Norma Jeanne Smith

Norma Jeanne Smith, age 90, of Iola, passed away Monday, May 27, 2019, at Windsor Place of Iola. Jeanne was born Sept. 12, 1928, in Iola, to Ira Snell and Mary (Todd) Snell.

Jeanne graduated from Iola High School in 1946. Jeanne began working at S&H Kress Store, then Scott’s Dime Store, followed by Edminston’s, and then she worked for the General Army and Navy Surplus Store. She also worked for Iola Laundry and Iola Wholesale Grocery.

Jeanne’s career spanned 32½ years as clerk of the District Court of Allen County, a career that initially began as a political position in which she ran for public office. 

Jeanne was married to William B. Smith on June 6, 1947, in Iola. This union was blessed with two children.

Jeanne was a member of BPW. She served her church as treasurer, was a member of the church choir, and a member of the United Methodist Women.

Jeanne loved spending time with her family, especially the grandchildren. She enjoyed cooking, gardening, and working in the yard. She is fondly remembered for her peanut butter fudge. Jeanne liked watching sports and bowling on television, and she was excited about the time she attended a home KU basketball game with her niece, Leanna Yohe.          

Jeanne was preceded in death by her husband; her parents; one son, David E. Smith; one grandson, Jesstin Wayne Orth; three brothers, Leslie Snell, Noel Snell, and Truman Snell; and one sister, Helen Diehl.

Jeanne is survived by one daughter, Donna Orth and husband, Wayne, Humboldt; one grandson, Scott Smith and wife, Maggie, Benton; one granddaughter, Stasia Ohmie and husband, Brian,  Fort Worth, Texas; great-grandchildren, Nora and Brady Smith, Benton; four step-grandchildren, Sara Jeffers, Topeka, Bill Orth, Humboldt, Matt Orth, Humboldt, and Annie Huffman, Chanute; six step-great-grandchildren, Tanner and Briar Orth, Humboldt, Emmy Jeffers, Topeka, Clement, and Josie Huffman, Chanute, and Lane Huffman, Iola; daughter-in-law, Mary Smith, Andover; and several nieces and nephews.

Visitation for Jeanne will be from 1 to 2 p.m. Friday in The Venue at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service, 1883 US Highway 54, Iola. A graveside service will follow the visitation at 2:15 p.m. in Highland Cemetery, 1800 N. Cottonwood St., Iola.

Memorials in Jeanne’s honor may be made to Windsor Place of Iola Activities Fund or Kindred Hospice of Parsons, and may be left with Feuerborn Family Funeral Service.

Condolences for the family may be left at www.feuerbornfuneral.com

Moran/Marmaton Valley Alumni gather for banquet

MORAN — The Marmaton Valley High School commons area served as the setting for 140 attendees Saturday at the 2018 Moran/Marmaton Valley Alumni Banquet.

Special recognition went to Dan Snyder for traveling the farthest, from San Clemente, Calif., to attend the reunion. Lilly Price Norman, Class of 1945, was the oldest female graduate in attendance. Bill Burch, Class of 1944, was th oldest male and oldest one to have served in the military. Classes ending in 4 or 9 also were recognized.

A $250 scholarship was awarded to 2019 MV graduate Isaac Heskett. Karlie Stephens was the only 2019 graduate to attend the reunion. She told the group about her higher education plans. Donna Dougherty Grigsby was the winner of a 50-50 raffle. Money collected from the raffle was earmarked for the scholarship fund.

The banquet was catered by Sam and Nancy Shocky Kuhns of Ari Capitol Caterers in Wichita.

Officers for 2020 were elected: Chris Elmenhorst, president; Phyllis Talley Nelson, vice president; Myrna Parsons Wildschuetz, recording secretary; Ann Morrison Houk, corresponding secretary; and Tiffany Dudley Dressler, treasurer.

Alumni President Chris Elmenhorst led the meeting. Barbara Chalker Anderson provided the invocation. Kaysha Elmenhorst sang the national anthem. Myrna Wildschuetz Parsons read the minutes of the 2018 banquet. Judy Ensminger Welch provided the treasurer’s report.

