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Three men share generations of Hays history

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

The city of Hays, historic Fort Hays and Ellis County were all established in 1867, 150 years ago this year.

Henry Schwaller IV

The community’s sesquicentennial was celebrated this weekend.

For three men living in Hays, that history is not just something to be celebrated once or twice a century. It is not plaques on a wall or disintegrating newspaper clippings. It is their lives and their families.

Henry Schwaller IV, George Philip V and Pete Felten, agreed to sit down with the Hays Post and talk about Hays history and changing face of the city.

Early Hays

Pete Felten

Schwaller’s family history dates back to the 1870s in Hays. His great-great grandfather Clemens immigrated to America with his brothers from Switzerland in the early 1800s. Clemens brought his son, Henry I, to settle in Ellis County on a farm near Walker.

Henry and Clemens worked in a general store in Catherine Astad. In about 1888 or 1890, the family acquired a lumberyard along the railroad tracks in Hays.

George Philip V

“They were a large Swiss German family. They were not Volga Germans, but they integrated into the community well and were very involved,” Henry Schwaller IV said.

Henry I, married, May Farley, the daughter of the local druggist. She was the Ellis County beauty queen and represented the area at the 1904 World’s Fair.

Henry II was the third child of Henry I and May. The family focus was business, but they were also involved in the community. May and her sister volunteered at the Presbyterian Club and were very active in other social circles, including Bridge Club and the Women’s Literay Club, which successfully obtained a grant from Andrew Carnegie to build the Hays Public Library.

Henry I was politically active and was one of the groups that campaigned to pave the Hays streets with brick, which was controversial at the time. Some people said they wanted to stay with their rural roots, and brick streets were too cosmopolitan. Henry I’s brother, Fred, was a charter member of the Hays Rotary Club and started the first golf course in Hays.

The Depression

The 1910s and 1920s were good years for the Schwallers, but the prospects changed even for successful families during the 1930s.

The first set back for local businessmen like the Schwallers was the income tax of World War I.

“Although we were comfortable and we had a business,”Schwaller said, “The 1930s were very, very tough. Our customers couldn’t pay and our customers could not afford. There was no building going on. It was a tough time to be in the lumber business.”

Although the economic conditions were awful as commodity prices were very low, the environmental conditions were perhaps worse, Schwaller said.

The dust storms during the Dust Bowl were so bad that it turned day into night. Schwaller said his grandfather recalled going to a basketball game inside Sheridan Coliseum. It was so dusty they had to call off the game because they could not see inside the building.

“The dust would get in houses. I understand that my great-grandmother would close all the windows as best they could and get all the towels they could and make them wet to seal every crevice, and the dust was still crazy,” Schwaller said.

“Not only were there really tough economic times … they were really horrible … but the environmental conditions were awful because the topsoil was just drifting away. Those are the stories that will stick with me most. If it were not for Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the New Deal, we would not have made it.”

In fact, Roosevelt’s WPA commitment to Hays was what turned the family from Republicans to Democrats and frankly other families too. Schwaller said many families had two pictures hanging in their parlor. One was of Jesus and the other was of Franklin Roosevelt. Roosevelt’s administration helped to revise farming practices, bring electricity to the region, and build the courthouse, municipal park and the pool.

“The list was a huge bounty to Ellis County when people couldn’t find work,” he said.


Philip Hardware

George Philip II came to American in 1873 from Scotland. He and a cousin had a general store in Victoria and George Philip was the postmaster there. In 1894 George started the hardware store in Hays. In 1896, the store was moved into its long-time location at 801 Main St.

The Philip family ran the hardware store until 1996.

George Philip V, 62, who still lives in Hays today, grew up working in his family’s store. He used the hardware to build himself elaborate toys, which his father would eventually disassemble and restock.

Downtown was the shopping hub. It was the social hub, Philip said.

“I remember when 27th and Vine were dirt roads, and now look what is there,” he said.

George grew up in what is now the Mary Elizabeth home. They family kept horses, and George said he remembers ridding along Big Creek and many areas that are now busy streets.

“It was a very small town,” he said. “That is one of the things we took for granted, maybe it was something we shouldn’t have taken it for granted.”

During Hays’s centennial in 1967, George and his family participated in a large pageant that depicted the history of the city. The pageant was staged on the football field and included elaborate costumes and live action with actors on horseback.

As the large chains came into the city, small local businesses like the Philip Hardware Store began to suffer. George V dropped power tools and appliances and focused on items that were harder to find and the big box stores did not carry. Eventually it would not be enough, and George made the decision to close. During this time, other downtown retailers suffered.

“Hays has done a lot downtown, a lot of revitalization. A lot of business is interested. They realize, hey, downtown can be a real vital place to shop … just to visit. There is the Art Walk,” Philip said.

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Catholic, protestants and the War

Pete Felten, local artists and Hays native, was born in Hays in 1933. Felten’s ancestors came from Germany in the 1700s and settled in Pennsylvania. They farmed their way across the country and finally settled in Hays. His father had a truck line and hauled freight from Kansas City to Colby on Highway 40.

He remembers a division in Hays between the German Catholics and the Protestants. Although the two groups got along fine, they had separate schools.

He remembers playing with the boys from German families. The Catholic schools were strict, according to his Catholic friends. The nuns and priests did not like the boys speaking German or using the term, gella, which was a slang for the affirmative. This is where the name of Gella’s Dinner came from.

