DODGE CITY GLOBE
Volume 112 | No. 154 To subscribe: 620-471-8001 $1.25 Visit us on Facebook at @DodgeCityGlobe If there are any local events in need of promotion please email whodgin@cherryroad.com.
Volume 112 | No. 154 To subscribe: 620-471-8001 $1.25 Visit us on Facebook at @DodgeCityGlobe If there are any local events in need of promotion please email whodgin@cherryroad.com.
United is pleased to announce the Kansas Soldiers’ Home (KSH) at Fort Dodge as the 2022 recipient of its annual holiday giving program. The KSH offers independent living, assisted living, and long-term care for over 80 veterans.
We all make some type of New Year’s resolution. We set goals for ourselves to eat healthier, lose weight, spend less time on our phones, exercise more, be more mindful – yada yada yada. Well, it doesn’t stop with just us. With all the unconditional love and joy pets bring us, an overwhelming number of pet parents also set New Year’s resolutions for their pets.
If you would have told me a year ago I would be sitting where I am today, I would not have believed you. But then Vince Marshall handed me the coolest job in town and got the hell out of Dodge City.
Emily N. Ibarra, 24, criminal trespass; possession of marijuana; possession of drugs; interference with LEO.
Jared Stevens, 1902 La Mesa, was the firstplace winner of the sixth annual Light Up Dodge City Holiday Lights contest. The contest, hosted by the Dodge City Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB), the Dodge City Area Chamber of Commerce, and the Dodge City Daily Globe, is a popular holiday tradition that rewards homeowners for their creativity and originality in holiday decorations.
Lawmakers said coaxing retired mental health care workers back into the field could be one way to mitigate the state’s mental health care worker shortage. A special committee of the Kansas Legislature recently met with mental health care institutions, including colleges, state agencies and the Kansas Board of Nursing to delve into the subject.
Legislators are almost certain to place the decline of the Ogallala Aquifer among their top priorities as the drought bearing down on Western Kansas hits the already depleted water supply. Every inch of Kansas is either abnormally dry or in a drought, according to the U.S.
During the 1960’s there was an oil boom in Morrow County, Ohio where we grew up, and either there were no regulations on anything or no one followed them, because oil rigs appeared on tiny podunk patches of ground barely big enough to contain the equipment, and the drilling rigs were so thick and close together, that at night the countryside looked like the Emerald City. A company drilled a well on our place and told dad they hit oil, but one morning we awoke to find everything gone, oil tank and oil included, without him every seeing a cent. The area was left a mess, with lengths of oil well pipe, huge wooden timbers and chunks of steel cable laying everywhere in the weeds.
In the summer of 1972 Dodge City men had a “brush” with greatness. Well, maybe just their faces did.