Humboldt man arrested on charge of rape of child

CHANUTE — An investigation involving the Chanute Police Department and Kansas Department of Children and Families led to the arrest of a Humboldt man for suspected rape of a child.

The Chanute Police Department announced the arrest via Facebook Tuesday of William Albin, 38, Chanute.

The investigation included multiple interviews, officers said.

Albin was taken to the Neosho County Jail without incident.

Information regarding the accusation is being forwarded to the Neosho County attorney’s office for review and consideration of formal charges.

Prolific popcorn peddlers praised

Iola Boy Scouts Desmond Quackenbush and Hunter Doolittle were recognized for popcorn sales during a recent Scout fundraiser. Quackenbush, who sold more than $2,500 worth of popcorn product, received a $50 gift card, balloons and an Xbox videogame console, for being the top seller in the district, and ranking 18th within the entire Quivira Council, which covers 30,000 Scouts. Doolittle placed 40th within the Council and also received a gift card. 

A look back in time

45 Years Ago

December 1973

The newly formed Iola Explorer Scout Post 75 held its first organization meeting last week, which got the post chartered by the Quivira Council of the Boy Scouts of America. The post is sponsored by local law enforcement agencies under a statewide program initiated by Attorney General Vern Miller. Young persons, boys or girls, who are interested in law enforcement will get an inside look at actual police-sheriff procedures through the Explorer Scout program. Advisors of the scout group are Sheriff Glen Cooper, Police Chief Everett Shepherd, Deputy Ivan Van Houden, the Rev. Bill Deckinger, Highway Patrolman Mark Westgate, Undersheriff Gary Garver, Leslie Andres and Bill West.

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Model Wholesale Grocery has sold its inventory to Joe Nemer of Wichita and will go out of business here after over 24 years of operation. John Masquelier, president, said efforts to sell the business to someone who would continue operations here failed. Eight persons are employed by the firm which supplied groceries to independent grocers in a wide area.

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Reductions in the number of boats being manufactured has cut into production at Rich-Mar Industries, located near the Old Lehigh Cement Plant site. Richard Crabtree, plant manager, said the firm, which manufactures aluminum gasoline tanks for boats, had to lay off six, leaving only himself and two others to fill what few orders are left. Crabtree speculated that boat plants were cutting back production because of the lack of motors, materials, and skepticism about upcoming fuel shortages.

11 — HUMBOLDT — The city council here last night voted to proceed with plans to extend sewer service to three areas at a total cost of $270,000. The projects include an extension to the industrial site, the Wakefield Addition, and the swimming pool area.

17 — Ray Pershall, president of Allen County State Bank, has announced that an auto bank will be built by the bank this spring at the corner of State and Buchanan streets. Three persons will be hired to operate the motor bank which will accept deposits, payments on loans, check-cashing, withdrawals and a night depository.

Wildcat girls and boys win tournament openers

The Yates Center girls basketball team started off their season strong Monday night when they stomped Marais des Cygnes Valley 49-10  in the opening round of the Winter Wildcat Classic.

The Lady Cats led 14-5 after the first quarter and 25-5 after the second. They allowed just five more points throughout the entire second half.

Junior Jaylee Catron led the way with 19 points followed by seven for Maddie Collins, six for juniors Taylor Jacobs and Jordan Weseloh, senior Allie Pringle had five, freshman Morgan Collins had four and freshman Jacelyn Catron had two points.

The Yates Center boys beat Marais des Cygnes Valley 57-22. Individual stats were unavailable as of press time.

The Wildcat girls will face Leon-Bluestem in the tournament semifinal on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. with the boys following after facing Hartford at 8 p.m.

 

Iola freshmen boys beat Central Heights

The Iola High boys freshmen basketball team opened up the season Monday at Central Heights and came away with a big 55-15 win.

Tyler Boeken led the way with 19 points, followed right behind by Karson Sigg, who had 18 points.

Sam Fager, Brett Morrison and Cooper Riley each had six points.

The Mustang varsity team will be back in action on Thursday versus Olathe Heritage at 5 p.m. for the second game of the Ike Cerfoss Tournament at Central Heights High School.

 

Museum, Californian in court over disputed Nazi art

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Seventy-nine years ago a Jewish woman named Lilly Cassirer surrendered her family’s priceless Camille Pissarro painting to the Nazis in exchange for safe passage out of Nazi Germany during the Holocaust.

