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With successful relationship in Hoisington, Roto-Mix to purchase building

The Hoisington City Council approved the sale documents for Roto-Mix this month, meaning the livestock mixing and feeding equipment company is that much closer to owning their building outright.

Roto-Mix started in Dodge City in 1984, but added the manufacturing facility in Hoisington in 1993.

Hoisington City Manager Jonathan Mitchell says the city has leased the building on south Main Street to Roto-Mix with intentions of the company purchasing it 20 years later.

Jonathan Mitchell Audio

The purchase price is $206,514 for the structures that were once used by the railroad that crosses the area of south Hoisington. Mitchell says their lease payments and investments into the building will keep Roto-Mix in the community.

Jonathan Mitchell Audio

Roto-Mix also has a retail location in Scott City.

Panther boys and girls win team titles at Rim Rock Farm XC Classic

Rim Rock Farm High School Cross Country Classic

The Great Bend Boys and Girls both brought home team titles from the prestigious Rim Rock Farm Classic near Lawrence Saturday.

The Rim Rock Farm High School Cross Country Classic is hosted by Lawrence Free State High School and the University of Kansas on the Rim Rock Farm course designed by Bob Timmons (KU Track and Field/Cross Country Legend). The event features the best high school cross country programs from the Midwest. There were three separate varsity races for both the boys and girls.

Boys

Crimson Division – 45 Teams -329 Runners

Team Scores
1 Great Bend 187
2 Nixa, MO 209
3 Kearney 247
4 Platte County 265
5 Wichita-North
6 Rogers, AR
7 Lexington
8 Andover Central
9 Lakewood
10 Blue Valley Northwest

Individual Results-Great Bend
1 Kerby Depenbusch 12 Great Bend 16:24.5
2 Connor Griffith 10 Great Bend 16:29.4
32 Sage Cauley 10 Great Bend 17:31.5
36 Josh Tomlin 10 Great Bend 17:34.6
124 Collin Hammond 10 Great Bend 18:27.2
137 Evan Hammond 10 Great Bend 18:34.0

Girls

Blue Division – 31 Teams – 239 Runners

Teams Scores-Top 10
1 Great Bend 127
2 Hiawatha 130
3 Basehor-Linwood 156
4 Logan-Rogersville 172
5 St. George-Rock Creek 199
6 Smithville 239
7 DeSoto (Mo) 240
8 Norton Community 305
9 Newton
10 St. Marys 336

Individual Results-Great Bend
6 Aubrey Snapp 09 Great Bend 21:07.3 6
27 McKenna Esfeld 10 Great Bend 22:14.0 22
29 Paloma Sandoval 12 Great Bend 22:14.9 24
30 Baleigh Fry 12 Great Bend 22:15.7
63 Lacora Bryant 12 Great Bend 23:19.8
181 Briana Perez 09 Great Bend 26:52.7 141
204 Chloe Gibson 10 Great Bend 28:02.7 161

Grier, Crawford help West Virginia put away Kansas, 56-34

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) – Will Grier threw for 347 yards and accounted for four touchdowns, Justin Crawford ran for 125 yards and another score and West Virginia pulled away late to beat pesky Kansas 56-34 on Saturday.

David Sills V had 130 yards and two TDs receiving, and Kennedy McKoy also reached the end zone twice, as the Mountaineers (3-1, 1-0 Big 12) beat Kansas (1-3, 0-1) for the sixth time in seven meetings.

They did it by overcoming a career game from sophomore Khalil Herbert, who ran for 291 yards and two TDs. It was the third-most yards by a Kansas player on the ground in school history.

Peyton Bender added 197 yards and a TD through the air, but he also threw a pair of picks, while a porous defense that allowed 40-plus points to Central Michigan and Ohio struggled once more.

The Mountaineers looked as if they’d cruise past the Jayhawks again when they put together four straight touchdown drives in the first half. Each covered at least 80 yards, none took more than 3:22 off the clock, and the result was a 28-3 lead midway through the second quarter.

Herbert finally stopped the onslaught with a 67-yard touchdown run, but the Mountaineers’ Mike Daniels picked off a tipped pass a couple minutes later and returned it for another score.

But the Mountaineers’ seemingly comfortable 35-13 halftime advantage didn’t last long.

Their offense suddenly hit the skids, punting four times and turning it over once during a five-possession series spanning the break. And a defense that had started to bottle up Herbert again became leaky, allowing short touchdown runs a couple minutes apart to make it 35-27.

Suddenly, the sparse crowd that turned out on a hot, sunny afternoon began to think back to 2013, when the Jayhawks stunned the Mountaineers 31-19 on a cool November day.

The teams swapped TDs in the fourth quarter, the Mountaineers getting a second chance at the end zone after an offside penalty on a field goal, and it was still 42-34 with 7:35 left in the game.

Grier answered with a QB keeper then scored again a few minutes later to put it away.

THE TAKEAWAY

West Virginia: Grier had the Mountaineers humming early and late, but the offense sputtered out of rhythm during a long stretch in the middle of the game. Their counterparts on defense didn’t help much, getting pushed around by the Kansas offensive line most of the afternoon.

Kansas: Miscues doomed the Jayhawks, from the pick-six to penalties when they were going for it in fourth-and-short situations. But while coach David Beaty insists there are no moral victories, the way Kansas responded to adversity was something to build upon.

UP NEXT

West Virginia has a week off before visiting No. 16 TCU on Oct. 7.

Kansas also gets a week off before Texas Tech visits Oct. 7.

