Beth Page

Beth Ann Page, age 57, of LaHarpe, died Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2019, at Research Medical Facility in Kansas City, Mo. She was born Sept. 11, 1962, in Chanute, to Dean and Roxie (Stanley) Page.

She was preceded in death by her parents.

Survivors include daughters Amber New of Moran and Darylann Barriger of Neosho Falls;  and numerous other relatives.

Graveside services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Mount Hope Cemetery in Humboldt. Family will greet friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday in the Venue at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service, Iola.

Memorials can be made to Windsor Place Activity Fund, and may be left with Feuerborn Family Funeral Service.

Timothy Fritch

Timothy Todd Fritch, age 41 of Humboldt, died Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019.

Cremation has been requested.  The full obituary and service details will follow at a later date. The family suggests memorials to be made to the Tim Fritch Children’s Educational Fund and may be left with or mailed to the funeral home. Arrangements have been entrusted to Countryside Funeral Home, 101 N. Highland, Chanute, KS 66720.

Illusionist extraordinaire kicks off Bowlus 2019-20 season

Don’t be surprised if you see Jason Bishop have a person passing through his body one moment or make goldfish appear from nowhere the next. 

Bishop, an international award-winning illusionist, will kick off the 2019-20 Bowlus Fine Arts Center season Saturday with “Jason Bishop: Straight Up Magic.”

Ticket information for the 7 p.m. show is available at www.bowluscenter.org.

Bishop’s interest in magic ran throughout his youth, truly taking shape in his mid-teens. In college, Jason studied theater and then went on the road performing at resorts and amusement parks, anywhere he could find an audience, including the street. As audiences enjoyed the show more and more, he altered his magic to become larger and more impressive.

“I’m doing something I enjoy,” Bishop told the “CBS Sunday Morning” show. “My philosophy is, make the tricks you like, and put them in front of an audience. And if they like them, then you’re good.”

Bishop grew up in New Jersey in an admittedly rough childhood.

As he explained in his CBS interview, both of his parents were drug addicts. His father died when he was young; his mother wound up prison.

Bishop and his siblings moved around from foster home to foster home before he found his salvation in magic.

Reading books about legends such as Harry Houdini played a role, he said.

“There was something attractive to me, about the fact that these guys were poor people, They found magic and through their own drive, they could make their life.”

The Jason Bishop Show features exclusive large illusions, award-winning sleight of hand and “close-up” magic that is captured live and projected onto LCD screens for the audience to have a clear view of every detail. 

Today, Bishop is the only illusionist in the U.S. to tour with the rare Double Levitation, Plasma illusion and Op-Art. 

More recently, Jason has been featured in various performing arts centers and theaters throughout the United States.

Gordon ends holdout

COSTA MESA, Calif. (AP) — Running back Melvin Gordon will end his holdout and report to the Los Angeles Chargers on Thursday, according to a person familiar with the situation.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Wednesday because he wasn’t at liberty to publicly discuss the situation. The running back has been absent since the start of training camp due to a contract dispute.

Gordon is not expected to play Sunday when the Chargers (1-2) travel to Miami (0-3). Los Angeles’ next two games after the Dolphins are at home against Denver and Pittsburgh.

“I don’t think you walk in camp and just play right away. You can run and do all the drills you want but it is hard to simulate real football,” coach Anthony Lynn said before practice Wednesday.

Gordon was slated to make $5.6 million on the fifth-year option of his rookie contract. That amount decreased by approximately $329,412 for each game he misses. 

Gordon also is subject to fines of up to $40,000 under the collective-bargaining agreement for each day he missed training camp.

General manager Tom Telesco suspended contract talks with Gordon’s agents until after the season. Gordon was seeking an extension of $13 million to $14.4 million per season, which was equivalent to deals signed by Todd Gurley, David Johnson and Le’Veon Bell. The Chargers offered around $10 million per year.

