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Robert A. Dague

Robert A. Dague, age 82, passed away on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at the Scott County Hospital in Scott City, Kansas. He was born on May 4, 1937 in Franklin County, Kansas, the son of John George Jacob and Etta Elizabeth Morgan Dague. A lifetime resident of Scott County & Scott City, Kansas, he was a farmer.

He was a member of the Prairie View Church of the Brethren in Friend, Kansas.

On July 19, 1959 he married Joan Carol Vaughn in Garden City, Kansas. She passed away on April 26, 1984 in Garden City, Kansas.

Survivors include his One Daughter – Barbara Jean Dague of Wichita, Kansas, Two Sons – Michael Lee Dague of Scott City, Kansas, John Dale Dague of Scott City, Kansas, One Brother – Roy Dague of Garden City, Kansas, Two Sisters – Dorothy Stiles of Scott County, Kansas, Emma Dague of Garden City, Kansas, One Granddaughter – Joanne VonLintel of Hays, Kansas.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Wife – Joan, One Son – Larry Dague and One Sister – Thelma Lehman.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m. Monday, June 3, 2019 at the Prairie View Church of the Brethren in Friend, Kansas with Pastor Jon Tuttle presiding.

Interment will be in the Prairie View Church Cemetery in Friend, Kansas.

Visitation will be from 2:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. Saturday and 1:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. Sunday at Price & Sons Funeral Home in Scott City.

Soggy fields leave Midwestern farmers with few good answers

By SCOTT McFETRIDGE
Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa — Between the country’s trade dispute with China and the seemingly endless storms that have drenched the central U.S., Iowa farmer Robb Ewoldt has had plenty of time to think about whether it’s too late to plant this season, how much federal aid he might get if he does or whether to skip it altogether and opt for an insurance payment.

Instead of driving his tractor, he’s driving a truck these days to earn a living while wondering how long it will be before he can return to his fields.

“Sometimes I think, what the heck am I doing farming?” he said recently by phone while returning home after hauling a shipment of dry ice to Chicago. “When you owe the bank money, you do some pretty crazy stuff.”

Ewoldt is one of thousands of Midwestern farmers facing such decisions as they endure a spring like no other. It started with poor corn and soybean prices falling even further as the U.S. and China imposed new tariffs, and was compounded by torrential rain and flooding that has made planting impossible and killed off crops that were just starting to emerge.

Conscious that the trade dispute was devastating American farmers, President Donald Trump promised $16 billion in aid — an increase over last year’s $11 billion in aid — but the promise has only added to farmers’ confusion about how to approach this strange spring.

That’s because details about how much money farmers would receive won’t be released until later, to avoid influencing what crops they decide to plant. While there’s a rationale behind keeping the aid details secret, it adds another layer of uncertainty for farmers already guessing about the weather, future crop prices and how much they would get in insurance payments if they don’t plant a crop.

“It’s a take what you can get and keep moving year,” said Todd Hubbs, an agricultural economist at the University of Illinois. “Depending on how the payments and everything break out, each farm is different.”

In the 18 states that grow most of the nation’s corn, only 58% of the crop had been planted as of last week — a far cry from the 90% that would ordinarily be planted by that point. In states that grow nearly all of the soybeans, less than half of the normal crop had been planted. Farmers have even taken to Twitter — creating a #noplant19 hashtag — to commiserate and share photos of their swamped fields.

For Jeff Jorgenson, it’s an all-consuming question of how much of his roughly 3,000 acres of southwestern Iowa land he can profitably farm. About a quarter of it can’t be farmed due to Missouri River flooding, and much of his remaining property has been inundated with rain and water from the neighboring Nishnabotna River.

Navigating muddy roads in his pickup truck this week, he tried to figure out whether it would be worth pumping water off his land or whether that would even be possible. Normally it wouldn’t be worth the effort, but with the prospect that the Midwest’s miserable weather will reduce the nation’s fall harvest, corn and soybean prices have started to rise and planting every acre possible has become more attractive than settling for insurance that would pay roughly half the revenue of a normal crop.

Jorgenson, 44, said it’s a puzzle trying to figure out how much land should remain unplanted and eligible for insurance payments, how much should be planted, how much money in federal aid will be available and whether those funding sources will be enough to cover his operating loan.

