Fatcow Icon
Cold or pollen?
by Rebecca Morris
Reporter
Photo/Submitted
Seasonal allergies can mirror many symptoms of the common cold, making sniffles and sneezes common sounds in fall.
Photo/Submitted Seasonal allergies can mirror many symptoms of the common cold, making sniffles and sneezes common sounds in fall.
slideshow

With its shifting temperatures, fall often brings sniffles, sneezes, sore throats and coughs. But what you think is a cold or sinusitis may actually be allergies.

Many people think allergies are a problem only in the spring and summer. But for some of the 36 million allergy sufferers nationwide, the time between late summer and the first hard frost is the “sneezing season.”

The main fall allergens are mold and ragweed, said Twin Lakes ENT Associates nurse practitioner Rowgena Cain, ARNP.

“Many people spend the fall suffering with symptoms like sneezing, nasal congestion, sinus pressure, postnasal drip, runny nose, and itchy, watery eyes,” Cain said. “They might experience these symptoms year-round, but many have symptoms that worsen during the spring and fall.”

Allergic rhinitis, often called hay fever, is caused by breathing in particles like pollens. Each ragweed plant can produce about a billion grains of a light, airy pollen which can be carried far by the wind. Researchers have determined that one square mile of ragweed plants can create an estimated 16 tons of pollen.

“When you’re allergic to ragweed and other plants, it means that your body’s immune system reacts to these harmless pollens as if they were harmful to the body,” said Cain, who works with local ear, nose and throat specialists Dr. Robert Knox and Dr. Anil Arora.

When the pollen is inhaled by someone who suffers from a ragweed allergy, it triggers the release of histamine, which causes inflammation in the nose, throat and eyes. Those with severe allergies also experience asthma attacks, chronic sinusitis, headaches, throat irritation and impaired sleep.

While ragweed levels are low now, they are expected to rise Sunday before falling again with Monday’s expected rains.

While there are no cures for allergies, there are ways to lessen the symptoms: avoiding the allergen, environmental controls, medication and immunotherapy, or shots.

The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America suggests avoidance as the best way to minimize pollen-related problems. Other tips include closing all windows and use a high efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filter, changing clothes after coming in contact with ragweed or even being outdoors on a windy day, and washing your hands often and avoiding touching your mouth or eyes.

Allergy sufferers can also use eye drops to help prevent pollens from sticking to the cornea and causing irritation, and showering before bed to help cut down on pollen-related symptom flares. Indoors, frequent dusting can help as well.

Recent rainfall, while needed to help ease the area’s drought, can also be triggering allergy problems in people sensative to mold.

“Fall is a big time for respiratory illness for two main reasons,” said Dr. Michael Gutman, medical director of New England Urgent Care. “For one, the kids are back to school and adults back to the office, so communicable diseases are being passed around more easily. Secondly, the change in weather does have an impact, in particular when you’re dealing with allergies.”

Many schools and offices are in older buildings and so mold spores and dust mites are more likely.

Seasonal allergies will typically first surface between ages 6 and 8. The severity of the allergic reactions such as ragweed may peak when people are in their 20s to 30s, and then may get worse again as folks are in their 70s and older. Also, the severity of the reaction can vary greatly from year to year.

“This is a result of the body’s maturation and also is very reliant on weather. If the ragweed season, for instance, is worse that year due to dry and breezy weather in the fall, than the allergy severity will be worse,” said Gutman.

And there’s often confusion regarding fall allergies versus a cold because their symptoms mimic each other. The symptoms of a cold are often characterized by runny nose, sore throat and cough. A distinguishing factor might be that in some upper respiratory infections, the patient will also have a fever and muscle aches.

One way to determine if your problems are allergy related is symptom reoccurrance, Cain said. Colds generally last seven to 10 days. If someone repeatedly has boughts of cold-like symptoms and doesn’t really ever seem to recover, he or she might have allergies.

Cain said patients with more severe symptoms can often benefit from allergy shots.

Patients can undergo allergy testing to identify what they are allergic to and the level of sensitivity they have to the specific allergen or allergens.

“From the test results, we can make allergy serum to use for allergy injections,” she said. “A patient will then be given injections to help decrease the immune system response to the allergens.”

Through the shots the immune system becomes less sensitive to the allergen, which can lead to a decrease in allergy symptoms over time. Cain adds, “This process can be used for a variety of allergens other than just pollen, including mold, dust, animal dander and some foods which cause allergic reactions in some people.”

