1
Petition filed for probate of Estate Published in The Saint Francis Her- ald, St. Francis, Kansas, Thursdays June 28, July 5 and July 12, 2007. (26-28) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF CHEYENNE COUNTY, KANSAS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CASE NO.2007-PR-09 MARY E. WALDEN, Deceased. Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59 NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are hereby notified that on June 22, 2007, a Petition for Pro- bate of Will and Issuance of Letters Testamentary was filed in this Court by Eldon F. Walden, an heir, devi- see and legatee, and executor named in the “Last Will and Testa- ment of Mary E. Walden”, de- ceased. All creditors of the decedent are notified to exhibit their demands against the Estate within four months from the date of first publi- cation of this notice, as provided by law, and if their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred. Eldon F. Walden, Petitioner APPROVED BY: JAMES M. MILLIKEN, CHAR- TERED Kari M. Gilliland, #17386 101 W. Washington Street, P.O. Box 627 St. Francis, Kansas 67756 (785) 332-2101 Attorneys for Petitioner Public Notices Published in the Saint Francis Her- ald, St. Francis, Kansas, Thurs- days, July 5, July 12 and July 19, 2007 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF CHEYENNE COUNTY, KANSAS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Case No. 06-PR-19 DELORIS E. NIPPS A/K/A DELORIS NIPPS, DECEASED PURSUANT TO K.S.A. CHAP- TER 59 NOTICE OF HEARING ON PETITION FOR FINAL SETTLEMENT You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed on the 28th day of June, 2007, in this Court by Charles W. Nipps, Administrator of the estate of Deloris E. Nipps, de- ceased, praying Petitioner’s acts be approved, account be settled and allowed; the heirs be determined; the Estate be assigned to the per- sons entitled thereto; the court find the allowances requested for attor- ney fees and expenses are reason- Petition filed for final settlement able and should be allowed; the costs be determined and ordered paid; the administration of the Es- tate be closed; upon the filing of re- ceipts the Petitioner be finally dis- charged as the Administrator of the Estate of Deloris E. Nipps, de- ceased, and the Petitioner be re- leased from further liability. You are required to file your writ- ten defenses thereto on or before the 25th day of July, 2007, at 10:00 o’clock A.M., in the district court, St. Francis, Cheyenne County, Kan- sas, at which time and place such cause will be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon said petition. Charles W. Nipps, Petitioner JAMES M. MILLIKEN, CHAR- TERED James M. Milliken, #07001 101 W. Washington Street, P.O. Box 627 St. Francis, Kansas 67756 (785) 332-2101 Attorney for Administrator B u s i n ess C a r d s ... *One color *Full color *T wo colors *T wo sided *Logos *Pictur es *The options ar e endless in making business cards for your business. The new card will run in the business card dir ectory FREE for two weeks! S. Casey McCormick Advertising Manager [email protected] 310 W. Washington PO Box 1050 St. Francis, KS 67756 [email protected] 785-332-3162 785-332-3001 (fax) Thursday, July 5, 2007 BIRD CITY TIMES 5 I Am A Countr y Newspaper ... I am a countr y newspaper. I am the friend of the family, the bringer of tidings from other friends; I speak to the home in the evening of summer’s vine-clad porch or the glow of the winter’s lamp. I help to make this evening hour; I record the great and the small, the var- ied acts of the days and weeks that go to make up life. I am for and of the home; I follow those who leave humble beginnings; whether they go to greatness or to the gutter, I take to them the thrill of old days, with wholesome messages. I speak the language of the common man; my words are fitted to his un- derstanding. My congregation is larger than that of any church in my town; my readers are more than those in the school. Young and old alike find in me stimulation, solace, comfort. I am the chronicler of man’s existence. I am the word of the week, the his- tory of the year, the record of my com- munity in the archives of state and na- tion. I am the lives of my readers. I am the countr y newspaper. Bird City Times Ag Talk with Jeanne P r a i r i e d og c o n t r o l d i s c u sse d Coupl e a nn o un c es w e ddi ng By Karen Krien Prairie dogs Prairie dog control was discussed when the Cheyenne County Com- missioners met on Friday. All three commissioners had received com- plaints about prairie dogs, the dam- age they were doing and lack of con- trol. The last day the dogs could be treated with the chemical bait Rozol was March 15. Now prairie dogs cannot be baited until October With the push of farmers and ranchers, the commissioners have decided to start preparing and dis- cussing treatments well before Oc- tober arrives. Farmers can do their own baiting with chemicals but they need to be certified. There is also a treated grain that farmers can spread but, at a previous meeting, Dan Schlittenhardt, supervisor, said that if the prairie dog eats some and does not die, he will never eat it again. The grain is only about 75-percent effective and there is also a matter that birds might pick up the treated grain. Also, at that earlier meeting, Mr. Schlittenhardt said the snow last winter had hampered the progress of baiting the dogs. Commissioner Beikman said he hoped Mr. Schlittenhardt could be out as soon as possible in the fall. Emergency preparedness Gary Rogers, emergency pre- paredness director, reported that his laptop computer had quit. “I have totally lost my office!” he said. Mr. Rogers not only serves Chey- enne County but also Rawlins and Sherman counties. Terry Miller, county clerk, said he would take it home over the weekend to see if information could be saved from the hard drive. Mr. Rogers presented a quotes from