Anderson County Review — August 4, 2015
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from August 4, 2015. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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in summa.
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The Anderson County Review
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August 4, 2015
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Friday Night Memories
and losses sometimes bitter;
Garnett Stadium retired big
where young warriors mixed
blood with the grass and
as USD 365 plans 2015 their
the mud and the powdery lime
that marked its yard lines.
football at new facility
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT It was a place
where high school passions
reigned on crisp fall Friday
nights ever since the 1930s;
a place where homecoming
queens dreams came true,
where wins were sometimes
But its time has passed
a victim of decades of local
political wrangling over who
should pay for its upkeep and
the construction of a near
million dollar upgrade to the
new football field and track
complex at Anderson County
Junior-Senior High School. As
of this fall, high school football
at Garnett Stadium will be no
more.
The news dribbling out
through scheduling notes
and school board meetings in
recent months and without a
formal public announcement
is being met with bittersweet
memories by hundreds of
Garnett High School and ACHS
alumni for whom the stadium
was a huge piece of their high
school eras.
In better days of winning
Garnett football teams the sta-
dium was like a carnival every
Friday night game in the fall.
Doug Archer, a 1973 GHS graduate, had his last hurrah on the
field in the famed state playoff
game against Wichita Kapan
Mt. Carmel when the Bulldogs
led 21-0 in the third quarter
but lost in the end 24-21. Kapan
went on to win the state championship in the division.
What I remember most
about the stadium was that for
SEE STADIUM ON PAGE 3A
The Garnett Stadium will no longer be used for high school football
games, replaced by a more modern facility near ACJSHS.
Flatiron Spectacle to
rock stadium in October
Garnett Chamber, Review
to host music event during
classic sports car weekend
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Local organizers are
planning a concert night, food vendors and beer garden in tandem with
an October 10 classic car event at
Lake Garnett Park a two-band, free
concert outing at Garnett Stadium
called the Flatiron Music Spectacle.
The concert will cap off Saturday
events of the Lake Garnett Grand
Prix Revival, which is expected to
draw more than 100 classic sports
car enthusiasts and their rides from
around the Midwest for the two-day
driving and display event.
Well be dovetailing with the
downtown sports car show and music
event theyre planning for that afternoon, said Burt Peterson, one of the
concert organizers. Were hoping to
enhance their event and draw from
it at the same time. Its going to be
an amazing day of classic sports cars
and rock and roll in Garnett.
The Garnett Area Chamber of
Commerce will co-sponsor the event
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 8-4-2015 / Dane Hicks
Free cotton candy, hot dogs, sno-cones and inflatable games were the rule on a warm but energetic evening Friday when
the Garnett Church of the Nazarene hosted its annual Back To School Bash. A large crowd attended the event, which was
also a finale for the churchs Vacation Bible School last week.
along with The Anderson County
Review a part of the newspapers
year-long celebration of its 150th anniversary. Tami Hiestand, chairman of
the Creative Business Partnerships
Committee within Garnetts community development division, said
the event would help exploit a nugget mined from recent Second
Saturdays events in Garnett.
One of the successes of Second
Saturdays was that we discovered sort
of a Garnett musical underground,
Hiestand said. People found out we
had a lot of talent around the area
and we want to keep promoting it and
capitalizing on it.
Headlining the concert will be
Atomic Possum, a Eudora-based
rock and roll band with a following
in Northeast Kansas and featuring
Bush Citys Leonard Louk, a former
principal in The Uncle Sam Band of
the 1970s. Another band with local
ties, Free Range Chicken, featuring
Burt Peterson and Adam Caylor of
Garnett, will be the opening act.
Organizers got the thumbs up
from Garnett City Commissioners
last Tuesday night after presenting
the basics of the plan. Commissioner
SEE CONCERT ON PAGE 2A
leaders ponder spillway damage
ACSO easing through bed City
Damage to Lake Garnett Dam
backside likely caused by 2007
freeze at state hospital
Sheriff says reduction
of space at facility has yet
to affect county detainees
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
OSAWATOMIE A temporary
reduction in bed space due to
remodeling at the Osawatomie
State Hospital hasnt affected
Anderson County law enforcement yet, and county sheriff Vern
Valentine hopes his luck holds out
until the construction is completed
in October.
Law officers in the region have
faced a logistical and administrative conundrum since the state
hospital announced in late June a
remodeling project would reduce
its available beds from 206 to 146.
Law officers and others like mental
health workers in the area typically admit patients to the state hospital who may not have committed
chargeable crimes or who may be
judged to be a threat to themselves
after some sort of event or incident that sometimes involves law
enforcement.
Valentine said low volume of
such cases in Anderson County has
meant the situation is less a problem locally than for some other
more populace jurisdictions.
Our average of sending someone to Osawatomie is less than one
a month, Valentine said last week.
It has not affected us at all, yet.
Valentine said under the circumstances options were limited
however when confronted with a
need, and some cities and counties in Southeast Kansas had been
forced to admit detainees to their
local hospitals for a few days until
space opened up at Osawatomie.
That could be a budget-busting
proposition for cities and counties,
Valentine said, but he said officers
might not have any choice because
it was the only monitored, full-time
care available outside of jail and
laws prevent jailing someone without charges or a court order. Law
officers passed that concern along
to state hospital officials and elected representatives last Monday at
a special meeting at Osawatomie to
discuss the situation.
Our comments were that we
are only allowed to hold someone
so long without charges or a determination from the courts that the
individual needs to remain in custody for their own or others well
being, Valentine said. If we dont
have that from the courts (and if no
SEE FREEZE ON PAGE 3A
flood; engineering study needed
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Heavy erosion on the spillway
of Lake Garnett Dam has worried city commissioners about the degree of damage to
the structure that holds back the 48-acre
lake, so they commissioned an engineering
study last week to inspect the dam.
Commissioners approved an expenditure of $3,200 to Shafer, Kline & Warren of
Lenexa to begin the study immediately to
determine the dams condition and make
recommendations on possible repairs.
The damage was brought to the citys
attention by hikers on the wilderness trail
north of the dam in recent weeks. The spillway east of the dam appears in good shape
in the area that can be seen from the roadway, but the steep drop down the back side
SEE DAM ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 8-4-2015 / Dane Hicks
Torrential rains in 2007 did heavy damage to the spillway at Lake Garnett
dam. City commissioners last Tuesday commissioned an engineering study
to assess the structural integrity of the spillway and the dam and to try to
determine if problems there need immediate attention.
County fair kicks off with parade tonight
Carnival opens tonight,
variety of events planned to
keep fairgoers entertained
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT The Anderson County
Fair gets into full swing tonight with
the parade kick off at Garnett Stadium
at 7 p.m. and midway carnival opening
at 6:30 p.m. and running all five nights
of the fair.
Other highlights for the remainder
of fair week include the Fashion Revue
and awards presentation tonight at 8
p.m. at the livestock arena.
The swine show is set for 9 a.m.
Wednesday at the livestock arena,
the fair tent with prize drawings runs
from 6 p.m.-10 p.m.
Thursday is the horse show at 9
a.m., pet contest at 1 p.m. in the livestock arena and the Shodeo at 6:30 p.m.
Friday is round robin showmanship
at 9 a.m. at the livestock arena and the
Buyers Premium dinner at 5:30 p.m.
SEE FAIR ON PAGE 2A
Custom printed business checks, invoices, sales receipts. Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
GARY YOUNG
BENEFIT DANCE
A benefit dance for Gary
Young will be held Saturday,
Aug. 22 from 7:30 p.m.-12 a.m.
at the Garnett K of C Hall.
$10 at the door, kids are free.
Pre-sale tickets through Aug.
7 only $8. Silent Auction, dollar
dance, snacks, BYOB. Tickets
available at Patriots Bank,
The Medicine Shoppe, Little
Peoples Learning Center and
from Jordan at Lindas House
of Hair Design. For more info
conract LPLC at (785) 4486585.
VFW BREAKFAST AUG. 8
Breakfast will be served at the
Garnett VFW Hall in Crystal
Lake Park from 7 a.m.-9 a.m.
Sat., August 8. Biscuits &
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage & eggs.
EVENING OF MUSIC
The Rocker and Shelton families will perform in concert
Friday, Aug. 14, at 7 p.m. at
the First Christian Church in
Garnett. Butch, Erin, Ian and
Brian will share their singing
and playing a little history of
their families through the years.
Their program will benefit
the fundraising efforts of the
planned Family Life Center at
the church. A free will donation
will be taken. Refreshments will
follow in the social room at the
church.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The August potluck dinner meeting of the Anderson
County Historical Society will
be held on Thursday, August
6, 2015, at the Lone Elm
Community Building at 6:30
p.m.
SCIPIO TRACTOR DRIVE
The Scipio Tractor Drive will
be Sunday, Aug. 16. Tractors
need to be entered by 9 a.m.
Call for meal for head count
by Aug. 14. (785) 448-4624,
Terry Feuerborn. Trams will be
provided for rides.
JASPER-ODELL HORSE PULL
The Jasper-ODell Memorial
Horse Pull will be Saturday,
Aug. 15, at Bush City. The Pony
Pull begins at 1 p.m. followed
by the Draft Horse Pull. A street
dance begins at 8 p.m. with
a $5 cover charge. For more
information call Terry Jasper at
(785) 448-8191. Concessions
available and moon walk for
the kids.
SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATIONS
Applications are now available
for the Ed Britton Memorial
Optimist Scholarship. The $500
scholarship is awarded annually to an upper-level college
student. The requirements are:
Be a graduate of a high school
in USD 365; have completed
at least 60 hours of work in a
recognized four-year university
and/or junior college; be carrying at least 12 hours per semseter during the scholarship year;
and have a minimum grade
point average of 2.5 during the
most recent 30 hours of study.
Pick up applications at area
banks; due Aug. 31, 2015. For
more information call Kenny
Kellstadt at (785) 448-3115 or
Stacey Hedges at 448-6155.
FARMERS MARKET
The Farmers Market is open
from 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Thursdays in downtown
Garnett. Sweet corn, tomatoes,
cucumbers, squash, baked
goods, local meats and eggs
will be available.
ECKAN STILL SEEKING
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
There is still time to help
Anderson County Students!
ECKAN is still in need of school
supplies, backpacks and/or
monetary donations in order
to provide students in need
with all items necessary to start
the school year off right. Bring
donations to ECKAN at 132 E.
5th, Garnett. Thank you for
helping change the lives of
Anderson County residents in
need.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Anderson County
Commission July 20, 2015
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on July 20, 2015 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was recited. Minutes of the July 13th and
July 15th meetings were approved
as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
met with the commission.
Discussion was held on a request
for a Local Traffic Only Sign on a
black topped road. The commission felt if they put it on one they
would have to put them on all
roads if requested. The commission stated roads are meant to be
driven and did not feel they should
restrict usage. The owner of the
company that is working on the
road is here and making sure that
the road is finished correctly. They
have been working weekends
to complete the repairs on the
work that was not done correctly
the first time. Dan Harden, BG
Consultants joined the meeting.
Discussion was held on acquiring the easement for the Morgan
Bridge replacement. Discussion
was held on options for the new
shop building.
Solid Waste
Scott
Garrett,
Landfill
Supervisor met with the commission. He presented his 2016
budget request. He presented
information to the commission on
a new recycling trailer.
Abatements
Abatements
B15345and
B15346 were presented and
approved.
Employee Rehire
Dena McDaniel, Treasurer met
with the commission. She has an
employee who quit to take care of
a personal issue. She is wanting
to come back to work and Dena
requested she be reinstated at
the rate she was in when she left
and not lose the longevity she
has acquired. She would have to
start back at the beginning with
sick and vacation. Commission
approved.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
July 27, Jake E Mcclendon,
Amner N Kern To Dustin
Mcclendon, Trent Kern, The S/2
Of Lot 23 And All Lot 24, Block 29,
City Of Greeley.
July 28, Kurt T Katzer And
Angela Katzer To John Anthony
Cubit, Lots 3 & 4 Blk 39 City Of
Greeley.
July 28, John R Strobel And
Cheryl Sue Strobel To Joseph
Strobel And Anne Marie Strobel,
W2 Nw4 Swfr4 30-19-20
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Secretary of the Department for
Children and Families vs. Andrew
D. Criqui, petition for child support.
Amy Marie Williams, Paisley
Clinton vs. Jason Kethal
Hermreck, petition for protection
from abuse.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Portfolio Recovery Assoc LLC
vs. Steven Leng Her, asking for
$1,490.67 plus costs and interest.
Raytown
Lees
Summit
Community Credit Union vs.
Bernard Garrett, Melissa Garrett,
asking for $8,202.10 plus costs
and interest.
Max Performance Ag, Brent
Macklin vs. Doug Setter, asking
for $12,240.18 plus costs and
CONCERT…
FROM PAGE 1A
Preston Peine commended the
group on the idea of building on
an existing success.
