BREAKING NEWS
UPDATED AFTER PRINT DEADLINE
A small earthquake, measuring 2.8 on the Richter scale, hit at 8:06 p.m. Thursday southeast of Marion.
The epicenter was tentatively located by the U.S. Geological Survey as being near 180th and Timber Rds., midway between Marion and Marion County Lake.
Marion city council members passed a resolution Monday that gave mayor David Mayfield and city administrator Roger Holter the temporary authority to make decisions without vote of council during a COVID-19 epidemic that is expected to cost the city $70,000 in sales tax revenue.
The resolution declares a local state of emergency and gives them authority to make any decisions they deem necessary to continue city operations and protect the well-being of employees and the public.
County health nurse Diedre Serene told commissioners Monday that despite three confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the county as of Sunday some residents were not following the governor’s orders.
“I have my doubts that some people are complying with the stay at home order, but I would hope they would,” Serene said.
When the Parmleys decided to put a little free library outside their house, it was 7-year-old Madalyn who served as the driving motivation.
“When we lived in Great Bend we frequented quite a few of them,” mother Andi Parmley said. “They had them all over town. She loved sharing books with other people, and she loved that other people were sharing books with her.”
Ashley Etheridge is no stranger to social distancing.
Limiting errands, ordering groceries online, and keeping her sons at home as much as possible is the family routine every flu season.
Joe Zinn is 81, but after five decades of digging wells, he doesn’t see a need to stop now.
“I’ll keep going until I can’t anymore,” he said. “It’s just all that climbing.”
Hillsboro city council members declared a state of emergency during their first online meeting Tuesday.
The first 10 minutes of the meeting were spent ironing out minor technical issues.
To date, the county has three confirmed and three suspected patients with COVID-19.
The first confirmed patient, a female between ages 20 and 44 who has traveled, was announced by county health nurse Diedre Serene last Thursday. She announced the second confirmed patient, a male between the ages of 45 and 54, on Friday.
Some businesses are still doing well despite financial ramifications of COVID-19 fears and the governor’s stay-home order. But some are struggling to stay open and have let employees go.
El Lorito Mexican restaurant in Hillsboro, for example, is holding up fairly well, co-owner Guadalupe Sosme said.
A pandemic straining many hospitals to their limits to care for the number of critically-ill patients is forcing area hospitals to adjust staffing and pay to keep operating.
St. Luke Hospital in Marion is taking some necessary steps to maintain financial stability.
Isolation, grocery shortages take toll on young families
By PHYLLIS ZORN
Staff writer
Having to take four young children to the grocery store with her despite fears they might be exposed to COVID-19, not being able to get needed supplies because of shortages, and missing the presence of relatives who can’t come visit are all hard facts of life now for rural Marion County resident Jill Smith.
Florence should raise the price it charges Marion County for emptying dumpsters at Marion County Lake, city superintendent Terry Britton said at Monday’s city council meeting.
“We’re basically losing money on it,” he said.
April 13’s blood drives at Trinity Mennonite Church in Hillsboro, and Goessel Mennonite Church are to continue as planned, with additional precautions being taken by American Red Cross.
Staff and donor temperatures will be checked entering the blood drives, and all Red Cross staff will wear masks and gloves.
The swaths of pinkish-purple blossoms spreading across fields and taking over lawns are thanks to a pretty weed that is thriving after a wet winter.
It’s henbit, a member of the mint family that germinates in the fall and sports blossoms in the cool of early spring, Marion County extension agent Rickey Roberts said.
A new program will be available to help teach county residents parent skills and strengthening family relationships through Families and Communities Together.
Marion County FACT received a $3,000 grant from Central Kansas Community Foundation’s L. Marie Haun Charitable Fund for Children to help fund its Growing Family Connections project.
For the past five years, Marion’s community garden has supplied thousands of pounds of fresh, clean produce to Marion County’s food bank.
This year, manager Pam Byers plans to keep that promise and expand on it by extending the garden’s growing season well into fall.
Services will be at a later date for former Peabody resident Kent V. Anderson, who died March 31 at Peabody Health and Rehab.
He was born July 19, 1957, in McPherson, to Lawrence and Nancy Anderson.
Services for Allen W. Pankratz, 94, of Hillsboro, who died March 31 at Hillsboro Community Hospital, will be scheduled at a later date.
He was born Dec. 14, 1925, in rural Marion to Sam and Helena Wall Pankratz.
IN MEMORIAM:
Nancy Davis
IN MEMORIAM:
Virginia Hammond
IN MEMORIAM:
Elaine Jantzen
IN MEMORIAM:
Carolyn Winter
When Kaylee, 8, and Collin Hunter, 5, decided to made Easter bags for residents at Marion Assisted Living, it was because they knew it was important to provide a service.
“They don’t get to see the people they love,” Kaylee Hunter said.
Stay-home orders mean changing this year’s annual Marion Easter egg hunt.
The hunt, sponsored by Marion Kiwanis and Marion City Library, will not be held on the library lawn as usual this year.
Farming is often passed down from one generation to the next who inherit a way of life along with a way to make a living.
“Those of us who work the land for a living, it goes beyond the financial significance,” Rex Savage said.
Despite rampant demand for beef in recent weeks, producers face uncertainty because the current market isn’t increasing their profits.
Lincolnville feedlot operator Mike Beneke said events in recent years have not been kind to producers.
The only thing spreading faster than COVID-19 these days are rumors, especially from ever- mutating pathogens like Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, and the other insidious diseases we’ve taken to calling anti-social media.
No, there’s no miracle cure being kept from us by transnational drug companies, Nancy Pelosi, Jared Kushner, the Trilateral Commission, or the Easter Bunny.
ANOTHER DAY IN THE COUNTRY:
Bringing out the best
Lehigh resident Jacqueline Cusick has spent the last three weeks sewing with a mission.
She, along with other seamstresses in the county, has been creating face masks for people working in the health care industry.
Marion’s Chingawassa Days was nixed this past week to ensure public safety amid an outbreak of COVID-19 that has caused a still-rising toll of deaths and hospitalizations statewide.
Clayton Garnica, chairman of Chingawassa Days, said the decision was forced by multiple factors, including the massive planning needed to pull off the event.
Marion County Democrats are continuing a scholarship award program of several years running.
High school seniors at all five Marion County high schools may apply.
Goessel native Madeline Reida placed second in Kansas Association of Broadcasters’ 2020 Student Award competition for her research paper “Box Office Bombs,” it was announced this week.
Reida was one of five Butler Community College students to place second and among 14 Butler students to receive awards.
SERMON FOR THE WEEK:
Weekly sermon: Where does my help come from?
SENIOR CENTER:
Marion,
Hillsboro,
Peabody menus
MEMORIES:
10,
25,
40,
55,
70,
100,
140 years ago
MEMORIES IN FOCUS:
Our congressman who never was