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Charitable causes announce collaboration for Nov. 21 events

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Hays Area Children’s Center

In the true spirit of holiday giving, two charitable causes are pleased to announce they will be combining fundraising efforts.

On Saturday, Nov. 21, Hays will play host to both The Emerald Ball, a premier gala for Parkinson’s disease awareness, as well as Bright Lights for Little Tykes holiday HACC_Logoauction, a long-time fundraiser for Hays Area Children’s Center.

Neither charity sees an issue. In fact, they see it as an opportunity to work together.

Representatives from the Emerald Ball and Hays Area Children’s Center discussed several possibilities that included changing the date. The Emerald Ball planning committee intends to change the date for next year’s event. However, for this year, both parties concluded while their causes were different, they shared a common bond and a collaborative approach would be the ideal option.

“Among its many services, Hays Area Children’s Center assists children with disabilities. The Emerald Ball is an event that hopes to bring awareness to Parkinson’s disease,” said J. Basil Dannebohm, chairman of the Emerald Foundation. “The sad reality is that disability knows no age, it can strike at any time, though it’s far more tragic when it affects a child.”

Dannebohm, along with Dr. Mirta M. Martin, President of Fort Hays State University, will serve as the honorary event hosts of The Emerald Ball, slated to take place at 6:30 p.m. at the Schmidt-Bickle Training Center on the FHSU campus. Wichita television personality Sierra Scott will emcee the gala. Scott will be joined on stage by Jenn Bates, co-anchor of KWCH Eyewitness News This Morning. Frankie Valens, who shot to fame in the 1960s and enjoyed hits with “This Magic Moment” and “The Lion Sleeps Tonight,” will perform during the event alongside Ron Neuman and the Diamonds Vocal Band. The Diamonds launched to fame in 1956 with their first hit “Why do Fools Fall in Love,” followed by 15 more Top Hits that sold more than 16 million copies including “Little Darlin,” “The Stroll” and “Silhouettes.”

The evening will include a social, silent and live auctions, dinner, and a dance.

The Hays Area Children’s Center suggested providing several items to the live auction portion of The Emerald Ball. Proceeds from those items would support HACC programs and services. These items will include decorated Christmas trees, vacation packages and fine art.

“The auction was the ideal avenue for collaboration,” Dannebohm said.

“We are extremely grateful for the opportunity to partner with another worthy cause, and truly appreciate the generosity of The Emerald Ball organizers,” said Susan Bowles, executive director of Hays Area Children’s Center. “Though our agencies have different missions, we share a common thread of seeking to improve quality of life for people of all ages who are learning to cope with physical or cognitive difficulties.”

Bright Lights for Little Tykes holiday auction will be held at 6 p.m. at the Rose Garden Banquet Hall, 2350 E. Eighth. A $50 ticket includes a bidding number for a live and silent auction, dinner and cocktails.

Hays Area Children’s Center is a non-profit agency in Hays that offers early education services, as well as early intervention supports for young children with developmental delays and disabilities. This program, including special education, therapy and health services, is offered at no cost to families in local communities. Bright Lights for Little Tykes, formerly known as Christmas Tree Auction, has been the agency’s primary fundraiser for nearly 30 years.

“Our staff and the families we serve are grateful for the long-standing support of our local community,” said Bowles.

Tickets for Bright Lights for Little Tykes went on sale Sept. 1. To reserve tickets, contact HACC at (785) 625-3257 or email [email protected].

Tickets for The Emerald Ball are on sale now and can be purchased by visiting the event’s website at www.myemerald.org.

US offers $10 million in grants for railroad crossing fixes

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — U.S. transportation officials will offer $10 million in grants for states to upgrade highway-rail crossings and tracks in response to a recent surge in flammable fuel shipments.

Wednesday’s planned announcement from the Department of Transportation comes as rail crossing collisions have increased over the past several years, following more than three decades of steady declines.

There were more than 2,200 collisions in 2014, killing 269 people and injuring 849.

Almost 40 percent of the fatalities occurred in just five states — California, Illinois, Texas, Alabama and Louisiana.

Acting Federal Railroad Administrator Sarah Feinberg says most rail crossing deaths are preventable.

The grants would pay for improvements along rail routes that transport flammable fuels. Shipments of crude oil and ethanol increased dramatically over the past decade before energy prices plummeted.

Now That’s Rural: Loren Kisby, Prohoe

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development

Let’s go to California, where firefighters are battling a wildfire with high quality hand tools produced by a company halfway across the nation in rural Kansas. These hand tools are also serving gardeners, growers and others around the nation and beyond.

Loren Kisby is owner and founder of Prohoe, the company which produced these remarkable tools. Loren grew up at Clifton and went to K-State. He became a teacher, served in the Army, and worked in business before farming. He also met and married Judy through their sisters who went on a church trip together.

Loren and Judy moved to a farm near Munden in Republic County and had two children. As their family grew, their farmhouse needed to expand also. Loren hand-dug a trench for an addition to their house – but then it rained, and the trench caved in.

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Loren looked at the muddy mess and realized he needed a special tool to clean out the mud. He welded a chunk of broken disk blade onto a metal handle to make the tool. It worked great.

