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General Mills to drop artificial ingredients from your cereal

NEW YORK (AP) — General Mills is dropping artificial colors and flavors from its cereals, the latest company to respond to a growing desire for food made with ingredients people see as natural.

The company said Monday that Trix and Reese’s Puffs will be among the first cereals to undergo the changes. The Minneapolis company says cereals like Lucky Charms that have marshmallows may take longer to reformulate. It says 90 percent of its cereals will have no artificial ingredients by the end of 2016.

A range of food companies including Subway, Pizza Hut, Panera, Hershey and Nestle have said in recent months that they’re removing artificial ingredients from some or all products. Companies say the changes are a response to a demand for food made with ingredients people can recognize.

Tickets on sale July 1 for 86th annual Kansas Biggest Rodeo

Cole Elshere jjj photo kbr 14
Saddle bronc rider Cole Elshere competes at the 2014 Kansas Biggest Rodeo. This year’s rodeo, the 86th annual, is July 30-August 1. Photo by JJJ Photos.

PHILLIPSBURG — Tickets go on sale July 1 for one of the most anticipated events in Phillips County.

The 86th annual Kansas Biggest Rodeo takes place at the rodeo grounds north of town on July 30 to Aug. 1, and Heritage Insurance in Phillipsburg will have tickets for sale beginning July 1.

This year’s rodeo features rodeo clown Gizmo McCracken, the bucking horses and bulls of Beutler and Son Rodeo co., announcer Randy Corley, and bullfighters Dusty Tuckness and Aaron Ferguson. Cowboy Kenny and the Steel Rodeo Tour returns with their brand of freestyle motocross to finish off every night of rodeo.

For one of the rodeo committee members, volunteering with the rodeo goes back to his childhood.

J.D. Shelton grew up in Stockton and moved to Phillipsburg when he was in the eighth grade. He remembers his dad, Dale, an electrician, working for the rodeo. In the early days, the rodeo was held in the afternoons because there were no arena lights. Under the direction of Wally Sullivan, secretary of the rodeo for many years, lights were installed by Dale Shelton. Dale dug the trenches, and J.D. and his brother hand-filled them around the electrical work. The first night performances of Kansas Biggest Rodeo took place in 1964.

J.D. also remembers helping his dad wire the portable stage that was set up for the celebrity who used to perform after the rodeo. Phillipsburg hosted the likes of Fess Parker, star of television’s “Daniel Boone,” Kevin Curtis from “Gunsmoke,”, country music star Lynn Anderson, and others.

J.D. has been on the rodeo committee for fourteen years, and it’s something he and the other committee members enjoy doing. “The guys are really dedicated, and get no pay,” for being on the committee, he said. The rodeo is “the number one attraction Phillipsburg has. It’s the highlight of the whole year for the county.” His son Jared is also on the rodeo committee.

Reserved seating tickets for the rodeo are $15 for adults and $11 for children ages 3-12. General admission tickets are $13 for adults and $10 for children. The Heritage Insurance office is open from 8 am to 5 pm each day, and closed for the lunch hour, from noon to 1 pm.

The rodeo begins at 8 pm each night, July 30-31-August 1. For more information, visit the rodeo’s website at KansasBiggestRodeo.com or, on Facebook, search for “ksbiggestrodeo”.

HAWVER: Tax vote an early look at 2016 re-election campaigns

martin hawver line art

The election—the important one, for Republican candidates for the Kansas House and Senate in August 2016—is just starting to heat up.

No, not many candidate filings yet, no radio and Internet commercials or those little brochures stuck in the screen door—but that election is starting right now.

Reason? It’s that of the 97 Republicans in the Kansas House and the 32 Republicans in the Senate, the governor-approved tax package this session just passed by one vote in each chamber. That means 34 of those current House Republicans didn’t vote for the governor’s tax plan; 11 Senate Republicans didn’t, either. (No Democrats voted for the package.)

Hmmm…

That can’t be good for a governor who is just one year into his second and final term in office. It means, of course, that the Republican Party of Kansas can brag about its overwhelming majorities, but the titular leader of that party, Gov. Sam Brownback, doesn’t have the solid, stable legislature that he wants to enact…well, whatever he has left on his gubernatorial bucket list.

Lawmakers are, for Brownback’s purposes, sorta like a dog that won’t heel when you tell it to.

So, while there is still a legislative session left before August 2016, plans are probably starting now to prune out those legislators who campaigned under the Republican party label, but didn’t line up to vote for the governor’s tax package. They become the problem, and for Brownback’s purposes, might just as well have been Democrats, or children or illegal aliens or something else.