Gordon has gained over 1,200 yards from scrimmage and scored 10 or more touchdowns in three straight seasons, but the Chargers offense has not sputtered in his absence. Austin Ekeler leads AFC running backs in yards from scrimmage and Justin Jackson is averaging 7.9 yards per carry.

Chargers running backs are averaging 5.4 yards per carry, which is third best in the league and over a yard more than the NFL average.

Quarterback Philip Rivers said he has not talked to Gordon for a little while and that it would be up to Lynn on how to handle his return.

“I know it would be good to see him,” Rivers said.

Voting opens for Kincaid Fair Queen

KINCAID ? Four teenagers are in the running for the 2019 Kincaid Fair Queen.

The winner will be crowned at 1 p.m. Saturday, just before the start of the Kincaid Fair Parade.

The candidates:

 

Shyla McCutchen

Shyla, 17, is the daughter of Trilla Miller and granddaughter of Kenneth and Carolyn Eastwood. The Crest High School senior was born and raised in Kincaid. She plans on attending college to be a nurse.

Her candidacy is sponsored by Deer Creek Boosters.

 

Aubree Holloran

Aubree Holloran is a junior at Crest and is active in volleyball, basketball, softball and dance. She also is vice president for the school?s Family, Career and Community Leaders of America Chapter, FFA secretary and active with the Student Council.

Her parents are Kevin and Stacy Holloran; grandparents are Charlie and Mary Holloran and Delton and Janice Hodgson.

Her candidacy is sponsored by South Lone Elm 15.

 

McKenna Hammond

McKenna is a freshman at Crest. She?s the daughter of Chad and Brenna Hammond, granddaughter of Mike and Renda Hammond and Homer and Shirley Adams and great-granddaughter of Bonnie Adams. She plays volleyball and is involved in FCCLA, band and cheer.

Her candidacy is sponsored by Friendship Quilters.

 

Haylee Beckmon

Haylee, 15, is active in volleyball, basketball, softball, dance, gymnastics, cheer, FCCLA and FFA. She enjoys horseback riding, helping with special needs children and hunting. Haylee also is active in community projects and attends church at The Barn, while staying active with Barn Harvesters 4-H club. She plans to attend college to become a therapist at Children?s Mercy Hospital and to help on the family farm.

She is the daughter of Nathan and Krissy Beckmon and  granddaughter of Randal and Marsha Beckmon and Terry and Jackie Broyles.

Her candidacy is sponsored by the Believe-it-Or-Not club.

Voting will take place until 8 p.m. today and Friday in the Fair building.

 

RICK AND Connie Thompson, rural Kincaid, are this year?s grand marshals.

The Thompsons have been involved in the Kincaid Fair for 40 years.

Rick is usually in the Lions Club hamburger stand. He also serves as concessions manager and works with the carnival to help distribute tickets.

Connie has assisted with several Fair projects, including the last five years as vice president of the Fair Association. She also is superintendent of the baking department and was instrumental in adding the photography exhibit display.

The Thompsons farm and raise sheep, while Connie works at the Kincaid post office. They have three children.

A look back in time

55 Years Ago

September 1964

 The hot lunch program for the Iola public schools gets underway for its second year of operation. The program began last year when the new home economics and science building was completed at the high school. 

*****

Dale Creitz, coordinator of music in the Iola public schools, was named coordinator of fine arts for the new Bowlus Fine Arts Center last night at a meeting of the board of education. Creitz will schedule all fine arts events and activities in the new building and will be in charge of student groups and teachers using the facilities.

IHS Homecoming Court

Iola High School’s 2019 Fall Homecoming King and Queen will be crowned prior to the Mustangs’ Oct. 4 home football game against Osawatomie.

The king candidates are, from left, Zane Whitney, Karson McGraw, Brody Nemecek, Elijah Fawson, Andre Quinn and Casen Barker. Queen candidates are, from left, Sadrie Overall, Ella Taylor, Lexie Vega, Lauren McDermeit, Gabby Richards and Torre DePriest.

