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David A. Walker

David A. Walker, 67, Stockton, Kansas, died Wednesday, May 22, 2019, at Hays Medical Center, Hays, Kansas.

Mr. Walker was born December 12, 1951, in Stockton, Kansas, the son of Lee Wildrix and Mildred L. Spargo. He was a lifelong resident of Rooks County, Kansas. He worked in the oil industry as a rig operator.

He loved to fish, and hunt. He also was an avid NASCAR fan.

Survivors include: two sons, Billy Walker (Mary), Topeka, Kansas, and Scott Walker (Stephanie), Morton, Washington, five grandchildren; one brother, Edward Walker, Logan, Kansas; and two sisters, Linda Groff (James), Stockton, Kansas, and Patty Eggers, Sterling, Kansas.

He was preceded in death by his parents, and one sister, Bonnie Thompson.

Cremation has been chosen. A memorial service will be held at a later date.

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

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

Norma Kay (Weltmer) Schultz

Norma Kay (Weltmer) Schultz, age 80, passed away on Tuesday May 28, 2019 at the Parkview Care Center in Osborne, KS. She was born the daughter of Charles & Gertrude (Duer) Weltmer on April 19, 1939 in a house 10 miles south of Thornburg, KS.

When she was a child, the family moved into Smith Center. She attended school in Smith Center, graduating in 1957. She met Loren Schultz in 1954 and they were married on September 22, 1957. To this union 3 children were born, Sheryl in 1959, Randy in 1961, Lori in 1967. They lived all their married life in Smith Center.

She worked at A & W for Gleam Manchester early in her married life. She baby sat for other children when her children were small. Once they all entered school, she started work in counter sales at our local Sears store. When the Sears store closed, she went to work at Independent Living. She then went to work for Quality Farm & Home which changed to Country General and later changed to Orscheln’s.

Between the changes at the store, she became employed by the Hubbard family, caring for Louise Hubbard until her passing. Then went back to work for Orscheln’s and retired in 2014. She was a member of the American Legion Auxillary. She was also a member of the Nazarene Church in Smith Center where she held many positions in the church including church pianist. She was also recognized for 70 years of service in June 2018. She served on the election board for many years. She raised her family up in the church as well.

Her health started to deteriorate in February 2019 after her diagnosis of cancer. She spent time in the hospital in Kearney & Smith Center and finally Parkview Care Center.

She was preceded in death by her parents; siblings Robert Willard & Doris; husband Loren; sisters in law Eunice Weltmer, Avis Weltmer & Karen Grieve; brother in law Paul Schultz.

She is survived by her children Sheryl (Duane) Macklin, Lori Schultz and Randy Schultz all of Smith Center; grandchildren Brett (Terra) Macklin of BelAire, KS and Stacey (Nic) Sears of Wichita, KS; a great grandson Bradyn Macklin of BelAire, KS; brother Richard Weltmer of Smith Center; brothers in law Garry (Justina) Schultz of Council Bluffs, IA; sisters in law Melva McGuin of Beloit, Nila Smith of Lindsborg and Donna Conrad of Smith Center; numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and friends.

Click HERE for service details.

Police: Kan. man with 10 convictions jailed after pointing gun at officers

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas felon on new weapons charges.

Garrison photo KDOC

Just after 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, police responded to a report of a shooting in the 300 block of SE Golden in Topeka, according to Lt. John Trimble.

Once on scene, police found the suspect 57-year-old Terry Allen Garrison at the residence.

Garrison then pointed a firearm at responding officers.

As more officers arrived, police took Garrison into custody without further incident. It was discovered that Garrison had discharged his firearm in the yard, but no one was injured.

Police also discovered that he was a convicted felon, which prohibits him from possessing a firearm. He was booked into the Shawnee County Department of Corrections for Aggravated Assault to a Law Enforcement Officer and Felon in Possession of a firearm.

Garrison has 10 previous convictions that include theft, robbery, burglary, forgery, aggravated robbery, aggravated assault, identity theft and aggravated failure to appear, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Linda Long

Linda Long, age 55, passed away at her home in Almena, Kansas.

