Anderson County Review — April 9, 2013
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from April 9, 2013. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Contents Copyright 2012 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Lickteigs honored
by historical society.
Its baseball season!
ACHS vs. CHHS.
See page 6B.
See Page 6A.
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APRIL 9, 2013
SINCE 1865 147th Year, No. 39
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(785) 448-3111
Voters approve new $25M hospital
Contested city, school
board races also
decided by voters
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT By a margin that
was first reported as a mere 48
votes but later revealed to be
more like 130, less than 4-out-of
10 Anderson County voters last
week committed the county to
a 30-year bond issue to build
a new $25 million Anderson
County Hospital.
The highly-contested issue
was defeated in most every rural
voting precinct in the county,
but only in a few of those precincts by decisive margins,
leaving Garnetts largest wards
to sway the eventual totals.
Unofficial vote counts (the
vote was to be canvassed by
county commissioners at 1 p.m.
yesterday before being rendered official) showed 1,081
in favor of the measure and 951
against. An earlier total had
shown the yes votes with only
a 48-vote victory, but county
clerk Phyllis Gettler said later
the manual adding of advance
voting reports resulted in a
missed report from one of the
countys touch-screen voting
stations. Once those totals were
added in, the measure passed
by about 53 percent of those
participating.
Gettler said county voting
records showed 5,392 registered
voters as of election day. Only
2,098 cast ballots, or about 38
percent.
The measure, which was
endorsed by the county commission, commits county taxpayers to a little over a 5 mill
tax increase to combine with
nearly tripled operating lease
payments from St. Lukes
to pay off bonds for the new
facility over a 30 year period.
Opponents warned St. Lukes
was committed to only the first
10 years of the lease agreement
with extensions to 30 years.
Supporters argued that the
agreement when fulfilled would
have St. Lukes paying for twothirds of the total project.
Hospital officials and supports maintained that age-related structural and major system
threats made the structure
obsolete, and said a piece-bypiece repair project would cost
$21 million and take 7 years to
complete, if some of the repairs
could be made at all.
County hospital board members and St. Lukes staff managed an aggressive campaign
to build support for the effort,
though some of the informational meetings held over the
course of the past five weeks
were attended by only a few
members of the public.
Were very excited that it
passed, said Board of Trustees
SEE ELECTION ON PAGE 3A
Schools offer creative
snow day solution
Is it spring yet?
USD 365 to add 10-15
minutes to May days
instead of 1 more day
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT How much can you
accomplish in 10 or 15 minutes?
Teachers and students in
USD 365 likely will have a variety of answers to that question
by Memorial Day, as the school
board voted to extend the school
day by 10 minutes each day in
May to make up a snow day.
The value of 10 minutes was
at the center of a debate over
the best way to make up an
extra day of school. Students
in the district missed six days
of class because of snowstorms
between late February and
March. Three days will not be
made up because the district
typically pads the calendar with
extra hours just for such purposes. That left three snow days,
however, that must be made up.
Two days were added to the end
of the year, bringing the last
day of school to Friday, May 24.
But that third snow day was
a problem. If the district added
that final snow day to the end
of the year, it meant students
would return for a partial day
on the Tuesday after Memorial
Day. Some parents and school
officials, including teachers,
didnt like that idea.
SEE EXTENSION ON PAGE 2A
USD 365: Increase in
taxes may be inevitable
School funding issues,
enrollment numbers
translate to tax hike
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-09-2013 / Vickie Moss
Linda Latimer, Greeley; Braxton Weide, Garnett; and Marena Lacey, Garnett, hang out at the playground at Lake Garnett
Park Sunday afternoon. Warmer temperatures finally arrived this past weekend after a chilly start to spring, bringing a flurry of
activity to local parks and lakes.
Video will market USD 365 schools
Project developer says
district is among first
to embrace concept
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A marketing video
could help USD 365 play the
role of the early bird, hoping
to catch parents who are looking for good schools and a nice
community.
School board members heard
Doug Archer, of Garnett, who
is developing a video project
aimed at attracting people to
Garnett schools. Although total
cost of the project is not yet
known, Superintendent Don
Blome said the district expects
to spend about $4,000 putting
the video together. When finished, it will be distributed primarily online through social
media.
The project is designed as
a marketing ploy that will target people outside of Anderson
County and create interest in
USD 365 schools, Archer said.
The project includes focus
groups, both from a local perspective as well as a focus group
in Arkansas to give an outside
perspective.
The videos primarily will
focus on key areas, such as
showing students who appear
happy and included. Other
key points include outstanding
performance on standardized
tests, technology achievements,
low teacher-student ratio, and
opportunities to participate in
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A drop in FTE
enrollment and state budget cuts mean a property tax
increase is all but inevitable for
taxpayers in USD 365 next year,
school board members learned
at their regular board meeting
last week.
Several
unknown
factors could change things, but
Superintendent Don Blome said
a local tax increase is likely to
be the districts only option.
Money is going to have to
come from somewhere. I dont
see any other way were going
to come up with it, unless you
cut a bunch of stuff and weve
already gone through quite a bit
of that, Blome said.
State legislators continue to
debate school funding issues,
and its unlikely the district
will know exactly how some
of those funding problems will
work out. Also playing into the
confusion surrounding school
finance is the ongoing legal
battle over a court order to significantly increase school funding. Other legislative issues,
like a proposed change to the
SEE TAXES ON PAGE 3A
extracurricular activities and
sports. Anderson Countys
location is expected to be a
prime drawing point, Archer
said, especially as families look
to move to the region when a
new BNSF intermodal is built
near Edgerton and Gardner.
USD 365 may be the first
district to look at developing
a marketing project like this,
Archer said. He predicts similar projects will become more
common in the next few years
SEE VIDEO ON PAGE 3A
Students will pay small fee for welding program
Plans continue on new
vocational education
programs in area
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Plans for vocational education programs for local
high school students continue
to evolve, with school board
members looking at charging a
small fee for students who want
to take the classes.
A new regional welding program will be added to USD 365
in a cooperative agreement with
Neosho County Community
College. The welding pro-
gram will be based in Garnett,
although students from other
area high schools also will
attend. A similar health science program will be offered at
Ottawa, and USD 365 students
can attend that program. The
vocational programs are part
of a statewide push to increase
vocational education. Students
who complete the course will
receive certification that can be
used to immediately find a job
in the workplace. Classes will
be offered during a students
junior and senior years of high
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-09-2013 / Vickie Moss
school, with certification available after one year of training. Connie Fagg and her mother, Betty Lewis, consider their options to
SEE WELDING ON PAGE 3A
play tile letters during a Scrabble tournament at the Garnett Public
Library Sunday, April 7. Several teams competed in the tourney.
2A
NEWS
IN BRIEF
VFW BREAKFAST OFFERED
VFW breakfast will be 7 a.m. to 10
a.m. April 13 at the Garnett VFW
Post. Serving biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage
and eggs.
NO COMMODITIES IN APRIL
The ECKAN agency has
announced that there will not be
any commodity food products
available for distribution in any of
its counties during April 2013.
GREELEY SALES APRIL 20
Greeley Garage Sales and St.
Johns Hall Garage and Bake Sale
will be from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Saturday, April 20.
GREELEY CLEAN-UP
Greeley Spring Clean-up will be
April 15 and 16. Items will be
hauled off at no cost. Items must
be placed by curb and be bagged
and bundled. Burn barrels and tires
will not be hauled off. Please call
City Hall at (785) 867-2440 for
large items like appliances.
FOL ANNUAL BOOK SALE
The annual Friends of the Library
book sale will begin Saturday, April
13, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Garnett Library. The preview sale
for Friends of the Library members
will be 7 p.m. Friday, April 12.
GREELEY BALL SIGN UP
Forms are available for the Greeley
Summer Ball programs at Greeley
Elementary School and the Bank
of Greeley. For more information,
contact Doug Rockers at (785)
867-2010.
VETERANS ADVOCACY
Veterans Corner II will be offered to
all veterans and their families from
1 p.m. to 4 p.m. every second,
third, fourth and fifth Thursday of
the month at the Goppert Building,
705 W. 15th St., Ottawa. Veterans
Corner II is a veterans advocacy
group to help fill out claims or
answer questions about veterans
benefits. Contact Kathy Lee at (785)
418-4059, email klee917@att.net.
This is a free service to all veterans
and their families.
SEVERE WEATHER ALERT
Anderson County residents who
want to get National Weather
Service severe weather warnings by phone via the countys
CodeRed system should register
online at www.andersoncountyks.
org, click Public safety/emergency
management, or pick up registration forms at the county annex,
Garnett City Hall, Garnett Library,
Welda Post office, Westphalia Coop, Greeley City Hall, Kincaid City
Hall or Colony City Hall. You must
be registered to receive the severe
weather warnings by landline or cell
phone. For more information contact AC Emergency Management
at (785) 448-6797.
HELP FOR ANIMALS
Anyone willing to donate kitty litter, canned dog food or canned
cat food, dog and cat toys, paper
towels., laundry and cleaning supplies, or newspaper to help support
Prairie Paws Animal Shelter can
contact Lisa at 785-304-4286.
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONER MARCH 25
Chairman Eugene Highberger called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Board of Commissioners to order at
9:00 a.m. on March 25 at the County
Commission Room. Attendance: Eugene
Highberger, Present: James K. Johnson,
Present: Jerry Howarter, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was recited.
Minutes of the previous meeting were
read and approved.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor, met
with the commission. The road crew
worked all day yesterday. However,
they closed back up a couple of hours
later. They are working today to get
them opened back up again. Discussion
was held on the supervisors who are
paid hourly and salaried. Commissioner
Johnson moved to change the pay for
the shop supervisor from salaried to
hourly. Commissioner Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0.
Transfer Station
Scott Garrett, Landfill Supervisor,
met with the commission. He presented
bids from Leroy Coop and Lybarger Oil
for a metered fuel tank at the transfer
station. Leroy Coop presented the low
bid. Commissioner Johnson moved to
accept the low bid of $1,455.00 for
a 500 gal. metered fuel tank out of
the Solid Waste Fund. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. He
presented a bid on garage doors for the
transfer station. Bids were received from
Lighthouse Electric and Performance
Electric for the electrical wiring. There
were questions on the Lighthouse bid.
Commission recommended getting the
questions answered. Bids were presented from D & S Door and Overhead
Door Company. Commissioner Howarter
moved to approve the purchase of two
door openers plus installation from D
& S Door at a total cost of $2,860.00.
Commissioner Howarter seconded.
Approved 3-0. He presented bids from
Advantage Computer and New Egg
for a laptop computer and printer plus
software. Commissioner Howarter
moved to approve the purchase of a
laptop, printer, and software at a cost of
$613.79. Commissioner Johnson seconded. Approved 3-0. He would like to
dust control the road at the landfill and
the road to the landfill. It will come to
about 2500 feet. Commission approved.
He is working on facing the hill at the
landfill and there is another area that
is going to need facing. Commissioner
Johnson moved to recess into executive session for 10 minutes to discuss
non-elected personnel with Scott Garrett
and Phyllis Gettler, County Clerk in
attendance. Open meeting to resume
at 10:25. Commissioner Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. No action after
executive session.
Reappraisal
Jay Velvick, Deputy Appraiser, met
with the commission. They would like to
purchase 6 ply tires for the Explorer from
Wolken Tire. Commission recommend
seeing if anyone else in the county sells
tires.
Emergency Management
Marvin
Grimes,
Emergency
Management, met with the commission.
He presented an emergency red light
renewal for Aaron Hedrick. Commission
approved. He has moved the command
vehicle the sheriff does not want to
Colony.
Executive Session
Commissioner Johnson moved to
recess into executive session for 15 minutes to discuss non-elected personnel
with Vernon Yoder, Weed Director, and
County Counselor James Campbell and
Assistant Shannon Rush in attendance.
Open meeting to resume at 10:55.
Commissioner Howarter seconded.
Approved 3-0. No action after executive session.
County Attorney
Brandon Jones, County Attorney, met
with the commission. Commissioner
Johnson explained how he would like the
county attorney to look at local painters
to repaint his office. Brandon explained
how he had basically already hired the
painter as she has picked colors and
designs. He feels that if he has the office
looking professional if he does not run
again in four years the county will have
a better chance at getting more candidates. Commissioner Johnson moved to
approve the expenditure of $2,324.00 for
painting the county attorney office and
$1,152.00 for custom wood blinds out
of courthouse general. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0.
Jail Contract
County Counselor James Campbell
and Sheriff Valentine met with the commission. He presented a contract with
the City of Topeka and Anderson County
for the holding of prisoners. James has
reviewed the contract and has no problems with it. Commissioner Johnson
moved to sign the contract with the city
of Topeka for the housing of inmates.
Commissioner Howarter seconded.
Approved 3-0.
