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                                SCHEDULE 14A
                               (Rule 14a-101)
                  Information Required in Proxy Statement

                          SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
              Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
                      Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the registrant  / /
Filed by party other than the registrant  /x/

Check the appropriate box:
/ /   Preliminary proxy statement   / /   Confidential, for Use of the
                                          Commission Only (as permitted by
/ /   Definitive proxy statement          Rule 14a-6(e)(2))

/x/   Definitive additional materials

/ /   Soliciting material pursuant to
      Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12

                     KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
              (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                          WESTERN RESOURCES, INC.
                 (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of filing fee (Check the appropriate box):

/ /   $125 per Exchange Act Rule 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 14a-
      6(j)(2).
/ /   $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
      14a-6(i)(3).
/ /   Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)4 and 0-
      11.
      (1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
      (2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
      (3)   Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction
            computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:
      (4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
      (5)   Total fee paid:
/x/   Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/ /   Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange
      Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting
      fee was paid previously.  Identify the previous filing by
      registration statement number, or the form or schedule and the date
      of its filing.
      (1)   Amount Previously Paid:
      (2)   Form Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
      (3)   Filing Party:
      (4)   Date Filed:


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[The following letter and reproduced newspaper articles were mailed to KCPL
Shareholders on or about July 19 and 20, 1996.]


 3

[Western Resources Logo]

Dear KCPL Shareowner,

Many of you told us you would be interested in reading clippings from
various newspapers to see what is being said about our offer.  So, here
they are.

As you can see by the news coverage, analysts share our belief that Western
Resources has made a significantly superior financial offer.  We believe
these articles also raise some troubling questions about the UtiliCorp/KCPL
proposal.

Also enclosed is a Gold proxy card.  Please sign, date and return it today
with a vote AGAINST the KCPL/UtiliCorp proposal in the postage paid
envelope provided.

You have also received our exchange offer materials meaning you may
formally tender your shares to us to make this combination a reality.

If you have any questions, please call toll-free through Georgeson &
Company at 1-800-223-2064.


                                          /s/ John Hayes





This letter is neither an offer to exchange nor a solicitation of an offer
to exchange shares of common stock of KCPL.  Such offer is made solely by 
the Prospectus dated July 3, 1996, and the related Letter of Transmittal,
and is not being made to, nor will tenders be accepted from or on behalf
of, holders of shares of common stock of KCPL in any jurisdiction in which
the making of such offer or the acceptance thereof would not be in com-
pliance with the laws of such jurisdiction. In any jurisdictions where
securities, blue sky or other laws require such offer to be made by a
licensed broker or dealer, such offer shall be deemed to be made on behalf
of Western Resources, Inc. by Salomon Brothers Inc or one or more registered
brokers or dealers licensed under the laws of such jurisdiction.


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                         Cover Legend For Articles



            The attached newspaper articles are provided for your

information and are used with the express permission of the original

publishers.  The beliefs and opinions expressed in these articles are

solely those of the newspapers which originally published them.











 5

The Kansas City Star Business
June 27, 1996



              KCP&L advisers asked to snub offer, Western says

            Western Resources Inc. told utility analysts Wednesday that
Kansas City Power & Light Co. instructed its financial advisers to ignore
Western's merger offer.

            Steven Kitchen, Western's chief financial officer, said KCP&L
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission show that KCP&L told
Merrill Lynch not to consider Topeka-based Western's $31-a-share stock-swap
proposal.

            "We think it is unconscionable that KCP&L management instructed
its financial advisers not to consider our offer in evaluating the fairness
of the UtiliCorp proposal to KCP&L shareholders," Kitchen wrote.

            KCP&L and UtiliCorp United Inc. in January announced plans to
merge.  Currently the deal would value each KCP&L share at less than $28 a
share.

            The Kansas City utilities have resisted Western's efforts to
break up their merger.

            Western is offering $31 worth of its stock for each KCP&L
share.

            Reprinted for informational purposes only with permission from
The Kansas City Star.










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As Seen In The New York Times
June 18, 1996

                  Rebuffed, Western Resources Tries Again

                 Raises Bid for Kansas City Power in Effort
                         to Scuttle Utilicorp Deal

                              By AGIS SALPUKAS


            Western Resources Inc. sweetened its bid for the Kansas City
Power and Light Company by about 11 percent yesterday in an attempt to
force Kansas City Power's board to reconsider its agreement to merge with
Utilicorp United Inc.

            Some analysts said the move could force the board of Kansas
City Power to begin talks with Western Resources -- a large utility based
in Topeka, Kan., whose first bid in April was quickly rejected.

