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Raymond Torvie Parrott

Raymond Torvie Parrott, 80, a longtime resident of Las Vegas, Nevada, died September 12, 2019 at the Nathan Adelson Hospice after a prolonged illness.

He was born December 5, 1938 in Cleburne County, Arkansas in a log cabin to Jake O. and Jessie Pearl (Tidwell) Parrott. He married the love of his life, Joyce Halling, December 29, 1962 in Hanston, Kansas.

Ray or Torvie as many knew him, served proudly in the Navy and then went to college. He attended Dodge City Community College and Wichita State University. He received a Bachelor of Science in Physical Education from Saint Mary of the Plains College in Dodge City, Kansas in 1971. He then completed a Master of Science degree in Education in 1975. He taught in many schools across Western Kansas and influenced countless lives as a teacher, coach, mentor, principal and superintendent.

In 1989, he retired from school administration and relocated the family remaining at home to Las Vegas. He embarked on a second career as a croupier. (Look it up!) He really enjoyed interfacing with the public and sharing his particular brand of humor at the table.

He loved his family and friends, sharing his love of his second home, Las Vegas, with all who came to visit. He also loved going to movies and the many restaurants available around town. As his health declined, he found a way to stay connected through Facebook, sharing his love of old country music, playing games and making friends with people all around the world. He had a great sense of humor and an infectious laugh when he got really tickled about something.

Ray is survived by his wife of 56+ years, Joyce of Las Vegas; daughter, Monica Scrudder, Gig Harbor, Washington; son, Greg (Stefanie), LaCrosse, Kansas; son, Scott, Las Vegas; son, Richard (Eva), Hays, Kansas; daughter`, Jennifer York (Daren), Scott City, Kansas; daughter, Myrna, Las Vegas; 12 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren. Sisters: Wanda Abernathy (Robert) Hutchinson, Kansas; Linda Rehmert, Eufala, Oklahoma; Brenda West, Corinth, Mississippi and many nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents Jake O. and Jessie Pearl Parrott; his brother Andrew; a half-sister, Opal Woodam; grand-daughter, Alexa Leigh Whalen; daughter, Janelle Parrott Whalen; and son, Michael Brett.

Remembrances can be sent to Palm Eastern Mortuary & Cemetery 7600 S. Eastern Avenue Las Vegas, Nevada 89123.
Funeral service will be held at Christ the King Catholic Church in Las Vegas, Nevada– Inurnment will be held at Palm Eastern Cemetery at a later date.

Larry L. (Colonel) Carr

Larry L. (Colonel) Carr, 78, passed away September 17, 2019 at Country Living of Larned.

He was born July 11, 1941 at Great Bend, KS, the son of Guy “DeLos” and Glennis Eleanor Schultz Carr. A lifetime area resident, Larry and his wife, Marlene, were founders of Carr Auction and Real Estate.

He was of the Christian faith. He was the president of Kansas Chapter #3 IHC Collectors Club; He sat for the boards of Santa Fe Trail Center, First State Bank, Pawnee County COOP. He was a member of the Kansas Auctioneer Association, The National Auctioneer Association, Kansas Realtor Association, co-founder of Sunrise Association, Larned Rotary Club, Lion’s Club and the Breakfast Club. He was an avid sports fan; collector of antique tractors and he was a Melvin Jones recipient.

On June 3, 1960 he married Marlene Renfro in Larned, KS. She survives.

Other survivors include: son, Kirk Carr, Larned, KS; daughter, Tammy (Jim) Froetschner, Larned, KS; brother, Harlie R. (Paula) Carr, Larned, KS; sisters, Carla (Gary) Bowman, Manhattan, KS, Bonnie Carr, Wichita, KS; three grandchildren, Shane Carr, Silverthorne, CO, Chris (Jamie) Froetschner, Larned, KS, Jami (Chris) Battin, Pratt, KS; six great grandchildren, Finley LaRue, Royce Callait, Sawyer May, Eli Christopher, Brezlin Vi and Jude Edward.

