Oregon bans vaping products

SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Oregon’s governor ordered a temporary ban Friday on the sale of flavored vaping products amid an outbreak that has sickened more than 1,000 people nationwide — and killed two in Oregon.

Several other states, including Washington, New York, Michigan and Rhode Island, have also imposed temporary bans.

The illnesses first appeared in March, with symptoms including shortness of breath, fatigue and chest pain. Most who got sick said they vaped products containing THC, the marijuana ingredient that causes a high, but some said they vaped only nicotine.

Gov. Kate Brown’s order imposes a 180-day ban on all flavored vaping products and on the sale of other sources or additives as they are identified in cases of vaping-related lung injuries or deaths.

“The safest option for Oregonians right now is to not use vaping products of any kind. Until we know more about what is causing this illness, please, do not vape,” Brown said.

The Oregon Health Authority had asked Brown for a six-month ban on sale and display of all vaping products, including tobacco, nicotine and cannabis. 

The agency also urged Oregonians to stop using all vaping products until federal and state officials have determined the cause of the illnesses.

The Oregon Retailers of Cannabis Association said it was very grateful the governor did not implement a complete ban on cannabis vaping products, like Massachusetts did. The group told its members that technical questions and issues need to be worked out and that it will try to “ensure the government acts responsibly and makes evidenced-based decisions that do not needlessly harm the legal cannabis industry.”

Brown also called on state agencies to develop plans within 90 days for consumer warnings, product testing and disclosure of the ingredients of vaping products. Brown also directed state agencies to develop proposals for long-term solutions for consideration by the Legislature, which convenes early next year.

State Rep. Cheri Helt, a Republican from Bend, said she’ll seek bipartisan legislation to address the dangers of vaping, including bans if necessary.

In Oregon, eight cases have been reported, two of which resulted in death.

Brown said federal action “is long overdue to address this national public health crisis.”

President Donald Trump has said he plans to ban flavored vaping products nationally.

Moran Manor merits praise

Moran Manor hosted a staff appreciation day Thursday for the nursing home’s part in parent company Americare Senior Living to receive the 2019 Customer Approved Award from NRC Health, a Nebraska-based health care intelligence firm.

The award goes to the top 20 senior care organizations across the country. The staffers were treated to snacks and assorted door prizes.

Among those honored from Moran Manor were, kneeling from left, Alicia Woods, Shailee Woods and Breanna Harred; second row, Kelsey Sigg, Jennifer Adams, Lori Stryker, Stephanie Coulter, Lia Apriliana, Hali Drake, Teresa Grewing, Tiffany Hennig, Ciara Dobson, Tamala Hyden, Lisa Heape, Christina Turner and Teresa Hall. 

Bus flips over; 13 injured

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Authorities say a bus carrying developmentally disabled people flipped over during a crash with other vehicles in Ohio and sent 13 people to hospitals.

WTOL-TV reports the accident occurred in Sylvania Township near Toledo around 10:30 a.m. Friday.

Township Fire Chief Michael Ramm says 11 clients on the bus were hurt along with two people in other vehicles involved in the accident.

Ramm says five of those taken to hospitals suffered severe injuries. No fatalities have been reported.

Romney, Sasse break from GOP on Trump’s China remarks

WASHINGTON (AP) — Most Republican leaders were silent or supportive of President Donald Trump’s public call for another foreign government, China, to investigate his political foe, while a handful voiced concern that the president was trying to enlist a rival power in his reelection effort.

Several House and Senate leaders stayed mum Friday as Trump escalated the controversy that has fueled an impeachment inquiry and plowed through another norm of American politics. The quiet continued as House Democrats released a trove of text messages showing U.S. diplomats conducted a campaign to push Ukraine to investigate former vice president Joe Biden, a leading candidate for the Democratic nomination to face Trump next November, and Biden’s son, Hunter.

Foreign interference in elections has long been viewed as a threat to U.S. sovereignty and the integrity of democracy, and soliciting foreign help in an election is illegal.

But Trump found support in his willingness to openly challenge that convention. Vice President Mike Pence made clear he backed the president and believes he is raising “appropriate” issues. Other allies agreed.

“I don’t think there’s anything improper about doing that,” GOP Sen. Ron Johnson, chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, said of Trump’s call on China to investigate the Bidens.

Dissent came from familiar corners. Utah Sen. Mitt Romney tweeted: “By all appearances, the President’s brazen and unprecedented appeal to China and to Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden is wrong and appalling.”

Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse said in a statement to the Omaha World-Herald: “Americans don’t look to Chinese commies for the truth. If the Biden kid broke laws by selling his name to Beijing, that’s a matter for American courts, not communist tyrants running torture camps.”

In contrast, neither Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell nor House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy responded to requests for comment Friday.

The responses followed a familiar pattern in the age of Trump. As the president broke another political barrier, his party leaders made no public effort to rein him in. Critics have argued that reaction has only emboldened the president, while doing lasting damage to the party and the presidency. Trump allies argue the president’s rule-breaking rhetoric is not as important as his policies, which they support.

But the silence this time also reflects a sharper dilemma for Republicans. As Democrats pursue an impeachment investigation, Republicans have been struggling with how best to shield themselves — and the unpredictable president who may decide their political fortunes — from the steady drip of new revelations. With little guidance from the White House, lawmakers have tried to say as little as possible, blame Democrats or express vague optimism about the investigative process.

Some Republicans appeared eager for the controversy to simply not exist. “I don’t think it’s a real request,” Florida Sen, Marco Rubio, a prominent China critic, told reporters on Friday. “I think he did it to get you guys. I think he did it to provoke you to ask me and others and get outraged by it.”

The president and his defenders indicated he was quite serious on Thursday. Standing outside the White House, Trump defended himself against allegations that he privately pressured Ukraine to investigate the Bidens by inviting a geopolitical rival to launch a probe.

“China should start an investigation into the Bidens,” Trump said after being asked about trade negotiations with the country.

Trump on Friday argued that he not specifically targeting a political foe, but merely pushing countries to clean up corruption. Although there is no evidence that the Bidens were involved in criminal corruption in either Ukraine or China, Republicans quickly took up the explanation.

Pence argued that the Bidens’ ties to Ukraine are of interest to the American people.

“There are legitimate questions that ought to be asked. We will continue to ask them because the American people have a right to know whether or not the vice president of the United States or his family profited from his position,” he said.

Romney tweeted the counter argument: “When the only American citizen President Trump singles out for China’s investigation is his political opponent in the midst of the Democratic nomination process, it strains credulity to suggest that it is anything other than politically motivated.”

House Democrats are investingatin whether Trump abused his power when he pressure Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to look into theories about Ukraine meddling in the 2016 and a separate allegation about Hunter Biden’s business ties.

The younger Biden served on the board of a Ukrainian gas company at the same time his father was leading the Obama administration’s diplomatic dealings with Kyiv. Though the timing raised concerns among anti-corruption advocates, there has been no evidence of wrongdoing by either the former vice president or his son.

The question of whether to dodge or defend is perhaps most critical for the Republican senators in competitive races next year. Those Republicans have little incentive to criticize the president because can’t risk alienating Trump’s base voters. But their futures also depend on peeling off enough swing voters who turned against Trump last year. An impeachment vote will force them to pick sides — an lose some support — on either side.

Most of those senators have tread carefully — and quietly — on the subject.

Arizona’s Martha McSally, stood at Pence’s side at the Thursday stop in Scottsdale, but did not commented on the matter. She has criticized Democrats for launching an impeachment investigation, but not commented on the whistleblower report and the loose transcript of the phone call that prompted the probe. Her office had no comment about whether she thought Trump’s statement Thursday was appropriate.

The office of Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado, widely considered the most vulnerable Republican senator and a special guest at a Trump re-election fundraiser this weekend, issued a statement Thursday that didn’t reference Trump’s request of China. “The Senate Intelligence Committee is a serious and respected body that is looking into this in a bipartisan fashion,” the statement said.

In North Carolina, Sen. Thom Tillis, whom Democrats hope to topple in 2020, stood by the president.

Asked about his reaction to the public statements Thursday, Tillis’ office responded with: “Democrats and the mainstream media are using anything and everything to justify impeaching the president and removing him from office.” His office referred back to that statement Friday morning after the texts were released.

Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, another Republican in a tough reelection race, did not respond to a request for comment.

While avoiding weighing on the propriety of the Trump’s remarks, one GOP senator was blunt about the limits of the party’s influence on the president.

“I can yay, nay, whatever. The president is going to say what the president is going to do.” Ernst said, saying it was up to member of Congress to make sure “we remain strong in the face of adversary.”

___

Riccardi reported from Denver. Associated Press writers Alan Fram in Washington, Scott Bauer in Madison, Wis.; Sara Burnett in Chicago; Jonathan J. Cooper in Phoenix; Scott McFetridge in Des Moines, Iowa; Lindsay Whitehurst in Salt Lake City; and Gary D. Robertson in Raleigh, N.C., contributed to this report.