Practically, in most House and Senate districts in Kansas, because a majority of Kansans are registered as Republican voters, once you get the GOP nomination for the general election ballot, chances are good that you will get to spend winters in Topeka. That’s just the numbers.

So, for the governor, it is time to sort out the Republicans in the Legislature, and the governor is good at it. Look at the Kansas Senate in 2012, when Brownback and political and financial backers pruned the State Senate of most moderate Republicans and boosted the GOP majority to a near-record 32 members.

But the conservative shift in that election didn’t give the governor the certainty of passage of everything he could think up, and while he was involved in the House elections last August and November on behalf of Republicans, he was…how do you say it…distracted by his own reelection campaign.

For 2016, the governor has little to do except to dabble in the House and Senate primary elections and the general election.

So, that sorting has started: Which legislators are keepers and which need to be thrown back into the stream of the general public?

For moderate Republicans, this year’s tax votes show that they are close—with the help of Democrats, of course—to the majorities needed to repeal some of the conservative/Brownback inspired legislation passed this year and last.

But, that comes down to those pesky voters, the ones who, having gone out to lunch or were on vacation during the primary, just look for the letter behind a candidate’s name in November.

While Brownback and crew are pruning, voters might want to read those brochures, those e-mails and such, and identify that there are conservative and moderate Republicans, and maybe figure out where they personally stand. There’s R, of course, and then there’s R-squared.

And Democrats? They’ll benefit from Republican angst, when voters can’t decide whether the GOP candidate is too liberal, too conservative, or just about right. Ever think Republican-dominated Kansas would come to the time when voters might have to consider a Democrat vote the “safe” vote in determining where the government goes? It might get there next election cycle…

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com.

Brownback wants more highway patrol officers

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback says he wants to increase the number of highway patrol troopers on the state’s roads.

His comments come as the patrol is working with its lowest staffing levels since 2005, when the patrol had 487 troopers.

Patrol spokesman Lt. Adam Winters says as of Friday, the patrol currently has 399 troopers.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that at the end of last year, the patrol had no troopers assigned to 21 counties, and another 34 counties had only one trooper.

When the governor was asked last week what areas of state government should get increased funding, he specifically mentioned the highway patrol but offered no specifics.

Carl Jr. Klitzke

Carl Jr. Klitzke, age 88, died Thursday, June 18, 2015, at Grisell Memorial Hospital, Ransom, KS. He was born June 15, 1927 to Carl “Bud” and Reva (Holmes) Klitzke in Ness County Kansas.

He attended Ransom High School and joined the Navy his senior year. He married Vivian Horschem on Nov. 20, 1947, in Ransom. They lived on the farm until 1965 when he built Vivian her dream home in town. In 1989, they moved to Apache Junction, AZ, and later relocated to Sun City, AZ.

He was a U.S. Navy veteran who served in World War II. He was a farmer and spent 25 years in public service as the mayor of Ransom and on the school board. He was also an electrician and proud business owner of Klitzke TV and Appliance store in Ransom.

Carl was an avid card player, reader and lifelong outdoorsman, and when he wasn’t found fishing or hunting, he enjoyed panning for gold. Other hobbies included collecting antique guns, Depression glass and jewelry making. He loved to make things grow and often gave neighbors a bucket of fruit.

He was passionate about sports and spent his life attending his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren’s games.

Survivors include his children Steve Klitzke, Hays, KS; Jeb Klitzke and wife, Anna Mae, Ransom, KS; and Taa Schwieterman and husband, Omer, Syracuse, KS. Grandchildren include Tara Goering, husband, Brandon and children Kyler Meyers, Blade and Sage Goering, Hays, KS; Jon Kuhn, Wichita, KS; Tally Ann Klitzke, McPherson, KS; Chandra Barron and her husband, Winniberto, Great Bend, KS; Carl Schwieterman and children Maya and Gunner, Overland Park, KS; Carl Bryce Klitzke, wife, Valerie and children Myra, Luke and newborn Samuel, Pratt, KS; and Seth Schwieterman, wife, Janae and child Boston, Overland Park, KS.

He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife of 63 years, Vivian; his son, Jeff Klitzke and daughter-in-law, Elaine Klitzke.

Services will be held graveside at the Ransom Cemetery on Monday, June 22, 2015 at 10 a.m.

In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to Carl Klitzke Memorial Fund at First State Bank of Ransom.

Salina duplex fire under investigation

Sunday morning fire in Salina
Sunday morning fire in Salina

SALINA – A residential fire on Sunday morning in Salina remains under investigation.