I think this is what weve
been talking about for years,
Peine said, when we have something going on in town, how do
we capitalize on it? I think doing
it all at the same time is fantastic.
Additional plans and details
on the event will be released in
coming weeks.
FAIR…
FROM PAGE 1A
with the 4-H Sale at 7 p.m.
The demolition derby rolls at
7 p.m. Saturday night. The 4-H
council swimming party starts
at 6 p.m. Sunday night for all 4H
kids who help clean up the fairgrounds and pick up trash after
the demolition derby.
For a full schedule of events,
see page 5B of todays Review.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
interest.
Sandy Otipoby vs. John
C. Glukowsky, Rebecca R.
Glukowsky, asking for $100.00
plus costs and interest.
Jane Donohue vs. Albert
Eugene Thacker, Rebecca
Sumner, asking for $655.00 plus
costs and interest.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Countryside Veterinary Clinic
vs. Clayton May, judgment for
$526.56 plus costs and interest.
Countryside Veterinary Clinic
vs. Ashley Reichard, dismissed.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
State of Kansas vs. Jason Karl
Stifter, intimidation of victim or
witness, driving while suspended,
transporting open container, dismissed.
Discover Bank vs. Darlene M.
Daniels, dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Ada
Williams, dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Kenneth
Roger Brooks, dismissed.
State of Kansas vs. Betsy Ann
Jives, dismissed.
Speeding violations:
Terance Jay Brooks, $567 fine.
Diversion granted.
Lynn Michelle Brown, $201 fine.
Tammy Lynn Bursell, $153 fine.
Julie H. Cain, $172 fine.
Gregory J. Cissell, $153 fine.
Andrew L. Garrean, $153 fine.
Carver Tyrone Harris, $195
fine.
Melissa L. Hutsell, $213 fine.
Brooke Ann Mallory, $165 fine.
Donna L. McCormick, $189
fine.
Jese Lincoln Rockers, $153
fine.
Michael Andrew
Vernon
Sawyer, $177 fine.
Jason L Stieben, $321 fine.
Diversion granted.
Braden Jared Stringer, $183
fine.
Jami A. Sutton, $315 fine.
Casey J. Walters, $153 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Lillian D. Lacey, $141 fine.
Michael L Weiland, $10 fine.
Other:
Weston Daniel Borntrager, purchase/consumption of liquor by
minor. $643 fine. Diversion granted.
Sarah J. James, DUI. $1,393
fine. Diversion granted.
Linda Philena Teresa Pina, failure to obey traffic control device.
$183 fine.
Angela D. Jasper, operating motor vehicle without valid
license. $27.50 fine.
Michael R. Spencer, failure to
yield to emergency vehicle. $303
fine.
Jason Karl Stifter, found guilty
of domestic battery, bodily harm,
DUI. No penalty listed.
Angela L. Williams, permitting
unauthorized person to drive.
$158 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On July 29, a report of criminal
damage to property was made
in the 300 block of South Willow
Street, Garnett. A 2003 Chevrolet
Silverado was vandalized valued
at $150.00
On July 28, a report of burglary and theft was made in the
300 block of Washington Street,
Garnett. An automobile CD player
and cell phone car charger were
stolen valued at $87.00.
On July 26, a report of aggravated battery and assault with
deadly weapon was made in the
300 block of East 7th Avenue,
Garnett. A cell phone was damaged/destroyed and a 2006 Ford
F150 Pickup was stolen valued
at $13,100. The truck was later
recovered.
On July 26, a report of theft
was made in the 700 block of
South Queens Highway, Garnett.
A refrigerator valued at $500.00
was stolen.
On July 20, a report of theft was
made in the 600 block of East
Monroe, Garnett. A 1996 Ford
Mustang, cash, and an antique
gas can was stolen. All together
valued at $5,250.00
On July 26, a report of liquor
purchase by a minor and disorderly conduct/fighting was made in
the 700 block of North Lake Road.
On July 24, a report of forgery
was made at Auburn Pharmacy,
429 North Maple Street, Garnett.
There was a forged prescription
note.
On July 22, a report of theft
was made at Subway, 109 North
Maple Street, Garnett. $100.00
was stolen.
On July 18, a report of drug seizure was made in the 600 block of
South Vine Street, Garnett. Illegal
drugs and drug paraphernalia
were recovered.
Arrests
Timothy Phillips was arrested
on July 22 on a warrant.
Joseph Willhite was arrested
July 22 on suspicion of DWS, no
vehicle liability insurance or registration.
Eric Spurgeon was arrested
July 24 on a warrant.
Joshua Freshour was arrested
July 24 on suspicion of forgery,
unlawfully obtaining a prescription-only drug.
Chad Flinn was arrested July
25 on suspicion of DWS.
Joseph Daulton was arrested
July 26 on suspicion of liquor purchase by minor.
Johnny Burnett, Jr, was arrested July 26 on suspicion of disorderly conduct.
Jon Reed was arrested July 27
on a writ.
Crystal Kirkland was arrested
July 28 on suspicion of theft, interference with officer, obstructing/
resisting.
ANDERSON COUNTY
SHERIFFS REPORT
Accidents
On July 27, a vehicle driven
by Brenna Michell Wilson struck
a coyote on 2000 Road near
Colorado Road.
On July 24, a vehicle driven
by Robert E. McLeod Jr. struck
a raccoon on 1650 Road near
Louisiana Road.
On July 25, a vehicle driven by
Lacie Jane Davis struck a deer on
1600 Road near Tennessee Road.
On July 24, a vehicle driven by
Winfred R. Bell Jr. struck a deer
on Highway 169 near 1100 Road.
JAIL LOG
Chad William Flinn, 40, Garnett,
was booked into jail July 26 by
Garnett Police on 5-day writ. Not
bondable.
Andrew William Benjamin, 27,
Colony, was booked into jail July
26 by Anderson County Sheriff
on suspicion of DUI. Bond set at
$1,000. Released July 27.
Jon Baird Reed, 29, Garnett,
was booked into jail July 27 by
Garnett Police on suspicion of
contempt of court. Bond set at
$490.
Justin Richard Reed, 27,
Garnett, was booked into jail July
27 by Osage County Sheriff on
suspicion of violation of protection
order, battery, criminal damage to
property, criminal trespass. Bond
set at $5,000. Released July 27.
Donald Evertt Tate, 43, Mound
City, was booked into jail July 28
by Linn County Sheriff on a warrant. No bond.
Anthony David Yuschishin, 35,
Kansas City, was booked into jail
July 24 by Miami County Sheriff
on suspicion of vehicle burglary.
Not bondable.
Bryan Mitchell Troxel, 30
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
July 24 by Miami County Sheriff
on suspicion of probation violation. Not bondable.
Chad William Flinn, 40 Garnett,
was booked into jail July 25 by
Garnett Police on suspicion of
DWS, 3rd conviction. Bond set at
$1,000. Released July 26.
Stephen Allen Hyden, 25,
Garnett, was booked into jail July
25 by Anderson County Sheriff
on 48-hour writ. Not bondable.
Released July 27.
Joseph Theodore Daulton, 20,
Garnett, was booked into jail July
26 by Garnett Police on suspicion
of liquor purchase by minor. Bond
set at $250.00. Released July 26.
Johnny Loren Burnett, 22,
Westphalia, was booked into jail
July 26 by Garnett Police on suspicion of disorderly conduct. Bond
set at $500.00 Released July 26.
Michael Eric Bowen, 40,
Burlington, was booked into jail
July 24 by Linn County Sheriff on
suspicion of probation violation.
Not bondable.
Joshua Frank Freshour, 26,
Leroy, was booked into jail July
24 by Anderson County Sheriff
on suspicion of forgery, unlawfully
obtaining prescription drug. Bond
set at $7,500. Released July 25.
Patrick Alan Butler, 34,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
July 24 by Miami County Sheriff
on suspicion of probation violation. Not bondable.
Craig Burton Allen, 31, Paola,
was booked into jail July 24 by
Miami County Sheriff on suspicion of probation violation. Not
Bondable.
Samuel Lee Bivins, 18, Paola,
was booked into jail July 24 by
Miami County Sheriff on suspicion of criminal threat, harassment by telephone. Not bondable.
Released July 27.
Jerry Ray Dixon, 62, Louisburg,
was booked into jail July 24 by
Miami County Sheriff on suspicion
of DUI. Not bondable.
John Wesley Mclaughlin, 27,
Lawrence, was booked into jail
July 23 by Linn County Sheriff on
suspicion of probation violation.
No bond listed. Released July 28.
Andrew Joseph Yeager, 29,
Paola, was booked into jail July
23 by Linn County Sheriff on a
warrant. No bond listed.
Kyle James Schreckhise, 36,
was booked into jail July 23 by
Linn County Sheriff on a warrant.
No bond listed.
Eric Keith Spurgeon, 26,
Garnett, was booked into jail July
24 by Linn County Sheriff on a
warrant. Bond set at $2,500.
Demetrius Armon Cornelius,
33, Pleasanton, was booked into
jail July 24 by Linn County Sheriff
on suspicion of probation violation. Not bondable.
Cory Lee Bartz, 27, Pleasant
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Hill, MO, was booked into jail July
24 by Linn County Sheriff on suspicion of fleeing a law officer. No
bond listed.
JAIL ROSTER
Jason Stifter was booked into
jail April 1, for Anderson County,
bond set at $20,000.
Michael Spellmeier was booked
into jail May 21 for Anderson
County, bond set at $250,000.
Herbert Hayden was booked
into jail June 11 for Anderson
County, bond set at $30,000.
Branden Dulin was booked into
jail June 25 for Anderson County,
bond set at $30,000.
Jacob Gilpatrick was booked
into jail July 6 for Anderson County
for court.
Christopher Bosler was booked
into jail July 13 for Anderson
County for 32-day writ.
Robert Harris was booked into
jail July 16 for Anderson County,
bond set at 10,000.
John Miller was booked into jail
July 9 for Anderson County, bond
set at $1,000.
FARM-INS
Floyd Reese was booked into
jail June 4 for Miami County.
Glief Garrison was booked into
jail June 5 for Linn County.
Eric Morris was booked into jail
June 26 for Linn County.
Mark Strom was booked into jail
July 2 for Douglas County.
Evan Robinson was booked
into jail July 8 for Douglas County.
Bradley Clark was booked into
jail July 2 for Douglas County.
Danny Mohler was booked into
jail July 14 for Linn County.
Matthew Petrie was booked into
jail July 9 for Miami County.
Derek Staum was booked into
jail July 9 for Miami County.
Roger Firebaugh was booked
into jail July 12 for Linn County.
Cynthia Sills was booked into
jail July 9 for Linn County.
Stetson Jackson was booked
into jail July 9 for Miami County.
Daniel Van Norman was booked
into jail July 21 for Linn County.
Michael Jackquinot was booked
into jail July 21 for Linn County.
Patrick Butler was booked into
jail July 24 for Miami County.
Demetrius Cornelius was
booked into jail July 24 for Linn
County
Eric Spurgeon was booked into
jail July 24 for Linn County.
Donald Tate was booked into
jail July 28 for Linn County.
Kyle Schreckhise was booked
into jail July 23 for Linn County.
Anthony Yuschishin was
booked into jail July 24 for Miami
County.
Craig Allen was booked into jail
July 24 for Miami County.
Cory Bartz was booked into jail
July 24 for Linn County.
Michael Bowen was booked
into jail July 24 for Linn County.
Jerry Dixon was booked into jail
July 14 for Miami County.
Andrew Yeager was booked
into jail July 28 for Linn County.
Bryan Troxel was booked into
jail July 24 for Miami County.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
RUGG
MARCH 22,1921-JULY 28, 2015
Ethel N. Rugg, age 94, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Tuesday, July 28, 2015, at her
home.
She was born March 22, 1921,
at Alva, Oklahoma, the daughter of Ray and Orra (Turner)
Olson. When Ethel was six
years old, the family moved
to Hardtner,
Kansas, where
her father was
a barber. The
family moved
to
Kiowa,
Kansas in 1932.
She was on the
honor roll, and
active in athRugg
letics, including softball,
basketball, and tennis. Ethel
graduated from Kiowa High
School in 1939. She attended
Northwestern College in Alva,
Oklahoma.
Ethel married Austin Dale
Rugg on August 22, 1942, at
Alva, Oklahoma. This union
was blessed with three children, Terry, Randy, and Carol.
Through the years, she
taught at Rosehill Elementary,
Kiowa Elementary, Hazelton
High School, where she also
coached. She later taught
Physical Education, and Earth
Science and Biology at Garnett
High School. In 1975, she was
awarded the BEST Award
(Best Earth Science Teacher)
in Kansas. Ethel retired in 1984
after 35 years of teaching wonderful students. She taught 8
years of Physical Education,
and the rest was teaching Earth
Science and Biology at Garnett
High School.
Ethel was a member of the
First United Methodist Church
in Garnett. After her retirement, she enjoyed taking trips
with her best friend, Janie
Paxton. Ethels greatest joy was
her family.