Gateway which gives a state discount. For a 15-inch screen, the cost is $1,355; for a 17-inch screen, $1,555. Clerk Miller suggested he get the larger screen with a large hard drive. The commissioners agreed that Mr. Rogers had adequate money is his budget to buy the computer that he thought necessary. Mr. Rogers talked about raising the meal allowance. He was told that the county will pay up to $10 for a meal and, if the cost went over that, Mr. Rogers would have to cover it. This arrangement appeared to be agreeable to Mr. Rogers. The commissioners signed the 2007 Kansas Emergency Coopera- tive Agreement. In other business In other business: • Andy Beikman, chairman, signed the Heritage Trust Fund Grant Contract. This grant is for the restoration of the courthouse steps. • Sick time was discuss and the commissioners agreed to change the policy to allow employees to be gone for as little as 30 minutes in- stead of taking off a full hour as the policy now states. • The new 911 system was dis- cussed. See related article. Next meeting The next meeting of the commis- sioners has been changed from Monday, July 16, to Friday, July 13. The time will be 8 a.m. and a bud- get work session will follow. Kari Nichole Gienger and Nathaniel Jack Ryan Toon are plan- ning an October wedding. Parents of the couple are Tony and Joan Gienger and Jack and Sheila Toon and Kent and Tammy Jantz. The bride-to-be is a 2003 alumni of St. Francis Community High School and a 2006 graduate of Fort Hays State University where she majored in business administration. The groom-to-be is a 2004 alumni of Cambridge High School in Cambridge, Neb., and is a student at Fort Hays State University where he is majoring in computer science. They are both employed at NEW Corp. in Hays. By Jeanne Falk, K-State Multi-County Agrono- mist Will low-test-weight wheat be suitable to use for seed this fall? According to Jim Shroyer, K-State wheat specialist, there’s no simple answer to this question. Producers who want to plant back some of the wheat they harvested from this year’s crop should have it cleaned out to a test weight of at least 56 pounds per bushel if possible. Wheat with a lower test weight may have a good germination test, and may even emerge just fine (just look at all the volunteer wheat that emerges from small or shriveled seed that is blown out the back of the combine!), but will often have lower vigor and yield potential than wheat with a higher test weight. The effect of test weight on emer- gence, vigor, and yield potential will vary from year to year. When there is stress on the seedlings or young plants in the fall from freeze or drought or some other factor, the effect of higher test weight seed is often greatest. A study conducted at K-State’s Agronomy North Farm in 1950 by H.H. Laude, professor of agronomy looked at seed test weight. The re- sults showed that: test weight had no effect on germination, higher test weight seed had 20-40 percent im- proved field emergence, higher test weight seed emerged 4-6 days sooner, higher test weight seed re- sulted in about a 5-bushel yield in- crease, and test weight of the seed had no effect on the final test weight of the subsequent crop In addition, in 1990, a study was conducted by K-State extension agonomists, Jim Shroyer, Stu Duncan, and Dale Fjell, on seed of Arkan wheat from 25 demonstra- tion plots around the state. Yields averaged 2.4 bushels per acre higher with the high-test-weight seed (61 vs. 54 pounds/bushel). Field observations have shown that higher-test-weight seed results in improved vigor and fall tiller de- velopment. A note from K-State’s Department of Agronomy in 1935 substantiates this, and summarizes the situation regarding low-test- weight seed. These comments still apply to today’s varieties: Shriveled seed, even when it has a fairly high germination percent- age, is likely to produce weak sprouts and plants that do not have enough vigor to survive unfavor- able conditions. Professor J.W. Zahnley, Director of the State Seed Laboratory, states that the germi- nated seed of several samples of shriveled wheat with test weights ranging from 46 to 55 pounds, was characterized by weakness of the first or temporary roots. Normal wheat seedlings should have three strong roots at the end of the germination period of seven days. Many of the badly shriveled seeds produced only a single, weak primary root, or one fairly strong root and one or two very weak ones. Such seed will not produce a normal plant under average field condition. And in case of adverse circumstances, these weak plants will perish more quickly than normal seedlings. If producers are planning to save their grain as seed and have it cleaned to raise the test weight, what should the minimum test weight be? How low is too low? In truth, there is no absolute minimum for farmer-saved seed, but yields and vigor are more likely to be af- fected at test weights below 54-56 pounds/bushel. Below 54-56, the plants are likely to have more prob- lems in the fall and in surviving the winter. Producers planting low- test-weight seed will also have to be extra cautious not to plant the seed too deeply, since seedling vigor will be below average. The effect of seed test weight on emergence, vigor, and yield poten- tial will vary from year to year. When there is stress on the seed- lings or young plants in the fall from freeze or drought or some other fac- tor, the effect of higher test weight seed is often greatest. Wheat seed quality concerns: Low test weights and foreign material JUNIOR CLASS BAKE SALE — Sidney Busse waits for Jim Leisure and Gary Brubaker to decide which treat they will be taking home. Mandi Walden looks on. Proceeds of the bake sale will go to the prom. Times staff photo by Casey McCormick By shopping the money-saving advertisements in the Bird City Times, you will save more than the weekly price of the newspaper. Toon — Gienger

