.com (INCN)
MISCELLANEOUS
$GYHUWLVH \RXU (9(17 352'8&7 RU
RECRUIT an applicant in this paper plus 40
other papers in Northeast Iowa for only $110/
week! Call 800-227-7636 www.cnaads.com
(INCN)
Oxygen Concentrator InogenOne – Regain
Independence. Enjoy Greater Mobility. NO
more Tanks! 100% Portable Long-Lasting
Battery. Try It RISK-FREE! For Cash Buyers
Call 1-800-998-1831 (INCN)
Drivers
Now Hiring solo Drivers
for a dedicated customer
in Cedar Falls, IA
IF YOU USED THE BLOOD
THINNER XARELTO
and suffered internal bleeding, hemorrhaging,
required hospitalization or a loved one died while
taking Xarelto between 2011 and the present
time, you may be entitled to compensation.
Call Attorney Charles H. Johnson 1-800-535-5727
$4,000 Sign On Bonus
‡5HJLRQDO3RVLWLRQV
‡$YJ<HDU
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&'/$\HDU
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www.ruan.com/jobs
800-879-7826
RUAN
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Clarion Coin Show!
High School in Clarion, IA
Sat. Sept. 12, 9 am-4 pm
Coins, Stamps, Tokens,
Currency, Silver, Gold,
Sports Cards, Collectibles
%X\‡6HOO‡7UDGH
Free Admission
More info? Call 515-460-5681
Regan (left) has lived with HIV since 1996.
Do you know your status? Ask your doctor for a test.
www.stopHIViowa.org
IDPH
Iowa Department
of Public Health
How You Can Avoid
7 Costly Mistakes if
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The Area’s Foremost Bat Professionals
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Free Estimates
Commercial & Residential
Call Perry Behrend at:
563-255-2024 or 563-880-8291
Each year thousands of Iowans are hurt at work, but
many fail to learn the Injured Workers Bill of Rights
which includes: 1. Payment of Mileage at $.56 per mile 2.
Money for Permanent Disability 3. 2nd Medical Opinion
in Admitted Claims. . . . A 1HZ %RRN reveals your other
rights, 5 Things to Know Before Signing Forms or Hiring an
Attorney and much more. The book is being offered to you
at QRFRVW because since 1997, Iowa Work Injury Attorney
Corey Walker has seen the consequences of client’s costly
mistakes. If you or a loved one have been hurt at work and
do not have an attorney claim your copy (while supplies last)
&DOO1RZ (800)-707-2552, ext. 311 (24 Hour Recording) or
go to www.IowaWorkInjury.com. 2XU *XDUDQWHH- If you
do not learn at least one thing from our book call us and we
will donate $1,000 to your charity of choice.
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LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS
80+ FIREARMS! September 12th 10AM 3001
,/5W7KRPVRQ,/3LVWROV‡5HYROYHUV‡
6KRWJXQV‡5LÀHVZZZWLSWRQDXFWLRQVHUYLFH
net Buyers Premium $15 Filing Fee Tipton
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Operators for Flatbed or Dry Van. TanTara
Transportation offers excellent equipment,
SD\ EHQH¿WV KRPH ZHHNO\ &DOO 0292 or apply www.tantara.us (INCN)
Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will
have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil
and put your sudoku savvy to the test!
Here’s How It Works:
Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3
boxes. To solve a sudoku,
the numbers 1 through 9
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LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS
AUCTIONS
The City of Buffalo Center (population 905) is taking applications
for a full-time Public Works Supervisor. This individual would be in
charge of the operation and maintenance of the City water, sewer,
streets, park, pool, city vehicles and buildings. Minimum requirements include: high school diploma or GED and current CDL upon
hire. Applicant must be able to obtain Grade II Water treatment
DQGGLVWULEXWLRQFHUWLÀFDWLRQDQG*UDGH,:DVWHZDWHUFHUWLÀFDWLRQ
Pre-employment drug/alcohol testing and background check is required. Application is available at City Hall, 201 Second Ave SW,
Buffalo Center IA or call 641-562-2505 for information. Application
and resume deadline is September 21 at 4pm.
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MID AMERICA MARKETPLACE
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Get Schooled: Creative Lunchbox Ideas
I
Family Features
t’s time for sandwiches to move aside, because this school year bento-box
style lunches reign king on campus. Bento boxes provide not only the space
for healthy and nutritious food choices, but also creativity. Isn’t it time for
lunch to be more fun?
Nutrition blogger and mom of two, Sally Kuzemchak, uses Lil Snappers kidsized fruit when she creates bento box lunches because they are easy for little
students to hold, serving size proportionate and each 3-pound pouch provides
enough fruit for lunches and snacks for an entire week. On top of that, the fruit
can be sliced up for dipping in almond butter or yogurt sprinkled with cinnamon or cut up into a fruit salad, perfect for the three or four compartments in a
bento box.
Studies indicate healthy eating can influence the cognitive ability and intelligence levels of students, and balanced midday meals of fruits, proteins, carbohydrates and healthy fats are best. For a well-rounded lunch, parents can fill
bento boxes with fresh pasta alongside sliced carrots and grapes, taco fixings
with a Lil Snappers apple or a fun
and creative meal-on-a-stick to
keep school-aged children satisfied throughout the day.
Preparing healthy, filling lunches shouldn’t be difficult, and with
bento-box style meals your kids
will never be bored. With a little preparation and recipe inspiration, crafting back to school
lunches will be a breeze. For additional recipes and information,
visit LilSnappers.com and look for
them at your local grocery store.
ACREAGE
Apple-Tuna Treasure Chest
Servings: 2
2 Stemilt Lil Snappers Kid Size Apples
1 can (6-ounces) white albacore tuna, packed in water, drained
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
1/2 teaspoon honey mustard
1/2 carrot, finely diced
Salt and pepper, to taste
Slice off top one-third of each apple; set aside. Using small teaspoon or
grapefruit spoon, core-out center of each apple base (working outward
from centermost part of fruit), leaving 1/4-inch outer edge; set aside.
In small bowl, mix tuna, mayonnaise, mustard and carrot. Season to
taste. Spoon 1/4 cup of tuna salad into each apple, top with top onethird of apples, tilted slightly to resemble a chest being opened.
Use playful, pirate-themed cupcake holders and flagged toothpicks to
make for fun presentation and easy clean-up.
Apple Turkey Cheese Kabobs
Servings: 2
1 Stemilt Lil Snappers Kid Size Apple, cored not sliced
1 block (3 ounces) low-fat cheese
1 slice oven-roasted turkey, cut 1/4-1/2-inch thick
2 bamboo skewers
Core apple and slice in half vertically.
Place two halves on cutting board, flesh side down, and slice
each into 3-4 slices, from stem end to bottom to resemble halfmoon. Set aside.
Cut 2-3 1/2-inch slices from block of cheese and, depending on
dimensions of cheese block, cut each slice again to create square
or triangle shape, as preferred.
Cut cubes of turkey from slice, or, using 1 1/2-2-inch round cutter cut rounds of turkey from slice. Then cut each round in half.
Thread pieces onto skewers, alternating between apple slices,
cheese and turkey.
City Wide Garage Sales
in Garner, Iowa
Fri., & Sat.,
Sept. 11 & 12!
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4BR, Attached Garage, Several Out Buildings.
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family. $3,000 to Buyer at Closing for carpet/
updating. Call a Realtor today! $110,000
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SANDRY 2 DAY AUCTION
Sat. Sept. 12th @ 9:30 AM
Sun. Sept. 13th @ 10:30 AM
Find an interactive
map with listings at:
www.theleaderonline.net
(641) 529-1525 Cell
Email: [email protected]
www.donnaeckard.com
1112 Hwy. 18 East,
Clear Lake
641-357-6123
Maquoketa, IA
Huge Flea Market
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Bring This Ad To Show For $1.00 Off Admission.
