Anderson County Review — April 22, 2014
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from April 22, 2014. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Contents Copyright 2014 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Greeley kids hunt
for Easter eggs.
ACHS girls do well at
own track meet.
See Page 1B.
See page 6A
E-statements & Internet Banking
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
APRIL 22, 2014
SINCE 1865 148th Year, No. 40
(785) 448-3121
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in 2015!
Get ready for a
birthday bash.
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1865-2015
(785) 448-3111
Spring fires:
By the numbers
Record number of calls
cost county more,
injure Colony firefighter
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT- The countys top
fire chief is scratching his
head trying to determine the
cause of a spring fire season
that cost the county 55 percent
more than usual, and resulted
in serious injuries to a Colony
volunteer firefighter.
JD Mersman, Anderson
County Emergency management director, keeps getting
asked the same question again
and again: Why have there
been so many grass fires this
year?
Its a question he doesnt
really know how to answer.
Sure, its been windy and dry.
But there have been many years
when conditions were similar,
and the call volume wasnt
quite so high. A burn ban
was in effect for many of the
worst days when the National
Weather Service forecasted
high winds and low humidity.
Ive sat down and really
tried to figure it out, but I dont
know, Mersman said. I just
cant put my finger on it.
Statistically, this spring has
brought a record number of
fire calls in at least the past 15
years, Mersman said. Between
Jan. 1 and March 31, fire units
SEE FIRES ON PAGE 3A
Johnsons county
seat up for election
Election filing deadline
is noon June 2 at
county clerks office
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Theres a learning
curve that comes with serving
as a county commissioner, Jim
Johnson said.
Johnson, who plans to run for
re-election to his District 1 commissioner seat in November,
said his first term has been a
matter of learning and adjustment. Hes looking for another
term to continue to serve on the
commission.
The deadline to file for elec-
tion is noon
Monday,
June 2, at the
Anderson
C o u n t y
Clerks Office
at the county
courthouse
in Garnett.
Johnson
A primary
election will
be Aug. 5, followed by the general election Nov. 4.
Locally, the District 1 county
commission seat is the only
major office up for election.
Voters also will select a township clerk in each township, and
Republicans and Democrats
SEE ELECTION ON PAGE 3A
City shakes up rec
department leadership
Bures will take on
rec coordinator job,
other duties shifted
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-22-2014 / Vickie Moss
Above, Braxton Barnes, Garnett, was determined to find the perfect eggs at the
Garnett Easter Egg Hunt Saturday, April 18. He bypassed some of the easier
pickings to dart from one area of the field to the next, picking up the eggs that
he liked.
At right, Amanda House of Garnett ignores her basket full of eggs to watch the
activity on the Anderson County Courthouse lawn during a hunt for an older
age group.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT After losing two
consecutive recreation coordinators following their respective convictions for drunken
driving, Garnett city leaders
are taking a new approach for
the position.
The recreation coordinator
position will be folded into the
job responsibilities of the rec-
reation director, a position held
by Phil Bures.
The citys recreation coordinator is in charge of various
programs offered by the city,
including overseeing organized
youth sports like flag football,
soccer, biddy basketball and
more. The position was supervised by the recreation director, who is in charge of the
administrative aspects of running a city recreation department including overseeing the
parks, recreation center, swimming pool and cemetery departSEE CITY ON PAGE 3A
Greeley companies made historic items for papal visit
Canonization of Pope John
Paul II offers reminder of
local ties to pope history
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GREELEY The upcoming canonization of Popes John XXIII and John
Paul II in Rome this coming Sunday
offers a reminder of the role local
businesses in Anderson County have
played in papal history.
During the papal visit of Pope
John Paul in 1987, local businesses
created items to mark the momentous occasion. The now-defunct
Garnett Church Furnishings factory
created a papal chair when the pope
visited the U.S., and two Greeley
businesses had a hand in creating a
long-lasting reminder of his visit.
Graven Images of Greeley created
die sets for metal stamping for invitations for the popes visit to Phoenix,
Ariz., where he attended the dedication ceremony of the St. Joseph
Hospital. Another Greeley company,
Hoffmans Creative Castings, took
those dies and created a gold-leaf
image of the pope and encased it in a
rosewood plaque.
Steve Hoffman of Greeley, who
created the plaque along with his
brothers JD and Rick Hoffman, all
of Greeley, recalled the experience
in advance of the canonization ceremony set for April 27 in Rome.
It was an opportunity to do something for a pretty big name, Steve
Hoffman said, adding that it was one
of the highlights of his career in the
bronze casting business.
The Hoffman brothers started the
foundry as sort of a hobby. They
began making belt buckles for
Greeley Days events, and the business expanded.
Im a disabled veteran, so it
gave me something to fiddle with,
Hoffman said.
Because of health issues, the
brothers havent made any bronze
items for some time, Steve Hoffman
said. However, during its heyday the
company specialized in making castings.
Initially, a company that helped
organize the papal visit at Phoenix
in 1987 asked the Hoffmans to create a bronze statue of the pope. But
they were given just two weeks, and
it would take that long to prepare
a mold and the bronze. Instead, the
Hoffmans improvised. Instead of
a bronze statue, they took the dies
used by Graven Images and created
an image that could be covered in
gold leaf. The image and an engraved
SEE POPE ON PAGE 3A
This photo from 1987 shows the casting
made by Hoffman Creative Castings for the
papal visit.
Etched glassware, engraved plaques, clocks – NEAT STUFF! – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
RECORD
NEWS
IN BRIEF
EVENT VIDEOS SOUGHT
Garnetts Creative Business
Partnerships Committee is in
search of video footage that local
residents may have shot at various local events during the course
of the past year or so, in order to
possibly include it in a proposed
2-minute promotional video for
the city. If you have local footage
of local sporting events, Square
Fair, The Anderson County Fair,
Cornstock, local kart races or
any other local events please
message The Anderson County
Review here or contact CBPC
chairman Tami Hiestand at tami.
hiestand@hp.com.
GREELEY GARAGE SALES
St. Johns Hall and Greeley Citywide Garage Sales will be 7 a.m.
to ?? Saturday, April 26.
CLOTHING GIVEAWAY
The Care 2 Share Free Sale and
Clothing Giveaway will be 9 a.m.
to noon Saturday, April 26, at the
Garnett Church of the Nazarene,
258 W. Park Road. Clothing and
shoes will be available, as well
as 10 free bags of groceries,
complimentary coffee, juice and
doughnuts, and face painting,
balloon animals and a craft table
for kids For more informatIon or
to make a donation call Shannon
Day at (913) 963-2435, or email
sday1181@hotmail.com.
FATHER-DAUGHTER DANCE
The second annual PEO
father-daughter dance, FatherDaughter Boots & Bows Dance,
will be from 7-9 p.m. Saturday,
May 3, at the Garnett Community
Building. Suggested donation is
$15 per family. The dance will
be country-themed with dancing,
refreshments and photos taken
for girls ages 2 years to sixth
grade. All proceeds will be used
to fund scholarships by Chapter
Y PEO.
LONE ELM CRAFT FAIR
The Lone Elm Craft Fair will be
8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, April
26, at the Lone Elm Community
Building.
FOOD DISTRIBUTION
The Emergency Food Assistance
Program Distribution will be 4
p.m. Thursday, April 24, at the
Anderson County Fairgrounds
Quonset Hut building.
COMMUNITY BREAKFAST
A Community Breakfast will be
7 a.m. to 9 a.m. Saturday, April
26, at the First United Methodist
Church, Second and Oak, in
Garnett.
RICHMOND SUPPER
The Richmond Community
Museum Potato Bar Supper is
set for April 26. Serving is from
5-7:30 p.m. at the Richmond
Community Building.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The Anderson County Historical
Societys May potluck dinner
meeting will be held at the museum on Thursday, May 1st, at
6:30 p.m.
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONER APRIL 7
Chairman James K. Johnson called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 a.m. on
April 7 at the County Commission
Room. Attendance: James K. Johnson,
Present: Eugene Highberger, Present:
Jerry Howarter, Present. The pledge
of allegiance was recited. Minutes of
the previous meeting were approved as
presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor, met
with the commission. Bob Hiner was
present and informed the group that the
road in front of his barn has been built
up and now the water, when it rains, is
backing up into his barn. After the rain
last week the water was 10 inches deep
and got into his hay. Commissioner
Highberger moved to approve the purchase of SS-1H, RS-1H, and RS-1M
from Ergon Asphalt, Cold Mix Oil for
Millings to both Ergon Asphalt and Road
Recyclers, Coughlin Company to crush
and screen mix millings, and Whitaker
Aggregates for 1/2 minus chip aggregate washed. Commissioner Howarter
seconded. Approved 3-0. Dan Harden,
BG Consultants, met with the commission. Commissioner Highberger moved
to sign the letter of intent to bank
the federal funds that are available.
Commissioner Howarter seconded.
Approved 3-0. Fuel bids for the month
of April were presented. Leroy Co-op
received all graders and landfill off road
diesel. Lybarger received shop gas and
diesel and the automated card system.
Communication Tower
Commissioner Highberger moved to
approve the agreement between RWD
#5 and Anderson County to install a
radio and equipment on RWD #5s
tower at 600 Road and Texas Road.
Commissioner Howarter seconded.
Approved 3-0.
Hope Unlimited
Donita Garnet and Dorothy Sparks,
Hope Unlimited, met with the commission.
They presented a proclamation declaring
April as Child Abuse Prevention Month.
Commissioner Highberger moved to sign
the proclamation declaring April as Child
Abuse Prevention Month. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0.
Abatements
Abatements B14-191 through B14197 were presented and approved.
Roll Call
Commissioner Highberger left the
meeting at 10:30 for personal business.
Rural Fire
JD
Mersman,
Emergency
Management, met with the commission.
He informed the commission of the number of runs the departments have made
in the first quarter. The number of runs
are up significantly. They are still having major problems with the tanker at
Westphalia. He has found a truck for
$17,000 in Pennsylvania and is recommending passing on the truck in Iowa they
were looking at for Greeley. It is needing
too many upgrades for the price they
are requesting. Commissioner Howarter
moved to purchase a 1995 GMC 1 Ton
fire truck from Command Fire Apparatus
at a cost of $17,000 out of the Rural Fire
Reserve Fund. Commissioner Johnson
seconded. Approved 2-0. Commissioner
Howarter moved to purchase two sets
of turn out gear from Jerry Ingram Fire
at a cost of $3,796 out of the Rural
Fire Fund. Commissioner Johnson seconded. Approved 2-0.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 p.m. due
to no further business.
North 75 to said highway center line,
thence in northwesterly direction 235.5
to POB.
H.A.A.C. Investments LLC to John
Q. Adams, E/2 of SE/4 of 34-22-19 and
SW/4 of 35-22-19.
Alfreda M. Hiner to Jack L. Hiner,
containing part of but not all of E2 SW4
and commencing at SE corner of said
SW4 34-20-20, thence running to POB;
all in 34-20-20; and NE4 NW4 and East
30 acres of SE4 NW4 34-20-20 and NE4
NWFR4 3-21-20 and NW4 SW4 34-2020 except 2 acres more or less lying
North of creek; and NW4 NW4 SE4 3320-20; and also beginning at point South
of NW corner SE4 of said Section 33,
thence running to POB; and SE4 SE4
and 16 rods off East side of SW4 SE4
Section 33 and SW4 SW4 34-20-20 and
also S2 NE4 SE4 and all that part lying
East of channel of creek of N2 NE4 SE4
said Section 33-20-20 and 32 acres off
West side of SW4 SE4 33-20-20; and
beginning at point on North line of SE4
33-20-20 to South Pottawatomie Creek,
thence in northwesterly direction making
creek boundary line to where said creek
crosses North line of said quarter section to POB; and also beginning at bed
of South Pottawatomie Creek on line
West of SE corner NE4, thence West
to middle of creek where said creek
crosses the said quarter section line the
second time, thence down said creek
with its meanderings to POB; and also
beginning 26 rods East of NW corner
SW4 SE4, thence running to POB; all
in 33-20-20; and North 30 acres of NW4
NW4 3-21-20.
Jack L. Hiner and Sandra L. Hiner
to Jack L. Hiner and Sandra L. Hiner,
containing part of but not all of E2 SW4
and commencing at SE corner of said
SW4 34-20-20 to POB; all in 34-20-20;
and NE4 NW4 and East 30 acres of
SE4 NW4 34-20-20 and NE4 NWFR4
3-21-20 and NW4 SW4 34-20-20 except
2 acres more or less lying North of
creek; and NW4 NW4 SE4 33-20-20;
and also beginning at point South of NW
corner SE4 of said Section 33 to POB;
and SE4 SE4 of SW4 SE4 Section 33
and SW4 SW4 34-20-20 and also S2
NE4 SE4 and all that part lying East
of channel of creek of N2 NE4 SE4
said Section 33-20-20 and 32 acres off
West side of SW4 SE4 33-20-20; and
beginning at point on North line of SE4
33-20-20 to South Pottawatomie Creek,
thence in northwesterly direction making
creek boundary line to where said creek
crosses North line of said quarter section
to POB; and also beginning at bed of
South Pottawatomie Creek, on line West
of SE corner NE4, thence West to middle
of creek where said creek crosses the
said quarter section line the second time,
thence down said creek with its meanderings to POB; and also beginning East
of NW corner SW4 SE4 to POB; all in
33-20-20; and North 30 acres of NW4
NW4 3-21-20.
CIVIL CASES FILED
Wells Fargo Bank NA vs. James
Harland Kerr, Elizabeth Kerr, Mary Doe,
John Doe, Razor Capital LLC, and
Western Credit Inc., asking $52,029.86.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Bank of America NA vs. Michael
Louis Sitler, John Doe, Jane Doe, and
unknown spouse of Michael Louis Sitler,
$67,743.78 plus interest and costs.
Discover Bank vs. Chris Thornhill,
$4,573.40 plus interest and costs.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Michael L. Sommer vs. Deborah A.
LAND TRANSFERS
Michael A. Drimmel to Henry L. Gatlin
and Carol M. Gatlin, the W/2 of Lot 4 and
all of Lots 5 and 6 in Block 3 in the City
of Garnett.