Funeral services are tentatively set for Friday, May 31, 2019, at 10:30 a.m. at the Enfield Funeral Home in Norton, Kansas.

A full obituary is pending.

Keith Otto Marcum

Keith Otto Marcum, 91, passed away May 28, 2019, at Brookdale Senior Living, Great Bend. He was born on March 21, 1928, at Turon, to Otto H. & Mildred (Riggs) Marcum. He married Marie Parks on November 4, 1961 at Overland Park. She died October 5, 2016.

Keith was an Army Veteran, having served during Korean War, earning the rank of Corporal. Coming from Topeka in 1969, Keith was a Great Bend resident. He was an office manager for the State of Kansas Employment Services for 32 years, retiring in 1992. Keith was an active and prominent member of the First Church of the Nazarene, being awarded the Distinguished Service Award, along with his wife Marie. Keith was also a member of VFW Post #3111.

Survivors include, one sister, Crystal Burrows of Adams, TN; and one brother, Frank Marcum of Plainville. He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife, Marie Marcum; and two sisters, Lois Walters and Martha Bennett.

Visitation will be held from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., Thursday, May 30, 2019, at Bryant Funeral Home. Funeral Service will be held at 11:00 a.m., Friday, May 31, 2019, at First Church of the Nazarene in Great Bend, with Pastor Josh Foster presiding. Interment will be in the Great Bend Cemetery. Military Rites will be conducted by the United States Army.

Memorials have been suggested to First Church of the Nazarene Compassionate Ministries, in care of Bryant Funeral Home.

Bruce Eldon Sneath

Bruce Eldon Sneath, age 59, died on Monday, May 27, 2019 in Scott County, Kansas. He was born on August 19, 1959, the son of Glen Eldon and Annette Dobrinski Sneath.

He was a member of the Pence Community Church in Pence, Kansas.

On July 16, 1977, he married Paula McDaniel in Scott City, Kansas. She survives.

Other survivors include:

Three Children
Christopher and Brandi Sneath of Garden City
Nicola and Russell Gregory of Scott City
Todd and Megan Sneath of Garden City

Seven Grandchildren
Jarron Gregory of Scott City
Bryton Gregory of Scott City
Brayden Sneath of Garden City
Easton Sneath of Garden City
Chase Sneath of Garden City
Riley Sneath of Garden City
Paxton Sneath of Garden City

Father
Eldon Sneath of Claremore, Oklahoma

One Sister
Missy Lorg of Claremore, Oklahoma.

He was preceded in death by his mother, and one brother Rick.

Memorial services will be held at 2:00 p.m. Friday, May 31, 2019 at the First Baptist Church in Scott City, Kansas with Pastor Don Williams presiding.

There will be no calling times.

Interment will be in the Scott County Cemetery.

Memorials are suggested to the Bruce Sneath Memorial Fund in care of Price and Sons Funeral Home, PO Box 553, Scott City, Kansas 67871.

Officials begin to increase the water release from Tuttle Creek Dam

RILEY COUNTY —To ensure dam safety, the Kansas City District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will begin to increase the water release from Tuttle Creek Dam in Manhattan Wednesday as runoff from rains over Memorial weekend are expected to fill the reservoir’s remaining flood storage capacity.

photo courtesy RCPD

According to a media release from the city of Manhattan, based on water already in the Little and Big Blue Rivers, releases are expected to be set at 15,000 cubic feet per second. Tuttle Creek Dam will slowly increase water through the outlet works starting at 7:00 a.m. and continuing into the afternoon.

Sirens near the dam and Rocky Ford Fishing Area will he sounded with each increase in release. These are not flood warnings. Flood warning sirens are spoken words, not tones.

This amount of water is not expected to cause any flooding downstream and no evacuation notices have been issued. If any announced releases are expected to cause flooding downstream, evacuation notices will be issued for impacted areas. The release will be managed from the outlet works (the tubes) and is expected to stay within the river channel. Additional rainfall is forecast and USACE staff are monitoring the situation 24 hours a day.

“This release will help slow down the rise of the lake. We’re definitely not out of the woods yet, but this release is a positive development for our community,” said Scott French, Manhattan Fire Chief and current Incident Commander.