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Page 1: Ag Talk with Jeanne Thursday, July 5, 2007 BIRD CITY TIMES 5nwkansas.com/bcwebpages/Pdf pages - all/bc pages-pdfs... · 2007-07-06 · Ag Talk with Jeanne Prairie dog control discussed

Petition filed forprobate of EstatePublished in The Saint Francis Her-ald, St. Francis, Kansas, ThursdaysJune 28, July 5 and July 12, 2007.(26-28)

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OFCHEYENNE COUNTY, KANSASIN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE

OFCASE NO.2007-PR-09MARY E. WALDEN, Deceased.

Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59NOTICE TO CREDITORS

THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALLPERSONS CONCERNED:

You are hereby notified that onJune 22, 2007, a Petition for Pro-bate of Will and Issuance of LettersTestamentary was filed in this Courtby Eldon F. Walden, an heir, devi-see and legatee, and executornamed in the “Last Will and Testa-

ment of Mary E. Walden”, de-ceased.

All creditors of the decedent arenotified to exhibit their demandsagainst the Estate within fourmonths from the date of first publi-cation of this notice, as provided bylaw, and if their demands are notthus exhibited, they shall be foreverbarred.

Eldon F. Walden, PetitionerAPPROVED BY:JAMES M. MILLIKEN, CHAR-TEREDKari M. Gilliland, #17386101 W. Washington Street, P.O.Box 627St. Francis, Kansas 67756(785) 332-2101Attorneys for Petitioner

Public Notices

Published in the Saint Francis Her-ald, St. Francis, Kansas, Thurs-days, July 5, July 12 and July 19,2007

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OFCHEYENNE COUNTY, KANSASIN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATEOFCase No. 06-PR-19

DELORIS E. NIPPS A/K/ADELORIS NIPPS, DECEASEDPURSUANT TO K.S.A. CHAP-

TER 59NOTICE OF HEARING ON

PETITION FOR FINALSETTLEMENT

You are hereby notified that apetition has been filed on the 28thday of June, 2007, in this Court byCharles W. Nipps, Administrator ofthe estate of Deloris E. Nipps, de-ceased, praying Petitioner’s acts beapproved, account be settled andallowed; the heirs be determined;the Estate be assigned to the per-sons entitled thereto; the court findthe allowances requested for attor-ney fees and expenses are reason-

Petition filed forfinal settlement

able and should be allowed; thecosts be determined and orderedpaid; the administration of the Es-tate be closed; upon the filing of re-ceipts the Petitioner be finally dis-charged as the Administrator of theEstate of Deloris E. Nipps, de-ceased, and the Petitioner be re-leased from further liability.