He was preceded in death by his parents and a brother, Val Gene.

Funeral will be 10 a.m. Saturday, September 21, 2019, at Larned United Methodist Church, with Bob Sallee and Pastor Tricia North presiding. Visitation will be from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday at Beckwith Mortuary, Larned, KS. Burial will be in Larned Cemetery, Larned, KS.

Memorials may be given to Santa Fe Trail Center, Pawnee County Humane Society or Larry Carr Memorial Scholarship Fund in care of Beckwith Mortuary, Box 477 Larned, KS 67550.

Police investigate after finding abandoned infant in Manhattan

RILEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating the case involving an abandoned infant.

Just after 7p.m. Wednesday, police received the report of an infant found alive in the 2000 block of North Manhattan, according to a media release from the Riley County Police Department.

The baby was transported to Stormont Vail in Topeka as a precaution.

On Thursday morning, police reported they had identified the mother of the infant and she is in good health.

Further investigation leads police to believe the mother’s intent was to follow the safe haven law, according to RCPD. Police have released no additional details.

Heartland Community Foundation accepting applications for fall grants

The Heartland Community Foundation, which serves Ellis, Rooks and Trego counties, is accepting applications for fall grants. Online applications are due Friday, Nov. 15.

This year, more than $150,000 is available to charitable projects in Ellis, Rooks and Trego counties, with over $50,000 available per county. Grants will be awarded from the following funds:

• Dane G. Hansen Community Grant Fund – available for programs and projects that address education, health care, community social services and security, conservation and environment, arts and culture, and community beautification.

 Ellis, Rooks and Trego County Legacy Funds – available for projects that improve the quality of life in either Ellis, Rooks or Trego Counties.

• Heartland Area Action Fund – available for projects that improve the quality of life for Heartland area residents.

• Kansas Health Foundation Fund for Heartland/Heartland Healthy Living Fund – available for projects and programs that protect and promote the health and well-being of Heartland area residents.

Funding is limited to projects in Ellis, Rooks and Trego counties and will be awarded through a competitive application process. Nonprofit organizations including government and public entities, educational institutions and churches are encouraged to apply. Applications must be submitted online by 11:59 p.m. Nov. 15.

Complete funding criteria and the grant application are available HERE.

— HCF

Eisenhower museum hosts meet and greet for vet walking across U.S.

Miller atop a ladder truck during his stop with the Ellsworth Fire Department over the weekend. Photo courtesy Jeremy Milller

ABILENE — The public will have a chance to meet veteran Jeremy Miller during his stop in Abilene on Thursday.

Miller is walking across the United States to raise awareness of the nation’s veteran suicide problem.

Read about Miller’s walk here.

Miller spent Tuesday night in Salina as a guest of the Salina Fire Department before heading out Wednesday to his next stop: Abilene.

According to a post on the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum Facebook page, Miller will be available to meet with the public from 9:30-10 a.m. Thursday at the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum, 200 SE Fourth Street.

Following the public meet and greet, Miller is scheduled to tour the new exhibits before continuing his walk toward Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va.

Kansas sex offender jailed, 4 children placed in protective custody

COWLEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating four suspects on drug charges

Sedam has previous convictions for Indecent Solicitation Child;GE14 less than 16,sexual act, offender registration and two for drugs, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections

On Tuesday, police located a 15-year-old runaway from Ponca City, Oklahoma, in the 2800 block of North Summit Street in Arkansas City.

They determined that she was under the influence of methamphetamine. They interviewed the juvenile, who said she had been staying at 33-year-old Arron Dion Sedam’s residence in in the 1000 Block of First Street, according to police.

She said Sedam provided her with meth and had given her a tattoo while she was at his residence. A search warrant was obtained and executed at the residence resulting in the three arrests. Four juveniles were taken into police protective custody due to the conditions at the residence.

Police arrested Angela Renee Baxley, 51, and Timothy Scott Massey, 46, who is listed as homeless,  on suspicion of felony possession of methamphetamine and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia. Massey also was arrested on a Cowley County District Court warrant for bond violation.