The boys’ military school may have been strict, but Felten remembers their huge cheers during football game.

“The were really fiery. They were great,” he said.

Felten he had fond members of Hays growing up and riding the hills of Hays on his bicycle.

Hays never had a boom, but had continual growth. The population of Ellis County never soared, but many of the older farm families moved into the city over the years, Felten said.

Farming had never been lucrative, but oil was discovered in the area in 1920s and that brought some prosperity to the farm families. The oil industry brought new businesses to Hays. The oil industry along with the college, which was established in 1902, both helped bring people from new regions with different backgrounds to the city.

“The general health of the city just got better and better,” he said.

 

Felted remembers pretending to fight the Nazis during World War II. He remembered scrap drives and the slowing of building in the city.

The USO was located in Hays and young men from the Walker Army Airfield would come into the city to visit the beer gardens. A lot of those soldiers ended up staying in Hays after the war.

Hays had prisoners of war at the experiment station.

“They loved it here,” Felten said. “They did not have to fight. They could speak the language because there were so many Germans out here and good food. They liked it out here in Hays.”

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Building for Boomers

As the cloud of the Depression lifted, the Schwallers knew they needed to diversify the business beyond a lumber yard.

“When he was running the lumberyard, there were 12 other lumber yards in town,” he knew he needed to get ahead,” Henry IV said of his grandfather.

In 1950s, Hays was hit by devastating floods. Henry II built some spec homes in the area of 22nd and Oak, which he called Highland Avenue. People eager to move out of the flood plain moved to the addition.

In 1959, Henry II bought the Winter’s family farm at 22nd and Vine for about $200,000. The property extended to 27th Street to about Indian Trail, about 150 to 200 acres.

At the time, this was thought to be an odd move. Most people in the community at the time assumed the city would grow to the west away from the cemetery. With the government land bordering the city on the south, Henry II saw the potential of city growth to the north and east.

Henry II also knew the state had adopted Vine Street as part of the new Highway 183.
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Not a hip city

Felten served four years in the military and came home to Hays as the hippie movement was beginning. He said the city leaders thought the city had a hippy problem, but Felten said it was exaggerated.

Locals were unsure if Felten, with his beard, was a hippie or an artist.

A group of students from Victoria came to interview him at the time and were shocked that the FHSU president’s daughter was riding around town in an open jeep with a big dog.

Felten just explained she was an artist.

The people in Hays were practical, Felten said, but there was a significant opposition to the war in Vietnam, especially among the young men in the community.

The completion of I-70 to the Colorado border in 1970, brought more motels and restaurants to the city and Felten said the city became more cosmopolitan.


Growing up in Hays in the 1960 and ’70s

Henry Schwaller IV was born in 1966, one year before the community’s centennial.

Schwaller remembers growing up in a much smaller city surrounded by country. He remembers a time before the Dillons was built on 27th and Hall and when everything west of that point was fields and farming.

His grandfather Henry II lived at 22nd and Oak, which at that time was in the country, and the family had a small farm there.

“It is hard to explain,” Schwaller said. “When you are really tiny and you look from your house and there is nothing and it is all fields and all dirt and now there are things there, it is really mind-boggling how the city has grown not only in population, but in density and land mass over the last 50 years.”

When he was born Interstate 70 was not finished and not connected to the rest of the country, and Vine Street did not exist in the form it is today.

He remembered going to the first A&W Drive on Eighth Street and Sandy’s Drive-in where the Hays Welcome Center is now at 2700 Vine.

Henry IV walked and biked to school and was among the first students as a sophomore to attend classes in the new Hays High School on 13th Street east of Canterbury.

“As a little kid all my memories are around parks and food and fun,” he said.

Henry IV spent a lot of time with his father and grandmother, Juliette Schwaller. She was also active in the family business and in the community.

Juliette had a son who would be eventually diagnosed with a mental illness and was referred to Menninger’s Clinic in Topeka. Juliette had the means and time to drive her son back and forth to receive care. However, she thought much about those families who did not have the means to seek care for their loved ones. Juliette helped form High Plains Mental Health and community mental health centers around the state.

She was involved with the Hays Arts Council to a degree and became the first women to run the Democratic Party in Ellis County.

Henry II was also very politically active and served in Kansas Gov. Robert Docking’s administration first on the highway commission, which helped build Vine Street and completed Interstate 70. Then he was Secretary of Administration.

By this time the family had diversified even further, Henry’s grandfather raised cattle and horses and his father helped in the family real estate and rental business as well as ran a liquor store and connivence food store.

More economic hard times

Although the Dust Bowl had  been very difficult on many Hays families, it was by no means the only economic downturn the community has faced.

“With the economic collapse again with farming and oil and industry in 1980s that extended all the way to 1994, it was very bleak here,” Schwaller said. … “It was absolutely devastating. It was devastating to our business and our family.”

“There was some who thought we may not survive the 1980s,” he said.

Growing a community

Henry IV said his families involvement in public service and politics in part lead him to be a city commissioner. He entered the commission in 1999. He lost re-election in 2007, and then won election in 2009 and has been on the commission since. His current term expires in 2020.

“This is something we do,” he said. “We are not just here to make a profit. We are here to give back to the community.”

The city started primarily because of three people, Buffalo Bill, who settled Rome; H.P. Wilson of the Union Pacific Railroad who developed Hays as we know the core; and Martin Allen, who named all the streets and told the residents what could and could not grow here.