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Fri. 5-9; Sat. 9-5; Sun. 10-4
FREE PARKING
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Free Shuttle Bus
(10 & under free) Service
from North
3-day re-entry stamp Parking Lot on
37280 140th Ave., Forest City, IA (From intersection of Hwy 9 & 69 in
Forest City, go N 2 mi. to 370th St., then W 3 mi. to 140th Ave. then N ¼ mi.,
watch for signs!) Selling in 2 auction rings both days!! Auction held rain or
shine, 4 large sheds on site! Partial listing, check website for updates
Saturday - 9:30 AM - Farm Primitives, Antiques: (12+) wringer
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clocks; windmill fan; windmill tower; Minneapolis Grain Exchange directory sign; May Equip. Radcliffe,IA IH tool box; DeLaval & IH cream sep;
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Equipment: AC C, belly mower, Ser.# C2634, NF; 24’ hay elev; MM 9’
tandem disc; JD disc plow, steel; JD 494A 4R planter w/disc openers; JD
2R planter; tear drop fenders; corrug. metal culvert pipe; Horse Drawn
Implements: JD, Deering & Minnesota mowers; NI & JD 1R & 2R cults;
JD & other 2R planters; 8’ straight discs; 10’ rot. hoe, steel carrier whls; hay
rake; 2 btm plows; potato planter; high whl grain wgns; doctor’s buggy, canopy; Tools, Building Supplies & Outdoor: Pallets of Rigid foam insulation;
pallet racking; metal storage racking & shelves; Restaurant Equipment;
Sunday - 10:30 AM - Gas & Man Cave: American Oil Pump & Tank
visible gas pump, cyl. glass; Butler Mfg Co visible gas pump, cyl. glass, lens
bezel; Mobilgas glass lenses; 1970’s gas pump; 1950’s Tokheim pump, rough;
Seeburg & Rockola jukebox’s from 1960’s; Vintage Pac Man, Ms. Pac Man
& Pac Man Jr. cocktail style video games; (2) old pinball machines; gas & oil
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Auctioneers Note: Bring a friend & a trailer, will be selling in two rings.
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www.foxauctioncompany.com
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641-420-3243
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Bring this ad to show for $1.00 OFF One Admission
REAL ESTATE & HOUSEHOLD
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 AT 10:00 AM
331 3rd Street | Meservey, Iowa 50457
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MARGIE KLINE
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SEPTEMBER 11 - 17
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Dining guide spots are $5 per week, doublespots for $7.50 per week or 4 spots for $15
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641-762-3541
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LISTING #12884: Auction to be held at the residence located at 331 3rd Street,
Meservey, Iowa. The auction of the real estate will take place immediately after the
sale of the household goods and is estimated to be at approximately 11:30 AM. The
property consists of 2 lots and a brick ranch style home with an attached 2-car garage.
The home has a newer metal roof with a concrete drive. This home has a full basement,
3 bedrooms, living room, large kitchen with dining area and 1.75 baths. The home has
a newer furnace (2012) and water heater, along with a soft water system. Included
appliances consist of Whirlpool refrigerator-freezer and a 30” gas stove. This property
also has a 20’ x 36’ wood frame detached garage or shop.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS: 2-Glider Rockers, Flowered Couch, End & Coffee Tables,
Vanity-6 Drawer, China Cupboard, Bedroom Set-3 Piece, Rocker-Recliner, Picnic Table,
Book Shelf, Electrolux Vacuum, Dinette Table, Bedding, Antique Chest of Drawers, Filter
Queen Vacuum, Wheel Chair & Canes, Typewriter w/Stand, Several Wall Mirrors, Boxes
of Glassware, Several Old Picture Frames
APPLIANCES: Trutest Chest Freezer, Maytag Washer, Whirlpool Gas Dryer, Estate 30”
Gas Range, Amana Microwave, GE Refrigerator-Freezer
TOOLS & MISCELLANEOUS: B&D Skill Saw, Level-3’, ¼” Drill & Bits, TroyBuilt Tiller
B&D Bench Grinder-5”, Screw Drivers, D.Craft B. Grinder 1/2HP, Portable Air Tank,
Battery Charger, Table Saw-10”, Soldering Guns, Lots of Nuts & Bolts, Pro Force Air
Compressor, 2 Garden Carts, Numerous Ladders, Misc. Car Parts, 2-Wheel Dollie Cart,
MW Portable Generator-5500Watt
As Joe Hanawalt was a mechanic for many years, there are many more items not
mentioned. Net proceeds of the sale of the household items and tools will be donated to
the Meservey Fire Department per Vivian’s wishes.
Seller: Vivian Hanawalt-Roger Obrecht, POA
Jeffrey T. Obrecht | 515.689.1648 | [email protected]
www.PeoplesCompany.com
855.800.LAND
Sports
The Grundy Register
Thursday
September 10,
2015
Volume 91, No. 37
Spartans dominate South Hardin in home opener
Scores and
Standings
Football
Class A, District 4
DistrictAll Pt.
GamesDiff.
AGWSR
0-00-2 BCLUW
0-01-1 Denver
0-02-0 Gladbrook-Reinbeck0-0 1-1
Grundy Center
0-0
0-2
North Tama
0-0
0-2
Wapsie Valley
0-0
1-1
September 4 games
All games non-district
Dike-New Hartford 28, GladbrookReinbeck 21
Grundy Center 42, South Hardin 6
Hudson 40, AGWSR 6
Denver 55, Nashua-Plainfield 6
East Marshall 55, BCLUW 18
GMG 22, North Tama 16
South Winneshiek 36, Wapsie Valley 14
September 11 games
Grundy Center at AGWSR
BCLUW at Gladbrook-Reinbeck
Denver at Dike-New Hartford (Nondistrict)
Wapsie Valley at North Tama
Class 1A, District 4
DistrictAll Pt.
GamesDiff.
Clayton Ridge
0-0
2-0
Dike-New Hartford0-0
2-0
Hudson
0-02-0 Jesup
0-01-1 MFL/MarMac 0-02-0 South Winneshiek 0-0
1-1
Sumner-Fred’burg 0-0
0-2
September 4 games
All games non-district
Dike-New Hartford 28, GladbrookReinbeck 21
Clayton Ridge 37, Starmont 0
Hudson 40, AGWSR 6
Jesup 34, East Buchanan 20
MFL/MarMac 33, Edgewood-Colesburg 6
South Winneshiek 36, Wapsie Valley 14
Sumner-Fredericksburg 45, Postville 0
September 11 games
Denver at Dike-New Hartford (Nondistrict)
Clayton Ridge at Jesup
South Winneshiek at MFL/MarMac
Sumner-Fredericksburg at Hudson
Volleyball
NICL West
Conf.All
MatchesMatches
BCLUW0-0
Grundy Center
0-0
Gladbrook-Reinbeck0-0
Aplington-Parkersburg0-0
East Marshall
0-0
South Hardin
0-0
West Marshall
0-0
AGWSR0-0
Local scores, Aug. 31 - Sept. 5
Wapsie Valley 3, Grundy Center 0
Jesup 3, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 0
Grundy Center Quad
Grundy Center 2, AGWSR 0
Grundy Center 2, Denver 0
West Branch 2, Grundy Center 0
West Branch 2, AGWSR 0
Mount Vernon Tournament
Gladbrook-Reinbeck 2, Tipton 1
Columbus Catholic 2, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 0
Mount Vernon 2, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 0
Mid-Prairie 2, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 0
By PATTI RUST
The Grundy Register
GRUNDY CENTER – Bryce
Flater rushed for 246 yards and
scored four touchdowns to lead
Grundy Center to a dominating 42-6
win in their home opener against
South Hardin Friday. The Spartans
more than doubled their offensive
yardage from the previous week,
compiling a total of 361 yards.
“It was a great game on all sides
of the ball,” Grundy Center head
coach Brent Thoren said. “I’m really
happy with how we have continued
to progress from week to week. The
entire offensive line really played
well and because of that, Bryce
Flater had a really nice night.”
Flater’s first two scores came in
the opening quarter, the first on a 34yard run just over four minutes into
the game. Later in the first Flater set
up his second touchdown of the night
when he intercepted a South Hardin
pass to put the ball on the Spartan
25 yard line. South Hardin answered
with a 73-yard touchdown pass from
Ty Cook to Hunter Edgerton, and a
failed conversion run made it 14-6
going into the second quarter.
Grundy Center quarterback
Austin Burroughs called his own
number toward the end of the second
frame, capping off a Spartan drive
with 13-yard touchdown run.
The Spartans continued their
onslaught in the second half when
Jordan Graham ended an early third
quarter Spartan sequence with a
diving score. South Hardin gambled
on a fourth down pass midway
through the third, but a Chase Boren
deflection denied the Tiger first
down. That Spartan possession set up
another scoring drive culminating in
a six-yard touchdown run by Flater.
Then with just over two minutes
left in the third frame Boren would
intercept a pass to put the home team
in position for Flater’s fourth TD run
and the final score of the night. Each
Spartan touchdown was capped off
by a Braidan Buhrow PAT, as he
went a perfect 5-for-5 in attempts
between the uprights.
On the defensive side of the ball
Grundy Center defensive players Jarrett Stoner (77), Jordan Hook (75), and Josh Kuiper (74) chase down
South Hardin quarterback Ty Cook (6) in a Friday night football matchup at Grundy Center.
Grundy Center held South Hardin
to less than 100 yards rushing, and
capitalized on four South Hardin
turnovers. Jared Krausman added an
interception to the two by Flater and
Boren, and Tim Knock recovered a
fumble.
