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Hays native and FHSU graduate appointed to chief judge for the 21st District Court

By James Bell
Hays Post

The Kansas Supreme Court announced Thursday the appointment of Hays native Grant Bannister to chief judge of the 21st Judicial District.

The appointment will be June 16 through Dec. 31.

“We are glad that Judge Bannister has agreed to serve as chief judge, providing continuity in capable leadership in the 21st Judicial District,” said Lawton Nuss, chief justice of the Kansas Supreme Court in a press release.

Bannister has served as a district judge for the 21st Judicial District since September 2016 and will replace Judge Meryl Wilson following his retirement.

“It has been a pleasure to work with retiring Chief Judge Meryl Wilson who has selflessly and admirably served the judiciary for over 22 years,” he said in the news release.

“I am grateful to be surrounded by hard-working staff, clerks, and judges who are dedicated to having fair, efficient, and accessible district courts in Riley and Clay counties.”

Bannister graduated from Fort Hays State University with a B.A. in economics in 1993. While attending FHSU he served as President of the Student Government Association, was a Truman Scholar National Finalist and a Rhodes Scholar Nominee.

He was the FHSU Young Alumni Award winner in 2007.

“Bannister graduated from the University of Kansas School of Law in 1997,” the release said. “He was in private practice in Manhattan for 19 years and also served as an adjunct professor teaching ethics in the College of Business at Kansas State University. He is married and has three children.”

2-year-old boy’s death at Kansas motel under investigation

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities are investigating after a 2-year-old boy who was on the radar of child welfare officials died at a Wichita motel.

The Kansas Department of Children and Families identified the boy as Zayden Jaynesahkluah. Police say he was pronounced dead on May 31 after a woman called to report that he wasn’t breathing.

No information has been released about how he died, and no arrests have been made. Police say they are awaiting a toxicology report.

Kansas Rep. Michael Capps said that welfare officials had been involved with Zayden’s family before he died, although he had no specifics. He says the welfare agency needs to be reformed. The Wichita area has seen several child abuse homicides. The victims include 3-year-old Evan Brewer, whose body was found encased in concrete.

This weekend’s Hays-area garage sales

Hays-area garage sales

Scroll to the bottom for a map of garage sale locations. Hays Post offers FREE garage sale listings weekly. Having a garage sale next weekend? Click HERE to submit your information.

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2519 E. 21st, Hays
Friday June 7th 3:00 to 8:00 pm. Saturday June 8th 8:00 to 12:00 am

Multi family garage sale Friday June 7th 3:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Saturday June 8th 8:00 to 12:00. Lots of house hold items, home decor, women’s clothing, nursing scrubs, purses, scrapbook items, dorm size refrigerator & much more.

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700 E 6th, No. 161, Hays (across from Gordon’s Carpet)
Saturday the 8th and Sunday the 9th 8am -?

Moving Sale! This weekend only! All must go! Hundreds of items of quality women’s clothing mostly Med and Large. Some clothing brands include Reebok, Big Star, Nike, Ann Taylor, Coach, Banana Republic, Lula Roe, Columbia and Clark’s. Lots of business casual. Crafts items, Star Wars and Trek items, antiques, kitchen, bird and rabbit decor, signed art and ceramics, disc golf, books, vinyl records and more!

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2902 Roosevelt Ave., Hays
Friday Noon- 8pm : Sat. 8am-Noon

3 family sale : Home decor : furniture : antique/ vintage items: Longaberger baskets: treasures : junk: Something for everyone

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1410 3rd St., Hays
Saturday-9:00 a.m.

Lots of name brand clothes (Business and Casual), women shoes, house hold items, Pampered Chef items, furniture, tools and misc. items

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1308 Grand Street, Hays
6.8.2019

ESTATE GARAGE SALE. Most everything that an estate would have to sell within a home – new things and old things. A considerable amount of women’s cloths, purses and shoes most hardly ever worn or used. This will be part of the Prairie Acres 9th Annual Community-Wide Garage Sale.

