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Largest industry, Kan. ag develops collaborative growth strategy

kansas-ag-growth-logo-bannerKDA

MANHATTAN — From workforce development to increased market access to research and development of new technologies and products, agriculture is primed for growth. Based on direct input and collaboration with hundreds of Kansas agricultural leaders, the Kansas Department of Agriculture has compiled and summarized industry feedback into desired growth outcomes for 19 specific sectors of the industry. The outcomes document has now been published on the Kansas Department of Agriculture website, agriculture.ks.gov/GrowAg, along with documents providing expanded background information for each of the 19 agricultural sectors.

“At every stage of this project, we have been pleased with the enthusiasm, initiative and spirit of cooperation shown by agricultural leaders throughout the state, who are eager to work together to enhance an environment for growth in Kansas,” said Secretary of Agriculture Jackie McClaskey. “It comes as no surprise to us that the farmers, ranchers, and agricultural business leaders of Kansas understand the need to look to the future in strategic ways to create short-term and long-term expansion of our state’s agriculture industry.”

The Kansas Agricultural Growth Strategy project has been coordinated by KDA, with participation by more than 500 agricultural stakeholders. This project is a direct response to the call to action issued at the August 2015 meeting of the Governor’s Council of Economic Advisors hosted by KDA. A highlight of the project was the inaugural Kansas Governor’s Summit on Agricultural Growth, which was held in Manhattan in August 2016. The Summit brought together nearly 400 leaders from across industry sectors under one roof to talk about barriers, challenges, opportunities, growth goals and next steps.

Input from the Summit, as well as from smaller meetings both before and after the event, led to the identification of desired industry outcomes, which can be found at the Ag Growth website. These documents are not intended to represent the opinions and priorities of the state government, but as a compilation of feedback from agricultural stakeholders which will now serve as a guidance document for private, public and academic partners to work together to grow the agricultural industry.

“Growing the Kansas economy is a top priority, and to grow the Kansas economy the agriculture industry must grow,” said Governor Sam Brownback. “I appreciate the commitment of everyone across the state who has worked on this agricultural growth project and I look forward to seeing their progress in the future.” Agriculture is Kansas’ largest industry and economic driver, contributing $64 billion to the Kansas economy, and employing nearly 13 percent of the Kansas workforce.

Individual action plans for each outcome have been developed by members of the KDA Growth Team in consultation with industry partners, and will be used to track progress of the strategic growth project.

The industry will gather once again this summer for the second annual Governor’s Summit on Agricultural Growth on Thursday, Aug. 24, 2017, to evaluate progress on the actions plans and to identify next steps for the Kansas agriculture industry. Information on the Summit will be posted as it becomes available at agriculture.ks.gov/summit.

Man pleads guilty to murder during Graham Co. trial

Bobby J. Tallent-photo Norton police

HILL CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man has pleaded guilty midway through his trial to killing a man in a western Kansas park and shooting at pursuing law enforcement officers.

Bobby Tallent, 39, admitted Wednesday to reduced charges of second-degree murder, attempted second-degree murder and other related charges. Jurors heard four days of testimony, but Tallent entered the plea before they began their deliberations.

Tallent was previously charged with first-degree murder in the March 2016 shooting death of Joseph Sweet in a city park in Norton. He arrested near the Nebraska border after a chase.

Tallent’s trial was moved to Hill City after a mistrial was declared in October when a Nebraska television station aired footage of people in the jury pool.

Sentencing is set for May 1.

Kan. woman accused of battering infant, illegal child care

Hatfield-photo Johnson Co.

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A 25-year-old Kansas woman has been accused of battery of an infant and running an unlicensed child care facility.

The Kansas City Star reports that Paige E. Hatfield of Olathe was charged Wednesday with one count each of aggravated battery and unlawfully running a child care facility without the proper license.

Hatfield is accused of critically injuring an infant who was less than 6 months old on Jan. 30. She allegedly unlawfully operated the child care facility from Jan. 1 through Feb. 3.

Hatfield was released from the Johnson County jail on a $25,000 bond Wednesday evening. She’s scheduled to appear in court March 10.

The Latest: Kansas governor calls for school choice measures

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Latest on a Kansas Supreme Court ruling on public school funding (all times local):

5:15 p.m.