Officials in Riley County, Pottawatomie County, and the City of Manhattan will continue to prepare for potential flooding throughout the area. Credentialed personnel will be visiting flood prone neighborhoods in Manhattan and in rural areas, going door-to-door to make sure residents are aware of the flood risks. These personnel will also be gathering information from residents including how many people are in the household, asking if the occupants have flood insurance, and also asking if there are any people in the home with medical needs that would make evacuation difficult if that time comes.

Knowing the existing medical needs will help emergency personnel plan for safe evacuation appropriate shelter environments for people with medical conditions. Residents are encouraged to ask for credentials from people who visit their home. A Flood Evacuation Special Needs form is also available for both counties.

KZ Country Cheesy Joke of the Day 5/29/19

khaz cheesy joke logo 20110802Mystery Tipping

A man takes his seat in the theater, but he is too far from the screen.

He whispers to the usher, “This is a mystery, and I have to watch a mystery close up. Get me a better seat, and I’ll give you a big tip.”

The usher moves him into the front row, and the man rewards him with a measly quarter.

The usher looks at his tip for a second and then leans over to whisper to the man, “the wife did it.”

 

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HHS has three players named to the KABC All-State baseball team

Coming off a 20-2 season, the Hays High Indians have three players named to the Kansas Association of Baseball Coaches 5A All-State team. Senior pitcher Trey Riggs is a first team pick while junior Brock Lummus was named honorable mention catcher and senior Palmer Hutchison honorable mention as a utility player.

Riggs, who was named the Western Athletic Conference Player of the Year, led the Indians with 6-2 record and 1.71 earned run average this spring. He struck out 52 batters while walking only 11 in 45 innings of work.

Lummus, who was named to the All-WAC first team, was tied for the Indians team lead with two triples, was second with six doubles and tied for third with three home runs while batting .333.

Hutchison, who was also a first team All-WAC selection, led the Indians with seven doubles and was tied for the team lead with two triples while batting .403. He went 7-0 in nine starts on the mound with a 2.58 ERA. Hutchison struck out 51 while walking only 10.

Kan. Farm Bureau Insight: A Baltimore bookstore

Greg Doering
By GREG DOERING
Kansas Farm Bureau

I booked a late flight home from a recent conference in Baltimore with the idea that I’d have most of the day to explore the city, or at least the areas near the hotel.

Mother Nature, however, had other plans and washed away my plans. On the way to lunch a colleague spotted a used bookstore. I can think of no better way to kill time on a rainy afternoon than to peruse stacks of books.

You can tell if a bookstore is good the moment the smell hits you. This one was fantastic. Despite the rain, inside the air was somehow dry and musty. It had an intoxicating fragrance of leather, binding glue and aging ink.

Books have always been a refuge for me on foul days. I was in middle school when, during the height of a thunderstorm, I discovered a copy of Herman Wouk’s “The Caine Mutiny” in the back of a closet at my grandparents’ home. Its blue cloth cover did little to reveal the compelling story within. It wasn’t until much later I learned Wouk’s story centered on the commander of a World War II Navy ship and won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1952.

When I read “My Side of the Mountain,” by Jean Craighead George, I was determined to run away from home and live in the Catskill Mountains just like Sam Gribley. I made it all of two houses down before my mother found me in a neighbor’s backyard. After a few years passed, when I was less of a flight risk, I received the other two books in the trilogy as a Christmas present.

From time to time, I wonder what it would be like to shun modern society and live off the land in some remote corner of the world. Thankfully I live in Kansas where the weather often delivers reminders of modern conveniences, like central air and indoor plumbing.

I discovered horror writer Dean Koontz by accident in a Burlington, Colo., gas station. Returning from a family ski trip, we were trapped there during a mid-March blizzard. I thought I’d discovered the next Stephen King until my dad informed me he’d been reading Koontz since the 1970s.

While that dented my pride, I’ll forever be in my father’s debt for his book suggestions. He had a voracious appetite for the printed word, often reading several books a week. It wasn’t until I was a little older, probably in college, that the recommendations started rolling in.