She was preceded in death
by her parents; husband Austin
Rugg on July 1, 1985; son, Randy
Lee Rugg in 1974; son-in-law,
Vince Kent in 2000; and sister,
Mina McKay.
Ethel is survived by her son,
Terry Rugg and wife Caren
of Ottawa, Kansas; daughter, Carol Kent of Garnett;
six grandchildren, Charlotte
Lutz and husband Kevin;
Nicole Kent and Josh Young;
Kaci Krupnik and husband
Mikhail; Cameron Kent; Sandy
Rugg; Molly Hess and husband Steven; great grandchildren, Owen Lutz, Orra Lutz,
Alex Kent, Tosh Young, Cali
Young, Coral Young, Cara Kent,
Gemma Kent, Ruby Kent, Eva
Krupnik, Samantha Krupnik,
and Spencer Rockers; and her
sister, Donna Schnackenberg of
Kansas City, Kansas.
Funeral services were
Saturday, August 1, 2015, at the
First United Methodist Church
in Garnett. Burial followed in
the Garnett Cemetery.
Memorial contributions may
be made to USD 365 Endowment
Fund and left in care of the
funeral home. Condolences
may be sent at www.feuerbornfuneral.com
SUTTON
JUNE 30, 1950-JULY 30, 2015
Jerry Sutton, age 65, of
Welda, died Thursday, July 30,
2015 at his home.
He was born on June 30, 1950
at Ottawa, Kansas, the son of
Howard and Jewel (Rausch)
Sutton.
He joined the United States
Army, serving from 1968 to
1972.
He married Valli Reppert on
July 3, 1976 at Garnett, Kansas.
He was preceded in death by
his parents; and half-brother,
Carl Duncan.
Survivors include his wife,
STADIUM…
FROM PAGE 1A
all the home games during that
undefeated regular season my
senior year the Garnett fans
would take their cars out in
the afternoon and park them
on the east side, Archer said.
Theyd have someone shuttle
them back and forth so theyd
have a great place to watch the
game from the comfort of their
cars.
Archer recalled the stadium was always full, with extra
benches pulled over from the
baseball fields and placed
behind the east sidelines.
People would sit on the east
rock wall and fill it to the max.
You literally could not find
a place to park or sit for that
matter around the stadium,
Archer said.
Even the stone the stadium
and surrounding wall is made
from tells a story of local history. It is native rock, cut from
the basin of what would become
Lake Garnett by workers in the
Civilian Conservation Corps,
when the Depression-era public
works program set up a work
camp in what is now Lake
Garnett Park in 1934. Before
they left in the summer of 1937,
theyd build the lake, nearby
shelter houses, swimming pool
building and football stadium
with its rock wall out of the
same stone, giving the whole
complex a common, rugged
look.
But the stadium was a point
of contention for years between
the city, which actually owned
FROM PAGE 1A
of the waterway shows tons of
displaced concrete guide work,
washed out gravel base under
the concrete and twisted, broken rebar. Damage to either
side of a dam weakens its ability to hold back the weight of the
water impounded upstream.
Youre sitting on a time
bomb there, said commissioner Gordon Blackie.
The mainstay of the damage may have been done by
a 2007 summer rain deluge
that dumped some 26 inches
of rain from Thursday, June
28 through Saturday, June
30. By the time rushing water
began to recede, Pottawatomie
Creek had peeled some 80 feet
of pavement off Scipio Road in
Robert R. Hepner, age 85, of Care, Garnett.
northeast Anderson County.
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
Funeral services are pendLocal rescuers had executon Sunday August 2, 2015 at
ed four swift water rescues
Anderson County Long Term ing at this time.
at area creek crossings, cars
were found swamped on Maple
Street in Garnett and debris
PROFESSIONAL TAX PREPARATION
was found hanging in trees 25
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
feet above the Pottawatomie.
Enrolled Agent
June is typically Anderson
Unfiled Returns
Countys wettest month with
Representing Clients Before: Offers in Compromise
around 6 inches of rainfall.
IRS Exam Division
Liens & Levies
January statistically is the driIRS Collection Division
Innocent Spouse Relief est.
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Federal
Emergency
IRS Appeals Division
JO WOLKEN
Audit Reconsiderations Management Administration
TAX-TIME TAX SERVICE, INC.
Payroll Tax Problems
publication from 2005 entitled
785-448-3056 415 S. Oak, Garnett
Dam Owners Guide to Animal
Impacts on Earthen Dams
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
details the level of destruction
that can be done to dams due
to burrowing of wildlife, into
either the upstream side or the
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
downstream side of the struc-
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MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
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(785) 448-6879
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
Rehabilitation
I remember Bill Craig announcing. Especially in the 1985
season when Garnett had not won a game. In one game that
September we were losing so bad he stopped announcing in
the second half and tuned a radio into the loudspeaker to pipe
in the Royals game because they were in the playoff hunt.
Doug Archer,
GHS Class of 1973
the property, and the local
school district, which leased it
for activities. Keeping a football field crowned up and covered with real turf is expensive;
wooden stadium benches rotted
away and were replaced with
aluminum. Detached restrooms
were added. The two entities
bantered over who should pay
for what off and on for years.
It was cost in fact that first
hinted the stadium might be
retired. Present-day USD 365
Superintendent Don Blome
told school board members last
February the district could save
$20,000 a year if it didnt have
to keep up the field. The comment came during worrisome
money talks when the district
estimated it could lose some
$67,000 in projected state education funding under new state
budget concerns. Though those
cuts never came to pass, the
plan to build the new stadium
addition at ACHS was already
underway since December of
2014 a harbinger of the old stadiums coming abandonment.
But the memories made on
the field remain. Bud Fraker,
who graduated from GHS in
1943, remembers dawning a
leather helmet to play football
DAM…
Valli Sutton, of the home; children, Adam Sutton of Garnett;
Niki Sutton of Lansing; J.D.
Sutton and Carl Sutton of
Garnett; Tiffany Heslip of
Ozark, Missouri; seven grandchildren; sisters, Janie Diedel of
Olathe; Lolita Worley of Grant
City, Missouri; and Evelyn
Sutton of Lenexa; half-brother,
Irvin Duncan of Schertz, Texas.
Graveside services were
11:00 a.m., on Monday August
3, 2015, at Garnett Cemetery,
Garnett.
health directory
3A
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To advertise in this
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(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
on the field before heading off to
World War II. Jim Hills, class of
74, dodged football coach Larry
Hausers recruitment efforts
for four years but returned
30-odd years later to watch his
son play at Garnett Stadium
for the Burlington Wildcats.
Joyce Martin remembers the
crowd energy and school spirit
of those games before she graduated in 1964, and the homecoming queen crown she won
there her senior year.
Dave Lybarger, class of 1983,
recalls a 1977 game night deluge that loaded the field and
track with four inches of water,
and how the occasional Santa
Fe train engine whistle on the
track a few dozen yards west of
the stadium would sometimes
drown out the announcers
voice. Henry Roeckers, class
of 1955, recalls nights after the
ball games when kids would
flock to Manners Restaurant
south of Garnett at the junction
of Highways 59 and 169. The
focus of Friday night football
in days without any or much
television not to mention no
cell phones or personal computers made evenings at the stadium socially paramount. For
decades until just a few years
ago those games came with the
loudspeakers signature booming baritone of the Bulldogs.
I remember Bill Craig
announcing, Archer said.
Especially in the 1985 season when Garnett had not
won a game. In one game that
September we were losing so
bad he stopped announcing
in the second half and tuned
a radio into the loudspeaker
to pipe in the Royals game
because they were in the playoff hunt.
Though football may be history at the stadium, its life as
an entertainment venue will
no doubt continue. Already,
a music concert is being
planned by the local Chamber
of Commerce in tandem with a
custom car event this October.
Its still an entertainment
venue, local musician and
event organizer Burt Peterson
told city commissioners last
week in a briefing about the
Flatiron Music Spectacle on
October 11. The place is an
amphitheater. Whether its
football or music or what have
you footballs just a bigger
stage.
No doubt new memories and
new football passions will be
made at the ACJSHS stadium
as well, as coming generations
of high school students get used
to the new complex as their
own.
Progress or lost heritage?,
Jim Hills pondered. I dont
know. But lets hope they make
their own memories.
FREEZE…
ture.
Dams like Lake Garnett are
engineered to hold back the
pressure of the lake water they
impound, and that hydraulic pressure is a constant but
usually forgotten presence on
the upstream side of a dam.
Burrowing by animals allows
the chance for seepage from the
upstream side and additional
erosion on the downstream side
of a dam.
Though wildlife damage has
not been suggested as an issue
with the Lake Garnett Dam, the
dams spillway empties into a
wooded area on its downstream
side, and large erosion cratering areas are visible underneath the damaged concrete in
the wooded area.
1×2
AD
FROM PAGE 1A
mental health facility is available) we have to let them go.
If you dont have any charges
against someone who we have
in protective custody, you can
not put them in jail.
Bill Rein, chief counsel for
the Kansas Department of
Aging and Disability Services,
told the audience at Mondays
meeting some of the rumors
of long waits or an admissions
freeze at the state hospital were
overblown. He said the average
wait for a bed at the facility
is 23 hours, and 80 percent of
patients on the waiting list are
admitted within two days.
Rein said the renovations to
the facility were slightly ahead
of schedule and the affected
areas were expected to reopen
in October.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
EDITORIAL
Waverlys wind power fairytale
At the new wind farm at Waverly, Ks.,
its owners have tapped the Latin root of the
Kansas state motto and named the operation the Ad Astra Wind Farm. A more
fitting name in that vein would be: Eyeis
Pull The Wool Overus.
Indeed, the only thing going to the
stars with Waverlys wind farm will be the
monthly electric bills of the KCPL customers who will be forced to pay for this silly
venture into environmental conscience
cleansing.
The real value of the Ad Astra farm is
that it provides for the eastern side of the
state a nearby example of the overall farce
of wind farming a visual representation
of the half-truths and snake oil so relentlessly sold by the wind industry and its
lackeys in the environmental movement;
a touchable, feelable manifestation of the
pointless spending of your hard-earned
dollar. What the Little Big Horn was to the
U.S. Cavalry, the Ad Astra Wind Farm is to
your household budget.
Seldom has so simple and poignant a
fact gone so blatantly and purposefully
ignored by so many from the manufacturers of wind equipment to the pitchmen
in the companies selling it, to the state
regulators who eventually forced KCPL
and other power companies to buy it, to
the electric customers who will shoulder
the rate increases to pay for it: Wind power
only works when the wind blows.
Most of us would like to charge our cell
phones, toast our Pop Tarts and run our
kidney dialysis machines all the time not
just when the wind is blowing. But take
what the wind company websites tell you
at face value and the reality is youll get
to watch the milk in your fridge turn to
cheese way before you see less Co2 emissions.
Lets work the math: Ad Astra opens up
and the wind blows, so KCPL shuts down
its LaCygne coal powered plant and lays off
those workers since power from LaCygne
is no longer needed. Local developers
buy the old Fairyland park off Prospect
Avenue in Kansas City and relocate it to
the former LaCygne plant site to become
Linn Countys biggest tourist draw.
Then the wind stops. Some towns have
no power, some towns are in perpetual
brown-out. Emporia and Cottonwood Falls
battle it out in a Flint Hills Mad Max-style
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
epic for the last plug-in at the Flying J
truck stop on Highway 50.
The answer to the equation is always
the same: KCPL still has to power its electrical grid at 100 percent regardless how
much wind power state regulators force
it to buy to please the environmentalists.
The reason? Because people still want
electricity whether the wind blows or not.
Companies have to generate for the whole
grid all the time, because no one knows
when the wind will blow and when it wont.
Grid power cant be stored and used later.
Not a single chunk of coal is saved; the
Wolf Creek nuclear plant still has to keep
generating. The net electrical and environmental impact of Ad Astra will be a big, fat
0.
Except for the impact on your electric
bill of course. Power companies eventually have to raise rates to pay for the wind
power theyre forced to buy, as KCPL
requested of the state corporation committee in 2012. Those rates are paid by the customers, so were funding wind projects that
do no good except to placate regulators and
warm the bosoms of tree-huggers.
Had the wind industry focused on
home-based wind mills that let you generate free power for your house, then kick
over to the paid power grid when the wind
stopped, consumers might have seen some
benefit. Instead wind companies pushed
for farms where the big money could be
farmed from power companies, who in
turn farm the added cost from your wallet.
Wind power is an inflationary fairytale
that no one is willing to tell.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
I think its BS they are letting all these four
wheelers run around the streets with no
tags, 90 percent dont have tail lights or
head lights or turn signals. Theres one
over here at the hospital driving right
through the new parking lot even though
theyve got cones all over it, blocked off. I
guess hes privileged hes got a four wheeler he can go drive wherever he wants. I
just think its BS these people driving these
things and not paying taxes for the roads
by not buying tags. I hope Im the guy that
jerks one of them around by the rear end
one of these days.