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Traffic accident and house fire send several to hospital
Shortly after Leitchfield Firefighters were called to a four-vehicle accident on HWY 62, just wes...
Feb 22, 2012 | 0 0 comments | 114 114 recommendations | email to a friend
full story


News
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow
Matt Lasley
Matt Lasley
slideshow
Stephen G. Wortham
Jun 17, 2013 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Stephen G. Wortham, 64, passed away on June 3, 2013 at his home in Fern Creek, Kentucky.

He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and was a retired mechanic.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Daphna (Horn) Wortham; brothers Bill, Don, Richard and Larry Wortham and sister Marcella Durbin.

He is survived by his son Andrew (Ashley), grandson Braylen Wayne and sisters Barbara Overton and Bonnie (Arnold) Saltsman as well as numerous nieces and nephews and sister-in-law Linda Wortham.

Funeral services were held at Fern Creek Funeral Home on June 5, 2013. He was cremated.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Circle M celebrates ten years
by Matt Lasley
Reporter
Jun 17, 2013 | 1329 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow

Local business Circle M Automation celebrated its tenth anniversary last month.

Located at in Leitchfield, Circle M is a systems integrator, which designs and/or builds more efficient automation systems for other companies, according to Circle M Owner, Brian Manion.

“We’re a company that helps other companies improve,” Manion said.

Manion said customer companies may contact Circle M with an idea for an automation system and discuss whether Circle M can build the system.

Manion said another service Circle M provides is designing a system, selling the design to the customer, and either building the system or consulting with the customer on the best way for someone else to build it.

“We get involved in the stuff that you can’t go through a catalogue and buy,” Manion said.

For example, Circle M was recently tasked with building a custom crane system designed to lift and transport a Dodge Viper to a designated area to be given a visual inspection by robots.

Circle M were tasked to build the crane in such a way that in the act of moving the Dodge Viper, neither the car nor the robots would be damaged, Manion said.

“We built a system that is quicker, easier on the operator, and makes a better product,” Manion said.

Circle M’s work on the crane led the company to becoming a certified Gorbel crane dealer, Manion said.

Manion founded Circle M after he took a voluntary layoff from his ten-and-a-half-year tenure Leitchfield Leggett & Platt (L & P) plant.

Manion said during his time working with L & P, he felt he had learned enough about automation to start his own business and when it was announced that L & P would be laying off workers, he volunteered and took the opportunity to start Circle M.

Circle M’s decade in business has been a learning experience for its workers.

In its early years, Circle M did a great deal of business working with plastics, but the closing of Leitchfield Plastics forced Circle M to branch out into other areas, such as robotics and custom controls, Manion said.

“We really learned that you don’t need to have all your eggs in one basket,” he said. “You have to be flexible…and continuously be going after work and different customers and broadening your horizons.”

This flexibility, along with support from local government and the Leitchfield-Grayson County Industrial Development Corporation, has led to a currently prosperous business.

“From a small business standpoint, I feel very fortunate to work where I am,” Manion said. “We’ve started picking up bigger industries. And we’ve been really fortunate with retaining our customer base.

“I feel extremely extremely fortunate to be able to do what I want for a living,” Manion said. “I’m not very good at very many things, but I feel like I’m pretty good at this. And 90 to 95% of the time, we knock it out of the park.”

Circle M” Automation is located 176 Judge Kenneth H. Goff Drive and can be contacted by phone at 270-230-0877.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Virginia Artman Holland
Jun 17, 2013 | 67 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Virginia Artman Holland, age 86 of Leitchfield passed away Friday, June 14, 2013 at her residence. She was born November 8, 1926 in White Mills, KY the daughter of Ernest & Iva Pence Artman. She was a member of the Church of Christ and Leitchfield Women’s Club and was a 4-H Agent at the University of Kentucky.

 
She is survived by two daughters, Robin Down Peterson of Lexington and Jill Holland of Leitchfield, two sons, Tommy Holland of Atlanta, Ga & Jack Holland of Leitchfield, grandchildren, Samantha Butler, Ashley Kelly and Thomas Holland and one great grandchild, Logan Kelley.
 
Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Holland, and one sister, Clara McDowell.
 
Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 16, 2013 at the Watson & Hunt Funeral Chapel in Leitchfield with Bro. David Downs & Bro. Chester Shartzer officiating. Burial will be in the Leitchfield Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held after 4:00 p.m., on Saturday and from 9:00 a.m. until service time on Sunday at the funeral home.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More News
Sports
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow
Matt Lasley
Matt Lasley
slideshow
Stephen G. Wortham
Jun 17, 2013 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Stephen G. Wortham, 64, passed away on June 3, 2013 at his home in Fern Creek, Kentucky.

He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and was a retired mechanic.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Daphna (Horn) Wortham; brothers Bill, Don, Richard and Larry Wortham and sister Marcella Durbin.

He is survived by his son Andrew (Ashley), grandson Braylen Wayne and sisters Barbara Overton and Bonnie (Arnold) Saltsman as well as numerous nieces and nephews and sister-in-law Linda Wortham.

Funeral services were held at Fern Creek Funeral Home on June 5, 2013. He was cremated.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Circle M celebrates ten years
by Matt Lasley
Reporter
Jun 17, 2013 | 1329 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow

Local business Circle M Automation celebrated its tenth anniversary last month.

Located at in Leitchfield, Circle M is a systems integrator, which designs and/or builds more efficient automation systems for other companies, according to Circle M Owner, Brian Manion.

“We’re a company that helps other companies improve,” Manion said.

Manion said customer companies may contact Circle M with an idea for an automation system and discuss whether Circle M can build the system.

Manion said another service Circle M provides is designing a system, selling the design to the customer, and either building the system or consulting with the customer on the best way for someone else to build it.

“We get involved in the stuff that you can’t go through a catalogue and buy,” Manion said.

For example, Circle M was recently tasked with building a custom crane system designed to lift and transport a Dodge Viper to a designated area to be given a visual inspection by robots.

Circle M were tasked to build the crane in such a way that in the act of moving the Dodge Viper, neither the car nor the robots would be damaged, Manion said.

“We built a system that is quicker, easier on the operator, and makes a better product,” Manion said.

Circle M’s work on the crane led the company to becoming a certified Gorbel crane dealer, Manion said.

Manion founded Circle M after he took a voluntary layoff from his ten-and-a-half-year tenure Leitchfield Leggett & Platt (L & P) plant.

Manion said during his time working with L & P, he felt he had learned enough about automation to start his own business and when it was announced that L & P would be laying off workers, he volunteered and took the opportunity to start Circle M.

Circle M’s decade in business has been a learning experience for its workers.

In its early years, Circle M did a great deal of business working with plastics, but the closing of Leitchfield Plastics forced Circle M to branch out into other areas, such as robotics and custom controls, Manion said.

“We really learned that you don’t need to have all your eggs in one basket,” he said. “You have to be flexible…and continuously be going after work and different customers and broadening your horizons.”

This flexibility, along with support from local government and the Leitchfield-Grayson County Industrial Development Corporation, has led to a currently prosperous business.

“From a small business standpoint, I feel very fortunate to work where I am,” Manion said. “We’ve started picking up bigger industries. And we’ve been really fortunate with retaining our customer base.

“I feel extremely extremely fortunate to be able to do what I want for a living,” Manion said. “I’m not very good at very many things, but I feel like I’m pretty good at this. And 90 to 95% of the time, we knock it out of the park.”

Circle M” Automation is located 176 Judge Kenneth H. Goff Drive and can be contacted by phone at 270-230-0877.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Virginia Artman Holland
Jun 17, 2013 | 67 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Virginia Artman Holland, age 86 of Leitchfield passed away Friday, June 14, 2013 at her residence. She was born November 8, 1926 in White Mills, KY the daughter of Ernest & Iva Pence Artman. She was a member of the Church of Christ and Leitchfield Women’s Club and was a 4-H Agent at the University of Kentucky.

 
She is survived by two daughters, Robin Down Peterson of Lexington and Jill Holland of Leitchfield, two sons, Tommy Holland of Atlanta, Ga & Jack Holland of Leitchfield, grandchildren, Samantha Butler, Ashley Kelly and Thomas Holland and one great grandchild, Logan Kelley.
 
Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Holland, and one sister, Clara McDowell.
 
Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 16, 2013 at the Watson & Hunt Funeral Chapel in Leitchfield with Bro. David Downs & Bro. Chester Shartzer officiating. Burial will be in the Leitchfield Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held after 4:00 p.m., on Saturday and from 9:00 a.m. until service time on Sunday at the funeral home.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More Sports
Opinion
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow
Matt Lasley
Matt Lasley
slideshow
Stephen G. Wortham
Jun 17, 2013 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Stephen G. Wortham, 64, passed away on June 3, 2013 at his home in Fern Creek, Kentucky.

He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and was a retired mechanic.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Daphna (Horn) Wortham; brothers Bill, Don, Richard and Larry Wortham and sister Marcella Durbin.

He is survived by his son Andrew (Ashley), grandson Braylen Wayne and sisters Barbara Overton and Bonnie (Arnold) Saltsman as well as numerous nieces and nephews and sister-in-law Linda Wortham.

Funeral services were held at Fern Creek Funeral Home on June 5, 2013. He was cremated.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Circle M celebrates ten years
by Matt Lasley
Reporter
Jun 17, 2013 | 1329 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow

Local business Circle M Automation celebrated its tenth anniversary last month.

Located at in Leitchfield, Circle M is a systems integrator, which designs and/or builds more efficient automation systems for other companies, according to Circle M Owner, Brian Manion.

“We’re a company that helps other companies improve,” Manion said.

Manion said customer companies may contact Circle M with an idea for an automation system and discuss whether Circle M can build the system.

Manion said another service Circle M provides is designing a system, selling the design to the customer, and either building the system or consulting with the customer on the best way for someone else to build it.

“We get involved in the stuff that you can’t go through a catalogue and buy,” Manion said.

For example, Circle M was recently tasked with building a custom crane system designed to lift and transport a Dodge Viper to a designated area to be given a visual inspection by robots.

Circle M were tasked to build the crane in such a way that in the act of moving the Dodge Viper, neither the car nor the robots would be damaged, Manion said.

“We built a system that is quicker, easier on the operator, and makes a better product,” Manion said.

Circle M’s work on the crane led the company to becoming a certified Gorbel crane dealer, Manion said.

Manion founded Circle M after he took a voluntary layoff from his ten-and-a-half-year tenure Leitchfield Leggett & Platt (L & P) plant.

Manion said during his time working with L & P, he felt he had learned enough about automation to start his own business and when it was announced that L & P would be laying off workers, he volunteered and took the opportunity to start Circle M.

Circle M’s decade in business has been a learning experience for its workers.

In its early years, Circle M did a great deal of business working with plastics, but the closing of Leitchfield Plastics forced Circle M to branch out into other areas, such as robotics and custom controls, Manion said.

“We really learned that you don’t need to have all your eggs in one basket,” he said. “You have to be flexible…and continuously be going after work and different customers and broadening your horizons.”

This flexibility, along with support from local government and the Leitchfield-Grayson County Industrial Development Corporation, has led to a currently prosperous business.

“From a small business standpoint, I feel very fortunate to work where I am,” Manion said. “We’ve started picking up bigger industries. And we’ve been really fortunate with retaining our customer base.

“I feel extremely extremely fortunate to be able to do what I want for a living,” Manion said. “I’m not very good at very many things, but I feel like I’m pretty good at this. And 90 to 95% of the time, we knock it out of the park.”

Circle M” Automation is located 176 Judge Kenneth H. Goff Drive and can be contacted by phone at 270-230-0877.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Virginia Artman Holland
Jun 17, 2013 | 67 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Virginia Artman Holland, age 86 of Leitchfield passed away Friday, June 14, 2013 at her residence. She was born November 8, 1926 in White Mills, KY the daughter of Ernest & Iva Pence Artman. She was a member of the Church of Christ and Leitchfield Women’s Club and was a 4-H Agent at the University of Kentucky.

 
She is survived by two daughters, Robin Down Peterson of Lexington and Jill Holland of Leitchfield, two sons, Tommy Holland of Atlanta, Ga & Jack Holland of Leitchfield, grandchildren, Samantha Butler, Ashley Kelly and Thomas Holland and one great grandchild, Logan Kelley.
 
Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Holland, and one sister, Clara McDowell.
 
Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 16, 2013 at the Watson & Hunt Funeral Chapel in Leitchfield with Bro. David Downs & Bro. Chester Shartzer officiating. Burial will be in the Leitchfield Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held after 4:00 p.m., on Saturday and from 9:00 a.m. until service time on Sunday at the funeral home.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More Opinion
Weather
Sponsored By:

RSS Feeds
All articles feed
News feed
Sports feed
Videos feed
Obituaries feed
Opinion feed
Local Features
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow
Matt Lasley
Matt Lasley
slideshow
Stephen G. Wortham
Jun 17, 2013 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Stephen G. Wortham, 64, passed away on June 3, 2013 at his home in Fern Creek, Kentucky.

He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and was a retired mechanic.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Daphna (Horn) Wortham; brothers Bill, Don, Richard and Larry Wortham and sister Marcella Durbin.

He is survived by his son Andrew (Ashley), grandson Braylen Wayne and sisters Barbara Overton and Bonnie (Arnold) Saltsman as well as numerous nieces and nephews and sister-in-law Linda Wortham.

Funeral services were held at Fern Creek Funeral Home on June 5, 2013. He was cremated.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Circle M celebrates ten years
by Matt Lasley
Reporter
Jun 17, 2013 | 1329 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow

Local business Circle M Automation celebrated its tenth anniversary last month.

Located at in Leitchfield, Circle M is a systems integrator, which designs and/or builds more efficient automation systems for other companies, according to Circle M Owner, Brian Manion.

“We’re a company that helps other companies improve,” Manion said.

Manion said customer companies may contact Circle M with an idea for an automation system and discuss whether Circle M can build the system.

Manion said another service Circle M provides is designing a system, selling the design to the customer, and either building the system or consulting with the customer on the best way for someone else to build it.

“We get involved in the stuff that you can’t go through a catalogue and buy,” Manion said.

For example, Circle M was recently tasked with building a custom crane system designed to lift and transport a Dodge Viper to a designated area to be given a visual inspection by robots.

Circle M were tasked to build the crane in such a way that in the act of moving the Dodge Viper, neither the car nor the robots would be damaged, Manion said.

“We built a system that is quicker, easier on the operator, and makes a better product,” Manion said.

Circle M’s work on the crane led the company to becoming a certified Gorbel crane dealer, Manion said.

Manion founded Circle M after he took a voluntary layoff from his ten-and-a-half-year tenure Leitchfield Leggett & Platt (L & P) plant.

Manion said during his time working with L & P, he felt he had learned enough about automation to start his own business and when it was announced that L & P would be laying off workers, he volunteered and took the opportunity to start Circle M.

Circle M’s decade in business has been a learning experience for its workers.

In its early years, Circle M did a great deal of business working with plastics, but the closing of Leitchfield Plastics forced Circle M to branch out into other areas, such as robotics and custom controls, Manion said.

“We really learned that you don’t need to have all your eggs in one basket,” he said. “You have to be flexible…and continuously be going after work and different customers and broadening your horizons.”

This flexibility, along with support from local government and the Leitchfield-Grayson County Industrial Development Corporation, has led to a currently prosperous business.

“From a small business standpoint, I feel very fortunate to work where I am,” Manion said. “We’ve started picking up bigger industries. And we’ve been really fortunate with retaining our customer base.

“I feel extremely extremely fortunate to be able to do what I want for a living,” Manion said. “I’m not very good at very many things, but I feel like I’m pretty good at this. And 90 to 95% of the time, we knock it out of the park.”

Circle M” Automation is located 176 Judge Kenneth H. Goff Drive and can be contacted by phone at 270-230-0877.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Virginia Artman Holland
Jun 17, 2013 | 67 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Virginia Artman Holland, age 86 of Leitchfield passed away Friday, June 14, 2013 at her residence. She was born November 8, 1926 in White Mills, KY the daughter of Ernest & Iva Pence Artman. She was a member of the Church of Christ and Leitchfield Women’s Club and was a 4-H Agent at the University of Kentucky.

 
She is survived by two daughters, Robin Down Peterson of Lexington and Jill Holland of Leitchfield, two sons, Tommy Holland of Atlanta, Ga & Jack Holland of Leitchfield, grandchildren, Samantha Butler, Ashley Kelly and Thomas Holland and one great grandchild, Logan Kelley.
 
Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Holland, and one sister, Clara McDowell.
 
Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 16, 2013 at the Watson & Hunt Funeral Chapel in Leitchfield with Bro. David Downs & Bro. Chester Shartzer officiating. Burial will be in the Leitchfield Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held after 4:00 p.m., on Saturday and from 9:00 a.m. until service time on Sunday at the funeral home.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Read More Local Features
Poll
Sponsored By:

Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow
Matt Lasley
Matt Lasley
slideshow
Stephen G. Wortham
Jun 17, 2013 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Stephen G. Wortham, 64, passed away on June 3, 2013 at his home in Fern Creek, Kentucky.

He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and was a retired mechanic.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Daphna (Horn) Wortham; brothers Bill, Don, Richard and Larry Wortham and sister Marcella Durbin.

He is survived by his son Andrew (Ashley), grandson Braylen Wayne and sisters Barbara Overton and Bonnie (Arnold) Saltsman as well as numerous nieces and nephews and sister-in-law Linda Wortham.

Funeral services were held at Fern Creek Funeral Home on June 5, 2013. He was cremated.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Circle M celebrates ten years
by Matt Lasley
Reporter
Jun 17, 2013 | 1329 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow

Local business Circle M Automation celebrated its tenth anniversary last month.

Located at in Leitchfield, Circle M is a systems integrator, which designs and/or builds more efficient automation systems for other companies, according to Circle M Owner, Brian Manion.

“We’re a company that helps other companies improve,” Manion said.

Manion said customer companies may contact Circle M with an idea for an automation system and discuss whether Circle M can build the system.

Manion said another service Circle M provides is designing a system, selling the design to the customer, and either building the system or consulting with the customer on the best way for someone else to build it.

“We get involved in the stuff that you can’t go through a catalogue and buy,” Manion said.

For example, Circle M was recently tasked with building a custom crane system designed to lift and transport a Dodge Viper to a designated area to be given a visual inspection by robots.

Circle M were tasked to build the crane in such a way that in the act of moving the Dodge Viper, neither the car nor the robots would be damaged, Manion said.

“We built a system that is quicker, easier on the operator, and makes a better product,” Manion said.

Circle M’s work on the crane led the company to becoming a certified Gorbel crane dealer, Manion said.

Manion founded Circle M after he took a voluntary layoff from his ten-and-a-half-year tenure Leitchfield Leggett & Platt (L & P) plant.

Manion said during his time working with L & P, he felt he had learned enough about automation to start his own business and when it was announced that L & P would be laying off workers, he volunteered and took the opportunity to start Circle M.

Circle M’s decade in business has been a learning experience for its workers.

In its early years, Circle M did a great deal of business working with plastics, but the closing of Leitchfield Plastics forced Circle M to branch out into other areas, such as robotics and custom controls, Manion said.

“We really learned that you don’t need to have all your eggs in one basket,” he said. “You have to be flexible…and continuously be going after work and different customers and broadening your horizons.”

This flexibility, along with support from local government and the Leitchfield-Grayson County Industrial Development Corporation, has led to a currently prosperous business.

“From a small business standpoint, I feel very fortunate to work where I am,” Manion said. “We’ve started picking up bigger industries. And we’ve been really fortunate with retaining our customer base.

“I feel extremely extremely fortunate to be able to do what I want for a living,” Manion said. “I’m not very good at very many things, but I feel like I’m pretty good at this. And 90 to 95% of the time, we knock it out of the park.”

Circle M” Automation is located 176 Judge Kenneth H. Goff Drive and can be contacted by phone at 270-230-0877.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Virginia Artman Holland
Jun 17, 2013 | 67 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Virginia Artman Holland, age 86 of Leitchfield passed away Friday, June 14, 2013 at her residence. She was born November 8, 1926 in White Mills, KY the daughter of Ernest & Iva Pence Artman. She was a member of the Church of Christ and Leitchfield Women’s Club and was a 4-H Agent at the University of Kentucky.

 
She is survived by two daughters, Robin Down Peterson of Lexington and Jill Holland of Leitchfield, two sons, Tommy Holland of Atlanta, Ga & Jack Holland of Leitchfield, grandchildren, Samantha Butler, Ashley Kelly and Thomas Holland and one great grandchild, Logan Kelley.
 
Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Holland, and one sister, Clara McDowell.
 
Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 16, 2013 at the Watson & Hunt Funeral Chapel in Leitchfield with Bro. David Downs & Bro. Chester Shartzer officiating. Burial will be in the Leitchfield Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held after 4:00 p.m., on Saturday and from 9:00 a.m. until service time on Sunday at the funeral home.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
View Previous Polls
Special Sections
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow
Matt Lasley
Matt Lasley
slideshow
Stephen G. Wortham
Jun 17, 2013 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Stephen G. Wortham, 64, passed away on June 3, 2013 at his home in Fern Creek, Kentucky.