However, Schwaller said it has really been groups of people who built Hays to what it is today. When Hays wanted a college, a group of residents worked toward that. A group fought for a bigger, better depot.

Since the recession in the 1980s and 1990s, the city has been able to build up reserves and steady its financial status. Many infrastructure repairs have also been completed since the turn of the century.

Henry IV said his biggest concern for the future is economic development. Rural Kansas’ population is in decline, and Hays can’t solely rely on retail for economic stability.

“We need to figure out what our next act is,” he said. “What are we going to do next. I have no doubt we will figure that out, but it is going to be a painful path getting there. It is going to take some time.”

Late in his grandfather’s life in 2013, his grandfather liked to be driven around town looking at construction and new additions. Henry IV took his grandfather up to 55th and Vine to the water tower and the two looked out over the city.

“He was blown away. We had been driving around looking at individual houses and where he used to live and now he could see the whole city. He said, ‘This is incredible. I never imagined this. Hays is a wonderful place. I never thought it would be this big. This is amazing.’”

When Schwaller was asked where Hays might be in 50 years or 100 years, he recalled a quote from Ray Crock, the founder of McDonald’s

“’I don’t know what we will be selling in the year 2000, but we will be selling more than anyone else,’ and I don’t know where we will be in 50 years, but we will be vibrant, we will still be here and we will be a regional center,” he said.

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Hope for the future
George Philip also said he is optimistic for the future of Hays.

“Hays is obviously growing,” he said. “There is a lot of residential development going on, obviously commercial development if you only look at the number of restaurant or retail outlets and the various products and services.”

“If I would have been dropped off the face of the earth 50 years ago and suddenly been dropped off again now,” he said, “I don’t think I would have recognized the place. So many landmarks have been torn down, so many new structures have been put up. It is rather remarkable.”

HPD Activity Log July 21-23

kbyw-november16

The Hays Police Department responded to 3 animal calls and 24 traffic stops Fri., July 21, 2017, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Aggravated Assault–900 block Fort St, Hays; 12:48 AM
Mental Health Call–4600 block Vine St, Hays; 4:13 AM
Driving Under the Influence–500 block W 19th St, Hays; 4:27 AM; 4:45 AM
Runaway Juvenile–2200 block Oak St Terr, Hays; 7/20 8:15 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–2400 block Virginia Dr, Hays; 9 AM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–45th and Danby Ln, Hays; 10:03 AM; 10:05 AM
Water Use Violation–2100 block Main St, Hays; 11:43 AM
Water Use Violation–500 block E 20th St, Hays; 12:17 PM
Theft (general)–200 block E 9th St, Hays; 10 AM; 1 PM
Animal At Large–4300 block Roth Ave, Hays; 2:57 PM
Identity Theft–1300 block Douglas Dr, Hays; 7/13 2 PM; 7/17 2 PM
Animal At Large–13th and Vine St, Hays; 4:09 PM
Credit Card Violations–Hays; 4:26 PM
Credit Card Violations–Hays; 4:25 PM
Credit Card Violations–Hays; 4:25 PM
Credit Card Violations–Hays; 4:25 PM
Credit Card Violations–Hays; 4:25 PM
Credit Card Violations–Hays; 4:25 PM
Credit Card Violations–Hays; 4:25 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–2200 block E 22nd St, Hays; 4:28 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–2700 block Vine St, Hays; 5:20 PM
Found/Lost Property–Hays; 7:01 PM
Violation of Restraining Order/PFA–500 block E 20th St, Hays; 7:57 PM; 8:19 PM
Suicidal Subject–100 block W 15th St, Hays; 10:41 PM
Welfare Check–400 block W 20th St, Hays; 11:38 PM
Suspicious Activity–1500 block Main St, Hays; 11:57 PM

The Hays Police Department responded to 4 animal calls and 15 traffic stops Sat., July 22, 2017, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Driving Under the Influence–1000 block Main St, Hays; 2:02 AM
Lost,Found,Stolen–800 block Allen St, Hays; 2:07 AM
Driving Under the Influence–500 block W 15th St, Hays; 2:09 AM
Intoxicated Subject–2700 block Walnut St, Hays; 6:19 AM
Animal At Large–10th and Ash St, Hays; 6:56 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–400 block E 18th St, Hays; 8:36 AM
Animal Bite Investigation–1100 block Drum Ave, Hays; 9:41 AM
MV Accident-Property Damage–1100 block E 27th St, Hays; 10:23 AM; 10:25 AM
Theft (general)–2100 block Elm St, Hays; 10:30 AM; 11:29 AM
Contempt of Court/Fail to Pay–3300 block Hall St, Hays; 12:47 PM
Animal Cruelty/Neglect–300 block E 13th St, Hays; 1:21 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–3700 block Vine St, Hays; 2:12 PM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–2200 block E 13th St, Hays; 1:40 PM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–100 block W 9th St, Hays; 7/23 12 AM
Theft (general)–1300 block 40 Hwy, Ellis County; 6:29 PM
Welfare Check–2500 block Vine St, Hays; 7:43 PM
Violation of Restraining Order/PFA–500 block E 20th St, Hays; 8:57 PM; 9:21 PM
Credit Card Violations–200 block E 28th St, Hays; 11:22 PM