Those attending from their corresponding classes:

1944 — Bill Burch and guest.

1945 — Lilly Price Norman.

1948 — James and Ellen Price, Joe Lilly and daughter, Hazel Stewart Dickerson.

1949 — Melva Bigelow Lincicome, Carl and Mary Ellen (1951) Murrow Stanley, Harold Houk, Margaret Bacon Fuston and Annette, Norma Smith Jackson and Bill and Lucille Harris Lincicome.

1951 — Glenn and Rhetta Smith and Audrey Moore Maley.

1953 — Jerry and Etta Freeman, E.J. and Barbara Siefker, Melvin and Mary Ellen (1954) Price.

1954 — Clyde Anderson, Elton and June Bigelow Green and Ted and Norma Arnold Stahl.

1955 — Wayne and Nancy Houk Chandler and Loren and Bobbie Mitchell.

1956 — Gene and Joyce Goodsell (1959) Todd.

1958 — Howard and Linda Ludlum, Dand and Nancy Snyder and Judy Ensminger Welch.

1959 — Donald and Sylvia Strong Wright, Paul and Mary Spangler and Katie McAdam Holloway.

1960 — Twila Flynn Norman and David and Ruth Spangler.

1961 — Kirby Vanatta, Shriley Moore Boyd, Melvin and Phyllis Talley Nelson and Galen Smith.

1962 — David and Beverly Brown (1963) Flack, Melvin Vanatta, Gale Ross and Glenn and June Sager Terrill.

1963 — Ann Morrison Houk.

1964 — Richard and Pat Norman (1969) Dudley, Stan and Donna Dougherty Grigsby, Bonnie Bigelow Weast, Jerry Jackman, Helen Vanatta Franco, Delbert and Joan Ludlum, Bob Ensminger and Dee Ann Donald Parsons.

1965 — Jerry Weast.

1966 — Sandra Brown Cormack, Jonet Atherton Bland and Roger Houk.

1967 — Myrna Parsons Wildschuetz.

1968 — Jim and Vickie Tholen, John Barker and Roger and Charlene Larson.

1969 — Barbara Barnes Wray, David and Patricia McDonald Powell, Charles and Helen Hicks Brand, Phyllis Gates Van Horn, David and Mila Baker, Jim and Janice Johnson Fewins, Corliss Stewart Lynes, Cheryl Raines Pinkerton, Andy Evans and Rex and Kristen Johnson (1971) Vanatta.

1975 — Debra Weast.

1977 — Gene and Kristin Welch (1979) Hartman.

1978 — Chris and Sherry Elmenhorst.

1979 — Mark Hoover, Marvin and Donna Foster, Michael and Jamie Siefker Stodgell, Jeff Sager, Barbara Chalker Anderson, Julie Spangler Cole, Bob and Julie Tholen, George and Lori Stephens, Daryl Drake, Harry Maley, Jeff and Pau Berkenmeier, Lloyd Lemieux and Jolynn Ensminger Neimith.

1980 — Gene and Karen Fewins (1979) Meiwes and Glenn and Arlene Garrison.

1983 — Gary and Sharon Henderson and Brenda Houk Armstrong.

1985 — Susan Siefker.

1992 — April Jackson.

2002 — Natasha Elmenhorst McVey and two daughters.

2004 — Troy and Brett Sager Baldeon and Tyler Elmenhorst.

2008 — Jill Hartman.

2015 — Kaysha Elmenhorst.

2016 — Molly Henderson.

2019 — Karlie Stephens.

 

Police reports 5/30

Arrests reported

Iola police officers arrested Matric David Scott Sunday for suspicion of consuming alcohol as a minor and illegally possessing a weapon in the 400 block of North First Street. Also arrested was Braden Asher Pollet for suspicion of consuming alcohol as a minor.

Garry Bradley, 32, Iola, was arrested by Iola officers Saturday for suspicion of driving while impaired and transporting an open container of alcohol in the 10 block of East Rock Street.

