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William Barker

William Barker, age 72, of Hays, Kansas died Sunday, May 20, 2018, at his home.  Services are pending at Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas.

Hays police SSRT training Monday

The Hays Police Department will conduct SSRT training May 21 .

HPD

The Hays Police Department will be conducting Special Situation Response Team training on Mon., May 21, 2018, between the hours of 3:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. at 1702 Volga Drive, Hays.

Police officers will be training with special tactical equipment. This training is being done with great care and safety.

As a homeowner, you may see law enforcement officers move through your area. There is no need to be alarmed. The officers are merely conducting a realistic training exercise and there is no danger to the community.

If you have any questions or concerns, you may contact the on-site supervisor (Team Commander Tim Greenwood or Team Leader Aaron Larson), or Police Chief Don Scheibler at 785-625-1030.

Ellis Co. students earn degrees from Cloud County Community

CONCORDIA — Three northwest Kansas students recently earned degrees from Cloud County Community College.

Students completing the degree requirements were eligible to participate in the Spring 2018 Commencement. Commencement ceremonies were held in Arley Bryant Gymnasium at the Concordia campus on May 11, 2018.

Cloud County Community College offers a wide variety of courses leading toward completion of transfer and career degrees in four areas: Associate of Arts, Associate of Science, Associate of Applied Science and Associate of General Studies.

• Nicole Dinkel of Victoria has completed the requirements for the Associate of Science degree from Cloud County Community College.

• Kiley Schmidtberger of Walker has completed the requirements for the Associate of Science degree from Cloud County Community College.

• Kourtney Talkington of Ellis has completed the requirements for the Associate of Science degree from Cloud County Community College.

MADORIN: Guilty pleasures await

Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.

Warmer weather means gardens, birds, spring cleaning, walks, fishing and more. For many, scores of garage sale ads make up for a long winter without a reuse or recycle fix. There’s a whole group of folks whose guilty pleasure involves sorting through unwanted belongings, hoping to score treasure.

As a kid, I attended church rummage sales with mom or gramma. These involved tables full of well-worn clothing or outmoded hats. Unlike our daughters and grands, I didn’t anticipate weekly scavenger hunts where I might find already broken-in jeans, cowboy boots, denim jackets, camo, hunting and fishing supplies (including a Herter’s crow call), a favorite game piece, a specialized cooking utensil, or funky décor to sizzle up outfits and rooms.

While garage sales potentially interest anyone, they’re perfect for dressing children. Considering kids outgrow clothing before it wears out, these weekend sprees offer a budget Godsend. Expect to find quality jeans, tops, shoes, and coats for pennies on the dollar. Of course, you have to factor in added expense for toys your kids latch onto while you upgrade their wardrobe.

As a result of these trips, our girls had more playthings than they needed. Ditto for the grands. Their moms find clever sandboxes, motorized bikes and cars, doll houses, and more for prices that don’t break the bank. Oftentimes, these items are in excellent condition and can be resold when the sprouts outgrow them. It makes financial sense to practice a reduce, reuse, recycle policy.

That said, my favorite part of garage sale-ing is discovering treasures I didn’t know I needed. Some shoppers hit the streets each Friday and Saturday with a specific list. Others count on serendipity to bless their adventure. With our kids are grown, I’ve joined the second group, which adds a new level of anticipation to the experience.

I’ve picked up clam shells big enough to serve as bathroom sinks and a conch larger than a basketball. One now showcases rocks, the other necklaces. This decades’ long addiction helped me build an extensive shell collection. These finds pushed it over the top.

In addition, cool kitchen gadgets and cookware from American history wait to be reused. I didn’t even know about springform pans for making cheese cake til I found one at a garage sale. Now, it’s a kitchen essential. Recently, I picked up a never-used ceramic tart pan for a dollar. While I use it only once or twice a year, it didn’t cost an arm and a leg so there’s no guilt.

This doesn’t cover vintage finds that include everything from Civil War letters to handcrafted lace doilies to WW II Ration books, stamps, and magazines. These discoveries make a history lover salivate. You never know when you’ll score the find that fills a hole in your collection. As a bonus, you often get the item’s background story.

I hesitated to share my love for this guilty pleasure for fear it might increase competition. However, the growing numbers of advertisements lead me to believe good deals await anyone willing to hit the road to find them.

Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.

Exploring Outdoors Kansas: You don’t say! 2018 edition

Steve Gilliland

My wife and I often pass the hours spent in a hunting blind by making up animal conversations for various situations.

On a fall turkey hunt years ago, we had our hunting blind set up near an old feedlot. The owner had round bales stored there and a tractor path wound around through the bales. The turkeys followed the tractor path through the bales and into the pasture surrounding the old feedlot. We put a couple hen turkey decoys just across the fence into the pasture and settled in to our blind. The resident cattle soon came to see what was up, and became enamored with the decoys.