Police arrested Sedam on suspicion of one felony count each of aggravated endangering a child, interference with parental custody and possession of methamphetamine, as well as one misdemeanor count each of possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of marijuana and tattooing a minor without consent. Sedam was transported to and booked into the county jail in lieu of $23,000 bond through Arkansas City district court. He remained in custody.

 

Operation Christmas Child craft event Sunday in Hays

Operation Christmas Child volunteers will be making crafts to place in shoebox gifts from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 22, at Messiah Lutheran Church, 2000 Main St. in Hays.

Rachel Albin, area coordinator, said participants do not need to have special skills, and youth are welcome to participate.

“If you want to take some of the items you make for your own shoeboxes or for your church’s shoeboxes, that’s absolutely fine,” Albin said. She added that if participants have crafts they are working on for their own shoeboxes, they are welcome to bring them along.

“This will be a fun time when we can gather together as an interdenominational group and work on projects and share ideas.”

Operation Christmas Child is a project of Samaritan’s Purse, an international relief agency headquartered in Boone, N.C., and led by the Rev. Franklin Graham. Every Christmas thousands of individuals prepare shoeboxes filled with small toys, school supplies and hygiene items, which are then delivered to needy children around the world.

Children receiving shoeboxes also receive a booklet titled “The Greatest Gift,” which tells the children about Jesus and how much he loves them. For many of the children, the shoebox is the first gift they have ever received.

Albin said in 2018, individuals in Ellis County donated 2,615 shoeboxes. This year’s shoebox collection week is Nov. 18-25.

Donations for craft supplies are always accepted and appreciated, Albin said. More information is available by contacting her at (785) 639-1325 or at [email protected].

– SUBMITTED –

Colby CC foundation receives gift for health and animal care students

Dorothy Lowry and her daughter Rhenda Field pose with Colby Community College health and animal care students. Lowry and her husband recently created the Ned and Dorothy Lowry Endowed Scholarship Fund at CCC.

CCC

Ned and Dorothy Lowry

COLBY — The Colby Community College Endowment Foundation announced a new scholarship fund after receiving a $300,000 gift from Ned and Dorothy Lowry of Dodge City. The Ned and Dorothy Lowry Endowed Scholarship Fund will assist students studying in health and animal care majors.

Dorothy Lowry and her daughter Rhenda Field were on campus Sept. 4 for a tour and a check presentation. After a group photo, nearly 50 students lined up to hug her.

“We truly were overwhelmed and so pleased that we chose Colby Community College for a part of our legacy,” Lowry said in an email to the foundation. “Best wishes to each of the students. We are glad to be a small part of their lives.”

Ned and Dorothy Lowry were born and raised in Norton and Phillips counties. Work with an oil and gas company took them to Nebraska and Oklahoma before they moved to Liberal in 1966. After 19 years as an employee for the same company, Ned decided to start his own oil and gas engineering and lease management company that facilitated drilling, completion and production for independent companies located outside of Kansas. He followed with another company where he managed a fleet of gas compressors and the construction of commercial real estate rentals.

After retiring in 2001, the Lowrys settled in Dodge City. They are enjoying life with their three married children and families that include eight grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

“It is an honor to receive and establish a scholarship fund that distinguishes a family legacy,” said foundation director Jennifer Schoenfeld. “The Lowry family will be helping students accomplish their educational goals for many years to come.”

BOOR: Storage methods to reduce hay losses

Alicia Boor

As you bring in your round bales for winter storage and feeding, store them to minimize weather losses.

Hay stored outside will be damaged by rain, snow, wind, and ice this fall and winter.  The average round bale loses about one fourth of its original nutrients during storage, but these losses can be reduced to less than 10 percent or so.  Now, you may be better than average but let’s still look at ways to reduce spoilage by storing that valuable hay more carefully this year.

  For instance, do you sometimes line up bales for easy access so the twine sides touch each other?  Or do you stack your bales?  If so, extra spoilage will occur where these bales touch because rain, snow, and ice will gather in spots where bales touch instead of running off.  Round bales butted end-to-end, cigar-like, usually have less spoilage.