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2218 Haney, Hays
June 7th and 8th

2218 Haney Drive friday june 7 12 (possibly earlier) to 6:30 (possibly later depending on traffic) saturday june 8 8 am to 1 (possibly later depending on traffic) priced to move!! Girls clothes 12-18 month to 3t and some 4t…boys size 4t/4 to 6/7(kids clothes all brands including some nike/UA…lots of shoes..some mens, womens size l/xl shirts, pants with some buckle name brand, lots of toys, household and misc, books, some misc baby/toddler items, coffee table, 18 inch like new ford rims, adding as we go ALL PRICED TO MOVE!

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109 West 14th, Hays
Friday, June 7 from 8am to 7pm

Plants, flower seeds, garden tools & usual garage sale items

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2519 E. 21st., Hays
Friday June 7th. from 3:00 to 8:00 pm Saturday June 8th from 8:00 am to 12:00 am Saturday June 8th from 8:00 to 12:00 am

Multi family garage sale. 2519 E. 21st. St. Hays. Friday June 7th 3:00 to 8:00 pm, Saturday 8:00 to 12:00 am Lots of house hold items, home decor, women’s clothing, nursing scrubs, purses, scrapbook items, dorm size refrigerator & much more.

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660 Commerce Parkway, Hays
Friday, June 7th, 7am-7pm Saturday, June 8th , 8am-12pm

Employment Connections Benefit Sale. Kitchen items, household decor, books, furniture, collectibles, lots and lots of misc. Proceeds benefit persons with disabilities.

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4101 Covenant Dr., Hays
Friday the 7th from 1-7 PM

Tons of women’s name brand clothing and shoes
Brand new furniture, accessories, lamps, etc.
Baby girl clothing and toys
Pbteen room decor (bedding, lamps, rugs, etc)
Kitchen and bath items
Beauty items (perfumes, lotions, hairsprays, shampoo & conditioners)
Name brand purses and bags
Exercise equipment
Dance outfits/clothing

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1503 Henry Drive, Hays
June 8th from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

Desks, small sofa table, jeans, purses, electric weed eaters, greeting cards, children’s books, pendant lights, Chiefs and Cowboys jackets, plastic shelving, coolers, bath rugs, lazy susan and many other items items.

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2230 Southview Drive, Hays
Thursday 4-7; Friday 8-6

The 3-car garage is full! All items are from pet-free/non-smoking homes. Cash only, please.
*Vintage Barbie Dolls and Collectibles (new in boxes)
*1930s Depression Glass (Most are $2 or less; Patterns: Strawberry, Waterford, Tea Room, Fortune, Queen Mary, Manhattan, Rose Cameo)
*Large assortment of vintage toy collectibles (New in packages; Looney Tunes, Disney, Flintstones, Felix the Cat, Kellogg’s, Oscar Meyer
*Caboose cupola seats *Vintage Pez (New in packages, including sets of Simpson’s Pez and Pokémon Pez)
*Girls’ Clothing 10/12 and up (summer and winter; Gymboree, Nike, Children’s Place, Crazy 8, Justice, Xersion). Excellent condition. Most are $1, or less.
*Girls’ Shoes sizes 3 and up (excellent condition)
*CB&Q railroad cans and tools
*Little Black Sambo vintage wooden children’s puzzle and other wooden puzzles
*Girl Scout Journey Junior Books (New)
*Vintage Matchbox and HO trucks (new in packages)
*Halliburton license plates (vintage; never used)
*Electric welder
*Vintage Craftsman tap and die thread cutter set in original wooden box
*Engine overhaul tools
*John Deere tractors and collectibles (new in boxes)
*Fisher Price Learn with Me Zebra Walker (new in the box- $10)
*Thomas and Friends Sea Monsters Pirate Set (new in the box- $10)
*Fisher Price Little People Disney Princess Magical Wand Palace (new in the box- $10)
*1965 Walt Disney Dumbo Record
*Warner Brothers Beanie Babies- new with tags/large assortment (Batman, Scooby Doo, Flash, Robin, Tweety, Taz, Speedy, Dino, Astro, etc.)
*Disney Beanie Babies- new with tags/large assortment (Mickey Mouse, Woody, Little Mermaid, Thumper, Seven Dwarfs, Dumbo, Flower, Flounder, Goofy, Flubber, Herbie, Panic and Pain, Donald Duck, Daisy Duck, Baloo, Pegasus, Lady and the Tramp, etc.)
*Harley Davidson Beanie Babies- new with tags
*1996 Cabbage Patch Swimming OlympiKid USA Olympics Doll (new in box) *100’s of McDonald’s and Wendy’s toys (Throw these out at the next parade instead of candy!)
*Batman Virtual Reality System
*Jurassic Park Virtual Reality System
*Set of 62 NEW 1990 Major League Baseball M.V.P. Collector Pin Series Cards (Each package contains a baseball card and collector’s pin.)
*Complete set of eight 1990 High Fashion Barbie plate set by Susie Morton (produced by Danbury Mint) (Each plate is rimmed in 23K gold and measures just over 9 inches in diameter. New condition with certificates of authenticity.)
*Boyd’s Bears (new with tags) *Collectibles, home décor, household items
*Disney Princess Comforter (twin)
*Pfaff sewing machine in cabinet (1960’s)
*New and gently worn women’s shoes and women’s clothing
*Books, toys, arts/crafts, games
*Polly Pocket Pet Shop, Cars, etc.
*Children’s costumes, holiday décor and much more!!!
**Directions to 2230 Southview Drive: Go south on Canterbury, past the railroad tracks and Highway 40. Continue south past El Charro and the RV Center until you arrive at Reservation Road (the dirt road going east and west). Turn left (east) and go past Josephine and Big Creek Drive. Turn left (north) at the next corner (Logan Drive). If the wind cooperates, we will have a garage sale sign at this corner. Continue north for about a block. 2230 is a green house on the corner.