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback is calling on legislators to enact school choice measures in response to a state Supreme Court ruling directing the state to increase its spending on public schools.

The conservative Republican governor said in a statement Thursday that the GOP-controlled Legislature has an opportunity to engage in what he called “transformative educational reform.”

Brownback said lawmakers should write a new school funding formula that puts students first and focuses on performance.

But he added that the state should give parents of struggling students a greater say over their children’s education. He said if parents do not believe a public school is best, they should have the resources to make other choices.

The governor was not more specific about what school choice measures he advocates.

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Several parents say they’re pleased with a Kansas Supreme Court ruling that directs the state to increase spending on its public schools.

Taunia Ross from the Kansas City suburb of Olathe said Thursday that additional state dollars would improve schools and parents would not have to pay as much in fees. She is the mother of four children aged 8 to 22.

Angie Sutton of Ottawa in eastern Kansas said legislators “absolutely” should be spending more on schools. She’s the mother of a 9-year-old and a 12-year-old.

In Wichita, community activist Djuan Wash pointed to the court’s finding that a significant percentage of minority students aren’t proficient in reading and math. Wash says such problems help create a cycle of poverty. Wash is the father of a 9-year-old daughter.

4:20 p.m.

Kansas’ attorney general says a state Supreme Court ruling suggests that lawmakers should concentrate on helping underperforming students by boosting spending on public schools.

Attorney General Derek Schmidt called Thursday for a “bold legislative response” to comply with the court’s order in a lawsuit filed by four school districts against the state in 2010.

The high court said the state’s funding for public schools is not adequate but did not say how much more lawmakers must provide.

In its decision, the court noted that about a quarter of the state’s students aren’t proficient in reading and math with higher percentages for minorities.

Schmidt said such a statement implies that underperforming students should be lawmakers’ main focus in crafting a new school funding formula before the court’s June 30 deadline.

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12:10 p.m.

Attorneys for four Kansas school districts that are suing the state to increase school funding say the state Supreme Court’s new ruling will require a funding boost of at least $800 million per year.

The Kansas Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the state isn’t spending enough money on its schools to provide a suitable education to every child, which the state constitution requires. The justices did not set a specific figure for how much more the state must spend a year.

Attorneys Alan Rupe and John Robb say the ruling suggests that the increase must be sizeable because it affirmed a lower court panel’s findings that spending was inadequate.

Rupe and Robb represent the Dodge City, Hutchinson, Wichita and Kansas City, Kansas, districts. They used the state in 2010.

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11:15 a.m.

The Kansas Supreme Court has ordered the state to increase its spending on public schools, but it didn’t say by how much.  Read the court decision here.

The court ruled Thursday that legislators must enact a new education funding law by the end of June.

The decision comes with the state already facing projected budget shortfalls totaling more than $1 billion through June 2019. Lawmakers are considering rolling back steep income tax cuts championed by Republican Gov. Sam Brownback.

The justices ruled in a lawsuit filed by four school districts in 2010. They argued that legislators were violating the state constitution by failing to finance a suitable education for each of the state’s 458,000 students.

The districts argued for an $800 million increase in the state’s $4.1 billion in annual aid.

 

 

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is preparing to rule on whether the state is spending enough money on its public schools to provide a suitable education for every child.

The court announced that it would issue a decision Thursday morning in a lawsuit filed in 2010 by four school districts. The districts have argued that the nearly $4.1 billion a year the state provides in aid to its 286 school districts about $800 million a year short of what’s necessary.

Previous rulings in the same lawsuit forced legislators and Republican Gov. Sam Brownback to boost aid to poor districts.

The decision comes with the state facing projected budget shortfalls totaling more than $1 billion through June 2019. Lawmakers already are considering rolling back past income tax cuts championed by Brownback.

UPDATE: Building in Aggieville fire a total loss

Large fire in Aggieville -Photo Manhattan Fire Dept.

MANHATTAN – Officials are still working to determine the cause of Thursday morning’s fire in Aggieville.

Just before 4a.m. the Manhattan Fire Department was dispatched to 700 N. Manhattan Avenue previously the Dusty Bookshelf, for a report of a structure fire. 

