Kansas man to start hemp farm, for research

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A central Kansas man is preparing to start an industrial hemp farm as part of a new state pilot program.
PJ Sneed plans to open the Always Sunny Hemp and Bee Farm in western Reno County, the Hutchinson News reported.
The farm comes after Gov. Jeff Colyer signed the Alternative Research Act in April, allowing the Kansas Department of Agriculture to oversee the growing of industrial hemp through a research program that Sneed and his wife plan to participate in.
“It presents a great opportunity for conventional farmers, rotational farmers and honestly opening its own industry in Kansas,” Sneed said. “And it’s really only been an industry for five years in the U.S.”
Sneed recently retired after more than two decades as a burn trauma nurse at Via Christi Hospital in Wichita. During his career, he grew interested in the medicinal uses of hemp, such as cannabidiol, which led him to learn more about hemp’s industrial uses.
“It can be used to make strong fibers, nutritional food products, bricks and so much more,” Sneed said. “They’ve even made a two-engine luxury jet out of a hemp-based composite.”
Sneed can’t officially grow hemp until the Agriculture Department finalizes regulations for the research program. The department’s Plant Protection and Weed Control division is tasked with developing rules and released a draft of the regulations in July.
The regulations are still subject to review by the Kansas Attorney General’s Office and Joint Committee on Administrative Rules and Regulations, as well as a public hearing. The draft includes a $1,000 license fee for approved growers and criminal history checks during the application. All hemp grown must test under 0.3 percent THC, the chemical component in marijuana that gives a high.
The regulations are expected to go into effect Dec. 31.
“The U.S. is the largest importer of hemp in the world,” Sneed said. “And yet we can’t grow it. Hemp was a $500 million industry in the U.S. last year, and in 10 years it’s expected to grow to $1.5 billion.”

 

A look back in time

65 Years Ago
September 1953
Iola Junior College, founded 30 years ago this fall, has developed into one of the finest two-year colleges in the Midwest. IJC is not actually 30 years old. The school was closed in the spring of 1943 and wasn’t reopened until the fall of 1947 — a period during which the draft and defense plants reduced the enrollment to near nothing. The college has a full-time faculty of 21 members.
*****
The present low level of the Neosho River has revealed four rather large holes on the south side of the municipal dam which might otherwise have gone undetected. Today a crew of city workers is filling the defects with rock and cement and also will repair a large crack in the east 50 feet of the dam. Clem Griffith, city engineer, says the holes developed because the concrete was improperly mixed or not properly tamped into concrete previously poured.
*****
Enrollment in the Iola schools continues to rise over last year’s figures. The total for all, including the junior college, now stands at 1,661, in comparison to 1,644 last year.
*****
The Rev. Herbert N. Hertel, pastor of St. John’s Catholic Church, will take up new duties as pastor at St. Mary’s in Parsons. He will be succeeded here by the Rev. Francis Donohue, pastor of the Catholic Church in Columbus for the past seven years. During his five years here, the St. John’s school was built, the church was redecorated and a new parish house was purchased.
*****
Over 250 men and women are expected to compete in five leagues as the bowling season shifts into high gear here starting Monday night.
*****
Duke Madell and Wayne Ellis, co-owners of the Iola Farm Store, announced the opening of their firm’s new anhydrous ammonia plant just east of the city on U.S. 54 today. Facilities at the new plant include a 30,000-gallon storage tank, equipment to unload tank cars, and several 1,000-gallon tanks mounted on trailers. Anhydrous ammonia is an 82 percent nitrogen fertilizer, the use of which has spread like wildfire since the end of World War II.