Monarchs split DH with Ellinwood

HAYS – The TMP Monarchs 17U Legion team picked up their first win of the season Thursday, splitting their doubleheader with Ellinwood at the TMP Field. The Monarchs rallied with eight runs in the bottom of the seventh inning to win the opener 15-14.

Jace Wentling hit a one-out triple which scored two runs the game winner. Wentling drove in three. Nick Helget had four hits.

Tyson Dinkel pitched the final two innings and picked up the win despite allowing five runs on eight hits.

Ellinwood scored six times in the third to take an 8-5 lead. They then added five in the top of the seventh to go up 14-7.

In the second game, Ellinwood scored six in the sixth to break open a two-run game and won 12-6.

The Monarchs had a 2-0 lead until the third when Ellinwood scored three runs. They led 4-2 going to the sixth then scored eight runs in the final two winnings.

Carter Newell gave up five runs, two earned, on six hits with seven strikeouts and two walks and suffered the loss. He also had two hits and drove in three runs.

The Monarchs are now 1-5.

Now That’s Rural: Tom Circle, Pecans in Kansas?

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development

Pecan groves in Kansas? The idea might seem rather far-fetched. In fact, some would say it sounds nuts. But today we’ll learn about a family-owned business in southeast Kansas which is raising and marketing pecans and more.

During the last two weeks, we have learned about local foods in southeast Kansas. A USDA Rural Development grant is supporting K-State’s Technology Development Institute in building markets for local foods.

Tom Circle and his family represent another example of a value-added, local foods producer. In this case, the food is pecans.

“We are on the northern edge of the pecan belt,” Tom said. He grew up on the family farm here where his parents and grandparents raised traditional row crops. During the farm downturn of the 1980s, his family wanted to diversify.

During the late 1960s, a neighbor of theirs had grown a few pecan trees, but the pecan grove had not been maintained. In 1992, Tom’s father bought the property and started to improve it, clearing brush, flagging the trees they wanted and transplanting the trees into rows. Then they began grafting and improving the varieties they wanted. The pecan trees did well.

One natural pest affecting pecans is the pecan weevil. Tom’s grandfather designed a weevil trap to monitor and control these pests. That innovative weevil trap is used nationwide today.

“(My dad) started selling a few nuts in an old building at the corner of the highway,” Tom said. Their roadside stand was open only in November and December during pecan harvest.
The business continued to grow, and the Circle family remodeled the old building. Tom’s father kept thinking of ways to add products and value, and his mother started baking pecan pies, for example. Pecan pie, by the way, is my absolute favorite.

Tom went to college and spent a few years away before he and his wife Barbara came back into the family pecan business. Another building expansion took place in 2011.

Today, Circle’s Pecans and Country Store is open year-round. The store offers pecans and much more. There are pecans in the shell, those which are called cracked and blown, and those which are completely shelled as halves and pieces. Then there are pecan pies, fruit pies, cream pies, and homemade ice cream. Did I mention pecan pies?