“Honestly, 24 hours a day, this is all you can think about,” he said.

Since Bob Worth started farming in 1970, this is the first year he’s opted not to plant on most of his 2,300 acres near the southwestern Minnesota community of Lake Benton. It was a difficult choice, but one Worth said he felt obligated to make given the ducks that are swimming where his corn and soybeans should be growing.

“I’m not going to try to destroy my ground to get a crop in,” he said, noting that planting equipment would rut and compact his land.

Despite insurance payments he will receive, Worth, 66, said he’ll need to refinance loans and lose some of the equity has built up on land that has been in his family for generations.

The deadline for not planting and taking an insurance payment without a penalty varies depending on the state and crop, but the decision time has either passed or is approaching. Hubbs, the Illinois economist, said choosing to opt out, especially when prices are rising, is agonizing for farmers but may be the right choice because of the risk of a poor harvest when planting late in soggy ground and the possibility that the farmer won’t be able to harvest the crop before the weather turns cold.

Hubbs said planting late won’t work out for many farmers unless summer and fall weather conditions are nearly perfect — a scenario that he said seems hard to imagine, given that “storms just keep firing up and moving through.”

Chad Hart, an agricultural economist at Iowa State University, said he worries that the federal aid Trump announced will encourage some farmers who would normally forgo a crop to instead risk planning on wet land. That’s a tough decision for individuals, but collectively it could reduce the supply of corn and soybeans and lead to higher prices.

“We’ve been stuck in a pattern of overproduction, and this could change that,” Hart said.

Ewoldt, who farms on about 1,100 acres he rents from relatives near the Mississippi River outside Davenport, said he hopes he can figure out what’s best for his farm and his family. Ewoldt, 47, said he’s good at producing a crop but that figuring out what to do in the coming weeks seems like guesswork.

“You’re trying to do the algebra equations and figure things out, but you have too many unknowns right now,” he said. “Nobody has a clue what we’re doing.”
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Associated Press writer David Pitt contributed to this report.

Cover photo by Can Stock Photo

Central Kansas flooding closes roads, threatens golf course

STERLING (AP) — Roads are closed in central Kansas and a community is in danger of losing much of its golf course because of continued flooding.

Officials said flooding remains a concern across Kansas because of severe storms that moved through the state earlier in the week and spawned a large tornado in northeast Kansas.

Rice County Emergency Management Coordinator Greg Klein said the Arkansas River is out of its banks and there is flooding along Cow Creek.

He said floodwaters are flowing through the Sterling Country Club and, “They’re going to lose part of their golf course.”

He said most of the dirt roads and many of the blacktop roads in the southern part of the county remain closed. A portion of Kansas 14 south of Sterling also was closed.

Silver Alert issued in WaKeeney

WAKEENEY—A Silver Alert has been issued in Trego County for Russell Adair Hearting, 71, WaKeeney, according to a post of the WaKeeney Police Department’s Facebook page.

The post describes Hearting as 5’10 and 160 pounds. He was last seen wearing a red, long-sleeve shirt, blue jeans, and high-top tennis shoes.

Hearting was last seen at 10:20 p.m. Wednesday on 190th and C Road when an individual stopped to speak with Hearting and offered to give him a ride and Hearting refused, according to the post.

Hearting is believed to be on foot and possibly suffering from dementia.

The department is asking for anyone with any information to please contact the Trego County Law Enforcement Center at 785-743-5711.

 

 

 

 

Betty F. Pettijohn

Longtime Goodland resident Betty F. Pettijohn, 84, passed away on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 at her home in Goodland.

Betty was born on April 14, 1935 to Andrew J. and Martha (Juhl) Pettijohn, on the family farm north of Kanorado, KS in Kit Carson County, Colorado. She was one of 8 children. Betty attended school in Goodland and graduated from Sherman Community High School in 1953.

Betty was hired by the City of Goodland on June 21, 1956 and retired on January 1, 1996. During her time at the City Office, Betty worked as Customer Service, Billing Clerk, and upon her retirement, she was Deputy City Clerk. In 1961, Betty married E.L. “Buck” Buxton, and after 40 years of marriage, they later divorced.

Preceding her in death were her parents, two brothers Bud and Alvin Pettijohn and two sisters Dorothy Cowan and Joan Sipes.

