Football-making town sets record

ADA, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio town long associated with the manufacturing of footballs has set a Guinness World Record for the most thrown at the same time.

The organization certified the record after the attempt was made Oct. 25 by 950 people simultaneously throwing a football on the Ada War Memorial Stadium football field, the Lima News reported this week.

Students from kindergarten through 12th grade joined teachers, coaches, bus drivers, school staff and community members to set the record.

The Wilson Football Factory in Ada donated more than 1,000 commemorative footballs for the attempt. Workers at the factory make about 3,000 footballs a day, cutting, stitching and lacing each by hand in a 25-step process.

A look back in time

65 Years Ago

December 1954

The biggest event of the season to Iola television fans was the throwing of a switch on Nov. 21 that put KMBC-TV on the air with the highest tower in Kansas City and with power rated at 316,000 watts. Prior to that time, WDAF was the only station that could be received here with any regularity at all. Now KMBC provides the best reception in the area with the single exception of KOAM Pittsburg.

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Dr. Herbert M. Webb, 77, retired Humboldt physician and surgeon, died Thursday at the Veterans Hospital in Kansas City. He had been a patient there since July. Dr. Webb spent most of his professional life in Humboldt and was widely known throughout the county.

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The folks at the County Home are going to get their TV set for Christmas. The money is in hand right now. Not only that, they may get a good second-hand piano as well, something they need almost as much as a television set. That’s the way the money is coming in today. Several television dealers have called to say that they would give part of an outfit free or at a heavy discount on a complete set and antenna. Installation labor has already been donated.

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Today was Christmas at the McAtee Nursing Home. A television receiving set was installed yesterday. Bill Burcham and 22 other Iolans presented the gift to the home. 

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J.E. Slyker, manager of the local Southwestern Bell telephone company, plans to have 36 operators at the switchboard to handle the 635 long distance phone calls that he expects during the 24 hours beginning Friday evening. Christmas is the busiest day of the year for the telephone company. Last year 426 long distance calls were completed on Christmas Day by local operators. Slyker has suggestions for those making Christmas calls: place your calls as early as possible; call by number. This speeds making the connection.

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Allen County was covered with a six-inch snowy blanket this morning. The drifts snarled traffic, particularly on east-west streets and highways, and blocked U.S. 54 between LaHarpe and Moran for a few hours this morning.

 The highway was closed to traffic between Bronson and Fort Scott where the snow measured 23 inches at noon. The Union Bus Depot reported that no buses arrived here from either the east or the south during the morning hours. Others were running behind schedule. 

 

Iraqis storm U.S. embassy

BAGHDAD (AP) — Dozens of Iraqi Shiite militiamen and their supporters broke into the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad today, smashing a main door and setting fire to a reception area, angered over deadly U.S. airstrikes targeting the Iran-backed militia. U.S. guards fired tear gas and palls of smoke rose over the grounds.

An Associated Press reporter at the scene saw flames rising from inside the compound and at least three U.S. soldiers on the roof of the main embassy building. There was a fire at the reception area near the compound’s parking lot but it was unclear what had caused it. A man on a loudspeaker urged the mob not to enter the compound, saying: “The message was delivered.”

President Donald Trump blamed Iran for the embassy breach and called on Iraq to protect the diplomatic mission.

“Iran killed an American contractor, wounding many. We strongly responded, and always will. Now Iran is orchestrating an attack on the U.S. Embassy in Iraq. They will be held fully responsible. In addition, we expect Iraq to use its forces to protect the Embassy, and so notified!” he tweeted from his estate in Palm Beach, Florida.

There were no reports of casualties, but the unprecedented breach was one of the worst attacks on the embassy in recent memory. It followed deadly U.S. airstrikes on Sunday that killed 25 fighters of the Iran-backed militia in Iraq, the Kataeb Hezbollah. The U.S. military said the airstrikes were in retaliation for last week’s killing of an American contractor in a rocket attack on an Iraqi military base that it had blamed on the militia.

The developments represent a major downturn in Iraq-U.S. relations that could further undermine U.S. influence in the region and also weaken Washington’s hand in its maximum pressure campaign against Iran.

Iraq has long struggled to balance its ties with the U.S. and Iran, both allies of the Iraqi government. But the government’s angry reaction to the U.S. airstrikes and its apparent decision not to prevent the protesters from reaching the embassy signaled a sharp deterioration of U.S.-Iraq relations.

Iraqi security forces made no effort to stop the protesters as they marched to the heavily-fortified Green Zone after a funeral held for those killed in the U.S. airstrikes, letting them pass through a security checkpoint leading to the area.