Circle’s Pecans and Country Store includes a full bakery and deli with a daily lunch menu. The food is homemade, using family recipes handed down from Tom’s mother and grandmother. The sandwich meats are shaved by hand for deli sandwiches. The store also offers other Kansas products, such as jams, jellies and homemade fudge.

Breakfast is offered on Saturday mornings. On the third Saturday of each month, there is an open mike, bluegrass pickers jam from noon to 4. “We’re just down-home folks and we want to welcome everyone,” Tom Circle said. His son helps part-time, making four generations which have been involved with the family business so far. Grandkids are also on the way.

Circle’s Pecans and Country Store is located along Highway 400, making it a convenient stop for tour busses, travelers, and the local regulars. The store is situated between Parsons and Pittsburg, near the rural community of McCune, population 409 people. Now, that’s rural.

The business website reports that interest in pecans is up, due to the nutrient-dense nature of the pecan meats. Pecans are said to be high in fiber, zinc, important vitamins such as E, and other essential minerals that support strong bones and good digestion. Pecans contain superior levels of antioxidant flavonoids and cholesterol-lowering plant sterols, more than any other tree nut. In fact, pecans are the only nut to rank in the top 20 antioxidant-rich foods.

For more information, go to www.kansaspecans.com.

Pecan groves in Kansas. Not only can these be found within our state, this entrepreneurial family is adding value by marketing pecans and related products directly to the consumer. We commend Tom Circle and family for making a difference by creatively marketing this special crop. If you haven’t guessed it by now, I must tell you that I’m nuts for pecan pie.

🎥 Little Jerusalem State Park to open this year with lower entrance fee, says owner The Nature Conservancy

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Sometime this year.

That’s when the Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park in Logan County south of Oakley is expected to open to the public after the land was purchased three years ago.

An update on the newest state park in Kansas was presented Thursday night by Laura Rose Clawson, director of marketing and outreach for The Nature Conservancy (TNC) Kansas field office, at the Hays Public Library.

“This is the first anyone’s hearing about it,” Clawson told the small but enthusiastic audience. “What I’m telling you is pretty new and there’s always something that could change. But there’s a good certainty [this] is going to be what happens.

“We need to get it open sooner than later so we’re going to do it in phases.”

The Nature Conservancy owns Little Jerusalem which is adjacent to the Conservancy’s 17,290-acre Smoky Valley Ranch in Logan County.

TNC purchased the 330 acres from fifth-generation owner Jim McGuire in late 2016. The family was ready to sell but only if the land and wildlife were protected and public access be granted to the previously private property.

Laura Rose Clawson, of The Nature Conservancy-Kansas, told a Hays audience Thursday the Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park is expected to open this year with a standard $5 entrance fee.

During 2017, Clawson said TNC realized “we were in over our heads. We are a nature conservationist organization. We are not a visitor access organization.”

TNC started exploring options, and looked towards the public/private partnership the organization has with the U.S. National Park Service at the Tall Grass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of Chase County.

They landed on a similar partnership with the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT).

The project next had to go through the legislative process. Then-governor Jeff Colyer signed the bill creating Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park about a year ago.

Phase 1 trail system at Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park (Click to enlarge)

Since then, work has been underway to open the park. Phase 1 is a series of designated trails.

Last Dec. 13, the  KDWPT Commission approved a $50 fee that would be charged to access the trails, although a $5 fee per vehicle would allow entrance to the grounds. The Nature Conservancy was not in favor of such a high fee.

“It’s really important to the Nature Conservancy that access is affordable as possible so that as many people as possible can experience it,” Clawson said.

TNC has been working with KDWPT, she said, and “landed on what we all feel is a really good solution.”

“It’s currently in front of the KDWPT Commission. What’s most likely going to happen and what everybody wants at this point is the Kansas standard park entrance fee, currently $5 a vehicle, or an annual pass [to all state parks].”

Clawson says the KDWPT Commission will discuss the joint proposal by KDWPT and TNC for lowering the fee from $50 to $5 will be discussed at a quarterly meeting and then voted on at the following meeting. “We don’t anticipate any push back with that,” she said.

The KDWPT Commission will meet June 13 at Rolling Hills Zoo in Salina. The agenda items currently do not specifically list Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park.

The Nature Conservancy owns the property and has partnered with the state of Kansas to offer public access.