She is survived by a longtime friend Margaret Russell of Goodland, KS; two brothers Conrad (Carol) Pettijohn of Goodland, KS and Robert (Joy) Pettijohn of Austin, TX, and one sister Grace Simmering of Ness City, KS. She is also survived by several nieces and nephews.

Private burial services were held on Friday, May 31, 2019 at the Goodland Cemetery, Goodland, KS.
Online condolences for the family may be left at www.koonsrussellfuneralhome.com.

Services have been entrusted to Koons-Russell Funeral Home in Goodland.

Winifred Litton Anderson Rankin

Winifred Litton Anderson Rankin died in Quinter, Kansas May 28, 2019 at age 94. She was born in Cheyenne Wells, Colorado on August 13, 1924 to Hattie Mabel Bretton and B.W. Litton.

Her family moved to Gove, Kansas when she was a young girl. She married her high school sweetheart, Robert “Bob” Monroe Anderson and together they had 5 children. They moved from Gove to Great Bend, Kansas in 1956. Her husband Bob died in an oilfield accident in 1968. She later married Duane Rankin in Wichita, Kansas and they made their home in Great Bend before retiring to Crane, Missouri and Grove, Oklahoma. Duane passed away in 2010. Winifred then moved to Quinter Independent Living Apartments in 2012.

She is survived by 4 children, Robert (Eileen) Anderson, Denver, Colorado, Raymond “Jerry” Anderson, Lincoln, Nebraska, Winnie Anderson Kingsbury, St. Peter, KS, and Randy (Cathy) Anderson, Great Bend, Kansas; daughter-in-law Betty Anderson, Great Bend, KS; and 3 step-sons, Steve Rankin, Wichita, Kansas, Stanley Rankin, Wichita, Kansas, and John Rankin, South Dakota. She loved being surrounded by her 12 grandchildren when they were young. They include, Sheri Elsen, Shele Maher, Amy Schonhoff, Kimi Bowman, Jamie Baldwin, Hunt Kingsbury, Wesley Kingsbury, Carrie Martinez, Amber Anderson, Rollie Anderson, Rob Nichols, Jason Effertz. She was also blessed with many great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Duane Rankin, son Ralph “Corky” Anderson, grand-daughter Shele Maher, grand-son Jason Effertz, brother Ralph Litton, sister Leola Litton Horner.

In lieu of a funeral, Winifred requested her children and grandchildren gather and release balloons in her honor. The Great Balloon Release will be 3:00 pm Friday, May 31, Black Angus Best Western Inn, Great Bend, Kansas.

Tour of Chapels bicycle ride to feature area architecture, culture

Photos courtesy Hays Area Bicyclists

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

A group of Hays area bicyclists have organized a bike ride that will feature tours of the area’s historic and picturesque churches and a celebration of the Volga German heritage.

The Tour die Kapellen, which is German for Tour of Chapels, will start and end at the Union Pacific Plaza, 10th and Main, Hays, on Saturday, June 22.

The event will include options for a 3-mile fun ride in addition to 13-, 30-, 50-, metric century 62-, and 75 plus-mile rides.

Depending on the length of ride you choose, you can see different churches along the route.

Churches along the supported routes include Catharine, Victoria, Pfeifer and Munjor.

“We feel it is important to show off our churches — the architectural beauty of them, the beauty and what we have in our surrounding little towns and in Hays,” organizer Kathy Rome said.

“Two or three of us were riding and we were like ‘Hey, we ought to put together a ride. We could show off our churches in our communities and our German heritage,’ so that is how it started.”

Photos courtesy Hays Area Bicyclists

Fellow organizer Kay Werth said, “It is really a marriage between the wellness community, the Volga German culture and ethnic things and a little bit about the historical architectural structures in our area. In addition, we are promoting the music in our area.”

There will bike SAGs at each of the churches with free snacks and beverages. Volunteers will be on hand to offer church tours and answer questions about the architecture and history of the churches. Music will be provided at the churches by members of the Hays Symphony and Hays City Band.

The 100-mile route also includes Schoenchen and Antonino. These last two stops will be self-supported. No tours or SAGs will be offered at those stops.

The event wraps up at the Downtown Pavilion with a German meal and music from the Tim Anthony Band, which is included in the registration. Beer will be available for those 21 or older. Registration includes two drink tickets.