On Tuesday her great-grandson was in a U.S. courtroom for the latest round of what has been a nearly 20-year battle to get it back.

After years of appeals by both Lilly Cassirer’s descendants and Spain’s Thyssen-Bornemisza museum, where the painting has hung for 25 years, a trial to decide its rightful owner is scheduled before U.S. District Judge John F. Walter.

Neither side disputes that Cassirer handed the painting over to the Nazis in 1939 in exchange for safe passage out of the country for herself, her husband and her grandson.

But the Madrid museum has argued that she forfeited her ownership rights when she accepted $13,000 from Germany in 1958, after the German government concluded the painting was lost forever. The museum also has argued that it acquired the work in good faith and has never tried to hide it.

Cassirer’s attorney, David Boies, grilled defense witnesses while seeking to show that the museum should have known it was looted art.

Boies asked the museum’s legal and research team why they overlooked signs that indicated the provenance was questionable.

One of the museum’s experts, Lynn Nicholas, said she couldn’t say if Baron Hans-Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza even looked at the back of the painting to study the provenance when he acquired it in 1976.

Nicholas said she couldn’t explain why cardboard covering various labels showing provenance had been attached to the back of the artwork.

One of those labels showed it had belonged to a Berlin gallery owned by the Cassirer family.

“There’s no dispute about the painting’s complete history. The court examined all the evidence and determined that the museum is the rightful owner,” Thyssen-Bornemisza’s U.S. attorney, Thaddeus J. Stauber, told The Associated Press in 2016 after Walter initially dismissed the case.

The Cassirer family successfully appealed last year and their lawsuit was returned to Walter for trial.

The family’s attorney, David Boies, says the matter now boils down to Spain doing what’s right and surrendering the painting.

“It’s unusual for a modern liberal democracy to be trying to hold onto Nazi-looted art,” he said Monday as he prepared for trial. “Every other civilized country in the world is committed to returning Nazi-looted art to the rightful owners.”

The painting, “Rue St.-Honore, Apres-Midi, Effet de Pluie” has been valued at $30 million or more.

Pissarro created the stunning oil-on-canvas work of a rainy Paris street scene from what he saw out the window of a hotel room in 1897. Its title translates to English as “Rue Saint-Honoré in the Afternoon, Effect of Rain.”

Lilly Cassirer’s father-in-law bought it directly from Pissarro’s art dealer and left it to her and her husband when he died.

For more than 70 years her family believed it was lost. Then in 1999 a friend of Cassirer’s grandson, Claude, who had fled Germany with her, saw a photo of it in a catalog and contacted him.

“And he was completely stunned because we thought the painting was gone,” Claude Cassirer’s son, David Cassirer of San Diego, told The Associated Press in 2016.

It turned out the work had been sold and resold several times before Thyssen-Bornemisza, one of the 20th century’s most prominent art collectors, bought it from New York gallery owner Stephen Hahn.

Thyssen-Bornemisza, who died in 2002, sold the painting and hundreds of other works to Spain in 1993 and they now form the core of the museum named for him.

169 work enters second phase

(Update: KDOT will allow traffic to move in both directions between Minnesota and Hawaii Roads on Friday 12/7/18, weather permitting.)

Weather permitting, the Kansas Department of Transportation will begin the second phase of the U.S. 169 pavement reconstruction project in Allen County on Friday.

Sometime late Friday, the highway will be closed from Hawaii Road (the Humboldt exit) south to Delaware (Tank Farm) Road.

Pavement removal operations will begin immediately on the affected stretch of road.

Meanwhile, KDOT will reopen U.S. 169 to unrestricted northbound traffic only from Hawaii Road to Minnesota Road south of Iola. Motorists going south from Iola will not be allowed from Minnesota to Hawaii roads, however, KDOT spokeswoman Priscilla Peterson told the Register.

The road work is part of the seven-mile U.S. 169 pavement reconstruction from Minnesota to Delaware roads, which started this spring.

The project consists of re-establishing a new subgrade base and replacing the concrete pavement on the highway and interchange ramps.

The state?s official detour remains in effect, diverting motorists from 169 at U.S. 54 in Iola, west to U.S. 75 in Yates Center, and south to K-39 and back east to U.S. 169 at Chanute.

The new phase may relieve northbound congestion, at least a tad, on old 169, or 1100 Street, which has served as an unofficial detour for local motorists since the project began.