During questions from the audience Clawson reiterated the entrance fee would be $5 per vehicle, the same as any other Kansas state park.

“So you come in, however many people are in your car, you pay one [$5] fee to get in and then you can get out and go on the trails.”

Clawson said the $50 fee came from “some former state personnel recognizing how excited people are for this, and knowing what it’s going to take [to open], was trying to make up the funds for it.”

KDWPT does not get any appropriation or general funding from the state, she noted. The department funds itself by charging fees.

“Nature Conservancy was okay with a fee, not a $50 fee. We’re all on the same page now and have worked it out.”

Clawson was unable to confirm a specific date for the park’s opening.

“There are a lot of  moving parts, but it’s gonna be this year the park will open. I can’t put a month to it quite yet. Too many little things that could come up.”

The plan calls for KDWPT to hire a new park ranger to start work this summer – a naturalist – who will have regularly scheduled guided walks on and off the trails. Rangers now working at Historic Lake Scott – just seven miles to the south in Scott County – are now rangers working in both parks, according to Clawson. The park manager for Lake Scott is also the park manager for Little Jerusalem.

There will also be occasional special events that would have a additional fee and different staffing. “We’re not talking $50,” she stressed. People are already requesting a night photography event to take pictures of the stars in the clear sky with no light pollution.

The parking lot, designed for 30 to 40 vehicles plus a designated bus area, has been carved out, overflow parking areas have been identified, fencing is going up, and hiking trails with a variety of views are being mapped. The trail system will be adjusted as needed.

A researcher in the Kansas State University Conservation and Parks Management Department is conducting a three-year study on the impact of visitors in the park.

“She has pictures of all the trespassers we’ve had because she’s got cameras hidden through Little Jerusalem,” Clawson laughed.

“But it also means she knows where every trickle of stream water is. And she’s going to be able to see where everybody is going off-road and going through. So maybe we need to put the trail there. Or maybe we have to do something more significant with our signage preventing people from going down there.

“We’re going to make those real-time decisions based on a combination of her scientific data and the park rangers that are going to be patrolling every day and see what’s happening.”

The mile-long valley of 150- to 160-foot-tall spires and cliffs encompasses the state’s largest Niobrara Chalk formations, created 85 million years ago when what is now western Kansas was under the Western Interior Seaway. Fossils can be seen embedded in the chalk.

Trails cross the historic Smoky Hill Trail territory that once saw “Wild Bill” Hickok and “Buffalo Bill” Cody pass through, and today is home to wildlife and plants rarely found anywhere else in the world.

Interpretive signage of the flora and fauna, along with information about the shortgrass prairie and the 200 acres of exposed chalk formations, will be placed along the trails.

Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park will be open 365 days a year during daylight hours, except for special night time events. Inclimate weather could force closure of the park or its entrance access, 400 Road, a dirt road maintained by Gove County.

Two staff members of The Nature Conservancy live in the area and manage Smokey Valley Ranch. “They’re sort of the first-line decision for Little Jerusalem as well,” Clawson explained.

The ranch and park are connected with cattle grazing in both areas. “That’s why we have fencing in the parking lot. It’s not so much to keep people in but to keep the cattle out,” she said with a smile.

Clawson thinks visitation will rival that of Tallgrass Prairie National Reserve, which sees up to 25,000 visitors a year. “We’ve gotten a lot of public interest about Little Jerusalem.”

Because TNC wants to limit the number of structures in the park, there will not be a visitors center.

“That’s one of the roles the new naturalist park ranger will play during the regular interpretive hikes and while meeting with school groups,” Clawson explained.

There are plans for a restroom facility.

Hays resident Jane Gilman told Clawson she would be “willing to pay $50” to hike in Little Jerusalem. She and her husband were recently on the Gove County 400 Road to pick up a piece of equipment. Gilman says she could see the tall chalk spires.

“I’m from western Kansas and I love open spaces.”

Gilman is an avid walker, three miles a day when she can. “I’m excited to go out and see this,” she said. “I picture this like my own ‘Little Grand Canyon’ here in Kansas.”

Russian woman sentenced for international parental kidnapping in Kansas

WICHITA, KAN. – A Russian-born woman was sentenced to 84 months in federal prison Thursday for unlawfully taking her daughter to Russia and demanding money before allowing the American father to have custody of the girl, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.