Executive Session
Commissioner Johnson moved to
recess into executive session for 5 minutes to discuss attorney client privilege
with James Campbell, County Counselor,
Shannon Rush, Assistant, and Sheriff
Valentine in attendance. Open meeting to resume at 11:30. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. No
action after executive session.
Meeting adjourned at 11:45 a.m.
LAND TRANSFERS
City of Garnett to Charles W. Gettler
and Phyllis J. Gettler, East 16, Lot 13,
and all Lot 14, Block 51, City of Garnett.
Merriman Real Estate I LLC to
Midwest Investments LLC, NW4 3619-19 and West 50 Acres of N2 SW4
36-19-19.
Ardena M. Kilet to Alan L. Newton
and Jody L. Newton, S2 NE4 18-2121, excepting there from a life estate
retained by Ardena M. Kilet.
Brad E. Spain to Robin R. Shane,
Lot 1, Block 1, Harper Addition to City of
kdan
1×2
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
AD
1×2
Garnett.
Wanda L. Caselman vs. Carol Jane
Long, Lot 12, in Block 32 in the City of
Garnett.
Jack E. Ball and V. Diane Ball to
Henry Lee Yoder, SE4 SE4 24-21-19
and SW4 SW4 19-21-20.
Thane L. McDaniel to Michelle Moyer,
Lots 1, 2 and 3, Block 23, Railroad
Addition to Town of Welda.
Althea M. Buckle to Thane L.
McDaniel, Lots 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 & 12,
Block 1, Town of Welda; and all that part
of NE4 NW4 2-22-19 lying East of Tioga
Street in Town of Welda, and more particularly described as follows: commencing at NE corner NW4 of said Section 2,
thence West 9.90 chains, more or less
to East line of Tioga Street; thence SW
along Tioga Street 23.7 chains, more or
less to South line of N2 of Said NW4;
thence East 22.6 chains, more or less
along South line of N2 of said Nw4 to
East line of said quarter section, thence
North 20 chains more or less to POB.
CIVIL CASES FILED
US Bank National Association vs.
Brent W. Ellison, Christabel D. Ellison,
State of Kansas c/o Kansas Attorney
General, Joe Doe, Mary Doe and
Kansas Department of Revenue, asking
$147,286.68 plus interest and costs.
Midland Funding LLC & Corp of
Aspire Visa vs. Joan M. Blacketer, asking $660.77.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Victoria L. Lutz vs. Carl Jeffrey Lutz,
petition for divorce.
Cody Spencer Clark vs. Tiffany Clark,
petition for divorce.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Secretary of Department for Children
and Families vs. Michael Allen Mills,
judgment by default for support.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
LVNV Funding LLC vs. Julie Frazier,
asking $568.38.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
City of Garnett vs. Paula Lewis d/b/a
Kippal Bar & Grill and Kip Koch, $4,127
plus interest and costs.
Wal, Inc. d/b/a Bills Quick Shop vs.
April Hogan, $956.00.
Saint Lukes Hospital, Inc. d/b/a
Anderson County vs. Sarah M. Hulcy
and William L. Hulcy, $12,477.42 plus
interest and costs.
Dodge Co. Sheriff vs. William B.
Woosley, $1,096.26 plus interest and
costs.
Capital One Bank, A Banking
Association vs. Duane Miller, $615.13
plus interest and costs.
Master Management LLC vs. Michael
A. Drimmel, $1,130 plus interest and
costs
Olathe Medical Center Inc. Corp vs.
Norma J. Harbin, $3,323.39 plus interest
and costs.
Olathe Medical Center vs. Audrey M.
Silvey and Brenda D. Silvey, $923.57
plus interest and costs.
Meritrust Credit Union vs. Taygon
Jean Stinnett and Tristen Blake Stinnett,
$12,184.94 plus interest and costs.
EXTENSION…
FROM PAGE 1A
Instead, they looked for alternatives. First, Superintendent
Don Blome said he asked teachers if they would be willing
to extend the school day by
an extra hour each day of the
last week of school. Because
the change would modify contractual teacher hours, Blome
and the school board needed
to work with the local teachers union, Northern Anderson
County Teachers Association,
to negotiate the best plan.
Teachers then suggested
the 10-minute alternative, with
students attending school a
full day on May 24 and adding
10 minutes each day in May,
although Blome said 15 minutes may be needed instead of
10. Board members approved
their plan but not without discussion. Board members worried the extra 10 minutes could
be wasted, and they wanted to
make sure teachers and students were working through
the extra time.
I can do a lot with 10 minutes, Garie Jean Brownrigg,
a teacher at GES and representative of the teachers union,
said.
Exactly when schools would
start the extended days was
not yet clear. Anderson County
High School principal Kenny
Kellstadt said he wasnt sure
how he would add 10 or 15
minutes at the junior high and
high school. Blome said he was
concerned that there werent
enough extra hours to cover
unforeseen
circumstances,
and he might want to start the
extended days in late April.
Who would have known
wed have this many snow dates
this late in the year? Blome
said. The way this year has
been, we may have another
snow day in May.
Parents will be notified when
the district determines exactly
when the extension will begin.
In USD 479 to the south, Crest
students will attend school on
two days that previously had
been scheduled as days off. The
school board met last night to
determine how it would address
the third snow day.
gun guys
2×2
CARE GIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support meets the fourth Monday
of each month from 1-2 p.m. at theSoutheast Kansas Mental Health
Center conference room, 519 S.
Elm St., Garnett. For more information call Phyllis at ECKAAA,
(800) 633-5621.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
RECORD
greeley farm implement
5×6
SMALL CLAIMS FILED
Countryside Veterinary Clinic vs. Kristi
Stephens, asking $270.81.
Countryside Veterinary Clinic vs. Rick
Berry, asking $243.93.
Countryside
Veterinary
Clinic
vs. Charles C. Schoonover, asking
$285.40.
Countryside Veterinary Clinic vs.
Becky Archer and George Archer, asking
$145.97.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
David Clark Heidrich, III, possession of certain hallucinogenic drugs and
use/possession of drug paraphernalia,
appearance with counsel set for April 30
at 9:00 a.m.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
James A. Carr, $221 fine.
Richard J. Reese, $143 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Scott Alan Spencer, $10 fine.
Other:
David Crews Berry, following another
vehicle too closely, $173 fine.
Francis D. Trumbly, unlawful vehicle
registration, dismissed charge, $98 court
costs only.
Rogelio Ortiz, transporting an open
container, $298 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on March 29 of
theft of property of wireless gear rapid a/
c charger, electrical tape, and Gatorade
Frost and occurred on North Maple
Street. Items were recovered except the
Gatorade Frost.
Arrests
Mason Irwin, Garnett, March 29, warrant arrest by law enforcement.
David Jacobus, Garnett, March 30,
possession of certain hallucinogenic
drugs with one prior conviction, DWS,
and vehicle liability insurance required.
Kristian Heaidrick, Garnett, March
30, possession of certain hallucinogenic
drugs with one prior conviction and use
possession of drug paraphernalia.
Teela Meineke, Garnett, March 30,
DWS 2nd or subsequent conviction.
Jason Cornett, Williamsburg, March
31, DWS.
JAIL LOG
Aimee Lynn Clark, 32, Topeka, March
29, possession of certain hallucinogenic
drugs with one prior conviction and use
possession of drug paraphernalia, bond
set at $1,000.
Kristian Desiree Heidrick, 21, Garnett,
March 30, possession of certain hallucinogenic drugs with one prior conviction
and use possession of drug paraphernalia, bond set at $1,000.
Teela Dawn Meineke, 36, Garnett,
March 30, DWS 2nd or subsequent
conviction, bond set at $500.
Jason Paul Cornett, 25, Williamsburg,
March 31, DWS, bond set at $300.
Ricky Nmi Dawn, 52, Iola, April 1,
abuse of a child, torture or beating under
18, aggravated assault, and disorderly
conduct, brawling or fighting, bond set
at $50,000.
Justin Patrick Guyett, 33, Kansas
City, April 1, failure to appear, bond set
at $1,000.
Michael Jae Roberts, 27, Platte
County, Kansas City, Missouri, April 1,
probation violation, bond set at $25,000.
JAIL ROSTER
Justin Guyett, was booked into jail on
April 1 for Anderson County, bond set at
$1,000.
Scott Berry was booked into jail on
January 31 for Anderson County for two
warrants, bond set at $10,000.
Roger Stewart, Jr., was booked into
jail on February 5 for Anderson County,
90 days and time served.
Kathern Kratzberg was booked into
jail on January 31 for Anderson County,
waiting on D.O.C.
James Hogan was booked into jail on
March 1 for Anderson County, no bond.
David Olson was booked into jail on
March 6 for Anderson County, multiple
ANCO warrants.
David Short was booked into jail on
February 5 for Anderson County for an
85-day writ.
Kristen Yeager was booked into jail on
February 4 for Anderson County, bond
set at $10,000.
Mark Brewer was booked into jail on
October 4, 2012 for Anderson County for
12 months.
Dustin Young was booked into jail on
October 31, 2012 for Anderson County,
bond set at $40,000.
FARM-INS
Timothy Livingston was booked into
jail on March 27 for Miami County.
Andrew Crabtree was booked into jail
on March 14 for Miami County.
Dylan Guinn was booked into jail on
March 14 for Linn County.
John Trimble was booked into jail on
March 28 for Miami County.
Zachary Johnson was booked into jail
on March 14 for Miami County.
Erick Ewing was booked into jail on
March 21 for Miami County.
Michael Roberts was booked into jail
on April 1 for Platte County, Missouri.
Chet Brown was booked into jail on
March 21 for Miami County.
Sivan Mead was booked into jail on
February 20 for Linn County.
Geremy Roberts was booked into jail
on April 1 for Miami County.
Phillip Hale was booked into jail on
April 2 for Miami County.
David Bolken was booked into jail on
April 2 for Linn County.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
REMEMBRANCES
ROBERTS
NULL
September 15, 1930-March 30, 2013
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
Doris Jean Null, age 82, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away on
Saturday, March 30, 2013, at St.
Lukes Plaza
Hospital
in
Kansas City,
Missouri.
She
was
born
on
September
15, 1930, in
Humboldt,
Kansas, the
Null
daughter of
Charles and
Mable (Switzer) Manley. She grew
up and attended schools in Chanute,
Kansas.
Doris was united in marriage to
Charles Edward Null on December
4, 1949, in Chanute, Kansas. This
union was blessed with three children, Tom, Rhonda and Karen.
After their marriage, they moved
to Buffalo, Kansas. They bought
a dairy farm near Harris, Kansas
in 1956. She worked on the farm,
and also as a cook at Garnett High
School in the 1970s.
July 16, 1933-April 2, 2013
She enjoyed spending time with
her family, quilting, sewing, playing
cards and gardening. She was an
excellent cook. Doris was a member
of the First Christian Church and
she was a Red Hat Lady. In 2006, she
moved from the farm to Garnett.
Doris was preceded in death by
her parents; her husband Charles
Null in 1998; her son Tom Null in
1999; her sister Catherine Stover;
and an infant sister.
She is survived by her daughter
Karen Reed and husband Richard
of Harris, Kansas; sisters Margaret
Burdge of Knoxville, Tennessee;
Viola Frane and husband Gerald
of Highlands Ranch, Colorado;
Charlene Bridges and husband
Lyle of Chanute, Kansas; six grandchildren; and four great grandchildren.
Funeral
services
were
Wednesday, April 3, 2013, at the
First Christian Church in Garnett,
Kansas. Burial followed in the
Amiot Cemetery in Harris.
Memorial contributions may be
made to WINGS and left in care
of the funeral home. Condolences
may be left for the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com
WARSTLER
February 24, 1926-April 1, 2013
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
Betty A. Warstler, 87, lifelong
resident of Erie, died at 10:55 a.m.,
Monday, April 1, 2013 the Anderson
County Hospital, Long Term Care
Facility in Garnett.
She was born Feb. 24, 1926 at
Erie, a daughter of Clarence E. and
Natal Mary (Basler) Ellis. She was
raised in the Erie area and attended
school there. She was employed for
a short time at the Prest Lumber
Co. at Erie and later worked for
Grandview Products at Parsons.
She also helped her husband farm.
On Aug. 15, 1952 she and Charles
Edward Warstler were united in
marriage at Urbana, KS. He preceded her in death on Nov. 28, 1990.
She loved animals and enjoyed
fishing, gardening and canning.
Survivors include two daughters,
Clara Nixon, Garnett, and Mary
Steinert, Erie; eight grandchildren;
21 great-grandchildren; and one
great-great granddaughter.
In addition to her husband, she
was preceded in death three brothers; one sister and one son, Charles
E. Buddy Warstler, Jr.
Funeral services were Friday,
April 5, at the Pierce-carson-wall
Funeral Home at Erie. Burial
was in the Oakwood Cemetery at
Parsons.