            Kansas City Power said its board would review the new offer in
"due course and advise shareholders of developments as they occur."

            Shares of Kansas City Power rose $1.50 yesterday, to $27.325,
in heavy trading on the New York Stock Exchange.  Shares of Western
Resources slipped 12.5 cents, to $28.625 while shares of Utilicorp dropped
25 cents, to $26.50.

            Western Resources raised its bid to $31 a share, from $28
share, for a total of about $1.9 billion.  It further sought to entice
Kansas City Power shareholders by promising a yearly dividend of $2 to
$2.35 a share.  The utility's current yearly dividend to $1.56 a share.

            "This is a very generous offer," said Barry Abramson, an
analyst for Prudential Securities.  "I think it will be difficult for the
board to reject the offer so quickly again."

            Thomas E. Hayes Jr., the chairman and chief executive of
Western Resources, warned that if the Kansas City Power board did not
negotiate a friendly merger, Western Resources, would take its offer to the
Kansas City Power shareholders.










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            "If you again refuse to discuss our revised offer with us, we
will continue the pursuit of our offer by directly seeking the support of
your shareholders,"  he said in a letter to A. Drue Jennings, Kansas City
Power's chairman, president and chief executive.

            [Pull Quote:  A rare hostile offer in a heavily regulated
            industry.]

            A $1.7 billion bid by Western Resources on April 14 forced
Utilicorp United to sweeten its own merger agreement for Kansas City Power. 
Under that offer, which Kansas City Power's board has already accepted,
Kansas City Power shareholders are to receive one share of Utilicorp for
each share; shareholders can expect a dividend of $1.85 a share.

            Utilicorp and Kansas City Power also structured the revised
deal so that a simple majority of stockholders would be needed for
approval, rather than the two-thirds required under Missouri law.

            Many institutional shareholders of Kansas City Power had
opposed Utilicorp's first bid, believing that the first Western Resources
bid was a better offer, Mr. Abramson said.  He said that the intent of the
new move by Western Resources, particularly the promise to pay a much
higher dividend, was certain to win support among the smaller shareholders.

            The willingness by Western Resources to make a hostile bid, and
then to try to break up a merger already agreed to, is rare for the utility
industry.

            The industry is heavily regulated on both the state and Federal
levels; because of this, a series of approvals are needed to complete a
merger, making it extremely difficult to win approval of a hostile bid.

            The industry, however, is undergoing upheaval as many states
consider opening their utilities to greater competition.  This has set off
a wave of mergers as managers of utilities believe that only those
companies able to cut costs by combining while increasing their customer
base will be able to compete.

            Western Resources operates two utilities in Kansas and Oklahoma
and has about 1.3 million electric and gas customers.










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            Kansas City Power has about 430,000 customers in Kansas City
and parts of eastern Kansas and western Missouri.

            Utilicorp, also based in Kansas City, is mostly a gas utility
serving about 18 states.  It has begun an effort to have a national brand
of products and services for utility customers.


Copyright(c)..... by The New York Times Company.  Reprinted by permission.













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The Wichita Business Journal
May 10, 1996



                           Question of motivation

                    Jennings' payout at issue in merger

                               by SANDY WEST

                                 [ANALYSIS]

            Questions of motivation have surfaced in the fight between
UtiliCorp United and Western Resources Inc. for Kansas City Power and
Light.

            Analysts quietly are questioning whether personal financial
gain is the KCPL chairman and chief executive officer's motivation for
sticking with his company's proposed "merger of equals" with UtiliCorp --
despite more lucrative financial terms offered KCPL shareholders by
Western Resources.

            Merger-related documents indicate that KCPL Chairman Drue
Jennings would be well-compensated -- he could receive more than
56 million, by some estimates -- if he can consummate a UtiliCorp/KCPL
merger and then not stay long.

            Jennings vehemently denies the characterization, said KCPL
spokeswoman Pam Levetzow, and added that he is "appalled" by the
implication.

                           [Picture of Jennings]
                             Jennings' future?1

                Base salary/Incentives    $5,994,975
                Insurance                    $41,328
                Medical benefits             $30,000
                Fringe benefits             $286,535

      1.    Based on a five-year employment contract and the assumption
      that Jennings' earnings will be comparable to what the chairman and
      CEO of UtiliCorp United earned in 1995.

      Sources:  Kansas City Power and Light, UtiliCorp United, Securities and
      Exchange Commission filings.



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            On Monday, during a teleconference with analysts, Jennings
responded directly:  "That is probably one of the most outrageous rumors
repeated back to me in the last 90 days."