Bogdana Alexandrovna Osipova referred to by her married name Mobley in court documents is being held in Harvey Co.

In March, a jury found Bogdana Alexandrovna Mobley, 38, guilty on one count of international parental kidnapping and two counts of attempting to extort money from the child’s father.

During trial, the prosecutor presented evidence that in April 2014 Mobley took a child of hers (identified as S.M. in court records) to Russia despite the fact the biological father, Brian Mobley, had been awarded joint custody in Sedgwick County District Court. At the time, the Mobleys had a pending divorce case before the court. The defendant did not obtain the permission of the court or Brian Mobley before going to Russia with the child. The child still has not returned to the United States.

Between April 2014 and November 2016, the defendant only permitted Brian Mobley to communicate with S.M. via cell phones and Skype applications. She told Brian Mobley that he needed to send her money in order to see the child.

Vice President: U.S. ‘encouraged’ by Mexico’s proposals as tariffs loom

WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. and Mexican officials claim to be making progress as they labored for a second day to avert import tariffs. But President Donald Trump is still threatening to impose them as he tries to pressure Mexico into stemming the flow of Central American migrantsacross the United States’ southern border.

Negoitiations with officials from Mexico photo courtesy Vice Pres. Pence

Vice President Mike Pence, monitoring the talks from his travels in Pennsylvania, said Thursday the U.S. was “encouraged” by Mexico’s latest proposals but that tariffs still were set to take effect on Monday.

Pence added that it would be “for the president to decide” whether Mexico was doing enough to head off the tariffs. Pence said that, among other issues, negotiators had been discussing a potential agreement to make it difficult for those who enter Mexico from other countries to claim asylum in the U.S. Mexico has long resisted that request.

Trump has threatened to impose a 5% tax on all Mexican goods beginning Monday as part of an escalating tariff regime opposed by many in his own Republican Party.

The frantic, last-minute talks underscore Trump’s chaotic approach even when decisions have enormous economic consequences for both the U.S. and its closest allies. Trump has embraced tariffs as a tool he can use as leverage against other countries, dismissing the potential harm to American consumers and manufacturers.

Traveling in Europe, Trump told reporters that negotiators had made “a lot of progress,” but continued to play coy.

“We’ll see what happens,” Trump said in Ireland before leaving for France to attend a D-Day ceremony. “But something pretty dramatic could happen. We’ve told Mexico the tariffs go on. And I mean it, too. And I’m very happy with it.”

It remained unclear whether any deal could be struck with Trump out of the country. Many in Washington still expect the tariffs to go into effect barring a major new concession from Mexico, though lawmakers who have been in talks with both U.S. and Mexican officials said they were hopeful a deal could be reached to satisfy Trump, or at least delay the tariffs’ implementation.

Mexican Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard spent several hours at the State Department Thursday morning, while Trump’s legal counsel and other Mexican aides met at the White House Thursday afternoon.

Ebrard told reporters as he left the State Department that progress was being made and that he was likely to return following consultations at the embassy. He returned in early evening.

His spokesman, Roberto Velasco, tweeted that “Options continue to be explored.”

“The stance of the United States is focused on measures of migratory control, ours on development,” he said.

White House spokeswoman Mercedes Schlapp said in an interview that conversations were continuing but “it looks like we’re moving toward this path of tariffs because what we’ve seen so far is that the Mexicans, what they’re proposing, is simply not enough.”

Pence, who led the discussions Wednesday with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other U.S. officials, told reporters in Pennsylvania that the administration had “made it very clear that our neighbors to the south, Mexico, must do more to end the tide of illegal immigration that is besetting our southern border.”

During Wednesday’s talks, the gulf between the countries was clear as Mexico offered small, thus far undisclosed concessions, and the U.S. demanded major action. A senior administration official said the U.S. once again pressed Mexico to step up enforcement on its southern border and to enter into a “safe third country agreement” that would make it difficult for those who enter Mexico from other countries to claim asylum in the U.S.

But Mexico surprised U.S. officials Thursday when they returned to the negotiating table and said they would commit to what Pence had requested, according to the official, who cautioned that significant questions about timing and implementation remain.