The mob of marchers, many of them in militia uniforms, shouted “Down, Down USA!” and “Death to America” and “Death to Israel” outside the compound, hurling water and stones over its walls. The mob set fire to three trailers used by security guards along the wall. AP journalists saw some try to scale the walls.

Others then smashed the gates used by cars to enter and dozens pushed into the compound. The protesters stopped in a corridor after about 5 meters (16 feet), and were only about 200 meters away from the main building. Half a dozen U.S. soldiers were seen on the roof of the main building, their guns were pointed at the protesters. Smoke from the tear gas rose in the area.

The protesters raised yellow militia flags and taunted the embassy’s security staff who remained behind the glass windows in the gates’ reception area. They hung a poster on the wall declaring, “America is an aggressor” and sprayed graffiti on the wall and windows reading, “Closed in the name of the resistance.”

An Iraqi employee at the embassy told the AP that the embassy’s security team had evacuated some local staff from a rear gate while others left by helicopters as the rest remained inside “safe” areas within the embassy. The employee spoke on condition of anonymity because of not being authorized to speak to journalists.

Some commanders of militia factions loyal to Iran had joined the protesters. Among them was Hadi al-Amiri, the head of the state-sanctioned paramilitary Popular Mobilization Units, the umbrella group for the Iran-backed militias.

At least three protesters appeared to have difficulties breathing from tear gas. No one was immediately reported hurt in the rampage, and security staff had withdrawn to inside the embassy earlier, soon after protesters gathered outside. There was no immediate comment from the U.S. Embassy.

Yassine al-Yasseri, Iraq’s interior minister, also appeared outside the embassy at one point and walked around to inspect the scene. He told the AP that the prime minister had warned the U.S. strikes on the Shiite militiamen would have serious consequences.

“This is one of the implications,” al-Yasseri said. “This is a problem and is embarrassing to the government.”

He said more security will be deployed to separate the protesters from the embassy, an indication the Iraqi troops would not move in to break up the crowd by force.

Seven armored vehicles with about 30 Iraqi soldiers arrived near the embassy hours after the violence erupted, deploying near the embassy walls but not close to the breached area. Four vehicles carrying riot police approached the embassy later but were forced back by the protesters who blocked their path.

There was no immediate comment from the Pentagon and the State Department.

The U.S. airstrikes — the largest targeting an Iraqi state-sanctioned militia in recent years — and the subsequent calls by the militia for retaliation, represent a new escalation in the proxy war between the U.S. and Iran playing out in the Middle East.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Sunday’s strikes send the message that the U.S. will not tolerate actions by Iran that jeopardize American lives.

The Iranian-backed Iraqi militia had vowed Monday to retaliate for the U.S. military strikes. The attack and vows for revenge raised concerns of new attacks that could threaten American interests in the region.

The U.S. attack also outraged both the militias and the Iraqi government, which said it will reconsider its relationship with the U.S.-led coalition — the first time it has said it will do so since an agreement was struck to keep some U.S. troops in the country. It called the attack a “flagrant violation” of its sovereignty.

In a partly televised meeting Monday, Iraq’s caretaker Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi told Cabinet members that he had tried to stop the U.S. operation “but there was insistence” from American officials. He declared three days of mourning for those killed in the U.S. strikes, starting Tuesday.

The U.S. military said “precision defensive strikes” were conducted against five sites of Kataeb Hezbollah, or Hezbollah Brigades in Iraq and Syria. The group, which is a separate force from the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, operates under the umbrella of the state-sanctioned militias known collectively as the Popular Mobilization Forces. Many of them are supported by Iran.

Producers, experts warn against raw milk

GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — Wearing sweaters, small kids (of the goat variety) went springing over hay-lined pens in the Good Karma Micro-Dairy barn in Russell County — where Erin and Doug Renard milk goats and cows and make raw cheese, Greek yogurt, butter and gelato.

“As you noticed when you came here, there’s no signs,” Erin Renard told the Kansas News Service. “One of the reasons there’s no signs is expense. But the other reason was we couldn’t even put ‘raw milk’ on the sign. Now we can.”

Prior to November, the Renards and other Kansas raw milk producers could advertise their products with only a sign on the farm — a 1967 law outlawed raw milk advertising otherwise. That changed when the Kansas Department of Agriculture settled a lawsuit with Mark and Coraleen Bunner, the owners of Shepherd’s Gate Dairy.

In Kansas, raw milk products — which aren’t inspected or pasteurized — still can’t be sold in stores. And while the agriculture department plans to propose legislation in 2020 to remove the advertising ban from state law, it won’t require ads to have warnings about the unregulated dairy products.

So, some raw dairies say that the key to preventing illness is for consumers to visit farms and do their research before drinking unpasteurized milk.

There are approximately 260 licensed dairies in Kansas, meaning they’re regulated.