The U.S. 169 project is expected to be complete and ready for traffic by next spring, weather permitting, according to a KDOT news release.

Emery Sapp & Sons, Inc., Columbia, Mo., is the general contractor in charge of the $16 million project.

 

Stay informed about developing construction projects, road closures, and emergency notifications by following the KDOT Southeast Kansas District on Twitter:

Wisconsin lawmakers push to weaken incoming governor

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Still stinging from an election loss, Wisconsin Republicans on Monday tried to push through measures that would weaken the incoming Democratic administration and allow outgoing Republican Gov. Scott Walker to make one last major mark on the state’s political landscape after his defeat in November.

(Update: Despite public outcry and a wave of protests during a lame-duck session, Wisconsin Republican lawmakers pushed through the set of five bills early Wednesday morning. Gov. Scott Walker is expected to sign them. The measures would, among other things, limit early voting and the incoming governor’s ability to make appointments.)

They backed down, for now, on changing the 2020 presidential primary date at a cost of millions of dollars to benefit a conservative state Supreme Court justice. That had been introduced but did not win approval in committee, meaning it is likely dead.

Angry opponents filled the hallways of the Wisconsin Capitol, and a hearing room, banging on doors and chanting “Respect our votes!” and “Shame!”

Republicans forged ahead despite threats of lawsuits, claims by Democratic Gov.-elect Tony Evers and others that they were trying to invalidate the election results and howls of protest from hundreds of people who showed up for a public hearing.

A Republican-controlled legislative committee held a hearing for nine hours, before voting just before midnight along party lines to pass the bills, setting up final approval in the Senate and Assembly today.

The lame-duck maneuvering in Wisconsin is similar to action taken by Republicans in North Carolina two years ago and is being discussed in Michigan before a Democratic governor takes over there.

The protests, coming at the end of Walker’s eight years in office, were reminiscent of tumult that came shortly after he took office in 2011, when he moved to end collective bargaining powers for public sector unions.

Other measures would weaken the attorney general’s office by allowing Republican legislative leaders to intervene in cases and hire their own attorneys. A legislative committee, rather than the attorney general, would have to sign off on withdrawing from federal lawsuits.

That would stop Evers and incoming Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul from fulfilling their campaign promises to withdraw Wisconsin from a multi-state lawsuit seeking repeal of the Affordable Care Act.

Republican Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald downplayed concerns about the lame-duck session, saying, “I don’t think it’s outrageous at all.”

“But listen, I’m concerned,” he said. “I think that Gov.-elect Evers is going to bring a liberal agenda to Wisconsin.”

Walker signaled support for the package.

“All the talk about reining in power, it really doesn’t,” Walker told reporters Monday afternoon at the executive mansion.

Fitzgerald said Walker and his chief of staff were deeply involved in crafting the measures.

Fitzgerald would not say whether there was enough support among Republicans for moving the 2020 presidential primary date, a change that would cost about $7 million and has drawn opposition from nearly every county election official.

But the committee’s rejection of the bill likely means it is dead.

Last week, Fitzgerald said that Republicans want to move the 2020 presidential primary, when Democratic turnout is expected to be high, so it won’t be on the same date as an April election where Walker-appointed Supreme Court Justice Dan Kelly is on the ballot, thereby improving his chances of victory.

Walker said he has always found it odd that the state holds partisan and nonpartisan races on the same date. The presidential primary is partisan, but state Supreme Court candidates are officially nonpartisan, although Kelly is part of a clear conservative-leaning majority on the high court.

The state Elections Commission unanimously adopted a motion Monday declaring that the shift would be “extraordinarily difficult” and costly without additional funding. Commissioner Mark Thomsen, a Democratic appointee, called the plan “the biggest waste of money for a single person that I can think of” during discussion preceding the vote.

The committee did approve limiting early voting to no more than two weeks before an election.

Similar limitations on early voting were found unconstitutional by a federal judge in 2016, and Democrats have threatened legal action again.

A news conference where Fitzgerald and other Republican leaders spoke was peppered with catcalls from protesters.

The votes to pass the sweeping package of bills today would come five weeks before Evers is slated to take office.

It was the first lame-duck session in Wisconsin in eight years. The last such session happened just before Walker took office, when Democrats tried unsuccessfully to approve union contracts.

Last month, Democrats won every constitutional office, including governor and attorney general.