You could almost sense their thoughts, so we named the cows Clara, Elsie, Audrey and Bessie, and imagined their conversation something like this; “They look like turkeys, but they sure don’t move much,” Clara thought starring at the decoys. Elsie added “Turkeys stink but these things smell like tractor tires or something. Let’s all run at them and see if they scatter and make those same funny noises turkeys make when we almost step on them.” Audrey weighed in “No I’m pretty sure they aren’t real turkeys – if they were they’d be eatin’ corn out of our poo right now.” Bessie said “Girls I’ve got an idea – let’s all back up and try to pee on them and see if they run like they usually do.”

Perhaps the funniest animal conversation we ever conjured up came about at an old farmstead where we hunt deer. The abandoned farmyard sits back a long lane and we park our pickup there and walk to the nearby deer blind. We know deer routinely wonder through the farmyard and around the old buildings, so we tried to imagine how they would react to our truck sitting there if they wandered through as we sat in the blind. Here’s the scene: One morning as we sit there in our deer blind, two deer, Bucky and Chloe wonder through and come upon our pickup in the drive.

“See Bucky,” Chloe states “I told you I smelled them again.” Bucky rests his chin on the hood of the pickup and replies “Yup, sure enough. Hoods still warm, they’re here somewhere.” “What doofuses,” Chloe retorts with disgust as she turns and begins to walk away. Meanwhile Bucky jumps up and sprawls out across the hood of the pickup with his front legs sticking out in front of him and his back legs out behind him, rolls his eyes back into his head and hangs his tongue out the side of his mouth.

“Chloe hears the commotion, and just as she turns around Bucky calls out “Ohhhhh Chloe, they got me!” “You get off there this instant,” Chloe scolds. “That’s not funny at all anymore, especially after you got shot in the butt last season!”

The nursing/retirement home where I used to work has two dementia units and I often marveled at the strange things the residents there with dementia would say and think. Making up animal conversations may see pretty weird and even goofy, but I can only hope that filling my mind with silliness like that now will help me ramble on about silly stuff like that when I get dementia rather than being mean & nasty and cussin’ all the time!

Steve Gilliland, Inman, can be contacted by email at [email protected].

11-year-old Kan. boy dies after pickup runs over minibike

LINN COUNTY — One person died in an accident just before 2p.m. Sunday in Linn County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Chevy Silverado driven by Robert Lee Brown, 21, Hume, MO, was westbound on 300 Road seven miles west of Prescott.

The pickup rear-ended and drove over a 49 CC Super Chopper mini bike driven by Kayden Blaes Samyn, 11, Mound City.

Samyn was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Frontier Forensics.  Brown was not wearing a seat belt and not injured, according to the KHP.  Samyn was wearing a helmet.

🎥 Downtown Hays Market to open Saturday in new pavilion

BY CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post 

The Downtown Hays Market will open for the season on Saturday.

The market will open 7:30 to 11 a.m. every Saturday through the season at the Downtown Pavilion, 10th and Main streets.

The market has about 40 vendors signed up this year. There is no cost to be a vendor. More information on signing up as a vendor can be found at Downtown Hays website.

Parking is suggested across the street in the area where the market was in previous years. There is a new restroom available at the site.

The market has special events planned throughout the season, including music, arts and crafts, and education classes with the Hays master gardeners.

To keep up with these special events, follow the Downtown Market on Facebook. Click here.

Dane Murzyn, a sophomore at Fort Hays State University and DHDC intern, will serve as the market manager this summer. Applications are being taken for another intern this fall.

Sheriff: Child wounded in Kansas drive-by shooting

JACKSON COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a drive by shooting that sent a child to the hospital.

Just before 2a.m. Sunday, the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call from a residence in the 13000 block of 166th Road north of Mayetta, according to Sheriff Tim Morse.

Deputies and investigators arrived at the scene and found multiple rounds that had been fired into the residence.

Jackson County EMS transported a minor child from the residence to an area hospital who had been struck by a bullet. The injury is not believed to be life threatening, according to Morse.

Anyone has any information regarding the incident, you are asked to contact the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office at 785-364-2251.

Austin, Gray lead scorching Yankees to rout of Royals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Tyler Austin hit a pair of two-run homers, Sonny Gray pitched eight innings of four-hit ball and the New York Yankees beat the Kansas City Royals 10-1 on Sunday to win eight consecutive series for the first time since 1998.

Miguel Andujar and Austin Romine added back-to-back homers in the ninth for the Yankees, who have won 14 of their last 15 against the AL Central.

Gray (3-3) was coming off a tough start against Oakland in which he allowed five runs and a season-high nine hits in five innings. But there was nothing tough about facing the Royals’ popgun lineup, which didn’t manage its first hit until there were two down in the fifth.