First it was James Clavell’s “Nobel House” part of a six-book chronicle of a family’s decades of service to the British Empire in Asia. Cormack McCarthy’s “The Road,” Michael Connelly’s “The Lincoln Lawyer,” Tom Wolfe’s “A Man in Full,” James Michener’s “The Source,” and others followed.

Michener’s “Chesapeake” was on prominent display in the Baltimore bookstore, alongside other authors and novels based in and around the region, like journalist and essayist H. L. Mencken. Of course, there was plenty of Edgar Allen Poe, father of the modern detective story and famous Baltimore resident.

After spending a couple hours browsing through the store, I figured I needed to get serious about finding something to buy. “Chesapeake” was out because I wasn’t going to lug a 900-page tome on an airplane. I finally settled on Bill Bryson’s “A Walk in the Woods,” which chronicles the middle-aged author’s attempt to hike the Appalachian Trail. It’s what I imagine Sam Gribley doing as an adult.

The one lament I have is I should have picked up a couple more books. I was hopeful to leave the rain in Baltimore. I figured once I returned, I would spend my free time hiking and fishing, not rushing to mow the lawn between downpours. Instead of casting into a lake, I’ve been swiping my library card. It’s not a terrible trade, but I’m ready for some sunny days.

“Insight” is a weekly column published by Kansas Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization whose mission is to strengthen agriculture and the lives of Kansans through advocacy, education and service.

Registration open for FHSU’s 73rd High Plains Music Camp

Dave Pietro

FHSU University Relations

Jazz saxophonist Dave Pietro, a gifted performer, composer and teacher, will headline the 2019 High Plains Music Camp the 73rd in the series founded in 1947.

Pietro has performed at jazz clubs, jazz festivals and concert halls in more than 30 countries around the world. He is a member of the Grammy Award-winning Maria Schneider Orchestra and the Grammy nominated groups the Gil Evans Project and Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society.

The fee is $450 for full campers, who will stay in Fort Hays State residence halls. The full-camper fee includes the camp fee, lodging and meals, beginning with lunch on Sunday, July 14, and running through breakfast on Saturday, July 20.

The fee for day campers is $250. Meal plans for lunch and dinner are available for purchase.

To register, go to www.fhsu.edu/musiccamp. To avoid late fees, a $100 deposit must be paid by the end of day June 15.

“The High Plains Music Camp has been a part of the FHSU campus for the past 72 years,” said Dr. Ivalah Allen, camp director and associate professor of music at FHSU.

“For an entire week – Sunday through Saturday – student musicians receive training from expert musicians in every musical discipline,” she said. “They have the opportunity to hear professional musicians perform in the evenings, and at the end of the week they will either play or sing in their band, orchestra, or choir on the Beach/Schmidt or Felten-Start stages.”

Guest artist Pietro has toured with the bands of Woody Herman, Lionel Hampton, Maynard Ferguson, The Village Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, John Fedchock and others. He has also performed with many other well-known musicians such as Paul Anka, Louis Bellson, Blood Sweat & Tears, David Bowie, Bobby Caldwell, Ray Charles, Rosemary Clooney, Harry Connick Jr., Michael Feinstein, Chaka Khan, Liza Minnelli, James Naughton and John Pizzarelli.

He received a bachelor’s degree in music education from North Texas State University, where he toured and recorded four albums with the school’s One O’Clock Lab Band. He has a Master of Arts in jazz composition from New York University, where he an assistant professor of music in jazz studies.

In addition to his performances in clubs, festivals and concert halls, Pietro has presented hundreds of workshops and concerts at schools around the world. He is sponsored by D’Addario Woodwinds, the Conn-Selmer Instrument Company and R.S. Berkeley Musical Instruments.

Since its founding, thousands of students have attended the camp. It offers students the opportunity to study with outstanding musicians from across the country and live a week of stimulating, concentrated study with nationally recognized musicians, teachers, and conductors. Performances, concerts, as well as recreational and social camp life make the week an event worth repeating year after year.

The camp is for students who will be entering sixth grade through the freshman year of college in the fall. Instruction and opportunities to perform are available for students in band and orchestra.

Choir and vocal studies are for older students who will be entering ninth grade or their freshman year in college in the fall.

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