The Hays Police Department responded to 3 animal calls and 23 traffic stops Sun., July 23, 2017, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Disturbance – Noise–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 12:40 AM
Disorderly Conduct–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 2:04 AM
Theft (general)–100 block Ash St, Hays; 2:22 AM
Driving Under the Influence–1200 block Vine St, Hays; 3:10 AM
Water Use Violation–2200 block Vine St, Hays; 3:27 AM
Credit Card Violations–200 block E 28th St, Hays; 5:07 AM
Credit Card Violations–200 block E 28th St, Hays; 5:07 AM
Credit Card Violations–200 block E 28th St, Hays; 5:07 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–2900 block Willow St, Hays; 7:40 AM
Animal At Large–32nd St and Canal Blvd, Hays; 8:04 AM
Water Use Violation–2700 block Hall St, Hays; 8:50 AM
Animal At Large–3900 block Fairway Dr, Hays; 9:34 AM
Incident, Miscellaneous–2800 block Augusta Ln, Hays; 9:57 AM
Welfare Check–1300 block E 33rd St, Hays; 2:42 PM
Domestic Disturbance–1100 block Vine St, Hays; 4:20 PM; 4:26 PM
Juvenile Complaint–300 block Main St, Hays; 4:55 PM
Stalking–3700 block Hall St, Hays; 5:32 PM
Driving Under the Influence–2800 block Vine St, Hays; 5:41 PM
Criminal Damage to Property–2700 block Colonial St, Hays; 7/22 9 PM; 7/23 3 PM
Found/Lost Property–600 block E 13th St, Hays; 6:18 PM
Bicycle – Lost,Found,Stolen–Centennial and Gen Custer, Hays; 9:11 PM
Burglary/storage unit–200 block E 14th St, Hays; 7/9; 7/23 8:45 PM
Runaway Juvenile–200 block E 22nd St, Hays; 10:33 PM
Theft (general)–1900 block Vine St, Hays; 10:18 PM
Domestic Disturbance–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 11:27 PM
Driving Under the Influence–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 11:46 PM

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Fort Hays State’s Encore Series announces 37th season lineup

FHSU University Relations

A wonderful variety of musicals, plays, dance and instrumental music make up the 2017-2018 season of the Encore Performing Arts Series at Fort Hays State University.

“For 37 years, the Encore Series has been a cultural gem of Western Kansas,” said Jacob Ternes, chair of the Special Events Committee.

“This season will to continue to bring New York City-caliber performances right here to the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center stage. I hope our patrons consider purchasing season tickets, because we expect several individual shows to sell out!”

Ternes said there is a show for all audiences on this year’s series. The season will open with “Benise: Spanish Nights.” A former street musician, Benise began composing original works with powerfully emotional arrangements that are both wild and refined. Additional shows include “Home Free,” “The Wizard of Oz,” “Dirty Dancing,” and “Dance Theatre of Harlem.”

This year will also feature a special off-season event: “The Doo Wop Project.” Season ticket holders have the option to purchase tickets and retain their dedicated seats, but this special event is not included in the season ticket package.

Season tickets for the 2017-2018 Encore Performing Arts Series are now on sale. Fort Hays State University students, faculty and staff, as well as senior citizens and youth, all receive discounts. For more information call the Memorial Union Student Service Center at 785-628-5306 or visit www.fhsu.edu/encore.

Previous season ticket holders will receive the series booklet in the mail within the next few weeks. The deadline to renew tickets and keep the same seats is Aug. 28.

All performances for the 2017-2018 season start at 7:30 p.m. in the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center in Sheridan Hall on the FHSU campus.

Fall semester 2017 performances:
Benise: Spanish Nights
Thursday, Sept. 28
Guitar virtuoso Benise and cast return with a brand new show – “Spanish Nights!” Backed by a stage full of musicians and elaborately choreographed dancers, “Spanish Nights” captures world music at its best, featuring the passion and grace of flamenco combined with fiery Spanish guitar. The show also puts a Spanish twist to classic songs from Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, AC/DC and the Eagles.

Home Free
Thursday, Oct.12
The all-vocal country sensation Home Free will bring Nashville country standards and country-dipped pop hits to town (and having a great time doing so). The five-man band has become known for its show-stopping performances that mix their signature no-instrument, all-vocal music with wit and humor.

Dirty Dancing
Thursday, Oct.19
“Dirty Dancing – The Classic Story On Stage” explodes with heart-pounding music, passionate romance and sensational dancing. Seen by millions across the globe, this hit features “Hungry Eyes,” “Hey Baby,” “Do You Love Me?” and the “Dirty Dancing” signature song “(I’ve Had) The Time Of My Life.” London’s Sunday Express said, “This crowd-pleasing stage adaptation hits the jackpot!”

Off-season event:
The Doo Wop Project
Wednesday, Nov. 29
From bop to pop – the evolution of a sound! This show is three parts Jersey Boys, two parts Motown: The Musical and “your grandma’s doo wop,” these five charismatic, handsome, triple-threat Broadway stars – with their hot 5-piece band – tear it up with musicality, dancing and showmanship not found with any other group. They “re-doo” classic doo wop songs from the ’50s and ’60s and make them sound fresh and new. They also take contemporary pop hits by stars like Jason Mraz, Amy Winehouse, Adele and Maroon 5, and “doowopify” them to provide entertainment for people ages 10 to 100.