Jacob Brown, 27, Iola, was arrested early Saturday for suspicion of disorderly conduct in the 500 block of South Buckeye Street.

On May 22, officers arrested James Myers, 62, rural Iola, for suspicion of distributing methamphetamine, felony interference with law enforcement, no liability insurance and defective headlight in the 10 block of West Monroe Street.

 

Gasoline taken

Casey’s General Store employees told officers Saturday a motorist drove off without paying for $16.29 worth of gasoline. The car was described as a red Ford Focus.

Maloney family hosts reunion

LAHARPE — The Maloney family held a reunion May 18 at the LaHarpe Community Center. Members gathered for a potluck supper, complete with a display of the family’s ancestors. Several biographies were shared.

Attending were Earl and Janice Maloney, Fort Scott; Rick and Roxann Maloney, Bronson; Darren Maloney, Scott and Carolyn Kinzle, Ann and Brad Lea and children Chelsea, Matthew, Morgan and Jacob, Jim Maloney, Jimmie and Lisa Maloney and children Leeann and Jimmy Jr., Ethan Tavarez, Jessica Maloney and father Ricky Narvaez and Barbara Stalnaker, all of Iola; Larry Joe and Jacie Powell, Brenham, Texas; Linda Maloney, Humboldt; Dale Maloney, Linda Sweany, Ray Maloney, Teresa Chandler, Levi and Savannah Flory and children Leanna and Jayde, LaHarpe; Samantha Alford and children Nathan and Adrienne Sprague, Gas; Kristie Stalnaker, Sweetwater, Tenn.; Chris and Cari Cavender and children, Canon, Madison and Liberty, Yates Center; Jeffrey and Billie Duckworth, Matthew and Symone Duckworth and children Maverick, Bentley and Lukas, Edna, Texas; Chuck and Diane Duckworth, Port Lavaca, Texas; Heather and Blaine Gardner and son Gavin and Bo Gutierrez, Chanute; Brenda Maloney Gutierrez, Neodesha, Jennie Treolo, Kansas City, Mo.; Betty and Ed Nicolay, Kelli and Tommy Walter and children Elsie and Weslon Joliff, Baldwin.

Fire ravages warehouse

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Fire officials in Topeka are investigating what caused a massive fire that tore through a downtown warehouse.

The fire was reported Wednesday evening at the Trails Market and Gallery, and firefighters battled the flames into early Thursday morning. All that remains of the warehouse is an empty brick shell. No injuries were reported.

The Topeka Capital-Journal says the fire spread to the Kansas Avenue Lofts, which opened only months ago. Firefighters say the blaze scorched the northeast end of the four-floor apartment building, but there was no indication early Thursday that the fire had gotten inside the lofts.

There were no immediate damage estimates from the fire. 

Fire investigators from both the city and state planned to begin the process Thursday morning of determining how and where the fire started.

Kansas lawmakers settle fiscal issues amid Medicare protest

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican legislators on Wednesday reversed actions by Kansas’ Democratic governor to reshape the state budget to her liking, but they couldn’t save a GOP tax relief plan and had their work briefly delayed by a loud protest in favor of expanding Medicaid.

The GOP-controlled Legislature overrode Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s vetoes of several items in the next state budget, including an extra $51 million payment to the state’s public pension system to help boost its long-term financial stability. She had argued for socking away more funds in the state’s cash reserves as a hedge against a future economic downturn.

Republicans failed to override Kelly’s veto of a tax bill aimed at providing relief to businesses and individuals paying more in state income taxes because of changes in federal tax laws at the end of 2017. The governor argued that it would “decimate” the state budget as it saved taxpayers roughly $240 million over three years.

Lawmakers’ last scheduled day in session, often short and quiet in past years, turned raucous because of a protest for Medicaid expansion in the Senate gallery. When demonstrators refused to stop singing and chanting, the Senate halted its work to clear the gallery and floor — and a Capitol Police officer required reporters to leave the chamber temporarily.