Senators: Partisanship driving discord in DC

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ two Republican senators argued Wednesday that the impeachment inquiry into Donald Trump arises from partisan opposition to the president and said it is preventing Congress from taking up important legislative business.

Sen. Jerry Moran said he can’t yet draw conclusions from a whistleblower’s complaint that disclosed a call by Trump in July to Ukraine’s president. A rough transcript of the call released by the White House before the complaint’s text became public showed Trump pressed for an investigation of Democratic rival and ex-Vice President Joe Biden and Biden’s son Hunter.

Moran suggested the 2020 presidential election is the proper vehicle for deciding whether Trump remains in office and said some Democrats in the House have favored impeaching Trump “almost since the day he was elected.

“It seems to me that the wolf has been cried so many times,” he said.

Moran hosted U.S. Attorney General William Barr for tours of law enforcement laboratories and training centers in Topeka and Wichita, and Barr participated in a closed discussion with law enforcement officials at Wichita State University about fighting crime. Barr ignored a shouted question about whether he had spoken with Trump or personal attorney Rudy Giuliani about Ukraine.

“It’s troublesome to me that we can’t elect a president, allow that president _ work with that president for the next four years and try to move the country forward and advance an agenda,” Moran told reporters after the round table. “We need a country in which we’re working together and not pulled apart.”

Roberts said in a statement that “the left” doesn’t want Trump to be president and, “That is their sole focus.” He said he wants to work on issues such as trade and health care.

“The rest of this is political theater,” he said.

Before Barr’s and Moran’s talk with law enforcement officials, about 20 people protested outside the law enforcement training center at Wichita State, where it was held.

They held signs with slogans such as “Barr should be disbarred,” and one with a cartoon portraying Barr as Trump’s emotional support dog. Donna Wirth, a retired small business owner and community activist, said she “absolutely” supports the impeachment inquiry.

“We want our country back,” she said. “I’m tired of seeing each of these instances of corruption coming up and nobody being held accountable.”

Andrew Peck

Andrew John Peck, 44, of Wichita, formerly Iola, died on Monday, Sept. 23, 2019, at Ascension Via Christi St. Francis surrounded by his family.

Born March 20, 1975, in Wichita to June (Peck) Burger (née Seldorsen) and Jerauld F. Peck Sr., he was the youngest of their 10 children. He graduated from Wichita Southeast High School, attended WSU Tech in Wichita, and Allen Community College in Iola.

Andy moved to Iola in 1995, and over the years he lived here he worked for Tramec, Gates Manufacturing and Precision Pumps. He moved back to Wichita in 2017 and worked at Brittain Machine, Inc. He enjoyed reading, working on computers, gaming, biking and tinkering with RC cars. Andy also loved going to the Renaissance Festival and showing off his blacksmithing skills.

Andy is survived by his siblings, Jeanne (Jeff) Garlach of Wichita, Ruth (Mike) Nurse of Wichita, Mary (Mark) Freimiller of Iola, Jerauld Jr. (Kathy) Peck of Las Vegas, Nev., Kathleen (Russell) Rush of Portland, Maine, Nancy (Mike) Ford of Iola, Helen Humphress of Haysville, Carol (Tim) Murray of Orlando, Fla., 18 nieces and nephews, and 16 great- nieces and great-nephews. He was preceded in death by his mother, June Burger, father, Jerauld Peck Sr., sister, Laurel (Peck) Walker, brother-in-law, Patrick Humphress, and niece, Jourdan Rush.

A memorial service will be scheduled at a later date.

A look back in time

40 Years Ago

October 1979

Mrs. Hazel Puckett of Route 2, Humboldt, was recently named Woman of the Year by the Humboldt Business and Professional Women’s Club because of her determination and faith as she has dealt with her daughter’s battle with the ravages of polio for 27 years.

*****

Because of the lack of a long-term lease commitment, representatives from Methodist Youthville last night recommended to the Circle B Boys Ranch board of directors that the home be closed on Nov. 9. The board members agreed. The home was located on the Allen County Farm five miles north of Iola.

*****

Norman Michael of Iola has worked in area oil fields for the past 30 to 35 years — setting up drilling rigs, fixing them when they fail and collecting ideas on how to do a better job of both. Last year Michael built not one, but two brand new drilling rigs. He sold both for about $300,000 each. He is pictured standing beside the truck-mounted oil derrick he designed and constructed.

