Opinion
September: Life Insurance Awareness Month
Chad A. Boaz, CRPC® Ameriprise Financial To make sure Americans are reminded of the need to include life insurance in their financial plans, the nonprofit LIFE Foundation coordinates Life Insurance Awareness Month. This year marks the seventh anniversary of Life Insurance Awareness Month (LIAM). According to the 2008 LIMRA study, 68 million American adults have no life insurance and among those with coverage, most have far less than recom...
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Financial FYI: New rules for gift cards
The gift card…an impersonal gift or the recipient’s paradise? I have to be honest, shopping is not one of my favorite things to do, so I enjoy giving the choice to my friends and family by providing them with a gift card. I was at a meeting recently that shared information about new gift card rules that took effect on Aug. 22. If you are like me, you may be interested to learn a little about those rules. The following information comes fro...
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Part one: The Amana Colonies
I don’t know if you are familiar with a national historic site called the “Amana Colonies.” I had heard of it and even visited the area several years ago and thought most people knew about it as a visitor destination, but I now realize many people are not familiar with the Amana Colonies The group who formed the Amana Colonies came to this country from Germany. They were a breakaway group from the German Lutheran Church and their ideas were...
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Mexican heritage
While Mexico will celebrate the 200th anniversary of its independence from Spain next week, Chanute is presenting its 93rd annual Mexican Fiesta this weekend at Santa Fe Park. From its inception in 1917, the fiesta has grown with Chanute’s Mexican American community. The fiesta started among Mexican immigrants who came to work on the Santa Fe Railroad. Many lived in boxcars in what was then called the “Little Mexico” section of Chanute. Fro...
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We have gas
As most of us know, Chanute was founded in 1873 after Octave Chanute settled some bickering between four townships. The railroad followed shortly thereafter. The census in 1880 was a mere 887 people but by 1900 it had grown to more than 4,200. No doubt this growth was brought about in large part by Chanute being including into the steel arteries of the industrial world. Then something happened between 1900 and 1910 to make the population mor...
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‘Winter’ hours begin at library
As we close an absolutely wonderful summer at the public library, we would like to thank all those who participated in our programming, read for the summer reading program or made use of our other services. While I know that the hot summer weather contributed to our rise in circulation, I also hope that our programs also enticed you to visit the library. We would also like to thank the many Chanute businesses who made t-shirts and other priz...
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Tri-Valley grateful for dedicated direct care staff
Several years ago, the U.S. Senate voted unanimously to set aside a week in September to recognize employees who work with people with disabilities. This year, the week of Sept. 12-18 has been designated as National Direct Support Professionals (DSP) Recognition Week and Tri-Valley plans to celebrate with its employees. Tri-Valley is proud of its 113 direct support professional’s and the work they do. Without their care and dedication, serv...
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Origins of the KKOY Sky Copter
Mark Patton Tribune Reporter Everybody remembers their first real job. Sure I mowed lawns and delivered the Chanute Tribune as a kid but my first “real job” was working for KKOY Radio. I started off playing local commercials and doing station identifications for Kansas City Royals and Chiefs games. I also did the dreaded weekend shifts, the Saturday and Sundays that nobody else wanted to work. After a four-year stint in the USAF, I retur...
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Mix it up with ... What’s Cookin’ with Diabetes
People newly diagnosed with diabetes typically experience a mix of emotions – many are afraid they may never again be able to enjoy food or have a dessert. Most people can learn to manage the disease successfully and still enjoy the food they eat! K-State Research and Extension along with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, would like to help you with just that! Join us for a special workshop that has been cooked up so people with diabet...
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Creepy local legends
Every small town has its legends. Some of them are downright spooky. Chanute has always been a special, magical and odd place to me so it is no different, I suppose. The thing about legends is that there is usually nobody left alive to vouch for their veracity, to tell you if they are true. One legend I heard was that of “Indian Cave.” The first time I saw this cave was as a small boy, perhaps six years old. My sister’s Brownie troop was h...