Royals continue season-best win streak

CLEVELAND (AP) — Francisco Lindor believes the Cleveland Indians need a spark.
Lindor homered in the ninth inning of Cleveland’s 5-1 loss Monday to the Kansas City Royals, who extended their winning streak to a season-high six games.
The Indians have lost three straight but still lead the AL Central by 14 games. Their magic number to clinch the division was trimmed to 12 after Minnesota’s loss to Houston.
“Our energy is down,” Lindor said. “I don’t why. Personally, my energy is down. We’re at that point in the season where guys are dragging their feet a little. We have to go back to playing the Tribe Way and not taking any pitch for granted. We’ll be fine.”
Jakob Junis allowed two hits in seven shutout innings and Ryan O’Hearn homered twice for Kansas City, which has also won eight of nine.
“It’s no fluke,” O’Hearn said. “Guys are going out, trying to win every day. Everyone is playing really well.”
Junis (8-12) gave up a two-out single to Lindor in the third and a leadoff single to Yonder Alonso in the fifth. The right-hander hit a batter, walked none, struck out six and retired his last nine hitters.
Junis was 0-2 with a 9.82 ERA in his first two starts against the Indians this season.
“Being in the division, these teams see my slider a lot,” he said. “Using my heater more was definitely the difference.”
Brian Flynn pitched a scoreless eighth and Wily Peralta began the ninth with a 5-0 lead. Lindor homered with one out, Michael Brantley singled and Peralta walked Jose Ramirez and Edwin Encarnacion on eight pitches.
Left-hander Tim Hill relieved, and pinch-hitter Yandy Diaz hit a hard grounder that second baseman Whit Merrifield turned into a game-ending double play. Hill recorded his second save.
“That was a great play by Whit, a great play,” manager Ned Yost said. “That’s why you bring Timmy in, to get a ground ball.”
Lindor has 30 homers this season. He joins Jose Ramirez, who has 37 home runs, as the first pair of switch-hitting teammates in major league history to each have 30 or more homers in a season.
O’Hearn had the first multihomer game of his career. He led off the fourth with a home run and hit a two-run drive in the sixth. Jorge Bonifacio and Hunter Dozier hit solo homers.
Adam Plutko (4-5) gave up three homers and allowed four runs in six innings. The right-hander had a career-high eight strikeouts.
Kansas City took two of three from Cleveland at Kaufmann Stadium last month and Junis made certain that trend continued. He retired the first eight batters before hitting Greg Allen with a pitch in the third. Lindor sent Allen to third with a single, but the inning ended with an out on the bases.
Lindor broke for second and was caught in a rundown when catcher Cam Gallagher threw to shortstop Adalberto Mondesi. The rundown continued until Allen finally broke for home, and Merrifield threw to Gallagher, who applied the tag.
NICE DEBUT
Josh Donaldson hit a grand slam in Triple-A on Monday after the Indians placed him on the disabled list to give him more time to rehab a calf injury in the minor leagues. Donaldson, playing for Columbus, also walked and lined out against Toledo. Donaldson, acquired from Toronto on Friday, will work out with the Indians on Tuesday and continue his rehab assignment for Double-A Akron in the Eastern League playoffs this week.
“That was good,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “It sounded like everything else went well, too, and he made all the plays.”
HEAR THE BUZZ
The Cleveland National Air Show, held at a nearby airport, ended Monday. Players and fans turned their attention to jets that flew around the ballpark in the early innings.
FEEL THE HEAT
Temperatures for the three-game series will be near 90 degrees each day, a stark contrast from the first time the Royals were in town. The gametime temperature of 32 degrees on April 8 set a Progressive Field record.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Royals: C Salvador Perez (sprained left thumb) sat out his fifth straight game, but manager Ned Yost said he is improving and remains day-to-day. The six-time All-Star last played on Aug. 28 against Detroit.
UP NEXT
Royals LHP Danny Duffy (8-11, 4.72 ERA) takes on Indians RHP Mike Clevinger (10-7, 3.17 ERA) in the second game of the series. Clevinger has made three starts against Kansas City this season, going 1-0 with a 2.57 ERA.