*****

Allen County commissioners this morning sold the old county farm north of Iola to Allen County Community Junior College for $108,000. The purchase price — which includes all buildings, improvements and mineral rights on the 240-acre farm — translates to $450 an acre. That is the base price the commissioners established for sale of the farm when they offered it at auction in June. No one bid on the farm at that time. 

*****

The old Horton barn, one of Iola’s most interesting and notable historical landmarks, will soon enter a new phase in its life. The hayloft of the structure is being renovated into two apartments by the present owner, Dr. Frank Lenski. Other pictures in this issue show how structures taken from local demolished business and homes are used in the renovation. In an accompanying article, Ethel (Horton) Reid of Iola tells about her father, Fred J. Horton, who built the barn to house teams of horses and ponies.

Hardwick earns $20K K-State scholarship

COLONY — Gregory Hardwick, a senior at Crest High School, has been accepted into the engineering program at K-State. The $20,000 scholarship approval will come in $5,000 annual increments for four years. The KSU program was Hardwick’s top choice, so the news was welcome. Gregory is the son of Timothy and Sandra Hardwick.

Animal rescue facility collecting donations

Items are being collected this month to benefit the Allen County Animal Rescue Facility.

Collection boxes will be set up through October at Iola City Hall, Orscheln Farm and Home, the Feedlot, Emprise Bank and Bank of Gas for the community to fill with ACARF wish list items.

Wish list items:

— Trash bags (13 and 55 gallon)

— Vinegar

— Bleach

— Purina Cat Chow and Purina Kitten Chow

— Rawhide bones

— Chew toys for dogs

— Kitten or puppy milk replacer

— Cat scratching posts

— Hand sanitizer

— Carabiner clips

The collection drive, sponsored by the Iola Community Involvement Task Force/PRIDE Committee,  runs through October.

Chiefs welcome back Hill and Claiborne to practice

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Defensive back Morris Claiborne returned to the practice field with the Kansas City Chiefs on Wednesday after serving his four-game suspension for violating the NFL’s substance-abuse policy.

He wasn’t alone.

The Chiefs also welcomed back wide receiver Tyreek Hill, who has been sidelined since Week 1 with a collarbone injury, and running back Damien Williams, who has been nursing an ankle injury.

It’s unclear how much they’ll play when the Colts visit Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday.

Claiborne, a former sixth overall pick of the Dallas Cowboys, missed most of training camp before the Chiefs signed him to what amounted to a prove-it contract. He played part of the preseason, but he was barred from practice and games until earlier this week

“It’s going to be fun. I think he has a lot to bring to this team,” Chiefs cornerback Bashaud Breeland said. “We’re all excited to get him out there with us.”

The Chiefs have been better against the pass this season under new defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, but they still rank 20th in the league against the pass. Claiborne should provide veteran help right away and could push for a starting job as the season progresses.

He’s coming off the best two-year stretch of his career with the New York Jets.

“We’ll see how he does out here,” said Chiefs coach Andy Reid, who was unwilling Wednesday to make any changes to his lineup. “We’ll get him back in and see how he rolls.”

Reid is also taking a wait-and-see approach to his offensive playmakers.

Hill was hurt in the opener in Jacksonville when his shoulder was driven into the ground on a play along the sideline. He wound up spending the night in the hospital, where his collarbone was stabilized without surgery.

The two-time All-Pro was seen catching passes from Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during warmups last week in Detroit, the first sign that Hill could soon be back on the field.

“He’s hard to hold down. He’s wired different,” Reid said. “He’s bouncing around and wants to go, but this one here, the doctors really have to keep checking on him. We’ll see how the time goes.”

Williams has struggled with an ankle injury most of the season, continuing a career-long trend of nagging injuries. In the meantime, LeSean McCoy has taken over the No. 1 job in the Kansas City backfield, and Darrel Williams has proven a capable backup.

McCoy ran for 56 yards and a score against the Lions. Darrel Williams had two TD runs.

“We’re just going to see how they do out here,” Reid said.

Regardless of whether they play this week, having Claiborne join Hill and Williams on the practice field Wednesday was an encouraging sign. The Chiefs are off to a 4-0 start without some of their key players.

Only two were left sidelined at practice this week. Left tackle Eric Fisher is recovering after surgery to repair a groin injury, and linebacker and special teams standout Dorian O’Daniel is sidelined by a hamstring injur