He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and was a retired mechanic.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Daphna (Horn) Wortham; brothers Bill, Don, Richard and Larry Wortham and sister Marcella Durbin.

He is survived by his son Andrew (Ashley), grandson Braylen Wayne and sisters Barbara Overton and Bonnie (Arnold) Saltsman as well as numerous nieces and nephews and sister-in-law Linda Wortham.

Funeral services were held at Fern Creek Funeral Home on June 5, 2013. He was cremated.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Circle M celebrates ten years
by Matt Lasley
Reporter
Jun 17, 2013 | 1329 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow

Local business Circle M Automation celebrated its tenth anniversary last month.

Located at in Leitchfield, Circle M is a systems integrator, which designs and/or builds more efficient automation systems for other companies, according to Circle M Owner, Brian Manion.

“We’re a company that helps other companies improve,” Manion said.

Manion said customer companies may contact Circle M with an idea for an automation system and discuss whether Circle M can build the system.

Manion said another service Circle M provides is designing a system, selling the design to the customer, and either building the system or consulting with the customer on the best way for someone else to build it.

“We get involved in the stuff that you can’t go through a catalogue and buy,” Manion said.

For example, Circle M was recently tasked with building a custom crane system designed to lift and transport a Dodge Viper to a designated area to be given a visual inspection by robots.

Circle M were tasked to build the crane in such a way that in the act of moving the Dodge Viper, neither the car nor the robots would be damaged, Manion said.

“We built a system that is quicker, easier on the operator, and makes a better product,” Manion said.

Circle M’s work on the crane led the company to becoming a certified Gorbel crane dealer, Manion said.

Manion founded Circle M after he took a voluntary layoff from his ten-and-a-half-year tenure Leitchfield Leggett & Platt (L & P) plant.

Manion said during his time working with L & P, he felt he had learned enough about automation to start his own business and when it was announced that L & P would be laying off workers, he volunteered and took the opportunity to start Circle M.

Circle M’s decade in business has been a learning experience for its workers.

In its early years, Circle M did a great deal of business working with plastics, but the closing of Leitchfield Plastics forced Circle M to branch out into other areas, such as robotics and custom controls, Manion said.

“We really learned that you don’t need to have all your eggs in one basket,” he said. “You have to be flexible…and continuously be going after work and different customers and broadening your horizons.”

This flexibility, along with support from local government and the Leitchfield-Grayson County Industrial Development Corporation, has led to a currently prosperous business.

“From a small business standpoint, I feel very fortunate to work where I am,” Manion said. “We’ve started picking up bigger industries. And we’ve been really fortunate with retaining our customer base.

“I feel extremely extremely fortunate to be able to do what I want for a living,” Manion said. “I’m not very good at very many things, but I feel like I’m pretty good at this. And 90 to 95% of the time, we knock it out of the park.”

Circle M” Automation is located 176 Judge Kenneth H. Goff Drive and can be contacted by phone at 270-230-0877.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Virginia Artman Holland
Jun 17, 2013 | 67 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Virginia Artman Holland, age 86 of Leitchfield passed away Friday, June 14, 2013 at her residence. She was born November 8, 1926 in White Mills, KY the daughter of Ernest & Iva Pence Artman. She was a member of the Church of Christ and Leitchfield Women’s Club and was a 4-H Agent at the University of Kentucky.

 
She is survived by two daughters, Robin Down Peterson of Lexington and Jill Holland of Leitchfield, two sons, Tommy Holland of Atlanta, Ga & Jack Holland of Leitchfield, grandchildren, Samantha Butler, Ashley Kelly and Thomas Holland and one great grandchild, Logan Kelley.
 
Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Holland, and one sister, Clara McDowell.
 
Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 16, 2013 at the Watson & Hunt Funeral Chapel in Leitchfield with Bro. David Downs & Bro. Chester Shartzer officiating. Burial will be in the Leitchfield Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held after 4:00 p.m., on Saturday and from 9:00 a.m. until service time on Sunday at the funeral home.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow
Matt Lasley
Matt Lasley
slideshow
Stephen G. Wortham
Jun 17, 2013 | 80 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Stephen G. Wortham, 64, passed away on June 3, 2013 at his home in Fern Creek, Kentucky.