Spring semester 2018 performances:
The Wizard of Oz
Thursday, Feb. 1
There truly is no place like home as the greatest family musical of all time, the wonderful “Wizard of Oz” twists its way into Hays. The entire family will travel down the Yellow Brick Road and beyond with Dorothy, Toto and their friends the Cowardly Lion, Tin Man and Scarecrow in this lavish production that features breathtaking special effects, dazzling choreography and classic songs.

Dance Theatre of Harlem
Tuesday, Feb. 6
Dance Theatre of Harlem is a leading dance institution acclaimed around the world, encompassing an international touring ballet company, a training school for ballet and the allied arts and Dancing Through Barriers®, a celebrated arts education and community outreach program. The assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. compelled Arthur Mitchell, with his mentor Karel Shook, to start a school that would offer children – especially those in his native Harlem – the opportunity to challenge themselves and grow through the study of a classical art form.

The ALL HANDS ON DECK! Show
Friday, March 9
All singing! All dancing! All big band! Based on Bob Hope’s 1942 USO tour to the troops in the field, “ALL HANDS ON DECK!” is a new, two-act revue performed by four charismatic singers/dancers/comics and a nine-piece orchestra featuring the songs, dances and laughs that America has loved since the ’40s. From 1941 to 1945, when America was embroiled in a great world war, Hollywood’s brightest stars, directors and screenwriters responded to the call of duty by sending real, living entertainment to our men in uniform.

The Reduced Shakespeare Company® in William Shakespeare’s Long Lost First Play
Thursday, April 5
Every famous character and Shakespearean plot device come together in a single story so comically outrageous it’s no wonder the Bard of Avon hid it away. Historical evidence (possibly imaginary) suggests that this manuscript, Shakespeare’s very first written work, is so romantically rich, historically accurate, and theatrically overstuffed that in a stroke of genius, the Bard decided to break it up into the 37 plays (or, depending on recent scholarship, 38, 39) that we know today as the Shakespearean canon.

The Hot Club of San Francisco Presents: Cinema Vivant
Wednesday, April 25
Imagine yourself in the idyllic French countryside in the 1930s. Sometime before dark, a gypsy caravan sets up camp in a field outside of town, luring the locals out for an evening’s fun. The wanderers travel with a film projector, pointing it at the side of a barn. As the images flicker to life beneath the stars, gypsy musicians play their guitars and fiddles, matching every movement on the screen with characteristic virtuosity, passion and humor. Reviving this lost entertainment, The Hot Club of San Francisco presents “Cinema Vivant,” an evening of vintage silent films accompanied by live gypsy swing.

Albert ‘Butch’ L. Albers

Albert “Butch” L. Albers passed away at home on July 22, 2017, at the age of 69. He was born to Donald and Marguerite (Seuser) Albers on December 17, 1947 in LaCrosse, Kansas.

Butch was raised on a farm south of Ransom, Kansas. After graduating from high school in 1965, he attended Fort Hays State University, where he received a BS and MS in Botany.

He married Jeanette Tillitson on August 29, 1970. Butch began working for the U.S. Forestry Service in Range Management while living in Magdalena and Glenwood, New Mexico. He was proud to serve in the Forest Service and keep wildfires under control.

In 1975, Butch and Jeanette returned to Ransom where he worked with his father and brother on their family farm. Butch enjoyed hunting, fishing, carpentry, dirt track racing, antiquing, golfing, and playing music. He was a member of the Praise Fellowship Church, where he played bass guitar and sang for many years.

He is survived by his wife, Jeanette, of the family home; two daughters, Lee Ann and husband Paul Cramer of Scott City, Kansas, and Wendy Pettit of Clay Center, Kansas; three grandchildren, Jordan, Logan, and Emily, all of Scott City; two sisters, Donna and husband Fred Klitzke of Glendale, Arizona, and Linda and husband Stuart Dietz of Hudson, Kansas; sister-in-law, Marlene Albers of Bison, Kansas; mother-in-law, Melba Tillitson of Ransom; and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents and his brother, Bill.

Funeral service will be 10:00 a.m., Friday, July 28, 2017 at Praise Fellowship Church, Ransom. Burial will be in the Ransom Cemetery.

Visitation will be Thursday, from 9:00 to 8:00 p.m. with family receiving friends from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at Fitzgerald Funeral Home, Ness City.
Memorial contributions are suggested to Praise Fellowship Church or North Ness County EMS.

Condolences may be sent to the family online at www.fitzgeraldfuneral.com.

News From the Oil Patch, July 24

By JOHN P. TRETBAR

Producers in Kansas who sell oil outside the state should take note of a ruling from the Third Circuit Court of Appeals last week. The court upheld a district court ruling in favor of companies who bought oil from SemCrude a decade ago just prior to the Tulsa firm’s bankruptcy.

That oil came from mostly Kansas producers who hadn’t been paid. Their security interests in the oil had been “perfected” under Kansas law, but not in Oklahoma and Delaware, where SemCrude did business. The companies who bought that oil from SemCrude were off the hook, according to the ruling, because they had no knowledge of the security interests in Kansas. The National Law Review notes that the Third Circuit’s decision should serve as a stark warning for oil producers to not rely on automatic perfection provisions of state law, and to take efforts to put subsequent purchasers on actual notice. Kansas producers lost millions of dollars in the bankruptcy settlement.

Baker Hughes reported a drop of one oil rig and a drop of one seeking natural gas in it’s national weekly total Friday. There are currently 950 active rigs nationwide. Canada has 206 active rigs, up 15. Independent reports that the Kansas active rig count was unchanged at 36. They’re drilling at one site in Barton County and moving in completion tools at two more. In Ellis County, operators report drilling ahead at one site, and they’re moving in completion tools at another.