He tossed the tool in the junk pile when he was done, but while doing fieldwork, he needed something to clean the mud off his farm implements. He fished the tool out of the junk pile again.

After five years of doing this, he noticed that the handle was bent but the blade looked like new. He realized such a durable tool could have several applications.

In 1990, he built a prototype garden hoe to give to family members for Christmas. The hoes worked so well that he started making them as a business. This professional hoe was heavy duty and durable, so he named his company Prohoe for short. He named his product Rogue.

“Rogue has two meanings,” Loren said. “It means someone who’s fierce and independent, like a rogue elephant, but in raising seed corn, for example, it means taking out the weeds and uneven plants so you get a great field of corn. These hoes have great strength and are also great for cleaning up a field.”

The reason these hoe blades are so strong is that they are made from the “recycled” disk blades of a farmer’s implement. These disk blades are made to withstand tough field conditions. Growers and gardeners loved them. Loren expanded the business.

He started making Rogue hoes in an empty chicken house on the family farm. In 1993, the grade school in Munden closed. Loren purchased the building and “recycled” it into the location for Prohoe. “We moved the business into the old school,” Loren said. “Of course, the business was only me, and it kind of echoed in there.”

Loren credits the Small Business Development Center for providing key help to his business. Business students from K-State helped with his early marketing plans.

Prohoe continues to make high quality, durable hand tools for outdoor applications. The company has reached an agreement with the City of Munden to purchase and “recycle” the soon-to-be-replaced community center. This will double the production area for the company’s 14 employees.

“We listened to our customers very carefully and developed products in response to customer needs,” Loren said. In addition to garden hoes, the company now offers field hoes, scuffle hoes, collinear hoes, scrapers, and fire tools with various lengths and types of handles. “We have 45 different models, but when you add in all the different handle lengths and types of handles, there are 134 different tools that we can make.”

Recent growth has come in demand for Prohoe’s firefighting and trailbuilding tools along with online orders. Prohoe has sold products from Washington to Florida, Canada and England. This is quite an accomplishment for a company in rural Munden, Kansas, population 119 people. Now, that’s rural.

For more information, go to www.prohoe.com.

It’s time to leave California where firefighters are using a tool from halfway across the continent in Kansas. We salute Loren Kisby and all those involved with Prohoe for making a difference with entrepreneurship and hard work. These tools will definitely come in handy.

Sewer line repair will limit parking on Main Street

Beginning Wednesday, there will be no parking allowed on either side of the street on Main Street between Sixth and Seventh streets due to repairs to the sewer line.

Cones will be set up to reroute traffic around the construction site. The work should be completed by Friday, Sept. 11.

For more information, call the city at (785) 628-7380.

Garden City zoo’s elephants moving to Colorado

GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — Two elephants will be moving from the Garden City zoo to Colorado.

The Garden City Commission voted Tuesday to move the elephants, Missy and Kimba, to the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

A zoo committee recommended that the aging elephants be moved so they can have a better social life and become part of another elephant herd before one of them dies. They will join four other female African elephants in Colorado.

The committee said the Colorado zoo also has stable financing and leadership.

KWCH reports http://bit.ly/1Krx266 ) Missy, who is 46, is among the oldest elephants in an American Zoological Association facility. Kimba is 33. The two have been together for more than 30 years.

No transfer date has been set.

Wednesday the first of six early release days for USD 489

Hays USD 489

USD 489 will have six early release days for the 2015-2016 school year that will allow teachers to have time for collaboration and professional development. Lunch will be served to students on these days.

USD 489

Students will be dismissed at 1 p.m. on early release days. The following are the scheduled early release days:

• Sept. 2
• Oct. 7
• Nov. 4
• Feb. 3
• March 2
• April 6

In an effort to accommodate students and families on those early release days, USD #489 has made the following arrangements at each of the schools:

Hays High School
Students will be told to exit the building. Bussing will begin at 1 p.m. Athletic practices will be scheduled at their regular after school time. Students should report back to the school then. Call the school with any questions regarding early release days at (785) 623-2600.

Hays Middle School
Students will be told to exit the building. Bussing will begin at 1 p.m. Parents can call Hays Middle School to make arrangements for after school care on Sept. 2. After-school care will begin at 1 p.m and end at 3:15 p.m. — $8.00 per student, with a snack provided. Call the school with any questions regarding early release days at (785) 623-2450.

Elementary schools
Bussing will begin at 1 p.m. Each elementary school will have the after-school program on early release days. The after-school programs will start as soon as the students are released, with the normal ending time still in effect. The cost for the program on these days will be $12 per school. Contact your school with after-school program questions.