Federer, Sharapova ousted at US Open

NEW YORK (AP) — Roger Federer served poorly. He volleyed poorly. Closed out sets poorly, too. And now he’s gone, beaten at the U.S. Open by an opponent ranked outside the top 50 for the first time in his illustrious career.
Looking slow and tired on a sweltering night in Arthur Ashe Stadium, the No. 2-seeded Federer double-faulted 10 times, failed to convert a trio of set points and lost 3-6, 7-5, 7-6 (7), 7-6 (3) in the fourth round to John Millman in a match that began Monday and concluded at nearly 1 a.m. today.
To Federer, it was all about the heat and the humidity. With the temperature in the 80s, even with the sun down, and the humidity at about 75 percent, he was unable to summon his usual verve.
“Was just one of those nights where, I guess, I felt I couldn’t get air. There was no circulation at all. I don’t know, for some reason I just struggled in the conditions tonight. It’s one of the first times it’s happened to me,” the 37-year-old Federer said. “It’s uncomfortable. Clearly just keep on sweating more and more and more and more as the match goes on. You lose energy as it goes by. But John was able to deal with it better.”
It’s only the second time in Federer’s past 14 appearances at the U.S. Open that he’s lost before the quarterfinals. He is, after all, a five-time champion at the tournament, part of his men’s-record haul of 20 Grand Slam titles.
“In all honesty, Roger’s a hero of mine. I look up to him,” said Millman, an Australian who is 29. “I felt a little bit guilty today, because he didn’t have his best day, and that’s for sure. I know that. I’m very aware he didn’t have a great day in the office. Probably, to beat him, I needed him to have an off-day and I needed to have a decent, good day.”
So much for that highly anticipated matchup between Federer and 13-time major champion Novak Djokovic in the quarterfinals. Instead, it’ll be the 55th-ranked Millman, who had never made it past the third round at a Slam until last week, taking on No. 6 seed Djokovic.
Hours before, Djokovic left the court for a medical timeout — the second time during the tournament he’s sought help from a doctor because of harsh weather — during what would become an otherwise straightforward 6-3, 6-4, 6-3 victory over 68th-ranked Joao Sousa of Portugal.
“I’m not 21 anymore. That was 10 years ago. I still don’t feel old. But at the same time, there is a little biological clock that is not really working in your favor,” Djokovic said. “Sometimes, you just have to survive.”
He reached the quarterfinals for an 11th consecutive appearance in New York as he bids for a third U.S. Open championship and 14th Grand Slam trophy.
The other quarterfinal on the bottom half of the draw will be a rematch of the 2014 U.S. Open final: No. 7 Marin Cilic against No. 21 Kei Nishikori.
Millman was adamant he would not be intimidated by Federer, and perhaps was helped by having spent time practicing together a few months ago ahead of the grass-court portion of this season.
“I love his intensity,” Federer said.
Still, this was a stunner. Not simply because Federer lost — he entered the day 28-0 at the U.S. Open, and 127-1 in all Grand Slam matches, against foes below No. 50 in the ATP rankings — but how he lost. Start with this: Federer held two set points while serving for the second at 5-4, 40-15 and did not pull through. Millman knew that was the turning point.
“At the start, I don’t think I was playing so well,” said Millman, who said he was sweating so much he had a hard time holding onto his racket. “But, yeah, as the match went on, I felt more comfortable, felt pretty good.”
Then Federer had a set point in the third at 6-5 in the tiebreaker, but again was stymied.
In the fourth set, he went up a break at 4-2, yelling “Come on!” and getting all of those rowdy spectators in their “RF” gear on their feet, prompting the chair umpire to repeatedly plead for silence. But Federer uncharacteristically got broken right back with a sloppy game, most egregiously when he slapped what should have been an easy putaway into the net.
And then there was his serve. He put only 49 percent of his first serves in play, including a hard-to-believe 31 percent in the second set. This is a guy whose combination of precision and power on that stroke is considered as good as anyone’s ever.
In the final tiebreaker, he double-faulted twice in a row. The first obvious signs of trouble for Federer came far earlier, in the second game of the second set. He started that 15-minute struggle by missing 18 of his initial 20 first serves. While he eventually held there, he needed to save seven break points along the way. It was clear Federer was not at his best.
Millman’s big rips on groundstrokes didn’t help matters. Nor did his steeliness despite not being all that familiar with this sort of success or setting. This is a guy who had never managed to beat a top-10 player, let alone a man who has spent more weeks at No. 1 in the ATP rankings than anyone else.
As the unforced errors mounted — Federer would finish with 77, compared to Millman’s 28 — Federer’s wife, Mirka, couldn’t bear to look, placing her forehead on her hands in the guest box in the stands.
Federer hung his head at a changeover, a little black fan pointed right at his face, but nothing seemed to make him feel like himself.
“When you feel like that,” Federer said, “everything is off.”