Just heard on the news that the dentist
is under police protection because he is
receiving death threats. I guess it would be
different if Planned Parenthood was selling
puppy parts.
Just for information, is the sheriff that
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Sheriff defends cloaked communications
I, Sheriff Vernon Valentine, mit and receive) and that can not government radios by just freely
handing over the code they would
would like for the person who happen.
wrote the article in the July 28th
An individual said, well its need to do that. Surely everyone
Anderson County Review Phone against the law to transmit on your can understand that and that is also
Forum about what I released to the frequency. I agree, but laws are why it is not open public record.
The digital system we are opermedia about not being able to hear broken everyday and in todays
law enforcement on your scanners world it is not worth the risk to ating under is known as TDMA,
as being a crock of, (deleted), and allow anyone – including terror- (Time Division Multiple Access) I
ists – access to law enforcement or dont know what that means or how
others to know the following.
it works but you
What I
can Google it for
released to the
an explanation.
media is what
We not only
I have been
told by the pro- To the residents of Anderson coun- placed on the north side of the hire but the
state provides
fessional that ty,
courthouse.
is
assisting
Lets recognize our heroes both p r o f e s s i o n a l s
I ask that you please consider
us with our giving a donation to the Veterans locally and nationally and show to take care of
upgrades to the Memorial Fund of Anderson our pride and love for America and that for us so
911 center and County. All of us know some- all the freedoms we have in the we do not violate any Federal
the new digital one who has served in the US United States of America.
radio system. Military or is currently engaged
God bless you and your Communication
The color code in Americas effort to keep our citi- family. God bless America. rules.
W i t h
that I advised zens safe and free. Any donation is Freedom
is
not
free.
todays
technolI would not needed and appreciated. You can
Sincerely,
ogy
I
am
sure
release, would donate by going to the Anderson
Ron Sobba
it
will
not
be
give full access County Clerk between 8 a.m. to 5
Garnett
to long before
to our radio p.m. M-F. The memorial will be
someone comes
system, (trans-
Support veterans memorial
up with a way to monitor / receive
our transmissions on our frequency without being able to transmit
on them. State Law Enforcement is
a prime example.
When they went to the 800 digital
frequency it took awhile to come up
with a specific code that you enter
into a digital scanner to be able to
hear them.
Digital scanners are available
and cost around 300 dollars but
be warned, even if you buy a digital scanner you will not be able
to monitor our radio traffic until
someone comes out with the specific code for scanners for the TDMA
system. Welcome to technology as
all my 911 employees will have to
go through hours of training once
the upgrade to our 911 communication center New Generation is
completed.
pleased with the digital radio service? They
cannot talk to the ambulance service or the
fire department, and the fire deparment and
ambulance service cannot talk to the sheriffs department or the police department on
their radios. Now, how stupid is that?
I hope everybody is planning on coming
out to the Anderson County Fair this week.
Theres a carnival again this time for five
nights instead of four, all the exhibits and
the shows and the entertainment. Its going
to be a big time so please come on out and
celebrate Anderson County with us. Thank
you.
There seems to be lots of projects getting
done around Garnett recently and here
while back somebody had an article wondering why none of this had happened in the
last 20 years or so. Is somebody at city hall
trying to build a legacy before they leave
office or is this guilty conscience about not
getting it done and where the money went?
The article in last weeks Review about the
sidewalks is kind of misleading. They failed
to mention that since 1991 the city has been
in violation of the ADA law, and in 2009 they
made up their own 6-year transition plan
and they havent completed what they said
they would do either in 2013, 14 or 15, and
now they want to extend it another year or
so. It seems like this leadership is taking a
page from Obama about stalling and misleading people. The leadership of Garnett
has ignored the handicapped people and the
sidewalk contractors say some of them havent been approached yet. Something very
misleading going on here in Garnett.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Vernon Valentine
Anderson County Sheriff
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
5A
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice of SEK Library System budget Notice to sell Levota property
(First published in The Anderson County Review August 4, 2015)
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, July 21, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF Anderson
County, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association
Plaintiff,
vs.
Greg A. Levota, et al.
Defendants,
Case No.15CV9
Court No.
Title to Real Estate Involved
Pursuant to K.S.A. 60
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and
by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me
by the Clerk of the District Court of Anderson
County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of
Anderson County, Kansas, will offer for sale
at public auction and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand at the West Side Entrance of
the Anderson County, Courthouse, Kansas, on
August 13, 2015 at the time of 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
LOTS EIGHTEEN (18) AND NINETEEN
(19) IN BLOCK TWENTY-FIVE (25) IN THE
CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS. TAX ID NO. 00208780, Commonly
known as 225 E. 3rd Ave., Garnett, KS 66032
(the Property) MS165956
to satisfy the judgment in the above entitled
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court.
Anderson County Sheriff
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
By: Chad R. Doornink, #23536
cdoornink@msfirm.com
Jason A. Orr, #22222orr@msfirm.com
8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180
Overland Park, KS 66210
(913) 339-9132
(913) 339-9045 (fax)
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS ATTORNEYS
FOR JPMorgan Chase Bank, National
Association IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A
DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
jy21t3
Resolution to rezone
Notice to sell Kelly property
Wittman property
ag4t1
Notice to settle Notice to demolish structure
Montague estate
(First published in The Anderson County Review
August 4, 2015
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, July 28, 2015)
In the Matter of the Complaint of
JOYCE E. MARTIN, City Manager
RE: Lot 9, Block 67 to the City of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, commonly known
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF
as 134 West Sixth Avenue
DAVID L. MONTAGUE, DECEASED
Case No. 15 PR 15 DAVID L. LUCAS
Owner/Occupant
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS [Docketed in Anderson County District Court as
Case #15-CV-27.]
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a Petition has been
NOTICE OF ORDER TO DEMOLISH
filed on July 27, 2015 in this Court by Audrey
STRUCTURE
Montague, as Petitioner and heir-at-law of David
You are hereby notified that on July 21,
L. Montague, Deceased, praying for the determination of descent of personal property and real 2015, this matter was heard by Joyce E, Martin,
property in Kansas, real and personal, or interest City Manager, pursuant to Title 8, Section 5, et
therein, owned by the decedent at the time of seq. of the Municipal Code and enabling stathis death. You are hereby required to file your utes of the State of Kansas under which said
written defenses to such Petition on or before Code is adopted, and pursuant to notice given.
the 31st day of August 2015 at 9:00 oclock a.m.
of said day in said Court, in the city of Garnett,
in Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place said cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
(First Published in The Anderson County
due course upon such Petition.
Review, Tuesday, July 21, 2015)
The property above described was found in violation of numerous provisions of the city codes
and in general to be a blighting influence on the
immediate neighborhood and to be an unsafe
structure. It is ordered that David L. Lucas, or
other owner, shall cause the structure on said
property to be razed, removed, or demolished
within 30 days from the date of the first publication of this notice, failing which Joyce E. Martin,
as City Manager of the City of Garnett, Kansas,
may, pursuant to Code and Statute, cause such
structure to be razed, removed, or demolished
and the cost thereof assessed and collected
as provided by law. Costs assessed to owner/
occupant.
A full copy of the said order may be obtained
or examined at City Hall, 131 West Fifth Avenue,
Garnett, Kansas, during regular business hours.
CITY OF GARNETT, KANSAS
Joyce E. Martin, City Mgr.
jy28t2
Notice to settle Lingo estate
/s/ Audrey Montague, Petitioner
ROBERT E.
JOHNSON II
JOHNSON LAW OFFICE, PA
P.O. Box 866
Iola, Kansas 66749
(620) 365-3778/(620) 380-6230 Fax
Attorney for Petitioner
ag0413
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Charles W. Lingo, deceased
No. 14-PR-21
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are notified that a petition has been
filed in this Court by Ruthana Keith, duly
appointed, qualified and acting Executrix of the
Estate of Charles W. Lingo, deceased, praying
Petitioner's acts be approved; account be set(First published in The Anderson County
tled and allowed; the heirs be determined; the
Review, August 4, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON Will be construed and the Estate be assigned
to the persons entitled thereto; the Court find
COUNTY, KANSAS
the allowances request for attorney fees,
In the Matter of the Estate of Roger Lee Byerley, and expenses are reasonable and should be
aka Roger Byerley, deceased, Case No. 14PR12 allowed; the costs be determined and ordered
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are notified that a petition has been filed in
this Court Jeff Byerley, duly appointed, qualified
and acting Executor of the Estate of Roger Lee
Byerley, aka Roger Byerley, deceased, praying
Petitioners acts be approved; account be settled
and allowed; the heirs be determined; the Will
be construed and the Estate be assigned to the
persons entitled thereto; the Court find the allowances request for attorney fees, and expenses
are reasonable and should be allowed; the costs
be determined and ordered paid; the administration of the Estate be closed; upon the filing of
receipt, the Petitioner be finally discharged as the
Executor the Estate of Roger Lee Byerley, aka
Roger Byerley, deceased; and the Petitioner be
released from further liability.
You are required to file your written defenses
thereto on or before August 31, 2015 at 9:00
a.m., in the Anderson County District Court, in
the City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas, at
which time and place the cause be heard. Should
you fail therein, judgment and decree be
entered in due course upon the Petition.
Jeff Byerley
Petitioner
paid; the administration of the Estate be closed;
upon the filing of receipt, the Petitioner be finally
discharged as the Executrix of the Estate of
Charles W. Lingo, deceased; and the Petitioner
be released from further liability.
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before August 12, 2015 at 9:00
a.m., in the Anderson County District Court, in
the City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas,
at which time and place the cause will be heard.
Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will
be entered in due course upon the Petition.
Ruthana Keith
Petitioner
Byerley estate
hearing set
1×3
AD
Notice of Hearing
Case No. l4PR21
Jesse T. Randall #09231
512 Main, P. 0. Box 301
Mound City, Kansas 66056
Telephone: 913-795-2514
Attorney for Petitioner
ag04t3
Jesse T. Randall
*09231
512 Main, P. 0. Box 301
Mound City, Kansas 66056
Telephone: 913-795-2514
Attorney for Petitioner
(Published in The Anderson County Review
August 4, 2015)
RESOLUTION No. 2015,0727:01
A RESOLUTION APPROVING ZONE
CHANGE APPLICATION #ZC2015-04
(WIDMAN) TO REZONE 10- ACRES FROM
A-1 AGRICULTURE DISTRICT TO R-E
RESIDENTIAL ESTATE DISTRICT.
WHEREAS, Anderson County, Kansas is a county municipal government with the authority to
adopt zoning regulations and create zoning
district boundaries as provided in Section 15-753
K.S.A.; and
WHEREAS, the County did adopt Resolution
NO. 00, 0911.1 in September 2000, establishing
zoning regulations for the unincorporated areas
of Anderson County; and
WHEREAS, the Anderson County Planning
Commission did hold a Public hearing on July
20, 2015 to consider Zone Change Application
#ZC2015-04 (Wittman) to rezone 10 acres from
A-1 Agriculture District to R-E Residential
Estate District.
WHEREAS, the Planning Commission, after
reviewing and considering all written and oral
testimony, did unanimously approve said zone
change request, and recommends that the Board
of County Commissioners adopt Zone Change
Application#ZC2015-04 (Wittman); and
WHEREAS, the Board of County Commissioners,
after duly reviewing the recommendation of the
Planning Commission and considering all comments for and against said
zone change, finds that the rezoning of 10-acres
from A-1 Agriculture District to R-E Residential
Estate District in substantial compliance with the
intent of the County Comprehensive Plan and the
public interest.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED,
that the Anderson County Board of County
Commissioners does hereby approve Zone
Change Application #ZC2015-04 (Wittman), said
property is located in Section 18, Township 20
South, Range 21 East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, Anderson County, Kansas.
PASSED AND ADOPTED THIS
27TH DAY OF JULY, 2015.
This action shall take effect upon publication in
the official County newspaper.
Attest:
Jerry Howarter, chairman
Eugene Highberger, commissioner
Leslie D. McGhee, commissione
Phyllis Gettler, clerk
EXHIBIT A
The South Half (S/2) of the Southwest Quarter
(SW/4) of the Northwest Quarter (NW/4) ofthe
Northeast Quarter and the North Half (N/2) of
the Northwest Quarter (NW/4) of the Southwest
Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4) all in
Section Eighteen (18), Township Twenty (20)
South, Range Twenty-one (21) East of the Sixth
Principal Meridian, Anderson County, Kansas.
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, July 28, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank
of New York as Successor Indenture Trustee
to JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Indenture
Trustee for the CWABS Revolving Home Equity
Loan Trust, Series 2004-J
Plaintiff,
vs.