KDOC: 12-hour shifts to continue at at Kansas prison

Serial killer Dennis Rader- is housed at El Dorado- photo Kansas Department of Corrections

EL DORADO, Kan. (AP) — The state corrections department says it will continue 12-hour shifts for its officers at El Dorado Correctional Facility for another 90 days.

The department said an emergency status started earlier this year will continue because of a staffing shortage. The agency says the extended shifts will be reviewed on or before Dec. 22.

Corrections Secretary Joe Norwood notified the union representing prison workers of the decision on Monday. The letter was provided to the media on Friday.

Norwood said the corrections department is working to hire and train more staff at the prison.

Three inmate-led disturbances were reported in May and June at the El Dorado prison.

Critics have said the unrest was caused in part after the state shifted some inmates from Lansing Correctional Facility to El Dorado.

Luncheon in Great Bend scheduled to meet FHSU interim president

Dr. Andy Tompkins

Join fellow Great Bend area alumni and friends for an opportunity to meet interim Fort Hays State University president, Dr. Andy Tompkins, during lunch as he makes his way across the state where he will meet with news outlets and Tiger supporters to share the latest and greatest in all things Fort Hays State.

The luncheon will take place at the Holiday Inn Express, 3821 10th Street in Great Bend from 12 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. October 18, 2017. The event is free but an RSVP is required by October 13. Contact the FHSU Alumni Association at 785-628-4430 or alumni@fhsu.edu.

Dr. Tompkins will be joined by DeBra Prideaux ’86, ’92, executive alumni director, and Lisa Karlin ’90, director of university relations and marketing.

Court records: Kansas Commerce secretary forced to resign

Commerce Secretary Antonio Soave answers questions about the KBA sale during a meeting at the Kansas Statehouse.
CREDIT STEPHEN KORANDA

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Court documents filed in a dispute between former Kansas Commerce Secretary Antonio Soave and his business partner say Gov. Sam Brownback forced Soave to resign.

Soave resigned in June and announced earlier this month that he was running for Congress.

His resignation came two weeks after business partner Paola Ghezzo sued Soave in Johnson County, alleging fraud and other financial misdeeds.

Ghezzo, who was a consultant at the Commerce Department, alleges that Soave used funds from their consulting business for personal bills and expenses related to state business.

The Kansas City Star reports court documents show Soave’s business was intertwined with the Commerce Department and say Brownback’s chief of staff knew about the fraud allegations in February.

Brownback denied forcing Soave to resign.

Kansas man, woman charged with 10 counts of animal cruelty

Ammo -photo courtesy Reno Co. Sheriff

RENO COUNTY — A Kansas couple is free on bond after being arrested Thursday for alleged animal cruelty.

On September 14, officers worked an animal welfare case and found a large number of new puppies in unsanitary living conditions and saw signs of neglect.

Darrell J. Francis, 62, and Delores Eileen Jenkins Francis, 55, both of Nickerson were booked into the Reno County Correctional Facility on 10 counts of animal cruelty.

During an investigation, a Reno County deputy responded to a home in Nickerson and discovered horrible living conditions and obvious animal abuse for the puppies. The animals transported to a vet in Lyons and later shipped by volunteers to Pawsitive Tails Rescue in Kansas City.

Deputy Chris Shields adopted one puppy and named it “Ammo.”

Two adult dogs were also neglected and reportedly had little food, water or shelter.

Clifford the Big Red Dog to visit Great Bend

Smoky Hills Public Television’s Family Fun Day will return to Great Bend next month. This free event will be held at Brit Spaugh Zoo on October 14 from 9am to 1pm.

During the event, children will be able to take a picture with Clifford. Parents are encouraged to bring a camera. The Great Bend Lions Club also will conduct free vision screenings. The first 500 children will receive a gift bag.

Last year over 700 children attended the event to meet Curious George.

“We are looking forward to returning to Brit Spaugh Zoo with another PBS Kids favorite, Clifford the Big Red Dog,” says Tricia Flax, event coordinator. “The community seemed to enjoy the event last year, and we are hoping for another great turnout.”

Smoky Hills Public Television serves 71 counties in central and western Kansas.

Circles of Central Kansas off to a great start

Circles of Central Kansas, a program designed to give people a road map out of poverty is off to a great start. According to Barton County Health Director Shelly Schneider, an idea that was spawned from conversations that took place last winter, is already helping a number of Central Kansas families.

Shelly Schneider Audio

Circles of Central Kansas is modeled after the circles program in McPherson County and is a joint effort between the Barton County Health Department, 20th Judicial District Community Corrections, the Essdack program at the Barton County Academy, and Kansas Kids @ Gear Up. Schneider says the first class is full and underway, but for people who are interested in participating in the next class, they can contact her office for more information.

Shelly Schneider Audio

The Circles program connects people in relationships across income lines and helps develop clear goals for education and stable income. Circles also focuses on supporting families to help themselves completely out of poverty.

The program is also in need of volunteers in various capacities and levels of involvement that might interest you. Contact Shelly at the Health Department for more information.

Man hit by semi after Russell Co. motorcycle crash

RUSSELL COUNTY –One person died in an accident just after 11:45p.m. Friday in Russell County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported Morris Henry Noftsger, 64, Kiefer, OK, and Valierie Sue Bowen, 47, Tulsa, OK., were each riding Harley Davidson Motorcycles eastbound on Interstate 70 four miles east of Dorrance.

Both motorcycles struck a large commercial vehicle tarp in the roadway and crashed.

Just after the crash, a semi hit Noftsger. He was pronounced dead the scene and transported to Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary in Russell.

Bowen refused transport from the original motorcycle crash.

The semi driver Elizabeth Ann Randall, 29, Beggs, OK., was not injured.

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