SHARAPOVA GONE
NEW YORK (AP) — Maria Sharapova won the U.S. Open as a teenager. More than a decade later, she can’t seem to make it past the fourth round.
With a mistake-filled performance, Sharapova lost a night match at Flushing Meadows for the first time in her lengthy career, beaten 6-4, 6-3 by No. 30 seed Carla Suarez Navarro of Spain on Monday.
“Just a little too up-and-down,” is the way Sharapova described her performance.
It’s the third consecutive appearance that ended one step short of the quarterfinals for the 31-year-old Sharapova, who had been 22-0 under the lights at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Sharapova collected the trophy in New York at age 19 in 2006 and owns a total of five Grand Slam titles, but the Russian was far shakier during this match than Suarez Navarro, who never has made it past the quarterfinals at a major.
The Spaniard, who turned 30 on Monday, will be at that stage for the second time at the U.S. Open, five years after her other run to that round.
“A really complete performance,” is the way she described her play.
On Wednesday, Suarez Navarro and her smooth one-handed backhand will take on 2017 runner-up Madison Keys of the United States. Keys advanced by beating No. 29 Dominika Cibulkova 6-1, 6-3.
“I have to be ready,” Suarez Navarro said about facing Keys, “and I think I am ready.”
Suarez Navarro often let the 22nd-seeded Sharapova create her own problems.
Sharapova had all sorts of trouble serving, repeatedly catching wayward ball tosses and committing eight double-faults. She was broken in six of her 10 service games.
During lengthy exchanges from the baseline, Sharapova repeatedly blinked first, although a couple of times the righty managed to switch her racket to her left hand for a desperation shot to extend a point.
While both women finished with 15 winners, Sharapova had nearly twice as many unforced errors as Suarez Navarro, 38-20.
“I didn’t take care of the chances that I had. By ‘chances,’ I mean the balls that were a little bit shorter. I hesitated to move forward,” Sharapova said. “The balls where I did attack, I made unforced errors, especially on that inside-out forehand today.”
Since her championship, Sharapova has only once made it to the quarterfinals at the U.S. Open — in 2012, when she lost in the semifinals. Since then, the best she’s done are fourth-round exits in 2014, 2017 and 2018.
After this latest loss, Sharapova was asked whether she envisions herself getting back to her best in the future.
“First of all, if I didn’t have the belief to keep doing this and to keep having the motivation and the grind of doing this every day in order to get myself in these positions, I don’t think I would be here. I think I’ve done plenty in my career, established a lot for myself personally, professionally,” she replied.
“The belief is not something that I’m eager to show everybody else,” Sharapova continued. “The belief matters most when it’s internal and when you have a passion for something. If you don’t, it’s your choice to not continue that, not for anyone else to tell you so.”

Jack Kendrick

Jack Edward Kendrick, Sr. age 82, a resident of Fort Scott and a former member of the Humboldt Police Department, passed away Thursday, Aug. 30, 2018, at the Medicalodge in Fort Scott.

Mr. Kendrick served with the U.S. Navy during both the Korean War and the Vietnam War.

Visitation is today from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Cheney Witt Chapel in Fort Scott. A graveside service will be at 12:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 7 at the U.S. National Cemetery in Fort Scott with military honors.

Baby blanket fundraiser on tap

MORAN — Although Christmas is still four months away, Marmaton Valley Junior High School eighth-grader Katie Bigelow already has her sights set on the holiday season.

Bigelow, 13, is raising funds to benefit families with premature babies at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo.

She will use those funds to provide blankets for the tiny infants.

Her goal is to raise $1,000, enough for 20 babies.

Bigelow, the daughter of Bill and Michelle Bigelow of Moran, has set up a GoFundMe account, labeled “NICU Love.”

In it, she explains how her family has had its share of premature births, so she understands the stress that families experience in similar circumstances.

As of Friday, Bigelow has raised $631 — enough to order the first shipment of supplies.

For more information, go to gofundme.com or visit Michelle Bigelow’s Facebook page.

Eighth-grade Ponies open season with sweep

Middle School Volleyball: Iola Ponies

The Iola Pony eighth grade volleyball A-team came away with a sweep Thursday over Anderson County. The B-Team fell in five sets.

The A-team won 25-23, 25-16 and 25-18.

“This was a great way to start the season,” head coach Terri Carlin said. “The girls really worked well together. Each player did what they needed to do for us to win. I was so proud of how they kept focus during the entire match. We had a great serving night, only missing a few.”

Aysha Houk led the Ponies in both aces and kills with seven and three respectively.

“Aysha is playing her first year of volleyball and is developing some great control on her serves,” Carlin said. “She is aggressive at the net.”

Cali Riley also had a strong showing at both the serving line and the net, delivering four aces, two kills and an assist.