The entry fee is $20 for the fun ride and $45 for the distance rides through the June 10 early-bird deadline. Fees after June 10 will be $25 for the fun ride and $55 for the distance rides. Registration also includes a free T-shirt and a swag bag from the Hays Convention and Visitors Bureau, which will contain promotional items and special offers from local businesses.

T-shirts and meal tickets are available for extra guests and family members and can be ordered with your registration.

The event already has bicyclists registered from as far away as Kansas City. The event is hoping for at least 50 riders in this first year.

Werth and Rome said organizers hope a portion of the proceeds for the ride can be used to keep the ride going in subsequent years. The ride would also like to make a donation this year to St. Fidelis Church, Basilica of the Plains parish in Victoria for upkeep of the church.

Registration starts at 6:30 a.m. with the main ride starting at 7:30 a.m. The fun ride will begin at 9 a.m. and run along the Big Creek dam through the FHSU campus. The fun ride will be family-oriented and include a short presentation from local law enforcement on bicycle safety. See below for a complete schedule.

Those who are younger than 18 will need to have a parent ride with them for the main ride. Children younger than 12 must be accompanied by a parent on the fun ride.

You can register online at www.haysareabicyclists.org. More information is also available online at www.facebook.com/haysareabicyclists/ or call the Downtown Hays Development Corp. at 785-621-4171.

The ride is sponsored by the Hays CVB, DHDC, Auto World, Midwest Energy, Werth Wealth Management, HaysMed and Northwestern Printers, Inc.

Schedule of Events

6:30-7:15 a.m. – Registration

Pick up packets at Downtown Hays Pavilion | 10th and Main Street

7:30-8 a.m. – The ride begins!

Riders will be escorted out of town by the Ellis County Sheriff’s Department

8:15-9:15 a.m. – St. Catherine Church (Catherine, KS)

www.volgagerman.net/catharine-church

​  • Music by Hays Symphony String Quartet

     www.hayssymphony.org

  • SAG and tours provided by Greg and Pam Schmidt

9 a.m. – Fun Ride departs

The Fun Ride will depart from the Downtown Hays Pavilion escorted by Ruth Bealer

  • The ride will begin with a 3-mile ride along the Hays Dike through the

     FHSU Campus.

  • Following the first three miles, an optional easy ride to Munjor (13 Miles) will be offered to anyone interested in continuing on.

8:45-9:45 a.m. – St. Fidelis Church, Basilica of the Plains (Victoria, KS)

www.stfidelischurch.com

https://kansastravel.org/cathedralofheplains.htm

​  • Music by Hays City Band Brass Choir

  • SAG and tours provided by John Braun and Cora Schulte

9-10:15 a.m. – Holy Cross Church (Pfeifer, KS)

https://www.germancapitalofkansas.com/index.asp?DocumentID=719

https://www.kansassampler.org/8wonders/architectureresults.php?id=48

• Music by Hays Symphony Harpist, Jane Hyde

 • SAG and tours provided by Deb​ Hoffman

9:45-11 a.m. – St. Francis Church (Munjor, KS)

https://stfrancis-church.com/

​  • Music by baroque cellist Ben Cline and baroque flutist Hillary Shepard

  • SAG and tours provided by Lilly Binder

Optional rides to Antonino and Schoenchen churches are self supported

11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. – Post-Ride Party

Downtown Hays Pavilion | 10th and Main Street

  • German meal sponsored by Hays Convention and Visitors Bureau and prepared by the Victoria community

  • Music provided by the Tim Anthony Band noon-2:00 p.m.

     This band hails from Victoria, Kansas. Members were featured on the ’80’s Star Search Show!

Advisory board: Don’t name officers involved in shootings

Security camera image of Wichita officer-involved shooting as he attempts to avoiding getting hit by suspect vehicle in January -image courtesy Wichita PD

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A public advisory board in Wichita is now recommending that officers involved in shootings should not be named, citing worries about possible death threats to the families of the officers.

The Citizen Review Board has changed its position after previously suggesting that police create a new policy where names would generally be released. The new recommendation came after Police Chief Gordon Ramsay raised concerns about officer safety.

Ramsay’s proposal, approved by the board last month, calls for releasing some information about the officer, such as age, gender, race and years of service, along with discipline history in use-of-force cases and previous involvement in shootings.