“Defensively we continue to
create turnovers to give the offense
extra opportunities,” Coach Thoren
said. “Our defense has really grown
up and are playing well. However,
we still have a lot to work on and
correct.”
Grundy Center opens district
play against AGWSR at Ackley on
Friday.
Grundy Center 14 7 21 0 -- 42
South Hardin 6 0 0 0 -- 6
Scoring Summary
First quarter
Grundy Center – Bryce Flater 34
run (Braidan Buhrow kick); 7-0
Grundy Center – Flater 1 run
(Buhrow kick); 14-0
South Hardin – Hunter Edgerton
73 pass from Ty Cook (run failed);
14-6
Second quarter
Grundy Center – Austin
Burroughs 13 run (Buhrow kick);
21-6
Third quarter
Grundy Center – Jordan Graham
5 run (Buhrow kick); 28-6
Grundy Center – Flater 6 run
(Buhrow kick); 35-6
Grundy Center – Flater 4 run
(Buhrow kick); 42-6
Team totals
GC S. Hardin
Rushes-yards42-351 31-97
Pass yards
10
123
Comp.-Att.-Int.1-2-0 7-13-3
Total offense
361
220
Punts-avg. 4-42.03-13.8
Individuals
Rushing – Grundy Center:
Bryce Flater 24-246, 4 TDs; Tim
Knock 3-55; Jordan Graham 9-42,
1 TD; Jack Stumberg 1-5; Austin
Burroughs 5-4, 1 TD.
Passing – Grundy Center:
Burroughs 1-of-2 for 10 yards.
Receiving – Grundy Center:
Braidan Buhrow 1-10.
Tackle Leaders – Grundy
Center: Graham 5.5; Knock 4.5,
Stumberg 3.5, Jordan Hook 3.0.
Tackles for Loss – Grundy
Center: Graham 1.0; Stumberg 1.0;
Cade Rohler 0.5; Jarrett Stoner 0.5.
Interceptions – Grundy Center:
Chase Boren 1; Flater 1; Jared
Krausman 1.
Fumble Recoveris – Grundy
Center: Knock 1.
GC/G-R girls take title at Pine Lake Invitational
By PATTI RUST
The Grundy Register
ELDORA – The Grundy Center/
Gladbrook-Reinbeck girls’ cross
country team claimed the team title
at the Pine Lake Invitational last
Thursday, edging out second place
West Marshall by 23 points. The
Spartan boys finished fifth among
10 scoring teams with East Marshall
claiming the boys’ team title. The
Dike-New Hartford boys went
third and the Wolverine girls placed
fourth.
Three Spartan girls earned top 10
individual finishes. Leading the way
was freshman Reegan Zinkula who
NICL East
Conf.All
placed second. Close behind were
MatchesMatches
Lily Ehlers in sixth and Mellina
Dike-New Hartford 0-0
Wrage who came home in the ninth
Union Community
0-0
spot. Also scoring for GC/G-R were
Sumner-Fredericksburg0-0
Cora Saak who placed 17th and Tiana
Wapsie Valley
0-0
th
Denver0-0 Saak who went 24 .
Jesup0-0 “The South Hardin Invite is
Columbus Catholic 0-0
always one of the toughest meets
Hudson0-0 of the season,” GC/G-R head coach
Local scores, Aug. 31 - Sept. 5
Andy McQuillen said. “It is usually
Marshalltown Tournament
hot, which it was again this year, and
Dike-New Hartford 2, Southeast Polk 0
the course is one of the toughest we
Dike-New Hartford 2, Iowa City West 0
run on each year. The girls’ team
Dike-New Hartford 2, Waverly-Shell
had a stellar performance against
Rock 1
some tough competitors we will
Marshalltown 2, Dike-New Hartford 1
face throughout the season. This is
Dike-New Hartford 2, Iowa City West 1
a tough group of kids that works
Dike-New Hartford 2, Marshalltown 0
hard every day to get better. And
more importantly, they work so hard
together as a team.”
Finn Cleveland and Dylan
Hendricks paced the GC/G-R boys
with a pair of top five finishes, going
third and fourth. Max Schweppe
went 20th, Brady Appel 32nd, and
Griffin Hamann 48th to round out the
Spartan boys’ team score.
“On the boys’ side we continue
to make strides forward,” Coach
McQuillen said. “Dylan and Finn
continue to push each other to lead
the pack. They both had a great
race at Eldora. Like the girls, this
team continues to gain experience
and improve. If we can continue to
make progress and work together,
this group may surprise some people
(319) 824-6958
[email protected]
See cross country page 15
By PATTI RUST
The Grundy Register
MARSHALLTOWN – The
Class 2A No. 4 Dike-New Hartford
volleyball team brought home the
title from the Pat Apgar Invitational
Saturday after a 5-1 run against a
number of ranked teams.
The Wolverines won three and
lost one in pool play, defeating
Class 5A No. 13 Southeast Polk 2116, 21-19, Class 5A No. 10 Iowa
City West 21-19, 21-13, and Class
4A No. 5 Waverly-Shell Rock 2116, 20-22, 16-14. In their only loss
of the day the Wolverines fell to
Marshalltown in three sets 21-12,
20-22, 9-15. In the semifinal round
D-NH turned back Iowa City West
for a second time, 19-25, 25-21,1614, before avenging the earlier loss
to Marshalltown in the final, 25-21,
25-17.
“The girls fought hard all day
long,” Wolverine head coach Diane
Harms said. “We need to work on
our consistency and limiting our
opponents point runs.”
Baylee Petersen led the
Wolverines in kills with 45 and she
also recorded 47 digs on the day.
Taylor Hedges provided the offense
with 121 assists. Katie Nielsen,
Carlee Dove, and Haleigh Durnin
defended the net with 10, nine, and
nine blocks respectively. Syndney
Petersen led in digs with 59, and
she made 49-of-54 serve attempts
with nine aces. Amber Rickert
landed 57-of-64 serves with nine
aces, and Josie Hill went 53-of-54
from the service line with six aces.
Dike-New Hartford was
scheduled to host Columbus
Tuesday, play Class 2A No. 13
Denver on the road Thursday, and
close out the week at the Osage
tournament on Saturday.
Pat Apgar Invitational at Marshalltown
Dike-New Hartford Leaders
Kills: Dike-New Hartford 151 (Baylee
Petersen 45, Madison Lavenz 33). Assists:
Dike-New Hartford 140 (Taylor Hedges
121). Blocks: Dike-New Hartford 48 (Katie
Nielsen 10, Carlee Dove 9, Haleigh Durnin
9). Digs: Dike-New Hartford 235 (Sydney
Petersen 59, B. Petersen 47, Lavenz 43).
Serving: Dike-New Hartford 252-276, 29
aces (Amber Rickert 57-64, 9 aces; Josie Hill
53-54, 6 aces; S. Petersen 49-54, 9 aces).
Rebels challenged
at tough Mount
Vernon tourney
News tip?
Let us know!
Wolverine
volleyball wins
Marshalltown
tournament
Reegan Zinkula, Mellina Wrage and Lily Ehlers run at the front of the pack, leading the Grundy Center girls’
cross country team to its first invitational victory in several years at South Hardin’s Pine Lake Invitational
Thursday. (Scott Bierle/Mid-America Publishing photo)
By PATTI RUST
The Grundy Register
MOUNT VERNON – The
Gladbrook-Reinbeck
volleyball
team went 1-3 at the tough Mount
Vernon tournament Saturday, after
dropping their season opener to
Jesup 1-3 on Thursday.
The Rebels opened the day at
Mount Vernon with a 21-19, 14-21,
15-13 win over Tipton before losing
their second match of pool play to
Class 3A No. 8 Waterloo Columbus
21-10, 21-18. In other matches
G-R fell to Class 3A No. 10 Mount
Vernon 13-21, 11-21, and MidPrairie, Wellman 27-25, 17-25, 1015. Columbus took the tournament
title with a 25-20, 25-27, 16-14 win
over Mount Vernon in the final.
Lauren Husmann led the Rebels
in kills with 21 on the day, and she
made good on 39-of-43 serves with
three aces. Leah Holman provided
44 offensive assists. Defensively
Madeline Mussing led in blocks with
six and Sydney Brown recorded 37
digs. Marissa Berendes landed a
perfect 36-of-36 serves with three
aces.
In their season opener against
Jesup G-R fell 14-25 in the first set,
bounced back to take the second 2523, then dropped the final two 20-25,
19-25. Haley Weber led the Rebels
with a double double, scoring 11
kills and putting up 18 digs. Leah
Holman led in assists with 13.
Sydney Brown recorded 14 digs
and landed 16-of-16 serves with two
aces. Marissa Berendes went 16-of18 in serving with three aces.