“(Riley) has been working very hard in practice to get better at the net and she also has been working to improve her overhand serve,” Carlin said. “That really paid off for us tonight as she made some great plays.”

Louise Caron had an ace, Dallyn McGraw and Celina Caron each had a kill with Caron adding an assist. Khloeigh Shafer added an assist and Carly Dreher came off the bench and made eight straight serves including an ace.

The B-team fell in a close five-set match 17-25, 12-25, 25-21, 25-23 and 8-15.

Dreher was a highlight, especially from the serving line. She had 11 aces including a period of seven serves in a row in the fourth set. An ace from Dreher gave Iola the set win in a very close set four.

“(Dreher) is a very consistent server, which is so important in close sets,” Carlin said. “When Carly is back there serving, you just know it is going to be over and in.”

Dreher also had a kill.

Abigail Hirt and Emma McCormack each had four aces and Macie Hoag and Jadyn Kaufman had three aces. Elise Fleming and McCormack each had a kill. Madison Robertson added two assists.

Pony assistant coach Aubrey Westhoff was impressed with the play of both Kaufman and Fleming.

“Jadyn was a leader on the floor,” Westhoff said. “She gave it her all on each play. If the ball is near her, it doesn’t hit the floor. Jadyn does a great job encouraging her teammates.

“(Fleming) had a great first match. She is becoming more aggressive at the net and had a few good hits, including a kill.”

The Ponies will host Wellsville on Tuesday at 4 p.m.

Junior high Wildcats square off to open season

MS VB: Marmaton Valley and Yates Center

Marmaton Valley Junior High and Yates Center Middle School volleyball opened their seasons against each other in Moran on Thursday. Yates Center walked away with all three wins.

The Yates Center A-Team beat the Marmaton Valley A-Team in two sets, 25-18 and 25-14.

Emma Schmidt led Marmaton Valley with six points off of her serves while Roslyn Houk and Raveyn Kegler followed with two points off of serves. Janae Granere and Bailey LaRue each had one point.

The B-team lost in three sets, 18-25, 25-18 and 14-16.

LaRue led with 11 points followed by Gracie Yoho with eight points, Brooklyn Adams with five, Mallory Heim and Kaitlyn Drake with three apiece and Na’Sha Gregory with one.

The C-teams played one set to 25 and Yates Center won 25-16.

Kaleigh Thompson and Zoe Sneed led with two points each followed by Drake who had one point.

Stats for Yates Center were unavailable.

The Wildcats host Northeast-Arma next Thursday while Yates Center will host Cherokee-Southeast.

Cubs handle Bluestem

MS Football: Humboldt Cubs

The Humboldt Middle School football team opened its season in a big way by putting up a 52-0 beating on the road at Leon-Bluestem.

“I thought we played really well for our first competition,” head coach Mike Miller said. “Our line was really good on both sides of the ball. We took care of the football and had just three penalties which is really good for the first game.”

Aiden Gean started off the season with a bang, leading the Cubs in rushing with nine carries for 242 yards and six touchdowns.

William Kobold had six carries for 51 yards and one touchdown and Dakota Slocum had four carries for 24 yards.

Quarterback Sam Hull went 1-2 in passing for three yards.

Gean also led the Cubs in tackles along with Garren Goodner with six. Maddox Johnson had five tackles and River Kaufman had four.

Hull, Slocum, Johnson and Gavin Jaro each had a fumble recovery and Landon Bauer grabbed an interception.

The Cubs will host Neodesha next Thursday at 6 p.m.

Royals send Butera to Rockies for minor leaguer

Major League Baseball: Kansas City Royals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Rockies acquired Drew Butera from the Kansas City Royals on Friday, giving Colorado a veteran backup catcher as they try to chase down the Arizona Diamondbacks in the NL West.

The Royals received minor league left-hander Jerry Vasto.

Butera was in his fourth season with the Royals, where he served as the backup to six-time All-Star Salvador Perez. He was hitting just .188 with two homers and 18 RBIs in 52 games, but will be remembered by Kansas City fans for catching the final out of the Royals’ 2015 World Series championship.

Colorado began the day 1 1/2 games behind the Diamondbacks in the division race.

The 26-year-old Vasto has spent most of this season at Triple-A Albuquerque, going 2-1 with a 3.16 ERA in 37 relief appearances. He made his big league debut on June 10 in a game against Arizona.