Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Salina Journal from Salina, Kansas • Page 9

Location:
Salina, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

On the Record The Salina Journal Thursday, June 19,1986 Page 9 Deaths funerals Mona Mae Brubaker Mona Mae Brubaker, 57, 1661 W. Republic, Lot No. 104, died Wednesday, June 18, at St. John's Hospital after a long illness. Mrs.

Brubaker was born March 26, 1929, in Ellsworth County. She was a teacher and a member of the Catholic church. She was a past Catholic Church of Craig, past president of the Eagles Auxiliary at Craig, a CCD teacher in Craig and at St. Mary's Queen of the Universe Catholic Church of Salina, and a member of the Ellsworth Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary, National Education Association and Kansas- National Education Association. She also had taught several years in the Ell-Saline School District.

Survivors include her husband, Louis; seven children, Ronald, Peggy Lou and Pamela Sue, all of the home, Romeyn Lauber of 1003 Harold, Marlene Walker of Brookville, Patricia Haas of Glasco, and Mary Brubaker of Clifton, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Vopat of Ellsworth; a brother, Edward Vopat of Shelton, two sisters, Evelyn Arensman of Kanopolis and Carol Shannon of Hutchinson; and four grandchildren. The funeral will be 10 a.m. Friday at St.

Mary's Queen of the Universe Catholic Church, the Revs. Everett Diederich and Frank Coady officiating. Burial will be in the Mulberry Cemetery, Brookville. A rosary will be said at 8 p.m. today at the Geisendorf-Rush Smith Funeral Home.

Memorials may be made to the American Cancer Society or Hospice of Salina. Visitation is until 9:30 a.m. Friday at the funeral home. Mary Jones Heeler BELOIT Mary Jones Heeler, 79, died Tuesday, June 17 at St. John's Hospital.

Mrs. Heeler was born May 21, 1907 on a farm near Drexel, Mo. She attended business college in Lawrence and worked for a Topeka attorney for several years. In 1946 she moved to Beloit, and with her first husband owned and operated a seed and feed store for many years. From 1967-1972, she was the Beloit Youth Center housemother.

Her first husband, Merle Jones, died in December of 1977. Her second husband, Jim Heeler, died in March of 1980. Survivors include her daughter, Sally Williams of Beloit and two grandchildren. The funeral will be 10 a.m. Friday at the McDonald Funeral Home in Grain Beloit, the Rev.

Randy Slafter officiating. Burial will be in the Elmwood Cemetery in Beloit. The family suggests memorials to the Solomon Valley Hospice. Visitation is at the McDonald Funeral Home, Beloit. Archie Pearson CONCORDIA Archie "Diz" Pearson, 82, Concordia, died Wednesday, June 18, at the St.

Joseph Hospital, Concordia. Mr. Pearson was born Nov. 28, 1903, in Cloud County. He was the former owner and manager of a dry cleaning shop in Concordia for 35 years.

He was a member of the First United Methodist Church, Elks Lodge, Lions Club and the country club, all of Concordia. Survivors include a brother, Elzie of Concordia. The funeral will be 2 p.m. Saturday at the Chaput-Buoy Funeral Chapel, Concordia, the Rev. Don Blanton officiating.

Burial will be in the Pleasant Hill Cemetery, Concordia. Memorials may be made to the First United Methodist Church. Visitation is after 10 a.m. Friday at the funeral home. DenzllR.Kallvoda BELLEVILLE Denzil R.

Kalivoda, 66, formerly of Republic County, died Tuesday, June 17, at Madonna Care Center in Lincoln, Neb. Mr. Kalivoda was born Oct. 2,1919, near Haworth. He was a retired farmer and had lived in Lincoln, Neb.

since 1975. He is survived by his wife, Doreen, of the home; his mother, Eva Kalivoda, and a son, Dennis, both of Lincoln, and two grandchildren. The funeral will be 10:30 a.m. Friday at the Bachelor-Faulkner-Dart Memorial Chapel, Belleville, the Rev. Lorena Hunt officiating.

Burial will be the Tabor Cemetery northeast of Belleville. Memorials may be made to the Nebraska Cancer Society. Visitation is at the funeral home. Lyle S. Miller HAWTHORNE, Calif.

The service for Lyle Sherman Miller, 73, Hawthorne, was June 12 at the Douglass and Dunaway Mortuary Chapel of Roses, Hawthorne, the Rev. Robert Hagenbach officiating. Burial was in the Mulberry Cemetery, Brookville. Mr. Miller died of a heart attack June 7 in Hawthorne.

He was born July 23,1912, in the Lincoln Township near Beverly. He was a retired maintenance supervisor and a veteran of World War II. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church and Veterans of Foreign Wars. He lived in Salina from 1929-48. Survivors include his wife, Rita, and a brother, Bill of Nashville.

Livestock CHICAGO (AP) Futures trading Wednesday on the Chicago Board of Trade: Open High Low Last Chg. 5,000 bu minimum; dollars per bushel WHEAT Jul 2.43V, 2.45V. 2.43 2.43V, Sep 2.43V. 2.46V, 2.43V. 2.44% Dec 2.52 2.54 2.51V, 2.52V.

Mar 2.51V, 2.53V. 2.51V. 2.52 May 2.42V, 2.44 2.42 2.42 Jul 2.32 2.33V, 2.31 2.31 CORN Jul 2.32V. 2.34 2.31V, 2.33 Sep 1.97V. 1.98V.

1.97V. 1.97V. Dec 1.91V, 1.92V. 1.90V, 1.90V. Mar 2.00V, 2.01V, 2.00 2.00V.

May 2.05 2.05V. 2.04V. 2.04V. Jul 2.06V. 2.06V, 2.05V, 2.05V, Sep 1.97 1.97V, 1.96 1.96 OATS Jul 1.04V.

1.07V, 1.04V, 1.06V, Sep 1.05V. 1.07V, 1.05 1.06V, Dec 1.13 1.15V. 1.13 1.14V, Mar 1.13V, 1.13V, 1.13V, 1.15V. SOYBEANS Jul 5.30V, 5.31V. 5.28V, 5.31 Aug 5.21 5.24V.

5.20 5.23 Sep 5.09 5.13V, 5.09 5.10 Nov 5.05 5.10 5.04V. 5.06V. Jan 5.14 5.18V, 5.13V. 5.16 Mar 5.23V. 5.27V.

5.23 5.25V. May 5.30 5.33 5.28V, 5.30 Jul 5.33 5.38 5.31 5.33 CHICAGO (AP) Grain and soybean futures prices were mostly higher Wednesday at the Chicago Board of Trade. At the close, wheat was cent to 1 cents higher with the contract for delivery In July at $2.44 V. a bushel; corn was V. cent lower to 1 V.

cent higher with July at $2. 32V. a bushel; oats were 'x. cent lower to 2V, cents higher with July at $1 a bushel; and soybeans were Vi ce.nl to cents higher with July at $5. 30V.

a bushel. CHICAGO (AP) Futures trading Wednesday on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange: Open High Low Settle Chg. CATTLE 40,000 cents per Ib. Jun 55.40 56.15 54.90 55.57 Aug 52.55 53.90 52.20 53.70 Oct 51.50 52.85 51.10 52.77 Dec 54.10 54.80 53.65 54.65 Feb 53.10 53.45 52.35 53.45 Apr 54.25 55.10 54.00 54.90 Jun 55.40 55.70 55.40 55.70 FEEDER CATTLE 44,000 cents per Ib. Aug 59.45 59.87 58.95 59.80 Sep 56.80 57.65 56.35 57.20 Oct 56.70 57.50 56.25 57.07 Nov 57.70 58.25 57.45 57.95 Jan 58.55 58.95 58.50 58.80 Mar 58.60 58.60 58.60 58.75 Apr 58.30 HOGS 30,000 cents per Ib.

Jun 55.25 56.85 55.05 56.75 Jul 51.15 52.50 50.95 52.42 Aug 48.25 49.50 48.07 49.45 Oct 43.05 44.00 42.90 43.90 Dec 43.50 44.60 43.50 44.55 Feb 42.90 43.50 42.75 43.45 Apr 39.00 39.50 38.95 39.50 Jun 41.00 41.40 40.90 41.40 Jul 41.25 41.42 41.25 41.47 PORK BELLIES 31,000 cents per Ib. Jul 68.10 70.70 67.20 70.70 Aug 66.70 69.25 65.75 69.25 Feb 59.30 60.80 58.67 60.62 Mar 59.10 60.10 58.60 59.40 May 60.25 60.50 60.25 61.27 lul An Srt JUI OU.9U OMAHA, Neb. (AP) Omaha Livestock Market quotations Wednesday: Hogs: 1600; barrows and gilts steady to 50 higher, fairly active; U.S. l-3s 220-250 Ibs KANSAS CITY (AP) Wheat futures Wednesday on the Kansas City Board ol Trade: Open High Low Settle Chg. WHIAT 5,000 bu minimum; dnllori per buihel Jul 2.41 2.42V.

2.40V. 2.41'/. 1 Sep 2.43 1 2.46 2.43 2.45'/i 1 Dec 2.52'/i 2.53V. 2.51V, 2.53 Mar 2.51 2.52W 2.50 2.50V. 1 May 2.42'/.

2.42 1 2.42V, 2.42V. .01 Jul 2.36 1 2.36 1 2.36 1 2.36'/i KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Wheat 148 cars: lower to IV. higher; No. 2 hard 2.61V.- 2.93V.N; No.

3 2.50V..2.92V.N; No. 2 red wheat 2.61V.-2.68V.N; No. 32.50V.-2.67V.N. Corn 0 cars: unch to 3 higher: No. 2 white 2.55-2.75N; No.

3 2.30-2.70N; No. 2 yellow 2.45V>-2.54N;No.32.25V,-2.53N. No.2milo3.87-4.00N. No. 1 soybeans 5.42-5.50V.N.

Hoppers 43.00-45.00. Salina terminal, Wednesday Hard unch up 2 cents up 5 cents Country elevator composite, Wednesday Hard unch up 2 cents up 5 cents up 3 cents Metals NEW YORK (AP) Handy Harmon silver Wednesday $5.100. up 0.030: the bullion price (or silver earlier in London was $5.091 up 0.016: Engelhard silver $5.100, up 0.025: fabricated $5.457 up 0.027: NY Comex silver spot month Tuesday at $5.062 up 0.006. 56.00-56.50, 210-220 Ibs 55.50-56.00; Sow weights under 500 Ibs fully steady; over 500 Ibs steady to 50 lower; 300-650 Ibs 45.00-46.25, few early 46.50. KANSAS CITY, Mo.

(AP) Quotations for Wednesday: Cattle 800: Trading slow, slaughter cows steady-weak. Not enough feeder steers or feeder heifers for an adequate market comparison. Supply mainly slaughter cows. Slaughter cows: Cutter and boning utility 1-2 35.75-40.00, high dressing individuals 40.00-43.90: canner and low dressing cutter 1-2 29.25-35.75. Feeder steers: Few medium frame 1 400-600 Ib 58.00-64.00.

Feeder heifers: Medium frame 1 475-800 Ib 45.50-49.50, package 400 Ib 57.00; medium frame 2 400-600 Ib 42.00-45.50 Hogs J300: Trading active. Barrows and gilts 50 higher; 1-3 210-260 Ib 50.00-55.50. Sows lower; greatest decline on weights over 500 Ib; 1 -3 300-600 Ib 44.50-45.00. Sheep 25: Spring slaughter lambs steady. Spring slaughter lambs: Few choice-prim.) 95100 Ib 70.00.

DODGE CITY (AP) Western Kansas feedlot sales: Trade moderate. Slaughter steers and heifers steady to 50 higher. Inquiry and demand good. Sales confirmed on 4.200 slaughter steers and 5,500 slaughter heifers Tuesday. For the week to date 22,700 head confirmed laughter steers: Choice 2-3, few 4 1100-1190 54.50-55.25, late 55.00-55.25.

mostly 55.00: choice with end good 1100 Ib 54.50; few mixed choice 1075 Ib 53.75 Slaughter heifers: Few choice 2-3, few 4 9501050 Ib 53.50-54.00; choice with end good 9751025 Ib 53.00-53.75: lew choice with end commercial and good 1025 Ib heifers and heife- rettes 52.50-53.00. Sales FOB leedlot net weights after 4 percent shrink. ROM Mary McQInisey CAWKER CITY Rose Mary McGimsey, 70, formerly of Cawker City, died Tuesday, June 17, at the Mount Joseph Care Home, Concordia. Miss McGimsey was born May 6, 1916, in Independence, and had lived in Cawker City most of her life. She was a former station agent and telegrapher for Missouri Pacific Railroad and a member of Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church and the ladies guild, Cawker City.

Survivors include a brother, William McGimsey of Omaha, Neb. There will be a funeral mass at 11:30 a.m. Friday at the Mount Joseph Care Home, Cohcordia, the Rev. Stephen Letourneau officiating. There will be another service at 2 p.m.

Friday at Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church, Cawker City, the Rev. Roger Meitl officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Memorials may be made to the church or the nursing home. Waconda Funeral Home of Cawker City is in charge of arrangements.

Henry P. Schroeder McPHERSON Henry P. Schroeder, 81, died Tuesday, June 17, at his home in McPherson. Mr. Schroeder was born Aug.

21, 1904, in Tipton. He was the retired owner and operator of the Tipton Auto Repair Shop and a member of St. Boniface Catholic Church of Tipton. He moved to McPherson in 1974 from Wichita. Survivors include two sons, Eugene of McPherson and LaVerne of Wichita; two daughters, Natalie Moritz of LaValle, and Lucile Becker of Tipton; four brothers, Herman, Charles and Isadore, all of Tipton, and Walter of Beloit; three sisters, Ann Mick, Marie Drummer and Matilda Arnoldy, all of Tipton; 15 grandchildren and 15 great- granchildren.

The funeral will be 11 a.m. Friday at St. Boniface Catholic Church, Tipton, the Rev. James Hoover officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

A rosary will be said at 8:30 p.m. today at the church. Memorials may be made to the church. Ball and Sons Mortuary of McPherson and Domoney Funeral Home of Downs are in charge of arrangements. RoeeH.Wagor SCANDIA Rose H.

Wagor, 89, Scandia, died Tuesday, June 17, at the Republic County Hospital in Belleville. Mrs. Wagor was born June 15,1897, at Munden. She was a homemaker. Her husband, Fred, died in 1966.

She is survived by two sons, Robert of Scandia, and Jaris of Sedalia, a brother, Jerry Strnad of Scandia; three sisters, Anna Kobes of Jamestown, Blanche Butler of Scandia, and Frances Picha of Deshler, seven grandchildren and 12 great- grandchildren. The funeral will be 2 p.m. Friday at the Bachelor-Faulkner-Dart Funeral Home, Scandia, the Rev. Barbara Palmer officiating. Burial will be in Tabor Cemetery northeast of Belleville.

Visitation is at the funeral home. Roadside panel drafts brochure The Saline County Roadside Management Committee will promote a living snow fence plan through a brochure to be mailed with the 1986 property tax statements in October. The committee discussed the brochure Wednesday during a meeting with the Saline County Commission. The committee includes representatives from the Kansas Fish and Game Commission, the Saline County Extension Service, the Saline County Conservation District and the Saline County engineer. The living snow fence project is designed to be planted about 75 feet from roads, leaving native grasses between the road and the fence.

The fence is composed of trees and shrubs that would block not only the wind, but provide shelter to wildlife. Bloodmobile misses goal The American Red Cross Bloodmobile at the First United Methodist Church collected 366 pints of blood over a three-day period that ended Wednesday, chapter executive Wilma Ray said. That number was one of the lowest of any summer blood drive, Ray said. The goal for this week's session was 450 pints. Runnels seeks name recognition By BRET WALLACE Staff Writer Judy Runnels is not a name easily recognized in Kansas, but she hopes that by Aug.

5 enough Democrats will recognize the name to award her the Democratic nomination for secretary of state. Runnels is fighting a tough battle, though, because her opponent is easily recognized Karen Carlin, former wife of Gov. John Carlin. "I think my challenge is to get my name recognized as highly as my opponent's," Runnels said Wednesday evening prior to a reception at the home of Albert Schwartz, 630 E. Iron.

"I'm doing that by doing what I Correction Because of a Journal error, an ingredient was omitted in a Wednesday recipe for Two-Cheese Mushroom Sauce. It should have included 1 cup shredded Gruyere cheese. The sauce instructions also should have read "Warm the milk and cream," rather than milk and cheese. have been doing this week, last week and the six weeks since I announced my campaign going to one or two or three towns a day and meeting the people." The one issue Runnels is campaigning on is the drive to get more Kansans registered and to the polls, but Karen Carlin supports the same concept, so that does not distinguish the candidates. Runnels would like to expand the number of places where voters can register and make it easier for voters to register by mail.

"It's more a matter of getting out and meeting Kansans," she said. Runnels is banking on her experience to win the votes of the people she meets. She served the past four years as a state representative from Topeka. Prior to that she served two years as legislative liaison for the governor's office and seven years as a lobbyist for the Kansas State Nurses' Association. Lobbying is one of the important jobs of the secretary of state, Runnels said, as the official must work to push changes through the Legislature.

"When changes are needed, I feel like I can work both sides of the said. Leaving the House of Representatives floor was a tough decision for Runnels one she did not even consider until Secretary of State Jack Brier decided to seek the Republican nomination for governor. Runnels said she is not looking beyond the secretary of state's office for higher offices. "Until the middle of the session when some of my Democratic friends urged me to run, I had not looked beyond the Legislature," she said. 'This is my goal right Elevator (Continued from Page 1) terminal elevators and keep free space in his elevator.

"This business has been kind to me," Soukup said. "I've had a lot of good years. Thjs has been one of the bad years. I hope there's not another one like it as long as I'm around." Soukup isn't alone in his desire to see the 1986 harvest pass quickly into history. Since before harvest, farmers and elevator operators across Kansas have scrambled to find storage space for the summer crop.

This year's wheat will be piled atop record- breaking surpluses that threaten to continue because of a weak export market and strong participation in federal crop programs. In Ellsworth County, for example, almost 90 percent of the farms are enrolled in the wheat program. Marvin Webb, director of the state Colorado woman injured in accident ELLSWORTH A Loveland, woman was admitted Wednesday evening to Ellsworth County Veterans Memorial Hospital after the trailer she was pulling with her Jeep was rear-ended by a tractor semi-trailer on Interstate 70 in western Ellsworth County. A nursing supervisor couldn't release the condition of Gladys V. Harvey, 50.

The Kansas Highway Patrol said Harvey's trailer was struck by a truck driven by Darrell D. Hartkemeyer, 57, Blue Springs, Mo. The semi traveled through Harvey's trailer, separating it from her vehicle. Grain Inspection Service, said his office estimated that as much as 65 percent of the storage space in Kansas was full before the combines started to roll earlier this month. That left about 300 million bushels of storage space for a crop estimated by the Kansas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service at 330 million bushels, a sharp drop from last year's 433.2 million-bushel harvest.

But Webb isn't sure Kansas farmers can find enough wheat in their fields to match even the reporting service's forecast. "It's hard to get a good picture because they're just getting started good in some areas of the state," he said. "But it appears the storage problem isn't nearly as severe as we thought it would be." Webb said several elevators, particularly those in central Kansas, have added storage space. Bennington Agri Services is one of several warehouses that constructed a bunker-type storage unit, which holds 320,000 bushels of grain. Dick Freel, manager of Minneapolis Agri-Center, said he is depending upon the railroad this year, rather than building additional storage space.

Harvest is about 40 percent finished in his area. John Bromley, a spokesman for Union Pacific Railroad, said the Salina area has been a trouble spot for his company because officials consider harvest there to be about 10 days ahead of its traditional time. Wheat classification meeting set A meeting is planned today in Washington between top officials of the Federal Grain Inspection Service and farm and grain industry groups over a wheat classification dilemma. Darris Larson, president of the Salina Board of Trade, said this is an important meeting for farmers because they stand to lose millions of dollars if their wheat is improperly graded. "The Federal Grain Inspection Service has recently instructed the grading agencies they control to classify wheat according to kernel characteristics," he said.

"This new method of wheat classification is causing both old crop and new crop wheat stocks to grade with a high percentage of wheat of spring and soft classes. "As much as 25-cent-per-bushel discounts may result from hard red winter wheat grading with corresponding levels of soft or spring wheat." Hale new First National president H.D. Hale, chairman of the board of First National Bank and Trust Co. of Salina, was elected president of the bank at its June board meeting. He will assume the president's duties July 1.

Gerald Shadwick, who has been First National's president for years, is stepping down at the end of June to become president of the Greeley National Bank in Greeley, Colo. Hale said he plans no management changes and will work closely with the current staff. He will continue to live in Prairie Village, a suburb of Kansas City. Hale also is president of Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. in Kansas City.

For your information Hospital admissions Asbury Lori Beeson, 159 Florida; Bonnie J. Elliott, 7509 W. Rifle Road; Eleanor N. Flsk, 834 Manor Road; George A. Lamone, 914 Millwood; Dody A.

Nestler, 150 S. Chicago; Susan E. Oliver, 720 N. Third; Timothy F. Pechanec, 609 Yale; Lynda S.

Smith, 344 N. Ninth; Edith M. Thelander, 4228 E. Crawford; Melvin C. White, 901 Windsor; Gale A.

Burger, Culver; Marian L. Dirks, Ludell; Karen L. Griest, Laurel, Terri A. Johnson, New Cambria; Lisa M.Myers, Marquette; Glen H. Shipley, Oberlin; Flora M.