Kelly’s inability to win passage of a plan to expand the state’s Medicaid health coverage for up to 150,000 additional people was her biggest setback since taking office in January. The House passed a plan in March but the Senate didn’t debate it because GOP leaders wanted further study and a vote on the issue next year.

“Lord, hear our prayer! We want health care!” the Rev. Sarah Oglesby-Dunegan, a Unitarian minister from Topeka, shouted from the gallery as the Senate took up budget issues.

Kelly has clashed with top Republicans most on taxes, pension funding and Medicaid expansion. Supporters say Medicaid expansion would provide health coverage to tens of thousands of poor and working-class families who cannot afford any private insurance or who are struggling to pay for it. Republican critics fear it would prove expensive for the state despite the federal government’s promise to cover most of the cost.

Lawmakers approved a record $18.4 billion budget for the fiscal year that begins in July, with extra money for public schools, higher education, social services and prisons.

The pension system for Kansas teachers and government workers is less than 70 percent funded over the long-term and GOP leaders argue that any extra step to close the gap is worth doing.

“This particular funding is just another step to getting this 800-pound gorilla off of our back,” said state Rep. Jim Kelly, a moderate Republican from southeastern Kansas who isn’t related to the goveror.

Laura Kelly also vetoed extra funds for community mental health centers and money targeted to reading and technical education programs in public schools.

Republican leaders had lawmakers vote on all of the budget vetoes in one package to increase their chances of getting the needed two-thirds majorities to override them. The votes were 27-11 in the Senate and 86-30 in the House, where four Democrats broke with the governor.

“Those were the worst things ever to cut from the budget,” said Sen. Molly Baumgardner, a conservative Kansas City-area Republican.

But Rep. Jim Ward, a Wichita Democrat, chided Republicans for supporting the additional spending while pursuing tax relief that he said would make the spending harder to sustain. Laura Kelly’s spokeswoman, Ashley All, said GOP lawmakers “failed to exercise fiscal responsibility.”

The House voted 78-39 to override the governor’s veto of the tax bill, but supporters needed 84 votes for a two-thirds majority in the 125-member chamber. Kelly also vetoed a larger GOP tax relief bill in March, and in Wednesday’s vote, six Republicans broke ranks with their leaders.

Top Republicans argued that it is unfair that some Kansans are automatically paying more in state taxes because of the federal tax changes, without any intervention by legislators.

Lawmakers had not expected to debate Medicaid expansion Wednesday. Advocates have been pushing expansion for seven years, stymied by Republican governors’ opposition until Kelly took office.

About 40 protesters stood outside the Senate chamber before it convened, chanting and singing. Nine went into the gallery to sing and chant slogans such as “Love God! Love People!” after Oglesby-Dunegan started the protest.

Capitol police and doorkeepers closed the gallery and tried to get the demonstrators out. Wagle’s aides tried to clear the Senate floor — though Democrats declined to leave.

Wagle’s office tweeted that it wanted to clear the floor for safety reasons. But her chief of staff, Harrison Hems, told reporters they were giving demonstrators “an audience” by shooting pictures and recording video, making it harder to restore order.

He added, “It’s a privilege to have a press pass.”

Wagle later said her office wasn’t singling out reporters, only trying to clear the floor and end the demonstration. The Kansas Sunshine Coalition, an open-government advocacy group, filed a complaint with the state attorney general’s office.

Hems said nine demonstrators were arrested, but the Kansas Highway Patrol, which oversees the Capitol police, said all but Oglesby-Dunegan were merely escorted out of the gallery. She received a summons to appear in court on a possible misdemeanor charge of illegally interfering with public business, Patrol Lt. Stephen Larow said.

South Logan FCE plans events

HUMBOLDT — Six members attended the South Logan FCE meeting Tuesday at the Humboldt Library.

Allen County Fair details were discussed. Members were unable to decorate local graves because of the weather.

Members expressed sympathy to the family of Mona Herder, who was a faithful FCE member for many years.

The South Logan project will be “How Much Do You Know About the Big ‘O,’” detailing osteoporosis.