Memorials are suggested to Paw
Prints and may be left at or mailed
to the funeral home, P.O. Box 182,
Erie, KS 66773. Online condolences
may be left at www.wallfuneralservices.com.
DRUMM
March 29, 2013-March 30, 2013
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
Zeno
Joseph
Drumm,
Westphalia, died on March 30, 2013,
at the Overland Park Regional
Medical Center.
Zeno was born on March 29, 2013,
to Michael and Megan Highberger
Drumm.
Zeno is survived by his parents, his sister, Addison Grace, of
the home, his paternal grandparents, Robert and Marie Drumm, of
Waverly, his maternal grandparents, Dan and Margie Highberger,
of Westphalia, his aunts, Heather
(John) Martin and Mindy
Highberger, his uncles, Matt (Renae)
Drumm, and Mitchell Highberger,
other relatives and friends.
Funeral mass was Wednesday,
April 3, 2013, at the St. Teresa
Catholic Church, in Westphalia,
Kansas. Burial was in the St. Teresa
Cemetery.
Contributions may be made
to the Zeno Drumm Memorial
Fund and may be sent in care of
Jones Funeral Home, P.O. Box 277,
Burlington, KS 66839.
KELLEY
March 10, 1941-April 2, 2013
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
Milburn Frederick Fred Kelley
Jr., age 72, of Garnett, died Tuesday,
April 2, 2013, at the Colmery-ONeil
VAMC, Topeka, Kansas.
He was born March 10, 1941, in
Kansas City, Missouri, to Milburn
and Dixie (Merryman) Kelley.
He served in the U.S. Navy from
July 29, 1963 to July 17, 1967 and
served in the Vietnam War.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, Milburn and Dixie Kelley;
four sisters, Nillie Stooksbury;
Dixie Lee Kelley; Rose Louise
Williams; and Mary Alice Slayton.
Survivors include Milburn F.
Kelley III of Garnett; Debra Dawn
Kelley of Olathe; Kathryn Marie
Kelley of Yates Center; Katrina Gail
Kelley of Wichita; Angela Denise
Feldkamp of Osawatomie; Joshua
Skinner of Kansas City, Kan.;
and Caleb Skinner of Garnett;
15 grandchildren; sister, Patricia
Ann Leonard of Palm Bay, Fla.;
brothers, Wilburn Bob Kelley of
Doniphan, Mo.; Charles Michael
Kelley of Pennsylvania; and Phillip
Dean Kelley; along with several
family members and friends.
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m., Wednesday, April 10, 2013 at
Feuerborn Family Funeral Service
Chapel in Garnett. Cremation is
planned.
ORAM
April 5, 1930-April 1, 2013
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
Betty Lou Oram, age 82, of
Drexel, Missouri, formerly of Paola,
died April 1, 2013 at her home.
She was born April 5, 1930,
at Paola, to Louellen and Nettie
(Russell) McKinney.
She married Frankie Victor
Oram on February 2, 1948 at Fort
Scott.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, an infant daughter
Betty Lou, a son Frankie Victor
Oram, Jr, a sister who died in
infancy Twila May McKinney, and
a brother LeRoy McKinney.
Survivors include her husband
Frank; daughters Norma Kiser
of Osawatomie, Peggy Oram of
Garnett, and Teresa Kilgore of
Osawatomie; her son Thomas Oram
of Overland Park, Kansas; sisters
Delores White of Parker, Patricia
Monroe of Goleta, California, and
Sharon Stewart of Osawatomie;
her brothers Richard McKinney
of Osawatomie, Rolla McKinney of
Osawatomie, and Montie McKinney
of Yellville, Ark.; 14 grandchildren;
many great grandchildren; other
relatives and friends.
Funeral services were held
Sunday, April 7, 2013 at the Paola
First United Methodist Church
under the direction of the
Osawatomie Penwell-Gabel Funeral
Home.
Bonnie Lovelle Roberts, age 79,
of Greeley, Kansas passed away on
Tuesday, April 2, 2013, at her home.
She was born on July 16, 1933,
in Garnett, Kansas, the daughter
of Thomas Westley Roberts and
Dortha Mae (Swope) Roberts. She
grew up in and attended schools in
Garnett. She was married to Clyde
Rocker. They later divorced. She
was married to Sam Borovicka.
They later divorced. Her longtime
companion was John Fish who preceded her in death in 2007.
Bonnie worked for many years
as a hat seamstress in Osawatomie.
She was retired from this profession. Bonnie loved her family and
enjoyed all of the occasions that
HAGEN
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
Freida (Sauer) Hagen, age 90, of
Ellis died Saturday, March 30, 2013
at Trego County Long Term Care
Facility in WaKeeney.
She was born March 11, 1923
in Ellis to William and Mary
(Zackman) Sauer.
She married Ernest Hagen on
October 19, 1944 in Ellis. He preceded her in death on March 12,
2008.
Survivors include two granddaughters; five great grandchildren;
two brothers, Arnold Sauer of Ellis
and Larry Sauer of Oklahoma.
She was preceded in death by
her parents; a daughter, Vivian
Ullen (Hagen) Ouderkirk; two sisters, Adelle Keller and Hattie Dietz
and two brothers, Gardner Sauer
and Billie Sauer.
Funeral services were Thursday,
April 4, at Christ Lutheran Church
in Ellis. Burial followed in Mt.
Hope Cemetery, Ellis.
DOZIER
November 26, 1914-April 5, 2013
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
Virginia Belle Dozier, age 98, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away on
Friday, April 5, 2013, at Anderson
County Long Term Care Facility in
Garnett.
She was born November 26, 1914,
in Peoria, Illinois, to Victor and
Elizabeth (Stuffings) Randall.
She married Henry Dozier on
July 1, 1934 in Kansas City, Mo.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Victor and Elizabeth
Randall; her husband, Henry
Dozier; her daughter, Donna
Rohrer; and one great granddaughter.
Survivors include her children,
Carolyn McGee of Blue Mound;
Henry Hank Dozier of Fox, Ark.;
Ladean Kempinger of Blue Mound;
Betty Lytle of Garnett; 15 grandchildren; numerous great grandchildren and great-great grandchildren.
Funeral services were Monday,
April 8, 2013, at Feuerborn Family
Funeral Service Chapel in Garnett.
Burial followed at Pleasant View
Cemetery, Blue Mound.
WELDING…
FROM PAGE 1A
Although the state will
reimburse districts for tuition,
districts will need to pay for
additional fees associated with
the courses. The amount of fees
varies depending on the course;
the welding program, for example, has higher fees than the
health science program.
Because of the cost to districts, school board members
considered whether they should
ask participating students to
pay part of the fees. Students
typically are asked to pay a fee
for some classes, particularly
those that have labs, Anderson
County High School principal
Kenny Kellstadt said.
A small fee would make it
more likely that participants
will complete the program,
Superintendent Don Blome
said. Districts will be reimbursed only for students who
complete the program and earn
the certification, he said. Class
sizes are limited, so if some-
OBITUARIES
The Anderson County
Review publishes fulllength memorial tributes
as submitted by families
or funeral homes at a
cost of 12 per word.
A photograph is complimentary with this paid
option. We also offer a
short-form version containing only pertinent historical data at no charge.
Please be sure to instruct
your funeral home as to
which version youd like
published, or contact
the Review directly at
(785) 448-3121, email
review@garnett-ks.com.
Garnett Monument
& Glass
126 West Fifth Garnett, KS 66032
Remember.
Forever.
they could be together. She was very
proud of her home and loved her
Greeley community and friends.
She is survived by her brothers, Howard Roberts of Manhattan,
Kansas; George Roberts of Chanute,
Kansas; sisters Kay Roecker and
husband Henry of Garnett, Kansas;
Glenda Alvers and husband Larry
of Homewood, Kansas; Candace
Damron and husband Carl Sr. of
Garnett; and many nieces and
nephews.
Graveside services were
Monday, April 8, 2013 at the Garnett
Cemetery in Garnett.
Memorial contributions may be
made to First Baptist Church of
Garnett. Condolences may be left
for the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com
March 11, 1923-March 30, 2013
YOUR LIFE IS A STORY.
garnettt
monument
TELL
IT WELL.
2×2
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc..
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published April 9, 2013
(785) 448-6622
Todd Barnes
one drops out, the district loses
that spot and the potential reimbursement. The high school is
charging a $25 application fee
for similar reasons.
We know theyre committed
and serious about it. Its easy in
class to hold up your hand and
say you want to do it, Kellstadt
said.
Board members said they
were in favor of charging students $150 for the programs,
although they have not yet
made a formal vote to finalize
the fee.
Did you know junk mail
mass mailings have as little as
a 2% response rate with customers?
Advertise where people read.
3A
TAXES…
FROM PAGE 1A
way machinery and equipment
are taxed, also could have an
impact on the amount of money
USD 365 collects in property
taxes.
Even if the state provides the
same level of funding, the district still will need to raise taxes
to make up for losses elsewhere,
Blome said.
Enrollment is the biggest
determining factor for how
much money the district will
receive from the state, and
enrollment likely will stay about
the same in local schools, Blome
said.
Preliminary enrollment from
recent kindergarten roundups
show about 90 students will
enter the local education system in the fall. With 75 high
school seniors graduating in
May, the difference between
outgoing and incoming students
is expected to result in a slight
gain. But the school finance formula only counts kindergarten
students as half-time students,
which means the district still
will be lower for its Full-Time
Equivalent (FTE) enrollment on
which school funding is based.
The enrollment decline alone
likely will cost the district as
much as $40,000 next year.
Districts can choose to use the
current years enrollment, the
previous years enrollment, or a
three-year average. Enrollment
was steady in 2012-13, and is
expected to be steady in 2013-14,
which works in the districts
favor. Also expected to benefit
the district next year will be a
special financing boost because
of building a new elementary
school last year, but that benefit
will end after next year.
ELECTION…
FROM PAGE 1A
Chairman Bill Barnes. I was a
little disappointed that it didnt
pass by any more than it did.
Honestly I dont know what
wed have done if it didnt pass,
and I think the commissioners also didnt know what wed
have done.
Opposition to the measure
based around the tax increase
and the size and scope of the
project saying costs could be
pared back by some other
option, and brought to light
decades-old prejudices against
the hospital and its operation
under various managers. Some
in opposition to the measure
violated state election laws by
circulating mailed flyers without attribution, or paid for by
information. The same was true
for illegal robocalls made the
Friday before the election, and
a website operated through an
anonymous registrar.
Elsewhere in city elections
former Garnett Mayor Greg
Gwin was unopposed in the
election and was re-elected.
Merlin Carpenter won the
Westphalia mayors race with
28 votes over Sam VanPatton
with 11. The five top vote-getters in the Westphalia council
race won their posts; they were:
Angela Gardner 39, Jim Nolan
30, Carol Mechnig 29, Dorothy
Cameron 23, Ryan Tastove 20
(write-in), Robert Ratzlaff 9 and
Kim VanPatton 16.
Leonard Leadstrom won the
Kincaid mayoral race with 21
votes unopposed. The top five
vote getters among the council candidates was: Marjorie
Stephens 24, Darlene Stewart
24, Carolyn Whitcomb 22,
Brandon Gates 20, Judith Lenon
13, Tammie Neudeck 9, William
Star 3.
In the USD 479 school board
race, Travis Church defeated
incumbent Frank Stewart by a
vote of 230 to 68. Another seat
was sought by Steve Prasko,
who received 124 votes; however, there were 139 write-in
votes so it was not immediately
clear who won the position. The
results of a canvass of votes
Monday will have determined
a winner in that race, but those
results were not available as of
presstime. Check The Reviews
Facebook page for updates.
Anderson
County
Commissioners conducted a
canvass of the votes Monday.
All votes reported here are unofficial; the votes were declared
official after the canvass.
VIDEO…
FROM PAGE 1A
as districts realize they must
compete to attract students and
families to their communities.
School funding debates at the
state legislature could push districts toward consolidation, similar to a consolidation trend in
the 1960s, he predicted. Because
of those projections, it is crucial
for Anderson County to be at
the leading edge in attracting
people to the districts schools
and communities, he said.
Archer also plans to develop a
network of ambassadors to continue the marketing message.
The video will direct watchers
to the ambassadors, who then
will work closely with anyone
who is seeking more information about the schools or communities.
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4A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
EDITORIAL
Not so
big deal
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.
My question is, why do we have a
city police officer driving his personal
vehicle with an expired tag since last
August that he drives to and from
work and around town when the tag
is expired. He parks this everyday
that he works in the city hall parking
lot where everyone can see it. Thanks.
Bye.
The $25 million hospital
vote was the biggest decision
Anderson County never made
BY RORKE DENVER
GUEST EDITORIAL
Among the messages sent by last
weeks hospital vote in Anderson
County is that even when its a big deal,
less than 40 percent of us really
EDITORIAL
care.
People have
been lamenting
low voter turnout
for decades and
the fact is nothing really seems
to motivate the
population to
participate unless
its the election of
the nations first
by Dane Hicks,
black president.