            Jennings could not be reached for comment for this story.

            In advertising, KCPL has urged shareholders to approve the
UtiliCorp merger offer because the company does not believe the figures
being used by Western Resources.

            Levetzow said that after Monday's meeting with analysts, KCPL
staff went back to the proxy statement to determine where the $6 million
figure was coming from.  "Frankly, (it was) a mystery to us," she said.

            Here's what the joint proxy states:

            - Jennings stands to collect more than $2.2 million through a
"golden parachute" from KCPL if he leaves the newly formed KCPL/UtiliCorp
company after a successful merger.

            Levetzow said the parachute is standard language build into a
proxy to ensure an executive sticks with the company through a successful
merger.

            - Jennings' employment contract with the newly formed company
runs five years.  If he leaves the company (for any reason other than being
fired for cause or leaves for "other than __ good reason"), he will be paid
for the full length of the contract.  The longer he stays, however, the
less his total severance compensation becomes.

            The language in the KCPL/UtiliCorp proxy led at least one local
outside analyst to say that there "appeared to be a disincentive" for
longevity.

            For example, if Jennings leaves within one year after the
proposed merger is completed, he will receive his $2.2 million KCPL golden
parachute in addition to full-contract cash compensation, insurance and
medical benefits, and any extra fringe benefits from the new company.

            Based on Jennings' earnings last year, that payout could be
$4.7 million to $5 million if he leaves within three years, according to
Wichita Business Journal research.  (That range includes the KCPL parachute
and the new company's severance package.)







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            - Jennings' salary will be comparable to that of UtiliCorp's
Richard Green, who through 2002 will serve as vice chairman and chief
executive officer.

            No specific salary is noted in the proxy information, however. 
Levetzow said that salaries for the new company's executives were something
the new board should determine.  So any speculation to the full amount of
Jennings' and Green's compensation is speculation, she said.

            However, according to the proxy, Jennings will receive at least
what he earned in the 12 months prior to the completion of the merger.  His
annual base salary in 1995 was $403,000.  He also received a short-term
incentive of $132,062 and a long-term incentive of $38,638.

            Green, during the same period, had an annual base salary of
$495,000 and other compensation of $53,730.  UtiliCorp's compensation
committee also authorized the payment of an annual incentive award of
$263,995 and a long-term incentive payment -- for the years 1993, 1994, and
1995 -- of $440,000.

            That means that Green earned in excess of $1.2 million last
year.

            Levetzow said that Green's 1995 compensation reflected one-time
payouts that should not be considered as part of his average annual salary.

            But questions remain about how Jennings' salary will be
determined in a successful merger with UtiliCorp.

            If the range is anywhere near what Green made last year,
Jennings could be looking at a $6 million reason to leave the new company
within a few years of a completed KCPL/UtiliCorp merger.

            But Levetzow argued that the proxy reflects "boiler-plate"
language standard in proxy statements.  The language protects companies
from executives who will not see a deal through to the end.

            "It's not unique to our situation.  The language in here is
neither excessive or out of the ordinary.  It is not made up for us,"
Levetzow said.

            "A board would not allow someone to write in here something
that would allow them to become wealthy," she said.





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            The hostile bid for KCPL offered by Western Resources Inc.
assures Jennings the same position and the same terms he currently has at
KCPL.  He compensation would be comparable to that of Western Resources
Chairman John Hayes.

            According to Western Resources' proxy, Hayes' salary, like that
of other executive officers, is reviewed annually.

            The proxy also indicates that in the event an officer leaves
for "other than for cause ... or ... for good reason" the company must make
a lump-sum cash payment of two- or three-years' base salary, two or three
times the average bonuses paid to the officer for the previous three fiscal
years and the actuarial equivalent of the excess of the accrued pension
benefits.  Whether the executive receives two years/times or three
years/times those amounts depends on whether he served on the president's
council, according to the proxy.

            In addition, the company must offer health, disability and life
insurance coverage to the executive officer and family for two or three
years, or until he is covered by equivalent benefits, the proxy states.

            According to Western Resources' 1995 annual report, Hayes
received a salary of $466,755, a bonus of $102,481, and other compensation
(including a long-term incentive payout) of $67,550.

            "As we understand the terms and conditions, our salary
schedules are quite different at Western Resources and it would be our hope
that we could negotiate a salary with Mr. Jennings that would be in the
best interest of our shareholders," said Western Resources spokeswoman
Michel Philipp.

            Reprinted for informational purposes only with permission from
Wichita Business Journal.