Faye Yockey and Mary White presented the lesson “Slide Into Home Plate,” and provided the main dish and breakfast sliders for the rest of the group to sample.

Faye, who also received a certificate for 25 years members at Recognition Day in Parsons, will be the honoree at the June 13 Volunteer of the Year Banquet, hosted by the Humboldt Chamber of Commerce.

Mary prepared a cake to honor Bonnie Ladd’s 90th birthday.

The club’s next meeting will be June 18. Carollyn Barnett will serve as hostess and present the lesson.

The Sharp family will host the community ice cream social. A tentative date of Aug. 23 has been set.

Snake slithers out of toilet, bites Florida man on the arm

CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. (AP) — Authorities say a ball python slithered out of a toilet and bit a South Florida man on the arm.

Coral Springs police spokesman Chris Swinson said the man was treated at the scene after the 4-foot snake bit him when he lifted the toilet seat on Sunday morning. The snake is nonvenomous.

Swinson told news outlets the snake didn’t belong to the man and it was unclear how it got into the apartment.

The South Florida SunSentinel reports the Coral Springs Humane Society took the snake to a veterinarian’s office. It was being treated for a scale infection.

Over the years other creatures have found their way into toilets in South Florida, including an iguana freed by Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue in March.

Arkansas River strained by flooding

FORT SMITH, Ark. (AP) — The Arkansas River held steady at record levels Thursday morning, putting enormous pressure on aging levees and offering little relief to areas enduring historic flooding.

In Fort Smith, Arkansas’ second-largest city, officials expected hundreds of homes to flood, while in nearby Van Buren, officials warned that a levee protecting a mostly rural area was “showing signs of significant leakage and deterioration.” And across the border in Oklahoma’s Muskogee County, the conditions have already prompted the evacuations of more than 2,400 people and flooded nearly 1,100 homes, according to the local emergency management department.

In Illinois, Gov. J.B. Pritzker activated the National Guard to respond to recent severe flooding.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Wednesday that more than 400 homes have been voluntarily evacuated because of the flooding. The Republican said he directed another $250,000 in state funds toward the flood response and requested federal assistance from the Trump administration.

At least one death in Arkansas has been blamed on the flooding.

“This is a flood of historic magnitude. It surpasses all Arkansas River flooding in our recorded history,” Hutchinson said Wednesday at a news conference with state emergency officials. “That should be enough to get everybody’s attention.”

The rush of water was hitting Arkansas as the Army Corps of Engineers releases water from a hydroelectric dam northwest of Tulsa, Oklahoma, to help drain the swollen Keystone Lake reservoir. The reservoir drains a watershed of more than 22,000 square miles in areas of northeastern Oklahoma and southeastern Kansas that have been hit by heavy rain.

The Corps said Wednesday that the releases would be reduced by Saturday to 150,000 cubic feet per second (4,247 cubic meters). Officials said that measure would help the floodwaters begin to recede but that it would take days, if not weeks.

Wikileaks found ill, misses hearing

LONDON (AP) — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange missed a court session today, apparently due to health problems. He had been expected to appear from prison via video link at a brief extradition hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court.

Lawyer Gareth Peirce told the court Assange was “not very well.”

Assange, 47, is in Belmarsh Prison serving a 50-week sentence for jumping bail in Britain while fighting extradition to the United States, which accuses him of violating the Espionage Act by publishing secret documents containing the names of confidential military and diplomatic sources.

Sweden also seeks him for questioning about an alleged rape, which Assange has denied.

It is not clear which claim would take precedence. 

The decision would likely be made by Britain’s home secretary.

Judge Emma Arbuthnot said a more substantive extradition hearing set for June 12 may be moved to a court next to Belmarsh Prison for convenience.

Roughly two dozen supporters chanted “Free Assange” outside the courthouse. His case has attracted fresh support from free press advocates in the week since the U.S. filed serious espionage charges against him.

He had earlier been held on suspicion of conspiracy to break into classified computer systems, a less serious charge.