PUBLISHER
For Anderson
Countys part, last weeks election
should have been the biggest deal in
county history at $25 million it was
the largest bond issue ever voted in
Anderson County.
One would think that historic
moment would have motivated the
masses… polarized the populace…
revved up the registered voters…
Nah.
The largest bond issue in Anderson
Countys history was decided by less
than four out-of-10 registered voters.
Pro or con, it may have been the most
expensive campaign in the countys
history as well. Hospital supporters
and the REACH citizens support committee spent heavily on advertising and
campaign materials to get their side of
the story out. Opponents even paid for
a mailing and robocalls, both of which
violated state election laws due to the
shy opponents desire to remain anonymous. The tab, all told, will be in the
thousands of dollars- far out of character for local elections, many of which
are often run on zero budget.
So, why didnt more people vote?
Passions were high among those on
either extreme of the issue. Age-old
prejudices about ACH among opponents percolated along with criticisms
that the project was too expensive and
too focused on property taxpayers
for repayment; supporters, citing the
degraded state of the present facilities
as well as the critical standing of ACHs
economic impact and public safety
offering to the community warned of
calamity if it was voted down.
But in the middle were 60 percent of
local registered voters who yawned.
The tight vote should tell the story.
With a 130-vote margin the win could
have easily gone to either side.
Its hard to imagine who didnt have
a dog in this fight one way or the other.
Does it reveal the disconnection and
low information nature of Anderson
Countys electorate as is criticized by
conservatives regarding the rest of the
countrys voting population? Perhaps
so.
If not, then what?
The choice by those voters was the
best one for the future of Anderson
County, but more people should have
exercised their right to have their say.
The fear is this: that too few people
will end up making too important decisions. For the 38 percent who took part
last Tuesday, that was huge power
indeed.
Id like to know whats going to happen to the people who put out the
robocalls and postcards. Whether the
Kansas Ethics Commission is going to
look into that or not. Thank you.
A victory for missile defense
BY RICH LOWRY
NATIONAL REVIEW
Kim Jong Un has done the nearimpossible. The newly minted supreme
leader of North Korea has forced the
Obama administration to admit that
the United States needs
more missile defense.
Since it was introduced by Ronald Reagan
in the 1980s, Democrats
have
reflexively
denounced the idea of a
defense against incoming ballistic missiles
Lowry
as wholly unworkable,
impossibly expensive
and dangerously destabilizing. Much
better to leave ourselves exposed and
work to sweet-talk our enemies out of
their hostility and their weapons.
In keeping with this approach, upon
taking office the Obama administration promptly nixed additional interceptors planned for deployment on the
West Coast against the budding North
Korean missile threat. George W. Bush
had already put 30 interceptors at two
sites on the West Coast, a symptom of
his Cold War mindset that the supple
and sophisticated Obama administration had no use for.
As it turns out, it is North Korea
that truly has the Cold War — or perhaps worse — mindset. In the words of
new Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel,
Pyongyang has made advances in its
capabilities and has engaged in a series
of irresponsible and reckless provocations. It conducted a third nuclear test,
apparently a successful one. It put a satellite in orbit with a Taepodong-2 missile. It displayed what appeared to be a
road-mobile ICBM.
While threatening to miserably
destroy U.S. units in South Korea and
turn that countrys capital into a nuclear sea of fire, Pyongyang has vowed
that North Koreans will be exercising
health
4×6.5
our right to pre-emptive nuclear attack
against the headquarters of the aggressor, which is, of course, none other
than the United States.
Rather than simply trust that a lunatic regime running its country like a vast
prison camp will rationally calculate
its self-interest as we would hope, the
Obama administration says it is going
to add back the 14 canceled interceptors. This will take the number of West
Coast interceptors from 30 to 44, but
with unnecessary expense and delay.
The new interceptors should be online
in 2017, or by the end of the presidents
second term.
While the restoration is heartening,
the Obama administration has pulled
the plug on the development of more
technologically advanced defense systems and cant overcome its compulsion
to make unilateral concessions to the
Russians. Hagel said the administration wont complete the final phase of
a defense system in Europe to guard
against an Iranian launch targeting the
United States.
Why seek protection from Kim Jong
Un, but not Ayatollah Khamenei?
Liberals once insisted that a missile
couldnt possibly be made to hit another
missile. Now, the technology has been
demonstrated to work again and again.
It is one of the reasons that the Israelis
didnt invade Gaza in response to the
rocket barrage emanating from there
a few months ago. It protected itself
with the Iron Dome defense system that
intercepted about 85 percent of the rockets.
The Israelis dont have the luxury of
abiding by stale arms-control orthodoxies. Neither do we. Evidently, though,
only Kim Jong Un and his ilk have the
power to convince the Obama administration of it.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
Yes, we have a new jail in Garnett.
We have a new elementary school in
Ganrett. We are going to have a new
hospital in Garnett. We have two new
county rural fire trucks in Garnett.
But down the road in rural Anderson
County we have an 8-ton load limit
bridge. I think what I cant buy in
Colony, Greeley or Westphalia Ill go
to Iola or Burlington and buy.
The way the city fathers like to spend
our tax money around here for the
homeowners, we need to get it on the
ballot at the next election to change
the name of the town from Garnett to
Bend Over.
DIRECTORY
JAMES A. GARFIELD
MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT
State election laws are very clear. The
flyers mailed by the hospital opponents omitting the line that tells who
funded them is illegal. Convictions
are a misdemeanor. I understand the
county attorney and the ethics commission have been made aware and
provided enough to start the investigation starting with the printer in
Kansas City. I think these cowards
should be prosecuted and more importantly, revealed. Thank you.
Health Services
The truth will set you free, but first it will
make you miserable.
The beginning is always today.
Yes, my daughter was reading me
some of the things from the newspapers Facebook page where the opponents of the hospital were making
all their comments, and I am simply
astonished not just that these people
have so much erroneous information
but also that they dont even seem
to be able to speak in complete sentences. All kinds of facts they were
talking about like they were really facts but they werent facts, they
were simply factually wrong. Some of
them as simple as its St. Lukes not
St. Francis that runs our local hospital. Misspelled words, sentences with
no basic English structure. No punctuation. Do these people really think
theyre going to make a convincing
argument when they cant even communicate like even poorly educated
human beings? I wonder how much
the comments of these ignorant,
uninformed and uneducated people
hurt the opponents side of the story?
Is this an indicator of the caliber of
the people who didnt want this bond
issue to pass? I would be more than
just a little bit embarrassed. Thank
you.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Children enjoy annual Easter egg hunt
Approximately 90 children gathered on the Parker
Elementary school grounds on
Saturday for the annual Easter
Egg Hunt, hosted by Iota Iota
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi.
Those contributing to this
years event included The Bank
of Greeley, Beckman Auto
Sales, Centerville Farm and
Feed, Dunlop Farms and Steve
and Judy Kinder.
Sarah Davidson, along with
Wayne and Donna Davidson
and Kayla and Mel, all of Kent
WA., were weekend guests at
the homes of Al and Rita Kerr
and Juanita Fann. On Easter
Sunday, the Kerr family also
welcomed Jeff and Roxanna
Kerr of Ankeny Iowa, Amber
Kerr of Kansas City Mo. and
Brad and Vicki and Destry and
Weston Kerr of Parker. The
group enjoyed a barbeque luncheon prepared by Brad.
Holiday weekend guests
at the home of Rosalie Davis
included Roger and Alice Davis
of Franklin NC., Woody and
Loreta Davis of Cabot AR.,
Tom and Tammy Davis of
Aurora MO., Betty and Gary
Hines of Shawnee, Kim Tate of
Smithville MO., and Gene Cady
and Janice Stahl of Parker.
Guests at the home of Steve
and Judy Kinder for the Easter
weekend included Molly Duke,
Rob and Robyn Duke and
Katlyn Eighmy of Olathe; Tyler
Eighmy and Fawn Gahman of
Lawrence.
Easter Sunday guests at
the home of Scott and Bonnie
Hobson were Ricky Sutton
and family of Southeast Mo.,
Katie Hobson of Topeka, Alicia
Hampton of Manhattan, Donna
and Bud Sutton of La Cygne
and Jim and Sandy Hampton
of Parker.
Happy Belated Birthday
wishes to Jacqueline Summers
on March 30 and Gale Page on
March 31.
Happy Belated 34th wedding
anniversary wishes to W.R. and
by Judy Kinder
Contact (913) 898-6465 or
True.blue.ku@gmail.com
with Parker news.
Julie Workman, who celebrated
their special day on March 24.
Happy Birthday wishes to
Larry Kinder on April 2, Janice
Stahl on April 3 and Sean Smith
on April 7.
Happy Anniversary to Rita
and Al Kerr on April 9.
Church News
Methodist Church: The
congregations of the Parker,
Beagle and Fontana churches
gathered at the Fontana Church
for an Easter Sunrise Service.
The members and guests then
returned to their respective
churches for the regular service. Lay-Leader Janice Stahl
gave the Call to Worship.
Pastor Marti McDougal gave
the Opening Prayer and led
the congregation in the Unison
Prayer of Confession from
Acts 10. Pastor McDougal then
conducted the Time with the
Children and the lesson was
titled Humpty Dumpty. The
Congregational Hymn was
titled The Angels Rolled the
Stone Away. Mrs. Stahl read
the Scripture Lesson from John
20:1-8. The Sermon Text was
taken from Acts 10:31-43 and
Pastor McDougals message
was titled Why Not a Crowd?
Candle lighter was Gavin
Cullor. Greeters were Bob and
Nancy Brownback. Ushers
were Jim and Kristy Schmitz.
Pianist and Music Director was
Sue Swonger.
Baptist Church: The congregation gathered on Sunday
morning for the Easter Sunrise
Service. Brother Preston
5A
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 06-29-2010 / Photo Submitted
It was a mad dash for the last Easter egg at the Parker Easter Egg
Hunt, hosted by the Iota Iota Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi.
Harrison gave the message,
which was titled Its a Good
Day in Christ, reading scripture from the Book of Romans.
Following the service, the men
served an Easter Breakfast in
the churchs dining room. Pastor
W.R. Workmans message for
the regular service was titled
Lets Not Forget the Agony
of the Garden and scripture
was read from Matthew 14:3242. Special hymns performed
by the choir included In the
Garden and He Lives. There
was no evening service.
Amazing Grace and Full
Gospel Church (Goodrich)
The congregation enjoyed a
number of hymns to praise
God and the Savior for the
Easter service. Pastor Freda
Miller read scripture from
John and Revelations and the
titled of her message was The
Resurrection. Following the
service, the congregation met
at the Parker Senior Center to
enjoy an Easter Luncheon followed by an Easter Egg Hunt
for the children.
Centerville News
Happy Birthday wishes to
Darrah Batcheler on April 6.
Happy Anniversary wishes
to Clint and Frannie Eastwood
on April 2.
Exercise Mondays are held
each week in the Fellowship Hall
of the Centerville Community
Church, beginning at 9 a.m.
Friends & Pieces Quilters
meet each Wednesday in the
basement of the Centerville
Community Church, beginning
at 10 a.m.
Centerville
Community
Church: The congregation
gathered along Cemetery Hill
for the annual Easter Sunrise
Service on Sunday morning,
followed by an Easter Breakfast
at the Fellowship Hall. For the
regular service, Kurt and Paula
Schwarz greeted members and
guests. Hymns for the service
included Christ the Lord is
Risen, I Live, Oh How He
Loves You and Me and He
Lives. Jeannie Kautt sang
Because He Lives. Pastor
Nancy Snyder-Killingsworths
sermon was titled Death is No
More! and scripture was taken
from Acts 10:34-43 and John
20:1-18. Music accompaniments
The samaritan woman
who found salvation
In John chapter 4 we read
how the disciples left Jesus
near the town of Sychar to
go and buy food. Jesus being
weary sat down at Jacobs
well. A Samaritan woman
came to the well to draw water
and Jesus ask her to give him
a drink of water. This discussion leads to the woman leaving her water jar and returning to town to tell the people
about, A man who told me
everything I ever did. She
then asks the question, Could
this be the Messiah?
It is at this time the disciples
return and they urge Jesus to
eat. Jesus answer to them is,
I have food to eat that you
know nothing about. The disciples then said to each other,
Could someone have brought
him food? (John 4:32-33)
We dont know if Jesus ever
got the drink he asked for as
the woman left her jar and
returned to town. At the same
time the disciples are confused
because they had just walked
to town to get food for which
Jesus now said he wasnt hungry. Jesus then makes his
mission statement, My food,
said Jesus is to do the will of
him who sent me and to finish his work. How are we to
understand this statement?
First we must recognize we
have an illness. We are sinners. We are alienated from
God. Just as the woman at
the well that Jesus met. She
could take a drink of water
and temporarily quench her
thirst but it returned. Initially
the woman believes there is a
living water that will quench
her thirst and she will never
have to draw water again.