Julia Mae Willets to Julia Mae Willets
and William Gary Willets, N2 SW4 2422-17.
Donald G. Louk and Donna R. Louk to
Leslie D. McGhee and Linda S. McGhee,
the N/2 of NE/4 and the N/2 of NW/4 of
31-21-21, less the SW/4 of the NW/4 of
the NW/4 and the W/2 of the SE/4 of
the NW/4 of 31-21-21 containing 15.0
acres more or less and less that taken
for county road right of way.
Stephen N. Smith and Carolyn S.
Smith to David S. Holloway and Rose
Holloway, Lot 14, Block 6, Parklane
Addition (1970 revised) to City of
Garnett.
Palmer & Akes Leasing Inc. to Orvel
J. Broce and James O. Broce, beginning
at point 1548.5 South of NE corner 3019-21, thence in northwesterly direction
along center line of county highway 125,
thence following said highway center line
in southwesterly direction 506.4, thence
South 75, thence East 800, thence
C.A. Davis Scholarships Available
Anderson County Hospital is accepting
applications for the C.A. Davis scholarship for
students who are residents of Anderson County
and have been accepted into an accredited
nursing program. Applications may be obtained
from Trina Smith, Administrative Assistant,
Anderson County Hospital, 785-204-4007 or
421 S. Maple, P.O. Box 309, Garnett, KS 66032.
Please submit applications to ACH no later than
Friday, May 30, 2014. Scholarship recipients
will be contacted by June 30, 2014.
Dr. Sandi Otipoby
Dental Team: Annie, Sandi, Trish
Annie Smith has joined our team!
Call Jodie now to set up an appointment
to have your teeth cleaned!!
785-448-2487
review dvd
4×10
Sommer, petition for divorce.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Michael L. Sommer vs. Deborah A.
Sommer, divorce decree granted.
Flo Irene Higginbotham vs. Phillip
Dwayne Proctor, final protection from
stalking order.
Phillip Dwayne Proctor vs. Flo Irene
Higginbotham, dismissed.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country Mart
Garnett vs. Jilissa Hoffman, $420.79
plus costs.
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country Mart
Garnett vs. Amy L. Widga, $668.68 plus
costs.
Great Southern Bank vs. Sarah E.
Brown, $874.20 plus interest and costs.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Robert E. Harris, domestic battery,
criminal damage to property x2, appearance with counsel set for April 22 at 9:00
a.m.
Gary Dalton Colston, distribution of
narcotic drugs or certain stimulants, use/
possession of drug paraphernalia, taxation drugs, DWS 2nd or subsequent
conviction, operate motor vehicle without
liability insurance and securing loads on
vehicles, appearance with counsel set
for May 6 at 9:00 a.m.
Herbert Robert Hayden, theft by
deception, status conference set for May
27 at 9:30 a.m.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Seth L. Bell, $195 fine.
Shawn Peter Epting, $141 fine.
John Douglas Speed, $165 fine.
Gregory Thomas Weisz, $165 fine.
Other:
Jason S. Boeck, domestic battery and
criminal threat, sentencing set for May
12 at 1:00 p.m.
GARNETT MUNICIPAL COURT
Speeding and other
traffic violations:
David A. Hafner, Garnett, April 11,
$150 fine.
Olivia Ryan Hart, Bartlesville,
Oklahoma, January 31, $150 fine.
Justin Dewey Powell, Ottawa,
February 21, tail lamps required, $75
fine, driving without license, $200 fine.
Carmen Sjelin, Rancho Santa
Margarita, California, February 19, $270
fine.
Kenneth Edwin Smith, Ottawa, April
3, obedience to traffic control device,
$125 fine.
John R. Teagarden, LaCygne,
February 17, tail lamps required, $125
fine.
Other:
Craig T. Galey, Garnett, January 14,
disorderly conduct, $400 fine.
Darrin G. Holstine, Garnett, March 29,
burning without permit, $550 fine – $400
suspended, no further violations within 1
year.
Brenda L. McAfee, Garnett, March
19, failure to register dog, $100 fine.
Stephanie White, Garnett, March 19,
failure to register dog x2, $100 fine $50
suspended.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on March 31 of
criminal trespass and occurred on South
Catalpa Road.
A report was made on April 9 of
criminal damage to property to four
hand sanitizer dispensers and a door
and doorknob all valued at $125 and
occurred on North Lake Road.
A report was made on April 16 of
burglary and theft of a chainsaw valued
at $250 and occurred on East 14th
Avenue.
Arrests
Danielle Seward, Ottawa, April 3, warrant arrest by LEO.
Debra Suire, Garnett, April 5, permitting unauthorized minor to drive.
Jordan Eckman, Ottawa, April 10,
interference with LEO, unlawful vehicle
registration and vehicle liability insurance required.
JAIL LOG
Jordan Douglas Eckman, 22, Garnett,
April 10, interference with LEO, unlawful
vehicle registration and vehicle liability
insurance required, bond set at $975.
Robert Earl Harris, 24, Garnett, April
10, domestic battery and criminal damage to property, bond set at $1,000.
Jason Kethal Hermreck, 30, Garnett,
April 11, charges not listed, no bond set.
Melissa Dawn Hermreck, 25, Garnett,
April 11, 48-hour writ.
Vicki Marie Clay, 42, Topeka, April 15,
giving a worthless check, no bond set.
Joshua West Kaufman, 31, Greeley,
April 15, failure to appear, bond set at
$1,500.
Dustin Lee Johnson, 19, Waverly,
April 16, aggravated battery, bond set at
$10,000.
JAIL ROSTER
David Ashley was booked into jail on
March 10 for Anderson County, bond set
at $5,000.
Dustin Johnson was booked into jail
on April 16 for Anderson County, bond
set at $10,000.
Shannon Hicks was booked into jail on
March 13 for Garnett Police Department,
for 78 days.
Patricia Croan was booked into jail on
March 10 for Anderson County, hold for
docket.
Bob Hayden was booked into jail on
March 21 for Anderson County, bond set
at $5,000.
Aaron Stevenson was booked into jail
on January 6 for Anderson County, bond
set at $5,000.
Jeremy Thomas was booked into jail
on December 9, 2013 for 6 months with
21 days credit.
Jason Hermreck was booked into jail
on March 5 for Anderson County for 8
months and 10 days.
James Atkisson was booked into jail
on January 14 for Anderson County,
bond set at $100,000.
FARM-INS
John Vaughan was booked into jail on
April 1 for Linn County.
Ammo
Giveaway
Come in to Register
for a Bucket of
Remington 22lr ammo
Drawing will be May 10, 2014
(No purchase necessary)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
ACKMANN
September 14, 1918-April 17, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 22, 2014
Anna J. Ackmann, age 95, of
Garnett, died Thursday, April 17,
2014, at Anderson County Hospital
Long Term Care in Garnett.
She was born on September
14, 1918, at Pickrell, Nebraska, to
Gottfried and Lina (Evers) Dieken.
She married Wilhelm Ackmann
on April 23, 1936, at St. Johns
Lutheran Church in Beatrice, NE.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Gottfried Dieken and
Lina Dieken Jergens; stepfather
John Jergens; daughter Hilda
Dossman; two grandsons, Mark
and Mike Dossman; granddaughter
Marlyn Harwood; great grandchild
Arron Evans; step-brother Henry
Jergens; half-brothers Raymond
and Gehde Jergens; step-nephew
Jerald Jergens.
Survivors include her sons
Herman Ackmann of Nortonville
and Henry Ackmann of Garnett;
14 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; 11 great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were Monday,
April 21, 2014, at the Trinity
Lutheran Church, Garnett. Burial
followed in the Garnett Cemetery.
BOWMAN
October 29, 1923-April 13, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 22, 2014
Vernon A. Bowman, age 90, of
Emporia, formerly of Garnett, died
Sunday, April 13, 2014, at Stormont
Vail, in Topeka.
He was born October 29, 1923, in
Anderson County, to William and
Bertha (Brummel) Bowman.
Vernon was inducted into the
United States Army on November
13, 1944 and discharged on August
23, 1946.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, William and Bertha
Brummel; and a grandson.
Survivors include his wife, Mary
Bowman, of the home; son, Douglas
Bowman of Escondido, Calif.; two
step-daughters, Barbara Dyer of
Pomona; Connie Alcorn of Enid,
Okla.; two sisters, Ora Lee Gish of
Topeka; and Wilma Jean McDonald
of Fargo, N.D.; two grandchildren;
four step-grandchildren; one great
granddaughter; nieces and nephews; and many friends.
Funeral services were Friday,
April 18, 2014 at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel,
Garnett; with burial following in
the Garnett Cemetery.
STEWART
August 28, 1922-April 10, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 22, 2014
Kenneth Leslie Stewart, 91, of
Springhill, formerly of Bonner
Springs, died Thursday, April 10,
2014 at the Golden Living Center of
Springhill.
Memorial services will be at 2
p.m. Saturday, May 3, 2014 at the
First Christian Church in Bonner
Springs, private family burial at a
later date. The family will receive
friends after the service at the
church.
He was born on August 28, 1922,
at Hutchinson.
Survivors inlcude his wife,
Edna Stewart of the home, four
children Ron Stewart of Ferguson,
Mo.; Cheryl Smith of Olathe; Joyce
Adams of Grain Valley, Mo; Randy
Stewart of Richmond, Kan.; a
brother Charles Stewart of Troy;
eight grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren.
ROECKER
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 22, 2014
Funeral services for Geneva
Roecker, age 94, of Richmond, will
be held at 9:30 a.m., on Thursday,
April 24, 2014, at St. Therese
Catholic Church, Richmond, with
burial to follow in the St. Johns
Catholic Cemetery, Greeley,
Kansas. A rosary will be held with
visitation following on Wednesday
evening, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral Home
in Garnett.
Geneva passed away on
Saturday, April 19, 2014 at Richmond
Healthcare and Rehabilitation in
Richmond.
POPE…
FROM PAGE 1A
inscription were placed on a
rosewood plaque for the event.
The project was a challenge,
especially on short notice. The
Hoffmans initially contracted
with a company in Mexico to
do the golf leaf, but the order
was returned without being
completed. The Hoffmans were
forced to figure out a way to set
the gold leaf themselves, and it
was finished just in time for the
Phoenix event.
The Hoffmans made four
plaques; one was sent to the
Vatican in Rome and another
was displayed at the hospital in
Phoenix. The Hoffmans made a
similar plaque for the steeple at
the Catholic church in Scipio.
I still have all the paperwork and plates and all that
stuff, Steve Hoffman said.
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
258 W. Park Rd.
Garnett, KS 66032
9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Spring/Summer
Clothing & Shoes
(Mens, Womens and
Childrens ALL Sizes
Face-Painting, Balloon
Animals and craft table
for kids
10 Free Bags of
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YOUR LIFE IS A STORY.
TELL IT WELL.
Garnett Monument
& Glass
126 West Fifth Garnett, KS 66032
Remember.
Forever.
(785) 448-6622
Todd Barnes
PROFESSIONAL
TAX PREPARATION
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
3A
REMEMBRANCES
FIRES…
FROM PAGE 1A
in the county responded to 298
calls. Of those calls, 85 percent
have been for grass fires. In a
typical year, those same units
will respond to a total of about
400 calls.
The cost of their response
for that time period was $55,000,
including fuel, equipment
repairs and miscellaneous
equipment. For each fire call,
the responding department
receives $50; individual firefighters are volunteers and are
not paid for their efforts. Fire
departments typically use the
money to pay for things like
department shirts or equipment.
The exception is the Garnett
rural and city fire departments.
Firefighters in those departments operate under a different contract with the City of
Garnett and receive $15 per
call, paid to the responding
firefighter at the end of each
quarter.
The financial impact of
the increased calls means the
county has spent about 55 percent more on firefighting this
year than it spent at the same
point last year. Mersman said
although the call volume is
high, the department plans for
such an event when planning
its budget. The county already
has spent about 21 percent of
its 2014 budget, and may need to
push back some long-term projects and equipment upgrades.
But the high call volume has
taken its toll on equipment and
various types of fire-fighting
apparatus.
The condition and terrain
our brush trucks are placed into
is less than ideal. Breakdowns
and repairs happen, and our
commissioners understand
that, Mersman said, adding
that he appreciates the efforts
made by the countys maintenance crews in the road department.
The busy spring also has
taken a toll on firefighters,
although Mersman said the
county has been fortunate to
have only a couple of incidents
that resulted in injury to firefighters. Early in the season,
one fire ighter sustained burns
to his arms. Another, Sarah
McDaniel, was driving to a fire
scene near Colony March 17
when she left the roadway and
struck a tree. She sustained
broken bones and is recovering
from her injuries.
She does have a long road
ahead of her, Mersman said.
Such incidents are covered
by the countys insurance;
although fire fighters are volunteers, once they respond
to a call they fall under the
umbrella of the countys coverage, Mersman said.
Every fire department in
the county has been called to
at least a dozen calls. Garnett
and Colony, which cover the
largest area and populations,
have responded to the most
calls. Mersman said calls break
down with 77 for Garnett; 71
for Colony; 32 for Welda; 29,
Greeley; 27, Westphalia; 26,
Harris; 24, Kincaid; and 12 for
Bush City.
There have been several
days when units responded
from one call to the next to
the next. It has been so busy,
Mersman said. Our firefighters work jobs and have families
outside the fire department.
Responding to the amount of
calls these firefighters have
requires them to take time away
from their jobs and lose out on
time with their families. Our
firefighters are truly dedicated.
I cant say thank you enough to
them.
In addition to the firefighters, Mersman also gave credit
to dispatchers at the Anderson
County
Communications
Center who help direct firefighters to the scene, and to
the Fire Department Auxiliary
and Community Emergency
Response Team (CERT) who
bring food and water to help
firefighters during the calls.
CITY…
FROM PAGE 1A
ments.
Phil requested my consideration of this change and is
ready to accept the challenge of
a combined position, Garnett
City Manager Joyce Martin
said. I have the utmost faith
in Phil because he has an open
mind and is willing to listen
to suggestions from parents,
coaches and co-workers.
Bures, an Anderson County
High School graduate, joined
the city about a year ago after
the retirement of Herb Waring.
Since then, hes made several
changes such as offering new
programs to boost attendance
at the swimming pool and
implementing a Superheros
of Kindness program with
kindergarteners at Garnett
Elementary School.
The previous recreation
coordinator, Brad Yeubanks,
left the post in March. Citing
employee privacy laws, city
officials declined to comment
about his departure. However,
he left soon after a conviction
for driving under the influence and subsequent arrest for
suspicion of driving while suspended.
Yeubanks had worked for
the city for about two years
and replaced previous recreation coordinator Josh Elliott.
Elliott also was arrested and
charged with a DUI but his
job was terminated for other
reasons before the court procedures were completed, Martin
said previously.
Because of the change to
Bures position, city leaders
will need to shift some of his
previous responsibilities to
other departments. Bures previously oversaw zoning and
nuisance complaints. Zoning
matters now will be handled
by Building Official Andy Frye.
The Garnett Police Department
will handle nuisance complaints, assisted by city staff
member Donna Roberts.
Notice to settle estate
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review April 15, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
SITTING AT GARNETT
In the Matter of the Estate of
ROBERT S. VANDERMAN, deceased.
Case No. 2014 PR 6
NOTICE OF HEARING AND NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
You are required to file your written
defenses thereto on or before the 7th day of
May, 2014, at 9:15 a.m., of said day, in the
District Court sitting at the Courthouse, 100
East 4th Street, Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, at which time and place the cause will
be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment
and decree will be entered in due course upon
the Petition.
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the estate within four (4)
months of the date of first publication of this
Notice, as provided by law, and if their demands
are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever
barred.
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that on April
3, 2014, a Petition was filed in this Court by
Benjamin D. Sherber, Attorney for the Kansas
Estate Recovery Program, an authorized
agent of the Kansas Department of Health &
Environment, Division of Health Care Finance,
praying for the appointment of an administrator.
Benjamin D. Sherber, Petitioner
Leslie A. Klaassen
#26020
HENSHALL, PENNINGTON & BRAKE
P.O. Box 667
Chanute, KS 66720
(620) 431-2600
Attorneys for Petitioner
ap15t3
ELECTION…
FROM PAGE 1A
each will select a precinct committeeman and committeewoman for each voting precinct.
There will be a number of state
and federal races on the ballot. Federal offices include U.S.
Senator and U.S. Representative
for the 2nd District. State offices up for election include governor, secretary of state, attorney
general, state treasurer, insurance commissioner, 4th District
State Representative, 5th
District State Representative
and 9th District State Board of
Education.
So far, no one filed for the
county commissioner seat.
Johnson said he plans to file
within the next week or two. He
was elected to the seat in 2010.
The challenge to being successful while serving as a commissioner comes from studying the issues. Once you learn
about the various sides of a
matter, you might even change
your mind, Johnson said. Thats
what happened when he studied
the countys agreement with
the Southeast Kansas Multicounty Health Department.
I thought going in perhaps
we could operate the health
department more efficiently
on our end. That turns out to
be wrong, Johnson said. The
group we operate with does a
very nice job and we get a lot
for our dollar.
County
commissioners
recently have been working on
a number of ongoing issues,
such as working with Sheriff
Vern Valentine to determine
the best course for medical
care at the county jail, and
with Emergency Management
Director JD Mersman about
equipment issue for rural fire
departments. Commissioners
are getting ready to dig into
next years budget, something
that typically challenges commissioners as they struggle to
minimize expenses and keep
taxes low, yet still offer quality
services.
Its all about rolling up
your sleeves and studying the
issues, Johnson said. Its
hard work.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
EDITORIAL
Conservatives may be right after all
A new study that shows Kansas high
school seniors SAT scores have been stagnant over four decades despite a 300 percent
increase in inflation-adjusted funding might
be hard enough on the states few remaining liberals (by that I mean in Douglas
and Wyandotte counties), but word late last
week that Gov. Brownbacks tax cuts had
yielded $178 million more in state revenues
than projected must have them looking for a
Kaw River bluff to jump from.
Its a frightening prospect to those folks
driving around Lawrence with Paul Davis
bumper stickers on their cars; the conservative philosophy that wants to make government smaller, let people and corporations
keep more of their money instead of paying
it to Topeka as taxes and put pressure on
public education to compete for funding
might be… right?
Its too early yet, but at least by mid-week
there should be some pretty heavy spiking of the financial football coming from
state Republicans not Brownback himself
, of course, because thats just not his style
but the safe money would be on a flurry
of activity from GOP biggies who want to
make sure folks know that Brownbacks big
gamble paid off.
It was a huge bet the idea of cutting
taxes and reducing state government spending in 2011 and 2012 during a recession on
the hope that keeping money in private
hands would restart the economy. As youll
recall there was much gnashing of teeth
from recipients of state budget funds like
the former Kansas Arts Commission, various social services and state educators at
the time, and warnings that not only would
the state be broke with reduced tax revenues but most of Kansas would degenerate
into some sort of Mad Maxx movie.
But it worked. Even with the tax cuts
that reduced short-term state revenues and
allowed some 200,000 small businesses to
pay basically no state taxes last year, the
Consensus Estimating Group in Topeka
says state revenues will have grown by $178
million through June 2015. Its news that
should put some spring in the step of state
legislators who come back to Topeka next
week for the wrap-up session.
The cost-benefit analysis will continue,
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
especially in light of a Cato Institute study
from March that showed theres basically
no correlation between the performance
of Kansas seniors on the college-entrance
SAT exams and levels of public funding
which have risen some 300 percent our state
since 1970.
Thats a pretty staggering topic for
debate, considering Legislators just agreed
to shell out another $129 million for education in order to satisfy the Kansas Supreme
Court, which is convinced the state doesnt
spend enough money to ensure kids get an
equal education. If the Cato Study is right
and a 300 percent increase in funding over
40 years expenses that included Title IX
girls sports equalization, burgeoning new
technologies, larger staffs and more administrators didnt bump up real student performance, did we do something wrong with
all that money?
But Kansans need not feel too bad it
was the same for all 50 states by comparison. As states spent more money and
refined ways to teach and spend money over
those decades even putting reading dogs
in classrooms SAT scores remained stagnant.
Boom.
Of course conservatives are constant
critics of public education and the dollars
that support it, and the Cato data would
appear to bolster that criticism. Whether
you buy into it or not, rest assured it will
fuel the debate.
And right now, as far as the big debates
go, conservatives in Kansas appear to be
winning.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1.
You do not need to leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Yeah, whatever the situation is with
the school staff member and the broken marriage, clearly it wasnt that
happy of a marriage.
I think that they should have men
principals in elementary school.
I noticed in the last edition the
Supreme Court has allowed all the
billionaires to give all the money that
they want to the politicians. So this
year I guess they can do without the
chump change that I might be able to
throw their way.
Kelly Eckerman is on early morning
news on Channel 9.
I hear on the news where Kansas City
The equal-pay canard not as it seems
To paraphrase the line often attributed to
Mark Twain, there are lies, damn lies and the
equal pay statistic.
The factoid that women earn only 77 cents
of every dollar earned by men is the focal
point of a feminist cargo cult. It has its own
movement and its own quasi-holiday, the socalled Equal Pay Day, marking how far into
a new year women supposedly have to work
to match what men made the prior year. The
figure is presumed to clinch any debate over
the continued existence of massive discrimination against women in the workforce.
Drawn from Census Bureau data, the 77cent stat is a comparison of the earnings of
women working full time to men working full
time. Its fatal flaw is that it accounts for none
of the important factors that play into the
disparity, such as hours worked.
Mark Perry and Andrew Biggs of the
American Enterprise Institute note that men
are twice as likely to work more than 40
hours per week as women. Then there are differences in choice of occupation, in education
and in uninterrupted years of work. Once
such factors are taken into account, there is
about a 5 percent differential in the earnings
of women and men, about which various
theories are plausible, including the effect of
residual discrimination.
What is clear is that the wage gap is largely
an artifact of the fact that women devote
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
more time to caring for children than do men.
Harvard economist Claudia Goldin points out
that the earnings of women without children
are almost equal to those of comparable men.
Feminists are mistaking a byproduct of the
laudable desire of mothers to spend time with
their kids for a depredation of The Man.
When asked in an MSNBC interview about
the reliability of the pay-gap number, White
House economist Betsey Stevenson confessed:
I agree that the 77 cents on the dollar is not
all due to discrimination. No one is trying to
say that it is. But you have to point to some
number in order for people to understand the
facts.
There you have it: For people to understand
the facts, you have to give them an easily mis-
understood statistic, usually without necessary context and spun in the most inflammatory fashion possible. Enter President Barack
Obama. He wrings every bit of dishonesty he
can out of the number.
At the Equal Pay Day event at the White
House, he marveled at the simplicity of it
all: A woman has got to work about three
more months in order to get what a man got
because shes paid less. Thats not fair. Thats
like adding an extra six miles to a marathon.
Such is his subtle rendering of a number
that even his own economic adviser admits
must be handled with care.
Hillary Clinton, whose prospective presidential campaign will be predicated on every
feminist cliche her supporters can muster,
tweeted on Equal Pay Day, 20 years ago,
women made 72 cents oan the dollar to men.
Today its still just 77 cents. More work to
do.
Yes, never tire or relent. The flogging of
the bogus statistic can never end.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
Theres only one way to go from here, right?
Kansas tax revenues appear to have bottomed out after the massive income tax cuts
of 2012.
That might be the biggest news from the
latest Consensus Revenue Estimate released
last week. The consensus reports are
released twice a year, generally in April and
November.
It took a full tax year of the cutsremember, almost 200,000 Kansans no longer pay
state income tax if their small businesses or
corporations are structured just rightto
establish that baseline of revenues the state
can expect to receive this year and next.
While that discussion of tax rates and revenues is pretty esoteric, were probably at the
place now where we can actually start looking at what Kansans expect from their state
government.
The estimate of revenues, after falling 6
percent (thats about $320 million) in the current fiscal year which ends June 30, is now
predicted to rise by a half-percent, or about
$32 million, in the fiscal year which starts
July 1, after all the under-the-sheets shifting and juggling of money among funds are
done.
The latest estimate is important because
weve had a full tax year of the new lower
rates, and presuming that everyone has
adjusted his/her withholding, we probably
are at the point where any growth in revenue
will be the result of more people working or
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
higher salaries or Kansans taking their tax
savings and spending it on taxable things,
ranging from groceries to smokes to paint for
their houses.
The state now has a pretty firm revenue
base from which to work.
If there ever was a time that the state has
a chance to actually study what it needs to
do for Kansans and what it wants to do for
Kansans and what it doesnt believe Kansans
needor will misswere there.
Lawmakers have spent the past two years
paring the state budget and now theyre at a
point where anything new will have to have
an identifiable source of money to pay for
it. That ranges from all-day Kindergarten to
more Kansas Highway Patrol officers to aid
for communities to increase their popula-
tions.
Politically, Republican Gov. Sam
Brownback says his tax-cut plan is working
or will at least through the fall campaign.
His goal, of course, is eventually to eliminate
state income taxes, freeing up Kansans to
spend that tax savings on expanding businesses, new technologies and maybe just
spending more money on things the state
taxes.
His likely Democratic challenger, Rep.
Paul Davis, D-Lawrence, says the state has
cut funding for important services to absorb
those income tax revenue losses. He believes
this reduction in revenues means the state
cant invest in education that will be vital to
new businesses, jobs and population growth.
Financially, the state will make it through
the campaign season, and were betting neither Brownback nor Davis is going to start
talking on the campaign trail about raising
taxes so the state has more money to spend
on things voters might want.
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC
of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of
Hawvers Capitol Reportto learn more about
this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.
com
has closed 36 schools in the last couple
of years and only two of them were
torn down. The other ones were all
sold and put to good use either as office
buildings or apartments for the aging
or apartments. But at least they utilized
something that was built. Here we have
a tendency to believe we ve got to tear
everything down. If our rec center is
getting so full and so busy that we dont
have any room any more, why not wait
until the hospital is built and instead
of tearing the old one down, knock a
few walls down and use that for a rec
center. That old hospital just like the
school could have been used for something. Weve just got poor management
in this town. Its terrible.
I really appreciate the work and effort
that went into the Easter egg hunt. My
children really enjoyed it. Thank you.
I see in the Review where the number
of farm-out prisoners in the Anderson
County Jail has gone way down from
where it used to be. Looks like its less
than half what it was several months
ago. What is this doing to the jail and
the countys revenue and why havent
you had a story about it in the paper?
Anyone? Buhler?
We need to teach our children and
grand children to respect others and
their property. This needs to start at
home. Do not blame others.
Contact your
legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
e-mail pat_roberts@roberts.senate.
gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building,
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2715 Fax (202) 225-5124
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep Lynn Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-6601
President Barack H. Obama
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.,
Washington, D.C., 20500
(202) 456-1414 Fax (202) 456-2461
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
5A
LOCAL
2004: City leaders propose corn festival
April 20, 2004
City commissioners in
Garnett are now studying
a proposal from the Kansas
Department of Transportation
that would close five of the citys
10 street crossings at their intersections with the Union Pacific
Railroad line that traverses the
town, cutting off road traffic at
those crossings but improving
safety and cutting costs of their
maintenance for the state.
The Anderson County
Commission has approved a
sheriffs sale of 20 tracts for
delinquent taxes May 7 on the
courthouse steps. The tracts
belong to 13 owners. Three of
the tracts are located in Colony,
eight are located in Kincaid,
three in Westphalia, one in
Mont Ida and two in Garnett
as well as three in rural townships.
The Garnett city commission heard preliminary plans
for a corn festival to be held in
Garnett in the fall of 2005. The
idea for the festival was presented by Susan Wettstein, assistant to the city manager, and
Robert White, director of value
added programs for the Kansas
Corn Growers Association.
White termed the festival idea
as very preliminary and said
planning is still in the brainstorming stage. Wettstein said
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
her vision of the festival was
one that would draw a significant number of people from
out of town, so that community
organizations could raise significant money for local projects,
instead of having 10 or 15 chili
suppers.
April 21, 1994
Members of the Central
Heights board of education
have approved $9,000 in additional work to the schools heating and cooling system, to be
done in addition to work previously approved. Improvements
would allow the band room and
theater to be cooled if needed during spring and autumn
months. The heating and cooling systems at the school are
designed to only heat or only
cool at any one time. As a result,
some rooms may become too
warm during fall and spring
months while heating units are
turned on.
Work on the renovation of
the Anderson County jail is well
underway. Workers are rebuilding the locking mechanisms in
the jail, installing new fire doors
on the west side of the building,
clearing the way for a containment yard to the south of the
jail and installing new water
lines. When completed, the jail
will be able to hold 16 prisoners. It was originally designed
to hold 26 prisoners when it
was built in the 1920s, but more
recent federal requirements
specifying a certain amount o
square feet in jail cells per prisoner reduced the jails capacity.
April 19, 1984
A change in product lines
that will boost the employment
of a local manufacturer to 75
people by the end of summer
is underway in Garnett. Regal
Industries Inc., formerly Regal
Aluminum Company, is in the
process of changing over to a
new line of products that will
include the latest in competitive technology in the window
industry.
It is time to start thinking
about removing loose limbs
dangling in back yards, to trash
that old refrigerator or sofa,
and to rake, trim and paint during the citywide clean-up for
Garnett scheduled next week.
Delta Kappa Gamma members install officers
Ten members and one guest
gathered for the April 12, 2014,
meeting of Delta Kappa Gamma,
Gamma Lambda Chapter in
Paola at Spudleys Restaurant.
President Judy Carlson called
the meeting to order and led
in the Delta Kappa Gamma
pledge. Carolee Dorton introduced guest Margaret Hays.
Margaret gave a most entertaining book review, How to
Boil a Flamingo and 49 Other
Lessons in the Art of Being
a Lady. The book was written by Allison Vale and Allison
Rattle.
President Judy called the
business meeting to order
with the sharing of the secretary and treasurers reports.
Members discussed changing
the rotation of meeting locations between Paola, Ottawa,
Osawatomie and Garnett.
Shirley McGhee moved Garnett
and Osawatomie work together
to host future meetings. Motion
was seconded and adopted.
Marlene Riedel announced
the next Executive Meeting will
be held at her home Tuesday,
June 17, 2014. The meeting will
begin at 1:30 p.m.
Delta
Kappa
Gamma
International Convention will
be held July 28 through Aug. 1,
2014, in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Leadership Training will be
held Sat., Aug. 9, 2014, in Salina
at the Ramada Inn.
The ceremony of Installation
of Officers was conducted
with Susan Geiss serving as
Installing Officer.
The meeting adjourned.
Members were saddened to
hear of the passing of former
member Lucille Cummings on
March 11, 2014.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-22-2014 / Photo Submitted
This walnut peg helped hold together support beams for a barn that stood for more than 100
years.
This peg could hold up a barn
Id almost bet you took
one look at this picture and
said, Thats just another old
stick of wood. Well, let me
assure you it isnt. Its a solid
walnut peg that once helped
hold a large barns support
beams together. In fact it is
from the large barn that at
one time stood on my in-laws
farm west of Garnett. (T.W.
& Dot Roberts).
This barn was erected in
1868 when nails, screws and
bolts were scarce. Often, the
use of nails replaced wooden
pegs when the railroad came
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
through an area. Generally,
this type of peg construction was phased out after the
Civil War because of better
transportation and more fac-
tories making nails.
Almost all wooden pegs
were made of solid walnut or
oak. Wooden pegs, in addition to the joinery, made a
wood to wood connection,
swelling and contracting at
the same rates, if the grain
was lined up just right as
well, it swells perfectly
together; over the years, the
joint gets tighter instead of
looser, and makes for buildings that if done right can
last for years. In fact, this
walnut peg came from a barn
that stood for over 100 years.
Community Bankers Week
CBA: Go local during
Community Bank Week
TOPEKA April 21st 26th
is Community Bank Week,
and the Community Bankers
Association of Kansas (CBA)
is encouraging consumers
and small business owners to
bank locally with a community bank. By doing so, customers will make a hometown
investment they can be proud
of because community banks
put local deposits back to work
right where it belongs in the
community.
States, local governments,
and community banks recognize Community Bank Week.
Some community banks partner with local charities to host
special events, while others
promote economic development initiatives. Many community banks traditionally mark
farmers
3×5
the week by highlighting their
community service or financial
education programs.
Community banks help
area families achieve financial
stability while also driving
small business lending in their
communities all of which
helps their local economy and
community to thrive, said Jay
Kennedy, CBA chairman and
president of First National
Bank of Frankfort, Kan.
Throughout community bank
week, our goal is to celebrate
the unique role that community banks serve in our states
economic system while helping to educate consumers and
small business owners about
the benefits of banking locally
with their community bank.
We at First National Bank
of Frankfort are relationship
lenders that only thrive when
their customers and communities do the same, so taking care
of our customers and looking
out for the best interest of our
community is the way we do
business, said Kennedy.
About CBA
Community
Bankers
Association of Kansas serves
independently owned and operated banks of all sizes and charter types throughout the state
of Kansas offering political representation, educational training and networking opportunities. Their purpose is to promote the economic strength in
Kansas community banks. For
more information, visit www.
cbak.com.
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Shouldnt you be banking with
a bank thats strong on
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should be more than just a place to keep
staff are actively involved in our
communities because we care.
Join us
Friday, April 25
Noon – 5:30 p.m.
at our two Garnett locations and the
Colony branch.
Internet banking and e-statements.
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
SPORTS
Wellsville dominates AC in baseball
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Wellsville completely dominated all aspects
of the doubleheader as they
downed the Bulldogs 10-1 in the
first game and 15-1 in the second game.
The
Bulldogs
played
Wellsville solidly for the first
three innings in game 1, but a 11 tie was broken open with four
runs in the top of the fourth
inning.
Wellsville expanded their
lead with two more in the fifth
inning and capped off the scoring with four more runs in the
seventh to put the game out of
reach.
The lone run for ACHS
came in the bottom of the first
inning.
Preston Emperley was 2-3
and also reach based via a walk.
Vincent Trujillo was 2-2 in the
ballgame.
The Bulldogs did garner 9
hits, but Wellsville struck out
an impressive 13 batters for the
ball game in the victory.
Wellsvilles pitchers did a
nice job keeping us off balance,
ACHS head coach Jeremy Ball
said.
The second game of the
day was much of the same.
Wellsville pounded out 20 hits
and limited the Bulldogs to just
four hits in the night game.
Offensively we were off
balance and had trouble with
Wellsvilles pitchers off speed
pitching, Ball stated when
explaining his teams troubles
at the plate.
Wellsville used a seven run
third and then scored four more
in the top of the seventh to help
account for the rout.
Tanner Lickteig finished
the game 2-3, hit a double and
scored the teams only run.
Tyler Woken went 1-3 and drove
in the only run of the game.
Vikings softball split doubleheader with Oz
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
OSAWATOMIE Central
Heights traveled to Osawatomie
on Tuesday, April 15 and won
the first game of the doubleheader 5-3 before losing a wild
second game 17-13.
In the opener, the Vikings
got on the board in the top of
the first inning after Kenzie
Hayward had doubled and
scored on an error.
Hayward had her hands in
the next run as well in the third
inning. With two outs, Hayward
singled to center field. Following
a walk, Megan Davis singled,
driving in Hayward from second base to make the score 2-0.
In the top of the fifth inning,
Kirby Laird scored on a passed
ball and then Davis promptly
drove in Kinsey Laird to give
the Vikings a 4-0 lead.
Osawatomie clawed back into
the game by scoring two runs in
the bottom of the fifth and one
more in the bottom of the sixth
to cut the lead to 4-3.
The Vikings could breathe
just a little easier after scoring
one more run in the top of the
seventh. Laird doubled to open
the inning and would eventually score on a Whitney Kraus
double to take a 5-3 lead.
Osawatomie wasnt able to
rally in the seventh. They had
one base runner reach following
an error with two outs, but any
chance at a rally was squashed
as a pop out ended the game.
Hayward went 4 2/3 innings
for the victory. She allowed
three runs, two of them were
earned off of just 3 hits. Davis
came in to relive Hayward and
pitched the last 2 1/3 innings
and allowed just one hit and
one run.
In the second game,
Osawatomie took control with
an astonishing 13 runs in the
bottom of the fourth to take
control on their way to a 17-13
victory.
Offensively, the Vikings actu-
ally played a pretty solid game.
The Vikings held a 4-2 lead
before the big inning doomed
them.
The Vikings attempted to
rally as they scored five runs
in the top of the 5th and four
more in the top of the seventh,
but it wasnt nearly enough to
dig themselves out of the huge
hole.
The disastrous fourth inning
shouldnt have ever happened.
With two runners on and one
out, two errors in the next four
batters extended the inning
that could have been over with
minimal damage.
Despite the offense pounding out 15 hits and scoring 13
runs, nine errors and 10 walked
batters were far too much to
overcome for the Vikings.
Kinsey Laird led the team as
she went 4-5 and scored three
runs. Kraus was 3-5 with three
runs scored and drove in two
runs as well. Lindsey Folsom
was also 3-5.
Undefeated Wellsville too much for AC girls
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Wellsville began
the day at 6-0 and they played
the part of an undefeated team
as they destroyed the Bulldogs
15-1 and 13-3 Tuesday, April 15.
In the first game Wellsville
seized control early on and
never let go. Four runs in the
first, third and fifth innings
were far too much for the
Bulldogs to overcome.
After the first two batters of
the game reached base, Paige
Scheckel reached via an error
and Maddie Magner walked,
the Bulldogs would only be able
to muster two more base runners the entire game.
The Bulldogs were limited to
one hit for the game and struck
out three times for the game.
In the final game of the day,
the Bulldogs would get off to a
much better start despite losing
13-3.
Scheckel led off the game by
reaching by an error and that
was followed by a walk, but the
next three batters were retired
in order to eliminate any kind
of early threat.
Once again in the third
inning, Scheckel led off the
inning by getting on base and
would eventually score the first
run of the game following an
error.
Scheckel would score the
next run as well after leading
off the fifth with a single. She
would score on a double, which
was followed by a one out single by Alexis Lickteig to score
the final run of the game for
ACHS.
Wellsville didnt light up
the scoreboard as early in this
game. They would score one in
the first, two in the third and
one more in the fourth to hold
a 4-1 lead heading into the fifth
inning. Five runs in the fifth
inning and four more in the
sixth blew the game open.
Hicks vaults to 3rd at Blue Valley
OVERLAND PARK Callie
Hicks landed a 3rd place finish
in the pole vault and 5th in long
jump to help boost the Lawrence
Free State High School girls
track team to a first place finish in the 11- team Blue Valley
Relays Friday at Blue Valley
High School in OPK.
The Free State girls massed
a total of 117 points for the title,
trailed by runner up St. Thomas
Aquinas with 91, followed
by Shawnee Mission North,
Shawnee Mission South, Blue
Valley Southwest, Blue Valley
West, Blue Valley, Shawnee
Mission East, Shawnee Mission
Northwest, Blue Valley North
and Blue Valley Northwest.
Hicks vaulted 83 behind
2nd place finisher from Free
State, Alyssa Hicks, who also
cleared 83 on fewer attempts.
Hicks also
earned a 5th
place finish
in long jump
with a leap
of 16 feet 14
inch.
She
is
the daughter of Dane
and Barbara
Hicks of Greeley.
Hicks
Bulldog golfer wins Paola golf tournament
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
PAOLA – Spencer Walter finished
in a tie for first in the Paola
High School golf tournament.
Walter and Jordan Bulcock of
Paola both shot a 74 to finish
three strokes ahead of the closest
competitors.
The Bulldogs finished third as
a team behind first place Paola
and second place KC Christian.
Paola finished with a score of 313,
followed by KC Christian with a
346 and the Bulldogs rounded out
the top three with a score of 365.
Hunter Spencer of ACHS also
finished in the top ten overall.
Spencer shot an 87 which placed
him 10th in the field of 40 golfers.
Zach Miller finished in 17th by
shooting a 99. Quinton Sam and
Seth Wolken finished 26th and
27th respectively. Sam finished
the tournament with a score of
105 and Wolken was one stroke
behind at 106.
Rounding out the scoring
for the Bulldogs was Bryce
Feuerborn with a score of 122,
which resulted in a 37th place
finish.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-22-2014 / Kevin Gaines
Jasmine White competes in the long jump at the ACHS Invitational track meet. White took seventh in
the event while teammate Jessica McCullar took first.
Bulldog girls win ACHS Invitational
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Makayla Kueser
and Jessica McCullar helped
lead the way by combining
for seven gold medals for the
Bulldogs on their way to a first
place finish at the 8th Annual
Anderson County Invitational
on Thursday April 17th.
ACHS girls finished the meet
with an impressive 158 points.
The next closest team was
Paola with 125 points.
Kueser won gold in the 100m
dash, the 200m dash, high jump
and was part of the 4×100 relay
team that won gold.
McCullar excelled by winning gold in the long jump,
triple jump and was also part
of the 4×100 relay team with
Kueser. McCullar also chipped
in with a fourth place finish in
the 100m dash.
There were plenty of other
good performances on the day
for the Bulldog girls.
Gwen Sibley placed fourth in
the 400m dash to go along with
a 2nd place finish in pole vault.
She was also a part of the 4×400
team that finished fourth as
well.
The boys didnt fare quite
as well, as they finished with
18.5 points as a team. Paola and
Louisburg finished in a tie for
first with 142 points.
The top individual performances for the Bulldogs on
the day were Tyler Woodard
who finished second in the long
jump, the 4×100 team finished
in fifth place and Tyler Jumet
finished in sixth place in the
triple jump.
ACHS Track Individual
Results
Girls
Note: [event winner in parenthesis if not ACHS
athlete]
100m dash- Makayla Kueser 1st 13.31 sec
Jessica McCullar 4th 14.37
200m dash- MaKayla Kueser 1st 28.1
400m dash [1st – Makayla Burton (Spring Hill)
105.3] Gwen Sibley 4th 1:07.3, Conner Parks
6th 108.2, Bel Sibley 12th 109.50
800m run- [1st – Halle Norris (Eudora) 2:36]
Eliza Sibley 7th 2:48.90, Julie Hartman 12th
2:59.56, Morgan Egidy 17th 3:08.68
1600m run- [1st – Kelsey Balluch (Eudora)
5:48.12] Bailee Wilson 4th 6:11.75, Tayler Porter
6th 6:32.34, Morgan Egidy 13th 6:55.41
3200m run- [1st Macy Burke (Spring Hill)
12:25.28] Remi Hedges 10th 14:34.78, Bailee
Wilson 11th 14.35.52
100m hurdles- [1st Cass Tressin (Paola)
17.41] Jasmine Whilte 4th 18.24, Ellie Lutz
6th 18.80
300m hurdles- [1st Lauren Dunn (Louisburg 51.3]
Ellie Lutz 7th 57.7, Jasmine White 8th 58.34
4×100 relay- 1st – 53.0 sec (Jessica McCullar,
Ellie Lutz, Reagan Jirak, Makayla Kueser)
4×400 relay [1st – Eudora 4:26.5] 4th – 4:43.9
sec (Gwen Sibley, Conner Parks, Bel Sibley,
Reagan Jirak)
4×800 relay [1st – Paola 10:47] 4th – 11:41
sec (Bailee Wilson, Bel Sibley, Tayler Porter,
Eliza Sibley)
High Jump- Makayla Kueser 1st 410.25
Pole Vault [1st McKinley Mathews (Louisburg)
8] Gwen Sibley 2nd 76, Tregon Guernsey
5th 6
Long Jump- Jessica McCullar 1st 1410.5,
Conner Parks 3rd 145, Jasmine White 7th
131.25
Triple Jump- Jessica McCullar 1st 313,
Jasmine White 4th 294, Conner Parks 6th
289
Shot Put [1st Kenny Haley (Paola) 321.5]
Madison Martin 4th 304, Reagan Jirak 5th
296.5, Grace Urquhart 9th 2611
Discus Madison Martin 1st 829.5, Grace
Urquhart 12th 593
Javelin [1st Tiana Moala (Paola) 1080.5]
Reagan Jirak 4th 9911, Madison Martin 6th
832, Morgan Egidy 14th 661.5
Boys
Note: [event winner in parenthesis]
100m dash- [1st Austin Roebuck (Paola) 11.88)
Zach Hilliard 14th 12.5 sec, Lee Kock 15th
12.6 sec
200m dash- [1st Wyatt Sander (Louisburg)
23.68) Lee Koch 8th 24.9 sec, Zach Hilliard
11th 25.31 sec
400m dash- [1st- Doug Kuesser (Osawatomie)
53.9] Storm Pracht 8th 58.8 sec
4×100 relay- [1st- Louisburg 45.37] 5th – (Zach
Hilliard, Tyler Jumet, Lee Koch, Story Pracht)
Long Jump- [1st- Brandon Dofat (Spring Hill)
1811] Tyler Woodard 2nd – 189.25, Tyler Jumet
7th 182.25
Triple Jump- [1st- Justin Criddle (Paola) 384]
Tyler Jumet 6th 36
Shot Put- [Tanner Wright (Ottawa) 491.5] Lee
Koch 19th 350.75, Zane Phelps 20th
349.25, Wyatt Hulett 22nd 344.5
Discus- [Conner McMullen (Louisburg) 1678]
Zane Phelps 13th 977, Wyatt Hulet 19th
845.5
Javelin- [Conner McMullen (Louisburg) 1481.5]
Zach Hilliard 10th 1208.5, Wyatt Hulett
17th 9110.5, Zane Phelps 18th 865
Lancers track star brings home four medals
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
PLEASANTON
Rene
Rodriguez raced and jumped
his way to four medals at
the Pleasanton High School
Invitational on Tuesday, April
15th.
The girls finished the meet
with 15.5 points, which placed
them in seventh out of nine
teams. Cass Midway High
School won the meet with 168
points.
Lancer girl athletes finishing in the points were Laurel
Godderz, who finished seventh
in shot put (2710), fifth in discus (843) and fourth in javelin (852). Krystal Cooper finished sixth in shot put (29) and
Shelby Ramsey finished in a
tie for seventh in the 100 meter
dash (14.97 seconds).
The boys placed sixth with
36 points. Cass Midway High
School won the boys meet as
well with an impressive 191
points.
Rodriguez led the Lancers
with medals with a second
place finish in the 100 meter
dash (11.43 seconds), a fifth
place finish in the 400 meter
dash (57.63 seconds), a third in
the long jump (182.25) and a
second in the 200 meter dash
(23.71 seconds).
Cody Vermillion fared well
also. He finished sixth in the
100 meter dash (12.14 seconds)
and third in the 100m hurdles
(19.94 seconds).
Rounding out the scoring for
the boys are Evan Godderz with
a fifth in the javelin (1203) and
they also placed sixth in the
4×100 HOG relay (1:06.61).
Day 1 I felt a
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COMMUNITY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
CALENDAR
Tuesday, April 22
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – ACHS boys golf at
Osawatomie
3:30 p.m. – ACJH track at Central
Heights
3:30 p.m. – Westphalia track at
Pleasanton
4:30 p.m. – ACHS softball/baseball
at Osawatomie
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights
baseball/softball at Prairie View
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
7 p.m. – Greeley spring program
Wednesday, April 23
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – ACHS Academic Banquet
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
Thursday, April 24
8 a.m. – ACHS boys golf at
Spring Hill
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
7 p.m. – Westphalia spring
program
Friday, April 25
Recycle Trailer at Bush City until
Sunday
2 p.m. – Central Heights track at
Rossville
4 p.m. – ACHS track at Fort Scott
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights
baseball/softball at home
vs. Burlington
Sunday, April 27
6 p.m. – Senior Citizens Prom at
ACHS
Monday, April 28
Recycle Trailer at Greeley until
Thursday
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
11 a.m. – ACHS boys golf at Iola
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV baseball at
home with Prairie View
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights JV
baseball/softball at Iola
5:30 p.m. – AC Site Council
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade)
Den Cub Scouts and Wolves
(second grade) Den Cub
Scouts meeting
Tuesday, April 29
3:30 p.m. – ACHS track at
Burlington
4:30 p.m. – ACHS baseball/softball
at Prairie View
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights
baseball/softball at Iola
Wednesday, April 30
7 p.m. – Central Heights Academic
Banquet
Thursday, May 1
11 a.m. – Crest Middle School
track at Burlingame Invitational
1:30 p.m. – Colony United
Methodist Women at Colony
United Methodist Church
3:30 p.m. – ACHS track at
Osawatomie
4 p.m .- Central Heights track at
Prairie View
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
6 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
7 p.m. – USD 365 School Board
Friday, May 2
10 a.m. – ACJH track at Burlington
10 a.m. – Central Heights middle
school track at Burlington
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
1B
LOCAL
Do you have your Heeling for Health team yet? Richmond
Heeling for Health is fast approaching its
Saturday date of April 26th at the ACJSHS
track! Teams are signing up fast for the
6:00 p.m. start. It isnt too late to get your
team registered with Sarah Holloran, Team
Coordinator. Individual walkers are welcome and can register the day of the event
at the main registration table adjacent to
the track.
Love Lights are being sold for $5.00
each from Dorothy Miller, Janet Hermreck
or Connie Thompson. The lights will be
placed as luminaries with the honorees
name. They will be lit at dusk for the final
lap. The first and final lap will be led by
Everett Cox, the 2014 Honoree, and his
team. Each honoree on a Love Light will
be read during the final lap before the close
of the event. Love Lights are designed as
a way for community members and walk
participants to honor the special people
in their lives such as neighbors, grandparents, spouses or children who may be
dealing with a serious illness, be deceased,
or others they love.
Team captains should check their team
in at the main registration table between
5:30 and 6:00. All team members are encouraged to be there by 5:45. Teams are asked to
have at least one team member on the track
at all times for the duration of the event.
Teams are encouraged to set up their
team headquarters around the track area
and to bring food in for their team. No
cooking will be allowed inside the fenced
track area. Cow-Platty BBQ and Catering
will be the food vendor for the event. Call
Glen today if you want to pre-order a pulled
pork dinner at 913-256-8485.
A silent auction was added this year as
the committee was provided a team signed
KU Mens Basketball and an autographed
football by signed by KSU Coach Bill
Snyder. Drawings will be held throughout
the evening for prizes and chances to win
the quilt made by the Christian Quilters
will be available at the registration table.
The winners for the quilt and silent auction will be drawn just before the final lap
begins. We will again be holding a series of
kids games in the infield area. Committee
members, Steve Benjamin and Phil Bures,
are coordinating this effort and hope to
have some fun games to keep the little ones
busy.
Event sponsors include: Zook Excavating,
Garnett Rotary Club, Garnett Lions Club,
Turner Construction, Auburn Pharmacy,
Quality Structures Inc., WCNOC, Central
Mechanical Construction, Inc., Taylor
Forge Engineered Systems, Family Care
Center and Tom Adams Construction.
These sponsors help make the event possible so be sure to thank them for their
generosity.
Team registration forms can be gotten
up from Sarah Holloran at 785-204-2150,
thru the event Facebook page (Anderson
County Hospital Foundation Heeling for
Health) or from the Anderson County
Hospital Business Office.
Committee
members include co-chairs Diane Doran,
Leslea Rockers, Dr. Jerry Padfield,
Michelle Cunningham, Holly Reeder, Steve
Benjamin, Dorothy Miller, Phil Bures,
Sally Emerson, Janet Hermreck, Tracy
Brown, Erin Zook, Sandra Hamilton,
Nathan Cunningham, Connie Thompson,
Sarah Holloran, Stephanie Smith, Janis
Hightower, and Marcia Mader.
On the
hunt in
Greeley
Zig Zag
Sewing
Club has
meeting
Zig Zag Sewing Club had
its monthly luncheon meeting April 2 at Sirloin Stockade.
Janet Dietrich was hostess and
16 members attended.
Minutes and treasurers
report were presented and
approved.
President Grace Donham
and fellow officers shared
items they discussed at an officers meeting in January. All
members will be invited to offer
their input and suggestions at
the May 7 club meeting.
Laura Sutton and Mary Fagg
won door prizes.
During show and tell, several members displayed recently
completed quilting and sewing
projects.
The May 7 meeting will be
a potluck luncheon at noon at
Osawatomie Court apartments.
Loretta Carlton and Loretta
Crozier will host.
-Loretta Crozier, secretary
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-22-2014 / Vickie Moss
Brooklyn Strobel picks up packages of candy during the annual Greeley Easter egg hunt
Saturday, April 19. The event is sponsored by Lamba Beta sorority in Greeley.
When youre hot, youre hot
The 22 year-old refrigerator
in my office has finally gone
kaput, so Im now in the market for a refrigerator. I have
become my own study for sales
and most importantly, timing.
Some lucky refrigerator owner
is going to make a sale!
Note: Yesterday, I was not in
the market for a refrigerator,
but today I am. Very simply, in
one final mechanical gasp of
what is probably by now illegal liquid coolant, Ive literally
moved into the market for
a refrigerator.
Thats important to any of
us in business, because depending on a whole range of factors,
our customers move into and
out of the market for our products and services every day.
Anticipating the best time to
meet them with our selling
message means anticipating
when they are moving into the
market for what we sell.
Think of it this way: People
buy baby food…when? If
you said when they have a
baby give yourself a $1. Do
they always buy baby food? Of
course not- we hope by the time
the kids 21 or so he can feed
himself. So theyre in the market for baby food for a relatively
short time but when they need
it, they really need it.
Its the same with your product or service. Certain times of
the year; certain life circumstances; certain emergencies,
etc., move people into and out
of your market. A just-retired
person may be in the market for
ceramics classes; a high school
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
freshmans mom may be in the
market for basketball shoes; a
45 year-old balding guy may be
in the market for a Corvette.
Customers move into and out
of various markets all the time.
They may not always have been
there and they may not always
be there, but at any particular
time, someone undoubtedly is.
Thats why the idea of selling should be foremost in your
mind as a business person all
the time. If you are not in the
midst of selling something at
this period in time, you should
be constantly establishing your
brand as top-of-mind awareness
for the time when customers
start moving into your market.
Understanding how and why
people move into and out of the
market for your product is one
of the fundamental keys in selling to them.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to
him at review@garnett-ks.com
or (785) 448-3121.
Museum sets
supper date
Following a great annual
meeting with Richard Brummel
telling about Idyle Wild, numerous winter visitors, and some
great artifact donations, the
Richmond Community Museum
will open a new season with its
annual Potato Bar Supper.
The supper is Saturday, April
26, serving baked potatoes with
all the toppings and extras from
5-7:30 p.m. at the Community
Building for a donation.
The Museum will open at 3
oclock that day, as always, with
no admission charge.
Also in late April, the
Museum will host visitors
from the Appanoose Museum
in northwest Franklin County.
Other visitors through the winter were from Chicago, Topeka,
Wellsville, and several parts of
Kansas City.
Artifacts donated recently include an early kerosene
stove and starch kettle used
by Cleta (Strobel) McDonalds
grandmother, Kate Schneider,
in Richmond. The kettle was
then used by Mrs. Schneiders
daughter, Odie Strobel, and
later by Mrs. McDonald in her
early marriage years. She also
donated a wall telephone, an
item Museum folks have been
hoping to receive.
The original Richmond RR
Crossing sign was donated by
Calvin Pearson.
David Wittmans Richmond
High School letter jacket was
donated by his children; Don
Poss gave his U. S. Navy uniform and Frank Bayley his U.
S. Marine one.
Children of the late Tillie
and Laura Nilges gave the
Museum numerous archival
(paper) items, including many
obituaries and funeral folders
which are being added to the
Obit Albums. These are excellent historical records which
are alphabetized and easily
located.
The Museum will open for
the summer on Memorial Day
weekend and be open Saturday
and Sunday, 1-4 p.m., through
Labor Day weekend. Those
with things and paper items
from the Richmond area are
encouraged to remember the
Museum.
Mark your calendar for the
Potato Bar Supper April 26.
Providing quality
products and service
AD
1×2
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS 66067
30% Off Select
Red Tag items
for cash on furniture
&
30% Off Select in stock
carpet until April 30th
with the mention of
this Ad. Hurry in!!
Mon.-Fri. 8:30a.m. – 5:30p.m. Sat. 9a.m. – 4p.m.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE REVIEW BY CALLING (785)448-3121
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
LOCAL
County publishes first quarter expenses Lone Elm approves electric agreement
(Publlished in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, April 22, 2014)
(Publlished in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, April 22, 2014)
ORDINANCE NO. #44
AN ORDINANCE, granting to Kansas
Gas and Electric Company, a Kansas
Corporation, doing business as Westar Energy,
its successors and assigns, an electric franchise, prescribing the terms thereof and relating
thereto, and repealing all ordinances or parts of
ordinances inconsistent with or in conflict with
the terms hereof.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING
BODY OF: Lone Elm, Kansas
SECTION 1. That in consideration of the
benefits to be derived by the City of Lone Elm,
Kansas (the City), and its inhabitants, there
is hereby granted to Kansas Gas and Electric
Company, a Kansas Corporation, doing business as Westar Energy, hereinafter sometimes
designated as Company, said Company being
a corporation engaged in the business of selling
and furnishing electric power throughout the
state of Kansas and to the inhabitants of the
City, the right, privilege, and authority for a
period of twenty .(20) years from the effective
date of this ordinance, to occupy and use
the several streets, avenues, alleys, bridges,
parks, parkings, and public places of said City,
for the placing and maintaining of equipment
and property necessary to carry on the business of selling and distributing electricity for all
purposes to the City, and its inhabitants, and
through said City and beyond the limits thereof;
to obtain said electricity from any source available; and to do all things necessary or proper to
carry on said business in the City.
SECTION 2. As further consideration for
the granting of this franchise, and in lieu of any
city occupation, license, or revenue taxes, the
Company shall pay to the City during the term
of this franchise two percent (2 %) of its gross
cash receipts from the sale of electric energy for
use within the corporate limits of said City, such
payment to be made monthly for the preceding
monthly period. Gross cash receipts shall not
include other operating revenues received by
the Company, which are not related to the sale
of electric energy. Other operating revenues
include, but are not limited to, delayed payment
charges, connection fees, disconnection and
reconnection fees, collection fees and return
check charges. Company will use commercially
reasonable efforts to ensure the accuracy of
its records and of the determination of the
amount of gross cash receipts subject to the
fee provided for in this Section 2. At the option
of either the City or the Company and upon
written notice given by one to the other sent
at least (90) days before the fifth, tenth, or fifteenth anniversary of this franchise, the rate of
compensation hereunder may be renegotiated.
Any new rate of compensation that results from
such renegotiation shall be effective on and
after the fifth, tenth, or fifteenth anniversary
of this franchise. Notwithstanding anything to
the contrary in this Franchise, the fee provided
for in this Section 2 shall not become effective
within any area annexed by the City until 30
days after the City provides the Company with
a certified copy of the annexation ordinance,
proof of publication as required by law and a
map of the city detailing the annexed area.
SECTION 3. That Company, its successors and assigns, in the construction, maintenance, and operation of its electric transmission, distribution and street lighting system,
shall use all reasonable and proper precaution
to avoid damage or injury to persons and property, and shall hold and save harmless the City,
from any and all damage, injury and expense
caused by the negligence of said Company, its
successors and assigns, or its or their agents or
servants.
SECTION 4. After the approval of this
ordinance by the City, Company shall file with
the City Clerk, the Companys unconditional
written acceptance of this ordinance. Said ordinance shall become effective and be in force
and shall be and become a binding contract
between the parties hereto, their successors
and assigns, from and after the first day of the
first month after such acceptance is provided by
said Comply to the City after its final passage,
approval and publication as required by law,
and acceptance by said Company.
SECTION 5. That this ordinance, when
accepted as above provided, shall constitute
the entire agreement between the City and
Company relating to this franchise and the
same shall supersede and cancel any prior
understandings, agreements, or representations regarding the subject matter hereof, or
involved in negotiations pertaining thereto,
whether oral or written.
SECTION 6. This franchise is granted
pursuant to the provisions of K.S.A. 12-2001.
SECTION 7. That any and all ordinances
or parts of ordinances in conflict with the terms
hereof are hereby repealed.
SECTION IL The Company will file
this ordinance with the State Corporation
Commission of Kansas. Should the State
Corporation Commission take any action with
respect to this franchise ordinance, which would
or may preclude Kansas Gas and Electric
Company, a Kansas Corporation, doing business as Westar Energy, from recovering from
its customers any cost provided for hereunder,
the parties hereto shall renegotiate this ordinance in accordance with the State Corporation
Commissions ruling.
SECTION 9. A franchise shall be assignable only in accordance with the laws of the
State of Kansas, as the same may exist at
the time when any assignment is made. In
the event of any assignment of this franchise,
Company shall be released from all obligations
which are assumed in writing by its assignee
upon the signing by such assignee of an
assumption of the franchise being assigned.
PASSED and APPROVED this 17th day
of March, 2014.
/s/ Howard E. Ludlum,
Mayor
/s/ Lori Morrison
/s/ Wilma Morrison
/s/ Jean Johns
/s/ Eileen Johns
Attest:
/s/ Linda Ludlum,
City Clerk
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ENROLL FOR SUMMER
1×5
NOW
Summer I starts June 2nd
Summer II June 30th
Notice of primary election
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, April 8, 2014)
NOTICE OF PRIMARY ELECTION
August 5, 2014
A Primary Election will be held August
5, 2014. Filing deadline is 12:00 noon June
2nd. Candidates for the following offices will
be nominated by each political party which has
qualified to participate in the Primary Election:
One candidate for United States Senate
One candidate for United States Representative,
2nd District
One pair of candidates for Governor/Lt.
Governor
One candidate for Secretary of State
One candidate for Attorney General
One candidate for State Treasurer
One candidate for Commissioner of Insurance
One candidate for State Representative, 4th
District
ANDERSON
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RACERS LOUNGE
is here for ALL your party needs!
is a great place for your next event.
We have plenty of room with
2 extra fold out tables.
We can also provide coffee/tea upon request.
Our spacious patio is great for summer BBQs.
Call us today to schedule
your next party!
Located at the Garnett Inn & Suites
109 Prairie Plaza Parkway
(785) 448-6800
Phyllis Gettler
Anderson County Election Officer
ap8t3
AD
1×2
COUNTY
Let the Review do
all the work for you!
785-448-3121 or
800-683-4505
BECKMAN
MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
Our hospitality room and bar
Witness my hand and official seal this
3rd day of April, 2014.
Sell your stuff on
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
Class Reunions, Family Reunions, Birthday Parties,
Bridal & Baby Showers, Graduation Parties,
Bachelor Parties, Engagement Parties
The following officers will be elected in each
political party which has qualified to participate
in the Primary Election:
One Precinct Committeeman in each Precinct
One Precinct Committeewoman in each
Precinct
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
900 E. Logan
Ottawa, KS
785.242.2067
www.neosho.edu
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
One candidate for State Representative, 5th
District
One candidate for Member, State Board of
Education, 9th District
One candidate for County Commissioner, 1st
District
One candidate for Township Clerk in each
Township
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
DC Solutions LLC
Foundation &
Drainage Repair
Licensed & Insured
785-448-3056
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
Jo Wolken – Registered Representative
Securities offered through H.D. Vest Investment Services ,
Member SIPC. Advisory Services offered through H.D. Vest
Advisory Services 6333 N. State Highway 161, Fourth Floor,
Irving, TX 75038, 972-870-6000
305 N. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
(913) 256-9163
www.facebook.com/DC Solutions LLC
www.dcsolutions@osawatomie.com
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Truth was found on road
from Jerusalem to Gaza
In Acts chapter 8:26-40 we
read the account of Philip and
the Ethiopian Eunuch. Philip
the evangelist was one of the
seven men chosen to serve
the early church because he
was full faith and the Holy
Spirit. Following the stoning
of Stephen, the first Christian
martyr, many Christians
scattered from Jerusalem.
Philip became an evangelist in Samaria and preached
the gospel, worked miracles
and brought many to faith in
Christ.
In Acts chapter 8 an angel of
the Lord told Philip to go south
to the desert road that goes
down from Jerusalem to Gaza.
On the way Philip meets an
Ethiopian who is traveling back
home after visiting Jerusalem.
The man was reading from
the book of Isaiah the Prophet
and was confused whether the
Prophet Isaiah was speaking
about himself or someone else.
Interestingly enough he had
just left Jerusalem the religious
capital of the known world and
this had never been explained
to him.
This created an opportunity for Philip to present the
Gospel of Jesus Christ to the
man. The man was reading in
Isaiah 53:7-8, He was led like
a sheep to the slaughter, and
as a lamb before the shearer
is silent, so he did not open his
mouth. In his humiliation he
was deprived of justice. Who
Lone Elm Craft Fair
April 26 8:30am-3:00pm
Lone Elm Community Building
Plants, Flowers, Jewelry,
Quilts and More!
Homemade pies for sale!
Lunch by
Seekers Not Slackers 4-H Club
3B
SOCIAL
Cole, Wiederholt engaged
Ludolph 50th anniversary
Weekly
Devotional
by David Bilderback
can speak of his descendants?
For his life was taken from the
earth. Philip began with the
very scripture the man was
reading and told him the good
news about Jesus.
The Ethiopian had been
to Jerusalem at least in part
searching for answers to some
religious questions for we read
he had, gone to Jerusalem
to worship. At this time he
would not have heard anything
about Jesus for most of the
Christians had scattered due
to persecution from the Jews.
I find it very interesting that
someone could visit the then
religious capital of the day and
come away without the slightest idea about who the Prophet
Isaiah was referring to. But
God will not leave those who
pursue him without help. God
moved Philip from Samaria to
Gaza for the sole purpose of
the salvation of this man and
the movement of his word into
Ethiopian. After Philip told
the man the Good News about
Jesus the man asked to be baptized and then went on his way
rejoicing.
If someone does not tell us
the Good News about Jesus we
are just like the Ethiopian, we
struggle to understand the significance of Jesus. Sometimes
the only way people can understand about Jesus is to see the
passion we as individuals have
for him as well as the compassion we have for others. That is
really what Philip revealed to
the Ethiopian.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-22-2014 / Photo Submitted
Dave and Debbie Cole of Olpe
and Pat and Janel Wiederholt of
Hartford announce the engagement of their children, Megan
Cole to Andrew Wiederholt.
Cole is a graduate of Olpe
High School and holds a degree
in athletic training from the
University of Kansas. She also
earned a masters degree at
Kansas State University and
will be attending physical
therapy school at Wichita State
University this summer.
Wiederholt is a graduate
of Hartford High School and
attended Bethel College on a
football scholarship, earning a
bachelors degree in Physics.
He is also a graduate of Kansas
State University, earning a
degree in Civil Engineering and
is working on a masters degree
in Engineering Management.
Wiederholt is employed at
Bartlett & West in Topeka.
Wiederholt is the grandson of
Delton and Janice Hodgson and
the late Jack and Mary Lou
Wiederholt.
The couple plans to marry on
May 23rd at St. Joseph Catholic
Church in Olpe.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-22-2014 / Photo Submitted
Butch and Esther (Hamilton)
Ludolph will be celebrating
their 50th anniversary on May
2, 2014. The couple was married
May 2, 1964, at the St. Teresas
Catholic Church, Westphalia.
The couples children will be
hosting a dinner and reception
for the couple on May 3, 2014.
Their children are: Alton and
Brenda Ludolph, Westphalia;
Chad and Brenda Ludolph,
LeRoy; Wesley and Lindsey
QUALITY Service You DESERVE
FIVE STAR FACILITY
Duplicate Bridge meets
Charles and Peggy Carlson
won the duplicate bridge match
April 16 in Garnett. Joyce
Hastert and Anita Dennis came
in second. David Leitch and
Steve Brodmerkle were in third
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Short Term Rehab Outpatient Rehab
place.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club invites all area
bridge players to join us each
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the
Garnett Inn.
Inhouse Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapy
Wound Care IV Therapy Respite Care 24 Hr. Nursing Care
Specialized Alzheimers/Dementia Unit
601 Cross Street
BUILDING MATERIALS
620-364-2117
Burlington
Get your Review online at www.garnett-ks.com
CONTRACTORS
Guide
GUTTERING
Ludolph, Peck; Kenton and
Pamela Ludolph, Westphalia.
They have 10 grandchildren: Jeremy and Aaron
Ludolph, Westphalia; Chyler
and Chonnor Ludolph, LeRoy;
Zachary, Emma, Brayden, and
Brody Ludolph, Peck; Olivia
and Emily Christiansen,
Westphalia.
Cards can be sent to PO Box
115, Westphalia, KS 66093.
Get the job done right!
Check this handy directory
of contracting companies
before you take on that
home or business project.
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING
MASON CONTRACTORS
NOW
FEATURING
CARRIER
SYSTEMS!
Lawrence (785) 749-0600 Ottawa (785) 242-3714
Baldwin City (785) 594-3357
(620) 363-4327
GLASS
SEPTIC TANKS / SYSTEMS
M-F 7:30-5:00
Sat. 8:00-3:00
LIME & LIMESTONE
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
SIDING & WINDOWS
FLOORING
GAS – PROPANE
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
CONCRETE CONTRACTORS
Garrison Concrete Inc
Work Done Right
Replacement Repair Brand New
Dave Garrison Sr.
Dave Garrison Jr.
Estimator/Supervisor
Owner
785-393-0806
785-393-2833
www.garrisonconcreteinc.com
Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express
Visit The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com.
If you would like to advertise your business in this directory
call Stacey at 785-448-3121, or email review@garnett-ks.com.
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
LOCAL
FOR RENT
MOBILE HOME
MOBILE HOMES
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Comfortable – 1 bedroom
apartment, furnished. $325 per
month. References and deposit
required. No smoking, no pets.
(785) 448-2980.
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2 bedroom – 1 bath duplex, CH,
CA, garage, 1 year lease, deposit, $575. 448-4495.
ap22tf
Your Land is Your Down
Payment. And well match your
tax refund up to $8,000. Singles
starting at $39,900. Doubles
starting at $59,900. Less than
perfect credit Ok! 866-858-6862
Partners In Excellence OTR
Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass
EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012
& Newer equipment. 100% No
touch. Butler Transport 1-800528-7825 www.butlertransport.c
om
Drivers – CDL-A. Train and
work for us! Professional,
focused CDL training available. Choose Company Driver,
Owner Operator, Lease Operator
or Lease Trainer. (877) 369-7885
www.CentralTruckDrivingJobs.
com
Exp. Flatbed Drivers: Regional
opportunities now open with
plenty of freight & great pay!
800-277-0212 or driveforprime.
com
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
REAL ESTATE
Northside Cafe – accepting
applications for part-time a.m.
servers. Weekends a must.
Apply in person. 604 N. Maple,
Garnett.
ap8t3
Medical Billing Trainees
Needed! Become a Medical
Office Assistant! No Experience
Needed! Online training at SC
Train gets you job ready! HS
Diploma/GED & PC Internet
needed! 1-888-926-7884
Anthony, Kansas is seeking
Water/Wastewater Operator.
High School Diploma/GED and
valid drivers license required.
Applications and complete job
description: www.anthonykansas.org. 620-842-5434. EOE.
Open until filled.
Heavy Equipment Operator
Career! High Demand For
Certified Bulldozer, Backhoe
And Trackhoe Operators. Hands
On Training Provided. Fantastic
Earning Potential! Veterans
With Benefits Encouraged To
Apply.
1-866-362-6497
poss
1×1
property
source
schulte
1×1
AD
1×2
kpa testosterone
2×2
MISC. FOR SALE
MISC
1100 W. 15th, Ottawa, KS
Activities Director
Full Time
Pick up application
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m.,
105 1/2 East 4th Ave., (620) 2282597 or (785) 241-0586. nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services
to victims of domestic violence
and sexual abuse. Call (620)
365-7566 or Kansas hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
Country Clipper Mowers
Jonsered Power Equipment & Certified Dealer
Chain Saws Trimmer Sales & Repair
Chain Sharpening Lawn & Garden Equipment
Repair & Service We service all kinds of small engines!
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
AD
1×1
OPEN MON . – FRI. 8 A.M. – 6 P.M.
Performance Electric Company LLC,
Ottawa, KS has been in business since 1991 and
is curently seeking a commercial/residential
journeymen electrician that can perform all
electrical tasks with general supervision. We
offer competitive wages and benefits based on
experience. Must have clean criminal
background and have a current drivers license.
E-mail resume to gcolbern@swbell.net
AD
1×2
Schneider has freight to move right now!
Solo and Team Dedicated opportunities
Up to $5,000 sign-on bonus for team drivers
Experienced drivers and recent driving school grads should apply ($6,000 tuition reimbursement)
Weekly home time | Earn up to $80,000/year (based on experience)
No-touch freight | Newer equipment | Predictable work
SERVICES
Featuring: Stand up deck, Joystick or Twin Stick
Ottawa Village Manor
SERVICES
SERVICES
EOE M/F/D/V
FOR RENT
Apply: schneiderjobs.com/newjobs | Info: 800-44-PRIDE
CNAs needed full time 2 p.m. – 10 p.m.
We offer competitive wages.
Night Nurse position needed 10 p.m. – 6 a.m., also
accepting applications for PRN LPN and RN staff.
Part-time or PRN OTR
(Occupational Therapist Registered)
Please contact
Gailyn Ledom, RN
Staff Development Coordinator
at 620-364-2117 ext. 27.
601 Cross St.
Burlington, KS 66839
SPRING CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
27667 W. 303rd
Located 1 1/2 miles West of Paola, KS on Peoria St.
Saturday, April 26 9:30 a.m.
Now Hiring
Gates Corporation is a worldwide leader in the
production of hydraulic hose. We are a growing
company and are looking for only the finest
employees for our manufacturing operation.
TRACTORS
JD 4010 D, wf
AC 180 D, cab, 500AC loader & bale spike
IHC 606, wf, gas
Ford 4100, gas
TRUCKS & TRAILERS
Full-Time & Part-Time Positions
Available On Evenings & Night Shifts.
Please apply in person. Applications will be taken
Weekdays 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Applications must be completed in the facility.
GED or high school diploma required.
Pre-employment background checks & drug screen required.
Gates Corporation
1450 Montana Road
Iola, Kansas
Equal Opportunity Employer
Your hometown.
Their future.
Imagine the possibilities for
your community if everyone
designated just 5% of their
estates to hometown needs.
With the help of community
foundations, we can create
permanent sources of
funding for local charities,
schools, churches, parks,
and so much more!
Put the Spring back
in your Love Life
E.D. is Not Caused by Aging
It's simple to treat with the right
medications and doctors that
understand how they work.
And to prove it, call this week to
meet with our Doctor and get a
PSA & Testosterone test for just
$199
Kansas Mens Clinic
3636 N. Ridge Road Sye. 2
Wichita, KS 67205
Phone Number is: (316) 361-8233
Learn more at
keepfiveinkansas.com
Got Drugs?
Drop off your unused medications for safe disposal.
National Drug Takeback Day
Saturday, April 26
10 a.m. 2 p.m.
Visit www.ag.ks.gov
to find a location near you.
2 DAY ANTIQUE
ESTATE AUCTION
Sat., April 26 & Sun., April 27, 2014
9:30 A.M. Each Day
534 Beech St. Ottawa, KS
(1 Block North of West 7th St. Caseys)
ANTIQUES – COLLECTIBLES – PRIMITIVES – VINTAGE – PICKUP TRUCK
Antiques; Collectibles; Primitives; Crocks; Quilts; Elizabeth Grandma Layton
original drawing; Farm Collectibles; Collectible Tools; Kitchen Collectibles;
Many, Many, Many Antique & Collectible Smalls; Too Many to List. Many
have been packed away for years.
Pickup & Layton drawing sell Sat. at 1:00 P.M.
NOTE: Due to Cecils unexpected passing, we will continue to sell his collection
of Antiques. This will be the first of several auctions conducted in the next few
months. This is only a partial list, as we are still unpacking and sorting, many
packed away for years. Hundreds & Hundreds of items. Many, many, nice, neat
and unique items. Continue to watch website for Listings.
Next Spratt Estate Auction, Sun., May 25 & Mon. Memorial Day, May 26.
* Check www.kansasauctions.net/griffin for full listing and dozens of pictures *
Refreshments by Happy Trails Chuckwagon
CECIL SPRATT ESTATE
Kansas Attorney General
Derek Schmidt
Not paid for at taxpayers expense.
Griffin Auctions
TERMS: Cash or Check with
positive ID. Not responsible
for accidents or loss.
Ottawa, KS 785-242-7891
Buddy Griffin www.kansasauctions.net/griffin Allen Campbell
2008 Chev LTZ 3500 4×4 Duramax w/Allison tran,
dually, 143,000K. gn ball, diamond plate tool box
06 Dodge 3500, D, quad cab, 4X4, auto, Ranch
Hand Bumpers
95 Chev Silverado 2500, Xcab, 454, auto
91 Ford L9000 315 Cum, 9-spd
65 Chev C60 w/14 Omaha Std Bed & hoist, 52
sides
94 Dodge 2500 Xcab, Cum, auto
97 Ford 250, 4X4 fb, bale spike, 351/5-spd
87 Ford F150 X-cab, pu, no rust
87 Ford F150 pu
84 Chev 1500 305, auto
80 Chev 1T, 4X4, 454, 4-spd, fbed
79 Chev 3/4T, 4X4
93 Wilson 48 X 96 combo, air ride, 3 ext, sliding
rear axles
45 semi van
24 WW gn, flat bed
2 small 2-wheel trailers
6 X 6 utility trlr w/sides
20 trip axle trlr
HAY EQUIPMENT
NH 273 Hayliner square baler
Vermeer 605J & 605F
MF 570 rnd baler
NH 854 rnd baler
Vermeer 256 bale buster
Sitrex 10 wheel rake on Ogden Caddy
Gehl 420 10-wheel rake
JD hay rake
IHC hay rake
NI rake
JD 9 pull type sickle mower
JD 32 bale grain elevator
LAWN EQUIP – TO BE SOLD AT NOON
CC Zforce 60, 23 hp Kawa, 25 hrs
Toro 52O turn, comm
CC O turn, 48, comm
Dixon O turn, 60
CC O turn, 42, new eng
JD Sabre 20/48
JD L160, 38 hydro
Sears 6-spd, 20/46
JD L100 42
CC 54
Craft 42 w/bagger
CC 42 lawn sweeper
Sears sp 5 hp snow blower
MTD sp snow blower
Misc mowers
Sickle bar weed Mower
Sev JD lawn tires & wheels, new
RVS & ATVS
88 Carri Lite 37 1/2 5 wheel camper
97 Dutchman 33 4 X 13 slide, bumper, like new
96 Ford Class B camper van
Skamper pop up camper
Club Car XRT w/cab, dump bed, 1500 hrs
EZ Go golf cart gas
05 Honda Rancher 350, 4X4
Kubota RTV 900 util vehicle
Honda 300 4X4
Kymco mixer 150 2WD
Polaris Mag 425 4X4
Polaris 350 4X4
Suzuki 50 CC
Red Cat 150 CC
2 ATVs for parts
Harley parts
BOATS & MOTORS
80 Ranger Bass Boat, 115 hp Evinrude, troll motor,
2 depth finders
Polar Craft 17 w/75 hp Merc
Lowe 14 w/ 9 hp Evinrude
Bass Buggy plastic 2-man boat
5.5 Evinrude motor
9.0 Johnson motor
Trolling motor w/foot control
9.8 hp Merc motor
EQUIPMENT
Sunflower 9410-15 no til drill
NH 202 manure spreader
BH 3210 10 semi-mtd mower, like new
BH 7 HD mower
Krause 15. disc chisel
Unverth 325 gravity wagon w/extensions, nice
Land Pride 15 batwing
JD FB 137 7 grain drill/grass seeder
IHC #10 grain drill
IHC fh blade
NH 352 grinder mixer
Gehl 21 grinder mixer
JD 3-pt scoop
JD 3-pt plow
Ford 3-bot plow
IHC 2-bot plow
2 3-pt post hole diggers
EZ Flo w/grass seeder
JD 14 disk
3-pt 5 mower
Wilmar 3T fert buggy
AC 21 disk
Starline frail manure sprdr
3 4-wheel wagons w/sides, 1 w/hoist
Badger wagon liquid spreader
Caldwell 6 3-pt blade
JD 18 spg stooth harrow w/evener
3 harrow sections
Sraroni TC 710 3-pt 72 mower
Tree shearer for skid loader
Carson seed stripper
Koyker 500 quik tach loader, 3 months old
Hilift bale unroller
Artco 3-pt hi lift
PTO 3-pt seeder
Midland #908 terrace disc plow
Jet Flo 8 X 47 port auger
12 wheel disk, AC 13 field cult
13 Bush Hog
Western 2yd. Scraper
Case 90XT Skid Loader
MISCELLANEOUS
66 skid loader bucket
Haul-Mor 8 X 16 steel flat bed rollback, hyd
wench
2 small steel buildings 12 & 20
HD rnd pen panels
Sev bundles 1 to 2 rnd & sq tubing
Chain link fence
Sev steel posts
Salt spreader, hitch mount
Key machine w/blanks
SO battery impact wrenches & 3/8
3 cut off saws
2 new Good Year 22.5 tires
4 Mitchlin used 22.5 on wheels
Lots other misc tires & wheels
Lots misc feed bunks & hay feeders
Sev 300 to 500 gal fuel tanks, some w/pumps,
some w/stands
Galv 8 fence posts, thick wall
Steel wheels
300 guard rail
3-pt carryall
2 3 pt bale carriers
Lincoln 225 welder
Craftsman floor model drill press
20 gal air compressor
AC 262 cu in motor
4 – 4 X 6 rubber trlr mats
2 used 18.4 X 28 tires
PU bed off 99 Ford F250
Lots misc hand & power tools
Preifert Squeeze Chute
New Hydra 12v 1800# Feed Box
Many items too numerous to mention
NOTE: More consignments coming in every day. Announcements sale day take precedence over
printed material. We will sell 2 rings at noon. NO BUYERS PREMIUM. Some pictures on website.
TERMS: CASH OR NEGOTIABLE CHECK. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS. LUNCH AVAILABLE.
Sale conducted by Bricker Auction Services brickerauction.com
Bob Paola, KS Cell & Sale Day: 913-285-0162
Steve Harrisonville, MO Cell: 816-738-9091
Bob Penn: 913-285-0246 Dave DeGrande: 913-294-6515
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
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LOCAL
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5B
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SERVICES
Garrison Concrete Inc
Work Done Right
Replacement Repair Brand New
Dave Garrison Jr. Dave Garrison Sr.
Estimator/Supervisor
Owner
785-393-0806
785-393-2833
www.garrisonconcreteinc.com
Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express
AD
1×2
NOTICES
SERVICES
(785) 448-8345
Call Colby Wittman
785-204-1074
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Coliseum (I-35 & East 85th
Street N.) Buy-Sell-Trade Info:
(563) 927-8176
FARM & AG
FARM AND AG
Composted – horse manure.
Garden ready. $10 per ton + $2
per mile, delivered from Central
Heights. (785) 869-2345. ap15t4*
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (816) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
mc25tf
2007 – 20 ft. Lamar gooseneck
trailer. Car hauler, spring assist
ramps, hardly used. (785) 4480009.
ap22tf
(913) 594-2495
LAWN & GARDEN
COMPUTER
WORK
The Grass Guys
COMPUTER EXPERTS
Professional & Insured
WANTED
WANTED
Wanted – good used refrigerator, clean. Call (785) 448-3121.
fb25tf*
Hermreck
Lawns to mow
Commercial & Residential
1×1 Call Mike
PETS
WANTED
Colbys Lawn Mowing Service
has immediate openings.
NOTICES
Gun Show April 26-27 Sat. 9 5 & Sun. 9-3 Wichita Kansas
LAWN & GARDEN
PETS
Registered Shih Tzu – shots and
wormed. Male, $250; female,
$300; older males, $100. (785)
733-2699.
ap22t3*
Knaus Lawn Care
Free Estimates
Insured
Byron Knaus
785-204-2911
785-448-6777
Bennetts Lawn Service
Mow Trim Leaf Removal Clean Gutters
Call Bob at
(785) 304-0251 or
(785) 448-6534
Keims Greenhouse
785-218-1785 785-448-7108
10 miles west of Garnett on Hwy 31
then 1 mile south on Finney Rd.
Hours: M-Sat 8am – 7pm
See us every Tuesday at the Sale Barn!
little& john
Farm
Greenhouse
Little John Sherwood
1×1.5
785-835-7057
Seed Potatoes Onion Sets
Strawberry Plants Asparagus Roots
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . 14th Annual
Heeling for Health walk,
Saturday, April 26th, ACJSHS
track, 6-9 p.m. contact Sarah
Holloran for team information
at (785) 204-2150, 2014 Honoree
is Everett Cox. Thank these
sponsors for their help: Zook
Excavating, Garnett Rotary
Club, Garnett Lions Club,
Turner Construction, Auburn
Pharmacy, Quality Structures
Inc.,
WCNOC,
Central
Mechanical
Construction
Inc., Taylor Forge Engineered
System, Family Care Center and
Tom Adams Construction.
ap22t1
Happiness is . . . Treat your girl
to the Father/Daughter Boots
and Bows Dance, Community
Building, May 3, 7-9pm, PEO
Scholarship Fundraiser. ap15t3
913-548-3169
Anderson County is taking applications
for two MOWER positions and two
FLAGGER positions. Deadline to apply
is April 25, 2014 and these are seasonal,
part-time positions. Applications and job
descriptions are available at the County
AUCTION REMINDER NOTICE
Saturday, April 26th 2:00 p.m.
25309 NW Mitchell Rd., Garnett, KS
Offering 5 acres, m/l with nice 3 bedroom, 2 story
home & outbuildings including a 40 x 40 insulated
metal building w/concrete floor, rural water,
5 minutes from town.
AD
1×2
Beckman
3×3
Eight
Happiness is . . . A Community
Breakfast! Saturday, April
26th, 7am-9am, First United
Methodist Church, 2nd & Oak
Streets.
ap22t1
Happiness is . . . Lone Elm Craft
Fair, April 26, 8:30-3:00pm.,
Community Building. Lots of
items, lunch by Seekers-NotSlackers 4-H.
ap22t1*
June Cooper
The family of Clarke Starr would like
to show their appreciation and gratitude
to all the family and friends for the kind
thoughts, prayers, phone calls, cards,
flowers, memorials, food, visits of
friends and neighbors and travelers. We
appreciate the kindness and sympathy
shown to us by Pastor Bill Nelson of the
Methodist Church of Welda, the
musicians, Rosalyn Kellstadt and
Chaplain Lloyd Hauk, and the casket
bearers for carrying Clarke to his final
resting place at Welda, Kansas. Also, the
Welda community ladies for the delicious
meal and the use of the Welda
community building. A special thank you
is sent to the hospital staff, the doctors
and nurses at the Community Care
Clinic, the Home Health Care group, the
Community Care Connections and the
very, very special hospice nurses, also
the Feuerborn Family Funeral Home for
their guidance and support during this
difficult time.
With gratitude,
The Starr Family
AD
1×2
MACHINIST C- Candidates will perform basic
drilling operations, including setup and bit sharpening.
Assist in the operation of the extrusion and straightening
presses. Abrasive blast products in preparation for
cleaning, painting, or shipping. Operate forklifts, overhead
cranes, and jib cranes. Position requires basic machining
and forming skills, and basic understanding of drawings.
package. Persons seeking a challenge and opportunity to
innovate are urged to apply in person or send a
salary history to: hr@tfes.com.
KURTZ AUCTION & REALTY SERVICE
Exclusive agent for the Seller only
Darwin W. Kurtz
Broker & Auctioneer
785-448-4152
Sell to
29,000
$ 695
customers
for only
Joe Borntreger
Happiness is . . . Heeling for
Health will hold a silent auction
during the event for a KU signed
basketball by the 2013-2014 team
and coaching staff and an autographed football signed by KSU
Coach Bill Snyder. See at 6pm
on April 26th at the ACJSHS
track.
ap2t1
Call for terms or more information.
JAMES E. & CHARLOTTE A. COX – OWNERS
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
Happiness is . . . A Potato Bar
Supper! April 26, 5pm-7:30pm
at the Richmond Community
Building. Sponsored by the
Richmond Community Museum
.
ap22t1
Many thanks to those who sent
cards, flowers & notes on behalf of
my sister, Floy Jean Dietz death.
They were so appreciated.
208 N. Iron St., Paola, KS 66071 www.tfes.com AA/EOE
JB Construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Happiness is . . . Learning,
sharing and making friends at
Bright Beginnings. Now enrolling preschoolers for fall morning classes. Come join us for
our Open House on April 23rd,
5-6 p.m., 230 N. Olive, Garnett.
(785) 448-5943. Drawing for free
tuition.
ap22t1
Card of Thanks
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems, Inc.
is a leading manufacturer of large custom fabricated steel
products for the energy, chemical and aerospace industries.
Products include: pressure vessels, heat exchangers,
nuclear components and gas pipeline equipment.
Garnett, KS
plant for the position of:
previously
Wells Lawn Service,
with new crew
785.304.1843
Happiness is . . . YUUUMMMM
. . . concesssion stand by ClowPlatty BBQ & Catering. Preorder
food thru Glen for Heeling for
Health, April 26th, ACJSHS
track. Glens special this year
will be a walking pulled pork
dish – contact Glen Platt at
(913) 256-8485 for information.
ap22t1
Reach 29,000 readers in Anderson, Franklin and
Douglas counties – and beyond – when you run your
For Sale, Services, Auction or Help Wanted ad
in The Anderson County Review and
The Trading Post. Its almost a GUARANTEED sale,
and all for just $6.95 for 20 words (larger ads cost a
little more). Just drop by our ofce at 112 W. 6th in
Garnett or use the handy form below to print your ad
and mail with your payment.
Heading:
No. times ad to run:
Ad Start Date:
x$6.95 = Amount Enclosed
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 22, 2014
LOCAL
Crest music students compete
Calendar
April 17-County bus to Iola,
phone 24 hrs. before you need a
ride 785-448-4410- any weekday;
19-Easter Egg Hunt, Colony
Ballpark, children age 0-5th
grade, 9:30 a.m.; Crest Sym if
bad weather; 20-Easter Sunday;
21-Last Day of Brush Cleanup;
Seekers Not Slackers 40H Club,
Lone Elm community building,
7 p.m.; Jolly Dozen Club, City
Hall community room, 7 p.m.;
22-Earth Day; Allen/Anderson
Deer Creek Watershed, City
Hall community room, 8 p.m.;
23-Professional Day
School Calendar
17-Forensics Night at Crest,
6 p.m.; 18- No School; 21-No
School; 23-FFA to Paola
Meal Site
18-fish, macaroni and tomato,
peas, bread, sunshine fruit; 21Salisbury steak, mashed potato,
gravy, lima beans, bread, pears;
28-live music, Vision cards
accepted-baked chicken, tossed
salad, Caribbean blend veggies,
roll, crank-orange fluff. Phone
620-852-3450 for reservations.
Churches
Scripture presented at the
Christian Church Palm Sunday
was Excepts from the Gospels.
Pastor Mark McCoy presented
sermon The Story-chapter 26The Hour of Darkness. Mens
Bible study Tuesday mornings,
7 a.m.; VBS meeting April 27,
2 p.m. at Methodist Church;
Spring Banquet May 5 at 6 p.m.
at City Hall community room.
All women are invited. Bring
a salad and a guest; wedding
shower for Dustin Smart and
Rochelle McGhee.
Scripture presented at the
United Methodist Church Palm
Sunday was Psalm 118:1,2,1929 and Matthew 21:1-11. Pastor
Dorothy Welch presented the
sermon Cheers, Jeers, and
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
Tears.
VBS
The next VBS meeting
is April 27 at 2 p.m. at the
Methodist Church. Needed
are a pre-school teacher and
some leaders to walk children
from station to station. This
years theme is Workshop of
Wonders, Imagine and Build
with God. The date is June
16-20, begins at 8:30 a.m. and
dismisses at 11:30 daily.
WWCWC
Working Wonders CWC was
called to order by President
Danelle McGhee April 9 with
8 present. Shirley McGhee
opened with prayer. Genna
Gallaher served refreshments.
Roll Call was answered with
a Spring Cleaning Task. Bev
Wittmer presented devotions
Saturday Different than it
Appears from Matthew 16:21
and reading the story, Father,
I Wanted a Car Not a Bible.
Final plans for the Spring
Banquet, May 5 were discussed.
Julia Martin is the speaker and
will sing. Graduates this year
are Jacob Riebel and Kadyn
Utley. The summer picnic was
set for Fathers Day, June 15 at 5
p.m. at the city park. A wedding
shower for Dustin Smart and
Rochelle McGhee was set for
May 17 at 7 p.m. Due to several
members absence, they will not
serve ice cream at Colony Day
this year. Danelle closed with
prayer.
Arts and Crafts Fair
The 11th annual Arts and
Crafts fair will be held April
27, 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. at the Lone
Elm community building. An
assortment of items are for sale
embroidery, quilts, aprons, tea
towels, wood ornaments, yard
accessories, fruit and vegetable
plants, purses, childrens clothing and more. Proceeds go to
the upkeep of the community
building. Homemade pies will
be sold. Seekers Not Slackers 4H Club will serve breakfast and
lunch. Phone Mrs. Tim Moody
620-439-5528 if you have questions.
Directions: from Garnettsouth on 169 to 59/31 junction;
south on 59/31 eight miles to
Lone Elm
Crest High
Three Crest students will
compete in the state music
competition April 26 at Stuckey
Middle School in Wichita. At
the regional music competition held at Allen Community
College, Brandon Braillier, Ivan
Godderz and Laurel Godderz
each received the best rating
of 1 earning them the right
to compete in the state competion.
Around Town
Doris Moore observed her
96th birthday April 9. She moved
that day to Guest Home Estates
VII, 806 West 4th St., Room 106,
Garnett, KS 66032. Doris and
her husband, Earl who passed
away in 1997, moved to Colony
in 1966. He taught at Crest and
she gave piano lessons from her
home until they retired.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 06-29-2010 / Photo Submitted
Junior Seth Wolken was inducted into his state officer position as editor after winning the majority vote.
Wolken elected to state FBLA post
Anderson County FBLA
chapter has been active with
many events these past three
months. Our chapter has
participated with our chapter officer Seth Wolken and
his state office campaign,
and competed at state conference.
Everyone in the chapter
helped Seth with his campaign by making posters,
helping him be organized,
passing out items and helping participate in the skit.
Seth won his campaign for
state editor.
A few members, includ-
ing Kortney
to put together an Easter
Kirkland,
egg hunt for a local day
Seth Wolken,
care, Little Peoples Learning
Matthew
Center. Club members will be
Kirkland
hiding eggs filled with candy
and Tyler
on Good Friday, April 18.
Wolken parThroughout April and
ticipated
May, the club members will
at the state
be having a membership
Wolken drive and passing out offilevel by taking objective
cer applications for the 2015
tests. Results came back and school year.
the chapter didnt quite qualKortney Kirkland completify for Nationals but Seth will ed an internship for Factor
be attending as part of the 110 during State Leadership
executive board.
Conference. This was a wonThe chapter is planning to derful experience for her to
team up with the KAY Club add to her resume.
The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com
Celebrate
Administrative Business Professionals
Week
A Special
THANK YOU
to our
District Administrative Specialist
Jody Troyer
We appreciate all that you do!
From the Welda District Employees
We thank our entire staff
for their hard work and
dedication throughout the year.
Alisha adams
Kerry Allen
Tonya Arnett
Angel Betts
Kristen Boone
tanya covey
Beth Davis
Gerri Godderz
Caitlin Golden
Trena Golden
Lisa Headrick
Cindy Lickteig
Bonnie Lile
Linda Macklin
Martha Miller
Karen Mueller
Debbie Oswald
Susan Sander
Susie Sayers
Jenny Schooler
Mandy Sobba
Brytton Strickler
Lynn Wawrzewski
Carla weaver
Darlene Windle
Nick Windle
Kim Wuertz
Cheyanne Handly
The City of Garnett would like to
recognize its staff for their efforts in
everything they do to make Garnett a
great place to Live, Work and Play!
Colette McDonnell
Nancy Hermreck
Susan Wettstein
Diane Hastert
Donna Roberts
Jenny Ferguson
Joyce Martin
Kristie Kinney
Betty Jasper
Andrea Sobba
Shirley Benjamin
Sharon Rocker
Connie Fagg
Jackie Gardner
Erika Peine
Karlyn Hulett
Jennifer Schooler
Katy Holloran
Welda District 785-448-4800
In case of a pipeline emergency please call 800-324-9696.
131 W. 5th St., Garnett, Kansas (785) 448-5496
Thank you to
Amanda Jones, Pauline Hermann,
auburn
2×5
Emily Brooks, Mindy Powelson
Michelle Laiter, Nikki Sprague,
Donna Bowman, Linda McGhee,
Jeanette Young
dedication is appreciated!
Insurance Investments
www.fbfs.com
Aaron Lizer
305 N. Maple Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6125
Thank you for all you do!
Sheri Lickteig, Jim Hogan,
Sarah Hulcy, Chelsey DAlbini
Thanks for all your hard work and
continued support in the growth of our business.
Kandice Simpson
Branch Office Administrator
Joshua D. Nelson
Princeton
Richmond
Garnett
(785) 937-2269 (785) 835-6161 (785) 448-2284
Financial Advisor
112 E. 5th
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-7171
MEMBER SIPC