You are required to file your writ-ten defenses thereto on or beforethe 25th day of July, 2007, at 10:00o’clock A.M., in the district court, St.Francis, Cheyenne County, Kan-sas, at which time and place suchcause will be heard. Should you failtherein, judgment and decree will beentered in due course upon saidpetition.

Charles W. Nipps, PetitionerJAMES M. MILLIKEN, CHAR-

TEREDJames M. Milliken, #07001101 W. Washington Street, P.O.

Box 627St. Francis, Kansas 67756(785) 332-2101Attorney for Administrator

Business Cards...*One color *Full color*Two colors *Two sided*Logos *Pictures

*The options are endless in making business cards for your

business.

The new card will run in thebusiness card directory FREE for

two weeks!

S. Casey McCormickAdvertising Manager

[email protected]

310 W. WashingtonPO Box 1050

St. Francis, KS 67756

[email protected]

785-332-3001 (fax)

Thursday, July 5, 2007 BIRD CITY TIMES 5

I Am ACountry Newspaper ...

I am a country newspaper.I am the friend of the family, the

bringer of tidings from other friends; Ispeak to the home in the evening ofsummer’s vine-clad porch or the glowof the winter’s lamp.I help to make this evening hour; I

record the great and the small, the var-ied acts of the days and weeks thatgo to make up life.I am for and of the home; I follow

those who leave humble beginnings;whether they go to greatness or to thegutter, I take to them the thrill of olddays, with wholesome messages.I speak the language of the common

man; my words are fitted to his un-derstanding. My congregation islarger than that of any church in mytown; my readers are more than thosein the school. Young and old alike findin me stimulation, solace, comfort. Iam the chronicler of man’s existence.I am the word of the week, the his-

tory of the year, the record of my com-munity in the archives of state and na-tion.I am the lives of my readers.I am the country newspaper.

Bird City Times

Ag Talk with Jeanne

Prairie dog control discussed

Coupleannounceswedding

By Karen KrienPrairie dogs

Prairie dog control was discussedwhen the Cheyenne County Com-missioners met on Friday. All threecommissioners had received com-plaints about prairie dogs, the dam-age they were doing and lack of con-trol.

The last day the dogs could betreated with the chemical bait Rozolwas March 15. Now prairie dogscannot be baited until October

With the push of farmers andranchers, the commissioners havedecided to start preparing and dis-cussing treatments well before Oc-tober arrives.

Farmers can do their own baitingwith chemicals but they need to becertified. There is also a treatedgrain that farmers can spread but, ata previous meeting, DanSchlittenhardt, supervisor, said thatif the prairie dog eats some and doesnot die, he will never eat it again.The grain is only about 75-percenteffective and there is also a matterthat birds might pick up the treated

grain.Also, at that earlier meeting, Mr.

Schlittenhardt said the snow lastwinter had hampered the progressof baiting the dogs. CommissionerBeikman said he hoped Mr.Schlittenhardt could be out as soonas possible in the fall.

Emergency preparednessGary Rogers, emergency pre-

paredness director, reported that hislaptop computer had quit.

“I have totally lost my office!” hesaid.

Mr. Rogers not only serves Chey-enne County but also Rawlins andSherman counties.

Terry Miller, county clerk, saidhe would take it home over theweekend to see if information couldbe saved from the hard drive.

Mr. Rogers presented a quotesfrom Gateway which gives a statediscount. For a 15-inch screen, thecost is $1,355; for a 17-inch screen,$1,555. Clerk Miller suggested heget the larger screen with a largehard drive.

The commissioners agreed thatMr. Rogers had adequate money ishis budget to buy the computer that

he thought necessary.Mr. Rogers talked about raising

the meal allowance. He was toldthat the county will pay up to $10 fora meal and, if the cost went overthat, Mr. Rogers would have tocover it. This arrangement appearedto be agreeable to Mr. Rogers.

The commissioners signed the2007 Kansas Emergency Coopera-tive Agreement.

In other businessIn other business:• Andy Beikman, chairman,

signed the Heritage Trust FundGrant Contract. This grant is for therestoration of the courthouse steps.

• Sick time was discuss and thecommissioners agreed to changethe policy to allow employees to begone for as little as 30 minutes in-stead of taking off a full hour as thepolicy now states.

• The new 911 system was dis-cussed. See related article.

Next meeting The next meeting of the commis-

sioners has been changed fromMonday, July 16, to Friday, July 13.The time will be 8 a.m. and a bud-get work session will follow.