Baker Hughes, widely regarded as authoritative, has not reported a single active drilling rig in Kansas in about a year, while Independent Oil & Gas has reported between two and three dozen active rigs during that period. On Friday, Baker Hughes didn’t even list Kansas among the 14 “Major State Variances” in its weekly report.

New drilling permits (and new well completions) in Kansas continue to outpace last year’s dismal numbers, but are still well behind the totals from two years ago. Operators filed 30 permits for drilling at new locations last week. There were 13 in eastern Kansas and 17 west of Wichita, including one new permit each in Barton and Ellis County. So far this year, there are 782 new drilling permits on file, compared to just 480 a year ago and 1,356 two years ago.

Independent Oil & Gas Service reported a total of 23 completions statewide last week, 13 of which were dry holes. There were 16 completions in eastern Kansas and seven in western Kansas, including two in Barton County. One of those was a dry hole. Year-to-date, the state has seen 740 new well completions, which is up from the 661 completions reported last year at this time, but well below the 2,631 completions reported two years ago at this time.

The energy-industry downturn cost the State of Wyoming 25,000 workers, about ten percent of its total workforce, between 2014 and 2016. The Casper Star-Tribune reports a slight uptick in the oil and gas employment today, up 1,700 jobs compared to a year ago.

A judge deciding whether to shut down the Dakota Access pipeline while more environmental review is completed says he’ll allow North Dakota’s main energy trade group to weigh in. The North Dakota Petroleum Council and others maintain their input is important because none of the parties in a lawsuit speaks for the general oil industry. Judge James Boasberg might also allow some national energy and manufacturing groups to have a say, though he didn’t immediately rule. Roughly half of the state’s daily production is being shipped through the pipeline., and the council maintains a shutdown “would pull the rug out from under the North Dakota oil industry.”

The Trump administration has not specifically said it will target Venezuela’s oil industry for sanctions, but they’ve gone after top Venezuelan officials, and US refiners worry that the country’s oil industry could be next. The San Antonio Express-News reports officials on the Texas coast are mobilizing against such a move with a letter to the president. Such a move could have a big impact along the Gulf Coast including in Corpus Christi, Texas, where Venezuela’s Citgo refines 157,000 barrels per day and employs more than 1,000 people. Citgo refines a total of nearly 750,000 barrels of crude oil in the US, at that site and two others in Louisiana and Illinois. The Chairman of the Port of Corpus Christi Commission and others are warning the president of a significant economic impact on refineries in the US that are operated by Citgo. Venezuelan lawmakers warned Tuesday the country could be headed for a “catastrophic” meltdown if the United States limits or blocks its crude exports amid an escalating struggle over the fate of the socialist administration.

The “Raging Grannies” have lost their case in federal court in Spokane, Washington. That’s the nickname of a group of people who filed a lawsuit seeking to stop coal and oil trains from moving through Spokane. A federal judge last week dismissed the lawsuit that challenged the primacy of the Interstate Commerce Commission Termination Act of 1995. The lawsuit was filed after failed efforts to ban the trains using local initiatives. The controversy culminated with the arrests of three women, all grandmothers, who blocked rail lines in the Spokane area last August.

Three ocean-front California local governments are taking legal action against oil companies, saying they’ve known for almost 50 years that fossil fuels are changing the climate and causing sea rise. Northern California’s Marin and San Mateo counties and the city of Imperial Beach in Southern California filed the complaints last week in California Superior Court, naming 37 energy producers.

Man accused of shooting at trooper on I-70 enters plea in Nebraska

Gathercole in a Dawson County Nebraska courtroom on Thursday- image courtesy KNOP TV

LEXINGTON, Neb. (AP) — A man suspected of bank robberies in five states has pleaded not guilty to unrelated charges in Nebraska.

Station KNOP reports that Richard Gathercole entered the pleas Monday in Dawson County District Court to two counts of possessing stolen firearms and one of theft or receiving stolen property. A trial starting date of Aug. 12 was set.

Authorities believe Gathercole is the man they call “the AK-47 bandit,” who’s robbed banks in California, Idaho, Iowa, Nebraska and Washington.

Nebraska court documents say Gathercole was arrested June 20 at a gas station near Lexington, Nebraska. A sheriff’s deputy had spotted a pickup truck there that Kansas authorities had reported stolen by a man who’d fired at but missed a state trooper.

Lexington is 70 miles north of Norton, Kansas.

Dr. Herman William Hiesterman

Dr. Herman William Hiesterman, 94, of Quinter, KS died Wednesday, July 20, 2017. 

He was born on May 31, 1923, in Palmer, KS, to Herman and Anna (nee Lindhorst) Hiesterman.  Seven children were born into this family; Herman was preceded in death by brothers, Emil, Edwin, Lawrence and sisters Hilda, Clara and Dorothy. Attending local schools, he transferred to Concordia College, Seward, NE for his senior year of high school.  In 1943, he joined the U.S. Army during WWII where he was in the Army Specialized Training Program, then a second lieutenant in the Medical Administrative Corps.  After the war, he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1948 and the University of Kansas School of Medicine in 1951. 