Trump officials have said Mexico can prevent the tariffs by securing its southern border with Guatemala, cracking down on criminal smuggling organizations and overhauling its asylum system. But the U.S. has not proposed concrete metrics to assess whether Mexico is complying, and it is unclear whether even those steps would be enough to satisfy Trump on illegal immigration, a signature issue of his presidency and one that he sees as crucial to his 2020 re-election campaign.

Beyond Trump and several White House advisers, few in the administration believe imposing tariffs is a good idea, according to officials familiar with internal deliberations. Those people worry about the negative economic consequences for Americans and believe the tariffs — which would likely spark retaliatory taxes on U.S. exports — would also hurt the administration politically. The officials were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Republicans in Congress have warned the White House that they are ready to stand up to the president to try to block his tariffs, which they worry would spike costs to U.S. consumers, harm the economy and imperil a major pending U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade deal .

Democratic House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal said he will introduce a resolution of disapproval to stop the tariffs if Trump goes through with his threat, panning it as presidential “overreach.”

The Department of Homeland Security announced Wednesday that U.S. Border Patrol apprehensions of migrants illegally crossing the border hit the highest level in more than a decade in May: 132,887 apprehensions, including a record 84,542 adults and children traveling together and 11,507 children traveling alone.

Sunny, warm Friday

Friday Mostly sunny, with a high near 83. Light and variable wind becoming south southeast 6 to 11 mph in the morning.

Friday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 61. Southeast wind 5 to 9 mph becoming light south southeast after midnight.

Saturday Mostly sunny, with a high near 85. South wind 6 to 13 mph.

Saturday Night Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 60. Southeast wind 6 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.

SundayScattered showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 71. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

Rescue puppies born during storm named after TV meteorologists

KANSAS CITY (AP) — An animal rescue has named a litter of puppies born during an outbreak of severe weather after Kansas City TV meteorologists.

Midwest Animal Resq of Raytown says the puppies were born May 24, when tornado warnings were issued. One day earlier, storms injured about two dozen people in Missouri’s capital city and killed three others elsewhere in the state.

The animal rescue said in a Facebook post that, “We figured they needed to be named after some of the folks who helped keep KC safe that night! Welcome to the world weather pups.”

One of the puppies is named for KMBC-TV chief meteorologist Bryan Busby, while the mother was named for the station’s meteorologist, Katie Horner. The other puppies were named for meteorologists at other TV stations.

KBI makes 16 arrests after 2-month drug investigation

CHANUTE, Kan. – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI), the Chanute Police Department, and the Allen County Sheriff’s Office made several arrests Thursday following a two-month long joint investigation into the distribution of illegal drugs, according to a media release.

Wade Wilson has four previous convictions in Neosho County for burglary and theft, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections

With the assistance of the Neosho County Attorney’s Office, arrest warrants were issued for individuals related to the distribution of methamphetamine. Then, on Thursday, June 6, in Chanute, Kan., and in the surrounding Neosho County area, the arrest warrants were executed as a part of “Operation Street Sweeper.”

The subjects were later booked into the Neosho County and Allen County Jails for drug-related crimes including the suspected distribution of methamphetamine, and the possession of controlled substances. Criminal complaints have been filed against the suspects in Neosho County District Court, and will be prosecuted by Linus A. Thuston, Neosho County Attorney. Every defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

Arrested during this operation were:

 Arrestee Name,    Age,    City,    Charge (*Listed charge may be the most serious of several charges)

Wade W. Wilson, 48, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Aubrey M. McKinney, 44, Humboldt, distribution of methamphetamine

Foster A. Curls, 37, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Jeremy M. Wilmot, 39, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Shelby T. Young, 27, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Jeffery R. Sinclair, 32, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Heather R. Treiber, 38, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Patrick J. Blanchard, 40, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Brion L. Dinkel, 45, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Rickie A. Blanchard, 29, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Donna R. Brewer, 36, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Tim L. Ingles, 29, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Heather A. Cox, 43, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

James A. Briggs, 50, Chanute, distribution of methamphetamine

Jessica M. Coyer, 40, Chanute, possession of a controlled substance

Ashten N. Wilson, 22, Chanute, possession of a controlled substance

The joint operation represented a coordinated law enforcement effort to combat drug violence and reduce the accessibility of illegal drugs affecting southeast Kansas. This investigation is ongoing and additional arrests are expected.

 

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