Brian N. Kelly, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 15CV16
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
Notice Of Sale
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
of Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, on August 20, 2015, at 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
LOT SIX (6), AND THE WEST HALF (W/2)
OF LOT FIVE (5), IN BLOCK THIRTY-TWO
(32), IN THE CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS., commonly known as 320
West 3rd Avenue, Garnett, KS 66032 (the
Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without
appraisement and subject to the redemption
period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more
information, visit HREF=http://www.southlaw.
com MACROBUTTON HtmlResAnchor www.
Southlaw.com
Vernon Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Prepared By:
SouthLaw, P.C.
Mark Mellor (KS #10255)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS 67202
(316) 684-7733
(316) 684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(180326)
jy28t3
Notice to settle Vanderman estate
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review July 21, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
SITTING AT GARNETT
In the Matter of the Estate of
ROBERT S. VANDERMAN, deceased.
Case No. 2014 PR 6
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a Petition
has been filed in this Court by Jeb C.
Griebat, the duly appointed, qualified and
acting Administrator of the Estate of Robert
S. Vanderman, deceased, praying that the
Administrators acts be approved; account be
settled and allowed; the heirs be determined;
costs be determined and ordered paid; the
administration of the Estate be closed; the
Administrator be discharged as Administrator of
the Estate of Robert S. Vanderman, deceased,
and released from further liability.
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before the 13th day of August,
2015, at 9:00 a.m. of said day, in the District
Court sitting at the Courthouse, 100 East 4th
Street, Garnett, Kansas, at which time and place
the cause will be heard. Should you fail therein,
judgment and decree will be entered in due
course upon the Petition.
Jeb C. Griebat, Administrator
Leslie A. Klaassen
#26020
HENSHALL, PENNINGTON & BRAKE
P.O. Box 667
Chanute, KS 66720
Tel. (620) 431-2600
Attorneys for Petitioner
jy21t3
Ottawa
jy21t3
W E R E R E A DY T O S E RV E YO U I N
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202 S. Main, Ottawa 785-242-2112
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East side of historic
downtown OTTAWA
785-242-3723
Jeff & Lou Baker – Owners
1-800 -CARSTAR – 24/7 Accident Assistance.
Relax, well take it from here.
109 S. Main
Ottawa, KS
Christian Books Church Sanctuary Supplies
Bibles Gifts Music
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
402 N. Main 785-242-8916
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Corners one Bookstore
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785-242-6655
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6A
SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW August 4, 2015 / Submitted Photo
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW August 4, 2015 / Submitted Photo
ACHS hosted its annual Bulldog Volleyball camp
July 13-17. Camp attendees included, front
row from left: Makenzie Lutz, MaKayla Kueser,
Reagan Jirak, Kinlee Jones, Cassidy Lutz; second row: Adrian Gwin, Samantha Nickell, Emily
Fritz, Madison Martin, Jasmine White, Alexey
Lickteig, Katelyn Alley; third row: Katelyn Phelps,
Audrie Goode, Lexee Feuerborn, Waltham
Farren, Morgan Bachman, Adrianna Pedrow,
Gabby Spring; fourth row: Maggie Price, Caitlin
Weirich, Jayda White, Tatem Ahring, Ty Flinn,
Katelyn Renyer, Lakin Katzer, Madi Fehling; 5th
row: Jenna Schmit, Maggie Reinert, Baily Cable,
Zee Driever, Sam Nelson, Halli Miller, Ashley
Lickteig. Top row: coaches Glenn Suderman,
Brittany Leathers, Ashlyn Martin, Jan Phelps.
Bulldog football players attending the recent ACHS
football camp included: front row from left: Beau
Beers, Jay Robbins, Solomon Kinder, Jayden
Jarrett, Nick Lybarger, Gavin Wolken, Colton
Palmer, Riley Hedges, Dallas Higganbotham,
Zach Beckmon; second row: Corey Bowen,
Mason Roberts, Zach Wilper, Ridge Pracht, Will
Mechnig, Lane Palmer, Aaron Kubacka, Dakota
Beers, Ryan Foltz, Briley Wolken, Christian
Damen; third row, Brandon McCulley, Michael
Bachman, Zane Phelps, Adam Kropf, Dalton
Duke, Kyle Lamb, Austin Akes; fourth row: Grady
Schuster, Jacob Rundle, Matt Kirkland, Chase
Ratliff, Devin Katzer, Derrick Nelson, Tim Comfort,
Bryce Feuerborn.Top: Coaches Greg Welch,
Terry Messenger, Matt Stevenson, Jason Wilert,
Tim Bremmerman.
Quilt guild makes plans for the fair
The Pieces & Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
President, Charlotte Lutz, on
July 23, 2015, at 9:30 a.m. in
the Archer room at the library.
Roll call was answered by 26
members and one guest, Reita
Welton. The minutes of the
May meeting were approved
as printed in the newsletter.
Terrie Gifford gave the treasurers report.
Committee Reports:
Program Patricia
Knoechel will be in Garnett
September 16 at 1pm for her
annual program.
ScholarshipRuth Theis
read a Thank You from the
scholarship winner, Seth
Wolken. Seth is unable to
attend one of our meetings but
provided homemade cookies
for our bus trip.
Anderson County Fair
Terrie Gifford had entry forms
available for those planning to
enter items in the fair which
starts August 4. Items may be
entered from 8 a.m. to noon
on that day. Entry forms are
not required for the Challenge
blocks. Members were encouraged to sign up to work at the
fair on the signup sheet being
circulated. Jeanne Poore will
judge the quilt entries at the
fair.
August
Luncheon
Carolyn Crupper requested
that members bring school
supplies to the luncheon and a
salad or desert along with needed serving utensil. The committee will provide the table
service. Roll Call that day will
be answered with a quilting tip
or show a useful quilting gadget.
Block of the Month– Several
members showed their blocks
from the May pattern. Joleata
Kent showed the June block,
June Block, and distributed
the pattern. Cynthia Fletcher
showed the July block, Rolling
Pinwheel, distributed the pattern and demonstrated its
assembly.
New BusinessTerrie
Gifford reported the following
slate of officers:
President
Bonnie Deiter, Vice President
Sandra Moffatt, Secretary
Ruth Theis, Treasurer Terrie
Gifford, Newsletter Carrie
Rulon and Historian Joen
Truhe. Judy Stukey moved
and it was seconded by Cynthia
Fletcher to approve the slate
of officers and to cast a unanimous ballot.
Motion carried. The new officers will be
installed in August.
There was discussion
regarding the role of the
Historian and what happens
with the scrapbooks that are
kept along with the books of
minutes. Charlotte requested
that members consider future
options such as transferring
the information to the computer.
Secret Sistergifts were
received by Bonnie Deiter,
Ruth Theis, Joleata Kent and
Marlene Walburn.
Show & TellThe following
items were shown: Charlotte
Lutz the presidents blocks
received today; Terrie Gifford a
charity quilt and a quilt; Joyce
Buckley microwave bowl covers and a red & white quilt;
Janie Paxton apron made from
pillow sham; Bonnie Deiter
a baby quilt and a cobblers
apron; Violet Holt a July 4
wall hanging and a snowman
wall hanging; Marvelle Harris
a Christmas wall hanging.
Challenge blocks were shown
by Terrie Gifford, Carolyn
Crupper, Sharon Bowman &
Connie Hatch.
Meeting was adjourned by
Charlotte Lutz.
Reita Welton gave a very
interesting program about the
history of the quilt she designed
and constructed for the Kansas
Governors Mansion, Kansas
Pride. The quilt hangs in the
Governors mansion in Topeka
but she showed a duplicate top
she is making for herself.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW August 4, 2015 / Submitted Photo
ACHS hosted a volleyball basics came recently for grades 6-8. Those attending included,
front row from left: Jenna Fritz, Jessica Akes,
Ali Owens, Brooke Schettler, Jaxcen Farren,
Lilly Spring, Kaylee Lamb; second row: Becky
Kropf, Kassidy Mader, Bailee Blaufuss, Kennedy
Blome, Grace McAdam, Micci Aldrich; 3rd row:
Hailey Gillespie, Abbey Lickteig, Aubree Holloran,
Go Back To School in Style!
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Chamber director resigns
GARNETT The first-ever
staffer of a new joint venture
between the City of Garnett
and
the
Garnett Area
Chamber of
Commerce to
pursue local
community
development
has resigned.
City manager Joyce
Brummel
Martin said
yesterday
GACC and city administrative
assistant Jennifer Brummel
had resigned and provided the
city 30 days notice prior to her
departure. No other details
were provided, and Brummel,
who took the job in March, did
not respond to queries from the
Review by press time yesterday.
The city and chamber
entered an operating agree-
ment in February that brought
the local chamber office into
a new home at Garnett City
Hall. Commissioners agreed
to staff a full-time employee
who would split his/her time
50/50 between city and chamber duties, with the GACC
reimbursing the city for half
the salary and benefit costs as
well as Chamber expenses. The
move was made after chamber
officials pitched the deal to the
city as a means of helping stop
the revolving door of part-time
paid staff the organization had
endured in recent years, and to
combine development efforts
with projects undertaken by
the citys tourism committee
and community development
department.
Martin said city officials
and chamber board members
would begin reviewing applications received earlier this year
for Brummels replacement.
Ryelee Rockers, Oliva Burns, Cali Foltz, Ellie
Pedrow, Remi McAdam, Kelcie Finn; fourth
row: Katie Schmit, McKenzie Kueser, Marah
Lutz, Abbey Reid, Carsyn Crane, Rayna Jasper,
Kameron Simpson, Amelia Cubit. Top: Coaches
Glenn Suderman, Brittany Leathers, Jan Phelps,
Mackayla Martin.
through Aug. 31, 2015
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
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427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-2276
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Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, August 4
8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. – Fair: Enter
all 4-H and open class exhibits;
judging at 1 p.m.
8 a.m. to 11 a.m. – Fair:
Conference judging of 4-H
Foods
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Noon – Fair: Rabbit Show at
Livestock Show Arena
2:30 p.m. – Fair: Poultry Show
at Rabbit/Poultry Pen
6 p.m. to 10 p.m. – Fair: Fun Time
Show Carnival Rides
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
7 p.m. – Fair: Parade at stadium;
pedal tractor pull follows
8 p.m. – Fair: Fashion Revuew
8 p.m. to 10 p.m. – Fair: Two Girls
and a Zoo
8 p.m. – Fair: Ranch Rodeo
Wednesday, August 5
9 a.m. – Fair: Swine Show at
Livestock Show Arena
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – USD 365 Booster
Club
6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. – Fair Tent
6 p.m. to 10 p.m. – Fair: Fun Time
Show Carnival Rides
6 p.m. – Fair: Sheep Show at
Livestock Show Arena
7 p.m. – Fair: Pie Baking Contest
7 p.m. – Fair: Meat Goat Show at
Livestock Show Arena
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
8 p.m. – Fair: Pie Awards
and Auction
Thursday, August 6
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
Center
1:30 p.m. – Colony United
Methodist Women at Colony
United Methodist Church
6 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
7 p.m. – USD 365 School Board
Monday, August 10
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
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic
Lodge No. 338
Tuesday, August 11
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
Wednesday, August 12
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 8-4-2015 / Dane Hicks
Dr. Wendy Belcher and Kay Wisdom work the backpack station at Fridays Back to School Bash
at the Garnett Church of the Nazarene. The church funded the outreach program for area school
students and gave the backpacks away at the culmination of its week-long vacation bible school.
Peterson
Peterson
Come one, come all to celebrate the birthday party for
Pam Peters turning 50, Burt
Peterson turning 40 and Josh
Landrums 30th.
Come and go birthday
party will be held at Bunker
Hill Center in Mound City on
August 8 from 2-4. No gifts
please.
French 80th birthday
Wayne French is turning
80. Come celebrate from 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 9,
at the Golden Heights dining
room.
Cards may be sent to
Wayne French, c/o Golden
Heights, 101 N. Pine St.,
Garnett KS 66032.
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Ads that work,
ads that dont
Packin
Peters, Peterson and
Landrum birthdays
French
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Ive seen advertising that
works and advertising that
doesnt work. But as a business
owner or manager how do you
start out with a better-than-average bet that the advertising
youre getting ready to do is
going to work?
It doesnt matter where you
advertise Facebook, Yellow
Pages, the newspaper, billboards, a sign stuck in your
yard the success of your
advertising depends on how
you approach a handful of basic
business principles.
What do you want? What do
you want your advertising to
do? Do you want customers to
flock in to your store to a heavy
discount clearance sale? Do you
want your advertising to establish a brand identity for your
business to build long-term customers (like McDonalds)? Do
you want to create good will?
Do you want some kind of combination of the above? Prioritize
your expectations and understand your own objectives.
The market: Whos the customer for your product or service and why do they want it? Is
it a big general market with lots
of customers in it like for groceries or gasoline, or is it a narrow market with few customers
like the one for prosthetics? In
short, who buys what youre
selling, and why?
The competition: Who is your
competition and what is their
approach? What advantage do
you have over your competitor (price, expertise, location,
convenience, testimonials from
satisfied customers) that you
can maximize, and what disadvantages do you have that you
need to minimize?