 13

The Topeka Capital-Journal
June 26, 1996



              KCPL surprises analysts, rejects Western's offer

By JIM McLEAN
The Capital-Journal

            [Logos of KCPL and Western Resources]

            Western Resources got an answer to its latest merger offer
Tuesday.  It was a day late and, analysts said, about $4 short.

            In a hard-edged statement, Kansas City Power & Light Co.
rejected Western's $1.9 billion merger offer, in spite of the fact that it
promised KCPL shareholders about $4 more per share than they can expect to
receive under KCPL's merger deal with UtiliCorp United Inc.

            "They're nuts," said Edward Tirello, an analyst with NatWest
Securities in New York, about KCPL.  "If I were a shareholder, I would be
scratching my head."

            [Pull Quote:  "They're nuts.  If I were a
            shareholder, I would be scratching my head."

                               -- Edward Tirello,
                               analyst, NatWest Securities]


            KCPL and UtiliCorp, both headquartered in Kansas City, Mo.,
announced a "friendly" merger agreement in January.  Western, a Topeka-
based energy company, announced its takeover bid in April.

            A week ago, Western upped its $28 a share stock-for-stock bid
to $31 and increased its promised dividend to between $2 and $2.35 a share
from the $1.95 to $2.11 contained in its original offer.

            The value of the KCPL-UtiliCorp deal is pegged to the price of
UtiliCorp stock, which closed Tuesday at $27.  The projected dividend under
the KCPL-UtiliCorp merger is $1.85.


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            Leading up to Tuesday's announcement, financial analysts had
said Western's offer was too good to ignore.  They speculated KCPL might be
forced to scrap its less lucrative deal with UtiliCorp and negotiate with
Western.

            "I expected them to come to the negotiating table," said John
Hayes Jr., Western's chairman and chief executive officer.  "I'm just
amazed.  If the KCPL board and management won't listen to their
shareholders, we will."

            Hayes said as soon as it receives clearance from the Securities
and Exchange Commission, Western will urge KCPL shareholders to tender
their stock in hopes of gaining enough shares to force KCPL's board to
negotiate a deal.

            But Drue Jennings, KCPL's chairman, president and chief
executive officer, said he's confident a majority of the company's
stockholders will reject Western's overtures.

            Credibility -- not money -- is the issue, Jennings said.

            "Western Resources has made many promises that KCPL believes
Western will not be able to keep," Jennings said.

            Specifically, Jennings said, the possibility that the Kansas
Corporation Commission will order Western to significantly reduce its
electric rates raises questions about the earnings projections on which
Western's merger offer is based.

            Jennings charged that analysts who continue to tout the
superiority of Western's offer aren't doing their homework.

            "These guys that think it (Western's offer) is so overwhelming
had better take a look at the reality of what $105 million, or even
$80 million, in rate reductions will do to the earnings of that company and
their ability to pay the dividend that they have advertised," Jennings
said.

            Western has proposed to cut its electric rates by $92 million
over the next several years.  But the KCC staff recommended much deeper
cuts of $105 million next year.

            NatWest's Tirello said he doesn't believe the KCC will follow
the recommendation of its staff.





 15

            "If they listened to their staff, every company in Kansas would
be bankrupt," Tirello said.  "They'll strike a balance."

            Dan Rudakas, an Everen Securities analyst in Chicago, echoing
comments made by several analysts, said despite Jennings' arguments to the
contrary, the Western proposal offers shareowners the best deal.

            "You never know what people are going to be swayed by, but I
would take the $31 a share, and I couldn't be talked out of it," Rudakas
said.

            But KCPL is going to try.

            Jennings said he will take every opportunity to remind KCPL
shareholders that the value of Western's deal hinges on its ability to
avoid significant KCC-ordered rate reductions and to achieve the projected
$1.043 billion in merger-related savings it has projected.

            "We do not intend to risk the future of our company and its
customers, employees, shareholders and other constituencies on Western's
hollow promises," Jennings said.

            "My answer to that," Hayes said, "is look at our track record. 
We've always delivered what we've promised -- period."

            Shareowners of KCPL and UtiliCorp are expected to vote on their
companies' merger in mid-August.  An earlier vote had to be postponed when
it appeared that KCPL shareholders might not deliver the two-thirds
majority necessary to approve the deal.  The companies restructured the
deal so that it now requires only the approval of a majority of
shareholders present at the August meeting.

            On Tuesday, Western shares closed up one-eighth at 29 3/8. 
KCPL's stock finished the day at 26 7/8, down five-eighths.

            Reprinted for informational purposes only with permission from
The Topeka-Capital Journal.