Spirit Week activities will culminate with the homecoming parade that travels from the IHS campus to the courthouse bandstand in downtown Iola at 2:20 p.m. Oct. 4. The candidates will be introduced at the bandstand. This year’s theme is “Saturday Night Lights.”

Have ‘Coffee With a Cop’

Hope Unlimited is teaming with the Iola Fire Department to offer “Coffee With a Cop Day” Tuesday.

Free coffee and casual conversation will be offered from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. at Around The Corner, at the intersection of Madison and Washington avenues in downtown Iola.

“This is a great way to informally get to know your law enforcement and ask questions you may have over a cup of joe,” said Jaclyn Conkling, a criminal justice advocate for Hope Unlimited.

Conkling also will be on hand to explain Hope Unimited’s services and how advocates help bridge gaps between law enforcement and the ones they serve.

Another event is planned Oct. 5 in Yates Center, Conkling noted. Details for that session are being finalized.

 

UK leader Johnson faces backlash over his tone

LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced a backlash from furious lawmakers today over his use of charged and confrontational language in Parliament about opponents of his Brexit plan. The Speaker of the House of Commons warned that the country’s political culture had turned “toxic.”

In a raucous, bad-tempered debate on Wednesday, Johnson characterized an opposition law ordering a Brexit delay as a “surrender act” and a “humiliation bill” and said delaying Brexit would “betray” British voters. He also brushed off concerns that his forceful language might endanger legislators as “humbug.”

Johnson took power two months ago with a “do or die” promise that Britain will leave the European Union on the scheduled date of Oct. 31, with or without a Brexit divorce deal. He’s pitting himself against lawmakers who are determined to avoid a no-deal exit, which economists say would disrupt trade with the EU and plunge the U.K. into recession.

Opponents accuse the prime minister of fomenting violence and hatred with his populist, people-versus-politicians rhetoric.

Some in Parliament warned Johnson to be more cautious, given the 2016 killing of legislator Jo Cox. The Labour lawmaker was murdered a week before Britain’s EU membership referendum by a far-right attacker shouting “death to traitors.”

Labour lawmaker Paula Sherriff brought up the death of Cox — and the death threats many legislators still face — and implored the prime minister to stop using “pejorative” language.

There was uproar in the Commons after Johnson replied: “I’ve never heard such humbug in all my life.”

Labour legislator Jess Phillips on Thursday accused Johnson of deploying a “strategy to divide.”

“It is totally planned. It is completely and utterly a part of a strategy designed by somebody to harm and cause hatred in our country,” she said.

“When I hear of my friend’s murder and the way that it has made me and my colleagues feel, and feel scared, described as ‘humbug,’ I actually don’t feel anger towards the prime minister. I actually feel pity for those of you who still have to toe his line,” she added.

Phillips urged Johnson to act like a “statesman” and apologize.

Johnson’s spokesman, James Slack, declined to say sorry. But he said the prime minister believed that sending threats or intimidation to politicians was “completely unacceptable.”

The prime minister was also criticized by Cox’s widower, Brendan Cox, who said he felt “a bit sick” at the way her name was being used.

“The best way to honor Jo is for all of us (no matter our views) to stand up for what we believe in, passionately and with determination. But never to demonize the other side and always hold onto what we have in common,” Cox tweeted.

Wednesday’s fiery session of Parliament came a day after Britain’s Supreme Court unanimously ruled that Johnson’s attempt to suspend Parliament for five weeks until Oct. 14 stymied its scrutiny of the government’s Brexit policy. The court declared the suspension void.

Emotions spilled over as opposition legislators demanded Johnson apologize and resign for breaking the law. But Johnson ignored calls to step down, showed no signs of contrition and redoubled his attacks on the lawmakers who he accused of blocking Brexit.

As lawmakers returned Thursday, Commons Speaker John Bercow urged moderation and implored members of Parliament to “treat each other as opponents, not as enemies.”