Evers vowed to fight the session, saying lawsuits were being explored. He called on the people of Wisconsin to contact their legislators even as the bills were speeding through. They were just made public late Friday .

“This is rancor and politics as usual,” Evers said in written testimony to the committee. “It flies in the face of democratic institutions and the checks and balances that are intended to prevent power-hungry politicians from clinging to control when they do not get their way.”

The executive director of One Wisconsin Now, which filed a lawsuit challenging the previous attempt to limit early voting, said the GOP’s latest effort shows they “refuse to accept the results of the 2018 elections” and are worried about large voter turnout.

About 565,000 people voted early in the November elections.

Democratic lawmakers who sit on the committee holding the hearing Monday said the scope of the lame-duck session was unprecedented.

“It’s a power grab,” said Democratic state Sen. Jon Erpenbach. “They lost and they’re throwing a fit.”

Erpenbach said expected legal challenges to what is passed could “grind things to a halt” in the Legislature for as much as a year.

Republicans have had majorities in the state Senate and Assembly since 2011 and worked with Walker to pass a host of conservative priorities. The GOP will maintain its majorities in the Legislature next year when Evers takes over.

 

Follow the developments by following Wisconsin Public Radio on Twitter:

Margaret Rogers

Margaret Ellen Rogers, 95, Iola, passed away on Sunday, Dec. 2, 2018, at Allen County Regional Hospital in Iola.

She was born Dec. 18, 1922, on the farm east of Blue Mound, the daughter of George Robert and Effie Alletta (Casida) Mitchell. Margaret graduated from Blue Mound High School in 1941.

On Dec. 10, 1944, she married Orville Wesley Rogers in Kansas City, Mo. When Orville returned from the service, they farmed in the Selma Community. 

She was a member of the Kincaid V.F.W. Auxiliary and the Kincaid Selma United Methodist Church.

Margaret loved to cook, make quilts and afghans. In 1992, they retired and moved to Iola, enjoying traveling in their motorhome and visits from their most important people, their family and friends. Orville and Margaret moved together to Windsor Place Nursing Home in Iola in October of 2014.

After 72 years of devoted marriage, Orville preceded her in death on Dec. 12, 2014. She was a loving mother to their surviving children, Gary Rogers and wife Peggy of Kincaid, Neil Rogers and wife Nancy of Blue Springs, Mo., and Carolyn Carstedt and husband Ed of Cherryvale; nine grandchildren, Dennis Rogers, Julie Underwood, Tom Rogers, Beth Welland, Sara Farnsworth, Mark Rogers, Emily Rogers, Evan Carstedt and Karen Meseraull; 19 great-grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren on the way in March.

Margaret was preceded in death by her parents, George and Effie Mitchell; twin brothers, Floyd and Lloyd Mitchell and one great-grandson, Connor Underwood.

Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at Kincaid Selma United Methodist Church, Kincaid, with burial following in the Kincaid Cemetery. The family will greet friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday  at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service Chapel at 1883 U.S. 54, Iola.

Memorial contributions may be made to Kincaid Selma United Methodist Church.

You may send your condolences to the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.

Jannie Shisler

Jannie M. Shisler, 94, Iola, passed away on Monday, Dec. 3, 2018, at Windsor Place Nursing Home in Iola.

Jannie was the fourth of five children born to Frank and Mary (Kozubik) Machart.  She was born on June 10, 1924, in Calliham, Texas. She attended high school in Calliham and graduated as valedictorian of her class.  She was married to Rex Eldon Shisler on April 3, 1976, and they made their home in Gas City. She was preceded in death by her husband on Oct. 17, 2010.

Jannie was a devoted Jehovah’s Witness for 82 years, serving her last 45 years with the Iola congregation.  She was a devoted mother, grandmother, sister, and friend and we will love and miss her always.  Jannie was an avid gardener who loved to tend to her flowers and garden until moving to the nursing home.  She was also an animal lover, but her greatest love was sharing the Bible with people.

She is survived by her devoted daughter, Margaret Lesher of Iola; beloved grandson, Jonathan Ratley of Yates Center; two beloved stepchildren, Kitty Chadwich of Henderson, Nev., and Adele Seleno of Huntington Beach, Calif.; and nieces and nephews, two of which were Gladys Hallman and Mary Nell Owens, who continued to write poetry and send to her and loved her to the very end.

Memorial services will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 15, at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses, Iola.  Condolences may be left at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.