See REBELS page 14
Grundy SPORTS Register
www.thegrundyregister.com
Thursday, September 10, 2015
13
IF-A/AGWSR girls fourth, boys eighth at Mason City Luna, Coulter lead Wolverines at Oelwein Invitational
By PATTI RUST
The Grundy Register
MASON CITY – In their second
week of competition the Iowa
Falls-Alden/AGWSR girls’ and
boys’ cross country teams went
fourth and eight respectively in
sweltering conditions at the Mason
City Newman Invitational. Osage
took the girls’ team title and GarnerHayfield/Ventura claimed the boys’
title.
The IF-A/AGWSR girls bettered
last year’s team score by 39 points.
Aubrie Fisher and Bethany Lippert
paced the Cadets, Fisher placing
third and Lippert fourth with less
than a second separating them at the
finish line. Patience Kauzlarich ran
to 33rd, Katie Meyter 41st, and Tessa
Van Buskirk 51st to round out the
girls’ team score.
“The heat didn’t slow the girls
down,” girls’ head coach Jamie
Maxwell said. “Nine out of 14
girls improved their times from last
week’s meet at Mayne’s Grove.
We will continue to work on
pack running in order to be more
competitive with team scoring.”
Seth Mazoway led the Cadet boys
with a 19th place finish and Brayden
Penning ran to 27th. Adam Long,
Joey Berkey, and Thomas Burchfield
went 56th, 58th, and 60th.
“I was pleased with how we ran
at Mason City,” Cadet boys’ coach
Michael Rottink said. “JV through
varsity, nine out of 10 runners
improved on their time from our first
meet, and all but one of the returning
runners ran a better time than they
did at the same meet last year.”
“I was particularly impressed
with how well the entire team in
both races implemented a strategy
we developed to attack a particularly
challenging section of the course,”
he said. “It was our goal for each
runner to pick off a few guys through
a 600 meter section and try to hold
on through the last mile and a half to
the finish. The JV runners - and there
were only 3 for this meet - picked up
24 places total, and the varsity ended
up with a net gain of 22 spots, from
the beginning of that loop through
the finish, which leapt us up from
what would have been a 10th place
finish to 8th.”
Next up for the Cadets – the
Marshalltown
Invitational
on
Thursday, Sept. 10.
Mason City Newman Invitational
Girls’ Varsity Results
Team Results – 1) Osage 33; 2) West
Fork 62; 3) Mason City Newman 95; 4) IF-A/
AGWSR 132; 5) Mason City 159; 6) GarnerHayfield/Ventura 184; 7) St. Ansgar 194;
8) Clear Lake 230; 9) North Iowa 272; 10)
Rockford 292; 11) New Hampton 298; 12)
Forest City 307; 13) Central Springs 338; 14)
Lake Mills 349; 15) Bishop Garrigan 365.
Incomplete Teams: North Butler.
Iowa Falls-Alden/AGWSR individuals
– 3) Aubrie Fisher 21:26; 4) Bethany Lippert
21:26; 33) Patience Kauzlarich 24:23; 41)
Katie Meyer 24:54; 51) Tessa Van Buskirk
25:48; 63) Breanna Fisher 26:46; 78)
McKenzie Barr 27:48.
Boys’ Varsity Results
Team Results – 1) Garner-Hayfield/
Ventura 19; 2) Clear Lake 66; 3) Mason City
91; 4) West Fork 148; 5) Forest City 175;
6) New Hampton 203; 7) Newman Catholic
217; 8) IF-A/AGWSR 222; 9) Osage 225; 10)
North Butler 288; 11) Central Springs 346;
12) Bish0p Garrigan 366; 13) Rockford 367.
Incomplete Teams: North Iowa, Lake Mills,
St. Ansgar.
Iowa Falls-Alden/AGWSR individuals
– 19) Seth Mazoway 19:00; 27) Brayden
Penning 19:21; 56) Adam Long 21:18; 58)
Joey Berke 21:20; 62) Thomas Burchfield
22:28; 88) Cameron Zolnosky 23:16; 91)
Carter Krukow 24:00.
College Sports Notes
D u m l e r, M c M a r t i n l e a d
DMACC women’s golf team
Former Dike-New Hartford
standout Ashley Dumler and former
Grundy Center star Josie McMartin led
the DMACC women’s golf team to the
team championship at the Ausustana
Highland Classis last weekend in Rock
Island, Ill.
Dumler placed third with a 36-hole
total of 156 (18-hole rounds of 79 and
77) while McMartin was sixth for the
Bears with rounds of 88 and 79 for a
162-shot total. Mount Mercy won the
tournament by 13 shots over secondplace Clarke University.
Morgan returns to area as
member of Kentucky Wildcats
Former Dike-New Hartford
volleyball star Brooke Morgan has
earned a spot in the starting lineup for
the University of Kentucky volleyball
team, which played in the University
of Northern Iowa tournament last
weekend in Cedar Falls. Morgan
recorded kill totals of 10 against UNI,
seven against Southern California and
one against Creighton. UK, which is
ranked No. 10 in the nation, went 1-2
in the tournament.
Hook, Weber continue to shine
for UNI
A pair of local preps continue
to shine for UNI. Sophomore setter
Heather Hook, formerly of Grundy
Center, and freshman outside hitter
Bri Weber, formerly of Dike-New
Hartford, combined for 33 kills and 99
assists in matches against Kentucky,
Creighton and Southern California
(USC). Both started all three matches.
Hook recorded 39 assists and two
kills in the loss to Kentucky while
picking up 33 assists and two kills in
a victory over Creighton and 27 assists
and two kills in a loss to USC. Weber
had 13 kills against Creighton, nine
against Kentucky and five against
USC.
Rohler starts at punter for in
Truman State loss
Former Grundy Center prep Brock
Rohler earned the starting position at
punter for Truman State (Kirksville,
Mo.) and punted three times for a
34-yard average in the team’s loss to
Midwestern State in Wichita, Texas.
Rohler also kicked off once for the
Bulldogs.
Did we miss anyone? If so let us
know at [email protected]. Only
athletes who graduated from Grundy
Center, AGWSR, Dike-New Hartford or
Gladbrook-Reinbeck and see playing
time during the current season will be
featured in this column. If you have
photos of local athletes participating in
college sports, feel free to submit them
to the address above.
OELWEIN — Haylee Luna
and Broden Coulter scored top-10
individual finishes last Tuesday,
leading the Dike-New Hartford
cross country teams at the Oelwein
Invitational.
The Wolverine girls placed
fourth in a 20-team field while the
boys came home seventh out of
22 teams despite running without
leader John Crew.
Luna came home 10 th in 21
minutes, 37 seconds for the DNH
girls while Livvy Eiklenborg
(19 th ), Alayna Kollasch (20 th ),
Kelsey Bakken (56 th) and Jenna
Hensley (63rd) rounded out scoring
individuals. Decorah, which is
ranked No. 5 in Class 3A, won
the meet with 34 points while
Western Dubuque (87), 2A seventhranked North Linn (112) and the
2A 15 th-ranked Wolverines (159)
rounded out the top four.
Coulter came home eighth for
the D-NH boys in 17 minutes, 50
seconds. Nate Sharp (17th), Bryce
Dall (39 th ), Collin Vanderlind
(56th) and Diland Cummings (83rd)
rounded out scoring runners.
Oelwein Invitational
(at Hickory Grove Golf Course)
Girls’ Results
Team scores — 1) Decorah 34; 2)
Western Dubuque 87; 3) North Linn 112; 4)
Dike-New Hartford 159; 5) Starmont 161;
6) Denver 165; 7) Waverly-Shell Rock 174;
8) Center Point-Urbana 180; 9) Waukon 239;
10) Sumner-Fredericksburg 251; 11) West
Delaware 262; 12) Jesup 263; 13) Beckman
Catholic 358; 14) Union Community 402;
15) Waterloo East 423; 16) Oelwein 431.
Incomplete teams: Don Bosco, EdgewoodColesburg, Trioli, Wapsie Valley.
Individual champion — Laura Snyder,
Western Dubuque 20:10.
Dike-New Hartford individuals — 10)
Haylee Luna 21:37; 19) Livvy Eiklenborg
21:58; 20) Alayna Kollasch 22:04; 56)
Kelsey Bakken 23:58; 63) Jenna Hensley
24:28; 67) Jurane Lizer 24:35.
Junior Varsity team scores — 10) DikeNew Hartford 261.
Dike-New Hartford JV — 47) Hannah
Dove 26:33; 85) Lauren Vanderlind 27:43;
89) Sarah Hoehns 27:51; 91) Josie Claude
28:01; 108) Mary Venenga 28:28; 124) Josie
LaForte 28:57; 150) Briann Kluiter 30:00;
169) Rachel Wardell 30:51; 175) Madison
Dove 31:00; 196) Carrie O’Connor 31:39;
203) Addie Johnston 31:56; 208) Brynn
Harberts 32:12; 221) Madi Harms 33:47;
233) Katelyn Soska 35:01.
Boys’ Results
Team scores — 1) Western Dubuque
43; 2) Decorah 67; 3) Waukon 116; 4)
Center Point-Urbana 145; 5) WaverlyShell Rock 147; 6) Denver 159; 7) DikeNew Hartford 192; 8) Dunkerton 203; 9)
Columbus Catholic 265; 10) Starmont 270;
11) Jesup 281; 12) North Linn 291; 13)
West Delaware 310; 14) Oelwein 387; 15)
Waterloo East 390; 16) Union Community
419; 17) Sumner-Fredericksburg 465; 18)
Beckman Catholic 540. Incomplete teams:
Don Bosco, Edgewood-Colesburg, Tripoli,
Wapsie Valley.
Individual champion — Issac Connolly,
Western Dubuque 16:53.
Dike-New Hartford individuals — 8)
Broden Coulter 17:50; 17) Nate Sharp 18:15;
39) Bryce Dall 19:23; 56) Collin Vanderline
19:48; 83) Dilan Cummings 20:37; 86)
Dylan Mrzlak 20:42; 92) Jakob Luna 20:59.
Junior Varsity team score — 9) DikeNew Hartford 237.
Dike-New Hartford JV — 12) Seth
Wibben 19:58; 65) Sawyer Loger 22:52;
85) Zack Nicol 23:32; 91) Ben Purdy 23:48;
127) Trevor Dumler 26:33; 137) Alex Lewis
27:48; 149) Jacob Junker 29:29.
AGWSR struggles, falls to Hudson
By PATTI RUST
The Grundy Register
ACKLEY – AGWSR dropped
its second game in as many outings,
suffering a 40-6 loss to Hudson in
their home opener Friday. Despite
228 yards in rushing, the Cougar
offense managed just one successful
scoring drive that ended with a Levi
Stockdale two-yard touchdown run
in the opening quarter.
The Cougar lead didn’t last long.
Hudson began their scoring frenzy
in the second quarter when Austin
Roth completed touchdown passes
to three different receivers, one of
them a 64-yarder, to give the Pirates
a 19-6 advantage at the half.
Hudson would score twice
more in the third frame when Roth
connected with Jackson Twait for a
second time on a 25-yard touchdown
pass, and Blake Hottle ran 82 yards
for a score to put the Pirates up 33-6.
The final Hudson scoring drive
of the night would end with a 25yard touchdown run by Hudson’s
Christian Seres in the fourth quarter.
Stockdale accounted for 108 of
the Cougars’ 262 yards of offense,
82 in rushing and 26 on a pass
completion to Josh June.
Next up for AGWSR – Grundy
Center at Ackley on Friday, Sept. 11.
AGWSR6000--6
Hudson 0 19 14 7 -- 40
Scoring Summary
First quarter
AGWSR – Levi Stockdale 2 run
(run failed); 6-0
Second quarter
Hudson – Cameron Fulcher 17
pass from Austin Roth (kick failed);
6-6
Hudson – Jackson Twait 55 pass
from Roth (run failed); 6-12
Hudson – Kain Krizik 64 pass
from Roth (Blake Hottle kick); 6-19
Third quarter
Hudson – Twait 25 pass from
Roth (Hottle kick); 6-26
Hudson – Hottle 82 run (Hottle
kick); 6-33
Fourth quarter
Hudson – Christian Seres 25 run
(Hottle kick); 6-40
Team totals AGWSR Hudson
Rushes-yards 68-228
NA
Pass yards
34
NA
Comp.-Att.-Int.2-4-34
NA
Total offense 262
NA
Punts-avg.
3-34.3
NA
Individuals
Rushing – AGWSR: Levi
Stockdale 20-82, 1 TD; Liam
Stubbe 17-53; Jermiah Stull 13-44;
Joe Wiarda 11-36; Aaron Roelfs
3-16; Landon Sanders 1-10; Tate
Hofmeister 3-(-13).
Passing – AGWSR: Stockdale
1-of-1 for 26 yards; Hofmeister
1-of-3 for 8 yards, 1 interception.
Receiving – AGWSR: Josh June
1-26; Stull 1-8.
Tackle Leaders – AGWSR:
Stubbe 5.0; Roelfs 3.0.
Fumble Recoveries – AGWSR:
Stull 1.
Exploring Iowa’s unsolved murders
This is a weekly feature highlighting some of
Iowa’s unsolved homicides in the hopes that it
Brian Lee Schappert, a 22-year-old Coe College senior, was killed in the early morning hours
of Friday, September 8, 1989, while working the
midnight shift alone at a Cedar Rapids Kum &
Go convenience store. Schappert’s throat was
slashed and he also sustained numerous stab
wounds to his back during a robbery at the 2743
Mount Vernon Road SE store.
Schappert’s body
was found at 3:15
a.m. by a cab driver
stopping to buy gas.
Witnesses told police they saw a white
male in his 20s, about
6 feet tall and 170 pounds, with shoulder-length,
dark brown hair in the area shortly before Schappert’s body was found.
Cedar Rapids Police also had one crucial lead:
a witness placed a van at the store near the time
the murder occurred. Police checked on more
than 400 such vans registered in the area, but
ANYONE WITH ANY INFORMATION about Brian Schappert’s
unsolved murder is asked to contact either Capt. Mellgren or Special
Agent Smith at (319) 286-5619, Linn County Crime Stoppers at
1-800-CS-CRIME (319) 272-7463 or the Iowa DCI at 515-725-6010.
admitted the van driver could
simply have been making a delivery at the store.
Schappert’s father believes
his son was acquainted with
his killer. Two weeks before
the murder, Brian had been promoted to assistant manager and
given the combination to the
store’s safe, his father said. His
body was found near the convenience store’s open, emptied
safe.
Find out more about this and
other unsolved homicides at
www.IowaColdCases.org.
Brian Lee Schappert, 22, Died Sept.
8, 1989, Location: Cedar Rapids
will lead to new tips and potentially help solve
cases. The project is a partnership between
this newspaper and other members of the Iowa
Newspaper Association.
these questions for us.”
Anderson called it a “crime of opportunity” where
someone was at the right place at the right time and
Chuck Deatsch wasn’t.
Anderson said they have received tips from all overthe country — psychics and others — as to what happened and they’ve followed up on those tips.
“I have received some rather bizarre letters of people
believeing that it could be related to some other thing
across the country and we know that it’s not.”
The reward now is more than $40,000 for information leading to the arrest of the person or persons responsible for Chuck Deatsch’s death.
Here is what is known about the more than sevenyear-old murder of Chuck Deatsch.
He was shot April 28, 2008 at 9:55 p.m. It was a cool
night with no snow on the ground. He was killed by a
single gunshot and the bullet went through a window
in the den where he was sitting at his computer playing
a game while watching the St. Louis Cardinals on TV.
“And it’s a normal day,” Anderson said. “And all of
a sudden he’s killed and his wife’s life is just turned upside down and forever changed.”
Anderson declined to elaborate on other details of the
case not made public.
“The last thing we want to do is jeopardize the integrity of the investigation,” Anderson said.
Anderson said anybody with information should
come to the Law Center and explain what they know.
Do you know something? Then call the Appanoose
County Sheriff at (641) 437-7100, Crime Stoppers at
(641) 856-3134 or email Anderson at [email protected].
Or go to [email protected].
MICHAEL SCHAFFER Managing Editor
Centerville Daily Iowegian
The murder of Chuck Deatsch of rural Mystic in Appanoose County on April 28, 2008, is more than seven
years old but it’s far from a cold case as far as Appanoose County Sheriff Gary Anderson is concerned.
“We still get little pieces of information that come in,”
Anderson said. “And we’ve done several hundred interviews on the case. It’s still an active case. And still being
worked and investigated. It’s not something that’s been
put on the back burner.”
Anderson said a local person or persons know what
happened that cool April night.
“We believe that there are people locally that have
information that can solve this,” Anderson said. “We
know someone, or persons, denitely have information
that would solve this case. And whether they’re scared.
Whether it’s a family member or a close friend that was
involved. We know that there are people out there that
know about this case and just need to come forward.
“Someone out here knows. And we just ask that they
come in and encourage them to come talk to us.”
Anderson said it’s important for somebody to come
forward and bring this case to a close.
“It’s not only just important to the family but it’s also
important to some of the people that have this information or may have been involved in the case. It’s never
going to go away. It’s not going to be something that
will ever be put on hold or not investigated. Every lead
we receive we’re going to follow up on.
“And it’s going to wear on that person. And if they
consciously sit back and realize if it was their family
they would want to know. And it’s the right
thing.”
Anderson said he would be willing to go
anywhere in the country to meet with somebody who has information about the case.
“If somebody out there believes ... and
there again, if they want to come in and explain to us that in their belief it was something else, they need to come in and explain
that to us and give us those details. We don’t
have a closed door on somebody’s beliefs or
somebody’s explanations. They just need to
come in and explain that to us and take care
of it. Do the right thing.”
Chuck Deatsch, his wife Liz and
Anderson said the case will remain classied as a murder case until “someone comes
daughters Sarah and Kathryn as
forward and explains the circumstances of
seen in a billboard plea asking for
his death.”
information about his death.
“We’re willing to listen to anybody
that has any information,” Anderson said.
Gone but not forgotten.
“Somebody out there can answer a lot of
14
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Grundy SPORTS Register
www.thegrundyregister.com
Strong second half lifts Wolverines past G-R Cougars winless at
Grundy Center Quad
By JOHN JENSEN
The Grundy Register
GLADBROOK – Calvin Wildeboer scored on a two-yard run with
five minutes, 36 seconds remaining, lifting Dike-New Hartford to a
28-21 victory over Gladbrook-Reinbeck in a battle of ranked teams.
The Wolverines, ranked as high
as No. 4 in Class 1A, trailed the
Rebels 14-0 late in the first half
before rallying to the lead with
three straight touchdowns. G-R
entered the game as the consensus
No. 1 ranked team in Class A.
“Holy cow that was a good
game,” D-NH head coach Don
Betts said.
“We told our kids coming in that
you have to keep grinding, we’ll
win it in the fourth quarter,” he said.
“I think our kids are in great shape,
we’ve worked extremely hard. They
believe they’re in great shape and
we said ‘You just have to keep hammering away.’
“They’re the No. 1 team in the
state for crying out loud, it’s not
going to be easy. Our kids kept
plugging away and banging and
banging and made some plays at the
end.”
G-R coach John Olson said the
difference in the game was DikeNew Hartford’s depth versus that of
the Rebels.
“We don’t have a lot of subs that
come in, we have a lot of guys playing all the way on both sides of the
ball,” he said. “I think last year we
had four or five guys playing both
ways, this year we have 10 guys
playing both ways and that really
catches up to us, especially on a
heated night like this.”
The game featured a battle of
returning first-team all-state running
backs in Dike-New Hartford’s Trent
Johnson and Gladbrook-Reinbeck’s
Eric Stoakes. Johnson got the best
of his Rebel counterpart, rushing for
256 yards and a touchdown on 29
carries while Dike-New Hartford’s
defense held Stoakes to 70 yards
on 20 carries. Thirteen of the Rebel
senior’s carries went for two yards
or less.
“We knew we had to contain
him,” Betts said of Stoakes. “He
had that one big run where he got
outside on us, and he can do that
every time he gets the ball so we
were just trying to get a lot of people to the ball in a hurry.”
“Our guys at the line of scrimmage are very quick, they fly to the
ball, we get a lot of people there,”
he said. “A lot of that is just our
guys being relentless getting to the
ball carrier.
With its running game bottled
up, G-R went to the air early and
often, with senior quarterback Jake
Schuman throwing for 192 yards
while completing 9-of-18 with
two touchdowns. More than half
of his yards came on a single play,
a 97-yard second-quarter completion to Matt Roeding that was the
second-longest in school history.
Schumann, however, was less effective in the second half as Dike-New
Hartford’s defensive pressure forced
him into quicker throws.
Dike-New Hartford running back Trent Johnson stiff arms G-R tackler Colton Dinsdale on his way to a big
gain in the first half of Friday’s game in Gladbrook. (John Jensen/The Grundy Register photo)
“In general our passing game
worked pretty well tonight,” Olson
said. “He had some throws he wishes he had back but when we started
getting tired in the offensive line
they took advantage of that, rushing
him so he couldn’t go through his
reads, and those are the things that
we have to clean up as a coaching
staff. When things like that happen we have to go to a little more
short passing or when something
like that happens we have to give
him a bootleg outside of those guys
so we can have two reads and a run.
That’s what the preseason’s for for
our coaching staff, too.”
Dike-New Hartford balanced its
running attack with a new Wildcat formation featuring a direct
snap to receiver Connor Neuroth,
who either kept the ball himself or
handed it off to either Johnson or
Wildeboer. Big runs out of the formation set up the Wolverines’ first
two touchdowns and helped them
run time off the clock on their final
series.
“We tried to figure out ways to
get the ball into the hands of our
playmakers, Neuroth, Johnson obviously ... that’s another way for us
to get the ball in their hands,” Betts
said.
Gladbrook-Reinbeck held the
upper hand early. After its initial
drive stalled on the Wolverine 20,
a blocked punt set up the Rebels’
first touchdown on a three-yard
Colton Dinsdale run, his only rush
of the game. One series later the
Rebels were backed up to their own
3-yard line and facing third-andlong. Schuman rolled left and found
Roeding wide open behind the Wolverine secondary for the score. Josh
Cooley’s PAT kick made it 14-0 one
minute into the second quarter.
D-NH got back into the game by
driving 99 yards after G-R punter
Ty Eiffler pinned it down at its own
one. The 5-minute, 11-second drive
took 13 plays and featured three
third-down conversions. Wildeboer’s 28-yard run from the Wildcat
formation put the ball at the one and
the senior fullback went the final
yard on a more traditional fullback
dive. The extra-point kick was wide
right, however, leaving the Wolverines still trailing by eight.
The deficit did not last much longer. Neuroth intercepted a Schuman
pass on Gladbrook-Reinbeck’s first
play after the Wolverine touchdown
and then took care of business himself, scoring on a 13-yard run from
the Wildcat formation. He also
scored the two-point conversion on
a run from the ‘Cat, tying the game
14-14 less than two minutes before
halftime.
That was where the score
remained until early in the fourth
quarter when Johnson got free in
the Rebel secondary and raced 55
yards to the house to give D-NH
its first lead of the night. G-R
answered on its very next drive,
marching 80 yards for the tying
score on a diving catch by Dinsdale
in the end zone. The senior receiver/
fullback also caught a key pass on
third-and-long from the Wolverine
43 to keep the drive alive.
Dike-New Hartford needed just
five plays to take the lead for good.
A 54-yard third-down run by Johnson set the Wolverines up at the
Rebel 6 and two plays later Wildeboer crossed the goal line with the
go-ahead touchdown.
The D-NH defense forced a
Rebel punt and then the offense
never gave the ball back, picking up
three first downs before running out
the clock.
Up next - The Wolverines return
home to play their third straight
non-district game against undefeated Denver. Gladbrook-Reinbeck
opens Class A, District 4 play at
home against BCLUW.
ACKLEY — The AGWSR High
School volleyball team struggled
against top-notch competition
Tuesday at the Grundy Center
Quadrangular Tournament.
The Cougars failed to win a set
while facing Class 2A No. 6 West
Branch, Class 2A No. 9 Grundy
Center and a Hudson team which
entered the tournament with two
straight wins.
The Cougars recorded just four
kills in a 21-5, 21-10 loss to Grundy
Center. Mel Morones had nine digs
while Reagan Rathe was 5-of-5
serving with an ace.
AGWSR fell to West Branch
21-9, 21-7 in its second match as
Alana Groninga recorded three kills
and was 7-of-7 serving with an ace.
The Cougars showed more life
against Hudson, falling 21-15,
21-16. Maddie Brandt had five
kills and went 8-of-8 serving with
a pair of aces while Mandy Willems
had seven assists and was 6-of-6
serving.
AGWSR looked for its first
victory Tuesday when it hosted
West Marshall.
Grundy Center Quad
Team standings — 1) West
Branch 3-0; 2) Grundy Center 2-1;
3) Hudson 1-2; 4) AGWSR 0-3.
Grundy Center 2, AGWSR 0
AGWSR 51
0
Grundy Center
21
21
Kills: AGWSR 4 (Alana
Groninga 2), Grundy Center
20. Assists: AGWSR 4 (Mandy
Willems 2), Grundy Center 18.
Blocks: AGWSR 0, Grundy Center
1. Digs: AGWSR 18 (Mel Morones
9), Grundy Center 27. Serving:
AGWSR 14-of-16, 1 ace (Reagan
Rathe 5-5, 1 ace), Grundy Center
13 aces.
West Branch 2, AGWSR 0
AGWSR 97
West Branch
21
21
Kills: AGWSR 7 (Alana
Groninga 3, Rachel Frazier 2),
West Branch 18. Assists: AGWSR
6 (Mandy Willems 5), West Branch
16. Blocks: AGWSR 4 (Frazier
2, Katie Gast 2), West Branch 3.
Digs: AGWSR 9 (Four tied 2), West
Branch 19. Serving: AGWSR 16-of17, 1 ace (Groninga 7-7, 1 ace),
West Branch.39-40, 9 aces.
Hudson 2, AGWSR 0
AGWSR 15
16
Hudson 2121
Kills: AGWSR 10 (Maddie
Brandt 5, Rachel Frazier 3),
Hudson . Assists: AGWSR 10
(Mandy Willems 7), Hudson.
Blocks: AGWSR 0, Hudson . Digs:
AGWSR 13 (Three tied 3), Hudson
. Serving: AGWSR 25-of-26, 3 aces
(Brandt, 8-8, 2 aces; Willems 6-6),
Hudson .
Dike-New Hartford 0 14 0 14 — 28
Gladbrook-Reinbeck7 7 0 7 —21
Scoring Summary
First Quarter
GR – Colton Dinsdale 3 run (Josh Cooley
kick); 7-0
Second Quarter
GR – Matt Roeding 97 pass from Jake
Schuman (Cooley kick), 14-0
DNH – Calvin Wildeboer 1 run (Kick
failed); 6-14
DNH – Connor Neuroth 13 run (Neuroth
run); 14-14
Fourth quarter
DNH – Trent Johnson 55 run (Jackson
Lage kick); 21-14
GR – Dinsdale 15 pass from Schuman
(Cooley kick); 21-21
DNH – Wildeboer 2 run (Lage kick);
28-21
Team Totals
DNH
G-R
First downs
17
9
Rushes-yards
50-32228-62
Pass yards
58
192
Comp.-Att.-Int.
6-14-09-18-1
Total offense
380
254
Fumbles-lost
2-01-0
Punts-Avg.
4-26.5
5-34.6
Penalties-Yards
3-15
3-20
Individuals
Rushing -- Dike-New Hartford: Trent
Johnson 29-256, 1 TD; Calvin Wildeboer
8-48, 2 TDs; Connor Neuroth 6-24, 1 TD;
Nick Durnin 1-4; Jacob Moore 2-1; Team
4-(minus 12). Gladbrook-Reinbeck: Eric
Stoakes 20-70; Colton Dinsdale 1-1, 1 TD;
Hunter Lott 1-(minus 3); Jake Schuman
6-(minus 6).
Passing -- Dike-New Hartford: Moore
6-of-13 for 58 yards; Neuroth 0-of-1. Gladbrook-Reinbeck: Schuman 9-of-18 for 192
yards, 2 TDs, 1 int.
Receiving -- Dike-New Hartford: Brody
Goos 3-34; Neuroth 3-24. Gladbrook-Reinbeck: Matt Roeding 1-97, 1 TD; Dinsdale
4-69, 1 TD; Josh Cooley 3-18; Lott 1-8.
Tackle Leaders (Solos-Assists) -- DikeNew Hartford: D.J. Ackerson 2-3; Blaine
Becker 4-5; Durnin 3-3; Jake Sonnenberg
3-5; Tyler Weise 4-6. Gladbrook-Reinbeck:
Cooley 3-6; Dinsdale 6-5; Ty Eiffler 4-3;
Kainen Hendricks 2-4; Hunter Lott 1-6; Dalton Schwartz 4-3; Walker Thede 4-1; Jacob
Walter 3-2.
Interception -- Dike-New Hartford:
Neuroth.
News deadline is:
10 a.m. Monday!
(319) 824-6958
Cougar seniors Rachel Frazier (No. 9) and Katie Gast (No. 5) set up a
block against West Branch’s Jenae Murry during the Grundy Center
Quadrangular last Tuesday. (John Jensen/The Grundy Register photo)
Rebels
From page 13
The Rebels were scheduled to
host Grundy Center Tuesday, Sept.
8, play at West Marshall Thursday,
Sept. 10, and will compete at the
South Hardin Tournament on
Saturday.
Mount Vernon Tournament
Gladbrook-Reinbeck Leaders
Kills: Gladbrook-Reinbeck 51 (Lauren
Husmann 21). Assists: Gladbrook-Reinbeck
48 (Leah Holman 44). Blocks: GladbrookReinbeck 14 (Madeline Mussig 6, Marissa
Berendes 3). Digs: Gladbrook-Reinbeck 135
(Sydney Brown 37, Berendes 22). Serving:
Gladbrook-Reinbeck 148-158, 12 aces
(Berendes 36-36, 3 aces; Husmann 39-43,
3 aces).
Jesup 3, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 1
G-R 14252019
Jesup 25232525
Kills: Gladbrook-Reinbeck 22 (Hayley
Weber 11, Leah Holman 4), Jesup 42.
Assists: Gladbrook-Reinbeck 20 (Holman
13), Jesup 37. Blocks: Gladbrook-Reinbeck
2 (Madeline Mussig 1, Megan Swanson
1), Jesup 7. Digs: Gladbrook-Reinbeck
70 (Weber 18, Sydney Brown 14, Marissa
Berendes 11, Paige Eiffler 10), Jesup 81.
Serving: Gladbrook-Reinbeck 71-78, 8 aces
(Brown 16-16, 2 aces; Berendes 16-18, 3
aces; Holman 11-14, 2 aces; Weber 9-9, 1
ace), Jesup 80-91, 10 aces.
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Grundy Center
Bowling
Lucky Strikers
First Half Standings
Truck’s Country Foods 6 2
Miller Time
6 2
GNB Insurance
6 2
Wild Wade’s Women
2 6
Scotty’s Saloon
2 6
Strohbehn Farms
2 6
High team handicap game
(Aug. 27) — Strohbehn Farms 835.
High team handicap game
(Sept. 3) — Miller Time 858.
High team handicap series
(Aug. 27) —Trunck’s Country
Foods 2,389.
High team handicap series
(Sept. 3) —GNB Insurance 2,416.
High individual game (Aug. 27)
—Tami Craig 201.
High individual game (Sept. 3)
—Jodi Michael 193.
High individual series (Aug. 27)
— Tami Craig 546.
High individual series (Sept. 3)
— Marcia Palmer 516.
www.thegrundyregister.com
Grundy SPORTS Register
Spartans split opening matches
GRUNDY CENTER — The
Grundy Center High School volleyball team opened its season with
mixed results last week, going 2-1
at its own quadrangular tournament
before getting swept at home by
highly-regarded Wapsie Valley.
The Spartans (2-2) swept AGWSR 21-5, 21-10 and Hudson 2117, 21-11, at the quad before falling
21-14, 21-17 to sixth-ranked West
Branch.
“We played with energy and
passion (in the first two matches),”
Spartan coach Lori Willis said.
“We served very aggressively and
it paid off with a lot of aces. Alyssa
(Mathews) did a great job finding the
hot hitters and they sure delivered
with some big swings for kills. The
team was having a blast out on the
court.
Going into the West Branch
match we knew they were going to
come after us since we have a strong
record against them. They are a very
senior dominated with 12 seniors on
the team. They played a very solid
game against us but we made too
many errors. We gave them 32 out of
the 42 points in the match with our
errors. In a sense we beat ourselves.”
Hana Edgerton had a big tournament with 18 kills while Katie Lindeman had 16 and Landry Luhring
eight. Alyssa Mathews recorded 50
assists in the tournament and Piper
Johanns 37 digs.
The Spartans fell behind No. 11
ranked Wapsie Valley in the early
going of all three sets and was unable to rally.
“Wapsie Valley is a team that
is very similar to us,” Willis said.
“They had most of their team returning from last year and Grundy Center
has a tradition of a strong program.”
Kayla Mathews paced the Spartans with seven kills in the match
while Lindeman had six. A. Mathews
had 20 assists and Johanns recorded
21 digs.
Willis said the Spartan defense
needs to improve and that starts with
blocking.
“Blocking is the first line of defense and is extremely important,”
she said. “West Branch has some
tall hitters and they were able to hit
over our block which you have to
give the credit to West Branch there.
But when we slow the ball down
with a touch block or funnel it to our
defenders we need to keep our feet
quiet and dig the ball. Wapsie Valley was able to abuse our block very
well (Thursday) night. They made
some good plays tooling it off our
girls making it very tough for the defenders to dig the ball. Our back row
did get some big digs when there
was an open net but we must work
on controlling the net so that doesn’t
happen.
The Spartans also continue to
look for a vocal leader to fill the role
played by Riley Sents the past couple of years.