Budget: Whats it worth to
capture the customers and sales
you want your advertising to
generate? A new customer for
an auto mechanic, for instance,
will be worth hundreds, maybe
even thousands of dollars in
service work if the relationship
stays positive. Is that worth
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
$50? $1,000? Your budget is obviously contingent on what you
can afford, but you also need to
consider what you realistically
expect the investment to return
in terms of dollars/profit.
Attention: So you know your
objectives and your budget and
your customers and you know
where you rank with the competition now, what gets the
attention of your target customers? Are they driving down the
highway passing billboards and
listening to the radio? Are they
sitting down with a cup of coffee reading the paper? Are they
16 years old with their noses
stuck in their smart phones?
Wherever your customer has
his/her attention thats where
your ad should be.
Benefit: Craft your ad with
a benefit for the customer in
mind. If youre a lawyer, simply putting your name or your
firm name on a billboard is a
snoozer but a headline that
says Learn the three biggest
mistakes men make in divorce
call Joe Blow attorney that
has more impact to a defined
market.
Once you work through
those foundational aspects,
youll have advertising that
really buys results instead of
being ignored.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to him
at review@garnett-ks.com or
(785) 448-3121.
Macklin 50th anniversary Library wraps
up reading
program
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 8-1-2005 / Photo Submitted
Jay and Linda (Holmes)
Macklin of Garnett will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday, Aug. 15, with
a reception hosted by their children and grandchildren from 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Community
Building at the Anderson
County Fairgrounds in Garnett.
The couple was married at
the First Methodist Church in
Garnett on Saturday, Aug. 15,
1965.
They have two children, Brent and wife Becky,
Williamsburg; and Lynetta and
husband Scott, Garnett. They
also have four grandchildren,
Logan and Evan Macklin and
Lane and Abby Logan.
After living more than 40
years in Pleasanton, they now
reside on 10 acres southeast of
Garnett.
No gifts, please.
The Garnett Public Librarys
2015 Summer Reading Program
was a great success. A total of
144 kids were actively reading
over the summer. A grand total
of 4808 books were read and
over 186,000 pages.
Library staff want to thank
all of patrons, volunteers, parents, siblings, babysitters, etc.
for taking the time this summer
to read stories, listen to stories,
check out books, take many
trips to the library, and for realizing how important it is for
kids to read over the summer.
Below is a list of Top Ten
readers in each age group.
Everyone did an awesome job
this summer.
Pre-1st Top Ten
Emily Sobba, K, 375
Landry Hedrick, Pre-K, 288
Adriane Cowan, Pre-K, 225
Melinda Cowan, Pre-K, 225
Wyatt Sobba, Pre-K, 225
Isabella Foltz, 1st, 175
Kal-el King, 1st, 172
Jack Foltz, Pre-K, 150
Chance Witherspoon, Pre-K,
150
Haven McCurdy, Pre-K, 136
2nd-4th Grade Top Ten
Hailey Mersman, 3rd, 8274
Reese Witherspoon, 4th,
7955
Reagan Witherspoon, 3rd,
7209
Kyrie King, 4th, 7000
Kimmie Dameron, 2nd, 6163
Kristen Schmit, 4th, 5846
Andrew Peine, 4th, 4923
Logan Walter, 4th, 4428
Shiloh Ford, 3rd, 4004
Kendra Hermreck, 2nd, 3516
Teen Scene Top Ten
Jenna Fritz, 7th, 6649
Kathy Graber, 7th, 6062
Joseph Ford, 5th, 5473
Hallie Fritz, 5th, 5312
Lanie Walter, 6th, 5254
April Powls, 6th 4884
Katie Schmit, 6th, 4730
Whitney Peine, 7th, 3605
Abbie Wiesner, 6th, 3098
Jacob Glaze, 6th, 2399
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
HISTORY
Hays site turns up 1995: Welda ballfield becomes plowed field
more stone artifacts
11 June 2015
A beautiful morning in Hays.
Another day of finding more
nice little arrowheads, hide
scrapers, a Mano (grinding
stone), a midden filled with
fresh water mussel shells and
bones of all kinds and sizes.
The find of the day was a bead,
which later was identified as a
shell button. The talk this evening was The Crooked Creek
Expedition 2015 by Norman
Dye. It was so interesting.
Bedtime with weather warnings close by.
12 June 2015
It did rain during the night. A
cool 61 degrees this morning.
Another trash midden found,
which contained 4 beautiful
little arrow heads, lots of mussel shells and hackberry seeds.
Bones of all kinds were being
found. Several people left this
evening to be home for the
weekend. Would you believe it
was 64 degrees at noon and the
high for today was a very pleasant 71 degrees.
The best find today was a
large bison bone with a hole
drilled thru it (used as some
type of tool). Tonight was a tour
of the St. Fidelis Church by
Theresa Gerritzen in Victoria,
Ks (Cathedral of the Plains).
Theres an 80% chance of rain
tonight.
13 June 2015
No rain. Very foggy this
morning. Finds today were 8
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
little arrowheads, 2 grinding
stones, bones and shells. We
had watermelon during our
afternoon break. I was invited out to dinner (supper) with
State Archaeologist Bob Hoard
and his daughter Anna. We
had a wonderful meal at a
Mexican Restaurant called the
Cancun. At 7:30 pm was a
Talk: George Sternberg an Old
Fashion Fish Story by Chuck
Bonner and Barbara Shelton
in the lobby of the Sternberg
Museum. Very interesting.
Sure looks like rain.
14 June 2015
Finds today included 6 small
arrowheads, a large hide scraper, a large stone knife and the
usual bones and shell. We were
rained out of the field at 3 p.m.
Everyone reported to the lab in
the Hays Middle School, where
we worked from 3:30-5pm.
Tonight was a Certification
Meeting by Al Petz.
Lingering showers all around.
To be coninued…
August 2, 2005
Archaeologists flanked by
state and local law officers
started with a backhoe and
ended up with hand trowels
Thursday in the exhumation of an anonymous mans
grave which they hope will
lead to clues in his 30-yearold unsolved homicide case.
After four and one-half hours,
officials retrieved the skeletal
remains from the body bag
in which the unknown man
was laid to rest in 1973 and
transported it to the Shawnee
County Coroners Office in
Topeka. There, Kansas Bureau
of Investigation officials hope
a facial reconstruction and
possible DNA samples will
reveal the mans identity and
put law on the path to finding
whoever caved in his skull and
dumped his body near Garnett
in 1973.
Anderson
County
Commissioners hope a bed
tax will help recoup property
taxes that will be abated on a
new motel development in the
city, but the sole local company now paying a similar city
tax says it wont yield as much
as planners think. County
commissioners in recent
weeks discussed instituting a
bed tax, which would be paid
by the new motel development
locating off U.S. 169 just east
of Garnett. Set for opening in
THAT WAS THEN
February 2006, the new motel
would be funded by city-issued industrial bonds which
would abate some $340,000 in
city, county and school district
taxes over its first five years of
the 10-year plan.
er Satchel Paige.
Garnett city commissioners approved the issuance
of $520,000 in industrial revenue bonds for Astro Cap
Manufacturing West Inc.,
when it met for a short meeting July 25. The IRB will be
used to purchase the building
that Astro Cap is presently
renting. The bonds will be paid
off by revenue from Astro Cap
over a period of at most 20
years. During that time the
building will be owned by the
City of Garnett, and, as such,
exempt from property taxes for
about a 19-year period during
the repayment of the bonds.
July 31, 1995
A little piece of community
history at Welda, the town baseball field, will soon be claimed
by the plow and planted in
soybeans. Thats not uncommon for a small town where
the population has moved on
to search for better opportunities, but it still seems a little
sad. The field was the home
turf of a tough bunch of semipro players called the Welda
Pirates. The Pirates were
mostly a collection of college
baseball players who spent
their summers in Anderson
County. Sometime in the 1960s,
the Pirates took on a barnstorming team that included
Kansas City Monarchs pitch-
Aug. 5, 1985
Garnett Publishing Inc.,
Garnett, will be among those
newspapers advancing into
the futuristic era of computer and laser-writers in the
near future, according to Don
Stimble, owner and publisher. The economy of the laser
writers can be used to offset
the expected periodic raises of
postal rates and permit small,
independent newspapers to
hold subscription increases
to smaller amounts. The laser
writer will permit publishers
to handle job printing and
display ads for newspapers in
greater volumes because of the
speed with which laser-printed
advertising copy or job work
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
can be completed.
Anderson County Sheriff
Tom Hermreck said at a news
conference Thursday afternoon one of the suspects of the
Colony State Bank robbery had
been apprehended at a truck
stop in Arkansas Tuesday. The
suspect was also wanted in the
robbery of a bank in Oklahoma
in May of this year. Two other
suspects are being sought in
the Colony bank robbery and
it is believed that their arrest
will be accomplished in the
near future.
Aug. 4, 1915
The fifth day of the
Chautauqua was intended, and
expected to be, the big day.
That was the date for Thavius
big band of 26 members. In
the Chautauqua bulletin, the
whole back was a picture of
Thavius band. With them
were the European Grand
Opera Singers, a woman and
two men. The Europeans sang
with the band, and showed
that, as a musical instrument,
the human voice can hold its
own with the other instruments. While a minor feature
of both performances, they did
what was expected of them,
adding variety to the program.
The opera singers made a fine
appearance, and those competent to judge declare them the
same high class as the band.
Kids dig Colony library story hour Duplicate bridge played
Several new magazines will be
added. Debbie Wools will complete the survey on musical
performer and the report for
Summer Story Hour. There are
many childrens books too tall
for library shelves. Kloma will
check on shelving at the Allen
County Hospital auction.
Books added to the library
in June: The Sixth Rider by
Max McCoy, The Crimson Hills
by LP Holmes, The Stampeders
by James B. Hendryx, BiscuitShooter by Clifton Adams.
Movies added to the library
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 8-4-2015/ Photo courtesy Debbie Wools
Story Hour children pictured with their Hero poster behind them
are: Kamryn Jones, Brooklynn Jones, Phillip Warren, Ruthie
Dietrich, Kaden Robb, Kaitlin Chapman, Kallie Robb, Blaine King,
Max Black, Two on floor: Jemma Womelsdorf, Easton King. Their
theme this year was Every Hero has a Story and hero pictures
were brought for their poster.
Calendar
August 5-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement, 7
p.m.; fire meeting, fire station,
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
7 p.m.; 6-County bus to Garnett,
phone 24 hrs. before you need
a ride, 785-448-4410 any weekday; Community Church
Missionary, church annex, 1:30
p.m.; United Methodist Women,
United Methodist Church fellowship hall, 7 p.m.; 7-Recycle
trailer on Cherry St., front of
City Hall area Friday morning,
leaves Tuesday
Meal Site
5-meatloaf, baked potatoes,
green beans, roll, peanut butter; 7-goulash, succotash,
bread, pears; 10-pasta bake,
zucchini and tomatoes, roll,
applesauce delight. Phone 620852-3450 for reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented July
26 was Joshua 3:1-19. Charlie
Towne, interim pastor brought
the sermon Faith IS the
Victory. August 2-Following
church services a potluck dinner held at the City Hall community room. Everyone is welcome
Weather Alert
Colony residents who
wish to get National Weather
Service severe weather warnings by phone via the countys
Code Red system should register online at www.andersoncountyks.org, click Public safety/emergency management,
or pick up registration forms
at the Colony City Office. 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.
Crest School
Crest enrollment dates are:
students whose last name
begins with A-M should enroll
Aug. 26 and students whose last
name begins with N-Z should
enroll Aug. 27 and new students
should enroll Aug. 28. The first
student day of the 2015-16 school
year is Sept. 8. New staff this
year are: Cody Kramer, Middle
School Social Science teacher;
Kristen Farnsworth, 4th grade
teacher; Terina Platt, High
School Business teacher; Zach
Mason, Physical Ed; Connie
Johnston, cook, Gerri Godderz,
Elementary Secretary and Leo
Ramsey, bus driver. An open
house will be held (time to be
announced) and the new staff
will also be welcomed at that
time.
Story Hour
Eleven children and four
older student helpers attended July 21. Leader Debbie
Wools read three books,The
Astonishing
Secret
of
Awesome Man, Diary of a Fly,
and Superworm.
During
craft they made Superhero airplanes. Charlene Tinsley provided the snack of apple slices, dip, goldfish crackers and
drink.
Library
The regular meeting was
held July 21 at the City Hall
community room. Kloma
Buckle will be putting up signs
in the library, one asking for
suggestions on books, movies
and magazines and a sign is
a list of new books. Several
new books have been ordered.
Magazines were discussed.
Steve Brodmerkle and Anita
Dennis won the duplicate bridge
in June: American Sniper, match July 29 in Garnett. Tom
Focus, Kingsmen: The Secret Peavler and Mary Margaret
Service.
Thomas came in second.