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Chanute gearing up for 40th annual Artist Alley
On Sept. 25 downtown Chanute will explode with hundreds of people roaming the street to be entertained, eating a funnel cake, admiring the antique cars and motorcycles, or shopping with the many Arts and Craft booths that line six blocks in downtown. This is the 41th annual Artist Alley Festival. The first Artist Alley was conceived and co-chaired by Cecilia Beuligman and Ruth Mannoni, both board members of the 1969 Neosho Valley Art Counc...
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Exhibit explores marketing, commercial ventures
A new special exhibit, “Travel Fees...When Adventure Was Serious Business,” can be viewed in our second floor Selsor Art Gallery at Chanute’s Martin and Osa Johnson Safari Museum. Curator Jacque Borgeson and Stanford student intern Jesse Stutt superbly tell the story of marketing and commercial ventures used by the Johnsons to help fund their pioneering documentary films. The introduction states, “From a shaky shoestring start to glitzy sho...
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Let’s drill some hydrogen wells
Edward P. Cross, president Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association The benefits of hydrogen for generating power from fuel cells are well-documented, whether for vehicles or commercial electricity production. Hydrogen combines with atmospheric oxygen in an oxidation/reduction reaction to produce electricity, with water and heat as the only byproducts. This avoids waste products like sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide....
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Organizations face losing tax-exempt status
How many times do we get mail, read it, then put it away and forget about it? In 2007, tax-exempt organizations were supposedly told that they had three years to comply with a new law, requiring tax-exempt organizations to file a Form 990-N, starting with May 15, 2008, after the completion of that tax year. The law mandates that all tax exempt organizations, other than churches and church organizations, must file an annual return with the IR...
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Juneau unique state capital
What U.S. State Capital is accessible by only air or sea? Actually, two state capitals meet that criteria. They are Hawaii and Alaska. Today, however, I want to visit with you about Juneau, the capital of Alaska. The city and borough of Juneau is located in the panhandle of Southeast Alaska. It is located 900 air miles north of Seattle, Wash., or 600 miles SE of Anchorage. Alaska covers a large landmass and it is often difficult to actually...
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Talk about taverns, past and present
It has been said that nothing is sure in this world but death and taxes. While I’m not disputing that, I have always felt that in Chanute one might say that nothing is sure but death and taxes – and an abundance of churches, hair stylists and taverns. It seems that there are still plenty of the first two but upon my most recent return to my old hometown, I have found a strange lack of the third. There are the places of legends that I recall ...
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Master Gardener training to be offered
Neosho County residents have a great opportunity this fall to participate in an outstanding horticulture program. The Master Gardener training will be held in Chanute starting Sept. 17 and will last for seven consecutive Fridays. The Master Gardener program is a volunteer program in which K-State Research and Extension “trades” classroom training for volunteer time. I have personally taken the Master Gardener training and gained considerable...
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Six ways to help yourself stay sane in a crazy market
Chad A. Boaz, CRPC¬Æ Financial Advisor Keeping your cool can be hard to do when the market goes on one of its periodic roller-coaster rides. It’s useful to have strategies in place that prepare you both financially and psychologically to handle market volatility. Here are 11 ways to help keep yourself from making hasty decisions that could have a long-term impact on your ability to achieve your financial goals. 1. Have a game plan Having...
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Kansas AG has right idea
Can freedom of speech go too far? Probably not, but how many people believe the followers of Westboro Baptist Church should be allowed to disrupt funerals? A federal judge ruled Monday that Missouri laws restricting protests near funerals are unconstitutional. Missouri legislators passed two laws in 2006 in response to protests at service members’ funerals by members of the Topeka church. The church contends the deaths are God’s punishment...
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Schools here have definitely changed
My the schools in my old school system have changed. I walked or rode my bicycle to school nearly everyday from K-9 as a kid in Chanute. I went to kindergarten at Murray Hill and then spent my grade school career at Lincoln Elementary. Of course there was the occasional wintertime ride — (no, my generation didn’t walk to and from school with snow up to our necks each way no matter what your parents tell you kids) — from mom, but mostly it ...
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