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Millions in life insurance funds remain unclaimed in Kansas

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As part of Life Insurance Awareness month, Insurance Commissioner Vicki
Schmidt highlights a lost and found search program that can have a significant financial impact on a family. Kansans can use this program to search among millions of dollars in unpaid life insurance policy funds.

“Purchasing life insurance is an important financial stability tool for families,” said Insurance
Commissioner Vicki Schmidt. “The NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator helps Kansans locate
lost or unknown policies.”

The Life Insurance Policy Locator is a free service provided by the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners. Individuals can perform a nationwide search for missing life insurance funds by providing the social security number, legal first name, legal last name, date of birth and date of death of a deceased individual. Searches can be performed at eapps.naic.org/life-policy-locator.

If you have questions or concerns about a missing life insurance policy, please call the Kansas Insurance Department at 1-800-432-2484. To learn more about life insurance visit
insurance.kansas.gov/life-viatical/.

COWBOY STORYTELLERS COMING TO MEDICINE LODGE

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“I THINK OF MYSELF AS A TROUBADOUR, A VILLAGE STORYTELLER’

THE GUY IN THE SHADOW OF THE CAMPFIRE.”

Louis L’Amour

 

I have been going to the Cowboy Storytellers of the Western Plains meetings since the mid 1990’s. I have been on the board of directors for several years. I have been producing the groups newsletter for years now. Every so often (especially when I was on stage) I would have someone call and want to hire my group of storytellers for some show. Well the name may be misleading.

Around 1993 a group of ranchers, farmers, cowboys, and old timers were at a cafe in Waynoka Oklahoma. As most coffee drinkers do they told stories of the old days. Then someone said, “you know as we die off, our stories die with us.”  On the spot the Cowboy Storytellers Association of the Western Plains was formed. The point being to go around to the smallest places in northern Oklahoma and southern Kansas and record the stories of the pioneers to save in a book. The point being that once the folks are gone their kids and grandkids will never hear of how hard it was to settle this land.

So this group comes to places, some only wide spots in the road, and have the locals get up and tell their stories, video them, and someday publish the stories. This is not a group of entertainers, it is a group that comes to your community and get those stories as close to first hand as possible. We try to get local musicians to come and sing a song or two (all of our music makers died off).

Here is what I am trying to get across. YOU ALL ARE WELCOME TO COME!

Yes you can be a member for $15 per year but you will not be charged for coming. The Storytellers are meeting at The Heritage Center just east of Medicine Lodge on US 160 highway on October 8, 2022. The Board always meets at 10:30 am but the storytelling starts at 1PM. Come early this weekend is the Chambers Fall Festival. There is a city wide garage sale, food truck row, car and motorcycle show and several places to eat. Go to the Stockade Museum and Carry Nation’s house. Tour the museum at the Heritage Center.

If you have some good early day stories just pipe up and tell us. There will probably be some cookies and tea mid afternoon.

If you would like a newsletter email me at [email protected] and give me your address.

How important is it to you to have the stories of your grandparents, uncles, aunts, old neighbors recorded so that your grand children can know what stories you have heard while growing up? Just think that your grandparents to you will be five generations by the time your grandchildren hear them. Will you tell them? Will they listen? Bet you have a hard time remembering stories from your youth because the old folks talking bored you? Would you not want to be able to pass the stories along when your kids and grandkids are old enough to care?

Bring your younguns along to hear stories of the area. It will be a nice fall day and there is nothing on the tube that is worth wasting a good day trip for.

HERITAGE CENTER-MEDICINE LODGE, KANSAS-SATURDAY-OCTOBER 8-1PM-ALL-YA-ALL COME!

Millions in life insurance funds remain unclaimed in Kansas

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Topeka, Kan. – As part of Life Insurance Awareness month, Insurance Commissioner Vicki
Schmidt highlights a lost and found search program that can have a significant financial impact on a family. Kansans can use this program to search among millions of dollars in unpaid life insurance policy funds.
“Purchasing life insurance is an important financial stability tool for families,” said Insurance
Commissioner Vicki Schmidt. “The NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator helps Kansans locate
lost or unknown policies.”
The Life Insurance Policy Locator is a free service provided by the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners. Individuals can perform a nationwide search for missing life insurance funds by providing the social security number, legal first name, legal last name, date of birth and date of death of a deceased individual. Searches can be performed at eapps.naic.org/life-policylocator.
If you have questions or concerns about a missing life insurance policy, please call the Kansas Insurance Department at 1-800-432-2484. To learn more about life insurance visit
insurance.kansas.gov/life-viatical

More Than A Flower

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“The most beautiful flower in the sunflower state is obviously the sunflower.”
That must be true or why would the sunflower be designated the state flower of Kansas?
No debate sunflowers are pretty to look at and many roadside ditches display lots of them.
It’s September, and sunflowers are already starting to wilt after displaying their beautiful yellow blossoms of glory.
Some years ago, visiting with a county agent, he said, “Sunflower growth varies from year to year.”
Having never given it much thought earlier, and not that it really matters, but the county agent was correct. Some years sunflowers grow everywhere, and other times there aren’t very many sunflowers.
Certain people contend, “Sunflowers are just another worthless weed.” Then others insist, “Oh sunflowers are such a beautiful wildflower.”
Both are correct. Sunflowers are a weed, and sunflowers are pretty to look at. However, sunflowers are also now a profitable farm crop.
Uncertain all uses for sunflowers, but a few seeds in a small sack on the candy shelf are high priced.
Younger generations don’t even know what an encyclopedia is. But that’s where old-timers look to find out unknown information.
“Sunflower leaves are used as fodder, flowers yield a yellow dye, and the seeds contain oil for table use, soap, paints, and lubricants. Sunflower oil cake is livestock and poultry feed. Seeds may be eaten dried, roasted, or ground into nut butter and are common in birdseed mixes.”
Kansas designated the wild native sunflower as official state flower and floral emblem in 1903. The sunflower is featured on the Kansas quarter 25-cents piece, the state flag, and of course Kansas’ nickname: “The Sunflower State.”
Native Americans were using native sunflowers for food more than 3,000 years ago.
Sunflower heads consist of 1,000 to 2,000 individual flowers joined together by a receptacle base. The large petals around the edge of a head are actually individual ray flowers, which do not develop into seed.
There are more than 60 species of sunflowers. The native sunflower grows to 15 feet tall with flower heads up to two feet in diameter and can produce over 1,000 seeds from one plant. The flower head turns and faces the sun throughout the day, tracking the sun’s movement.
Reminded of Song Of Solomon 2:12: “The flowers are unfolding in the fields.”
+++ALLELUIA+++
XVI–39–9-25-2022

Auditions for the Best Christmas Pageant Ever

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Auditions held at Wichita Children’s Theatre & Dance Center, 201 Lulu

on Wednesday, Nov. 3.

Last names beginning with A-L audition at 4:30pm

Last names beginning with M-Z audition at 5:30pm                                                      

Callbacks will be held on Wednesday, November 4 at 4:30pm

Must be 8 years of age or older to audition.  Adults needed as well!

No prepared material required.

Performances will be December 14-16 at Century II, Mary Jane Teall Theatre.

There is no cost to audition or participate in this production.

Please call 262-2282 if you have any questions.