Around Town
Morris Luedke took his wife,
Allene, and son, Mark, out to
dine Sunday in celebration of
their birthdays.
Anderson County
Sympathy is expressed to
the families and friends of Ila
news DAILY
Davis-Belvoir, 87, who passed
at 8 a.m.
away July 20 at Iola Nursing
Center, Iola. Funeral services
KOFO 1220 AM
were Friday at Feuerborn
Funeral Home, Colony. Burial
at Colony Cemetery.
ANDERSON
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all area
bridge players each Wednesday
at 1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Sales & Service
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN MOTORS
111 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
North Hwy. 59
in Garnett, KS Jetzon
Cooper
Kumho
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg. Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Patriots Bank Bldg. Richmond
(785) 835-6161
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Millers Construction, Inc.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Has Your Foundation Let You Down?
Serving your area since 1969
Waterproofing Epoxy Injection
Straighten & Stabilize Walls
Solid Piering & Leveling
TAYLOR BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION
Foundation Repair Residential and Commercial
785-242-7477
Ralph Taylor Ottawa, KS
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
And
Cou
Ne
Mon
8:0
Country
Favorites
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Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
FAIR
Meet your neighbors at the Anderson County Fair!
Good Luck to all fair participants!
2×3
greeley
imp
farm
Anderson Co. Fair Tent – 2015
Wednesday, August 5
6:00 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
Tent sponsored by The Anderson County Fair Board
Just Crafting It By Faith Jacquelines Creations
KOFO Radio Anderson County Hospital Cornstock
Floral Expressions & Salon Golden Heights Living
Center Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce &
Tourism Committee Neosho County Community
College Pampered Chef Mary Kay Cosmetics
GSSB Sonic Juice Plus Beckman Motors
Cookie Lee Jewelry Rockers Photography
Anderson County Chapter Kansans for Life
Anderson County Democratic Party Anderson
County Farm Bureau Bright Beginnings Preschool
Fair a family tradition for Foltzes
GARNETT The Anderson parade. Charlie and Carol were Jackson Abstract and M.L. City, Missouri; Stephanie
County Fair was always one of both members of the Extension White Abstract Co, and com- and husband Mike, and son,
the high points of the summer council and Carol taught bined them in 1980 to establish Will, live in Colorado Springs,
for Charlie and Carol Foltz and some cooking classes. They the Anderson County Abstract Colorado; Angie and her hustheir girls. The couple will be have been avid supporters of Co. In the summer of 2012, band Joe, and children, Finn
honored this year as the fair the livestock sale, purchasing she decided to retire and spend and Lochlyn, live in Overland
parade grand
Park, Kansas, and Chris
marshals.
and husband Brian and
The
fair
sons, Tristan, Dylan and
parade is 7
Aidan, live in the rural
p.m. Tuesday.
Hillsdale lake area.
T h e i r
Charlie and Carol are
daughters,
members of Holy Angels
Deb, and husCatholic Church and
band
Dean
have been active in varMcSpadden,
ious community activiMelissa, and
ties. Charlie is secretary
h u s b a n d
of Kansas Corn Board,
Steve Daggett,
member of American
Stephanie, and
Legion, Optimist Club,
husband Mike
Knights of Columbus, and
Moore, Angie,
a member of Anderson
and husband
County Farm Bureau
Joe Kennedy,
board of Directors; Carol
and
Chris,
was a member of Kansas
and husband
Land Title Association
Brian Weller,
Executive Board; City of
were all memGarnett Zoning board,
bers of Star
Economic Development
Shooting 4-H
Committee; Holy Angels
club.
Altar Society, and helped
T h e y
with Garnett Friends of
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 8-4-2015 / Photo submitted
all
were
the Library Christmas
involved in Charlie and Carol Foltz will serve as the 2015 Grand Marshals of the Anderson County Fair tour.
sewing, foods, parade Tuesday night at Garnett Stadium.
Both Charlie and
cattle
and
Carol keep busy enjoying
horse projtheir children and grandects, and dancing at county an animal every year. They more time with their ten grand- children. They enjoy travel4-H days. The girls participat- also provided trophies during children.
ing, Charlie works in a couple
Their five girls; Deb and her fishing trips a year, and Carol
ed in the state fair on several the times when the girls were
husband Dean, and children, enjoys working in her garden
occasions. They all served in showing their animals.
Charlie has farmed his Jill, Tom and Erin, live in Palm and yard.
a variety of leadership roles,
holding about every office pos- entire life, living on the fam- Harbor, Florida; Melissa and
sible. The girls always enjoyed ily farm for the past 38 years, her husband Steve, and daughriding their horses in the fair and Carol was the owner of ter, Elizabeth, live in Platte
Stop by the Anderson County Fair Tent to register for FREE
giveaways and Grand Prize drawing.
DRAWING WILL BE AT 8:30 P.M.
MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN
Che
Moran Locker wants you to compare processing prices and save
on costs. Your hand-raised livestock is cut to your specifications to
fit your needs, double-wrapped (the best way and most freezer
stable way) and frozen. Locally owned and operated, we are a
home-owned business with the experience of four generations
of meat processing and butchering. Keeping our prices as low as
possible for over 25 years. Slaughter fees are still only $35 per head
for average size beef and hogs. With the economic slump you need to
know where to go for the highest quality processing and slaughtering at the lowest prices. Thats Moran Locker, where you actually get
the quality processing you expect at the lowest price you deserve.
2×5
moran locker
2×5
Good Luck to the
Auburn
2015 Anderson County Fair
Competitors and Participants!
3B
BECKMAN
MOTORS
2×3
2015 beckmans
Chevy Colorado
2015 Ford Superduty
2015 Chevy Silverado
Check out the new inventory
at Beckman Motors.
Featuring 2015 Buicks, Chevys and Fords!
2015 Buick Encore
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441 800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Our Auto Refill program never forgets
Sign up TODAY!
Good Luck to all participants
2x2of the Anderson County Fair!
barneys
Caring for the health of you and your community
429 N. Maple M-F 8:30-7; Sat. 8:30-2 448.6122
Mike & Cathy Barnes
313 S. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-3815
Online refills are available at:
www.auburnpharmacies.com
P.S.I., Inc.
2×3 Insurance Real Estate
psiCommercial Farm Owners
Life Auto Crop
Good luck to
2×3
all fair participants!
beachner
Enjoy the Anderson County Fair
and good luck to all participants!
2×3
Try Our
Sandras
Dessert
Calzones!
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
(913) 837-7825 (620) 237-4631 (620) 365-6908 (620) 473-3831
Mound City, KS
Humboldt, KS
Moran, KS
Iola, KS
Good luck to
2×3
all forge
participants!
taylor
2×3
lyon coffey
See you at the
Anderson County Fair!
2×3
GSSB
A tradition that leaves us
smiling year after year!
Thank you in advance to
the many volunteers who
dedicate many hours for a
successful fair.
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
LOCAL
Need a little help?
2×5
Collins farms
Lime Spreading
Standard, Variable Rate
and GPS. Spreading
and Hauling Ag Lime.
Collins Farms
785-733-2428
The Fun Time Show Carnival will highlight the Anderson County Fair
midway Tuesday through Thursday nights from 6:30 p.m. to 10:30
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 8-4-2015/ Archive Photo
p.m. and until 11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. A full range of carnival rides and entertainment booths will be featured for fairgoers.
Enjoy the Anderson County Fair!
Come see how much Tator Tot has grown!
2×2 The Garnett Saddle Club
will have
garnett saddle
Tator Tot
parade night.
Join in on the horse fun at our Fun Shows
and the Gail Long Memorial ride this fall!
in this fair ad
2×2 Bring
& receive 10% off
your
purchase
6tha avetotalbou-
through Aug. 31. 2015
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-2276
Changing
2×5
jobs or
state farm retiring?
Call Howard (785)304-0865 or Barb (785)448-0990
Ryan Disbrow, Agent
115W.
N Maple
Street
504
Redbud
Ln.
Garnett, KS
Garnett,
KS66032
66032
Bus: 785-448-1660
Bus:
785-448-1660
www.ryandisbrow.com
www.ryandisbrow.com
2×3
lizer crop ins
Have fun
at the
FAIR!
2×5
mcconnel
machinery
1001136.1
Take your retirement
savings with you.
Rolling over your 401(k) to a
State Farm IRA is easy. I can
take care of the paperwork while
helping you with a retirement
plan that meets your needs.
Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.
CALL ME TODAY.
State Farm, Home Office, Bloomington, IL
2015 ANDERSON COUNTY FAIR
2×3
Valley r
IOLA, KANSAS
(620) 365-6000
TOLL FREE (866) 201-2265
www.mybankcnb.com
Ask about Platinum Savings!
2×3
comm national
bank
120 E. MADISON
www.mcconnellmachineryco.com
valleyragriservice.com
Good luck fair participants Enjoy the Anderson County Fair!
2×6
southern star
Enjoy the fair &
2x3Good Luck to all
participants!
r i cfair
h m
o n d
healthcare
Make a difference, every day, every time!
340 South St. Richmond, KS
785-835-6135
Corley Seed Farms
2×3
Quality Certified Soybean & Wheat Seed
Custom Cleaning Contract Production
corley
seed
Grant & Gaylon Corley
785-489-2505
620-364-6050 Cell
grant@corleyseedfarms.com www.corleyseedfarms.com
2×3
mont ida meats
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Anderson County
3×5
AD
fair schedule
Country Nights Carnival Lights
August 4- 8
Fun Time Show
Carnival Rides
will be at the
2015 Anderson County Fair
for 5 nights!
Tuesday – Saturday
August 4th – 8th
6:00 p.m. – 10:30 p.m.
Rides for children, teens and adults!
Advanced ticket sales wrist bands for $15
Wrist bands sold during county fair for $20
Wrist bands good for one night
different color wrist band per night
Tuesday, Aug. 4 Fair Parade 7 p.m., Two Girls and a Zoo-Petting Zoo 8-10 p.m.
Pedal Tractor Pull, Ranch Rodeo 8 p.m., Fashion Revue & Awards 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 5 Anderson County Fair Tent 6-8:30 p.m.,
Pie Baking Contest & Pie Auction 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 6 Pet Show 1 p.m., Shodeo 6:30 p.m., Touch A Truck 7-9 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 7 Buyers Appreciation Supper 5:30 p.m.,
Livestock Premium Sale 7 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 8 Demolition Derby 7 p.m.
NEW THIS YEAR AT THE FAIR!
TOUCH A TRUCK – FREE to everyone. Thursday, Aug. 6, 7-9 p.m.
Featuring a Fire Truck, Ambulance, Police Car and A Life Flight Helicopter
Look them over, ask questions & get a better understanding of these vehicles.
For more information call 785-448-6826.
Find us on and on the web at www.andersoncofair.com.
Anderson County Fair 4-H Livestock
AUCTION
3×5
Friday,
Aug. 7th
7pm Show Arena
livestock
auction
ADMISSION FREE
Invest today in our agricultural future. Come out and
support the kids! If you cant attend the sale, call Ron Ratliff or
Roger Brummel and they will be glad to buy one for you.
Roger Brummel (785) 448-3161
Ron Ratliff (785) 448-8200
EXAMPLE
1,100 lb steer base price
$100 per 100 weight…..$1,100
You bid $400 premium
and pay owner…………$400
If you wish to retain animal,
you pay fairboard……..$1,100
2014 BUYERS
Adams Agency
Advocate
Anderson County Abstract
Anderson County Review
Anderson County Sales Company
Arne & Stacy Hanson
AuBurn Pharmacy
AVON, Paula Sjorlund
Barnes Seed Service
Barneys Liquor
Beachner Grain
Beckman Ford
Beckman Motors
Bill Graham Family
Brummel Farm Service
Carl & Dawanna Nichols
Chet Arne
Countryside Vet Clinic
Cubit Farms
Dr Lindsey Westberg
Dr. Sandi Otipoby, DDS
EKAE
Farm Bureau Financial Services
Farm Talk
Farmers State Bank
Fern Manspeaker
Foote Cattle
Garnett True Value
Gene & Virginia Raymond
Gene Hermreck
Graham School
Greeley Implement
GSSB
GV Limousin
H & R Block
J & W Equipment
Jim Johnson, County Commissioner
Joe Fritz Family
John Wolken
Landmark Bank
Leos Auto Supply
LeRoy Cooperative
Les & Linda McGhee
Ludolph Trucking
Lybarger Oil
Lyon-Coffey Electric Cooperative
Manspeaker Farms
Mark Mersman Family
Mayway Farms, Jason Flory
Mr & Mrs Charlie McCormick
Nate Cunningham Family
Norma Rockers
OMalley Equipment
Orscheln Farm & Home, Iola
5B
FAIR
Patriots Bank
Plumbing & Heating Unlimited
PSI
Richmond Body Works
RJ Enterprises
Russ & Margie Bunnel
Sandras Quick Stop
Schulte Agency
Scipio Supper Club
SEK Genetics
Seward Seed
Sonic
Storrer Implement
Taylor Forge
Terry Jasper
Tom & JoAnn Johnson
Tom Adams Construction
Twin Motors Ford
Valley R Agri Service
Wes Recycling
Whitaker Aggregates
Wolken Plumbing & Electric Inc.