Weekly
Devotional
by David Bilderback
Jesus engages the woman and
she finally begins to realize
she has a deeper sense of dissatisfaction than just a drink
of water.
Second we must acknowledge our condition. We are
lost. Apart from confession
and faith there is no salvation.
The woman recognized her
condition. She had become a
social outcast because of her
lifestyle. After her confession
to Jesus she returns to the
town and testifies to the people
about this Jesus she had just
met.
Third we must take the
cure. The cure is stated in
Romans 10:9, If you confess
with your mouth Jesus is Lord,
and believe in your heart that
God raised him from the dead,
you will be saved. God will
confront us with our sin. We
can acknowledge our sin and
be saved and live without the
deep sense of dissatisfaction
we now have or we can ignore
Gods urging and live according to our own desires. What
we need to clearly understand
is apart from confession and
faith there is no salvation.
David
Bilderback:
A
Ministry on the Holiness of
God.
BECKMAN
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6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
LOCAL
Vikes leap into Spring with 3 wins
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
OSAWATOMIE – Winter may
have held on through the first
days of spring and the first
weeks of area high school baseball season, but the Central
Heights Vikings have been supplying their own brand of heat
with early-season thumpings
of both Anderson County and
Osawatomie.
The Vikes dumped AC in a
double-header season opener
16-1, 14-4, and dropped Oz in a
single matchup Friday13-3.
Jordan Horstick took the
mound against AC in the
opener and threW all 4 innings
before the run rule win. The
defense racked up 4 errors but
made up for them with a lot of
hustle, solid backup and positive play. Jordan Smith was 2-4
with 3 runs, an RBI and a double; Tristan Davis was 2-3 with
4 runs, 2 RBIs and a double;
Horsitck 2-4, 3 runs and 2 RBIs;
Adam Pryor 3-3, 3 runs, 1 hit by
pitch and 3 RBIs. The Vikes had
no strikeouts in the game and
were 12-26 hitting overall.
Trevor Burkdoll lead-off
game two going three innings
to get the win, striking out
three and walking one and giving up two earned runs. Drew
Beckwith threw the fourth
inning for a strikeout and a
walk. Burkdoll was 2-3 with 2
runs, 2 RBIs a stolen base and
a walk; Beckwith was 3-4 with
3 runs, 3 RBIs a double and a
stolen base, Smith was 3-3 with
3 runs, a double, 2 RBIs and a
stolen base; Davis 2-3, 1 run,
an RBI and a walk; Pryor 1-2, 2
RBIs, hit by pitch; Jacob Pryor
2-3 with 2 runs, an RBI and a
double; Chase Brown 1-1 with 2
runs, two walks and two stolen
bases.
We did a lot of little things
right for this early in the year,
said head coach Jason Brown.
Beckwith opened on the
Lets Play Ball
mound against Oz going two
innings to give up three runs,
striking out one and walking
two. Brown said Beckwith
threw well but experienced a
little tightness in his arm, so
Jordan Smith came in for the
next three innings to give up a
hit, 0 runs, 2 walks and three
strikeouts. Coby Robertson finished the final inning.
Davis went 1-3 with 3 runs, 2
RBIs a double, a walk and a stolen base; Horstick was 3-4 with
2 runs, 4 RBIs and 2 doubles;
Robertson 1-3, 1 run, 1 walk and
a stolen base; Pryor 2-3 2 runs,
3 RBIs and a stolen base; Brown
3-4, 2 RBIs, a double and a stolen base. Coach Brown said he
was pleased with the scoring
versatility of his offense.
We have different guys stepping up each outing, Brown
said. Its nice to know you can
get hitting out of all parts of
your line-up.
Garbarino bumps AC to 4th place at Baldwin
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
BALDWIN CITY – Two first
place hurdle finishes by
Alexandra Garbarino boosted the AC girls to a 4th place
finish at the annual Baldwin
Invitational Track meet last
week in the AC track season
opener.
The AC boys followed up
with a 9th out of the 13-team
field. Baldwin teams took first
place in both the boys and girls
divisions.
Anderson County girls
results- Finals: 100 Meter:
MaKayla Kueser 4th, 13.59. 200
Meter: Alexandra Garbarino,
27.95; 400 Meter: Conner Parks
15th 1:12.96; Tiffany Gafford
17th 1:14.65; Julie Hartman
21st 1:24.37. 800 Meter: Kali
Herman 20th 2:55.60; Adrianne
Garbarino
28th
3:35.85;
Cheyenne Sumner 29th 3:53.22.
1600 Meter: Amanda Moody
16th 6:21.65; Bailee Wilson
18th 6:27.77; Tayler Porter 19th
6:31.30. 3200 Meter: Moody 8th,
13:48.25; Wilson 11th, 14:00.33.;
Paige Scheckel 16th 14:30.33. 300
Meter Hurdles: Garbarino 1st
48.96; Maddie Goode 15th 57.74.
4×100 Relay 4th, McCullar, Jirak,
Garbarino, Kueser 53.96. 4×400
Meter Relay: 10th, Hermann,
Gafford,
Parks,
Kueser,
4:47.98. 4×800 Meter Relay: 5th
Hermann, Wilson, Scheckel,
Porter 11:30.71. High Jump:
Kueser 3rd 410; Alexis Pedrow
9th 48; Tana Benton 13th 46;
Pole Vault: Michalea Stevenson
6th 7; Tregon Guernsey 14th, 6.
Long Jump: Jessica McCullar
4th 157, Alyssa Mikesell 14th
14 5.25, Pedrow 19th 138.5.
Triple Jump: Jessica McCullar
4th 324.5; Pedrow 14th 13 8.5;
Annelie Koppe 22nd 2311.25.
Shot Put: Regan Jirak 17th
279; Sarah Egidy 19th 266;
Joanna Reed 26th 177. Discus:
Maci Rockers 19th 739; Bailey
Wolken 23rd 403. Javelin:
Jirak 11th 886; Egidy 19th
618, Rockers 20th 585.
AC boys results- Finals: 200
Meter: Zach Hilliard 5th 24.67;
400 Meter: Cale Hedges 3rd
52.80; Tyler Jumet 23rd 1:03.66.
800 Meter: Hedges 2nd 2:07.54;
Star Carter 23rd 2:34.25. 1600
Meter: Tanner Wilson 2nd
4:44.52; Carter 19th 5:40.32.
3200 Meter: Wilson 10:53.44.
4×100 Meter Relay: 7th Hilliard,
Hedges, Koch, Read 47.52. 4×400
Meter Relay: 3rd Hedges, Read,
Wilson, Kaufman 3:44.37. High
Jump: Tyler Woodard 11th
54. Long Jump: Woodard 12th
187; Joey Reed 13th 186;
Tyler Jumet: 29th 16. Triple
Jump: Woodard 373; Jumet
317. Shotput: Wesley Wolken
17th 3711; Zane Phelps 32nd
295.5; Lee Koch 33rd 292.
Discus: Phelps 25th 831;
Michael Ghareeb 523. Javelin:
Tim Cornett 3rd 146; Wolken
13th 1181; Phelps 24th 828.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-09-2013 / Stacey Dennison
Anderson County High Schools Alex Dennison, catcher, and Central Heights High Schools
Coby Robertson, batting, each get ready for the pitch during a varsity baseball game Tuesday,
April 2.
AC golfers start season with 5th as a team
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
BURLINGTON – Anderson
County High School golfers Spencer Walter and Jack
Rickabaugh finished 4th and
5th respectively at last weeks
Burlington Golf Invitiational.
Their scores helped AC to
a 5th place finish in the 10
team field. Both shot 79s on the
course. South Lyon Countys
Chase Coble won first with a
67 and Burlington A won the
team competition with a 337.
AC shot a team 370. Colton
Eichman shot 99, Seth Wolken
117, Zach Miller 113 and Zeke
Hermreck 117.
In last weeks Anderson
County Invitational AC fielded only three individuals and
fell short of the team scoring. Rickabaugh shot a 74 for
6th, Walter a 76 for 8th and
Eichman an 88 for 35th out of
the 67 competitors. Piper took
first place with a team 302.
NCCC to have All-Star Game
High School seniors from
all over the Southeast Kansas
area will be competing this
coming weekend at the Neosho
County Community College
gymnasium in the 5th Annual
Harold Turner All-Star Game
on Sunday, April 14. The Girls
game will start at 2 p.m. followed by the boys game at 4
p.m.
Student-athletes from the
following high schools will be
represented: Chanute High,
Chanute Christian Academy,
Coffeyville,
Frontenac,
Fredonia, Pittsburg, Pittsburg-
Colgan, Erie, Altoona-Midway,
Humboldt, Emporia, Oswego,
Coffeyville, St. Paul, Neodesha,
Baxter-Springs, Independence,
Caney Valley, Riverton, Girard,
Central Heights, Anderson
County, Crest and Fort Scott.
Harold Turner is a Chanute
resident and graduate of CHS.
He was a unanimous all-region
and all-conference selection
during the 1967-68 and 1968-69
seasons, the 1967-68 Panther
team won the conference title.
He can still be found at all
home games cheering for his
alma mater.
ACH
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front row sports
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COMMUNITY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
CALENDAR
Tuesday, April 9
8:45 a.m. to 10 a.m. – TOPS at
Garnett Methodist Church,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – ACJHS track at Iola
4:30 p.m. – ACHS baseball,
softball at Wellsville
Crest High School track at
Pleasanton
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
Wednesday, April 10
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
Thursday, April 11
8:45 a.m. – TOPS #247 at the
Garnett Town Hall Center
12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. – Line
dancing at Garnett Senior Center
3 p.m. – ACHS Track Invitational
5:30 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
Carry In Supper at the Garnett
Senior Center; pitch at 6 p.m.
7 p.m. – GES vocal concert,
kindergarten & 1st grade, at GES
Friday, April 12
7 p.m. – ACHS Spring Play
Saturday, April 13
7 a.m. to 10 a.m. – Breakfast at
Garnett VFW
Crest prom
7 p.m. – ACHS Spring Play
Monday, April 15
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
2 p.m. – ACHS JV boys golf
invitational
4:30 p.m. – ACHS baseeball,
sofbtall at home with Burlingame
4:30 p.m. – ACHS JV baseball at
Osawatomie
5:30 p.m. – GES Site Council
6:30 p.m. – GES PTO
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at Pizza Hut
Tuesday, April 16
ACHS Forensics Invitational
8:45 a.m. to 10 a.m. – TOPS at
Garnett Methodist Church,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
3:30 p.m. – ACJH track at home
with Wellsville, Central Heights
3:30 p.m. – Westphalia track at
Pleasanton
4:30 p.m. – ACHS baseball,
softball at home with
Osawatomie
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Town Hall Center
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
Wednesday, April 17
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
6:30 p.m. – ACHS Senior Athlete
Dinner
7 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony Methodist Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club
at Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, April 18
8 a.m. – ACHS boys golf at
Spring Hill
8:45 a.m. – TOPS #247 at the
Garnett Town Hall Center
12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. – Line
dancing at Garnett Senior Center
Crest High School track
Sterling 6
1×2
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Plaza Grill
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LOCAL
ACHS drama
students offer
Stapp play
Warming Up
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-09-2013 / Vickie Moss
A muskrat ignores nearby fishermen to catch a little sun on an exposed pile of brush at Lake Garnett last week.
Although temperatures have had a tough time warming up this spring, there were periods of warmth and sun
that brought people out to enjoy the lakes recreational offerings.
GARNETT Gary Ray Stapps world-premiere, two-act play Romey Odel & Julietta
May (No, It Aint Shakespeare) hits the ACHS
stage and promises to deliver the goods.
Tennessee hill-folk matriarchs Clesterine
Coymack (Miranda Woosley) and Flittie
Fieldhat (Melissa Kropf) have been at odds
with each other for years, but in spite of their
feud, their grandchildren, Romey Odel (Tim
Comfort) and Julietta May (Tana Benton)
have become betrothed by way of a hillbilly
superstition built upon The Hitchin Rock. The
problem is, Romey Odel cant stand Julietta
May, and hes discovered he has feelings for
an unlikely somebody else. But Julietta May
insists the wedding is still on, until she suddenly realizes shes fallen in love with a city
boy (Asa Young). But with the curse of The
Hitchin Rock looming over their heads, their
nuptials are literally set in stone. But true
love, hillbilly style, finds a way to prevail. And
prevail it does right up to the climatic and surprising wedding event never before witnessed
upon the top of Shaky Spears Mountain.
Surrounded by a collection of colorful, loveable, sassy, and eccentric relatives, Romey
Odel and Julietta May say their I dos in a
way William Shakespeare never saw coming.