Upon arrival, crews found a two-story commercial structure with heavy smoke showing from the east end of the building, according to a media release from the Manhattan Fire Department.

 

Crews initiated an interior attack but after multiple attempts were unsuccessful at extinguishing the fire. With conditions worsening, the decision was made to transition to a defensive attack fighting the fire from outside the building. The fire reached a second alarm before it was contained within approximately three hours. A total of 30 firefighters responded on 7 fire apparatus with units still on scene at the time of this release. 

 

No injuries have been reported. One cat was rescued from a neighboring business.

The building was a two-story commercial building that was under a building permit, with the name of the new business being Co-op. The building is considered a total loss. 

The owner is listed as Sherilyn and Roger Bender of Sunrise Beach, Mo. 

 

There is also smoke damage to Varsity Donuts, 704 N. Manhattan, and Thread, 1224 Moro St. Both businesses are currently closed. 

 

The intersection of North Manhattan and Moro is also closed until further notice.

The fire cause is under investigation at this time. The Manhattan Fire Department, Riley County Police Department, Kansas Office of the State Marshal Fire (OSFM), and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) will conducting a joint investigation.

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Crews have extinguished a fire that heavily damaged one building and caused smoke damage to two others in the Aggieville bar and shopping district near the Kansas State University campus.

Deputy Manhattan Fire Chief Ryan Almes says the fire was reported around 3:45 a.m. Thursday in a building that had housed a bookstore called the Dusty Bookshelf and was being renovated. Almes says dangerous conditions inside the building forced firefighters to exit the building. He says 30 firefighters then fought the blaze from outside the building before extinguishing it around 8 a.m. No one was hurt.

The fire also caused smoke damage to adjoining businesses that sell doughnuts and T-shirts. A cat was rescued from one of the businesses.

The state fire marshal’s office will help investigate the fire’s cause.

 

MANHATTAN – The Kansas State Fire Marshal’s office is helping investigate the cause of Thursday’s  fire in the Aggieville bar and shopping district near the Kansas State University campus.

The Manhattan Fire Department said in a post early Thursday on its Facebook page that the fire was in a building that had housed a bookstore called the Dusty Bookshelf. The building was vacant and being renovated. .

No information was immediately available about what started the fire.

Riley County police are urging people to avoid the popular area.

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RILEY COUNTY- Crews are working a large, 2 alarm structure fire in 700 Block of Manhattan Street in the Aggieville bar and shopping district just east of the Kansas State University campus in Manhattan, according to a social media report from the Manhattan Fire Department.

The fire was reported just after 4 a.m.

 

 Check the Post for more information as it becomes available.

Police: 2 Kan. community college athletes jailed for allegedly selling drugs

Sean Taborsky-photo BCCC Athletics

BARTON COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating two college athletes on drug charges.

Just after 4p.m. Wednesday, officers from the Great Bend Police Department obtained a search warrant for a residence at 1123 Stone Street, Apartment A, based on information indicating that drugs were being sold from this location, according to a media release from police.

When officers knocked on the door and announced that they had a search warrant, the individuals inside refused to come to the door. Officers forced open the door and secured the individuals found inside.

Baker-photo BCCC Athletics

During the execution of the search warrant, officers found evidence that a large quantity of marijuana had been flushed down a toilet in the house. The quantity of product flushed was enough that it had actually clogged the toilet.

Devon Baker, age 19, and Sean Taborsky, age 19, both students at Barton Community College from Wichita were arrested and turned over to the Barton County Jail. They are on the school’s wrestling team, according to the college web site.

They were both charged with Possession of Marijuana and Interference with a Law Enforcement Officer.

A third person, Tyrone Poole, age 19, was also on scene during the execution of the warrant, but was released on scene.

Carley M. Day

screen-shot-2017-03-02-at-12-09-40-pmCarley M. Day, 82, died Feb. 28, 2017, at Via Christi St. Francis Regional Medical Center, Wichita. She was born April 4, 1934, at Prague, Okla., the daughter of Charles E. and Helen (Coleman) Smith. She married Edwin Harold Day June 20, 1952, at Prague, Okla. He died Aug. 9, 2010. A Great Bend resident since 1954, coming from Stillwater, Okla., Mrs. Day was the long-time manager of Howard’s Apparel.