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Indictment: Plainville couple stole millions in check-kiting scheme

Plainville Livestock Commission

TOPEKA — The owners of the Plainville Livestock Commission in Rooks County have been charged with carrying out a check-kiting scheme that cost banks millions of dollars, U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister said Thursday in a news release.

A grand jury in Topeka returned the indictment Wednesday. The indictment can be seen here.

Tyler Gillum, 47, and his wife, Camden Gillum, 50, both of Plainville, are charged with 31 counts of bank fraud, one count of making a false statement to the Small Business Administration in an application for a $1.5 million loan, and one count of making a false statement to Almena State Bank in an application for a $500,000 line of credit.

The indictment alleges the Gillums defrauded Almena State Bank in Almena; Landmark Bank in Manhattan; Colorado East Bank and Trust in Lamar, Colo.; Astra Bank in Scandia; TBK Bank in Dallas; Guaranty State Bank in Beloit; and The Bank in Oberlin.

RELATED: Cattlemen affected by Plainville bankruptcy likely in for long wait

The indictment alleges investigators examined unfunded checks and wire transfers totaling more $2 billion sent by Tyler Gillum as part of the scheme. That included 409 wire transfers and 7,584 checks. Tyler Gillum, formerly a loan officer for Montezuma State Bank, owned and operated with his wife Plainville Livestock Commission. In advertisements for the business, they said: “The sale barn facility was first established in 1950 and is situated in the heart of Cow-Calf Country. We pride ourselves in offering individualized attention to marketing your livestock.”

The indictment defines check kiting as a form of check fraud that takes advantage of the time between presentment of a check and the actual receipt of funds (“the float”) to make use of non-existent funds in a checking or other bank account. The purpose of check kiting is to falsely inflate the balance of a checking account in order to allow written checks to clear that otherwise would bounce.

Investigating agencies included the U.S. Department of Agriculture – Office of Inspector General, the FBI, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation – Officer of Inspector General, the Federal Housing Finance Agency – Office of Inspector General and the U.S. Small Business Administration – Office of Inspector General. Assistant U.S. Attorney Rich Hathaway is prosecuting.

In all cases, defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty. The indictments merely contain allegations of criminal conduct.

— Office of U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister

Check Hays Post for more as details become available.

RELATED: Producers try to recoup losses after Plainville Livestock Commission drains account

RELATED: Plainville economy trying to recover after two bankruptcies in a month

RELATED: Kan. Livestock Assoc. issues advisory on Plainville Livestock Commission

James Rex Carswell

James Rex Carswell, 92, of Selden, KS passed away on May 29, 2019 at the Sheridan County Health Complex. He was born on November 30, 1926, seven miles west of Selden, to Wylie Vinton and Mary Agnes (Geisenhener) Carswell.

Rex attended Violenta Grade School and then graduated from Decatur Community High School in 1944. He married Betty Thieler on June 6, 1946 in Selden, KS. Rex was baptized on February 17, 1974 at the Rexford Community Church. He was a famer / rancher until retiring in 2006. Rex was a member of the Rexford Community Church, Lions Club, Odd Fellows Lodge and the Masonic Lodge. He enjoyed baseball, puzzles, golfing, hunting, fishing and playing cards and dominoes at the Red Barn.

Rex was preceded in death by his parents; grandson, Richie Perry and granddaughter, Kelli Marie Hofmeier.

He is survived by his wife, Betty Lou Carswell of Selden, KS; sons: Vincent Harold Carswell and wife Peggy of Oberlin, KS and Daryl Eugene Carswell and wife Rita of Hays, KS; daughters: Terry Ruth Salter and husband Steve of McPherson, KS and Peggy Ann Dible and husband Robert of Menlo, KS; 14 grandchildren and numerous great grandchildren and two great great granddaughters, Brylee and Hadley.

Funeral services will be held 10:30 am Saturday, June 1, 2019 at the Rexford Community Church. Burial will follow at Hawkeye Cemetery, Rexford. Visitation will be Friday, May 31, 2019 from 12:00 – 7:00 pm at Pauls Funeral Home, Selden. The family will receive friends from 5-7:00 pm.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Rexford Community Church. Condolences may be left at www.paulsfh.com

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