When it comes to raw dairies, Kansas has about 45 producers, and is one of 17 states that allow direct raw milk sales from farms to consumers. Thirteen of those states allow raw milk to be sold in stores.

Raw milk comes from goats, cows or sheep and is sold without pasteurization — a process that heats milk and kills bad bacteria without changing the nutritional content. But advocates say raw milk is more nutritious, can cure lactose intolerance and treat asthma and allergies.

The Food and Drug Administration, however, has debunked a host of raw milk claims. And for decades, the FDA has warned consumers about the dangers of raw milk. It may contain bacteria like E. coli, listeria and salmonella. If pregnant women consume raw milk products with listeria in it, it can cause a miscarriage or even death of the newborn — even if the expectant mother never gets sick.

Plus, illnesses from bacteria in raw milk can be more dangerous for adults over 65, children under 5 and people with compromised immune systems.

Past outbreaks in Kansas from raw milk have sickened dozens of people, said Daniel Neises, an epidemiologist with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. His agency stands behind studies and evidence they saw during past outbreaks.

“Some bacteria can cause severe illness with long-term consequences like hemolytic uremic syndrome, which can cause kidney failure, and Guillain-Barré syndrome, which can result in paralysis,” he said.

Third-generation farmer TeCoa Seibert is from Chapman, Kansas, and has had a goat herd for 35 years. She said she’s never gotten sick from consuming raw milk. But because it isn’t inspected in Kansas, she understands the potential health risks posed by sick animals and unsanitary milking conditions.

“Does the animal have a shiny coat? Are there any abscesses? Does the animal have a snotty nose?” she said. “Most of the people coming in to pick up milk for me would have no clue what a healthy animal or a clean farm is supposed to look like.”

Now that any raw milk producer can advertise, Seibert is worried. On one hand, she said advertising connects the consumer directly to the farm, so people can see the origin of the food.

“It’s what the farmers want — they want people to come back to the farm and have a relationship with their food,” Seibert said.

But more advertising could open the door for unsanitary farms, she said.

But without any inspection, without any kind of regulation … without understanding what our waste-handling facilities are or any of that, now you start getting a complication,” Seibert said, adding that she’s worried there might be “an increase in the number of people exposed to harmful diseases.”

The old law banning advertising of raw milk off of a farm was unconstitutional and violated free speech, said Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

“There’s really not a logical connection between the advertising restriction and the government interest that’s in play,” he said in November. “So, you know, it’s pretty clear that on its face the advertising restriction would have fallen as we continued to contest the case.”

The Kansas Legislature must approve the bill that’s being drawn up by the Kansas Department of Agriculture in order to reflect the changes of the settlement. In the bill, the agency will push for labels on the advertisements, so it’s clear the product includes raw milk.

“For example, printed, written, or visual forms of advertisement should clearly state that such milk or milk products are raw,” said Jeff Jones, program manager for the KDA’s Dairy and Feed Safety Program. “In addition, containers of any unpasteurized milk offered for sale should be clearly labeled as ungraded raw milk.”

Neises, with the state’s health department, said the ads should have a warning. He said more advertising could lead to more widespread consumption of raw milk.

“If raw milk is being sold, it should be clear to the consumer that consuming that unpasteurized milk increases the risk of illness,” Neises said.

But Jones said his agency won’t seek a mandated warning label.

“I think that’s where the people, you know, have to make that choice,” Jones said.

Raw dairy owners say consumers should do their due diligence. Erin Renard said they should research and ask several questions of the producers before purchasing raw milk.

“Do you have your milk tested? What are your methods? Can I watch you milk? … Have you ever had any illness?” she said, adding, “we haven’t.”

And as for some raw milk producers’ initial concerns that the state would try to completely rewrite the law to ban the sale of raw milk, Jones said that is not the case.

“Our intent is not to ban the sale of raw milk,” he said, “but to propose additional advertisement labeling requirements for public awareness.”

Carl Hydorn Sr.

Carl R. Hydorn Sr., 84, of St. Edward, Neb., passed away surrounded by family on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2019 at Cloverlodge Care Center, St. Edward, Neb.

Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Friday at the Miller-Levander Funeral Home in St. Edward, Neb., with the Rev. Mary Avidano officiating. Visitation will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home. Military rites will be conducted by Crosier American Legion Post No. 226, Army Honor Guard, and the American Legion Riders. Inurnment will be at a later date.

Miller-Levander Funeral Home in St. Edward, Neb., is in charge of arrangements. Condolences may be sent to the family at www.levanderfuneralhome.com

Carl was the son of George and Edna (Harper) Hydorn, and was born on June 21, 1935 at Garnett. He attended school at a little school outside of Garnett.