Lincoln: (785) 623-2500
O’Loughlin: (785) 623-2510
Roosevelt: (785) 623-2520
Wilson: (785) 623-2550

HPD Activity Log Sept. 1

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hpd actvity log sponsor hess bittel fletcher

The Hays Police Department responded to 9 traffic stops and 7 animal calls Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2015, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Mental Health Call–500 block W 36th St, Hays; 1:26 AM;
Burglary/vehicle–600 block E 6th St, Hays; 8/31 10:18 PM; 10:20 PM
Criminal Damage to Property–200 block E 6th St, Hays; 8/31 10 PM; 10:10 PM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–900 block Fort St, Hays; 7:16 AM; 7:15 AM
Animal At Large–29th and Walnut St, Hays; 7:31 AM
Abandoned Vehicle–1900 block Fort St, Hays; 8 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–200 block E 6th St, Hays; 10:20 AM
Criminal Damage to Property–100 block E 15th St, Hays; 10:56 AM
Animal At Large–400 block W 14th St, Hays; 11:03 AM
Tethering Violation–1300 block Eisenhower Rd, Hays; 1:31 PM
Animal At Large–700 block Elm St, Hays; 3:46 PM
Assist – Other (not MV)–1000 block Fort St, Hays; 4:24 PM
Abandoned Vehicle– 100 block E 22nd St, Hays; 4:56 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–27th and Vine, Hays; 5:45 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–1000 block E 27TH ST, Hays; 5:52 PM
Driving While Suspended/Revoked–200 block W 8th St, Hays; 10:48 PM
Credit Card Violations–200 block W 10th St, Hays; 10:50 PM

City of Hays alters trash collection for Labor Day weekend

Due to the observance of the Labor Day holiday on Monday, the city of Hays refuse/recycling route collection schedules will be altered as follows:

• Monday and Tuesday routes will be collected on Tuesday.

• There will be no changes to Wednesday, Thursday or Friday routes.

Customers with questions should call (785) 628-7357.

It is anticipated that heavy volumes of refuse/recyclable will be encountered around the holidays. Be sure to set bags out by 7 a.m. on the collection day and keep in mind that the trucks have no set time schedule.

Eleanor Heier

Eleanor Heier, 81 of Colby, passed away Tuesday Sept. 1, 2015.

Arrangements are pending with Schmitt Funeral Home in Quinter.

Dodge City residents suspected in string of Hays shoplifting incidents

hpd patch BIGBy JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

Two Dodge City women were arrested over the weekend in connection with a number of thefts at Hays retailers.

According to the Hays Police Department, Roberta Toya Gonzalez, 43, and Angie Pilar Parra, 30, both of Dodge City, were arrested and a juvenile was taken into custody Sunday evening at Hastings Entertainment after they were identified in a string of shoplifting incidents at the entertainment store.

HPD Lt. Brandon Wright said at 6:13 p.m. Sunday employees from Hastings reported the women, who had had been identified as suspects in previous thefts at the store, were in the store.

The women had been identified on security cameras on multiple occasions, and the police department is investigating five more cases they believe are connected.

The initial estimated value of the items stole from Hasting was $1,700, according to Wright.

During a search of the suspect’s vehicle, officers reportedly found a significant amount of stolen items, valued at more than $1,800, that allegedly had been taken from eight other retailers in Hays.

Following the arrest, the juvenile was handed over to a relative.

“Hastings themselves made it happen,” Wright said. “They have been watching, (and) these people were on their radar.”

Officers continue to investigate similar cases they believe could be linked.

 

 

HHS volleyball opens season with a pair of wins

The 9th-ranked Hays High volleyball team opened their season with a pair of wins Thursday in Larned. The Indians defeated Larned 25-13, 25-15 then knocked off La Crosse 27-25, 25-19.

The first match against Larned, Tessa Stickel had 6 kills and Audra Schmeidler had 4 kills. Schmeidler added 4 serving aces. Albany Schaffer led the way with 12 digs. Kylie Brown added 3 blocks and Taylor Groen-Younger had 11 assists.
The second match against Lacrosse, Tessa Stickel again led the way with 10 kills. Kylie Brown followed with 8. Taylor Groen-Younger recorded 17 assists and Albany Schaffer had 2 service aces and 14 digs.
The Indians are off until September 10th when they travel to Dodge City.

 

TMP-Marian volleyball sweeps opener

The 3rd-ranked TMP-Marian volleyball teams opened their season with a pair of wins at the Trego triangular. The Monarchs defeated Stockton 25-17, 25-21 in their opener then knocked off host Trego 25-17, 25-11 in their second match.

Savannah Yost and Kayla Vitztum both had 11 kills on the day. Vitztum and Ashley Ostrander each recorded six service aces. Bailey Hagemen led the team with 14 digs.

The Monarchs are back in action Thursday in Abilene.

Police: 4 Kan. teens arrested after chase in stolen pickup

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Police have arrested four teenage boys after a pickup was stolen and authorities were led on a chase.

The Wichita Eagle reports a man was told by a family member around 7 a.m. Monday that his pickup and a revolver had been stolen several hours earlier.

According to Lt. James Espinoza, Wichita police spotted the stolen vehicle around 11:50 a.m. and were in pursuit until the chase ended in Bel Aire.

Bel Aire Police Chief Darrell Atteberry said the pickup was spotted again, prompting another chase.

Police say one of the boys jumped out of the moving vehicle, but was apprehended by a K-9 unit.

The other three boys, ages 14, 15, and 16, were taken into custody.

The teens face charges of burglary and theft.

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