Other cast members include Bel Sibley, Kristen
Simpson, Jesse Blake, Lauren Egidy, Kaylen
Peine, Wesley James Wolken, Shelby Brooks,
Remi Hedges, Ashley Holloran, Heather Kropf,
Eliza Sibley, Kori Pitts, Seth Wolken, Amanda
Barcus, Tyler Woodard, Tyler Wolken, Alisha
Gettler, Marcus Marmon, Devin Katzer. Vicki
Markham and Amber Mauldin direct and
Payton Feuerborn is the Stage Manager.
Romey Odel & Julietta May will run Friday,
April 12 at 7:00 PM and Saturday, April 13 at
7:00 PM. Tickets are $4.00 for adults and $3.00
for students. Tickets are available by calling
(785)448-3115 or in the office at ACHS. They
are also available at the door.
Friends of the Arts Dessert Bar at
Intermission: The Friends of the Arts will
host their annual dessert bar during intermission of the show Friday and Saturday. This
will be a free will donation. Money earned goes
towards assisting the various Arts Programs
at ACHS.
Richmond
Museum plans
Potato Bar
The Richmond Community
Museums traditional St. Pats
Potato Bar Supper was moved
to Saturday, April 13, this year,
when the usual good food will
be served from 5-7:30 p.m. for
a donation at the Community
Building.
Visitors are welcome at the
Museum after 3 p.m., said president Mary Tooley. There are new
artifacts to see including a story
and military medals awarded
Capt. Leon Akin, the only known
World War II Prisoner of War
from the Richmond area. After
the war, Akin was professor of
choral music at Sterling College
for many years and occasionally
returned to Richmond to sing at
church services.
The visiting display this year
is Marvin and Pat Gretencords
collection of older model toy
tractors matched with about 35
farmers in the area who had that
model working tractor. Folks
enjoy seeing what Frank Cox,
Gus Benus, Jim Kueser, Lank
Gretencord and others used to
farm with in the 1940s and 50s.
Each tractor is labeled with the
farmers name and years of
birth and death.
New display cases show off
military uniforms and their
former space now displays a
huge Phillips 66 emblem given
to the Museum by Ed Wolken
of Garnett. This sign was originally at the Richmond Gault
Service Station.
There are numerous other
new items, said Dennis Peters
who led volunteers in a winter
project of reinforcing the floor.
Helpers included Berea Boosters
4-H Club and some Central
Heights students in addition to
Museum board members, their
families and friends. Baumans
of Garnett installed a new carpet.
Youre invited to spend the evening of April 13th at Richmond
to visit the Museum and enjoy
a great potato bar supper next
door. There is no admission
charge at the Museum which is
open through the evening.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-09-2013 / Photo Submitted
Senior citizens make Easter treat boxes at the Richmond Nutrition Site March 25. Pictured are Mary Sue Cox and Eleanor
Scates, on the left side of the table, and Sister Loretta Roecker, Sister Mildred Katzer, Wilma Ball, with Goldie Harkins helping
Marilyn Schaub.
Richmond Library enjoys
crafts, new books, DVDs
The Richmond Public Library
held a few craft days for the kids
during spring break. We made
bird feeders, bracelets, decorated bunnies and made wax paper
art.
First up was bracelets on
Monday, March 18, next we
made Easter Egg bird feeders
on Wednesday, March 20th.
The teens did Wax Paper art
on Thursday, March 21. Last
was Decorating Bunnies and
Butterflies and Friday, March
22nd. We hope the kids enjoyed
their Spring Break.
Monday March 25th the
Adults made Easter Treat
Boxes, and Wednesday, March
27th the seniors made Easter
Treat Boxes at the Richmond
Nutrition Site.
The library also has some
new books in:
Adults:
Halfway Hexed -Kimberly
Frost
Red Velvet Cupcake MurderJoanne Fluke
1B
Heart of Texas #1 -Debbie
Macomber
Alex Cross, Run- James
Patterson
Teens
UnWholly -Neal Shusterman
[#2 Unwind]
I Am Number Four- Pittacus
Lore [#1 Lorien Legacies]
Junior
The One And Only IvanKatherine Applegate
Darth Paper Strikes Back
-Tom Angleberger [Origami
Yoda book]
The Dragon Boy- Donald
Samson {#1 Star trilogy]
Childrens
Pete The Cat Play Ball
Pete The Cat Petes Big Lunch
And some new movies:
Wreck-it Ralph
Breaking Dawn [pt. 2]
Alex Cross
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-09-2013 / Photo Submitted
Monster High [double feaDamien Geiler and Weslon Rowland, both from Garnett,
ture]
work on Easter egg bird feeders March 18 at the
Skyfall 007
Richmond Library.
Red Dawn
2B
Stevens 90th
birthday
LOCAL
Rockers, Russell married
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 01-04-2011 /
Photo Submitted
On April 20, 2013 a 90th birthday party and reception for
Mildred I. Julius-Stevens, M.D.,
D.D., H.H.D. will be hosted by
her family at Mr. Ds Restaurant
and Grill in Garnett from 2 p.m.
to 4:30 p.m. You may bring a
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 06-29-2010 / Photo Submitted
birthday card, greet the honoree
Rachel Rockers and Mitchell Bridesmaids were Audrey
and her family or just leave your
Russell were married in Greeley Franks, sister of the bride;
best wishes.
Drs. Robert L. Stevens, M.D. on Nov. 3, 2012. The double Amelia Reyes, sister of the
and Mildred I. Julius-Stevens, ring ceremony took place at groom; Sarah Biby and Jenny
M.D. arrived in Garnett St. Johns Catholic Church at Engler, friends of the bride.
November 11, 1948 to join Dr. 3 p.m. with Father Matthew
Best man was Dan Reynolds,
Ralph E. White M.D. in the prac- Schiffelbein officiating.
friend of the groom. Groomsmen
Parents of the bride are Tom were Damian Reyes, brothertice of surgery and medicine at
the Medical Center Clinic. Dr. and Rosalie Rockers of Greeley. in-law of the groom; Brian
Robert L. Stevens, M.D. died Parents of the groom are Glenn Huska, Kurt Sumrall and
February 5, 2009. Dr. Julius and Marsha Russell of Mission. Ryan English, friends of the
still remembers many of their Grandparents are Louann groom. Tracy Rockers and
patients from over the last 65 Hermreck of Greeley, Martin Shane Morrisey were honorary
Rockers of Greeley, Lillian
years.
attendants. Ushers were John
Russell of Kansas City, Mo., and
Augustyn, Matt Engler and
Robert Kavanaugh of Mission.
The bride was escorted down Mike Zenwekh.
Reception, dinner and
the aisle by her father. She
dance
followed at St. Johns
chose an ivory strapless satin
Hall,
Greeley.
Following a honball gown with a jeweled embellishment waistband. It featured eymoon to the Bahamas, the
a ruffled organza underlay with couple resides in Spring Hill.
The Anderson County Review a chapel train. It was compli- Rachel is a physical therapy
has announced winners of its mented by a chapel length veil. assistant employed at Haeger in
annual Sweepstakes contest. Her bouquet was pink roses and Olathe. Mitch is also a physical
Winners for
therapy assistant at Sweet Life
stargazer lilies.
2012 are:
Matron of honor was Amy Brookedale Place in Overland
Grand
Galey, sister of the bride. Park.
prize – $500
James Tilton,
Eudora.
Second
Heeling for Health is fast their team in at the main regisPlace
approaching its Saturday date tration table between 5:30 and
$100
Kathy
of April 27 at the ACJSHS track. 6 p.m. All team members are
Schulte,
Schulte Teams are signing up fast for encouraged to be there by 5:45.
Colony.
Third
the 6 p.m. start. It isnt too late Teams should have at least one
Place – $50
to get your team registered with team member on the track for
Ray Meyer,
Michelle Cunningham, Team the duration of the event.
Garnett.
Coordinator. Individual walkers
For more information on the
Fourth
are welcome and can register the event or to get involved contact
Place – $50
day of the event at the main reg- any committee member: coLarry Gifford,
istration table near the track.
chairs Diane Doran and Leslea
Garnett.
Love Lights are being sold Rockers, Dr. Jerry Padfield,
Fifth Place
for $5 each from Dorothy Miller, Marilyn Artherton, Nathan and
Meyer
– $50 Carl
Marilyn Artherton and Connie Michelle Cunningham, Sarah
Guilfoyle,
Thompson. The lights will be Holloran, Sandra Hamilton,
Greeley.
placed as luminaries with the Steve Benjamin, Dorothy Miller,
Sixth
honorees name. They will be Tracy Brown, Sally Emerson,
Place – $50
lit at dusk for the final lap. The Erin Zook, Connie Thompson,
Lois Caylor,
first and final lap will be led by Jeff McAdam, Karen Wolken,
Garnett.
the family of Marcia Peine, the Carol Ann Feuerborn and Renee
Seventh
2013 Honoree, and each hon- Duke.
Place – $50
oree on a Love Light will be
Matt Danner,
Gifford read during the final lap before
Garnett.
the close of the event. Love
Eight
Lights are designed as a way for
Place – $50
community members and walk
Robert Dehn,
participants to honor the speGarnett.
cial people in their lives such
Ninth
as neighbors, grandparents,
Place – $50
spouses or children who may be
Ruth Caudell,
dealing with a serious illness,
Colony.
be deceased, or others they love.
Tenth
Caylor
In addition, one lap during the
Place – $50
event will be walked in memoD a n i e l
ry of Teresa Nicolas, longtime
Vaughan, Garnett.
ACH employee, who recently
lost her battle with cancer.
Team captains should check
Sweepstakes
winners named
Heeling for Health planned
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Cast iron has long history of use
At the present site Im working at I have uncovered a large
amount of iron artifacts and a
great deal of these have been
cast iron.
So with all this late winter
weather continuing to hang
on, I decided I would just do a
little research and find out just
what cast iron really is.
Cast iron is an alloy of iron
that contains 2 to 4 percent
carbon, along with varying
amounts of silicon and manganese and traces of impurities
such as sulfur and phosphorus. It is made by reducing
iron ore in a blast furnace. The
liquid is cast, or poured and
hardened, into crude ingots
called pigs, and the pigs are
subsequently remelted along
with scrap and alloying elements in cupola furnaces and
recast into molds for producing a variety of products.
The Chinese produced cast
iron as early as the 6th Century
B.C., and it was produced sporadically in Europe by the 14th
Century. It was introduced
by Henry Roeckers
Contact (785) 448-6244
for local archeology information.
into England about 1500; the
first iron works in America
were established on the James
River, Virginia, in 1619. During
the 18th and 19th centuries,
cast iron was a cheaper engineering material than wrought
iron because it did not require
intensive refining and working
with hammers, but was more
brittle and inferior in tensile
strength.
Nevertheless, its load bearing strength made it the first
important structural metal,
and it was used in some of
the earliest skyscrapers. In the
20th Century, steel replaced
cast iron in construction, but
cast iron continues to have
many industrial applications.
Most cast iron is either socalled gray iron or white iron,
the colors shown by fracture.
Gray iron contains more silicon and is less hard and more
machinable than is white iron.
Both are brittle, but a malleable cast iron produced by a
prolonged heat treatment was
developed in France in the 18th
Century, and a cast iron that is
ductile as cast was invented in
the United States and Britain
in 1948. Such ductile irons now
constitute a major family of
metals that are widely used
for gears, dies, automobile
crankshafts and many other
machine parts.
For the most part, all the
cast iron I have found has
been: old wagon, stagecoach,
horse drawn farm machinery
and Model T parts. Even a few
tools may be cast iron.
I guess everything I find has
a story behind it!
2003: Schools worry about money
April 8, 2003
Garnetts office of Social
and Rehabilitation Services is
one of among 43 county offices
slated for closure between now
and 2005, as part of a budget
tightening strategy by the headquarters in Topeka. There also
will be changes in operational
policies that will allow clients
to get information from access
points in communities that
dont have offices.
USD 365 school board members laid the groundwork for
a local tax increase Thursday
night to meet a $245,000 district
shortfall next school year, in lieu
of the options of closing two of
four district attendance centers
or cutting teacher positions and
boosting the number of kids in
most all classrooms in the district.
April 15, 1993
The City of Garnett has
been awarded two grants totaling more than $165,000 to start
work on development of the
pedestrian and bicycle trail on
its portion of the old Santa Fe
railroad line, as well as restoration of the railroad depot on that
line. The Kansas Department
of Transportation, through its
transportation enhancement
program, will fund $54,000 of the
$67,000 in grant money to refurbish and restore the Atchinson,
Topeka and Santa Fe railroad
by Vickie Moss
Staff Writer
depot located on the southeastern edge of the city. Terms of the
grant stipulate that the city pays
20 percent of the project cost,
while the state pays the other 80
percent.
April 11, 1983
The survey by the engineering
consultant for the Cedar Creek
reservoir has been completed,
the grouting company has been
working on the sewer system
in Garnett, and 20 applications
have been received for the citys
sidewalk renovation program.
