UPDATED AFTER PRINT DEADLINE
  • Reservoir open to most activities

    Camping, boating, and fishing restrictions were lifted today at Marion Reservoir, but swimming remains prohibited under a blue-green algae warning issue by Kansas Department of Health and Environment. “All camping sites are available, even along shorelines,” lake manager Kevin McCoy said. “Boat ramps are open, but swim beaches remain closed.”

HEADLINES

  • Free EMT housing isn't

    County commissioners got a surprise Monday — a $900 bill for what they thought was going to be free housing for emergency medical technicians in Hillsboro. Or, at least, two commissioners were surprised. Hillsboro mayor Delores Dalke told the county on March 13 that Hillsboro was willing to pay for housing and meals if the county would commit to hiring full-time crew members to be stationed at Hillsboro.

  • Mysterious trailer to be flamed

    Hillsboro council members resolved what to do with a trailer abandoned on hospital property by voting Tuesday to donate it to the fire department. When the trailer appeared during Hillsboro Community Hospital construction, city officials assumed it belonged to someone on the construction crew.

  • Tempers flare as lake chief resigns

    Heated meetings have left the county commission divided and the county just two weeks away from having no superintendent at the lake. Citing family reasons and with his wife, Jill, at his side, superintendent Steve Hudson on Monday gave two weeks’ notice of resignation, after the conclusion of the Bluegrass at the Lake festival he started.

  • Kapaun pilgrimage is family affair

    After walking 59 miles in four days, Bernadette Stuhlsatz could see that the trek had taken its toll on her sister, Natalie. She was struggling with sore feet, and her back, afflicted with scoliosis, was hurting. A final mile lay ahead, one to be walked in silent reflection. “There was a moment where I didn’t have to say anything,” Bernadette said. “I just looked at her, and she grabbed my hand, and we held them for the entire mile to the church. She said when we got done it encouraged her to finish.”

OTHER HEADLINES

  • Developer's lake easement request sparks contentious exchange

    Steve Hudson’s resignation as lake superintendent wasn’t the only divisive lake topic to dominate discussion at county commission meetings Monday and last Wednesday. Heated debate, both pro and con, surrounded a request for a driveway easement from developer Garry Dunnegan, who last year installed a controversial dock in apparent contravention of previous lake rules.

  • No dam reason to worry about reservoir weight limits

    Memorial Day weekend visitors to Marion Reservoir were greeted by an additional electronic sign meant to keep large vehicles off the dam. The Corps of Engineers imposed a maximum six-ton limit for vehicles and vehicle combinations in November as a safety precaution for the bridge that spans the dam release gates.

DEATHS

  • Vera Beach

    Services for Vera David-Beach, 87, who died Monday at Parkside Homes, will be 11 a.m. Saturday at Hillsboro Mennonite Brethren Church. Born Sept. 12, 1929, in rural Tampa to Otto and Miriam (Reuscher) David, she married Raymond Beach on June 4, 1994, in Lincoln, Nebraska. He died in 2013.

  • Artis Dean

    Graveside services for Artis Mildred Dean, 90, who died Sunday at Kansas Christian Home, will be 2 p.m. Friday at Greenwood Cemetery, Newton. Visitation will be 5 to 9 p.m. Thursday at Petersen Funeral Home, Newton. Relatives will receive friends from 6:30 to 8 p.m.

  • Joan Hope

    Services for Joan Hope, 90, who died Saturday at Salem Home, will be 11 a.m. Thursday, at Hillsboro United Methodist Church. Visitation will be 6 to 8 tonight at Jost Funeral Home, Hillsboro.

  • Larry Olsen

    Services for lifelong Marion resident Larry Earl “Farmer” Olsen, 77, who died May 30, were Monday at Aulne. Burial was in Marion Cemetery. Born Jan. 3, 1940, to Earl F. and Tena “Lucille” (Rempel) Olsen, he was the third generation to live on the family farm west of Marion. He also worked as a builder and raised miniature horses.

  • Wade Smith

    Private services are planned for Wade Smith, 56, who died May 30 at Hillsboro Community Hospital. Born Aug. 29, 1960, in Salina to Kenneth and Irene (Harper) Smith, he is survived by his companion, Mary Klenda of Hillsboro; daughter, Brianna Smith of Overland Park; five brothers; seven sisters; and a grandchild.

DOCKET

FARM

  • Mechanical problems checked from afar

    Technology has changed the landscape of farm implement repair. “When I first started doing this in the late ‘70s, I never dreamed I’d be using a computer to do this,” Todd Carpenter, field service technician for Prairieland Partners, said. “Now it’s the first tool out of my tool box.”

  • Ag services abound in county

    Agriculture is big business these days. Farmers have many more services available to them than a few decades ago. Farm co-ops employ agronomists, seed salesmen, feed specialists, and others to assist producers in various ways.

  • Changes in seeds help crops

    Big changes in soybean and corn genetics in the past 20 years have made it easier to produce successful crops. Specific traits implanted in seed make it possible for Roundup herbicide to be sprayed directly on crops for weed control.

  • County ranks 12th in cattle

    Despite a downturn in prices that farmers have received in recent years, cattle production continues unabated. Kansas cattle have increased from 6.25 million in January 2016 to 6.4 million this January, according to the National Agricultural Statistics Service.

  • Trailer to aid in grain bin rescues

    Nearby fire districts are cooperating to create a new rescue service designed to free victims who have become trapped in grain bins. A grain engulfment trailer and a team specially trained to use it will be available for mutual aid in McPherson County and surrounding counties.

OPINION

PEOPLE

SCHOOL

  • Tabor student's paper honored

    Tabor College senior Molly Wiebe Faber of Hillsboro won $300 from the Harms Anabaptism Contest for her first-place paper, “Brecht: A Model for Christians in Theater,” presented last month at Tabor.

UPCOMING EVENTS

MORE…

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