While attending medical school, he met his future bride, Donna Letha Drees, a church organist at Our Savior’s Lutheran church in Kansas City, KS.  They were married on August 20, 1950.  Herman spent a year of internship at Kansas City General Hospital, where he worked with Carl C Gunter, MD.  Herman and Carl, along with their wives moved to Quinter in July 1952 to begin practice with Dr. Ben Morris.  After one year, Herman and Carl went into practice for themselves.  In 1958, Herman completed a surgical residency in Lincoln, NE.  Herman and Carl remained in practice together until Carl’s retirement in 1984.  From 1985, Herman was in practice with Michael Machen, MD and Victor Nemecheck, MD until his retirement from private practice in 1989.  He continued to practice in the Indian Health Service on a part time basis for 9 additional years until 1998.

Herman was an active member of Immanuel Lutheran Church, Oakley, and was also involved in community and school affairs, serving on the Quinter School Board for 16 years. He served as president of the Kansas Medical Society from 1981-1982. For many years, he was on the faculty of the University of Kansas School of Medicine as a preceptor.  Approximately 170 medical students spent their preceptorship with him and Dr. Gunter.  He was a Charter and Certified member of the American Academy of Family Practice and a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Societies.  In 1984, Herman received Alumnus of the Year Award from Kansas University Medical School and in 1993, from Concordia University in Seward.  Hobbies included sports of all types, fishing, hunting, reading, telling jokes and playing his ukulele.  An avid gardener, Herman was especially known for growing delicious corn and German Volga garlic.  As a frugal farmer at heart, he enjoyed nothing better than figuring out how to fix items using only the parts on hand.  

Herman was married to Donna for 50 years, who preceded him in death in 2001.  Survivors include his son, Grant W. Hiesterman (and wife, Janet) of Bloomington, MN; daughter, Amy L. Peterson (and husband, David) of Wheaton, IL; four grandchildren, Matthew and Luke (and wife, Rachel Poker) Hiesterman, Brian (and wife, Renee) and Curt Peterson; two great-grandchildren, Kingston and Riley Peterson; and many beloved nieces and nephews and other relatives.

Funeral service for Herman will be at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, July 28th in the Brethren Church, Quinter, with family receiving friends at 9:30 a.m. until the time of service.  Rev. Michael Brockman of Immanuel Lutheran Church, Oakley, KS will be officiating. Burial will be in the Baker Township Cemetery, Quinter.

Memorial donations are suggested to the Gove County Healthcare Endowment or Quinter Senior Citizen’s Center. Donations made to the organization may be sent to Schmitt funeral Home, 901 South Main, Quinter, KS 67752.

Condolences may be left for the family online at www.schmittfuneral.com.

Vernita M. Serpan

Vernita M. Serpan, 90, La Crosse, Kansas, died Saturday, July 22, 2017, at Rush County Memorial Hospital Long Term Care, La Crosse, Kansas.

Mrs. Serpan was born October 14, 1926, in rural La Crosse, Kansas, the daughter of Peter and Pauline (Stecklein) Schaffer. She was a lifelong resident of Rush County, Kansas. A 1944 graduate of La Crosse High School, La Crosse, Kansas, she was a dispatcher for the Rush County Sheriff’s Office before her retirement.

She was a member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church, St. Michael’s Altar Society, and VFW Post 3147 Ladies Auxiliary, all of La Crosse, Kansas. She was also involved in the FHSU Senior Companion Program for six years.

On November 30, 1944, she married Charley Serpan at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, La Crosse, Kansas. He preceded her in death June 23, 1997.

Survivors include: one son, Darryl Serpan, Hutchinson, Kansas; three daughters, LaVerda Herbel, Aurora, Colorado, Vicky Foos (DeWayne), La Crosse, Kansas, Kim Taylor (Fred), Victoria, Kansas; seven grandchildren, Chad Herbel, Scott Herbel, Jeremy Foos, Jendee Dalton, Anna Taylor, Andrew Taylor, and Lucas Taylor; and eight great grandchildren, Steven Herbel, Ryan Herbel, Cody Foos, Aidan Herbel, Gratton Dalton, Morgan Foos, Chase Herbel, and Rennick Dalton.

She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband; two brothers, Rudy Schaffer, and Robert Schaffer; and six sisters, Charlotte Kline, Bertha Oliverius, Esther Schuckman, Jenny Pozalek, Minnie Stejskal, and Mary Urban.

Visitation will be Tuesday, July 25, 2017, from 4:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M. at the Janousek Funeral Home, La Crosse, Kansas, with the family receiving friends from 6:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. A vigil service and rosary will be at 7:00 P.M.

Church visitation will be Wednesday, July 27, 2017, from 9:00 A.M. to 9:50 A.M. at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, La Crosse, Kansas.

Funeral service will be Wednesday, July 27, 2017, at 10:00 A.M. at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, La Crosse, Kansas, with Father Matthew Kumi and Father Ed Kline officiating. Interment will be in the La Crosse City Cemetery, La Crosse, Kansas.

In lieu of flowers or plants, the family requests memorials to Rush County Memorial Hospital Long Term Care, La Crosse, Kansas.

Condolences or remembrances may be left for the family at www.charterfunerals.com/locations/janousek-lacrosse.php.

Arrangements were by Janousek Funeral Home, 719 Pine Street, P O Box 550, La Crosse, Kansas 67548, 785/222-2517.