The canvas of the votes cast
in the Tuesday election resulted
in a lowering of the margin that
City Commissioner Claron Cole
won over Kenneth Wells. Cole
defeated Wells by 69 votes less
than was originally tabulated on
the unofficial results. Cole won
by an official margin of 404 to
257.
April 15, 1913
A meeting of the Garnett
Chautauqua association was
held in the First Baptist Church
last night, and it is ready to make
some interesting announcements. All but one of the members were present, and he was
out of town, and it certainly
looked good to see a bunch of
Chautauqua hustlers ready for
business and able to do things.
The committee is ready now to
start the ball to rolling. Come on
with your support. The association is with you for the greatest
Chautauqua in this part of the
state. We can have it, and you can
help. Get in now, while there is
room.
diebolt
2×2
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
biz direct
4×8.5
greeley farm implement
2×6
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey or Kari at
785-448-3121.
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
www.adamsonbros.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
3B
LOCAL
AD
2×2
AD
2×5
Creative
Kids
This is the third
installment of
the Creative Kids
feature. The
rst published
Feb. 12 and
featured winning
entries for rst,
second and third
place, as well
as honorable
mention. The
second installment
was published
March 12.
AD
2×5
AD
2×5
AD
2×5
AD
2×5
AD
2×5
AD
2×5
AD
2×5
AD
2×5
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Notice to
control
noxious
weeds
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, March 26, 2013)
GENERAL NOTICE TO CONTROL NOXIOUS
WEEDS
The Kansas Noxious Weed Law K.S.A.
2-1314 et seq requires all persons who own or
supervise land in Kansas to control and eradicate all weeds declared noxious by legislative
action. The weeds declared noxious are: Field
Bindweed, Musk Thistle, Sericea Lespedeza,
Johnson Grass, Bur Ragweed, Canada Thistle
Leafy Spurge, Hoary Cress, Quack Grass,
Russian Knapweed, Kudzu and Pignut.
Notice is hereby given pursuant to Kansas
Noxious Weed Law to every person who owns or
supervises land in Anderson County that noxious
weeds growing or found on such land shall be
controlled and eradicated. Control is defined
as preventing the production of viable seed and
the vegetative spread of the plant. Failure to
observe this notice may result in the County:
1: Serving a legal notice requiring control of the
noxious weeds within a minimum of five days.
Failure to control the noxious weeds within the
time period allowed may result in the county
treating the noxious weed at the landowners
expense and placing a lien on the property if the
bill is not paid within 30 days.
2: Filing criminal charges for non-compliance.
Conviction for non-compliance may result in a
fine of $100 per day of non-compliance with a
maximum fine of $1500.
The public is also hereby notified that it is
a violation of the Kansas Noxious Weed Law to
barter, sell or give away infested nursery stock or
livestock feed unless the feed is fed on the farm
where grown or sold to a commercial processor
that will destroy the viability of the noxious weed
seed. Custom harvesting machines must be
labeled with a label provided by the Kansas Dept.
of Agriculture and must be free of all weed seed
and litter when entering the State and when leaving a field infested with noxious weed. Additional
information may be obtained from the Anderson
County Noxious Weed Department or by contacting the Kansas Dept. of Agriculture, 109 SW 9th,
Topeka, KS 66612
mr26t3
City changes
rates, fees
for permits
(Published in The Anderson County Review
Tuesday April 9, 2013)
CITY ATTORNEYS SUMMARY OF
ORDINANCE #3944
On March 26, 2013, the City of Garnett,
Kansas, adopted Ordinance #3944 which
amended parts of Title IV of the Municipal Code:
(1) changing the rates and rate structure for
some electric, plumbing, mechanical and building
permits issued by the City; and,
(2) providing for referral of certain plans for
outside review and establishing a plan review
surcharge to be paid by the permit applicant.
A complete copy of this ordinance is available
free of charge at www.garnettks.net (available for
at least one week following the publication of this
summary noitce) or at City Hall, 131 W. Fifth
Avenue, during regular business hours.
This summary is certified by Terry J. Solander,
City Attorney, in compliance with K.S.A. 123007.
ap9t1
kdan
1×2
%
2
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
Did you know junk mail
mass mailings have as little as
a 2% response rate with customers?
Advertise where people read.
FOR RENT
HELP WANTED
MISC. FOR SALE
Available by May 1. Furnished
1 bedroom apartment with
washer and dryer. References
required. (785) 448-3158. mc26tf
2+ bedroom – very clean,
CH&CA. $475 per month. (785)
418-5435.
ap2tf
Office Space – excellent location,
utilities included. 448-8006.
ap9t2
2 bedroom – 1 bath, mobile home
in Garnett. $350 per month. (913)
669-9599.
ap9t2
You got the drive, We have the
Direction OTR Drivers APU
Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass
passenger policy. Newer equipment. 100% No touch. 1-800-5287825
P/T Event Specialists needed
to demonstrate food/products
in local retailers! Must have PC
access. Great pay! Weekends
req. Email Elizabeth Yambao at
Elizabeth.yambao@asmnet.com
Drivers: Inexperienced? Get on
the Road to a Successful Career
with CDL Training. Regional
Training Locations. Train and
WORK for Central Refrigerated
(877) 369-7885 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com
Exp. Flatbed Drivers: Regional
opportunities now open with
plenty of freight & great pay!
800-277-0212 or primeinc.com
Airlines Careers – Become an
Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA
approved training. Financial
aid if qualified – Housing
available. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of
Maintenance 888-248-7449.
Attend College Online from
Home. *Medical, *Business,
*Criminal Justice, *Hospitality.
Job placement assistance.
Computer and Financial Aid
if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 888-220-3977 www.
CenturaOnline.com
For Sale – router, router table,
bits, disc grinder, Dremel kit,
extension, table stand, 1x30x5,
4x36x6, 3×20, hand sanders,
radial table, scroll, band, circular saw, drill press, tool cart,
machinist chests, caliper, ShopVac, compressor, hoses, brand
finish nailers, creeper, floor jack,
stands, seats, lots of hand tools.
(785) 448-0843.
ap9t1*
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
AD
1×1
AD
1×1
AD
1×1
HELP WANTED
miller
1×2
AD
Drivers – $1,000 sign-on bonus, I will pickup your unwanted
paid hourly: $17.57/hr! Full/ appliances, etc. for free. Jay 1×2
MISC. FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
misc
part-time regional runs! Paid
vacation, 6 holidays! Owner
operators welcome. CDL-A, 2
years experience. (913) 393-1096
ap2t2*
Weekend Cook Needed – Apply
in person. Guest Home Estates,
806 W. 4th, Garnett.
ap9t4
Heavy Equipment Operator
Career! 3 Week Hands On
Training School. Bulldozers,
Backhoes, Excavators. National
Certifications. Lifetime Job
Placement Assistance. VA
Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497
Russell County News seeking
reporter with graphic design
skills. Could lead to management position. Send resume to
PO Box 513, Russell, KS 67665 or
jack@mainstreetmedia.us
Sloan, (620) 376-8016.
ap2t2*
Happy Jack Skin Balm: Stops
scratching & gnawing. Promotes
healing & hair growth on dogs
& cats suffering from grass &
flea allergies without steroids!
Orscheln Farm & Home. www.
happyjackinc.com
Auct
3×9.5
SERVICES
Tree trimming/removal – interior/exterior painting, building
small storage shed, gutter cleaning, power washing, Crane Lift
and Handyman Service. (785)
448-8203.
ap9t1*
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m.,
105 1/2 East 4th Ave., (620) 2282597 or (785) 241-0586. nv21tf
Mobile Home Insurance. We
have great rates on mobile homes
that are less than 15 years old.
Archer Insurance Agency, 118 E.
5th Street, P.O. Box 307, Garnett,
BAUMANS REPAIR
Ks. 66032 (785) 448-3841.
my23tf
Hydraulic Cylinders
Hope Unlimited offers services
Bottle and Service Jacks
to victims of domestic violence
Hydraulic Hose Assemblies
and sexual abuse. Call (620)
365-7566 or Kansas hotline After Hours Hydraulic Hoses
No Sunday Sales
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
AD
1×1
RYTTER
1×1
COMPUTCOMPUTER
ER EXP
1x2WORK
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
Thaddeus Bauman
(785) 448-8555
AD
1×2
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASIFIEDS!
Saturday, April 20, 2013- 10:30 a.m.
We want your farm equipment or other
equipment. Please call us by April 5, 2013 to
get it into our sale bill and advertising.
joe borntrager
2×2
Hecks 2×5
PUBLIC AUCTION
(785) 448-3121
SERVICES
SERVICES
SAVE up to $1,200 on 2012 models.
Trade in your old riding mower – running or not on a 2013 model and SAVE up to $1,000!
0% Financing for 48 Months with approved credit
Offer ends June 30, 2013
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Open Fri.-Sat. 8 a.m. – 6 p.m.
& Evenings afer 6 p.m.
Westphalia, KS
(785) 893-1620
Lybarger
2×6
30 Gallon Minimum Purchase.
Sale runs March 1 – April 15, 2013.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Need a place
to hang your hat?
Check out our
5B
Real Estate Classifieds!
FARM & AG
FARM AND AG
Wanted – pasture to rent or
lease for horses. Prefer Southern
Franklin County, (785) 418-1387.
ap2t2
AD
1×7.5
AD
1×1
LAWN & GARDEN
LAWN AND GARDEN
Lawn Service – mowing, trimming, dethatching, leaf removal,
grass catcher (optional). Byron
Knaus, (785) 204-2911 cell; (785)
448-6777 home.
mc26t10*
bennet
1×1
keims
1×1
little& johns
Farm
Greenhouse
SERVICES
Little John Sherwood
785-835-7057
1×1.5
AD
1×2
Check out our
Monthly Specials
GARAGE SALES
GARAGE SALES
Moving Sale – 15 Country Club
Drive, Saturday, April 13th, 8am? Oak dining room table with (2)
leaves and (8) chairs; oak hutch;
end tables; (1) large oak entertainment center and (1) smaller
oak entertainment center; maple
corner hutch; mahogany buffet;
glass front hutch; other misc.
items.
ap9t1*
Huge Garage Sale – Saturday,
April 13, 8:00-3:00 p.m. 26238
NW 1750 Road, Pam Howarter.
ap9t1*
NOTICES
NOTICES
Gun Show April 13-14 Sat. 95 & Sun. 9-3 Topeka Kansas
Expocentre (19th & Topeka
Blvd) Buy-Sell-Trade Info: (563)
927-8176
kpa sam and louie
2×2
Auction 2-Day April 1314 Manhattan, KS New
Construction Materials, Police
Used/Seized Items Kitchen
Cabinets, Granite Countertops,
Doors, Flooring; Vehicles,
Equipment, Jewelry; AND
MORE! For more info visit
TotallyAuction.com
ADOPTION
ADOPTION
A lifetime of love, security and
happiness awaits your newborn. Expenses paid. Michelle
and Kevin 1-855-882-2700 or m
ichelleandkevinadopt@yahoo.c
om
Educated, financially secure,
affectionate married couple
want to adopt a baby into a nurturing, warm, and loving environment. Expenses paid. Cindy
and Adam. 1-800-860-7074
Happiness is . . . Purchasing a
Love Light for $5 to honor your
loved one. Love Lights will be lit
during 13th Annual Heeling for
Health walk. This years honoree is Marcia Peine, Saturday,
April 27th, ACJSHS track.
Contact Dorothy Miller at (785)
448-3007.
ap9t1
Happiness is . . . Breakfast at
the VFW, 7am-10am, Saturday,
April 13. Biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage
and eggs.
ap9t1
Happiness is . . . Registering
your team for the 13th Annual
Heeling for Health walk,
Saturday, April 27th, ACJSHS
track, 6-9pm, (785) 448-3131. The
2013 honoree is Marcia Peine.
ap9t1
AD
1×2
Happiness is . . . The annual
Friends of the Library book
sale at the Garnett Library on
Saturday, April 13th from 10am
to 4pm.
ap9t1*
SUNSET MANOR in Waverly, long-term care division of
COFFEY COUNTY HOSPITAL, is now hiring:
activities director – FT
housekeeper – PT/PRN
CNA – FT
dietary aide – PT
Download application at coffeyhealth.org.
Send resume/application to:
Theresa Thoele, Human Resource Director, 801 N. 4th,
Burlington, KS 66839 or tthoele@coffeyhealth.org.