Mrs. Day was a member of Central Baptist Church and an active member of the American Baptist Women’s Group.

Survivors include one son, Michael Day and his wife Joan of Pratt; son-in-law, Edd Jackson of Great Bend; three brothers, Bob Smith and his wife Regina, Jerry Smith and his wife Sharon and Sam Smith and his wife Linda, all of Prague, Okla; three sisters, Joyce Ellison and her husband Gene, Frances Simek and her husband T. J. and Sue Schima, all of Prague; five grandchildren, Chris Short and his wife Jennifer of Andover, Daylin Short of Lakewood, Colo., Jeff Jackson and his wife Alexandra of Olpe, Amanda Day of Hays, and Shanda Day of Wichita; and eight great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by one daughter, Pamela Jackson, and two sisters, Mary Ann Gregory and Mindy Calger.

Funeral services will be at 10 a.m., Saturday, March 4, 2017, at Central Baptist Church in Great Bend, with the Rev. David Walters and Pastor John Grummon officiating. Burial will be in Great Bend Cemetery. Friends may call from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., with the family receiving friends from 6 to 8 p.m., Friday, March 3, 2017, at Bryant Funeral Home. Memorials have been established with Central Baptist Church, in care of Bryant Funeral Home.

UPDATE: Kansas clerk shot by murder suspect improving

Alex Deaton courtesy of Ellsworth County Sheriff’s Office

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The condition of a Kansas convenience store clerk has been upgraded after police say he was shot by a fugitive charged with two Mississippi killings.

A spokeswoman for Via Christi Hospital in Wichita says the man was in fair condition Thursday. He was listed in critical condition after being shot Wednesday in Pratt as officers searched for the suspect, 28-year-old Alex Deaton.

Police say Deaton stole a vehicle after shooting the clerk. Deaton was arrested when the vehicle crashed about 80 miles away.

The clerk’s family has identified him as 19-year-old Riley Juel. His sister tells Wichita television station KSNW that her brother was able to call police and his mother after being wounded to tell them what happened.

Deaton also is suspected of killing his girlfriend and another woman in Mississippi, and kidnapping two hikers in New Mexico.

3:30 p.m.

A convenience store clerk in Kansas is in critical condition after police say he was shot by a fugitive charged with two murders in Mississippi.

Maria Loving, a spokeswoman for Via Christi Hospital in Wichita, says the clerk is in critical condition Wednesday but she could not release the man’s name.

Authorities say the man was shot Wednesday in Pratt as officers were searching for 28-year-old Alex Deaton. Pratt Police Sgt. Edward Gimpel said Deaton was being chased in a stolen car when he went into a Kwik Shop, shot the clerk and stole a vehicle. Deaton was later arrested when the vehicle car crashed in Ellsworth County.

Mississippi authorities have charged Deaton in the death last week of his girlfriend and the shooting death

Scene of Wednesday’s crash-photo courtesy KHP

of another woman at a rural Mississippi church. He’s also suspected of other crimes in Mississippi and New Mexico.

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Noon

Mississippi authorities say they will seek extradition of a fugitive who left a nearly 2,000-mile trail of violence that ended in a fiery crash Wednesday in central Kansas.

Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey told reporters that Kansas authorities have agreed to hand over 28-year-old Alex Bridges Deaton, who is suspected of strangling his girlfriend last week in a suburb of Mississippi’s capital city. Deaton is then believed to have shot a jogger from the SUV he stole from the girlfriend, and officials say he may have also killed a woman at a rural Mississippi church.

Bailey says Deaton sent a series of texts, some incriminating, to friends and family before he went silent Saturday. He resurfaced Tuesday, with New Mexico authorities saying he carjacked and briefly abducted two hikers. Kansas authorities say he shot a store clerk in that state and stole another vehicle, before being captured following a chase.

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10:45 a.m.

Authorities have arrested a man suspected of shooting a Kansas convenience store clerk and kidnapping two hikers in New Mexico while on the run after his girlfriend was killed and a jogger was shot in Mississippi.

Kansas Highway Patrol trooper Tod Hileman said in a tweet that 28-year-old Alex Bridges Deaton was taken into custody Wednesday near the town of Wilson, about 80 miles from where the clerk was shot.