“There was an atmosphere in the chamber worse than any I’ve known in my 22 years in the House,” Bercow said. “The culture was toxic.”

Johnson says he wants to strike an agreement with the bloc, but the EU says it is still waiting for useful proposals to come from Britain to unblock stalled negotiations.

EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier said Thursday that he is “still ready to work on any new legal and operational proposal” from Johnson, but indicated that insufficient progress had been achieved in the past few weeks.

“We are still waiting,” he said.

The EU agreed upon a Brexit divorce deal with Johnson’s predecessor, Theresa May, but it was rejected in the British parliament three times, prompting May to resign.

Johnson now wants to drastically renegotiate the agreement or leave the 28-nation bloc without a deal on Oct. 31.

Gap widens between rich and poor

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The gap between the haves and have-nots in the United States grew last year to its highest level in more than 50 years of tracking income inequality, according to Census Bureau figures.

Income inequality in the United States expanded from 2017 to 2018, with several heartland states among the leaders of the increase, even though several wealthy coastal states still had the most inequality overall, according to figures released today by the U.S. Census Bureau.

The nation’s Gini Index, which measures income inequality, has been rising steadily over the past five decades.

The Gini Index grew from 0.482 in 2017 to 0.485 last year, according to the bureau’s 1-year American Community Survey data. The Gini Index is on a scale of 0 to 1; a score of “0’’ indicates perfect equality, while a score of “1’’ indicates perfect inequality, where one household has all the income.

The increase in income inequality comes as two Democratic presidential candidates, U.S. Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, are pitching a “wealth tax” on the nation’s richest citizens as a way to reduce wealth disparities.

The inequality expansion last year took place at the same time median household income nationwide increased to almost $62,000 last year, the highest ever measured by the American Community Survey. But the 0.8% income increase from 2017 to 2018 was much smaller compared to increases in the previous three years, according to the bureau.

Even though household income increased, it was distributed unevenly, with the wealthiest helped out possibly by a tax cut passed by Congress in 2017, said Hector Sandoval, an economist at the University of Florida.

“In 2018 the unemployment rate was already low, and the labor market was getting tight, resulting in higher wages. This can explain the increase in the median household income,” Sandoval said. “However, the increase in the Gini index shows that the distribution became more unequal. That is, top income earners got even larger increases in their income, and one of the reasons for that might well be the tax cut.”

A big factor in the increase in inequality has to do with two large population groups on either end of the economic spectrum, according to Sean Snaith, an economist at the University of Central Florida.

On one side, at the peak of their earnings, are baby boomers who are nearing retirement, if they haven’t already retired. On the other side are millennials and Gen Z-ers, who are in the early stages of their work life and have lower salaries, Snaith said.

“I would say probably the biggest factor is demographics,” he said. “A wealth tax isn’t going to fix demographics.”

The area’s with the most income inequality last year were coastal places with large amounts of wealth — the District of Columbia, New York and Connecticut, as well as areas with great poverty — Puerto Rico and Louisiana.

Utah, Alaska, Iowa, North Dakota and South Dakota had the most economic equality.

Three of the states with biggest gains in inequality from 2017 to 2018 were places with large pockets of wealth — California, Texas and Virginia. But the other six states were primarily in the heartland — Alabama, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska, New Hampshire and New Mexico.

A variety of factors were at play, from a slowdown in agricultural trade and manufacturing to wages that haven’t caught up with other forms of income, economists say.

While some states have raised the minimum wage, other states like Kansas haven’t. At the same time, the sustained economic growth from the recession a decade ago has enriched people who own stocks, property and other assets, and have sources of income other than wages, said Donna Ginther, an economist at the University of Kansas.

“We’ve had a period of sustained economic growth, and there are winners and losers. The winners tend to be at the top,” Ginther said. “Even though we are at full employment, wages really haven’t gone up much in the recovery.”