Nobody was injured in the fire at a duplex in the 700 Block of Manchester Road according to Salina Fire Chief Roger Williams.

“The blaze did cause extensive damage to one side,” said Williams.

“The 734 side will need extensive interior remodeling,” he said.

“The other at 736 only suffered some minor smoke damage.”

One tenant was not home at the time of the fire. The other was able to escape without injury.

Williams said the cause of the fire was not able to be determined.

Patee surprised in Ellis with state ‘We-Kan’ award

Marci Penner, Kansas Sampler Foundation, surprises Dena Patee, Ellis Alliance Director, with the 2015 We Kan award.
Marci Penner, Kansas Sampler Foundation, surprised Dena Patee, Ellis Alliance Director, with the 2015 We Kan award Monday. (Photos courtesy Kansas Sampler Foundation)

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

ELLIS — “Only in a small town can you make a phone call and 14 people and 1 bulldog show up 12 minutes later for a ‘flash mob award ceremony.'”

Mari Penner and WenDee LaPlant, executive director and assistant director of the Kansas Sampler Foundation, were on the road last Monday–driving west on I-70 in their brightly colored ERV-Explorer Researcher Voyage–and made a phone call to clerk Margie Mickelson in the Ellis city office.

“We were 12 miles east of Ellis and asked Margie if she could put out the word to have residents gather within 15 minutes at Dena Patee’s office for a surprise award presentation,” Penner said.

Penner hides the award behind her back as she follows Ellis residents into the Ellis Alliance office.
Penner hides Patee’s award behind her back as she follows Ellis residents into the Ellis Alliance office.

Unknown to Patee, she had been selected for one of ten 2015 “We Kan” awards from the Kansas Sampler Foundation, which is based in Inman.

The mission of KSF is to preserve, sustain, and grow rural culture by educating Kansans about Kansas and by networking and supporting rural communities.

Patee is director of the Ellis Alliance, which coordinates economic development and chamber of commerce activities in the town.

“Dena has had so much passion for Ellis for many years,” Penner said, “which we see by our own observation and things we hear from other people. She’s doing everything out there for Ellis and it was time she be noticed and appreciated for that.”

Penner and LaPlant, surrounded by the 14 Ellis residents–including Mayor Dave McDaniel–presented Patee with the 2015 We Kan award for “Doing Everything, All Out.”

“There were a few red eyes,” Penner said. “It was really neat.”

The surprised Patee was in her office on Washington Avenue, along with her bull dog Junior, recuperating from Saturday’s Riverfest, while she counted proceeds from the annual community event and wrapped up her report.

patee dena and marci
Penner told Patee she’s “doing everything out there for Ellis and it was time you be noticed and appreciated for that.”

“Today was a great day!,” Patee wrote on her Facebook page. “Thank you to all those that came to support me and who work with me in our great little town!”

Most of the 2015 We Kan awards, made by Elk Falls (KS) Pottery, had already been presented to the recipients during the annual Kansas Sampler Festival, held May 6 and 7 this year in Wamego.

Penner and LaPlant handed out the remaining two awards in person as they journeyed west in ERV this week to Sherman, Thomas and Sheridan counties.

They were gathering research for an update to the 2005 “The Kansas Guidebook for Explorers,” which features every incorporated city in Kansas–all 626–and includes observations of the key elements in sustaining communities.

John L. Herl

Funeral services for longtime Wallace and Sherman County, Kansas, resident John L. Herl, 82, will be held Saturday, June 27, 10:00 AM MT at Herl Chevrolet, 2103 Enterprise Road, Goodland.

Interment will be at Goodland Cemetery.

Memorials to Shriners Hospitals for Children may be left at the service or mailed to Koons Funeral Home, 211 North Main, Goodland, KS 67735-1555.

Online condolences to www.koonsfuneralhome.com.

Charlotte Ann Mahin

Charlotte Ann Mahin, daughter of Paul and Clara (Huffman) Wolf was born on Dec 19, 1941 and passed away June 18, 2015 at the age of 73 years and 6 months.

She spent her childhood and growing up years on a farm near Quinter. She was baptized and became a member of the Old German Baptist Church on Oct 20, 1957 to which she dearly loved and remained faithful until death. She was anointed in March of 2014.