CHS is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . Coming to
help Dr. Mildred Julius Stevens
celebrate her 90th birthday at a
party Saturday, April 20, 2013, 24:30 p.m. at Mr. Ds Bar & Grill,
311 N. Maple Street, Garnett.
RSVP 9am-11am, Monday Saturday (785) 448-5454. Card
shower appreciated. 202 West
4th Ave., Garnett, KS 66032.
mc19t5*
Happiness is . . . Hodgson
Family Garage Sale, April 13,
Park Road and Spruce. ap9t1*
Estate Sale
LOG HOME KITS
AD
2×2
gates
2×4
AMERICAN LOG HOMES IS ASSISTING LIQUIDATION OF
LAND DEVELOPERS ESTATE
3 Log Homes selling for BALANCE OWED. FREE DELIVERY
BALANCE OWED $17,500
BALANCE OWED $22,900
BALANCE OWED $15,700
View at www.thegreatamericanlogco.com
Ready Only Reply. Call 704-602-3035 ask for Accounting Dept.
12 Hour Nights 8 Hour Nights
Evening Shifts
Youth
Specialists
Enjoy working with youth? Elizabeth Layton Center
has part-time summer work available for
Youth Specialists to co-lead groups and work
individually with youth challenged with serious
emotional disturbance. Positions available in Ottawa
and Paola. Providing transportation is a job
requirement, candidates must be at least age 23 to
comply with KDOT guidelines. Applicants must have
valid drivers license with good driving record.
Paid training is provided.
Send resume and cover letter to ELC
PO Box 677, Ottawa, Kansas 66067
hr@laytoncenter.org.
Open until lled.
EOE
Lybarger
2×6
and co engineer
2×4
2×4
Garage Sale – Gym boree!
Burlington Rec. Center gym,
Friday, April 12 6pm-8pm and
Saturday, April 13, 8am-11am.
Multiple sales under one roof.
ap9t1
Hodgson Family – Park Road
and Spruce, April 13. 36 TV,
luggage, microwave, bike, park
bench, Wii games, bed frame,
much stuff.
ap9t1*
Titonka Trading Co. – 109 E.
7th, April 12 and 13, Friday and
Saturday, 9am-3pm., misc. items
ap9t1*
April 12 & 13th – 501 E. 4th,
8am-? Furniture, household,
misc, much more!
ap9t1*
Saturday, April 13 – 8-5, 545 E.
Monroe. Sofa, desk, christmas
tree, much more. Wilcox. ap9t1
April 12th, Friday only – noon5:30 p.m. 325 Orange. Size 4 girls
clothes, baby crib, lots misc.
ap9t1*
Multi-family – Barnes Garage
Sale, Saturday, April 13, 8:00
a.m. to 2:00 p.m., 425 East Park
Road (located in back garage).
Electronics, ceramic stove top
with down draft, lots and lots
of other household and kitchen
items, lots of womens apparel
for work (dress slacks, skirts,
etc.) mens clothing, little boys
and girls clothing, jewelry, bedding, toys, furniture and lots
more!
ap9t1
413 N. Grant – Eileen James, 8:00
a.m. – ? Little boy clothes, name
brand, like new condition and
girls 7/8 name brand. Lots of
nice women and mens clothes.
Vintage and lots of misc. ap9t1*
Multi-Family – Quonset Hut,
Friday, 10am-7pm; Saturday
8am-?? Baby clothes and girls
clothing, changing table, swing
jumparoo and more. Lots of
misc.
ap9t1
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
life care of oz
GARAGE SALES
30 Gallon Minimum Purchase
Sale runs March 1 – April 15, 2013
www.lybargeroil.com
*Limited 1 per customer
6B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Planning to burn? Call dispatch
Calendar
April 15-Seekers Not Slackers
4-H Club, Lone Elm community
building, 7 p.m.; Jolly Dozen
Club, 7 p.m.; 16-Library board
meeting, city hall, 5:30 p.m.; 17Lions Club, United Methodist
/church basement, 7 p.m.
School Calendar
April 11-Forensics at Louisburg;
13-Prom; 16-middle school track
meet at Yates Center, 3:30 p.m.
Senior Meals
April 12-lasagna, tossed salad,
Italian lend, Texas toast, jello
with fruit; 15-pasta bake, Prince
Edward veggies, wheat bread,
pears; 17-birthday meal-roast
beef, mashed potatoes, gravy,
green beans, roll cake and ice
cream. Games played each meal
day. Phone 620-852-3479 for reservations.
Christian Church
Easter Scripture presented
was John 6:30-35 and Philippians
3:3-21. Pastor Mark McCoy presented the sermon The Bread
of Life. Mens Bible study at
the church, 7 a.m. Tuesdays;
Apr. 7-church potluck dinner and meeting at the City
Hall community room following services; Apr. 10-Working
Wonders CWC, 7 p.m.; Apr. 14Cross Training starts up again
with a breakfast at 9:30 a.m. at
the church; church directory
photos will be offered again
immediately after church for
those who missed the January
day; Apr. 21-VBS meeting at the
Methodist Church, 2 p.m.
UMC
Easter Scripture presented
at the United Methodist Church
was Psalm 118:14-24, Matthew
6:1-4, and John 20:1-18. Pastor
Leslie Jackson presented the
sermon.
VBS
April 21 is the 2nd meeting
for those organizing Vacation
Bible School. It will be held at
the United Methodist Church
at 2 p.m. June 10-14 is the week
scheduled for this years VBS.
Brush Cleanup
The citys annual brush
cleanup is the week of April
22-26. Set brush beside the
street for Tim Dietrich, city
superintendent to pick up.
Superintendent WILL NOT
drive the backhoe into anyones
yard to pick up.
City Wide
Cleanup is to be determined.
Burning
It is damp underfoot now
after receiving around 3 inches
of rain in March, but will dry
soon and be time for farmers
to burn for weeding purposes.
They are to call the Anderson
County Dispatch Center at
785-448-5428. Give them what,
where and what time you will
start your burn and phone
number to reach you while you
by Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net
with Colony news.
are doing your burn. When finished you are to phone tell them
so. A burn ban to be used on
the rangeland fire danger index
may be seen on the website
www.cph.nosa.gov/top/.
City Hall
It was 30 years ago in March
when the new City Hall building was under construction.
In September 1983 the City of
Colony opened the doors of this
new building. Along with the
City Hall office were rooms for
the Colony City Library, rest
rooms, kitchen area and a community room. It remains the
same today. The Mid-America
Council on Aging meets three
times weekly for senior meals
in the community room. The
room is used for private gatherings and as a voting poll also.
Seats to serve 100 people are
available for the room. The
building to the south of the City
Hall building was completed in
1985. This building housed the
Fire Department until their
new building was built on Pine
Street. It is now used for the
citys equipment.
4-H
Seekers Not Slackers 4-H
Club held their monthly meeting March 18. Roll call was
answered by 19 members and
two leaders by naming something they were doing over
spring break.
There were
two guests present. Tanner
LaCross led the club in saying the flag salute and the 4-H
Pledge. Karson Hermreck and
Juliana Sprague led in singing
God Bless My Underwear.
Members were reminded of the
market beef weigh-in March 23,
the market lamb, hog, goat, and
bucket calf on May 1. Discovery
Days registration is now open.
It was voted to help with the
Roll and Stroll in Iola April
6 and the Lone Elm Arts and
Crafts Show and alumni dinner April 27 It was voted they
look into buying show shirts for
the fair and go to the T-Bones
baseball game in July. Special
guest, Kevin Malone, president
of Lazarus Gunners spoke
about trap shooting. Makalya
Jones gave a demonstration on
how to make a bird feeder. For
recreation, Ridley Black and
Alex Brownrigg led the club
in playing Heads Up and-Up.
The meeting was adjourned by
saying the 4-H Motto.-Cassie
Bowen, Reporter
Around Town
Tessa Louk and Shayla
Stephens were awarded scholarships by the Doug Bruce
Memorial Scholarship fund.
Both were 2012 Crest graduates.
Tessa is a freshman at Kansas
State University and is daughter of John and Terri Louk.
Shayla is a freshman at Allen
Community College.
Kasey Thexton, Wichita
arrived Saturday and spent
Easter weekend with his parents
Harold and Marilyn Thexton.
Joining them on Easter Sunday
was Vernon Sprague, Lone Elm
and Sandra Adams, Kincaid.
Mary Clemans was a dinner guest Easter Sunday at the
home of her son and wife Arvin
and Kathy Clemans, Iola. Other
guests were her granddaughter Stacey Billingsley, husband
Jeff, daughters Stephanie and
Kristin, Joplin, MO; Kathy
Clemans mother, Doris Roe,
Iola and Kathys sister Barbara
Diehl, Moran. A hand drawn
pencil sketch of Marys cat, a
favorite pet, was drawn by her
great granddaughter Stephanie
age 15, and given to Mary as an
Easter Gift.
Mark Luedke took his parents, Morris and Allene Luedke
out for dinner Sunday following
church services in observance
of Easter and their wedding
anniversary.
An Easter luncheon was
enjoyed at the home of Greg,
Terri and Tiffany Jackman.
Guests were Zachary Jackman,
Dean Hamm, Decker and Sandy
Spillman, Jeff, Missy, Katrina
and Kaden Strickler, Colony;
Luke, Jessica, Kallie, Kamrie,
and Karlie Feuerborn, Garnett;
Andrew, Crystal, Arabella,
Aydan, and Mathew Dunbar,
Richmond; Dollene Jackman,
Humboldt; Danny and Margaret
Jackman, Moran; Shane, Rita,
Kayla, Hannah, and Erin
Drybread, Buffalo; and Mike
Armstrong, Kincaid.
Sympathy is expressed to
William R. Bill Brecheisen at
the loss of his wife Eva Marie,
80, March 26 at the Richmond
Healthcare Center, Richmond.
Sympathy is also extended
to her son and wife, Dan and
Rene Womelsdorf, and daughter Gloria Martin, both, Welda.
Funeral services were Saturday,
March 30, at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral service Chapel,
Garnett. Burial followed at the
Welda Cemetery.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 04-09-20130 /
Photo Submitted
The 45th Annual Anderson
County
Historical
Society
Banquet was held on Wednesday,
April 3rd at the high school commons area. Walt & Dorothy
Lickteig were honored as the
2013 Outstanding Couple of the
Year. Bud Fraker provided an
interesting and entertaining program on the history of the Fraker
Clothing Store. President Kristie
Kinney extended her thanks to
Bud Fraker, Marilyn Burkhardt,
the officers and directors, and
everyone who purchased tickets
to help make the 2013 banquet
a success. Pictured above from
left, Kristie Kinney, President of
the Anderson County Historical
Society, with Dorothy and Walt
Lickteig. At right is Bud Fraker.
Teachers organization meets
The Garnett Public Library
served as the host site for the
Alpha Gamma Chapter of Delta
Kappa Gammas March 9, 2013,
meeting. We welcomed guests
from the Alpha Xi Chapter for
this exchange meeting. A wonderful brunch was served by
Donna Mader. Those attending
much enjoyed a testimony and
music selections sung by Pam
Covault and Sheryl Urquhart.
Flower pot favors designed by
Marlene Riedel and stuffed
with goodies provided by Rena
Smith were given to those present. Tables were decorated with
baskets filled with Easter eggs
provided by Shirley McGhee.
Alpha Xi and Alpha Gamma
then dispersed to conduct their
own business meetings. There
were 10 attending from Alpha
Gamma Chapter. President
Judy Carlson called for the
secretarys minutes and treasurers report.
Jenny Miller reported delivery of the service project items
collected by Alpha Gamma
members at Christmas time.
prize. Mary Ann Umbarger The Miami County Cancer
received a birthday gift from
her Secret Sister and she also
won the door prize of stationary
and wash cloths. Seed packets
were given by Patty as the hostess gifts. The table decorations
were lovely handmade crossed
stitched tea towels. The March
meeting has not be scheduled.
Hyatt Club has pot luck luncheon
Pat Mosher was hostess for
the Hyatt Club meeting, a pot
luck luncheon, at the Garnett
Public Library on Feb. 20.
Eleven members attended and
each brought Get Well cards
for four members. We received
an update on the health of each
of those members. Members
updated their addresses and
phone numbers for the 2013
member directory that Rose
Marie Miller is preparing.
President Dorothy Miller asked
for a vote to participate in the
annual Heeling for Health walk
on April 27. Members voted to
put together a team to be captained by Joella Phares. Patty
provided info on the Rail Trail
silent auction and dinner set
for March 27. She also made
information available on the
new Anderson County Hospital.
Secretary/Treasurer
Janis
Hightower gave the Treasury
Report.
Hilda Lankard had the winning guess on the mystery
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc..
(785) 448-3121
garnett true value
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3×8
Foundation was thrilled to
receive the snack items.
Members are reminded that
newspaper reports are to be
turned in to Jenny Miller.
State Convention will be held
at the Marriott in Wichita April
12, 13 and 14th, 2013. Please let
Judy Carlson know if you can
attend. March 29th is the dead-
maloans
2×3
line for reservations.
The April 20th meeting will
be held at the home of Carolee
Dorton in LaCygne. A brunch
will be served at 10:00 AM. The
reservations person from each
town is asked to let Carolee
know how many are attending
from their town.
The meeting adjourned.
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