On March 29, 1959, Carl was united in marriage to Alice C. Lambeth. They lived in the Iola area, and later moved to Americas, Olpe, Hartford, and St. Edward, Neb. Carl worked as a truck driver for Dolly Madison Cakes in Emporia for 31 years.

Carl served in the U.S. Army National Guard, and was a member of Teamsters. He enjoyed and was very good at woodworking, and loved to fish.

Carl is survived by a son, Carl (Becky) Hydorn Jr. of St. Edward, Neb.; grandson Andrew (Sevita) Gillis of Omaha, Neb.; great-granddaughter Adalyn; two stepgrandchildren, Jessica (Mike) Respi of Pleasanton, Neb.; LeeAnn Kopel of Dallas, Texas; five great-grandchildren, Marissa, Calleigh, Amelia, Brandon, and Karma; two nieces, Joyce Wright of Iola and Karen (Mick) Winner of Iola; along with several great- and great-great nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents, wife Alice, brother Clarence “Tuffy,” and an infant brother Frank.

Aimee Billingsley

Aimee Sue Billingsley, age 72, of Iola, died Saturday, Dec. 28, 2019 at Allen County Regional Hospital, Iola. Aimee was born on Oct. 6, 1947 in Moran, to Harry and Prudence (Lower) Fronk.

Aimee graduated from Iola High School in 1968. After graduating, she attended Pittsburg State University. She worked for many years as an addiction therapist.

Aimee was preceded in death by her father; husband, Dr. John A. Billingsley; and one brother, Kevin Fronk.

Aimee is survived by her companion of 28 years, Rick Sebol of Kansas City, Mo.; her mother, Prudence Fronk of Iola; two sons, Daniel Billingsley of Tulsa, Okla., and Jeffrey Billingsley and wife, Stacey of Joplin, Mo.; two grandchildren, Adrien and Kristin Billingsley of Joplin, Mo.

Cremation has taken place. Condolences for the family can be left at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.

Police report

Juvenile arrested

Iola police officers arrested a 13-year-old male for suspicion of criminal damage to property and disorderly conduct Dec. 23 following an incident in the 10 block of Boyer Circle.

 

Light stolen

Jesse Comer told Iola officers Dec. 23 somebody stole the headlight from his bicycle while it was 100 block of East Jackson Avenue.

Suspect in fire deaths arrested

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have arrested a suspect in the deaths of a mother and two children whose bodies were found after a house fire in Kansas City, Kansas.

Police said late Monday in a tweet  that charges are pending a review by the Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office. The cause of death and a motive weren’t immediately released.

Firefighters responded to the blaze around 4:35 a.m. Monday. KCTV  reports that the victims have been identified as 32-year-old Yazmine Rodriguez, 14-year-old Amerikha Rodriguez and 10-year-old Jean Carlos Rodriguez.

Family members say they tried to reach Yazmine all day Sunday, but she never called or texted them back.

“I want justice and if anybody saw anything, anybody go inside the house, speak up,” Ana Rodriguez, the children’s aunt, said. “They were the happiest kids ever.”

Yazmine has two other children, who were with their father for Christmas break. The father of the children who died is in Mexico.

Putin attempts to rewrite history

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — The U.S. ambassador in Warsaw came to Poland’s defense today following repeated claims by Russian President Vladimir Putin that Poland bears blame for the outbreak of World War II.

“Dear President Putin, Hitler and Stalin colluded to start WWII. That is a fact. Poland was a victim of this horrible conflict,” Ambassador Georgette Mosbacher said on Twitter in English and Polish — though not in Russian.

World War II began Sept. 1, 1939, when Nazi German troops invaded Poland. Two weeks later, the Soviet Red Army invaded from the east, in what Poles still call a “stab in the back.” The dual occupation came days after the Nazi and Soviet regimes had signed a pact with a secret protocol to carve up Poland and the Baltic states. Some six million Polish citizens were killed in the war, with Poland putting up resistance throughout.

Recently Putin has been arguing that the collusion of Western powers with Adolf Hitler paved the way for World War II. He has singled out Poland in particular, casting it as an anti-Semitic country that welcomed Hitler’s plans to destroy Europe’s Jews.

Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki protested Putin’s words on Sunday, saying they are deliberate “lies” and arguing that Putin is trying to deflect attention from recent political failures by Russia.

The relationship between Russia and Poland has been tense since Poland threw off Moscow-controlled communist rule 30 years ago and began moving closer to the West. Poland has since joined NATO, the European Union and has cultivated a close alliance with the United States.

Poland has also been making efforts to reduce its dependence on Russian gas and oil and has vocally opposed Nord Stream 2, a Russian-German gas pipeline under construction that will transport Russian gas to Western Europe, bypassing Poland and Ukraine.