Kansas authorities began pursuing Deaton because he was driving a vehicle reported stolen in New Mexico. Kansas investigators say the suspect ditched the vehicle before shooting the clerk and stealing another vehicle. Hileman says Deaton was arrested after his vehicle crashed and caught fire.

Authorities were seeking Deaton in the death of 30-year-old Heather Robinson. Mississippi officials also consider him a suspect in the shooting death of a woman found dead at a rural church.

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Deaton-photo Mississippi Bureau of Investigation

ELLSWORTH COUNTY–  A suspect wanted for a Wednesday morning shooting in Pratt County is in custody after a chase and crash in Ellsworth County.

Just before 8a.m. on Wednesday, a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper attempted to stop an eastbound black Cadillac on Interstate 70 just west of Bunker Hill Road, according to a media release from the KHP.

The vehicle matched the description of a vehicle included in an attempt to locate after a shooting at a convenience store in Pratt early Wednesday.

The suspect, Alex Deaton, 28, was wanted for the incident in Pratt County.  He refused to stop the vehicle and deputies successfully deployed stop sticks.  The driver took the Wilson exit and drove a mile south to the town of Wilson.  Troopers used tactical vehicle intervention to prevent Deaton and the vehicle from entering the community.

Officers caught Deaton after the Cadillac crashed and caught on fire. There were no injuries to officers or Deaton.

He faces charges through multiple county courts in Kansas and is also wanted for a double-murder in Mississippi and other crimes in multiple states including kidnapping two hikers in New Mexico while on the run after his girlfriend was killed and a jogger was shot in Mississippi.

———–

ELLSWORTH COUNTY–  The wanted suspect who allegedly shot a convenience store clerk Wednesday morning in Pratt County was arrested in Ellsworth County after a chase, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.

The KHP is expected to release addition details later on Wednesday.

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PRATT COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Pratt County are investigating a shooting and stolen vehicle after officers engaged in a pursuit involving a vehicle that had been reported stolen from a location in New Mexico.

The vehicle was later abandoned by the suspect, who fled on foot to a convenience store located on the west side of Pratt, according to a media release from Pratt County Sheriff’s Department.

The suspect entered the store where he shot a clerk before stealing a vehicle from the parking lot. The stolen vehicle is described as a black, Cadillac CTS bearing Kansas license plate 013JVR.

The suspect in this case has been tentatively identified as 28-year-old Alex Bridges Deaton.

He is wanted for a homicide in Mississippi and a robbery and shooting in New Mexico.

Any who sees either the black Cadillac or Deaton is urged to contact law enforcement immediately.

Do no approach or make contact as Deaton is deemed armed and extremely dangerous.

INSIGHT KANSAS: Diverting from the ‘glidepath to zero’

Undoubtedly many informed Kansans were upset by events in the Kansas Capitol last week. Deliberating at nearly the speed of prairie lightning, the Kansas House and Senate had considered and passed, by nearly veto-proof margins, tax legislation which made progress toward resolving the structural deficit that has disordered the state’s finances for the past four years.

Dr. Mark Peterson
Dr. Mark Peterson

They accomplished this in a little over four weeks – laying it on the governor’s desk just in time for him to pan the effort before a friendly Kansas Chamber of Commerce audience. There he gave progressives the raspberry for even thinking he would deny his signature program, added a little tease (“I will not sign this bill”) that suggested it might become law without his signature, and then threw the work of moderate Republican and Democratic legislators (HB2178) into the ash bin with an early morning veto on February 21st – 29 days into the session.

Should Brownback opponents despair? Partisan leaders in both the Kansas House and Senate have shown themselves able “to give peace a chance.” House Speaker, Ron Ryckman, Jr., and less enthusiastically, Senate President Susan Wagle, appear intent upon resolving the tax problem with bipartisan support. Indeed they must try again, and perhaps embrace a better product. There is no alternative to finding a structural fix to the fiscal crisis confronting Kansas, and HB2178, good as it was, still came up short of a complete solution.