Wolken Tire
Xtraformance Feeds, Robert Miller
Zook Excavating
Buyers Appreciation Supper
Friday, Aug. 7th 5:30pm at Tent
Come be our guest.
Notice of Frontier
Extension District budget
(First published in The Anderson County Review August 4, 2015)
4-H SALE
COMMITTEE
Ron Ratliff,
Christy Ratliff,
Bill Pracht,
Deanna Wolken
4-H
COURTESY
Moran Locker,
Stinson Processing,
Mound City
Butcher Block,
Mont Ida Meats
RING HELP
Gail Ratliff,
Bill Pracht,
Bill Poovey,
Rick Wiley,
Curt Guilfoyle
Jess Rockers
AUCTIONEER
Ron Ratliff
CLERKING
Deanna Wolken
BARN CLEAN-UP
Chore Boyz
APPRECIATION
SUPPER
Roger Brummel
Livestock
Appreciation
Committee of
Moms
FOR RENT
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
2 bedroom duplex – very
clean, carport. Lawn care provided, $450 month. (785) 4185435.
my19tf
Farmhouse – for rent, between
Garnett and Greeley, 1/4 mile
off 169 Hwy. 2 bedroom, 1 car
garage. (515) 480-9125.
ag4t3*
General Labor – Garnett
Publishing is looking for 3-4
physically able individuals to
take on a variety of physically demanding part-time, temporary tasks fom now through
fall. We need a handful of people
to work more or less on-call
who arent afraid to get dirty
and sweaty to paint, tuck point,
load in, load out, clean, tear out
old shelving, climb ladders, run
cable and lots more we havent thought of yet. High school
boys or girls okay, but you must
be ready to work and be available on a somewhat on-call
basis. $12/hour. Apply at GPI
at 112 West 6th in Garnett, or
e-mail Dane Hicks at dhicks@
garnett-ks.com
jy14t3*
Part-time – para-educator St.
Rose School. Assist teacher in
providing academic instruction and supervision for small
groups and individual students. Contact Michelle Gavin,
(785) 448-3423.
ag4t1
Butler
Transport
Your
Partner In Excellence. CDL
Class A Drivers Needed. Sign
on Bonus. All miles paid. 1-800528-7825 or www.butlertransport.com
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Lori 1-800-926-6869 ext. 303.
Drivers: Home Daily!
$2000.00 Sign On Bonus
for 2008 and newer.
Lease Purchase options
with financial assistance.
Average truck last
week $3200 including
fuel surcharge.
Owner Operators, this
is one of the best stable
companies you can contact.
Call: 888-992-5609
REAL ESTATE
1829 Miller Drive, Lawrence,
$102,000. 3 bedroom, 1 bath
remodeled in (02). Just updated with new HVAC, new paint
inside and out, carpet thu-out,
kitchen floor plus lots more.
Vacant and move-in-ready. Not
a drive by. Diann Lutackas, KW
Legacy Partners, Inc. (785) 6334333, text: 80354 to 79564.
**jn16**
364 E 1750 Rd, Baldwin City
$330,000. 3 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms on 5 acres in the country
but close to town. The outbuilding has 3 parking areas and
a studio area upstairs with a
furnace and shop downstairs.
Patty Wiseman, ReeceNichols
Preferred Realty 913-709-0963
**ap21**
514 Flame Way, Baldwin City
$279,000. 6 bedroom home with
custom cabinets, designer double-oven, high-end granite and
wine frig, this home is perfect
for a family that likes to cook
and entertain. Patty Wiseman,
ReeceNichols Preferred Realty
913-709-0963
**ap21**
4 buildable lots, a house can be
built on each lot. SW of Wichita
in Harper, Kansas. $30,000 talkes all. taxes are low, 1 lot has
cave. Harper is at Hwy. 2 and
160. Iris Faucett, (620) 491-0936.
**jn30**
Osage City Building – for sale
or lease, 8500 sq. ft. Great commercial or retail location. (785)
841-3902 or (785) 979-1008.
**jy7**
1×3
1×3
access
SERVICES
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services to victims of domestic
violence and sexual abuse. call
(620) 365-7566 or Kansas Hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
Bill Stanford – tree trimming
and stump grinding. Insured
and licensed. Free estimates.
(785) 893-2202.
jy14t4*
Male Care Giver – has opening for days or nights. Hourly
rates. (785) 214-1989.
ag4t1*
1×3
JOIN OUR TEAM!
RN- Mon. – Fri.
1×3
2 p.m. – 10 p.m.
Rich
RN/LPN
Full Time
Weekends
Apply in person at:
Richmond Healthcare &
Rehabilitation Center, LLC
340 South St.
Richmond, KS
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Your Needs, Our Passions…Every Day!
Large 3 Day Estate Auction
1×3
Earl & Mary Clemans Estate
2x2The
August 6, 7, 8, 2015 9:00 AM
G.A.R Street in Colony, KS
kurtz329auction
Complete sale bill, pictures and lots of information
at www.kansasauctions.net/kurtz
Kurtz Auction & Realty Service
exclusive agent for seller
785-448-4152
1×3
Auctioneers: Darwin W. Kurtz, Col. Ben Ernst & Laverne Yoder
MOBILE HOMES
Clayton Homes – National
Open House Your 1st year
Utilities are on us up to $3,000.
Down Payments reduced for
limited time. Lenders offering $0 Down for Land Owners.
Special Govt Programs for
Modular Homes. 866-858-6862
AUTOS
1994 Corvette – red, 82,000 original miles. AM/FM, CD, DVD,
bluetooth, Sirius radio, too
many extras to list. Bree Auto
Sales, (785) 883-2913.
ap14tf
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
JB Construction
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
2×2
OPERATORS
AND CDL TRUCK
DRIVERS NEEDED IN
whitaker
HUMBOLDT AREA.
Hours are 7-5 p.m., Monday-Friday.
Insurance, overtime, and 401K are available.
620-664-7449
3×5
lifecare
RN/LPN – Full-time position available for a
Kansas-licensed nurse.
Staff Development Coordinator – RN – Full-time
position available for a Kansas-licensed RN with 3 years
of supervisory experience.
Part-time Floor Tech
1 Part-time Weekend Cook
2 Part-time Dietary Aides
Part-time Evening & Weekend Driver
Director of Communications
ag4t1
6B
Want a new BOSS?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Check our classied job listings!
More LOCAL customers read Review classieds than any other newspaper!
MISC. FOR SALE
ADOPTION
Sears Refrigerator – stays
cold, freezer works, would
make good garage fridge, $75.
(785) 448-7641.
jy28tf
20 40 45 48 53 Storage containers centralcontainer.net or
785 655 9430
A happily married New
Jersey couple seek to adopt a
baby; love, laughter, warmth
and cheer. Expenses paid.
Valerie & Michael 800-278-0320
after 6pm.
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Hecks
Storage Buildings
Terms
448-0319
or
204-0369
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
Delivery Available
AUCTIONS
KSU Athletics August 8th 10 am
1800 College Ave. Manhattan,
KS
(KSU
Brandeberry
Complex) like new furniture,
office equipment, KSU Football
collectables, Jerseys, posters,
signs, exercise and weight
equipment. ruckertauctions.
com Jeff Ruckert Auctioneer
785-565-8293
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (816) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
jn9tf
Our Hunters will Pay Top $$$
To hunt your land. Call for a
Free Base Camp Leasing info
packet & Quote. 1-866-309-1507
www.BaseCampLeasing.com
SERVICES
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . Breakfast
at the Garnett VFW, 7am-9am,
Saturday, August 8. Biscuits
and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage & eggs.
ag4t1
Card of Thanks
Monsantos ROUND UP
The family of the late Sam Harris
would like to thank everyone for the
cards, on-line condolences, lovely
flowers, delicious food and
the monetary donations made in
Sams memory. Also, thanks to
those who stopped by to visit and
those who attended the visitation
and funeral. A special thank you to
Dr. Frank Porter for all the care
he gave Sam through the years, to
the Allen County Regional Hospital
staff for the excellent care given
to Sam and making his family
comfortable, and to the Reverend
Honeycutt for visiting Sam at his
bedside and comforting his family.
We deeply appreciate the kindness
and support shown to us during
this difficult time.
You may be entitled to compensation
1z4
harris
Call McDivitt Law Firm
Toll Free: 888-212-1322
ADVERTISEMENT
2×3
Charge Nurse:
RN or LPN
brandon
woods
CNAs, CMAs
We are seeking caring, dedicated licensed nurses and assistants to join
our resident directed team of professionals in our Health Center and
Assisted Living neighborhoods. Must be responsible, organized & able
to work independently. Full & Part Time Openings.
Competitive pay & benefits including direct deposit, paid time off,
tuition reimbursement, 401(k) & more!
Human Resources
1501 Inverness Drive
Lawrence, KS 66047
TProchaska@5ssl.com
EOE
Drug Free Workplace
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
1×3
AD
1×3
Diagnosed with a serious medical condition,
including Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma,
after exposure to
Monsantos Round Up pesticide?
2×4
kpa qsi
(913) 594-2495
1×3
COMPUTER
AD
WORK
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
LAWN & GARDEN
Riding lawnmower – like new,
36 deck. Runs good, $800. (785)
410-7130 or (785) 448-6721. ag4t1*
Come See Why Country Clipper
Stands Out
1×2
Heck
Joystick or Twin Stick Steering
All Steel and Cast Iron Construction
Patented Stand-Up Deck For Easy Maintenance
5 Year Limited Warranty
NEW! Jonsered Lawn & Garden
Equipment Available
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN Mon. – Fri. Sat. by Appointment
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
2×4
kpa
friendly
Saturday,
August 15
bingo
Doors open at 10am Bingo at 1:00pm
Guaranteed Payout!
$5,000 – $1,000 $500 games
$125 Buy In Before 8-7-15 $150 After 8-7-15
SUNFLOWER
SOUTH BLDG.
Kansas State Fairgrounds 2000 N. Poplar Hutchinson
Seating is limited. For reservations call
Friendly Bingo after 5:00 pm, Wed. – Sun.
620-662-6221
2×2
kpa dry
We baseInstall
Sump Pumps
Restore your homes value with a New Dual Pump Pack sump pump system
316-243-9342
888-485-6398
www.DryBasementKansas.com
new.ads.multiple_Layout
1 9/12/12 9:31
AM Page 6
The Space You Need
2×4
kpa morton
GARAGE | GENERAL STORAGE | HOBBY SHOP
The Style You Want
If youre running out of space in your home, its time to talk with Morton
about a new building. From basic storage buildings to garages that complement
your home, Morton will work with you from concept through completion to
ensure your project runs smoothly & results in a quality building.
Eight offices serving Kansas
800-447-7436
mortonbuildings.com
2012 Morton Buildings, Inc. Morton Buildings is a
registered trademark of Morton Buildings, Inc. All
rights reserved. A listing of GC licenses available at
mortonbuildings.com/licenses.aspx. REF CODE 043.
800-447-7436 mortonbuildings.com
2×4
AD
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, August 8, 2015 10 a.m.
408 Pearson Waverly, KS
Auctioneers Note: Being held at the
2×5 Waverly
Comm. Bldg. w/seating, A/C.
CABINETS, FURNITURE & LAMPS
Brandon Otto
Antique Hoosier-style Sellers kitchen cabinet w/white & red
porcelain top; white metal kitchen cabinet; 2 vintage chrome
table sets; folding wood kitchen table set w/4 storable chairs;
wash stand; display units w/shelves & storage;
50+ vintage/retro lamps-all working.
VINTAGE KITCHENWARE
Lustro ware; Ohio Art; Dazey red football butter churn; FireKing
Blue Sapphire Bakeware-Philbe; FireKing tulip & more; several
pcs PYREX; refrigerator dishes; McKee; Hazel Atlas Moderntone
Platonite; 11+ flats s&ps; many vintage, rare & primitive
kitchen items; Guardian ware; old jars.
FIESTA, GLASSWARE, BEVERAGE SETS & RELATED
Many pcs original, vintage Fiesta dinnerware; Fenton; black
amethyst; blue opalescent hobnail; ruby red & Princess House;
American Sweetheart Monax; Longchamp gold cristal glasses;
teapots; Chrisfineholm; Art Glass; many pcs anodized Aluminum
waresome rare & still in orig boxes; barware; retro vases &
dishes; beverage sets, some in carriers; pottery incl Hull,
McCoy & Red Wing. Other items incl.
COLLECTIBLES, JEWELRY, DOLLS, CHILDRENS & MISC.
Linda Kaminski, owner
Branden Otto, auctioneer 913-710-7111
www.ottoauctioneering.com