“We are still looking for the vocal
leader of this group to step up with
confidence and talk this team to victories,” Willis said. “We need more
volleyball communication on the
court. Our bench did an outstanding
job (Thursday) night to provide a
pulse for the girls on the court. They
were communicating what was going on and they were also cheering
like crazy. I am very proud of those
girls they showed that we truly are a
family and that family sticks together. That was the driving force to get
things turned around in game three. “Every time we step on the court
we are going to get everyone’s best
shot,” Willis added. “They are going to play us harder than they do
against other teams,” Willis said.
“We know this and expect this but
we have failed to rise to the occasion
the last two matches. We are going
to go back into the gym and work on
finding our confidence and our mojo
again. It has only been gone for two
days, so I don’t think it will take us
long to find it again. It is also early in
the season and though we have two
losses already we aren’t ready to hit
the panic button yet. We just need to
go back to the basics and work our
way back from there.”
The Spartans played their first
home match of the season Tuesday
at Gladbrook-Reinbeck. They host
East Marshall Thursday before playing in the Aplington-Parkersburg
tournament Saturday.
25
23
Wapsie Valley 3, Grundy Center 0
Wapsie Valley 25
25
Grundy Center 18
14
Kills: Grundy Center 32 (Kayla Mathews 7, Katie Lindeman 6), Wapsie Valley 39. Assists: Grundy Center 24
(Alyssa Mathews 20), Wapsie Valley 31.
Blocks: Grundy Center 2 (K. Mathews 1,
Kylie Willis 1), Wapsie Valley 13. Digs:
Grundy Center 67 (Piper Johanns 21,
Lindeman 14, K. Mathews 14), Wapsie
Valley 76. Serving: Grundy Center 5658, 3 aces (Landry Luhring 9-9, 2 aces;
Lindeman 12-12), Wapsie Valley 55-61,
5 aces.
Grundy Center Quad
Team standings — 1) West Branch 3-0;
2) Grundy Center 2-1; 3) Hudson 1-2; 4) AGWSR 0-3.
Grundy Center 2, AGWSR 0
AGWSR
5
10
Grundy Center 21
21
Kills: Grundy Center 20 (Katie Lindeman
5, Three tied 3), AGWSR 4. Assists: Grundy
Center 20 (Alyssa Mathews 16), AGWSR
4. Blocks: Grundy Center 1 (Kylie Willis),
AGWSR 0. Digs: Grundy Center 33 (Landry
Luhring 8, Piper Johanns 7), AGWSR 18.
Serving: Grundy Center 30-37, 8 aces (Kayla Mathews 10-10, 3 aces; Cearra Agoun 3
aces), AGWSR 14-16, 1 ace (Reagan Rathe
5-5, 1 ace).
Grundy Center 2, Hudson 0
Hudson
17
11
Grundy Center 21
21
Kills: Grundy Cneter 22 (Hana Edgerton
7, Katie Lindeman 7), Hudson 9. Assists:
Grundy Center 19 (Alyssa Mathews 15), Hudson 7. Blocks: Grundy Center 6 (Edgerton 2,
Lindeman 2), Hudson 1. Digs: Grundy Center
26 (Landry Luhring 9, Piper Johanns 7), Hudson 11. Serving: Grundy Center 30-36, 5 aces
(A. Mathews 7-7, 2 aces; K. Mathews 10-11,
1 ace), Hudson 26-29, 2 aces.
West Branch 2, Grundy Center 0
West Branch
21
21
Grundy Center 14
17
Kills: Grundy Center 23 (Hana Edgerton
8, Landry Luhring 5), West Branch 17. Assists: Grundy Center 20 (Alyssa Mathews
19), West Branch 12. Blocks: Grundy Center 0, West Branch 2. Digs: Grundy Center
32 (Piper Johnns 9, Kayla Mathews 9), West
Branch 33. Serving: Grundy Cneter 31-33,
0 aces (K. Mathews 9-9; Johanns 7-7), West
Branch 41-41, 6 aces.
Grundy Center senior middle hitter Hana Edgerton sends an attack toward Wapsie Valley during Thursday’s
match in Grundy Center. Edgerton finished with five kills in the match. (John Jensen/The Grundy Register
photo)
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Classifieds!
Thursday, September 10, 2015
15
Cross country
From page 12
later in the season.”
Alayna Kollasch led the DikeNew Hartford girls’ team with an
11th place finish, followed by Livvy
Eiklenborg’s 13th place showing, and
a 15th place by Haylee Luna. Jurane
lizer ran to 30th and Kelsey Bakken
33rd.
Nate Sharp, Broden Coulter,
and Bruce Dall went 10th, 11th, and
14th for the Wolverine boys. Collin
Vanderlind went 27th and Jakob
Luna placed 30th.
This week GC/G-R and D-NH
will compete at the Marshalltown
Invitational on Thursday, Sept. 10.
Pine Lake Invitational
Girls’ Results
Team Results – 1) Grundy Center
53; 2) West Marshall 76; 3) East
Marshall 92; 4) Dike-New Hartford
92; 5) South Hardin 110; 6) Jesup
122; 7) Hudson 144; 8) BCLUW
181; 9) North Tama 247. Incomplete
Teams:
Aplington-Parkersburg,
Green Mountain Garwin.
Dike-New Hartford individuals
– 11) Alayna Kollasch 23:38; 13)
Livvy Eiklenborg 23:52; 15) Haylee
Luna 24:06; 30) Jurane Lizer 25:46;
33) Kelsey Bakken 26:00; 37) Kadi
Wright 26:41; 38) Jenna Hensley
27:00; 55) Hannah Dove 28:25; 59)
Lauren Vanderlind 28:58; 62) Katie
Camarata 29:17; 65) Josie Claude
29:44; 67) Rachel Wardell 30:00;
68) Briann Kluiter 30:06; 73) Sara
Hoehns 30:39; 74) Josie LaForte
30:41; 81) Mary Venenga 31:40;
82) Madison Dove 32:18; 86) Carrie
O’Connor 32:32; 93) Brynn Harberts
34:52; 95) Carien Scheepens 35:26;
96) Addie Johnston 35:36; 97) Madi
Harms 35:51; 101) Katelyn Soska
38:14.
Grundy
Center/GladbrookReinbeck individuals – 2) Reegan
Zinkula 22:28; 6) Lily Ehlers
23:00; 9) Mellina Wrage 23:26; 17)
Cora Saak 24:12; 24) Tiana Saak
25:09; 47) Jori Steenhoek 27:43;
58) Madison Westwater 28:55; 72)
Taylor Gienger 30:34; 29) Haleigh
Steding 31:31.
Boys’ Results
Team Results – 1) East Marshall
54; 2) Aplington-Parkersburg 89; 3)
Dike-New Hartford 92; 4) Hudson
97; 5) Grundy Center 105; 6) West
Marshall 153; 7) Jesup 173; 8)
BCLUW 193; 9) South Hardin 203;
10) North Tama 302. Incomplete
Teams: Green Mountain Garwin.
Dike-New Hartford individuals
– 10) Nate Sharp 19:47; 11) Broden
Coulter 19:48; 14) Bryce Dall 20:12;
27) Collin Vanderlind 21:08; 30)
Jakob Luna 21:30; 33) Seth Wibben
21:38; 35) Dilan Cummings 21:42;
42) Dylan Mrzlak 22:11; 72) Sawyer
Loger 24:28; 81) Ben Purdy 26:20;
84) Zack Nichol 26:24; 100) Alex
Lewis 29:35; 101) Trevor Dumler
29:37; 109) John Crew 31:41; 110)
Jacob Junker 33:43.
Grundy
Center/GladbrookReinbeck – 3) Finn Cleveland 19:13;
4) Dylan Hendricks 19:21; 20) Max
Schweppe 20:45; 32) Brady Appel
21:34; 48) Griffin Hamann 22:38;
52) Joe Kanagy 23:10; 58) Alex
Schweppe 23:26; 65) Jesper HolkeFarnam 23:45; 70) Jadon Spear
24:20; 74) Carter Murphy 24:41; 85)
Jordan Lehr 26:26; 93) Eli Harberts
28:00; 97) Dakota Gleissner 28:44;
113) Jack Stanley 39:39.
Turn off the
television.
Turn on
their minds.
Dike-New Hartford’s Broden Coulter (left) and Nate Sharp near the finish line at the Pine Lake Invitational in Eldora Thursday. (Scott Bierle/
Mid-America Publishing photo)
Finn Cleveland races past fans near the end of Thursday’s boys’ race at
the Pine Lake Invitational in Eldora. (Scott Bierle/Mid-America Publishing photo)
In school or at
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is a textbook for life.
Encourage your children to
make reading the newspaper a
part of their everyday routine
for lifelong learning.
The Grundy Register
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