She was united in marriage to Dennis Mahin of Knob Noster Missouri on Oct 12, 1974. They enjoyed 40 years of married life together. Mother spent the first years of their married life working at Kansas/Nebraska Gas Co. in Quinter. They then moved to Knob Noster Missouri where they spent 5 years working on the Mahin family farm. They then moved back to Quinter, where she spent the remainder of her life. She spent some 20 years working at Gove County Medical Center as a custodian, nursery aid, and in the laundry department. She was respected and loved by her coworkers. Mother loved and appreciated others, and she strove to befriend and share with all those that she met. Mother lived an active life until October 2012, when she suffered an aneurism and a stroke. Her health continued to decline until her Savior called her home.

She is survived by her husband Dennis Mahin; daughter Janelle Bowman and husband Nathan; son Norman Mahin and wife Shelley; grandchildren Jack, Stewart, Reid Bowman and Allison and Leanna Mahin. She is also survived by many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents Paul and Clara Wolf; brother Eldon Wolf; brother-in-law David Bayer; Sister in law Mary Bayer; sister Violet Flora and husband Richard; and son in law Nathan Metzger.

She was loved and will be missed by those who knew her.

Funeral service will be 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, June 23, 2015 at Old German Baptist Brethren Church, Quinter. Burial will be in Big Creek Cemetery, Quinter.

Visitation will be Monday, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. and 5:00 to 8:00 p.m. at the funeral home.

Memorial contributions are suggested to Gove County Medical Center or Gove County Medical Center, Long Term Care. Checks made to the organization may be sent in care of Schmitt Funeral Home, 901 South Main, Quinter, KS 67752.

Condolences may be left online at www.schmittfuneral.com.

Connie B. Riggs

Connie B. Riggs, age 64, passed away Thursday, June 18, 2015 at Salina Regional Medical Center. She was born July 11, 1950, in Phillipsburg, to Oscar Lyle and Freda (Dalby) Luce.

Riggs, Connie Pic

Connie was a 1968 graduate of Trego Community High School, WaKeeney. On July 20, 1968, she was united in marriage to Leonard Riggs, in Quinter. They enjoyed 46 years of marriage together. Connie cherished her time with family, especially her grandchildren. She loved to grow flowers and vegetable in the garden. She was known throughout her family for her cooking skills. She and Leonard were known for their love of animals, large and small. Connie especially enjoyed her miniature horses and donkeys. She will be deeply missed by many.

Survivors include her husband; three children, Rachel Anne and husband Dennis Elsen of Beloit, Jennifer and husband Terry Cotton of Wichita, and Matthew and wife Donna of Wichita; six grandchildren, Haley, Brianna, and Lacy Elsen, Miranda and Tanner Cotton, and Dakota Riggs; two brothers, Ken Luce and wife Theresa of Oakley, and Jeff Luce of Europe. She was preceded in death by her parents.

Funeral services will be 10:30 a.m., Monday, June 22, 2015 at the United Methodist Church of Quinter. Burial will be in the Union Cemetery, Collyer.

Visitation will be Sunday, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. at the funeral home in Quinter.

Memorial contributions are suggested to the Connie Riggs Memorial Fund. Checks made to the fund may be sent in care of Schmitt Funeral Home, 901 South Main, Quinter, KS 67752.

Condolences may be sent to the family at www.schmittfuneral.com.

Attorney for suspect in 4 Kansas deaths wants trial moved

OTTAWA, Kan. (AP) — The attorney for a man charged with four deaths at a Kansas farm wants the trial moved to a different county.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports  the attorney for 30-year-old Kyle Flack of Ottawa has filed a motion to move the capital murder trial out of Franklin County.

Flack is charged with murder and rape after two men, a woman and her daughter were found dead near Ottawa in 2013. Flack has pleaded not guilty.

The motion for a change of venue contends Flack cannot get a fair trial in Franklin County because pretrial publicity has prejudiced potential jurors. The motion doesn’t name a preferred new site for the trial.

A motion hearing is scheduled June 30 to determine whether court documents sealed by judges should be unsealed.

Four-run seventh lifts Liberal past the Larks

A throwing error and a double led to a four-run seventh inning as the Liberal BeeJays rally past the Hays Larks 8-7 Sunday night at Brent Gould Field in Liberal.

The Larks led 7-4 before Derrick Mount’s throwing error scored two to pull the BeeJays within a run. A two-out double off DJ Carr scored the other two runs to give Liberal the lead.

Dan Hawk pitched two innings of relief, allowing four unearned runs and takes the loss.

RJ Williams went 3-for-3 with a home run and four runs scored.

The Larks have now dropped two straight and are two-games back of the BeeJays in the Jayhawk North. The two play Monday night in Liberal before the series shifts to Hays for games Tuesday and Wednesday.

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