Kari Nichole Gienger andNathaniel Jack Ryan Toon are plan-ning an October wedding.

Parents of the couple are Tonyand Joan Gienger and Jack andSheila Toon and Kent and TammyJantz.

The bride-to-be is a 2003 alumniof St. Francis Community HighSchool and a 2006 graduate of FortHays State University where shemajored in business administration.

The groom-to-be is a 2004alumni of Cambridge High Schoolin Cambridge, Neb., and is a studentat Fort Hays State University wherehe is majoring in computer science.

They are both employed at NEWCorp. in Hays.

By Jeanne Falk,K-State Multi-County Agrono-

mistWill low-test-weight wheat be

suitable to use for seed this fall?According to Jim Shroyer, K-State

wheat specialist, there’s no simpleanswer to this question. Producerswho want to plant back some of thewheat they harvested from this year’scrop should have it cleaned out to atest weight of at least 56 pounds perbushel if possible.

Wheat with a lower test weightmay have a good germination test,and may even emerge just fine (justlook at all the volunteer wheat thatemerges from small or shriveledseed that is blown out the back of thecombine!), but will often havelower vigor and yield potential thanwheat with a higher test weight.

The effect of test weight on emer-gence, vigor, and yield potentialwill vary from year to year. Whenthere is stress on the seedlings oryoung plants in the fall from freezeor drought or some other factor, theeffect of higher test weight seed isoften greatest.

A study conducted at K-State’sAgronomy North Farm in 1950 byH.H. Laude, professor of agronomylooked at seed test weight. The re-sults showed that: test weight hadno effect on germination, higher testweight seed had 20-40 percent im-proved field emergence, higher testweight seed emerged 4-6 dayssooner, higher test weight seed re-sulted in about a 5-bushel yield in-crease, and test weight of the seedhad no effect on the final test weightof the subsequent crop

In addition, in 1990, a study wasconducted by K-State extensionagonomists, Jim Shroyer, StuDuncan, and Dale Fjell, on seed ofArkan wheat from 25 demonstra-tion plots around the state. Yieldsaveraged 2.4 bushels per acrehigher with the high-test-weightseed (61 vs. 54 pounds/bushel).

Field observations have shownthat higher-test-weight seed resultsin improved vigor and fall tiller de-

velopment. A note from K-State’sDepartment of Agronomy in 1935substantiates this, and summarizesthe situation regarding low-test-weight seed. These comments stillapply to today’s varieties:

Shriveled seed, even when it hasa fairly high germination percent-age, is likely to produce weaksprouts and plants that do not haveenough vigor to survive unfavor-able conditions. Professor J.W.Zahnley, Director of the State SeedLaboratory, states that the germi-nated seed of several samples ofshriveled wheat with test weightsranging from 46 to 55 pounds, wascharacterized by weakness of thefirst or temporary roots.

Normal wheat seedlings shouldhave three strong roots at the end ofthe germination period of sevendays. Many of the badly shriveledseeds produced only a single, weakprimary root, or one fairly strong rootand one or two very weak ones. Suchseed will not produce a normal plantunder average field condition. And incase of adverse circumstances, theseweak plants will perish more quicklythan normal seedlings.

If producers are planning to savetheir grain as seed and have itcleaned to raise the test weight,what should the minimum testweight be? How low is too low? Intruth, there is no absolute minimumfor farmer-saved seed, but yieldsand vigor are more likely to be af-fected at test weights below 54-56pounds/bushel. Below 54-56, theplants are likely to have more prob-lems in the fall and in surviving thewinter. Producers planting low-test-weight seed will also have to beextra cautious not to plant the seedtoo deeply, since seedling vigor willbe below average.

The effect of seed test weight onemergence, vigor, and yield poten-tial will vary from year to year.When there is stress on the seed-lings or young plants in the fall fromfreeze or drought or some other fac-tor, the effect of higher test weightseed is often greatest.

Wheat seed quality concerns: Low test weightsand foreign material

JUNIOR CLASS BAKE SALE — Sidney Busse waits for JimLeisure and Gary Brubaker to decide which treat they will

be taking home. Mandi Walden looks on. Proceeds of thebake sale will go to the prom. Times staff photo by Casey McCormick

By shopping the money-savingadvertisements in theBird City Times, youwill save more thanthe weekly price of

the newspaper.

Toon — Gienger