Does snow drift around your bales?  Bales placed in east-west rows often have drifts on the south side.  Hay close to fencelines or trees can get extra snow.  As snow melts it soaks into bales or makes the ground muddy.  Plus, the north side never gets any sun so it’s slow to dry.  This year, line your bales up north-and-south and away from trees for fewer drifts and faster drying as sunlight and prevailing winds hit both sides of the row.

Most important is the bottom of your bales.  Always put bales on higher, well-drained ground so water drains away from them.  Keep them out of terrace bottoms or other low spots.  If necessary, use crushed rock, railroad ties, or even pallets to elevate bales to keep the bottoms dry.  This also will reduce problems getting to your hay or getting it moved due to snow drifts or mud.

Just a little pre-planning can save lots of hay and frustrations.

Alicia Boor is an Agriculture and Natural Resources agent in the Cottonwood District (which includes Barton and Ellis counties) for K-State Research and Extension. You can contact her by e-mail at [email protected] or calling 620-793-1910

Judge denies Missouri request to allow 20-week abortion ban

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A federal judge has denied a request by Missouri to allow a ban on abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy to go into effect while the state waits for further court action.

U.S. District Court Judge Howard Sachs had previously paused parts of Missouri’s new abortion law. It was set to go into effect Aug. 28 and criminalizes abortions after eight weeks of pregnancy.

It also triggered bans at 14, 18 and 20 weeks if the initial eight-week ban was found unconstitutional.

The judge issued a preliminary injunction Aug. 27 against the bans based on gestational age. The state immediately appealed the judge’s decision to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. It’s not clear when the appellate court will hear the case.

Missouri asked Sachs to reinstate just the 20-week abortion ban during the appeal.

Renewed threats of flooding as Missouri River rises

By BRENT MARTIN
St. Joseph Post

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — Flooding might well be returning to northwest Missouri, though the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is downplaying how severe this late summer, early fall flooding will be.

Torrential rain in the upper Missouri River Basin has filled the six reservoirs upstream on the Missouri River. The Corps has reduced water releases from Gavins Point Dam, but only for a while. Releases have dropped from 70,000 cubic feet per second to 60,000, but then will be raised to 80,000 well into October.

National Weather Service Hydrologist Kevin Low says the forecast for the final three months of the year is about twice the average rainfall.

“Our upper basin runoff forecast for 2019 is 58.8 million-acre feet, more than 30 million-acre feet more than the long-term average of 25.3,” Low tells a conference call hosted by the Corps of Engineers.

The Army Corps of Engineers Mike Dulin in the Kansas City office says the Corps doesn’t expect the renewed flooding to do the damage the mid-March and late May floods did.

“We continue to monitor the Missouri River after last week’s torrential rainfall in the Dakotas,” Dulin says. “Based on National Weather Service forecast information, we anticipate the crest to reach Rulo, Nebraska this Saturday into Sunday and could peak at a stage around 22 feet. While no levees are expected to overtop, levees that were previously breached during the March flood event could see some floodwaters move back into the bottoms as the crest passes.”

The National Weather Service reports the Missouri River at St. Joseph rose to 18.2 feet this morning and is expected to crest at 21.2 feet Monday and Tuesday. Upstream, at Rulo, Nebraska the Missouri River topped just over 20 feet and is expected to crest at 22.2 feet this weekend.

Missouri River Basin Water Management Director John Remus says water releases at Gavins Point will remain high for a while.

“We don’t have an exact date on that, but it will be well into October,” Remus says.

Remus says the Corps hopes to manage releases from the upstream dams in such a way as to return to normal on December the first.

“The plan is to cut down releases. Our plan is to get down to where we need to be for our winter evacuation by the first part of December,” Remus says. “If we do that, then we would not necessarily have to release higher flows coming out of Gavins Point.”

Corps officials say they are attempting to deal with rainfall in northern Nebraska and the Dakotas that has exceeded 400% of normal the past two weeks.

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