He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years and was a retired mechanic.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank and Daphna (Horn) Wortham; brothers Bill, Don, Richard and Larry Wortham and sister Marcella Durbin.

He is survived by his son Andrew (Ashley), grandson Braylen Wayne and sisters Barbara Overton and Bonnie (Arnold) Saltsman as well as numerous nieces and nephews and sister-in-law Linda Wortham.

Funeral services were held at Fern Creek Funeral Home on June 5, 2013. He was cremated.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Circle M celebrates ten years
by Matt Lasley
Reporter
Jun 17, 2013 | 1329 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette
Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
Theresa Armstrong | News-Gazette Leitchfield business Circle M Automation, owned by Brian Manion (front, holding scissors), recently celebrated its tenth year in business with an open house alongside numerous City and County officials.
slideshow

Local business Circle M Automation celebrated its tenth anniversary last month.

Located at in Leitchfield, Circle M is a systems integrator, which designs and/or builds more efficient automation systems for other companies, according to Circle M Owner, Brian Manion.

“We’re a company that helps other companies improve,” Manion said.

Manion said customer companies may contact Circle M with an idea for an automation system and discuss whether Circle M can build the system.

Manion said another service Circle M provides is designing a system, selling the design to the customer, and either building the system or consulting with the customer on the best way for someone else to build it.

“We get involved in the stuff that you can’t go through a catalogue and buy,” Manion said.

For example, Circle M was recently tasked with building a custom crane system designed to lift and transport a Dodge Viper to a designated area to be given a visual inspection by robots.

Circle M were tasked to build the crane in such a way that in the act of moving the Dodge Viper, neither the car nor the robots would be damaged, Manion said.

“We built a system that is quicker, easier on the operator, and makes a better product,” Manion said.

Circle M’s work on the crane led the company to becoming a certified Gorbel crane dealer, Manion said.

Manion founded Circle M after he took a voluntary layoff from his ten-and-a-half-year tenure Leitchfield Leggett & Platt (L & P) plant.

Manion said during his time working with L & P, he felt he had learned enough about automation to start his own business and when it was announced that L & P would be laying off workers, he volunteered and took the opportunity to start Circle M.

Circle M’s decade in business has been a learning experience for its workers.

In its early years, Circle M did a great deal of business working with plastics, but the closing of Leitchfield Plastics forced Circle M to branch out into other areas, such as robotics and custom controls, Manion said.

“We really learned that you don’t need to have all your eggs in one basket,” he said. “You have to be flexible…and continuously be going after work and different customers and broadening your horizons.”

This flexibility, along with support from local government and the Leitchfield-Grayson County Industrial Development Corporation, has led to a currently prosperous business.

“From a small business standpoint, I feel very fortunate to work where I am,” Manion said. “We’ve started picking up bigger industries. And we’ve been really fortunate with retaining our customer base.

“I feel extremely extremely fortunate to be able to do what I want for a living,” Manion said. “I’m not very good at very many things, but I feel like I’m pretty good at this. And 90 to 95% of the time, we knock it out of the park.”

Circle M” Automation is located 176 Judge Kenneth H. Goff Drive and can be contacted by phone at 270-230-0877.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Virginia Artman Holland
Jun 17, 2013 | 67 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Virginia Artman Holland, age 86 of Leitchfield passed away Friday, June 14, 2013 at her residence. She was born November 8, 1926 in White Mills, KY the daughter of Ernest & Iva Pence Artman. She was a member of the Church of Christ and Leitchfield Women’s Club and was a 4-H Agent at the University of Kentucky.

 
She is survived by two daughters, Robin Down Peterson of Lexington and Jill Holland of Leitchfield, two sons, Tommy Holland of Atlanta, Ga & Jack Holland of Leitchfield, grandchildren, Samantha Butler, Ashley Kelly and Thomas Holland and one great grandchild, Logan Kelley.
 
Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Holland, and one sister, Clara McDowell.
 
Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 16, 2013 at the Watson & Hunt Funeral Chapel in Leitchfield with Bro. David Downs & Bro. Chester Shartzer officiating. Burial will be in the Leitchfield Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held after 4:00 p.m., on Saturday and from 9:00 a.m. until service time on Sunday at the funeral home.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet