Anderson County Review — April 26, 2016
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from April 26, 2016. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
April 26, 2016
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 2016 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Spring
Its spring!
Is In the Air
Time for a home project,
See inside.
Home, Auto & Bridal Edition A semi-annual supplement
(785) 448-3121
| review@garnett-ks.com
ACHS student
to ride bulls for
FSCC Rodeo Team.
Greeley students take
part in marathon.
See page 1B.
car repair or a wedding.
SINCE 1865 150th Year, No. 39
See page 6A.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
E-statements & Internet Banking
Member FDIC Since 1899
Missing womans body
found at reservoir
(785) 448-3111
Two men injured
in motorcycle,
dirt bike wrecks
Separate wrecks, hours
apart on Sunday injure
Olathe, Greeley men
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Two men were seriously
injured in separate wrecks a
little more than eight hours
apart, one while riding a motorcycle on the highway and the
other while riding a dirt bike
on a rural road.
The first wreck was reported to the Anderson County
Sheriffs Department at 10:44
a.m. Christopher Allen Belshe,
41 of Olathe, was headed north
on U.S. 169, driving a 2010
Honda motorcycle, when he
apparently swerved to miss
something in the road, according to the report. Belshe left the
roadway and struck some sort
of drainage point southwest of
600 Road.
He was taken to Anderson
County Hospital and then
taken by air ambulance to St.
Lukes Hospital on the Plaza in
Kansas City, Mo. According to
social media posts from friends
and family, Belshe broke both
hips and his pelvis, had internal injuries and surgery but
was in stable condition Sunday
night.
The second wreck happened
at about 7 p.m. Sunday on 2430
Road, just north of Spencers
Bridge in Greeley. Freddie
Turley, 44, of Greeley, and two
other people were riding dirt
bikes when Turley apparently
lost control and was ejected. He
was taken to Anderson County
Hospital and transfered to
another health care facility in
fair condition.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Vickie Moss
Recent storms
Little known about womans final journey drop 1.47 inches
Emergency responders, law enforcement and water rescue personnel check the area surrounding the dam at the Cedar Valley
Reservoir, about four miles from Garnett on 1600 Road, where the vehicle of a missing woman was found. The body of the woman,
identified as Sharon Miller, 74 of Garnett, later was found submerged in the water somewhere near the dam.
Woman left for hospital early
Sunday morning, found hours
later in lake 4 miles away
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Many questions remain
about the death of a woman who left her
home early Sunday morning, apparently headed to the hospital. But somehow,
she ended up more than four miles
away, submerged in water near the dam
at Cedar Valley Reservoir.
The body of Sharon Miller, 74 of
Garnett, was found at 6:10 p.m. Sunday,
more than 12 hours after she left her
home, Garnett Police Chief Kevin
Pekarek said. A relative who posted
a missing person alert on Facebook
before her body was found Sunday said
she left home at about 5:30 a.m. Sunday
in her new, red Malibu sedan after tell-
ing her husband she was going to the
Anderson County Hospital emergency
room with an eye issue. The hospital is
several blocks from her home, but more
than four miles from the reservoir.
After she didnt come home, Millers
husband called police at 1:39 p.m. A
police officer looking for Miller checked
the reservoir and found her car parked
near the dam, but Miller was nowhere
in sight.
Colonys water rescue team and
Anderson County rescue and dive teams
were called to search the water, and officials later requested assistance from the
Franklin County dive team. Her body
was found more than two hours later in
the water, Pekarek said, but he did not
know where it was located or how far it
was from the bank.
Its not known why Miller was at the
reservoir, Pekarek said.
Its something you scratch your
head about, Pekarek said. Officers
talked to a lot of people. There were no
alarm bells that went off.
Officers were told Miller enjoyed
driving to area lakes and looking at
the water, Pekarek said. But it was not
known how she ended up in the water.
Pekarek said he did not know if the
woman had any specific health issues.
The area where Miller died has
been the site of other fatalities in previous decades. Though swimming isnt
allowed at the reservoir, the sheer bluff
and its 30-40 foot drop to the water has
been a favorite jumping spot for illegal
swimmers, but a rock outcropping at
the bottom makes it particularly dangerous. The spot claimed the life of a
father swimming there with family several years ago, and a teenager drowned
there inside a vehicle after it rolled off
the bluff.
An obituary for Miller has not yet
been released.
More rain expected
this week, but area still
2 inches below normal
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – The nearly 1 1/2
inches of rain that fell last week
added 50 percent to the total
rainfall so far this year. More
rain is expected this week, but
it will take more than 2 inches
to catch up to normal precipitation levels.
Its been a dry year so far,
with a total of just 7.38 inches
of rain since 2016 began. By the
end of April, normal rainfall
for this area is expected to be
about 9.71 inches.
Storms started dumping rain
over the area Monday, April 18,
and at least a small amount of
rain fell every day until Friday,
followed by a small amount
overnight Sunday and into
Monday morning. The most
rain fell Monday, April 18, with
0.72 inches. Another 0.58 inches fell between Wednesday and
Thursday morning. The total
last week was 1.47 inches.
But the total rainfall for the
month of April so far is just
1.65 inches. Thats significantly below normal; the average
rainfall in April is 3.98 inches.
Theres a chance that April
can end strong, though. Rain
and thunderstorms are predicted every day this week, according to the National Weather
Service at Topeka. The lowest
chance is Wednesday night,
with just 20 percent. Thursday
SEE RAIN ON PAGE 3A
State budget cuts delay Welda highway project; bridge work continues
Project would have fixed
curves, hills on highway
between Welda and Garnett
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
TOPEKA – A project to improve the
highway between Garnett and Welda
has been delayed indefinitely because
of state budget cuts.
The Kansas Department of
Transportation last week announced
it will delay two categories of road
projects scheduled for fiscal years 2017
and 2018. That includes a reconstruction project that would have improved
U.S. 169 between Welda and Garnett, a
nine-mile stretch of road with several
curves and hills. It would have been a
modernization project projects that
reconstruct existing roadway, widen
shoulders, flatten hills, straighten
curves, etc. The project was expected
to cost a little more than $25 million;
bids were to be let in March 2017.
The latest round of budget cuts do
not impact projects already under construction, such as the Pottawatomie
bridge replacement on U.S. 59 north
of Garnett. The concrete deck for the
bridge was poured Friday. The project
is expected to be completed this summer, perhaps as early as July.
The new transportation budget
delays include 14 projects in FY 2017
that have an estimated construction
cost of $271 million; 9 projects in FY
2018 that have an estimated construction cost of $247 million; and two projects in FY 2019 that have an estimated
construction cost of $35 million.
The two categories delayed are
modernization and expansion projects, which add capacity to the highway system.
Most of the delayed projects are in
other areas of the state, but two nearby counties also are affected. They
include:
K-31 from Osage City east to U.S.
75, a two-lane reconstruction project
covering seven miles with an estimated cost of $20 million.
K-68 in Miami County, a frontage
road from Somerset Road east for 0.3
miles with a cost of $2.26 million.
SEE HIGHWAY ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Vickie Moss
Crews with B & B Bridge Company LLC, pour the concrete deck Friday, April 22, at the site of a new bridge over the
Pottawatomie Creek on U.S. 59 north of Garnett. It will replace a bridge built in 1957 and is part of KDOTs T-WORKS, a
10-year, $8 billion transportation program, but is not affected by the recent transportation budget cuts. The new bridge is
expected to be completed later this summer, perhaps as early as July.
Direct mail services. We print and mail your materials anywhere! Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
LOCAL
NEWS IN
BRIEF
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS APRIL 11
C, D TAGS DUE
License plate renewas for all
individuals whose last name
begins with C and D are due by
Friday, April 29, at the Anderson
County Treasurers Office.
FOOD DISTRIBUTION
The
Emergency
Food
Assistance Program Distribution
will be 4 p.m. Thursday, April
28, at the Anderson County
Fairgrounds Quonset Hut building.
SPRING CONCERT
The Garnett Area Community
Band will have a Spring Concert
of Music Favorites at 3 p.m.
Sunday, May 1, at the auditorium at Anderson County Jr./
Sr. High School. Refreshments
available for a free-will donation.
WESTPHALIA ALUMNI
The Westphalia Annual Alumni
Party will be from 8 p.m. to 11
p.m. Saturday, May 7 at the
Westphalia Elementary School.
Admission is $10 and includes
sandwich, chips and soda.
Music provided by DJ Ricky
Rios of Garnett. Everyone invited.
GHS CLASS OF 1976
The Garnett High School Class
of 1976 will have a 40-year
reunion June 17 and 18. For
details see Garnett High School
Class of 76 on Facebook or
contact Rick Feuerborn at (785)
448-2975. Early registration by
May 27 is $15 per person, $25
per couple. Late registration is
$20 per person, $30 per couple.
GO-KART HELP NEEDED
Garnett Go Kart Road Races are
being held in Garnett May 14-15
and August 13-14. The event
organizers are looking for corner
spotters, flagmen, gate registration personnel, organization to do
concessions and other positions.
Please call to and leave your information and availablity at 785-4483826.
BICYCLE SAFETY RODEO
A Bicycle Safety Rodeo is planned
for 10 a.m. to noon Saturday,
May 14, at the Garnett Depot. It
is sponsored by the Friends of
the Prairie Spirit Rail Trail for students in kindergarten through sixth
grade. Bring bicycles for inspections, learn how to ride safely and
earn certificates of completion.
Drawings for two new bicycles and
helmets.
LIBRARY FUNDRAISER
The Richmond Library is having its Spring Fundraiser Dinner
on Saturday, April 30, at the
Richmond Community Building.
The dinner will be a Taco Dinner
from 4:30 to 8 p.m. The library is
also having a raffle. Tickets can
be purchased from any library
board member or at the library.
Tickets will also be sold right up
to the drawing, at around 8 p.m.
the night of the dinner. Free will
donation for the meal. Take out
available.
N2 Nw4 28-19-20; & Tract 2: N2
N2 Nw4 Sw4 21-19-20 & Tract 3:
Se4 Sw4 21-19-20 & Tract 4: Sw4
Sw4 21-19-20 Less S2 Sw4 Sw4
21-19-20; & Tract 5: Beg 53.36
Rods East Of Swcor Sw4 Sw4,
Thence North 40 Rods, Thence
East 26.68 Rods, Thence South
40 Rods, Thence West 26.68
Rods To Pob; All In Se4 Sw4 Sw4
21-19-20; & Tract #6: E2 Ne4
Nw4 28-19-20 & All That Part Of
Section 28 Lying West Of (The
Old) County Road; All In 28-19-20.
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on April 11, 2016 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance: Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, 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. He presented paperwork for the Federal
Fund Exchange for commission
approval. Commission signed
paperwork. Alan Hire and Lester
looked at the lighting that BG
Consultants had scheduled for the
shop. They have taken out about
a third of the lights as there were
a lot more than needed.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM
due to no further business.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Capital One Bank vs. Randy G.
Hermreck, judgment for $1,232.36
plus costs and interest.
Bobs Supersaver dba Country
Mart Garnett vs. Kim Dunlap, dismissed.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
April 15, Brian Richard Sommer
and Emily Ann Ball.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Merranda Smitherman vs. Otis
Smitherman, petition for divorce.
Rae J. Newland vs. Stephen J.
Newland, petition for divorce.
LAND TRANSFERS
LIMITED ACTION FILED
April 14, Wesley W Fritz
And Christine E Fritz To Mary
L Nearhood, Beg 75 North
Of Secor Lot 1 Blk 61 City Of
Greeley, Thence North 80, More
Or Less, Thence West To East
Line Of Missouri Pacific Railroad
R/W, Thence In Southwesterly
Direction To Pt Directly West Of
Pob, Thence East To Said Pob;
All Of Which Tract Of Land In
Located In Blk 61 In Said City Of
Greeley;
April 15, Thomas F Galey To
Aaron Lizer Enterprises Llc, All Of
Lots 120, 122, 124, 126, 128, 130,
132 & 134 In Blk 20 In What Was
Formerly Orchard Park Addition
To City Of Garnett, Being Part Of
Ne4 25-20-19
April 15, Catherine A Barnes
And Michael W Barnes To Double
Z Partnership, Lots 26 & 27 Blk
2 New Orchard Park Addition To
City Of Garnett; & Lots 28, 29, 30
& 31 Less West 63 Thereof, Blk
2 New Orchard Park Addition To
City Of Garnett;
April 15, Ryan A Walter And
Carla J Walter To Gregory J Perry,
Amelia Erickson And Nathan
Erickson, Tract 2: A Tract Of Land
In The Se/4 Of 34-20-19; Tract 3:
A Tract Of Land In Se/4 Of 34-2019.
April 15, Pauline A Hermann To
Kelly Flynn Williams, All Of Lot 3
Blk 2 Bryson Addition To City Of
Garnett.
April 15, Lynn Ervin Gordon
Jr To H Kevin Ryan And Yvonne
E Ryan, North 90 Acres Of Ne4
35-20-18 & South 70 Acres Of
Ne4 35-20-18
Aril 18, Mark Rockers Jr, A/K/A,
Mark J Rockers Jr, And Joan
Rockers A/K/A Joan M Rockers
To Mark J Rockers Jr, Trustee,
And Joan M Rockers Trustee,
Rockers Family Revocable Trust
U/T/A Dated 4-18-2016, Tract 1:
Se4 & E2 Ne4 & E2 E2 Nw4 Ne4
20-19-20 & S2 Nw4 Sw4 & S2
N2 Nw4 Sw4; & Ne4 Sw4; Tract
2: N2 N2 Nw4 Sw4 21-19-20
&; Tract 3: Se4 Sw4 21-19-20
& Tract 4: Sw4 Sw4 21-19-20
Less S2 Sw4 Sw4 21-19-20; &
Tract 5: Beg 53.36 Rods East Of
Swcor Sw4 Sw4, Thence North 40
Rods, Thence East 26.68 Rods,
Thence South 40 Rods, Thence
West 26.68 Rods To Pob; All In
Se4 Sw4 Sw4 21-19-20; & Tract
#6: E2 Ne4 Nw4 28-19-20 & All
That Part Of Section 28 Lying
West Of (The Old) County Road;
All In 28-19-20;
April 18, Mark J Rockers Jr,
Trustee, Joan M Rockers Trustee
And Rockers Family Revocable
Trust U/T/A Dated 4-18-2016 To
Rockers Family Farm Llc, Tract
1: Se4 & E2 Ne4 & E2 E2 Nw4
Ne4 20-19-20 & S2 Nw4 Sw4 &
S2 N2 Nw4 Sw4; & Ne4 Sw4; All
In 21-19-20; & West 60 Acres Of
Miami County Medical Center
Inc., vs. Pamela S. and Robert L.
Hennigh, asking for $794.63 plus
costs and interest.
Portfolio Recovery Associates
LLC vs. Amanda Weller, asking for
$783.10 plus costs and interest.
Westar Energy Inc. vs. Bethany
R. Bell, asking for $879.37 plus
costs and interest.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Aaron C. Knight, dismissed.
Ronald L. Bowling, dismissed.
Jasten Arthur Bechtel, diversion, $364 fine.
Rufus Brooks Boswell, diversion, $333 fine.
Parker Ryan Elgin, $231 fine.
Reginald Earl Finch, $153 fine.
Alexandra Nichelle Ford, disposed due to failure to appear.
Jeremiah Lee Johnson, $183
fine.
Billy Wilson Kemp, $153 fine.
Timothy Ryan Lanzone, disposed due to failure to appear.
Jessica Marie Robertson, $153
fine.
Corbin Lee Roush, $165 fine.
Austin Kristopher Schafer, $198
fine.
Christopher C. Schultz, disposed due to failure to appear.
Stefanie C. Tapke, diversion,
$458 fine.
Zach V. Thomas, $153 fine.
Mary Trotter Woolridge, $153
fine.
Other:
Michael Wayne Peres, no vehicle registration, dismissed.
Monte L. Mason, taking or dealing in wildlife, $208 fine.
Miquel Wayne Smith, driving on
left in no passing zone, disposed
due to failure to appear.
GARNETT MUNICIPAL COURT
CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Catrena E. Boots, Topeka, 51
mph in a 30 mph zone, $225 fine.
William Arthur Bundy, Liberty,
Mo., 42 mph in a 30 mph zone,
$150 fine.
Michael Joseph Courtemanche,
Bluefield, W.Va., 44 mph in a 30
mph zone, $150 fine.
Tanya R. Ewert, Garnett,, 32
mph in a 20 mph zone school
zone, $250 fine.
Hayes
Nathan
Farwell,
Fredonia, 39 mph in a 30 mph
zone, $125 fine.
Stephanie
Lynn
Jones,
Lawrence, 42 mph in a 30 mph
zone, $150 fine.
Andee Janaye Kepner, 42 mph
in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Keith E. Kratzberg, Garnett, 57
mph in a 30 mph zone, $180 fine.
George R. Milleret Jr., Bixby,
Okla., 39 mph in a 30 mph zone,
$125 fine.
Laura Marie Moley, Shawnee,
RECYCLE!
46 mph in a 30 mph zone, $180
fine.
Michael L. Sitler, Garnett, 43
mph in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Kelly D. Warren, Ottawa, 42
mph in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Donald R. Welsh, Garnett, 41
mph in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Jerry L. Wilkins, Galena, 42
mph in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Julius Wyatt, Lawrencevillel,
Ga., 51 mph in a 30 mph zone,
$225 fine.
Luke Potter Yocham, Iola, 42
mph in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Mitchell Dan Highberger,
Westphalia, $10 fine.
Travis S. Wilson, Garnett, child
passenger safety restraint, $60
fine.
Other:
Jimmy Don Hart, Lane, fishing
without a trout permit, $75 fine.
Lori Ann Hart, Lane, fishing
without a trout permit, $75 fine.
Richard E. James, Gas, disobey traffic control signal, $125
fine.
Michele Elizabeth Lutz, Garnett,
limitations on backing, $125 fine.
Scott D. Schulte, three counts
of failure to register dog, $200
total fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
April 13, a report of disorderly
conduct in the 300 block of South
Willow Street.
April 15, a report of burglary
and theft of a 48 inch 3D television
and cell phone in the 200 block of
West Ninth Street.
April 16, a report of burglary
and theft of a microphone and guitar strap in the 600 block of East
Second Street.
April 16, a report of disorderly
conduct in the 700 block of East
Fourth Avenue.
April 17, a report of purchase
of liquor by a minor and furnishing
alcohol to a minor in the 100 block
of Prairie Plaza Parkway, Garnett.
April 11, a report of theft of a
bra and two pairs of underwear on
South Main Street.
Arrests
April 6, Joshua Hoke, Lawrence,
on suspicion of criminal sodomy,
indecent liberties with a child.
April 7, Matthew Daly, Garnett,
on suspicion of DUI, no vehicle
liability insurance, consumption of
liquor by a minor, no valid drivers
license and reckless driving.
April 8, Wayne Kirkland,
Garnett, on suspicion of aggravated battery, criminal damage to
property, criminal restraint, interference with a law enforcement
officer, intimidation of a witness.
April 9, Matthew Daly, Garnett,
on suspicion of purchase of liquor
by a minor, disorderly conduct.
April 9, Charles Foster,
Richmond, on suspicion of DUI.
April 10, Alexandra Lehman,
Garnett, on suspicion of possession of drugs, possession of drug
paraphernalia, operate a vehicle
without a license.
April 12, Zachary Archer,
Garnett, on suspicion of no vehicle liability insurance and no
vehilce registration.
April 14, Robert Soulia, Garnett,
on suspicion of disorderly conduct.
April 14, Michael Malone,
Garnett, on suspicion of disorderly
conduct.
April 16, Robert Soulia, Garnett,
on suspicion of disorderly conduct.
April 17, Maryssa Lutz, Garnett,
on suspicion of purchase of liquor
by a minor.
April 17, Ethan Pracht
Westphalia, on suspicion of furnishing alcohol to a minor.
April 19, David Olsen, Garnett,
on a warrant.
April 19, David Short, Garnett,
on a warrant.
April 19, Timothy Fagg, Garnett,
on a warrant.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
April 13k a report of criminal
damage to a door handle at the
intersection of U.S. 59/169.
Accidents
April 8, a vehicle driven by Kelli
L. Chewy, 31, Jay, struck a deer
on U.S. 169 near U.S. 59.
JAIL LOG
Robert David Soulia, 58,
Garnett, was booked into jail April
14 by Garnett Police Department
on suspicion of disorderly conduct. Bond set at $500.
Christopher Estell Cutshaw,
20, Louisburg, was booked into
jail April 14 by Miami County
Sheriffs Department on suspicion
of domestic battery. Bond set at
$1,000.
Christopher Steven Dibben,
29, Bucyrus, was booked into jail
April 14 by Miami County Sheriffs
Department on a warrant. No
bond.
Dustin Edward Floyd, 27,
Olathe, was booked into jail April
14 by Miami County Sheriffs
Department on suspicion of
domestic battery. No bond.
Nelson Reynaldo Lopez, 39,
Paola, was booked into jail April
14 by Miami County Sheriffs
Department on suspicion of DUI.
Bond set at $25,000.
Andrew William Benjamin, 28,
Colony, was booked into jail April
15 by Anderson County Sheriffs
Department on a 48-hour writ.
Robert David Soulia, 58,
Garnett, was booked into jail April
16 by Garnett Police Department
on suspicion of disorderly conduct. Bond set at $500.
Ethan William Pracht, 24,
Westphalia, was booked into
jail April 17 by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Bond
set at $500.
Richard Ernest McDonald, 57,
Roscoe, Ill., was booked into
jail April 18 by Anderson County
Sheriffs Department on suspicion
of driving while suspended. Bond
set at $500.
George Lincoln Ward, 42,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
April 18 by Miami County Sheriffs
Department on suspicion of rape.
Bond set at $500,000.
Albert Luis Escapite, 27,
Norwalk, Calif., was booked into
jail April 19 by Douglas County
Sheriffs Department on suspicion
of distribution of drugs. Bond set
at $35,000.
Alicia Erin Langford, 29,
Nevada, was booked into jail April
19 by Douglas County Sheriffs
Department on suspicion of probation violation. No bond.
David Duane Olsen, 54,
Garnett, was booked into jail April
19 by Garnett Police Department
on a warrant. Bond set at $100.
David Ivan Short, 46, Garnett,
was booked into jail April 19 by
Garnett Police Department on a
warrant. Bond set at $835.
Timothy Allen Fagg, 53,
Garnett, was booked into jail April
19 by Garnett Police Department
on a warrant. Bond set at $300.
Patience Jane Theiss, 32,
Osawatomie, was booked into
jail April 20 by Anderson County
Sheriffs Department on a warrant
for failure to appear. Bond set at
$10,000.
JAIL ROSTER
Joseph Daulton was booked
into jail August 15 for Anderson
County, bond set at $15,000.
Nathanael Talbert was booked
into jail August 28 for Anderson
County, bond set at $100,000.
David Gordon was booked into
jail December 11 for Anderson
County, serving sentence until
July 13, 2016
Chad Mueller was booked
into jail January 26 for Anderson
County with 3 bonds.
Jason Schwenk was booked
into jail February 1 for Anderson
County, bond set at $7,500.
David Coon was booked into
jail on January 20 for Anderson
County. No bond info.
Jeremy Smith was booked into
jail February 17 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $7,500.
John Miller was booked into jail
March 11 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $2,500.
Dawn Smith was booked into
jail March 25 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $5,000.
Wayne Kirkland was booked
into jail April 5 for Anderson
County. Not bondable.
Simon Varelas was booked into
jail April 7 for Anderson County.
Not bondable.
Racheal Westman was booked
into jail April 9 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Kenny Hermreck was booked
into jail April 12 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Tim Fagg was booked into jail
April 19 for Garnett Police. Bond
set at $300.
Patience Theiss was booked
into jail April 20 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000.
David Short was booked into jail
April 19 for Garnett Police. Bond
set at $835.
FARM-INS
Caleb Chrisman was booked
into jail December 17 for Douglas
County.
Scott Shay was booked into jail
February 12 for Miami County.
Jason Hutchinson was booked
into jail February 24 for Douglas
County.
Keirstin Addington was booked
into jail March 18 for Douglas
County.
Katrina Beavers was booked
into jail April 5 for Miami County.
Jeremy Norvill was booked into
jail April 7 for Douglas County.
Ralphael Alexander was
booked into jail April 7 for Douglas
County.
Alberto Escapite was booked
into jail April 19 for Douglas
County.
Alicia Langhford was booked
into jail April 19 for Douglas
County.
George Ward was booked into
jail April 18 for Miami County.
3×7.5
wolken tire
See dealer for details
Anderson County Recycle Trailer Schedule
3×6
May 2016
anco recycle
1
2
Bush City
Kincaid
8
9
Colony
Colony
15
22
29
Kincaid
10
Country
Mart
4
Kincaid
11
Welda
5
Kincaid
12
17
18
19
Westphalia
Westphalia
Westphalia
Westphalia
23
24
25
26
30
Greeley
Greeley
6
Colony
7
Colony
13
14
20
21
Welda
16
Greeley
Harris
3
Greeley
Harris
Harris
28
27
Bush City
Bush City
31
Bush City
Holidays, weather and breakdowns may alter schedule.
Arrival times may vary.
Any questions call (785) 448-3109
or visit www.andersoncountyks.org
(785) 448-3212
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
KOONTZ
DECEMBER 14, 1930-APRIL 23, 2016
Mary M. Koontz, 85,
Leawood, KS passed away
Saturday, April 23, 2016 at Villa
St. Joseph, Leawood, KS.
Mass of Christian Burial will
be 10:30 a.m. Thursday, April
28, 2016 at St.
Michael the
Archangel
Catholic
C h u r c h .
Graveside
services will
be 2:00 p.m.
Thursday at
Koontz
the Garnett
Cemetery,
Garnett, KS.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions in memory of Mary M. Koontz to the
OHSU Knight Cancer Institute,
3181 S.W. Sam Jackson Park
Road, Portland, OR 97239-3098,
www.ohsu.edu/knight-cancer-institute.
Mary was born on the second floor of a two story home
December 14, 1930 in Axtell, KS
to Robert E. and Margaret C.
Smith.
She was a graduate of
Marysville High School. On
January 2, 1952,
Mary married Claron L.
Koontz in Fort Walton, FL,
while Claron was in the Air
Force. They moved to the
University of Kansas campus,
Lawrence, KS in 1957 and then
to the Kansas City area in 1959.
She worked at the Kansas
City, KS Court House and later
Panhandle Eastern Pipeline.
After retirement, Mary and
Claron moved to Brownsville,
TX.
Over the next 15 years,
they traveled to all continental states including Alaska. In
2007, Mary and Claron returned
to Overland Park, KS.
Mary was preceded in death
by her husband, Claron on
Nov. 28, 2009.
She is survived by her four
sons, Michael (Pamela) Koontz,
Overland Park, KS, Stephen
(Jane) Koontz, Baton Rouge,
LA, Robert (Sandy) Koontz,
Tonganoxie, KS and Mark
Koontz, Basehor, KS; sister,
Charlotte (Marshall) Jones,
Spokane, WA; eleven grandchildren, Amber, Matthew,
Melissa, Julie, Tim, Joe,
Aubrey, Andy, Austin, Eric
and Bren; and one great granddaughter, Hannah.
Online condolences may be
expressed at www.amosfamily.
com. (arr. Amos Family Chapel
of Shawnee, 913-631-5566)
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
3A
LOCAL
WHITMER
Evelyn J. Whitmer, 82, loving wife, mother, and grandmother, passed away Sunday,
April 17, 2016
surrounded
by her loving
family.
Evelyn
was preceded
in death by
her husband,
Thurman;
parents,
Whitmer
Clarence and
Elizabeth
Rocker; brothers, Delmar,
Virgil, and Vernon Rocker; and
sister, Lois Rocker.
Survivors include her
daughters,
Deb
Trimble
(David), Sharon Macy (Rob),
and Cathy Barton (Alden);
sons, Bill (Cindy), Rick
(Eileen), and Kenny Whitmer;
sisters, Edith Sosby (Butch)
and Joann Johnson (Leroy);
brother,
Butch
Rocker
(Sharon); 14 grandchildren and
13 great-grandchildren.
Funeral Mass was Friday,
April 22, at St. Anne Catholic
Church, 2801 S. Seneca,
Wichita, KS.
Share condolences at www.
CozineMemorial.com. Services
by Broadway Mortuary.
RAIN…
HIGHWAY…
FROM PAGE 1A
K-68 in Miami County, a
four-lane expressway from U.S.
69 at Louisburg west 0.8 mile
with a cost of $11.5 million.
Despite the delays, the
overall good condition of the
10,000-mile state highway system wont be impacted since
KDOTs preservation projects
will be let to contract as scheduled and will be funded at the
$400 million per year level. Nor
will these delays affect projects
that are already underway,
said Kansas Transportation
Secretary Mike King.
The preservation program
covers a range of work, includ-
ing pavement and bridge repair,
resurfacing and replacement.
I also want to assure our
city and county partners that
there will be no change in the
amount of revenue they receive
from the Special City County
Highway Fund (SCCHF),
Secretary King said.
Annually, KDOT shares
about a third, or almost $150
million, of the state fuels tax
revenue with local governments through SCCHF. The
project delays also wont affect
other KDOT programs that
fund aviation, rail, public transit and more.
FROM PAGE 1A
is expected to be dry until the
evening.
The best chance for rain
is tonight, with an 80 percent
chance of showers and thunderstorms. The next best chance is
Friday night, with a 60 percent
chance.
Temperatures for much of
the week should be mild, with
highs in the 70s and lows in the
50s. Today likely is the warmest day of the week, with temperatures expected to reach 79.
The dry weather and recent
high winds have created
extremely dangerous fire conditions. Anyone who plans to
conduct an outdoor burn is
required to first obtain a burn
permit by calling Anderson
County Dispatch at (785) 4486826.
Starting at $9,750
Health Services
3×6.5 D I R E C T O R Y
health directory
Eye Care
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MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
Dental
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Alissa Hardman Ouellette RDH
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Ask how the
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Now caring for Hygiene patients
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121 W. 6th Ave.
Garnett, KS
WE
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Starting at $8,225
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785-448-6393 785-448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary &
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Fully independent suspension
2- and 4-passenger options available
1Offer ends May 2, 2016. Subject to approved installment credit with John Deere Financial, for commercial use only. Up to a 10% down payment may be required. Example: Based on an MSRP purchase of $9,799 with a 10% down payment of $979.90, monthly payment of $137.60 at 3.9% APR for 72 months. Price
not as shown. Taxes, freight, setup and delivery charges could increase monthly payment. Other special rates and terms may be available, including financing
for consumer use. Available at participating dealers.
Prices and models may vary by dealer. Manufacturer suggested list price of $9,799 on new Gator XUV590i and $9,739 on Gator XUV560 S4. Prices are suggested retail prices only and are subject to change without notice at any time. Dealer may sell for less. Shown with optional equipment not included in the price.
Attachments and implements sold separately. Some restrictions apply; other special rates and terms may be available, so see your dealer for details and other
financing options. Available at participating dealers. Before operating or riding, always refer to the safety and operating information on the vehicle and in the operators manual. Actual vehicle top speed may vary based on belt wear, tire selection, vehicle tow weight, fuel condition, terrain and other environmental factors.
John Deeres green and yellow color scheme, the leaping deer symbol and JOHN DEERE are trademarks of Deere & Company.
Limited appointment times available.
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Chiropractic
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-5856
Open Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
FULL SERVICE MENU CATERING CARRYOUT
Italian Mexican Steaks Seafood Chicken Salad
Garnetts most experienced food service establishment
serving the community since 1968.
No membership required.
Restaruant opens at 11am
Bar opens at 5pm Mondays – Satudays
225 N. Maple, Hwy 59 Garnett
(785) 448-3040
Dwyane & Barb Foltz, Proprietors.
We welcome you to enjoy our
Farm-to-Table Country Cuisine!
Proudly Serving Locally-Raised Beef & Pork.
Full Menu Online: thebrandniron.com
Full Bar
Kitchen Hours:
Wed. & Thur. 4 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 10 p.m.
1457 Hwy. 59 Princeton, KS 785-937-2225
Scipio Supper Club
RESTAURANT AND BAR
Call ahead for large parties
Kitchen Hours: Wed. & Sun. 6 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 6 p.m. – 10 p.m.
Bar open later
32465 NE Neosho Rd Garnett 785-835-6246
To advertise your business here
contact Stacey at (785) 448-3121
or email review@garnett-ks.com for
more information.
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
LOCAL
RIP, you whippersnappers
We all know the newspaper industry is dying
and we know this, of course, because the media and
pop culture, known for their Kardashian-esque
solid judgment and fact-focused decision making,
tells us so.
Which is why my observation at last weekends
Kansas Press Association convention was so ironic.
You would have expected that there, in the mortuary of what used to be my industry, the sounds
of rattling bones and the creaking of coffins being
laid asunder would be solely and ruefully mixed
with nothing but the latching of crypt lids and the
fastening of rusty iron locks on ivy-covered mausoleum gates.
Instead, I heard the joyful sounds of gurgling
infants and the laughter of play they were evidence of, dare I say procreation within this industry of decay and impotence? Yes, there are children
children in the newspaper business. Im reminded of my fellow Missourian and coiffure icon Mark
Twains response when word circulated that he
had succumbed The reports of my death have
been greatly exaggerated.
When I say children, Im being almost literal.
But literally speaking, theyre kids in their 20s, 30s
if you just turned 53 and have been putting pen to
paper for over 30 years in this business, they seem
like children. Why, our own Greg Doering from
Garnett is news editor of the Manhattan Mercury;
Joey Youngs not even 30 yet and running the
Clarion and Hillsboro papers; Tommy Felts is,
Ill bet, the first publisher of the Ottawa Herald
to sport a Mohawk; Travis Mounts, Jason Jump,
Zach Ahrens at the Topeka Capital Journal all of
them young guns mowing grass and taking names
at newspapers in their towns.
What gives? Dont these kids know the partys
over? Dont they understand the rest of the world
is tweeting and snapping and surfing and posting
and that nobody needs newspapers anymore? And
yet, I watched them heading to and from instructional seminars, trading stories with their contemporaries about what works at their papers and
what doesnt; talking about the fun of capturing
a particular story or photo; the importance of telling stories about what their city council is doing;
talking about being rung out by a reader over missing a story or boycotted by an advertiser because of
some stance the paper took in their small town.
Odd. Why would readers or advertisers still
get so bent out of shape about what the newspaper
does, if the business is dead and doesnt matter?
Strange an industry whose obituary has been
codified in the bits and bytes of popular virtualdom
has a bunch and I mean a bunch of young people
working in it. Smart ones too they have smart-
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
phones and Facebook pages and websites and snapthingys all that. From Galena to Garden City;
small towns and larger towns; theyre covering
their communities, doing things no one else can do
with the same competence and professionalism
and audiences and advertisers are still buying.
A dead industry? Not quite. Did you know more
people now read more content from more newspapers than ever before? No kidding. Newspaper
websites lead the world in consumed news content.
The problem is that for the first 10 years of the
Internet, our industry fell over backwards trying
to give our product away online and now we seem
surprised to find out people would rather read it
for free than pay for it. Go figure.
But these young kids arent afraid of fixing the
problem. Theyre hammering out and publishing
more stories faster, with better photography and
even video, setting up pay walls for their online
papers, transforming their small town newspapers
into micro media centers that combine online
speed and worldwide reach with the for-the-record
permanence of ink on paper cant be changed or
revised or fiddled with no matter who hacks the
website.
Its not all butterflies and rainbows by any
stretch were still in a cruddy economy and there
are more competitors, just like for every other
business large or small. Larger papers in bigger
towns have bigger problems holding revenues, and
most times theyre the worst about giving away
their content for free. Theyre not alone in their
struggle. Everyone from Wal-Mart to Amazon to
the local pool hall is trying to find more ways to
fund their survival, and newspapers are no different.
But I like those odds a lot better knowing our
industry is attracting and keeping young blood.
Newspapers dead? All these kids think thats greatly exaggerated.
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.
I was very disappointed to not see any pictures of the king and queen of the prom. How
beautiful she was and how handsome he was,
and not one picture of the king and queen.
If family and friends of a high school prom
student cannot attend the prom dance,
shouldnt this same rule apply to the junior
sponsor grandchildren? Their time to attend
the prom dance will come later. Thanks.
I have to say I am amazed at the way Donald
Trump is doing in his campaign. Everybody
wrote the guy off, belittled him, told him he
was nothing but some kind of comic book
character and he has done nothing but prove
the liberals and the conservatives wrong
over and over again and pick up more and
more steam. He cant be bought because he
Trump wuz robbed; sign of a sore loser
Give Donald Trump credit for planning
ahead. He is preparing to be a sore loser.
Trumps complaints that he is being
undone by a rigged system crafted by a corrupt Republican Party is the dress rehearsal
for his campaigns closing argument should
it come up short in Cleveland. Trump will, in
his telling, have been stabbed in the back by
insiders and be fully justified in wreaking a
terrible revenge on the party that he briefly
sought to lead.
Facts and logic dont particularly matter to Trump or his mouthpieces, yet the
rigged charge is absurd even by the standards of his standard-less campaign.
Colorado occasioned the latest Trump
fusillade. Colorados offense against fairness
and decency was Ted Cruz winning all of its
delegates in the same caucus system it has
used for years.
The only change in the state, implemented
back in August, before many people took
Trump seriously, was canceling its presidential preference poll, which didnt have any
role in binding delegates anyway.
The Colorado system — precinct caucuses
electing delegates to district and state assemblies, where they are selected for the national convention — isnt undemocratic. But it
rewards a different, more demanding and
engaged sort of participation than a primary.
For understandable reasons, Trump
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
would prefer that every contest be an open
primary. The Republican calendar has plenty of those. But it has other varieties of contests as well, reflecting the different histories
and characteristics of the state parties. The
diverse, patchwork system forces a candidate to demonstrate strength all over the geographical map and in myriad ways. If Trump
is a master at message and free media — both
driven by his outsized personality — the delegate game has shown Cruzs campaign is
much more technically proficient.
For all of Trumps complaints, the nomination system was set up to favor the
front-runner and get him over the top as
soon as possible. Hes won about 37 percent
of the vote and 45 percent of the delegates.
Still, the whining serves several Trump
purposes. It feeds his psychological compulsion to never admit hes been beaten or outmaneuvered; and it sets the predicate for his
argument at a convention (itd be unfair
if he didnt get the nomination), and, more
importantly, for ditching the party if he
loses.
It is hard to think of a major presidential
candidate, let alone a front-runner, who has
ever had so little regard for the unity or
interests of his own party or is so clearly preparing to bring it down, like Samson at the
temple of Dagon, if it doesnt bend to his will.
Trump is doing all he can to delegitimize the
GOP in the eyes of his voters.
Trump portrays himself as a perpetual winner, yet also cultivates a sense of
aggrieved victimhood that is clearly part of
his appeal to his supporters. Most unsuccessful candidates seek to avoid the appearance
of being a sore loser, no matter what their
true feelings. In another departure from the
rules of politics, Trump would embrace the
role with gusto. His signature line would go
from Make America Great Again to We
Wuz Robbed.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Budget balancing act could get ugly
Legislators return to the Statehouse this
week to consider whether they want to do
some really politically ugly stuff to balance
the state budget this yearor not.
Its that simple.
The latest financial report shows that the
state is going to have to come up with about
$140 millioneither new revenues (virtually
impossible) or spending cuts, more likelyto
get out of this fiscal year with a constitutionally required positive ending balance in
the treasury. Doesnt have to be much, just
a few bucks give the state a constitutional
balanced budget.
Now, there is talk about the two-year budget cycle, and that the state will need $151
million in higher revenues or budget cuts for
the upcoming fiscal year which starts July 1,
but, well, we understand that the Legislature
will meet again next year to work on that.
So, its just the get-out-of-town $140 million
that is the real goal of lawmakers during
their wrapup session so they can get out on
the campaign trail and back to life as many
of us know it.
Gov. Sam Brownback has an ideaor
rather three of themthat would let the
Legislature do some politically unattractive
and unpopular bill-passing in the wrap-up
session, and while he has a favorite, he wants
lawmakers to choose.
Legislators (no show of hands, er, votes,
yet) will have to decide whether they want
to vote on ugly revenue-saving bills or leave
it up to the governor, who has authority to
make spending cuts called allotments all
by himself.
Hmmm Lets look at that again. The
Legislature where members of the House
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
and Senate stand for election this year can
make spending cuts and money transfers, all
of which will wind up on their election opponents campaign flyers.
Or, lawmakers can ignore the fiscal
sleight of hand proposed by Brownback, who
as chief executive officer of the state would
have to make the spending cuts himself.
Lets seelegislative cuts and shuffles will
cost candidates votes this fall, while there
isnt a lot of political downside to pointing at
the governor who is in the last three years of
his last term and saying he did it.
The governor has made much of the duty
of the Legislature to pass a balanced budget
which it believed it had with this years budget bill, before those new revenue estimates
were made public last week.
So, now it is clearly who wants to do
the icky budget-cutting because, practically, every dollar cut from this years budget
means that some interest group is going to be
mad.
That makes the real question simple: Mad
at whom?
The governor already has authority to
make across-the-board budget cuts, and with
a little tweaking of the lawand without a
dollar sign in sightlawmakers could hand
him authority to make narrowly focused
cuts in spending. That essentially leaves to
the governor what gets cut, which is a fairly
remarkable power to hand the governor.
But thenits the guy whose name wont
be on the ballot this fall making politically
powerful decisions, not the Legislature.
Nope, the governor isnt really interested
in seeing all that responsibility handed back
to him, but then again, if you were in the
Legislature, and standing for re-election this
fall, do you want your DNA on anything that
will make voters mad?
The governor has supporters in the
Legislature, many of them Republicans he
campaigned for. Most were happy for his
help which helped them land seats in the
Legislature, but memories tend to be short in
the Statehouse.
So this week and probably part of next
week may just turn out to be pivotal for some
legislative races. The choices are to help the
governor or to help yourself and your campaign.
Wondering which way the Legislature will
go?
Syndicated by Hawver News Company
LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawvers Capitol Report to learn
more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.
hawvernews.com
doesnt need anybody elses money. Finally
we have someone running for president who
can really do what he believes is right for
Americans instead of being beholden to special interests. I have heard him compared to
Teddy Roosevelt and I absolutely agree. Im
glad this is still America, where someone can
be elected president by listening to the people
and not the media or the big shots in either
one of the parties. After the past eight years
weve endured we deserve a real president for
a change. Thank you.
To the Democrats in Anderson County, do you
know one of your organizers, (name deleted),
posed with other Democrats last summer at a
moveon.org event? Do Democrats in Anderson
County really embrace the principles and
beliefs of moveon.org? Do your candidates
running for election subscribe to the ideals of
moveon.org? Is this how you want your party
portrayed in your county? I doubt that any
Democrat in Anderson County who knows
what moveon.org is can be happy about this.
Question your leaders and get answers. Thank
you.
(Editors note: Due to the tendency of cell
phones to distort audio, please be sure to speak
slowly and clearly into the phone when leaving
your messages.)
Isis started under president Bush when he disbanded the Iraqi army, it was under Bush not
Obama. Insurance premiums? Thats greedy
companies, not Obama. You really need to do
a little fact checking before you say anything.
Leave it to Republicans to start two wars, both
of them unjust, never paid for, borrowed trillions of dollars from social security. Yeah, lets
vote Republican.
To the moron whos a Trump fan and running everybody down who doesnt like him,
you dont even have a personality. If youre a
Trump fan this is what you really are: a racist,
a bigot, a woman hater. Go back under whatever rock you came from. You dont even rate
a personality.
To the person who called about spending
money on the furnace, I agree with you 100
percent.
Contact Your
Legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
email pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521. Fax: (202) 228-6966
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep. Lynn Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 225-6601
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2016.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
5A
LOCAL
Bures, Yoder engaged
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Photo Submitted
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Photo Submitted
Rene and Rosalee Bures
of Richmond are happy to
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Amanda Bures,
to Kurt Yoder, son of Andy and
Pam Yoder of Garnett.
Amanda is a 2009 graduate
from ACHS and will graduate in May from Kansas State
University with a degree of
Doctor of Veterinary Medicine.
Kurt is a 2009 graduate
from ACHS and graduated
from Kansas State University
in 2013 where he received his
bachelors degree in Civil
Engineering. He is currently
employed at BHC Rhodes in
Overland Park.
They will reside in Butler,
Mo., where Amanda will be
employed at Bates County
Veterinary Clinic.
Kurt is the grandson of
LaNelle Welsh and David and
Sylvia Yoder.
The couple will be married
at Saint Boniface Catholic
Church at Scipio, Ks. on May
21st, 2016 at 3:00pm.
This photo by Shirley Roeckers won the 2014 Day in the Life of Anderson County Photo contest sponsored by the Friends of the Garnett
Public Library and the Garnett Public Library. The contest is returning this year. Be a part of photographing the people, the events, the
places in Anderson County on Sunday May 8th. All photographs must be taken within the 24 hour period beginning at 12:01 a.m. and
ending at midnight Sunday, May 8th . Complete rules are available at the Garnett Library.
Lions Club recognizes Farmers Night
Garnett Lions Club held
their annual Farmers Night on
March 21 at the Garnett Senior
Center with the Senior Board
members preparing the meal.
There were forty four members
and guests present.
The program was presented
by the local FFA Chapter at
the ACHS. Eight members and
their advisor, Jeff Gillespie,
set up four tables of items for
guests to visit. These stations
were the different cuts and
kinds of meat, of which they
had numbered and gave you
a choice of three to see which
you thought they were, types
of dairy products with skim
milk, half and half and cheeses
to sample and determine which
you were tasting, samples of
crackers made from different
types of grain showing the different taste and texture, and
entomology(types of bugs)
farmers deal with in their oper-
ations. A very informative pro-
gram and we thank the chapter
for their time and willingness
to present it.
The program was enjoyed by
all as they visited each of the
four tables and with each other.
Celebrate Community Bank Week
April 25-30
CBA of Kansas: Switch to a local safe haven
TOPEKA April 25-30 is
Community Bank Week. During
this week many of Kansas consumers will consider switching
to a new banking relationship
closer to home. Community
Bankers Association of Kansas
(CBA) wants to remind them
that their local community bank
is a safe haven from impersonal bank practices that can leave
many banking customers feeling
overwhelmed and taken advantage of. As local small businesses
themselves, community banks
only thrive when their customers
and communities do the same.
Community bank customers are
rewarded with lifelong financial
relationships by people who care
about them and look out for the
best interest of their community.
Its just the way they do business.
By going local with your community bank, you can rest assured
that your banking needs will
be taken care of and that your
money will be put to work where
it belongsin your community
in the form of loans to local residents and small business owners.
Its a hometown investment you
can be proud of, said Shawn
Mitchell, CBA President and
Chief Executive Officer.
Consumers should treat themselves to what a community bank
offers:
Service. Community banks
are relationship lenders that
focus on the needs of local families, businesses and farmers.
Because they know their customers and their customers know
them, they are able to provide
superior, personal customer service. When consumers call their
local community bank, theyll
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6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
LOCAL
AC girls take 3rd at Fort Scott
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
FORT SCOTT Paola ran away
with both the boys and girls
team track titles at the Fort
Scott Invitational last Friday.
The Paola girls scored an
impressive 217 points as
they rolled over Pittsburg
(103 points) and third place
Anderson County (70 points).
The top finishers for the
girls squad was Averi Wilson
with a 2nd place finish in
the 1600 meter run (5:25.94)
and also in the 800 meter
run (2:26.24). Wilson finished
behind Cassidy Westhoff from
Fort Scott in the 1600 meter run
by 13 seconds and trailed only
Abbie Casper from Pittsburg in
the 800 meter run by less than a
second.
Gwen Sibley pulled in a
bronze medal with a 3rd place
finish in the pole vault with a
vault of 86.
Jasmine White finished
third, as well, in the triple jump
with a distance of 33 0.25.
A pair of relay teams, the
4×100 and 4×400, both brought
home a third place finish. The
4×100 team consists of Ellie
Lutz, Connor Parks, Audrie
Goode, Danielle Mills and the
4×400 runners are Gwen Sibley,
Parks, Mills, and Wilson.
The top finisher for the boys
team was Adam Kroph with a
vault of 10 in the pole vault,
which was good for a second
place finish.
Other athletes that scored
points are as follows:
Girls
Audrie Goode (4th) 200m 27.73
Audrie Goode (4th) 300m
Hurdles 54.03
Regan Jirak (4th) Javelin
103
Regan Jirak (4th) Shot Put
33 6.75
Conner Parks (4th) Triple
Jump 33
4×800 meter relay P. Rupp,
E. Porter, B Sibley, R. Hedges
(4th) 12:20.08
Conner Parks (5th) Long
Jump 15 5.5
Ellie Lutz (6th) 100m
Hurdles 18.00
Paige Rupp (6th) 1600m
6:25.17
Jasmine White (6th) 300m
Hurdles 1:00.35
Gwen Sibley (6th) 400m
1:05.40
Boys
4×400 meter relay D.
Kueser, T. McDaniel, M.
Roberts, A. Kropf (4th) 4:01.25
Tyler Jumet 300m Hurdles
44.740
Damone Kueser 800m
2:14.77
Tyler Jumet Long Jump
189.25
Tyler Jumet Triple Jump
385.5
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Photo Submitted
ACHS Senior Trey Ahring signed a letter of intent to ride bulls for the Fort Scott Community College
Rodeo Team on Tuesday, April 19, 2016. He is pictured with Coach Chad Cross, head rodeo coach at
Fort Scott. Trey has been a member of the Kansas High School Rodeo Association for the past three
years. Trey will study Agriculture while attending FSCC. He is the son of Travis and Tracey Ahring of
Garnett.
Vikings hammered in opener
but pull out nightcap win
Viking softball splits doubleheader
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND The Santa Fe
Trail Chargers were scorching
hot in the opener against the
Central Heights Vikings on
Tuesday before going ice cold
in the late game to split the
doubleheader.
SFT pounded out 17 runs in
the early game and limited the
Vikings to just 2 hits in a lopsided 17-1 defeat.
The game started evenly
with both teams going scoreless for the first two innings.
The Chargers scored 3 in the
top of the third before erupting
for 7 in the fourth, 2 in the fifth
and 5 more in the sixth to close
out the game.
Viking head coach Jason
Brown wasnt too happy with
his teams play.
We did not play well as a
team, we struggled on defense
with fielding, pitching and the
defense as a whole, he stated.
While offensively the second
game didnt go too much better,
the pitching and defense came
through to hold on for a 3-1
victory. Senior Merrick Brown
drove in all three runs getting
two hits in three at bats.
Ethan Shields, junior, dom-
inated on the mound shutting down the Chargers bats.
Shields pitched a complete
game and returned the favor by
allowing only two hits. Shields
had the SFT hitters off balance
all night striking out 11 batters.
We scratched out the runs
we needed in order to win,
Brown said much more pleased
with his squads effort in the
second game.
The bottom of the lineup
got on and Merrick (Brown)
had a good day at the plate and
came up with some timely hits
for us getting all 3 RBIs for the
team, Brown added.
AC boys split shut-outs with Humboldt
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
HUMBOLDT ACHS swapped
shutouts with their hosts in the
opening double header to go 1-1
in Humboldts Walter Johnson
Tournament.
It was a 10 AM start for the
opener and it seemed that the
Bulldogs bats never did wake
up when they took a dominating 12-0 loss. The Bulldogs were
not only shutout, they were also
no-hit and were walked only
once in the game. Humboldt
struck early and often, scoring
4 runs in the first inning and 7
more in the second to open an
early 11-0 lead.
The Bulldog pitchers combined for 5 innings pitched,
allowing 7 hits but walked 12
batters en route giving up the
12 runs.
Sophomore Cole Denny
started the second game finished it in 5 innings, allowing 2 hits and striking out 5.
Offensively, it seemed there
was a hangover from the openers no-hitter before ACs bats
finally rallied in the third
inning.
AC scored 5 runs in the
third, 6 runs in the fourth and 2
more runs in the fifth to finish
the game with an 13-0 victory.
Four Anderson County players had multiple hits in the
game. Brady Rockers, Austin
Peine, Mason Louk and Denny
all picked up two hits.
Denny helped himself out by
driving in 4 runs on the afternoon. Peine also knocked in 4
runs himself.
Local golfers compete at Spring Hill
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
SPRING HILL Central
Heights Matt Percy had a
solid second place finish at the
Spring Hill Invitational with
a 75.
Eric Pahls from Piper
destroyed the competition by
running away with the tournament with an impressive 67 on
the afternoon.
Percy and Pahls were neck
and neck through the front
nine. Pahls held a slim one-shot
advantage before a dominating
score of 32 on the back nine to
pull away.
Anderson County golfer
Zach Miller was the top golfer
for the Bulldogs on the day,
shooting an 81, which was good
for an 11th place finish.
Also shooting an 81 was the
Vikings Kyle Powelson, which
solidly placed him 10th.
Quentin Sams of Anderson
County and Carson Powelson
of Central Heights both shot a
98, which placed them 62nd and
58th respectively.
Dont
Percy wins
Oz tourney, forget…
Miller 9th
OSAWATOMIE Matt Percy
from Central Heights won the
Osawatomie Invitational and
Zach Miller from Anderson
County finished just inside the
top 10 last week.
Percy paced the field on
the front 9 holes shooting a
34, which was 2 strokes better
than the closest competitor. He
closed out the round with a
39 on the back nine to win the
tournament by 2 strokes over
Nate Streeter of KC Christian
High School.
Miller from Anderson
County shot a 42 on the front 9
and bettered that score slightly
on the back 9 with a 40.
The Bulldogs Quentin Sams
shot a 91 to finish 23rd out of 76
golfers.
Carson Powelson fared pretty well for the Vikings as well
with a 19th place finish by
shooting an 88.
Kyle Powelson of Central
Heights finished the afternoon
shooting an even 100, which
placed him just inside the top
50.
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Vikings second in Humboldt tourney
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
HUMBOLDT Friday afternoon the Central Heights
Vikings opened up the Walter
Johnson Tournament in
Humboldt with a dominating
15-3 victory over Neodesha
before falling to Humboldt in
the championship game.
Merrick Brown pitched
5 strong innings, allowed
3 unearned runs, 4 hits and
struck out 7.
He started a little shaky
the first inning but then settled
down and did a good job, head
coach Jason Brown said. He
got ahead in the count and we
made some plays behind him.
He (Brown) was pulled after 5
innings since we had a large
lead, Brown added.
Cade Masingale came on in
relief and did a great job closing the game out, striking out
one in the 6th inning.
Offensively the Vikings put
up some solid numbers. Colin
Maloney had 3 hits and drove
in 3 runs to lead the way.
Brown, Ethan Shields,
Masingale and Jason Clissold
all had 2 hits in the early game.
The Championship Game
didnt go quite as Vikings had
hoped, losing to Humboldt 15-5.
We ran out of pitching and
it ended up catching up with
us, Brown said disappointingly.
We would like to have had
all of our pitchers fresh, but that
cant happen with it being our
4th game of the week, Brown
stated. Out pitch counts were
too high to go after Humboldt
with our best. I think we can
compete with them with our
pitchers fresh.
Offensively the Vikings
put up some decent numbers. Jacob Pryor led the way
against Humboldt. He was 2-3
with a homerun, scoring twice
and driving in two runs.
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out early on.
The Vikings pitcher Morgan
Jilek battled back but a two out
error allowed the first two runs
to cross the plate.
Central Heights answered in
the bottom half of the inning
scoring two runs of their own.
The final run came from a
Davis double to right field to
tie the game up at two.
That was about all that
would go right the rest of the
game for the Vikings. Santa
Fe Trail cruised scoring 3 runs
in the second, 1 in the third
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RICHMOND Central Heights
starting pitcher Megan Davis
didnt get much help from the
offense in the opener, but she
didnt need it. The Vikings
scored with one out in the bottom of the seventh to win the
game 2-1 over Santa Fe Trail.
The Vikings struggled offensively and ended up winning
the game in their final at bat
with the help of a passed ball
and an error.
Demeree Pendelton led off
the bottom of the seventh with
a single. Pendleton advanced to
second on a passed ball following a Riley Roll strikeout.
Pendelton wasted little time
swiping third base and as
Santa Fe Trail tried gunning
her down, the third baseman
misplayed the ball allowing
Pendelton to score to end the
game.
Davis pitched a complete
game 3 hitter, struck out 7 and
didnt walk a batter.
Unfortunately, the momentum didnt carry over to the
second game of the doubleheader. Santa Fe Trailed scored in
all 5 innings, cruising to an
easy 13-2 victory.
The game quickly got off to a
shaky start as a hit batter, bunt
single and a fielders choice left
the bases loaded and nobody
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
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1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, April 26
Central Heights at Franklin County
Literature Festival
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
3:30 p.m. – ACHS track
at Burlington
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV/varsity
softball at Prairie View
4:30 p.m. – ACHS varsity baseball
at Prairie View
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights
baseball, softball at home
with Osawatomie
Crest Jr. High track at Uniontown
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
7 p.m. – Legion BIngo at VFW
Wednesday, April 27
Pioneer League Art at Iola
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
Thursday, April 28
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
Crest Jr. High track at Burlingame
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
Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
Friday, April 29
10 a.m. – Central Heights Middle
School, ACJH track at Burlington
3:30 p.m. – Crest track at Madison
Invitational
7 p.m. – ACHS band spring
concert and awards
Sunday, May 1
3 p.m. – Community Band Spring
Concert of Music Favorites
Monday, May 2
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
1:30 p.m. – ACHS boys golf at
Ottawa
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV baseball
at Santa Fe Trail
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights
baseball, softball at
Northern Heights
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – GES PTO
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
7 p.m. – ACJH band/choir concert
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lodge
No. 338
Tuesday, May 3
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
3:30 p.m. – Westphalia track at
Jayhawk Linn
3:30 p.m. – ACHS track at
Burlington
Crest Junior High track at
Jayhawk Linn
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV/varsity
softball at home with Santa
Fe Trail
4:30 p.m. – ACHS varsity baseball
at home with Santa Fe Trail
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
Wednesday, May 4
Crest Jr. High track at
Jayhawk-Linn
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
3 p.m. – ACHS JV boys golf at
Osawatomie
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Greeley students run Garmin
Marathon/Munchkin Race
To prepare for the race, the students participated in the The Running Club, a volunteer fitness club sponsored by Mrs. Jayme Secrest.
Above, Greeley students ran in a practice race
on Friday, April 15, near their school.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Photo Submitted
Twenty three students in K-6th grades at Greeley Elementary took part in the Garmin Marathon/Munchkin Race
in Olathe Saturday, April 16, 2016. Above, race participants from Greeley Elementary pose with Undersheriff
Laiter, back left, and Deputy LeVota, back right, who monitored traffic during a practice run Friday, April 15.
At right, Greeley students were among 350 students from the state of Kansas that participated in the run. The
students had to run after school for 10 weeks to run up to 25 miles, and at the Garmin Marathon they ran their
last 1.2 miles to complete a full marathon of 26.2 miles.
Quilt guild to Annual quilt show set for May 7
honor Gordon
The Pieces and Patches Quilt Guild of Garnett will honor
one of its long time guild members, Phyllis Gordon at their
annual Spring Quilt Show
on Saturday, May 7th, from
1:00 to 3:00 p.m.
Phyllis has been an
active member of the quilt
guild since its inception
in May of 1989. She has
been an active and involved
member of the guild for the
past 27 years.
Phyllis has served as
President of the guild and
had served 7 years as the
Newsletter Editor. She
also has been Chairperson
Gordon
of the May Quilt Show for
many years.
Even Phylliss late husband, Don, was involved in the
guild. She got him to make quilt racks to display the quilts.
Current Guild President, Bonnie Deiter, stated that
Phyllis Gordon was one of the first members to welcome
her when Deiter joined the guild.
Bonnie said that Phyllis has always such a positive
attitude and is willing to help anyone with quilt questions.
Phyllis always has a smiling face to greet you, Deiter
said.
Mrs. Gordon will be present from 1-3 p.m. to visit with
guests. She will also display many of her beautiful quilted
works.
Come and celebrate with us as we honor Phyllis
Gordon, Deiter said.
The Pieces and Patches Quilt Guilds quilt show year. The boutique will feature quilted and quilt
is held at the Garnett Senior Center, 128 W. Fifth related items donated by guild members and are
Ave,. from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 7 and is free to the available for purchase. Money raised from the boupublic. All quilters and quilt lovers are invited to tique sales will be used for purchasing new display
display their quilts and quilted items in the show. racks for the quilts. Donations are also accepted for
If you would like to display items, guild members purchasing new quilt racks.
will be available to receive items from 8:00
to 10:00 a.m. that morning. There is no fee
to enter items. Quilts measuring 30 inches or
larger must have a sleeve of at least 4 inches
wide for hanging. Items must be picked up
by 3:10 p.m. on Saturday, May 7.
On display will be this years Opportunity
Quilt, Queen and her Court. Pieces
& Patches guild members create an
Opportunity quilt each year to be raffled
off. The proceeds from the raffle support the
scholarship fund, which awards a scholarship to a high school senior from Anderson
County. The 2016 quilt top was made by
Sharon Rich; the applique flowers and top
sewn together by Connie Hatch, Carolyn
Crupper, Judy Stukey, and Terrie Gifford.
Tickets are $1 each or 6 for $5. They can be
purchased from any guild member or at the
quilt show that day. The drawing will take
place at 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, May 7th. The
winner need not be present to win.
The guild would like to thank the following businesses and organizations for their
support in displaying and selling tickets
for the quilt: Goppert State Service Bank,
Patriots Bank, Farmers State Bank, Garnett
Public Library, Anderson County Hospital,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Photo Submitted
and the Garnett Senior Center.
This
is
the
2016 Opportunity Quilt that will be raffled off.
The club will have the Boutique again this
Westphalia
Scholar
Bowl teams
compete
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Photo Submitted
The Westphalia Scholar Bowl team, from left: Nathan Schmit, Dylan Cole, Jacob Elliss, Morgan Hall-Kropf, Becky Kropf, Molly Comfort,
Hannah Gardner, Derek Ratzlaff, Maya Corley, Lily Rolf and April Powls.
Eleven students from 6th,
7th and 8th grades comprise the
Westphalia Wolverine Scholar
Bowl Team coached by Amy
Carey and Wilma Setter.
The Wolverine Scholar Bowl
Team had eight tournaments
this year competing against
Central Heights, Jayhawk
Linn, Moran, Pleasanton,
Crest, Mont Ida, Pittsburg,
Anna, Uniontown, Anderson
County, Iola, Chanute, and
Santa Fe Trail schools.
The A Team, Jacob
Elliss, Becky Kropf, Dylan
Cole, Hannah Gardner, Derek
Ratzlaff, and alternate Molly
Comfort, were awarded 1st
place in two tournaments and
2nd place in four tournaments.
Their overall record for the
year was 41 wins and 16 losses.
The B Team, April Powls,
Nathan Schmit, Lily Rolf,
Morgan Hall-Kropf and Maya
Corley, won 1st place at four
tournaments and 2nd place in
three tournaments. Their overall record was 46 wins and 13
losses.
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
BUSINESS
BUSINESS BEAT
Its all about urgency
When I started my career
an old-timer client told me he
never ran sales at his mens
clothing shop.
Why?, I asked in my best
still-wet-behind-the-ears earnesty.
Ive never been able to justify telling a customer that just
because he came in today to
buy something that he has to
pay more than if he came in
yesterday before a sale ended,
he told me. I went home that
night and saw about 15 commercials from JC Penney,
Sears and Mens Wearhouse
advertising one sale idea after
another.
Maybe my clients philosophy eased his conscience, but it
wasnt very compelling for his
customers or in the long run,
very good for his business.
After all, if you want to sell
stuff, you have to motivate your
customers with some sense of
urgency. Otherwise theyll put
off buying from you and end up
buying from one of your competitors the next time they stop
in a Wal Mart or a Target for
deodorant. Simply put: If you
dont motivate your customers,
somebody else will.
Thats why you can learn
so much by watching the big
boys ads on TV or in your
area daily paper. The urge to
action should always be a part
of your promotional efforts.
Think 2 Day Sale, or
Saturday Only or Absolutely
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
Ends March 25th. Heres why:
If youve done your job right,
youve planned your sale with
timing in mind. The time to sell
hard on snow shovels isclass?
Thats right. When it starts getting cold. Youre using the natural gravity of seasons, events
(back to school, St. Pattys
green beer special at your bar,
etc.) to help drive sales. Thats
bound to help motivate customers as well, but you add more
urgency by letting them know
the value will be less if they
miss the deadline.
So remember to make your
sale worth it to the customer
(10% off never sold a thing, so
if thats all youre doing, dont
waste money advertising it!),
but put him under some pressure to perform!
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.
Community Band
plans spring concert
The
Garnett
Area
Community Band will be presenting a special favorites
Spring Concert on Sunday, May
1, 2016 beginning at 3:00 p.m. in
the Auditorium at Anderson
County Junior Senior High
School.
Under the direction of Jeff
Russell, the Community Band
will perform a little jazz, such
as Cole Porters Begin the
Beguine, featuring Calvin
Rosey from Ottawa on the
trombone. Classics as Tea
for Two, Prairie Lament
a Cowboy song, Handels
Prelude and Fughetta,
John Philip Sousas Semper
Fidelis, and more exciting
arrangements will be featured.
Closing the Concert will be
Paul Jennings arrangement of
Solid Gold Revival with music
from the 1960s. The Garnett
Area Musicians will be joined
by musicians from LaCygne,
Richmond, Lane, Lawrence,
Olathe, Ottawa, Osawatomie,
Burlington,
Welda
and
Westphalia.
As in years past, refreshments (free-will donation) will
be served immediately following the concert in the Commons
Area. Everyone is invited to
come, enjoy the entertaining
music and visit with friends,
family & neighbors.
ACH introduces new surgical staff
GARNETT Anderson County Hospital
welcomed two new staff members to its
surgical team recently to help meet
the growing needs of the community. Kelly Warren, R.N., B.S.N. brings
more than 26 years of experience as
a surgical nurse to her new role as
nurse manager for surgery. Warren
worked at Saint Lukes South Hospital
in Overland Park as a surgical services clinical coordinator, and is well
known to many of the specialists who
provide surgeries at Anderson County
Hospital.
Stephanie Ernst, surgical technologist, is an experienced staff member
who brings efficiencies to the surgery
department by ensuring the two surgical suites are well staffed.
The new surgical suites at
Anderson County Hospital allow our
specialists to perform many outpatient
surgeries on site, and we have wit-
Warren and Ernst
nessed significant growth as patients
choose to access high quality care
close to home, said Rich McKain,
CEO of Anderson County Hospital.
We are delighted to welcome Kelly
and Stephanie as we grow to meet the
needs of the community. Our highly
regarded specialists from Saint Lukes
are excited to offer excellent health
care options for patients locally at our
modern facility.
Anderson County Hospital provides
18 different specialty services, including general surgery. Saint Lukes physicians provide surgical services at
Anderson County Hospital in many
different specialties including cataract
surgery, dermatology, ear, nose and
throat, gastrointestinal, gynecology,
orthopedics, podiatry, urology, and
general surgery. Anderson County
Hospital opened its new facility in
January 2015. The hospital features
two state- of- the- art surgical suites
with the latest laparoscopic surgery
technology. Patients who would like
more information about specialty and
surgical services offered are invited to
contact Anderson County Hospital at
785-448-3131.
4-H assistant added at extension district
The Frontier Extension District is
happy to announce the employment of
Katie Gilbreth as the new 4-H Program
Assistant located in the Garnett office as
of May 2nd.
Katie will be actively involved in the
4-H Youth Development Program through-
out the District.
Katie received an associates degree
in Art from Cowley County Community
College. She is currently living in the
Garnett area.
We are excited to have Katie on board
and encourage all Frontier District fam-
ilies to stop in the
Garnett office to introduce yourself and
welcome her to the
District, said Janae
McNally, the 4-H Agent
for Anderson County.
Gilbreth
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys
Ladies Day
Every Tuesday!
www.thegunguys.net
2×3
dunns fish farm
Delivery of Black Crappie, Channel Catfish, Bass,
Hybrid Bluegill, Coppernose Bluegill, Redear Bream,
Fathead Minnows, and Triploid Grass Carp
New Indoor Range
ns
es of Gu
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
P.O. Box 85 Fittstown, OK 74842
www.dunnsfishfarm.com
800-433-2950
NOW AVAILABLE FOR POND & LAKE STOCKING!
We furnish hauling containers! Live delivery Guaranteed!
Discounts/Special Deliveries on large orders!
Wed., May 4th 8:30-9:30AM
Garnett Beachner Grain, Inc. 804 E. 6th Ave.
785-418-0711
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
info@thegunguys.net
ANDERSON
Turtle Traps, Fish Feeders, Fish Traps! Decorative Fountains, Aerators,
Windmill Aerators! Vegetation Control, Pond Fertilizers!
To place an order or for more information Mon-Fri 7a.m.-5:30p.m.
call one of our Aquatic Consultants, your local Sat 8a.m.-12p.m. CST
dealer, or email sales@dunnsfishfarm.com
Fax: 1-580-777-2899
COUNTY
BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Hastert hosts Chapter Y
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
PEO April 18 meeting
Chapter Y of P.E.O. met
Monday, April 18, in the home
of Ruth Lee Hastert. President
Rita Boydston called the meeting to order. 19 members were
in attendance. The members
finalized plans for the Daddy
Daughter dance, Dancing
With the Stars, which will be
Saturday, April 23. Lucille
Holderman reported on the
Spring Fling Brunch held on
April 9 at the Thelma Moore
Theater. Chaper Y hosted the
event with members coming from PEO chapters in
Burlington, Iola, Yates Center,
Chanute, Humboldt,
and
Eureka. The Chamber Players
entertained with a short preview of their upcoming production, Southern Fried Murder.
Sonya Martin gave a program on Team Building sharing examples from her experiences. Sonya gave members an
opportunity to practice working as a team. Members were
divided into teams and given
a bag of unrelated items. The
challenge was to work together
to create a story that included
all items in 5 minutes. The
humorous stories were shared
and enjoyed by all.
Refresments were served by
hostess Ruth Lee Hastert and
co-hostess Sandra Moffatt.
4×10.5
biz directory
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
MIKE HERMRECK
Sales & Service
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery M-F
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
(785) 448-5441
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Livestock Waterers
HOMER RIFFEY SERVICE
785-448-2384
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
SALES & SERVICE
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Hours:
785-448-3056
2×5
garnett rotary
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Millers Construction, Inc.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
To advertise in this
contact Stacey at
Cooper Jetzondirectory
Kumho
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
3B
LOCAL
2006: Site for alternate What is more important,
school protested in 365 character or reputation?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Photo Submitted
This brass badge was found at an abandoned schoolyard and
features the words Rapid Auto Transit Co. and the number 240.
Brass badge found at
old school grounds
This sure was an unusual
artifact to find on a very early
abandoned school ground.
My very first thoughts when
I found it were: How long ago
was it lost, by whom was it lost
and of all places how did it up
on a school yard?
As you can see by the picture its a brass Badge with
the words Rapid Auto Transit
Co. and the number 240 on
it. Im not sure what the number actually stands for.
The Transit Company was
founded in 1875 and it went
defunct in 1970, when the
streetcar system dismantled
completely in 1954 and was sold
in 1970.
A few key people in this
company were: Thomas Lowry,
Horace Lowry, Charles Green
and Fred Ossanna.
Their main products were:
streetcars, horse-drawn bug-
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
gies and buses.
This company actually
was located in the Minnesota
areas of Minneapolis -St.Paul
employing an estimated 1,000
employees.
You ask! Why do you like
to use your metal detector so
much? Well, its historical artifact finds exactly like this that
fascinate me every time I find
them.
April 25, 2006
A plan to locate an alternative school in a mobile unit on
the grounds of Irving Primary
Center has been halted, at least
until local protesters get an
audience with USD 365 School
Board members. Concrete
footings already were poured.
The issue arose over the development of a special program
at USD 365 aimed at special
classes for high school students
at risk of not graduating from
school due to poor academic
performance.
Protesting neighbors have
apparently been successful in
defeating efforts to start two out
of three rock quarries proposed
at sites near U.S. 169.
Operations at Garnett
Church Furnishings creaked to
a halt Friday afternoon with its
remaining employees receiving
half the pay they had coming,
10 days in arrears in its rent
and with apparent questions on
whether or not the company
will make its planned move to
Marceline, Mo.
April 22, 1996
Anderson County wheat
farmers and those in the rest
of this state are bracing for
what could be a disaster in
wheat production this year,
one that could amount to a
billion dollar loss statewide.
County extension agent Matt
Teagarden said the dry conditions and temperature variations during the winter had
placed the local wheat crop in
such a state that a rain this late
in the game probably wouldnt
help much.
The Anderson County
Hospitals Board of Trustees
will propose a new ambulance
contract to the county commission, one that will ask for an
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
additional $30,000 in county
tax subsidy to cover the losses
and costs of equipment the hospital says it absorbs to run the
ambulance service in a year.
The City of Garnett has
granted its cable television
provider TCI a 90-day extension of its service contract
while the final touches are put
on an agreement which will
lock the city into TCI service
for 15 years.
April 28, 1986
County residents who do
their own fruit and vegetable
canning will soon be able to
check the pressure and accuracy of their home canning
systems. The pressure canner
tester checks the accuracy of
gauges and also the weights of
pressure canners. The amount
of time needed to check a pressure canner lid is approximately 10 minutes per lid and
the service is provided by the
extension office.
Negotiators for the North
Anderson County Teachers
Association requested a total
7.38 percent salary outlay
increase from the USD 365
School Board at a salary negotiation meeting. The increase
did not include an increase
in the salary base but did
increase the increments which
more experienced and more
qualified teachers are paid.
Looking back on life and
lifes experiences is something
we dont do much of. I spent
the last several years of my
work life trying to, as I came
to call it, identify the path forward to resolve a problem.
Corporations have found over
the years that trying to pin
point blame or identify guilty
parties is not productive, hence
the emphasis of moving on or
forward to a solution.
My life verse, Philippians
3:13-14; even contains the
words, forgetting what is
behind. I understand the
importance of this phrase within the verse but no one bible
verse should be taken by itself
but must be understood in context with the text as a whole.
The bible, particularly Judges
is replete with Israel failing
to obey God, making the same
mistake of idol worship and
falling into captivity. It was
always the same mistake that
led them into captivity. They
never learned that by looking
back you can learn how you got
where you are and by virtue of
that who you are. Their transgression of idol worship got so
bad we read in Judges 17:6, In
those days Israel had no king
and everyone did as he saw fit
in his own eyes.
This is a key verse in Judges
and one we should learn from
today. What we see is with our
own eyes. Two words reputation and character can be used
to describe us. I have no author
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
of these words but find them
very revealing. Reputation
is what others suppose we are.
Character is what we really
are. Reputation is what men
think you are. Character is
what God knows you are.
Reputation is what is chiseled
on your tombstone. Character
is what the angels say about
you before the throne of God.
Character never changes when
circumstances change because
problems prove our integrity.
In Jeremiah 31:34b the word
of the LORD came to Jeremiah
the prophet concerning the
exiles who were being held captive in Babylon. For I, (God)
will forgive their wickedness
and will remember their sins
no more. God was willing to
do this for Israel if they would
refrain from idol worship
which is why they had been
taken captive by Babylon. If
we are willing to accept Jesus
Christ as our personal Savior
God is willing to remember our
sins no more. This requires
that we do what is right in
Gods eyes. No one can get
to this point until they understand that character is more
important than reputation.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Duplicate bridge played
Mary Margaret Thomas and
Tom Peavler won the duplicate bridge match April 20th in
Garnett. Patty Barr and Dave
Leitch came in second. Anita
Dennis and Steve Brodmerkle
were in third place.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all
bridge players Wednesdays at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday 9am
Wednesday 7:30pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
6×12
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School 9am
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
church directory
Morning Worship 10:00am
Evening Worship 6:30pm
Wednesday Service 7pm
(785) 448-3208 258 Park, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Phil Rhoades
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Elder Planning Specialists
Annuities
Medicare Supplement
Long Term Care
Scott D. Schulte CSA
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th Garnett
340 E. South St.
Richmond, Kansas 66080
(785) 835-6135
Hwy 59 at Hwy 31 GARNETT
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3558
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
LWML 2nd Sunday 11:30am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ervin A. Daugherty Jr.
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9 am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9:28 am
Sunday Worship 10:28 am
Childrens Church 10:30 am
Wed. Evening Bible Study 6:28 pm
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Mike Farran
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm, Youth Mtg. 7pm
Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ron Jones
BEACON OF TRUTH
Saturday Sabbath Worship 9:30am
Saturday Evening Service 6pm
(except 4th Saturday)
Wednesday Evening Prayer Svc. 7:00pm
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Andrew Zoll
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 10am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Pastor Chris Goetz
Children & Youth Pastor – Brett Hartman
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – David Hill
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15am
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am/Thurs 7pm
Chancel Bells Wed 6pm
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
Jr. & Sr. UMYF Sundays
U.M. Women 1st Wednesday
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
Reverend – Bill Driver
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:45am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
Pastor – Butch Ritter
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
GREELEY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship 9am
Bible Study (Teens, Adults) 10am
Sunday School (Children) 10am
204 N. Main, PO Box 37, Greeley, KS 66033
(913) 755-2225
Pastor – Bill Driver
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 448-3947
1300 & Broomall Rd, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Vernon Yoder
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 8:30am
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
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Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country Favorites
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Heating &
Air Conditioning
(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Sunday School 9:30am
Worship Service 10:30am
2nd & Pine, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Cody Knapik
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
For additions, subtractions or changes to your
church information, a church official may
contact the Review at (785) 448-3121.
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
LOCAL
Notice to foreclose mortgage Notice to quiet title
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, April 12, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
PennyMac Loan Services, LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Aaron M. Brooks, Jane Doe, and John Doe,
et al.,
Defendants
Case No. 16CV11
Court No.
Title to Real Estate Involved
Pursuant to K.S.A. 60
NOTICE OF SUIT
STATE OF KANSAS to the above named
Defendants and The Unknown Heirs, executors, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns
of any deceased defendants; the unknown
spouses of any defendants; the unknown
officers, successors, trustees, creditors and
assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; and the unknown guardians, conservators
and trustees of any defendants that are minors
or are under any legal disability and all other
person who are or may be concerned:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a
Petition for Mortgage Foreclosure has been
filed in the District Court of Anderson County,
Kansas by PennyMac Loan Services, LLC,
praying for foreclosure of certain real property
legally described as follows:
THE EAST HALF (E/2) OF LOT
SEVENTEEN, AND ALL OF LOT EIGHTEEN
(18) IN BLOCK SEVENTEEN (17) IN THE
CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS. Tax ID No. 1-00208470 Commonly
known as 323 East 2nd Ave, Garnett, KS 66032
(the Property) MS174027
for a judgment against defendants and any
other interested parties and, unless otherwise
served by personal or mail service of summons,
the time in which you have to plead to the
Petition for Foreclosure in the District Court of
Anderson County Kansas will expire on May
23, 2016. If you fail to plead, judgment and
decree will be entered in due course upon the
request of plaintiff.
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
By: Chad R. Doornink, #23536
cdoornink@msfirm.com
8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180
Overland Park, KS 66210
(913) 339-9132
(913) 339-9045 (fax)
By: /s/ Tiffany T. Frazier
Tiffany T. Frazier, #26544
tfrazier@msfirm.com
Garrett M. Gasper, #25628
ggasper@msfirm.com
Aaron M. Schuckman, #22251
aschuckman@msfirm.com
612 Spirit Dr.
St. Louis, MO 63005
(636) 537-0110
(636) 537-0067 (fax)
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
ap12t3
Notice to sell Bross property
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, April 12, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF Anderson
County, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Willi Bross, et al.
Defendants,
Case No.15CV57
Court No.
Title to Real Estate Involved
Pursuant to K.S.A. 60
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under
and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me
by the Clerk of the District Court of Anderson
County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of
Anderson County, Kansas, will offer for sale at
public auction and sell to the highest bidder for
cash in hand at the west side entrance of the
Anderson County, Courthouse, Kansas, on May
4, 2016 at the time of 10:00 AM, the following
real estate:
BEGINNING 60 FEET WEST OF THE
SOUTHEAST CORNER OF LOT ELEVEN
(11) IN E. S. NICCOLLS ADDITION TO THE
CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS, THENCE WEST 70 FEET, THENCE
NORTH 140 FEET, THENCE EAST 70 FEET,
THENCE SOUTH 140 FEET TO THE PLACE
OF BEGINNING; TAX ID NO. 1-00206190,
Commonly known as 623 E Monroe St, Garnett,
KS 66032 (the Property) MS164357
to satisfy the judgment in the above entitled
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court.
Anderson County Sheriff
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
By: /s/ Chad R. Doornink
Chad R. Doornink, #23536
cdoornink@msfirm.com
Jason A. Orr, #22222
jorr@msfirm.com
8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180
Overland Park, KS 66210
(913) 339-9132
(913) 339-9045 (fax)
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS ATTORNEYS
FOR Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND
ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
ap12t3
Notice to recover water
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, April 26, 2016)
BEFORE THE STATE CORPORATION
COMMISSION
OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
NOTICE OF FILING APPLICATION
RE: Christian L Martin dba Tailwater, Inc.
Application to a permit to authorize the
enhanced recovery of rural water into the
Kempnich, 5-IWU, 6-IWU, 7-IWU, 13-IWU,
21-IWU, 27-IWU and the 29-IWM, 30-IWM,
31-IWM located in Anderson County, Kansas.
TO: All Oil & Gas Producers, Unleased Mineral
Interest Holders, Landowners, and all persons
whoever concerned.
You, and each of you, are hereby notified
that Tailwater, Inc. has filed an application to
commence the injection of rural water into the
Upper Squirrel formation at the Kempnich, Sec
22, 20S, 20E; 5-IWU located 3939 from S. line,
4200 from the E. line; 6-IWU located 4183
from the S. line, 3694 from the E. line; 7-IWU
located 4107 from the S. line, 3346 from the
E. line; 13-IWU located 3743 from the S. line,
2964 from the E. line; 21-IWU located 2863
2×4
AD
from the S. line, 2991 from the E. line; 27-IWU
located 3238 from the S. line, 3006 from the
E. line; 29-IWM located 4083 from the S. line,
2968 from the E. line; 30-IWM located 4391
from the S. line, 2967 from the E. line; 31-IWM
located 4416 from the S. line, 3256 from the
E. line, in Anderson County, Kansas, with a
maximum operating pressure of 500 PSIG and
a maximum injection rate of 50 bbls per day.
Any persons who object to or protest this
application shall be required to file their objections or protest with the Conservation Division
of the State Corporation Commission of the
State of Kansas within fifteen (15) days from the
date of this publication. These protests shall be
filed pursuant to Commission regulations and
must state specific reasons why the grant of the
application may cause waste, violate correlative
rights or pollute the natural resources of the
State of Kansas.
All persons interested or concerned shall
take notice of the foregoing and shall govern
themselves accordingly.
Tailwater, Inc.
6421 Avondale Dr. Ste. 212
Oklahoma City, OK 73116
405-810-0900
ap26t1
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, the 19th day of April, 2016.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
HAROLD K. MAYES, JR.,
Administrator of the
ESTATE OF LILLIAN A. MAYES, deceased,
Plaintiff,
v.
WILLIAM M. HAGER and GERTRUDE L.
HAGER, deceased, ALBERTA J. BISHOP,
DOROTHY A. HEIMBIGNER, CAROLYN J.
BENNETT, et al.,
Defendants.
CASE NO. 2016-CV-000016
NOTICE OF SUIT
(Filed pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60)
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO:
William M. Hager and Gertrude L.
Hager, deceased, Alberta J. Bishop, Dorothy
A. Heimbigner, Carolyn J. Bennett, and the
unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of such
of the defendants as may be deceased and
the unknown spouses of the defendants; the
unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of such defendants as are
existing, dissolved or dormant corporations, the
unknown executors, administrators, devisees,
trustees, creditors, successors and assigns
of such defendants as are or were partners
or in partnership, and the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of such of the
defendants as are minors or are in anyway
under legal disability, and the unknown heirs,
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
creditors and assigns of any person alleged to
be deceased and made defendants as such,
and all other persons who are or may be concerned:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a
Petition has been filed in the District Court of
Anderson County, Kansas by Harold K. Mayes,
Jr., the duly appointed, qualified and acting
Administrator of the Estate of Lillian A. Mayes,
deceased, by virtue of Letters of Administration
issued by the District Court of Anderson County,
Kansas, in case number 2015-PR-000012, in
the case entitled In the Matter of the Estate of
Lillian A. Mayes, deceased, praying for judgment that the plaintiff is the sole owner of fee
simple title to the following described real property located in Anderson County, Kansas, free
of all right, title and interest of the above-named
defendants, and all other persons who are or
may be concerned, and that they and each of
them be forever barred and foreclosed of and
from all right, title, interest, lien, estate, or equity
or redemption in or to the following-described
real estate, or any part thereof:
Tract I
Beginning at the Southwest corner of the
Southeast Quarter of Section 2, Township
21 South, Range 19 East of the Sixth P.M.,
Anderson County, Kansas, being marked with
a iron bar; thence North 00 degrees 27 minutes 58 seconds West 430.63 feet on the West
line of said Southeast Quarter to a iron bar;
thence North 88 degrees 41 minutes 43 seconds East 285.02 feet to a iron bar; thence
North 00 degrees 05 minutes 23 seconds East
22.48 feet to a iron bar; thence North 80
degrees 52 minutes 49 seconds East 279.35
feet to a iron bar; thence North 80 degrees
48 minutes 01 seconds East 754.39 feet to a
iron bar; thence North 83 degrees 11 minutes
40 seconds East 624.90 feet to the West right
of way of the Missouri Pacific railroad, being
marked with a iron bar; thence South 30
degrees 59 minutes 37 seconds West 758.21
feet along said right of way to the South line of
the Southeast Quarter, being marked with a
iron bar; thence South 88 degrees 11 minutes
04 seconds West 1532.81 feet to the point of
beginning, containing 20.74 acres more or less,
including that part used for road right of way, all
in Anderson County, Kansas;
Tract II
Beginning at the Northeast corner of the
Southeast Quarter of Section 2, Township
21 South, Range 19 East of the Sixth P.M.,
Anderson County, Kansas, being marked with
a iron bar; thence South 01 degrees 22 minutes 38 seconds East 817.58 feet on the East
line of said Southeast Quarter to a iron bar,
on the North right of way of the Missouri Pacific
Railroad right of way, thence South 25 degrees
37 minutes 38 seconds West 103.62 feet along
said right of way to a iron bar; thence on a
curve to the right with a radius of 5250.23 feet
a central angle of 5 degrees 22 minutes 04
seconds with a length of 491.88 feet, having a
chord bearing of South 28 degrees 18 minutes
35 seconds West and chord distance of 491.70
feet to a iron bar; thence South 30 degrees
59 minutes 37 seconds West 785.34 feet to a
iron bar on said right of way, thence South
83 degrees 11 minutes 40 seconds West
624.90 feet to a Iron bar; thence South 80
degrees 48 minutes 01 seconds West 754.39
feet to a iron bar; thence South 80 degrees
52 minutes 49 seconds West 279.35 feet to a
iron bar; thence South 00 degrees 05 minutes 23 seconds West 22.48 feet to a iron
bar; thence South 88 degrees 41 minutes 43
seconds West 285.02 feet to a iron bar, on
the West line of the Southeast Quarter; thence
North 00 degrees 27 minutes 58 seconds West
2203.43 feet to the Northwest corner of the
Southeast Quarter, being marked with a
iron bar; thence North 88 degrees 12 minutes
39 seconds East 2607.94 feet to the point of
beginning, containing 115.54 acres more or
less, including that part used for road right of
way, all in Anderson County, Kansas;
Tract III
Beginning at the Southeast corner of the
Southeast Quarter of Section 2, Township
21 South, Range 19 East of the Sixth P.M.,
Anderson County, Kansas, being marked with
a iron bar; thence South 88 degrees 11 minutes 04 seconds West 998.04 feet on the South
line of said Southeast Quarter to a iron bar
on the East right of way line of the Missouri
Pacific Railroad; thence North 30 degrees 59
minutes 37 seconds East 1479.09 feet to a
iron bar on said right of way; thence on a curve
to the left with a radius of 5350.23 feet and a
central angle of 4 degrees 23 minutes 32 seconds and a length of 410.15 feet and a chord
bearing of North 28 degrees 47 minutes 51
seconds East and a chord distance of 410.05
feet to a iron bar on the East line of the
Southeast Quarter; thence South 01 degrees
22 minutes 38 seconds East 1596.09 feet to the
point of beginning, containing 17.99 acres more
or less, including that part used for road right of
way, all in Anderson County, Kansas;
and quieting plaintiffs title in said real property against you.
You are required to answer or plead to said
Petition on or before the 8th day of June, 2016,
at 9:00 a.m. in said Court at Garnett, Anderson
County, Kansas. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course
upon said Petition.
HAROLD K. MAYES, JR.
Administrator of the Estate of
Lillian A. Mayes, deceased
SUBMITTED BY:
DEBORAH A. HUTH #14987
ATHERTON & HUTH LAW OFFICE
415 Commercial St.
P.O. Box 624
Emporia, KS 66801
620 342-1277
Fax 620 342-2343
email: deb@athertonhuth.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
ap19t3
Notice of zoning request
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, April 26, 2016)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE
THE GARNETT PLANNING COMMISSION
The Garnett Planning commission has
received an application for a zoning change.
TAKE NOTICE this matter will be considered on
the 17th day of May, 2016 commencing at 6:00
P.M. in the Commission Room at City Hall, 131
W. Fifth Ave., Garnett, Kansas.
1. An application from Reuben Feuerborn
for Upright Monuments, LLC to rezone 504
East 5th Ave. Garnett, Kansas 66032 from a
R-3 zoning district to a B-1 zoning district.
The complete application, including legal
description of property, may be viewed during
regular business hours at City Hall.
The purpose of this hearing is to receive
evidence from the applicant and to take comments from the public which will be considered
by the Planning Commission in making its
report to the Garnett City Commission regarding the requested zoning change. At the
hearing, any party may appear in person or be
represented by an agent or an attorney.
ANDY FRYE
Zoning Administrator
ap26t1
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
3 bedroom – upstairs apartment, very clean, central heat/
AC. Garage included. $500/
month. (785) 418-5435. mc22tf
Newly listed: Nice 3 BR
home on 3/4 acre—-EDGE of
Lecompton! Do you like to sit
on a big porch and listen to
birds instead of neighbors?
Do you like to grow your own
food? If so, this home could be
for you. Located on the edge
of Lecompton on 3/4 acre, this
home features 3 BR, 2 bath,
big front porch, many vegetable gardens, flower gardens,
fruit trees, etc. Home also has
a wood stove in addition to
Central heat/air. Live the Self
Sustained Lifestyle you have
been dreaming about!! $132,000
Contact Darrell Mooney at Pia
Friend Realty. 785-393-3957.
More pictures at www.piafriend.com
**ap26**
REAL ESTATE
4 buildable lots, a house
can be built on each lot. SW
of Wichita in Harper, Kansas.
$20,000 talkes all. taxes are low,
1 lot has cave. Harper is at
Hwy. 2 and 160. Iris Faucett,
(620) 491-0936.
**jn30**
FSBO Country Home – 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, move in ready.
Covered porches, shaded patio,
2 vehicle carport. Log siding,
metal roof, mature trees. Nice
50 x 40 shed with 50 x 16 lean
to, concrete floor, and 12 x 36
RV addition. $135,000. All on 2.1
acres, blacktop road, close to
Garnett. (785) 204-0730.
**fb9**
1820 Miller Drive, Lawrence,
$99,900. 3 bedroom, 1 bath
remodeled in (02). Just updated with new HVAC, new paint
inside and out, carpet thru-out,
kitchen floor plus lots more.
Vacant and move-in-ready. Not
a drive by. Diann Lutackas,
KW Legacy Partners, Inc. (785)
633-4333, text: 80354 to 79564.
**jn16**
Built in 1901 – by the town
Banker, this 3-4 bedroom,
3 bath Victorian is located
at 906 Liberty in charming
Oskaloosa. Wrap around porch,
new kitchen, new baths, new
siding, pocket doors, stained
glass windows, original woodwork, auxiliary wood furnace,
full dry basement, fireplace,
garage and much more. Home
has been renovated from top
to bottom in the last 8 years.
30 minutes to Lawrence and
Topeka. Dont miss this chance
of a lifetime to own this timeless beauty! See pictures at
www.piafriend.com. Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty,
(785) 393-3957.
**ap12**
1×3
schulte
1×3
MOBILE HOMES
2000 Sq Ft doublewide under
$80,000. Lenders offering $0
Down for Land Owners. Huge
selection of true Modulars in
all sizes. Wrap land, home,
and land improvements in one
package. 866-858-6862
HELP WANTED
Truck Driver Wanted – for
silage harvest, travel to Texas,
Oklahoma, Western Kansas
from May to November. Class
A CDL required. (913) 256-9347.
ap12t3*
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Tina ext. 301 or Lori ext. 303
1-800-926-6869.
JB Construction
2×2
JB CONSTDecks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
Got Drugs?
Drop off your unused medications for safe disposal.
National Drug Take-Back Day
Saturday, April 30
10 a.m. 2 p.m.
Visit www.ag.ks.gov
to find a location near you.
Kansas Attorney General
Derek Schmidt
Not paid for at taxpayers expense.
2×4
KPA QSI
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
5B
LOCAL
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a Happy Ad!
More LOCAL customers read Review classifieds than any other newspaper!
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
HELP WANTED
AUCTIONS
LAWN & GARDEN
LOST AND FOUND
Semi driver – wanted for local
deliveries. Hazmat & CDL
required. Apply in person at
Taylor Oil, 504 Main Street,
Wellsville, KS.
ap5t4
Raymer Society Art Auction
– Saturday, April 30th, 1:30pm
Raymers, Sandzens, Prairie
Printmakers, other area artists
224 S. Main, Lindsborg, KS 785
227-2217 www.lesterraymer.org
Keims Greenhouse
Lost – radio with headset. John
Brown and Utah roads. (620)
200-3007.
ap26t1*
SERVICES
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 pm,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
Printing: Business cards, custom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
Top Notch Mowing – offers
complete lawn and landscape
maintenance. Leaf cleanup,
grass collection, lawn edging.
Call Miles at (785) 448-8222.
ap5t4*
1×3
HELP WANTED
The
Anderson
County
Review is seeking a part-time
records transcriber to handle our court records and law
enforcement reports which are
published each week in the
newspaper. All training provided, Thursdays only, generally
5-8 hours, $10/hr. Work from
home with own email or from
our office in Garnett. Must be
professional, dependable, accurate and solid typist. Contact
publisher Dane Hicks immediately at dhicks@garnett-ks.com
ap26tf
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
1×4
STILES
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
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 Sherwood
Farm & Greenhouse
1×2
785-835-7057
Roses Perennials
AD
Hanging Baskets Annuals
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or mor trees. Call (916) 232-6781
in St. Joseph for details. dc8tf
Will buy – horses and ponies,
(785) 448-8200.
ap19t3
1×3
AD
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
1×3
COMPUTER
AD
WORK
LPNs & RNs – All Shifts
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
CNAs – All shifts
Dietary Aides part time evenings
Day Cook – full time
Come See Why Country Clipper
Stands Out
1×2
hecks
Joystick or Twin Stick Steering
Patented Stand-Up Deck For Easy Maintenance
All Welded Steel Decks
3/5 Year Limited Warranty
Jonsered Tillers, Walk Mowers,
Tractor Mowers, Trimmers in Stock
Hecks Small Engine Repair
EEO/AA, M/F, Vet, Disabled
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN Mon. – Fri. Sat. by Appointment
MISC. FOR SALE
INJECTION MOLDING SUPERVISOR
KEY ROLE & RESPONSIBILITY – Primary duties include; providing direction to
manufacturing personnel in order to meet quality, cost and delivery expectations
of our customers, maintain a safe, clean and organized working environment.
TRAINING/EXPERIENCE – Requirements: Degree preferred, High School Diploma or GED
required. Adequate relevant experience supervising employees within a high volume
manufacturing environment. Injection Molding Experience a plus.
COMPENSATION/BENEFIT PACKAGE: Compensation based on experience.
Medical – Company Pay
AD&D ($40,000) – Free to Employee
Prescription Plan
401(k) Retirement – Co Match
Health Savings Account – Co Contributed
Paid Holidays – Paid Vacation
Dental, vision, Short term life
$.50/hr. Attendance Bonus
$20,000 life – Free to Employee
Incentive Bonus
Send resume with salary requirements to:
janiceb@charloma.com
or Apply in person Mon-Fri 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.
1290 10th Rd. SW – Burlington, KS
620-336-6009
Equal opportunity employer
Check us out on the web at www.charloma.com
Happiness is… Garnett Area
Community Band Spring
Concert of Music Favorites.
Sunday, May 1, 3pm, ACJSHS
auditorium. Refreshments following.
ap26t1*
Happiness is… celebrating
your wedding anniversary
with a FREE announcement
and photo in the Review. Go
to www.garnett-ks.com and
click the form under Submit
News. Available FREE 24
hours/day! mc1tf
DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO
1220 AM
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
General Contractor
EDGECOMB Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
K.R. SERVICES
2×2 Tree Stump Grinding
Clearing – Trees & Brush
KRNewPasture
& Old Fence Removal & Clearing
Track Skidsteers w/Horizontal & Vertical Cut
Turbo Saw w/Auto Spray
Hydra Rake w/Grapple Forks
Dozer Grader
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
620-365-9437
Seeking Nurse Staff LPN
at area Assisted Living Facility. You will ensure
that
our residents get the care they need and
2×3
that we have the necessary resources to provide
GUEST
HOME
it. You
will have direct
impact on the quality of
care that our residents receive and will do what
it takes to provide the highest quality care. Your
outcome-focused work will leave you feeling
empowered at the end of each day, because
youll know youve made a difference in the
lives of our residents. 25-30 hours per week.
Please send resume with salary requirements
to 7440 220th Road, Chanute, KS 66720
or fax resume to 620-431-0402.
Anderson County Hospital, Saint Lukes
Health System has jobs available!
Apply online at
www.saintlukeshealthsystem.org/jobs
2×3
ACH
Nurse
Manager – full-time for Med/Surg/ED
Certified Nursing Assistant – full-time positions all shifts in RLC
Certified Nursing Assistant – PRN all shifts in RLC
Certified Medication Aide – PRN in RLC
Medical Lab Technician/Clinical Lab Scientist – full-time
nights in Laboratory
Medical Assistant – full time FCC
Cook – full time in Nutrition
LPN – part time as needed in RLC
RN – part time as needed in Med/Surg, ED, RLC,
Pre Op/Post Op, and Specialty Clinic
Other part-time jobs: Housekeeper, Laundry Associate
We Hire Only Non-Tobacco Users. EOE.
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems, Inc.
Burlington, KS
2×5
CHARLOMA
Happiness is . . . submitting
your FREE wedding announcement ONLINE for publication in The Anderson County
Review. Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click the form
under Submit News. Fill in
the form and click SUBMIT.
Available FREE 24 hours/day!
mc1tf
news
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
HELP WANTED
RECEPTIONIST/DATA ENTRY
KEY ROLE & RESPONSIBILITY – Primary duties include; greeting visitors and answering
phone while maintaining highest level of customer care, data entry, and other clerical
duties as assigned.
TRAINING/EXPERIENCE – Requirements: GED or High School Diploma, proficiency in
Excel & Word. Previous experience in a manufacturing environment a plus.
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Westphalia
Annual
Alumni
Party!
Saturday, May 7, 8pm-11pm,
Westphalia Elementary School.
Admission, $10 includes, sandwich, chips, soda and music.
ap26t2
Happiness is… Enjoying the
National Multi-Media juried
art exhibition At the Walker,
from April 4 through May
28th, 2016. Walker Community
Gallery – Garnett Public Libra
ry.
ap26t1
Anderson
County
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
26 Boys – 10 speed hybrid
bicycle, new tires, $100. 4488362.
ap26t2*
A leader in the healthcare
1×2
industry, Genesis HealthCare
is now hiring at Richmond
Healthcare and Rehabilitation
ADlocated in Richmond, KS
Center
We offer competitive
compensation, medical, dental,
vision benefits, 401K, vacation
time, growth opportunity
and more.
Apply online:
www.genesishcc.com
Email:
chasidee.stark@genesishcc.com
AUTOS
keim
785-218-1785 785-448-7108
Happiness is… having your
engagement announcement
and photo published FREE
in the Review! Go to www.
garnett-ks.com and click the
form under Submit News.
Available FREE 24 hours/day!
mc1tf
2×5
GOODELL
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. We are seeking
qualified candidates at our Greeley, KS plant for the position of:
2×5
TFES
METAL
TRADES-MAINTENANCE -Position involves performing major overhauls,
assembly, repairs and preventative maintenance on all plant machinery and
equipment, install circuits, lighting equipment, and electrically operated
machinery as required, perform repairs and periodic preventative maintenance
checks and service on all electrical equipment, maintain and calibrate electrical
recording instruments and gauges as required, test operate repaired equipment
for proper functionality.
Candidates must possess two years minimum job-related work experience,
requires working knowledge of machinery and equipment within the facility,
requires familiarity with tools and equipment used in the repair of machines and
equipment, capable of reading and understanding wiring diagrams and electrical
schematics, capable of reading and understanding basic machine and equipment
drawings and specifications, capable of math computations.
We offer a competitive salary and an attractive benefits package. Persons seeking
a challenge and opportunity to innovate are urged to apply in person or send a
confidential resume detailing experience and salary history to: hr@tfes.com
208 N. Iron St., Paola, KS 66071 www.tfes.com EEO Employer/Vet/Disabled
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 26, 2016
LOCAL
Colony/Crest Alumni banquet set for May 28
Calendar
22-Earth Day; 27-Fire Dept.
meeting, fire station, 7 p.m.;
Court, City Hall Community
Room, 6 p.m.; City Council
meeting follows, 7 p.m.;
National Drug Take Back Day
School Calendar
21-high school track at
Burlington; middle school
track at Burlington, 10 a.m.;
23-sophomore class dodge ball
tournament at Crest, 8 a.m.
Meal Site
22-teriyaki chicken, wild rice,
mixed veggies, bread, sunshine
fruit; 25-chicken fried steak,
mashed potatoes, Italian blend
veggies, roll, plums; 27-live
band, Vision cards accepted;
baked chicken, scalloped potatoes, garden blend veggies,
wheat bread, orange and pine
apple fluff. Phone 620-852-3450
for meal reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented Sunday
was John 7:37-52. Pastor
Andrew Zolls sermon was
The Prophet from Galilee.
Apr. 24-Bring Best Choice
labels, Box Tops for Education,
and used ink cartridges as
Cindy McGhee needs to get
these sent to Cookson Hills
Childrens Home. This is one
of our church mission projects.
They use them to get supplies.
Apr. 17-May 29Bring items to
take to camp. May 2-Womens
Spring Banquet 5 p.m. at the
City Hall community room. All
women are welcome. Bring a
friend and a salad.
UMC
Scripture presented Sunday
at the United Methodist Church
service was Psalm 23, Acts
9:36-43, Revelation 7:9-17 and
John 10:22-32. Pastor Dorothy
Welch presented the sermon,
Oh No! Sheep!
VBS
The Christian Church is
in charge of Vacation Bible
School this year. Vacation
Bible School will be held June
6-10. Their theme is Cave
Quest. All three churches
(Christian, Community and
United Methodist) work together each year. The week of June
6-10, classes will be held at each
church beginning and ending
each morning at the Christian
Church. They will begin at 8:30
a.m. and dismiss at 11:30 a.m.
Citywide Yard Sales
Citywide Yard Sales are
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
April 29 and 30. Get the street
map at GSSB drive thru,
Hi-Point Caf or Jeanies. If
you have questions or need to
register please contact Marla
Bain 620-852-3321 or City Hall
620- 852-3530.
Brush Cleanup
City Wide annual brush
cleanup has been set for April
29-May 9. If you need help in
getting your tree limbs from
your street to the dump, phone
852-3530 and the city superintendent will try to be there to
help those who do not have a
way to do so themselves.
Colony/Crest Alumni
The annual Colony/Crest
Alumni Association will hold
their annual alumni banquet May 28 at the Crest High
School auditorium in Colony
May 28. Visitation and registration will begin at 5 p.m. and
the banquet at 7 p.m. Tickets
are $17 per plate in advance
or $18 at the door. This covers
the alumni dues of $5.00 and
the dinner. Reservations are
needed so caterer can prepare
enough food for all.
Reservations must be made
as soon as possible by sending
them to the corresponding secretary Linda Ellis, 1872 Haskell
Road, Ottawa, KS 66067, or
phone 785-214-9791. She needs
your class year with your reservation. This years president
is Arvin Clemans.
Please respond by May 16
to Linda, make checks payable to Colony/Crest Alumni
Association and please give
to the Earl R. Clemans, Jr.
Scholarship fund as the
Association gives $500 scholarship awards to a girl and one
$500 to a boy yearly.
If you cannot attend your
continued support is appreciated. Update the secretary if you
have a new address.
BOE
At the April 11 meeting of
In recognition of…
Administrative
Professionals
Week
Thanks for all your hard work and
continued
2×2 support in the growth of our business.
the Crest board of Education
called to order by board president, Tadd Goodell, it was
voted by 5-l vote to adopt the
resolution to extend board
members term of office; by 6-0
votes to move spring break to
March 20 through March 24,
2017, to not make up the missed
snow day this year and to purchase the grades 3-5 textbooks
as was presented.
Following executive sessions
to discuss personnel, it was
voted by 6-0 vote to hire Hannah
Boehn as Vo-Ag Instructor and
FFA sponsor, Jon Thompson
as Head Custodian and Jessica
Thompson as high school cheer
and dance sponsor. Also by 6-0
vote they accepted the resignation of Patricia JuAire as
English teacher and supplemental sponsorships, Brenna
Hammond as high school
dance/cheer coach and Nick
Gonzalez as head custodian.
The March 9 ANW Special
Education board meeting minutes was reviewed.
Principal Travis Hermreck
reported middle school track
is underway with 28 students
participating.
Stephanie
Edgerton and Ashley Bures
have been participating in
the ANW Special Education
Co-Teaching Program and
the KSDE program director is
very impressed with their program and intends to use it as
a model. Hermreck will attend
training on the program on
April 19. DARE graduation is
April 1 and the PTO will host
an assembly on April 21. The
students have almost completed state assessments and MAP
testing will begin next week.
Chuck Mahon, superintendent,
reported the strategic planning
committee will meet to finalize the plan before the May 9
board meeting. Bailey Myers
and Hermreck are coordinating the state assessments and
the testing is going well. The
roof repair has started, will be
completed soon and the north
door to the school is being
repaired. There are 18 high
schools students out for track
and the track meet hosted by
Crest on May 5. Prom was held
on April 9 and was a success.
Board members attending were Bryan Miller, Jeff
Strickler, Richard Webber,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Allene Luedke
April 10-16 was National Library Week. Colony Library celebrated April 16. Library Board members
served kool aid, tea and a variety of cookies. The library members pictured above were on hand to
answer questions and conduct drawings for adult and childrens prizes. Winners were Brody Hobbs$20 Walmart gift card; Judy Henderson-Southeast Kansas Library System (SEKLS) 50th anniversary
(1916-2016) cookbook; Denton Ramsey-The Good Dinosaur DVD and Lola Webber-Bug jar, Bug Book,
etc. Pictured are Kloma Buckle, Library Director at the computer, (l-r) Gary Hobson, board member,
Steve Wallace, vice-president, Debbie Wools, secretary, Jean Frank, treasurer, and Sue Michael, president elect. Other members not attending were Charlotte Wallace, president and Lola Webber, board
member, both terms expire April 30.
Travis Church, Tadd Goodell,
and Pamela Adams. Jeff
McAdam was absent. Others
were Superintendent Chuck
Mahon, Board Clerk Leanne
Trabuc, Principal Travis
Hermreck, Brenda Stephens,
Patricia JuAire, Brenna
Hammond and Arlyn Briggs
4-H Exchange Meeting
Seekers Not Slackers hosted an exchange meeting with
Cherry Mound March 21 at the
Lone Elm Community building. The meeting was called
to order by Kendra Sprague
with Tyler Gillespie and Lillie
Ball leading the club with the
flag salute and 4-H motto. Roll
call was answered by naming a Favorite Food with 21
member and three leaders
present. Logan Walter and
Hank Newton lead the club in
singing Old McDonald. During
the meeting discussion included weigh in for bucket calf,
goat, sheep, and pig on May 4.
Deadline for Discovery Days is
April 15 and 4-H camp is April
1. The club was asked to help
serve at the Kincaid Banquet
on April 30. For program
Karson Hermreck talked about
how to read Pig Ear notches,
Brooklyn Jones showed the
A Special
THANK YOU
to our
District Administrative Specialist
Jody Troyer
club how to make a String Art
Cross, and Tyler Gillespie did
a project talk on Lamb, Its
Whats for Dinner. For recreation Brenton Edgerton and
Trevor Church led members
in Egg Relay.The next meeting is April 18 at Lone Elm
Community building.
Birth
Jon and Jenna Pretz are
the proud parents of a daughter, Jolee Clare Pretz, born
April 10 in Brookings, SD. She
weighed 9 pounds 9 ounces.
Grandparents are George and
Marjorie Pretz, Osawatomie,
Garry are Paula Decker, Welda.
Great Grandparents Bonnie
Rook, Welda, Charlie and Betsy
Stephens , Iola, Great-greatgrandmother Mary Decker,
Colony.
Shower
A community wedding
shower for Caitlin Golden and
Casey Callaway will be held
Sunday, May 1. 2 p.m. at the
Colony Community Church.
Please bring your favorite recipes to share with Caitlin and
Casey.
Around Town
Thelma Culler recently celebrated her birthday when her
son Dr. James Robert Smart
and Emily, LaHarpe took her
to Ottawa where they dined
at Sirloin Stockade. Her son
Jerald Don Smart and Vickie,
rural Garnett sent her a card
and money, Jerald Don also
phoned her, and her son
Joseph Smart and Lynn,
Cincinnati, Ohio phoned and
also sent a card and monetary
gift. Thelmas friend Darlene
Hall gave her a birthday party.
Others attending were Ron
Cunningham and Lawrence
Penka. A cherry upside down
cake and ice cream were served
and Darlene gave her a gift.
Sympathy is expressed to
Gary and LaNell Knoll at the
death of his mother Florence
Knoll, 87. She passed away
April 9 at Golden Heights in
Garnett. Funeral services were
April 13 at Feuerborn Family
Funeral Service, Colony, burial
followed in Colony Cemetery.
Sympathy is also expressed
to Billie Thompson at the death
of her daughter, Debra Lynn
Knepp Holderman, 60, Iola.
She passed away April 7 at
Cherry Ridge Farms, Ottawa.
Funeral services were April
14 at Waugh-Yokum & Friskel
Chapel, Iola, burial followed in
Colony Cemetery.
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We appreciate all that you do!
From the Welda District Employees
Kandice Simpson
edward
jones
Senior Branch Office Administrator
Welda District 785-448-4800
Joshua D. Nelson
Financial Advisor
112 E. 5th
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-7171
Thanks
for all
you do!
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Spring
Is In the Air
Home, Auto & Bridal Edition A semi-annual supplement
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
2 SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016
Beat planning pressure: 5 tips for an intimate wedding
(BPT) – The terms wedding and money go
hand in hand. The average wedding cost
is now up to $31,213 according to theknot.
com, and thats not even including the
honeymoon. Because of increasing costs,
more and more couples are looking to
plan a smaller, more intimate ceremony.
While theres no universal way to define a
small wedding, it typically involves a limited gathering of family and close friends.
No matter the size of your guest list,
youre bound to feel the stress of planning
as you want your day to be perfect. But
opting for a modest-sized wedding opens
the door to endless options and possibilities. Here are some tips for making your
small-scale wedding the event of the year:
Whittle down your guest list
If you can keep your guest count low,
the cost for just about everything you
need for your wedding will significantly
decrease. Theres always going to be more
guests you could invite, but if youre
making a point to have a small wedding,
people will be understanding. Set limits
and stick to them.
Rent what you can
Rental stores offer a wide range of products to fit weddings of any size or theme.
A smaller wedding opens up your options
when it comes to venue and personalization. Youll likely need tables and chairs,
tents, a dance floor and maybe even china,
tableware and linens. Start by searching
on RentalHQ.com to find a store for all
your decorating and setup needs.
Keep the menu simple
One of the biggest costs of a wedding is
the food, so try to shy away from extrav-
agant and fancy menu
items. All you need are
a few key dishes and one
or two desserts to keep
everyone satisfied. Your
guests arent coming to
ogle over a lavish spread,
they simply want to be
there to celebrate with
the happy couple.
Stick to your budget
Create a budget using
money you already have
in the bank. Theres no
need to go into debt when
planning an intimate
wedding. If you have
$1,000 to spend, then plan
a $1,000 wedding. If you
stick to a moderate budget, youre more likely
to keep the planning and
actual event in control.
Think outside the box
A small wedding may
require a bit of strategic
thinking and DIY projTHE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Brandpoint Content
ects. For example, you
More couples look for a smaller, more intimate wedding to reduce the expensive costs of having a tradican make your own invitations and party favors tional ceremony.
to not only save money,
supposed to be one of the happiest occa- and helpful options visit rentalhq.com/
but to reflect your unique personality as
sions. For more wedding planning tips weddings.
a couple. You can also get creative with
the venue, like a small bed and breakfast,
restaurant or historic home. Theres no
need to book an entire banquet hall.
Let these straightforward ideas take
some of the stress out of your wedding
planning. After all, your wedding day is
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SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016 3
Shedding for the wedding: Your 3-month guide
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Brandpoint Content
Plan for about three months to learn new eating and exercise habits to get you ready for the big day.
week and add in another day or Pilates or
yoga.
Weeks 9-12
It is important to keep up with your
developing healthy habits as the weeks
progress, but as your wedding day
approaches, youre sure to feel the stress
of planning. A new focus on rest and
relaxation during this time period is key,
Bronston says. You can eat well and exercise perfectly, but without sleep, stretching, rest and recovery, your body is at risk
of not functioning properly.
Planning a wedding can be stressful
and tiresome, but if you commit to a
healthy diet and fitness plan, youll walk
down the aisle feeling confident and ready
for your new life ahead.
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(BPT) – The dress, the tux, the guests, the
honeymoon – there are so many details
that go into your wedding day. All eyes
are on you from the moment you walk
down the aisle until the last dance of
the night. Understandably so, brides and
grooms often feel a lot of pressure to look
their best on this important day – theres
nothing like a wedding to motivate you to
get serious about your health and fitness
goals.
But crash diets or extreme exercise
programs are never the answer.
Its usually best to start thinking
about your specific goals three months
before your wedding day to allow plenty
of time to establish your routine and
adjust to a healthier lifestyle, says Steve
Bronston, certified personal trainer with
Life Time, a healthy way of life company
that operates more than 115 health and
wellness centers nationwide. This creates a great opportunity for the bride and
groom to support each other and get in
shape together.
Bronston and Life Time offer a threemonth countdown plan to get you ready
for the big day:
Weeks 1-4
Focus on changing your unhealthy habits. Nutrition is key when trying to lose
weight, decrease body fat and increase
your overall health. Work with a professional to lay out a detailed nutrition plan
that consists of carbohydrates, protein
and healthy fats at each meal. Then, begin
with a fitness program that incorporates
weight training and cardio intervals.
Arm exercises like overhead press, tricep
push-ups and bicep curls, and back exercises like rows and rear flys help brides
looking to tone up for a strapless or lowback dress. Bronston suggests starting
with two or three days of weight training,
two or three days of cardio and one day of
Pilates or yoga.
Weeks 5-8
Now its time to switch up your exercise routines. Its a good idea to work
with a personal trainer or join a group
fitness class once or twice a week to
shake up your routine and stay motivated. Your workouts should include one to
two weight training exercises per body
part throughout the week. If you can, try
to shift the amount of weight you use and
number of repetitions you do to help stimulate change within your body. Continue
a cardio routine of two to three days per
4 SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016
Drive safer at any age using the top vehicle technologies
(BPT) – New technologies are responsible for many of the advances, comforts
and conveniences of modern life, from
the smartphone to wearable items such
as smart wristwatches and eyeglasses.
Thats no different in the car, where new
technology is helping people drive more
safely.
While cars today may not look much
different from previous model years, the
latest technology is helping save lives.
One in five injury crashes could be prevented or reduced if all passenger vehicles were equipped with specific types of
technology, according to a study from the
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
Enhancing vehicle safety
In the past, safety features were geared
toward protecting drivers and passengers
during a crash. Now, newer vehicle technologies have the potential to prevent a
collision altogether. Many are already on
the market, including:
Blind-spot warning systems warn
drivers of objects in blind spots, especially
while changing lanes and parking.
Back-up cameras warn of objects
behind the vehicle to help drivers judge
distances and reverse more safely.
Smart headlights adjust the range and
intensity of light based on the distance of
traffic and to reduce glare and improve
night vision.
Collision avoidance systems alert the
driver when the vehicle may be in danger
of a collision.
Lane departure warnings monitor the
vehicles position and warn the driver if
the vehicle deviates outside the lane.
Parking assistance indicates distance
to objects, making parking easier, or may
enable vehicles to park on their own.
Adaptive cruise control allows the car
to adjust its speed depending on traffic
conditions.
As these technologies become more
widely available in new cars today, its
important all drivers learn how they work
and how to use them effectively, says
Jodi Olshevski, gerontologist and executive director of The Hartford Center for
Mature Market Excellence. This is especially true for mature drivers, as many
technologies can enhance the driving
experience as we age.
Top technologies among mature
drivers
Drivers ages 50 to 69, according to a
new study from The Hartford and the MIT
AgeLab, are most willing to adopt the following vehicle technologies: 1) blind-spot
warning systems, 2) back-up cameras, 3)
smart headlights, 4) collision avoidance
systems, and 5) lane departure warnings.
A majority of participants indicated
they are willing to purchase these five
technologies, are likely to use them, and
think they are worth having.
These technologies can help keep drivers safe and feeling confident behind the
wheel. For example, back-up cameras can
help drivers with reduced flexibility to
see behind the vehicle, and blind-spot
warning systems may help drivers with
limited range of motion be more comfortable while driving.
The importance of learning about vehicle technology
Learning more about how vehicle technologies work is a smart step to keeping
drivers safer on the road. Many new cars
already include some safety technologies,
and all new cars will be required to have
back-up cameras by May 2018.
Staying current on the latest features
available – and using them appropriately
– may help all drivers, including mature
drivers, stay safe behind the wheel. To
learn more, drivers can download a free
vehicle technology guidebook and take
an interactive video quiz at thehartford.
com/cartech.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Brandpoint Content
Modern technology like backup cameras can help you drive safe at any age.
Simple solution to maximize your cars performance
(BPT) – Are you the type of driver who pushes the
accelerator a little harder on the curves of a back-country
road? Are you a person who smiles as they approach a
new terrain or road condition youve never conquered
before? If so, youre a performance seeker. A person who
is constantly pushing themselves to prove that they are
driver enough.
The performance driver never wants to lose the feeling
of adrenaline as they push their vehicle to the max, but
as the seasons change, so do the road conditions and the
challenges drivers face. We sat down with X-Games athlete, professional race car driver, professional stunt car
driver and BFGoodrich(R) Tires ambassador, Andrew
Comrie-Picard, or ACP, to better understand the challenges associated with wet weather driving, how modern
tires can help prevent the loss of traction and skidding,
and how they make the overall driving experience more
fun – regardless of the season.
Keeping contact with the road
The biggest danger with wet weather driving is how
unexpected the road conditions and hazards can be. As
the temperatures rise and seasonal showers pick up,
standing water in puddles, still-cool spring temperatures,
and the potential for showers to lift oil to the surface of
the road can all compromise traction and lead to a skid
or a possible accident.
Having the right tires is the number one thing you
can do to prevent hydroplaning without losing performance often drowned out during the rainy season, says
Andrew Comrie-Picard (ACP). The proper tread depth
and tire design can make all the difference in your vehicles ability to shed water, while increasing control on
the road.
What if you hydroplane?
ACP has driven in all types of conditions across terrains all over the globe – including a recent expedition
down an ice road onto the frozen Arctic Ocean. He says
its important to think like and become a performance
driver in the situations where the road conditions deteriorate to ensure you do not lose control.
Panicking is the worst thing to do. If you start hydroplaning, slow the vehicle down gradually, dont slam on
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the brakes. Ride it out and be ready for when your tires
regain traction with the road, ACP says. Those who
drive the fastest typically have the slowest control input:
they brake slower, they steer smoothly, and these are the
types of things that will save you in a skid.
ACP also says the key to this calmness is having a
good understanding of your vehicle, its tires, and their
limitations.
You need to be able to feel where the edge of your
vehicle and its tires are so you know exactly how much
you can push it in any climate or condition. A tire that
communicates with you when its sliding and when its
stopping is crucial, he says. That kind of sensitivity is
what makes tires so important for a performance driver
like ACP.
High performance tires help you respond to unexpected situations, whether youre hydroplaning or starting
to skid out. While greater traction during wet weather
seasons is certainly argument enough, these tires also
open your cars potential, making for a much more fun
driving experience regardless of the forecast.
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SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016 5
A new car vs. your used car: Whats the greener option?
(BPT) – Buying a new car to reduce
your carbon footprint seems logical. But
surprisingly, keeping the vehicle already
in your garage, or replacing it with a
more fuel efficient used car may be a
greener choice. Thats because it takes a
lot of energy and raw materials to manufacture a new vehicle. It varies between
models, but it is reasonable to estimate
building a new $30,000 midsize car will
generate greenhouse gases that are the
equivalent of 14 metric tons of CO2,
says RockAuto.com Vice President, Tom
Taylor.
The average car on the road is about
11 years old. EPA data shows that vehicles (cars and trucks) built in 2005, on
average, emit 447 grams of CO2 per mile.
A 2016 vehicle is expected to generate
about 90 grams less than that every mile.
Producing less CO2 is good, but it would
take more than 150,000 miles of driving
for that 90 grams in CO2 savings to add
up and compensate for the 14,000 kg (14
metric tons of CO2) it took to build the
new car. Especially for someone who
does not drive a lot, it could be greener to
just keep a well maintained older vehicle
than to build a new one.
How much do you save with an electric car?
Electric cars do not have tailpipes,
but an electric car is still on the hook
for upstream CO2 emitted by the utility which provides the electricity for the
car. The EPA estimates upstream CO2
is around 100 grams per mile for most
electric vehicles. That is a whopping 347
grams less than what is produced by the Taylor says. Less energy and materials Upstream CO2 may decline as utility
average vehicle built in 2005, but it would means less CO2.
companies find new, greener ways to
still take over 40,000 miles of driving
Car manufacturers are using more generate electricity. Nevertheless, keepbefore the electric car saved enough CO2 recycled materials and updating fac- ing your current car well maintained or
to cover the greenhouse gas cost of build- tories to use less energy. Government buying a more fuel efficient used car are
mandates require future vehicles currently great choices if you want to be
ing it in the first place.
The environmental cost of servicing become increasingly more fuel efficient. green.
older cars
What about the CO2
equivalent discharged
while making parts to
fix an older car? Brake
pads, struts, tires and
other parts wear out
as the miles pile up.
Fortunately, unless the
vehicle is involved in an
accident, the structure
that makes up most of a
car will never need to be
replaced.
Many smaller parts
like alternators and
major parts like engines
and transmissions can
be
remanufactured.
Remanufacturing means
only the components
that experience wear are
replaced. Metal housings and other major
pieces can be cleaned,
refinished and reused.
Remanufacturing saves
more than 80 percent of
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / Brandpoint Content
the energy and raw materials required to build a Keeping your current car well maintained or buying a more fuel efficient car are great choices if you want
new part from scratch, to be green.
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6 SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016
Professional or amateur? Five
qualities of an expert contractor
(BPT) – Are you one of the more than
3 million people planning to renovate
your kitchen or bathroom this year?
Or perhaps youre adding on a room or
finishing your basement. If youre going
to hire a contractor for any home remodeling project, make sure you know the
difference between a great contractor
and an OK one. In other words, learn
what separates a professional from an
amateur.
A quick Google search on remodeling disasters or renovation mistakes
returns an endless number of nightmare remodeling projects and scams,
where the homeowner is left dealing
with unfinished projects or unsafe conditions, and ultimately spends more
money rectifying the issue.
When making such a significant
investment, you want to make sure
youre getting a reputable and dependable professional so your project doesnt
become another horror story. Its important to do your research, read reviews
and check references before you put
your home in the hands of someone else.
So, now that youve narrowed down
your list of potential contractors, how
can you weed out the amateurs from the
tried and true professionals?
Look for these qualities:
Focus:
Professional: Puts clients first and
will work with you to make sure your
goals are feasible and that the project
can get done on time and on budget.
Treats customers, their families and
their homes with respect.
Amateur: Focuses on finishing the
job as quickly as possible, with little
regard for your familys personal needs
and schedule.
Livability:
Professional: Well-equipped to deal
with the No. 1 threat to livable remodeling – dirt and dust. Protects you and your
family from annoying and potentially
dangerous air particles by using the
most effective tools and processes for
dust elimination, such as the BuildClean
Dust Control System.
Amateur: Doesnt have a proactive
strategy to manage indoor air quality
and jobsite dust. Brushes it under the
rug without concern for your indoor air
quality, your belongings and the shortterm and long-term health of you and
your family.
Ethical:
Professional: Proactively addresses
challenges head-on, immediately notifying you of an unexpected issue.
Amateur: Ignores problems uncovered during the project in order to keep
it moving. Leaves behind things like
hidden mold, leaky pipes or structural
issues, putting the health and safety of
your family at risk.
Risk:
Professional: has a license, certifications and insurance. Obtains all necessary permits, protecting you against
unsafe work and legal issues. Guarantees
their work.
Amateur: Unaware of – or doesnt
care about – building codes, required
permits and health and safety regulations. Leaves you liable for any improper work, mistakes and in a potentially
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Value:
Professional: Communicates with
you to establish an estimate and negotiate a fair contract and payment schedule.
Amateur: Underbids a project by
thousands of dollars and is likely to
cut corners to meet the budget or overwhelm you with costly change orders.
When beginning your remodeling
projects this year, remember professional contractors will put your interests first. They will proactively address
potential issues and discuss a livability
strategy with you that includes timeline,
logistics, dust control and safety. With
an amateur, there are no guarantees, so
youre putting yourself and your loved
ones at unnecessary risk.
For more information on selecting a
professional contractor, visit: livableremodeling.com.
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SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016 7
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8 SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016
Five essential spring home improvement projects
(BPT) – The arrival of spring means new
beginnings and a fresh chance to tackle
those home improvement projects youve
been putting off for the last several months.
Get your home ready for summer and make
it more beautiful, efficient and functional
than ever with these five seasonal projects.
Keep, donate or trash.
Your first step is to declutter the home.
Separate items into three categories: keep,
donate or trash. Heres a tip: if you havent
used something in the last year, chances are
you can get rid of it. Items such as unwanted electronics, housewares and gently used
clothing can be donated to charity. For
everything else, check with your local recycling program before putting anything in
the garbage.
Get serious about spring cleaning.
Give your home a fresh start by wiping
down windows, countertops, electronics,
appliances, doorknobs, furniture, light fixtures and ceiling fans. Also, be sure to mop
floors and vacuum carpet. Never cleaned
windows before? Find out how with our free
guide.
Bring your deck back to life.
We think winter is hard on us, but just
imagine how hard it is on our decks, which
weather the bitter cold temperatures, snow
and ice all season long. Take a close look
at your deck and check for warped, loose
or splintered boards. Sweep away anything
that may have fallen between the cracks,
make any needed repairs, scrub or power
wash, and restain if necessary.
home, spring is the perfect time to renew
your homes look. One 2016 color trend: bold
entry doors like those from Pella. Learn
more and pick out your new, colorful front
door.
Bloom where you are planted.
Whether you are a homeowner, renter
or sublessee, celebrate the end of winter
by creating spaces for bright flowers and
making the most of your garden. Apartment
dwellers, bring the outdoors in with hanging baskets, potted plants or herbs.
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Do a color refresh.
Whether youre adding a fresh coat of
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SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016 9
4 tried and true tips for any kitchen redesign
(BPT) – Tackling a home improvement
project can be a really daunting task whether its a simple redecoration or a
full kitchen renovation. You may feel
like youre the only homeowner, ever,
to have questions. Renowned designer
and LG Studio Artistic Advisor, Nate
Berkus, has answered design questions
from homeowners for more than 20 years,
and hes found that the same ones keep
cropping up.
Redesigning your kitchen is a big
investment, says Berkus. Its not just
about the money; youre also investing
a lot of time and emotion. There are so
many decisions to make, and you want
them to be the right ones. You also want
to create a space that reflects the people
who live there. A well-designed kitchen
needs to be functional and personalized.
Berkus offers answers to four design
questions that commonly confound
homeowners:
1. Where do I even begin?
Berkus recommends starting with a
vision of what kind of kitchen you want
to create.
There is so much design inspiration
out there – Instagram, Pinterest, design
blogs, etc. Find out what you are drawn to
and what catches your eye. Ask yourself
– how do we want to live in the space, and
whats important to us? The design needs
to support that, says Berkus.
A redesign doesnt have to always
mean a full renovation, or that you need
to do it all at once. Painting cabinets can
be a weekend process, and change the
appliances when you have the budget.
You can do it piecemeal, notes Berkus.
2. How do I make the best use of my
renovation dollars in the kitchen?
The kitchen is the number one room
that consumers are most likely to splurge
on when renovating, according to a
nationwide study from LG Studio. So is it
really worth it?
Absolutely, says Berkus. Its hands
down the hardest working room in your
home, and you need it to stand the test
of time. A kitchen is also about bringing
people together. We do a lot of living and
create a lot of memories in our kitchens.
To make the most of your kitchen renovation dollars, Berkus recommends shopping local vintage shops or multi-dealer antique malls for one-of-a-kind items
such as light fixtures and seating. Even
shop your own home for things like trays,
bowls and objects that could get new life
displayed and used in your kitchen.
3. Whats the most important thing to
invest in during a renovation?
If you dont start with innovative,
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hard-working appliances, it doesnt matter what backsplash you are using, says
Berkus. A kitchen needs to function, and
great appliances are at the heart of that.
They are 100 percent worth the investment.
Take for example the new 42-inch
built-in side-by-side refrigerator from
LG Studio, which Berkus helped design.
The stainless steel finish is so handsome
and the inside of the refrigerator is huge.
Its perfect for big families and kids. Your
appliances need to seamlessly marry
design with functionality, notes Berkus.
4. Tastes change, so how can I be sure
I wont hate all this five years from now?
The biggest thing is not to get sidetracked by trends. I always say if something was considered beautiful 10 years
ago, it probably will still be beautiful in
10 years, says Berkus.
When investing money, Berkus recommends always reaching for what is
classic and what has stood the test of time
– things like subway tile, Carrara marble,
butcher block and painted-wood cabinets.
A typical renovation takes several
months, but trends change often, notes
Berkus. If you pick out a backsplash or
cabinet color because someone told you
that is the hottest thing right now, by the
time its installed chances are youll have
moved on to something else.
Redesigning and renovating a kitchen
can be a rewarding, enjoyable experience – especially with some advice from a
design professional.
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10 SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016
7 steps for summer lawn prep
(BPT) – If youre a part of the nearly 90
percent of Americans who believe its
important to have a well-maintained
yard, you and your backyard will
appreciate these seven simple steps for
tending to your natural turf lawn with
minimal effort.
According to Grass Seed USA, a coalition of American grass seed farmers
and academics, investing a little repair
time in early spring and a small amount
of maintenance time in summer will
pay off with a lush lawn ready for all
your summer activities.
1. Test your soil. Good soil is one of
the essentials of a healthy lawn. A soil
test is simple, inexpensive and provides
valuable information about current pH
levels. Simple amendments like lime or
sulfur can be added to neutralize overly
acidic or alkaline soil and help grass
thrive. Find a soil test kit at a local
garden store or make your own using
common household items.
2. Aerate. Older or heavily trafficked
lawns can suffer from soil compaction.
A core aerator with hollow tines will
pull small plugs of soil out of the ground,
allowing increased movement of water,
nutrients and oxygen. Aeration can also
increase the soil contact with new seeds
and promote new growth. You can rent
an aerator or hire a professional to do
the work for you.
3. Seed. According to Grass Seed
USA, the ideal lawn planting season
is April through the mid-to-end of
October, depending on where you live.
Turf specialists at a garden store or
local university extension office can
help select the right seed for your area
and usage, pointing you toward the seed
closest to existing grass or suggesting
alternatives for problem areas. After
seeding, water lightly but regularly,
keeping the reseeded areas damp until
the new grass grows in.
4. Control weeds. Healthy lawns
essentially control weeds by squeezing
them out. However, if crabgrass or dandelions invade, herbicides may help.
Consult a garden specialist about which
herbicide is right for your lawn and
how to use it. Applying a pre-emergent
herbicide in the spring before weed
grass emerges can reduce problems
down the line. If youve applied seed,
keep in mind herbicides can kill it, so
use a product that will not affect new
growth. For dandelions, digging them
up is often effective, but a broadleaf
herbicide may be applied.
5. Water as needed. On average,
a lawn needs about 1 inch of water
per week, from rainfall or irrigation.
Letting the lawn dry out completely
between waterings will encourage the
grass to grow stronger, deeper roots
as it searches for water deeper in the
soil. Put a rain gauge on your porch
to measure rainfall; skip the watering
and save your irrigation money if you
receive 1 inch of rain in a week.
6. Fertilize naturally. Dont break
your back trying to bag lawn clippings.
If you mow frequently (about once a
week during the growing season) and
dont remove too much height (only
one-third of the blade), you can leave
the grass clippings on the lawn. They
contain the same nitrogen, phosphorus
and potassium as commercial fertilizer
– and theyre free.
7. Mow to the right height. Wait until
your grass is 3 inches tall before mowing and then cut it to 2 inches in height.
By only trimming one-third of the blade
length, you will avoid stressing the
grass while leaving enough leaf to protect the roots from the sun – helping you
create a low-maintenance, drought-tolerant lawn.
A lawn doesnt need constant pampering. Ongoing lawn maintenance can
be quick and easy, and the reward is
a beautiful, environmentally-friendly
setting for outdoor activities of many
kinds. So, fire up the grill, hang up the
hammock and get busy enjoying your
personal great, grassy outdoors.
More lawn care tips can be found at
www.weseedamerica.com.
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SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016 11
Go green to save green: 6 earth-friendly home improvement ideas
(BPT) – From cleaning out the garage to
upgrading your floors and windows, it
often seems like home improvement projects will never end. While you may be
dedicated to making your home a better
place, its also important to consider how
it affects your carbon footprint. Are you
doing everything you can to make your
home earth friendly?
Not only could your home benefit from
energy-saving changes, but you can also
lower your utility bills and live green
without sacrificing your style. While
Earth Day falls in the month of April,
its not the only time to commit to environmental stewardship. Consider some of
these ideas to be both earth friendly and
cost effective year round:
Choose the right materials
Start the planning stage of your project
by selecting materials with low impact on
the environment. For example, reclaimed
wood is durable, versatile and renewable,
and can add beauty and timelessness
to your home. Since it is recycled, your
reclaimed wood project doesnt involve
chopping down or harming any new trees.
Other eco-friendly alternatives include
linoleum instead of vinyl, low or no-VOC
(volatile organic compounds) paints, bamboo and cork.
of their work and have them explain what
tactics they use to be environmentally
friendly.
use significantly less energy and last longer than traditional incandescent bulbs,
so youll save more in the long run.
If possible, make sure the appliances,
tools and equipment in your home have
the ENERGY STAR label. This means that
the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) qualifies that product as energy
efficient. The ENERGY STAR label is
becoming more widely recognized as more
consumers bring these types of appliances
– like ovens, stoves and HVAC systems into their home for both cost and energy
savings.
Fixtures like low flow faucets, toilets
and showerheads are just a few of the ways
you can conserve water in your home and
reduce the amount of your water bills.
Additionally, there are plenty of washing
machine and dishwasher options that give
you the same level of cleaning power while
saving both water and energy.
Going green doesnt have to be difficult
or costly. Use these tips to save money
each month and impact the world around
you in a positive way. To learn more about
reusing tools and being a friend to the
environment, visit rentalhq.com.
Use energy efficient equipment
Try eco-friendly lighting
A lighting upgrade is essential for an
earth-friendly home. While LED and CFL
lightbulbs tend to cost more upfront, they
Rent your project tools
Before you go out and buy all the tools
and equipment you need for each home
improvement project, do a little research
to find out what you can rent. Not only
does this save you money, but it also limits
energy consumption, pollution and waste
associated with manufacturing, storing
and maintaining new equipment. You can
easily find a rental company on RentalHQ.
com to provide a variety of products such
as aerators, augers, jackhammers, pressure washers, chainsaws and more.
Hire savvy professionals
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 4-26-2016 / BPT
Choosing the right materials and a savvy
professional to do the work can help keep
your home earth-friendly.
If youre undergoing a serious remodel, youll most likely be working with a
contractor, designer or other professional
to review your plans and turn them into
reality. Make sure you not only hire the
right people, but make your goal of going
green loud and clear. Ask to see examples
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12 SPRING EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – April 26, 2016
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