Sparks, Ellsworth; Wilma W. Stanley, Minneapolis; and Jeremy J. Van Oort, Osborne. St. John's Agatha Basgall, Salina; Jesse P.

Thompson, North Highland, Brian K. Armstrong, El Paso, Texas; and Harvey B. Griggs, Tescott. Hospital dismissals Asbury Irene P. Duryee, 820 Custer; Jeremy K.

Lachenmaier, 430 S. Connecticut; Dody A. Nestler, 150 S. Chicago; Weather Jessica S. Tyler, 876 Cherokee; Brenda L.

Wcldy and baby girl, 233 E. Klrwin; Sherri L. Winchell and baby boy, 856 Pontlac; Eddie F. Boyer, Belleville; Lisa M. Myers, Marquette; Dora E.

Schur, Minneapolis; Eileen S. Silver, Clay Center; Barbara R. Solberd, Lucas; Fred Vahsholtz, Abilene; and Jeremy J. Van Oort, Osborne. St.

John's Mary E. Werner, 900 N. 10th; Anna R. Cole, 1709 Lewis; Ralph M. Disney, 1108 Funston; Sonny Elam, Brookville; Margaret V.

Heald, Minneapolis; and Margaret Kllian, Enterprise. Births Boys: Paul R. and Gale A. Burger, Culver, 8 Ibs, IS born June 18. Galen W.

and Bonnie J. Elliott, 7509 W. Rifle Road, 7 Ibs. 4 born June 18. Divorces Filed Glovanna M.

Nagel vs. Larry L. Nagel. Municipal Court Criminal Lacene J. Hall, N.

West Place, a charge of disorderly conduct for breaking the glass in the front door of the residence of Patricia Flagg, 241 N. Perm, on June 8 and not cooperating with police officers; $50 fine. Pamela Cunningham, 20,1839 Haskett, a charge of shoplifting for taking two cartons of cigarettes on June 5 from Super Food Barn, 1808 S. Ninth; $10 fine. Traffic Samantha Fowler, 607 Park, driving under the influence; diversion granted, license restricted for 180 days, $200 fine.

Fire run 115 Springfield, 11:37 p.m. Tuesday, fire in dryer of Pam Lowry residence; minor damage. Recycling St. Elizabeth's Catholic Church will collect tied or sacked newspapers from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday at the First Covenant Church parking lot, one-fourth block west of the church on Cloud Street.

Extended outlook Saturday through Monday No significant rainfall. High upper 80s to mid-90s, low in 60s to low 70s. Zone forecasts Zones 1,2 Partly cloudy today, high around 90. Winds southerly 15 to 25 mph. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday, low in low to mid-60s.

High Friday 85 to 90. Zones 3,6 Partly cloudy today, high in low 90s. Winds southerly 10 to 20 mph. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday, low 65 to 70. High Friday low 90s.

Zones 4, 7,8 Partly cloudy today, high in low 90s. Winds southerly 10 to 20 mph. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday, low 65 to 70. High Friday around 90. Zones 9,10,11 Partly cloudy today, high around 90.

Winds southerly 10 to 20 mph. Partly cloudy tonight, low around 70. Partly cloudy Friday, high in low 90s. Zones 13,14, IS, 16,17 Partly cloudy today, high in low 90s. Winds southerly 10 to 20 mph.

Partly cloudy tonight, low around 70. Partly cloudy Friday, high in low 90s. Elsewhere in Kansas Wednesday highs-lows and precipitation to 6 p.m. Belleville 91-68, Beloit 92-70, Chanute 8949, Coffeyville 92-67, Concordia 9048, Dodge City 84-65, Emporia 9045, 8 pjn. EOT, Thu, June 19.

Rain Flurries Snow Netontf Service NOAA Oeoi ol Commerce Garden City 88-62, Goodland 88-60, Hutchinson 92-70, Pittsburg 94-69, Russell 90-66, Topeka 94-67, Wichita 91-69. Salina weather At City Airport, 9 p.m. Wednesday: Temperature 85F; Barometer 29.96 Wind 13 mph; Relative Humidity 24-hour Precipitation to 7 p.m. none. Wednesday's High 92; Record is 109 in 1936.

Wednesday's Low to 9 p.m. 68; Record is 50 in 1912. Today's Sunset Tomorrow's Sunrise 6:08. Broadcasting of local, state and regional weather conditions continues 24 hours a day on NOAA Weather Radio WXK-92 on a frequency of 102.400 MHzFM..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Salina Journal Archive

Pages Available:
477,718
Years Available:
1951-2009