Without the return of the tax on LLC pass-through profits and reinstatement of a third income tax bracket Kansas has no humane and effective means of covering the ongoing, and rising disparity between revenue and expected state spending. In the coming fiscal year the gap may reach a half-billion dollars, and go on climbing given existing spending commitments and the state’s predicted economic and demographic trends. HB2178 gets the problem about half fixed which still means that an additional $350 – 450 million in cuts or revenue have to be found for the years after Fiscal 2018. The governor’s proposals for increased consumption taxes, more one time cash round-ups, deferring pension obligations and another daylight robbery of the Kansas Bank of KDOT have been scorned by progressives and conservatives alike.

The House mustered a veto override majority in response to the governor’s veto. As the senate override failed, Senator Wagle remained above the fray expressing hope for significant spending reductions in the state budget to reduce the need for increased revenue. In the past, Senator Wagle has demonstrated pragmatism. If she aspires to higher office in 2018, she’ll have to show effective bargaining skills. She can start by holding a majority of moderate senate Republicans, retaining needed Democrats and persuading three or four more conservatives for a veto override majority on an effective, durable revenue solution.

Slashing spending alone is fantasy given rising needs of an aging population, little expansion in the earning workforce, low but economically unstoppable inflation, and the necessity to repay what has been “borrowed” to cover the financial shortfalls of the last four years. Cooperation between the moderates, progressives and realist conservatives negotiating serious, meaningful, and effective fixes to things like KPERS, the “suitable provision for finance” in K-12 education, and an adequate healthcare support system focusing on the needs of poor families with minor children and the disabled must be accomplished, and will require leadership.

If Kansans really wanted to get on the Brownback “glidepath to zero” program, they would not have dumped all those conservatives and backed all those moderates and Democrats in the last election cycle. If Senator Wagle wants the next job, she’ll need to put daylight between herself and the governor, make the bargain of a lifetime with twenty-seven members of the Kansas Senate, and show Kansans generally that she is the leader they need.

Dr. Mark Peterson teaches political science at the college level in Topeka.

Kan. woman accused in husband’s shooting death to undergo tests

Frantz- photo Leavenworth police

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A 50-year-old woman accused of killing her estranged husband in Leavenworth, Kansas, will undergo mental competency testing.

The Leavenworth Times reports that a Leavenworth County judge on Wednesday ordered the testing for Barbara Marie Frantz, of Kansas City, Kansas. She’s charged with first-degree murder in the death of 54-year-old Gary Frantz.

Leavenworth police say Gary Frantz was shot several times Jan. 27 on a Leavenworth parking lot. Barbara Frantz was arrested hours later in Burlingame, Kansas.

Police have said the case involved domestic violence but did not offer further details.

The Kansas City Star has reported that Barbara Frantz referred to Gary Frantz as her ex-husband in a Facebook post in December. He listed his marital status on Facebook as separated.

The Dentist in Hays will sponsor D.C. Law indoor football game Saturday

screen-shot-2017-03-02-at-11-13-53-amDODGE CITY — The Dentist in Hays — Dr. Melinda Miner and Dr. Michael Holmberg — invite you to watch the D.C. Law Champions Indoor Football team battle the Duke City Gladiators at the season opener on Saturday, March 4, inside the Dodge City United Wireless Arena starting at 635 p.m.

Meet the players on the field after the game and get autographs and photos.

If you catch a football you get to keep it, if you catch a player you have to give him back!

The Dentist is providing FREE youth tickets and sports mouth guards to the first 250 children with a paying adult ticket.

To reserve your family tickets for the March 4 game, call the arena box office at (620) 371-7880 promo code: DENTAL. (Limit 2 free children for each paying adult.)

Arlene Heroneme Rupp

Arlene Heroneme Rupp, age 84, of Ellis, passed away Monday, March 1, 2017 in Ellis.

Funeral services will be 10 AM Saturday, March 4, 2017 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Ellis. Burial will follow in St. Ann’s Cemetery in Zurich, Kansas.

Visitation will be Friday  6:30 PM – 8:00 PM with a combined Daughters of Isabella rosary and parish vigil service at 7:00 PM all at St. Mary’s Church, Ellis.

Memorial contributions are suggested to St. Mary’s Church of Ellis.

A complete obituary is pending with Keithley Funeral Chapel 400 E. 17th Ellis, KS 67637.

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