Wilfred Glenn ‘Wilf’ Jacka

Wilfred Glenn “Wilf” Jacka, age 88, of Oakley, died Friday, July 21, 2017, at the Logan County Manor, Oakley. He was born December 4, 1928 in Utica to Glenn Ivan and Mabel Rose (Hoctor) Jacka. He was a U.S. Army veteran, serving as a Master Sgt. and a Paratrooper.

On July 11, 1953, he married Jessie Brown. To that union were born 5 children. On March 5, 1970, Wilf married Erma (Scott) Sheaks in Scott City. She preceded him in death in 2008.

Wilf was a resident of Oakley since 1991, moving from Scott City. After retiring from Miller Gearhead and Pump, Scott City, he began a second career as a farm hand for Larry Berkgren, until he retired again in 2002. Wilf was a long time member of the American Legion in Scott City. He enjoyed gardening, fishing, and his family.

Survivors include his stepdaughter, Joyce Holzmeister and husband John of Oakley, son, Bill Jacka of Truth or Consequences, N.M.; daughters, Marquita Jacka of Wichita and Joni Brack and husband Ron of Willowdale; 12 grandchildren, and 9 great-grandchildren; and sister, Ardith Linsacun of Snohomish,Washington.

Wilf was preceded in death by his wife Erma, (2008), sons: Tracy and Glenn Jacka; son-in-law, Billie Riggs: stepsons, Shawn and Fred Sheaks; stepgrandson, Zachary Riggs; stepbrother, Darrell Holmes, half-brother, Rudy Jost; and half-sister, Anna (Jost) Haag.

Graveside service will be at 10:00 a.m., Friday, July 28, 2017 at Gove Cemetery, Gove with Pastor Timothy Braun officiating. Service will include Military Honors and inurnment will follow. No visitation. Memorials to: Wilf Jacka Memorial Fund, may be sent to Kennedy-Koster Funeral Home, P.O. Box 221, Oakley, KS 67748.

Online Guestbook www.kennedykosterfh.com

Ellis County Sheriff’s Office activity log July 21 – 23

July 21
Out of County, Criminal Transport, Norton, 8:37 a.m.
Cattle Out, 3000 block Codell Road, Plainville, 12:11 p.m.
Cattle Out, 900 block 280th Avenue, Hays, 8:44 p.m.
Personal Injury Accident, 1900 block 310th Avenue, Hays, 10:21 p.m.

July 22
Custody Dispute, 1500 block West 27th St, Hays, 12:41 p.m.

July 23
Warrant Service, 100 block W 12th St, Hays, 11:23 a.m.
Found/Lost Property, 1100 block 250th Avenue, 7:39 p.m.
Personal Injury Accident, 1400 block Walker Avenue, 9:04 p.m.

280th Ave. to close for asphalt recycling

ELLIS CO.

The Ellis County Public Works Department is announcing that a cold in-place asphalt recycling project will take place beginning at the Highway 40 and 280th Avenue intersection and commencing South on 280th Avenue for three (3) miles ending at the 280th Avenue and Munjor Road intersection.

This three (3) mile area of 280th Avenue will be closed to thru traffic beginning at 7:00 a.m. Tuesday, July 25, 2017 and will remain closed until the project is complete. The expected completion date is 3 to 6 working days from the start date of the project.

Motorists traveling in the affected closure area should use alternate routes of travel until the project is complete. Please direct any questions to the Ellis County Public Works Department at 785-628-9455. Your cooperation during this project is appreciated.

Bennett Dee Miller

Bennett Dee Miller, “Dee” age 77, died July 21, 2017 at the Good Samaritan Center in Goodland. Dee was born on March 22, 1940 in Benkelman, NE to Henry Bennett Miller and Joy Geneva Hester Miller.

Dee attended school in Goodland and graduated from Sherman County High School in 1958. He served in the army from 1958-1961. Dee worked as a federal aviation air traffic controller for 25 years, retiring in 1990. In his retirement, he farmed and did many odd jobs.

Dee married Shelby Hunt at Pilgrim Holiness Church in Goodland on June 22, 1962, and recently celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary. They made their home in Goodland for many of their years together.

Dee loved to tailgate in the K-State “Fan-bulance” and attend K-State games in Manhattan. He supported Goodland athletics by attending games, both home and away. He was very active in Topside Tipoff for years. He loved helping with the fourth-grade Circus trips made possible by the Shriners. He was a Mason and was active in the Elks lodge for several years. Dee also had many hobbies including: fishing, bowling, cards, and fantasy sports.

He is survived by his wife, Shelby of the home, sister Judy (Bob) Hill, Cleo Springs, OK; many nieces, nephews, great-nieces and nephews, great-great-nieces and nephews, and a host of friends.

He was preceded in death by his son, Chad Miller; his parents, Bennett and Joy Miller; and a half brother and a half sister.

Visitation will be Monday, July 24, 2017 from 5:00 to 7:00 PM MT at Koons-Russell Funeral Home in Goodland. Funeral Services will be held Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 10:30 AM MT at the Harvest Evangelical Free Church. Interment will follow in the Goodland Cemetery, Goodland, KS with Military Honors provided by the Goodland VFW Post 1133.

Memorial contributions may be designated to the Topside Tipoff or to the Goodland Regional Medical Center Auxiliary and may be left at the services or mailed to Koons-Russell Funeral Home, 211 N. Main Ave., Goodland, KS 67735.

Online condolences for the family may be left at www.koonsrussellfuneralhome.com.

Funeral service arrangements were entrusted to Koons-Russell Funeral Home in Goodland.

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