Gray wound up allowing one run while striking out five and walking one. New York is 24-1 when allowing four runs or fewer.

Eric Skoglund (1-4) gave up six runs, eight hits and two walks in five innings, the latest lousy start by the Royals’ rotation. Kansas City’s 5.51 team ERA is by far the worst in the majors.

Kansas City remains winless in six rubber games this season.

One night after the Yankees pounded five homers, including two from Gary Sanchez, it was the strong but inconsistent Austin that gave New York the lead and kept adding to it.

Skoglund had managed to avoid early trouble, nearly getting a triple play in the second inning, but walked Aaron Hicks to start the fourth. Austin turned on the first pitch he saw and sent it about 440 feet over the left-field wall – it actually went about 500 feet with the bounce.

New York tacked on two more runs, the first on Romine’s single later in the inning and the other on Hicks’ triple in the fifth, before Austin got into the act again.

This time, his two-run shot was a high fly ball that just cleared the centerfield wall.

It was the second two-homer game of the year for Austin, who also did it March 31 at Toronto. The four RBIs matched a career high, which he also accomplished April 23 against Minnesota.

That was plenty for Gray, who finally surrendered a run with two outs in the eighth. He retired his first 14 batters and only allowed two runners to reach second through the first seven innings.

SWEET LOU

The Royals wrapped their Legends Weekend celebration with Lou Piniella throwing out the ceremonial first pitch. Piniella has deep ties to both clubs, having played five seasons in Kansas City and his final 11 with New York. He also spent three seasons as the Yankees’ manager.

FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

New York’s starting lineup Saturday was its first with every player under 29 since Sept. 26, 1970, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

HELLO, OLD FRIEND

Kansas City assigned RHP Michael Mariot to Double-A Northwest Arkansas. The eighth-round pick of the Royals in 2010 was signed Friday after getting released by San Diego earlier in the week.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Yankees: 1B Greg Bird (right ankle surgery) could rejoin the Yankees soon, manager Aaron Boone said, but that could lead to some tough roster decisions. “The good thing is a lot of people here put themselves in a position to make it difficult,” Boone said.

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy said he’s perfectly healthy, despite another miserable outing Saturday, and floated the idea of moving to the bullpen. Manager Ned Yost nixed that on Sunday. “That’s not happening. He’s a major league starter,” Yost said, “and yes, he’s going to make his next start.”

UP NEXT

The Yankees head to Texas for a three-game set beginning Monday night, when RHP Masahiro Tanaka (4-2, 4.73 ERA) will be on the mound. The Royals head across Missouri for three games with St. Louis with RHP Ian Kennedy (1-4, 4.98 ERA) starting the opener Monday night.

Partly sunny, warm Monday

Today Areas of fog before 9am. Otherwise, cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 81. Light and variable wind becoming south 8 to 13 mph in the morning.

Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 61. Southeast wind 8 to 11 mph.

TuesdaySunny, with a high near 87. South wind 9 to 16 mph.

Tuesday NightA 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 64. South southeast wind 8 to 15 mph.

WednesdayA 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 86.

Wednesday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 65.

ThursdayMostly sunny, with a high near 90.

Thursday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 65.

3 hospitalized after Graham Co. pickup rollover accident

GRAHAM COUNTY — Three people were injured in an accident just after 9:30p.m. Sunday in Graham County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Chevy Silverado driven by Tyler E. Morris, 20, Bogue, was westbound on P Terrace Road approximately one mile west of 320th Avenue.

The pickup dropped off the right shoulder and the driver over-corrected. The pickup crossed the center line, entered the south ditch, rolled multiple times and came to rest in a field.

Morris and a passenger Ragen J. Struckhoff, 21, Stockton, were transported to Wesley Medical Center in Wichita.

Passenger Chase M. Smith, 20, Hill City, was transported to Hays Medical Center.

They were not wearing seat belts, according to the KHP.

Man faces life sentence for Kansas City-area child sex crimes

PLATTE COUNTY (AP) – A Louisiana man faces multiple mandatory life sentences in prison for sexually abusing a young girl and for being a predatory sex offender.

McDonald-photo Platte Co. Sheriff

Platte County Attorney Eric Zahnd said 49-year-old Robert McDonald, of Coushatta, Louisiana, was found guilty Thursday of 10 felonies. The jury also found McDonald to be a predatory sex offender.

The victim told investigators that McDonald repeatedly sexually abused and raped her when she was between the ages of 5 and 7. The victim’s sister testified that McDonald had also touched her in a sexual way.

Zahnd says the finding that McDonald is a predatory sexual offender means he must be sentenced to life in prison on four of the 10 counts.

McDonald will be formally sentenced July 16.

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