Anderson County Review — December 14, 2021
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from December 14, 2021. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
FINAL WEEK!
See todays numbers…GRAND PRIZE number in Dec. 21 Review!
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
KS,KS,
and
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,
and
communities.
www.garnett-ks.com |
E-statements & Internet Banking
Potential
appointees
line up
Five city residents express
interest in city commission
post, deadline this Friday
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Five city residents have
submitted statements of interest in
the appointment to the vacancy on the
Garnett City Commission as the deadline nears this Friday.
Mayor Jody Cole and commissioner
Greg Gwin will presumably make the
appointment in coming weeks after
reviewing the applicants. The appointee will finish out the term of Cody
Gettler, who took office last January
but passed away November 11.
Individuals who have so far submitted their Statement of Interest form
indicating their wish to be appointed
are Jason Sheahan, former commissioner and mayor Michael Norman,
Mark Locke, Mark Powls and Paula
Scott.
State law requires commissioners
to make an appointment within 10-60
days of a vacancy occurring, though
Gettler passed away nearly a month
ago. City attorney Terry Solander said
the delay came when commissioners
opted not to start the process until
after Gettlers funeral. The city has in
the past extended the selection period
to some 60 days in order to ensure
ample time for notification of the
vacancy and to gather candidates, he
said.
If commissioners cant agree on a
suitable appointee, according to state
statute, the statute directs the city
attorney as the designee to make the
selection from among the applicants.
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Devastating tornadoes that smashed through
Kentucky after bedtime Saturday
and hit five other states throughout Saturday afternoon and evening have raised attention locally
to the means of being notified of
weather emergencies after bedtime.
The deadly twister which officials say at this point may have
taken more than 100 lives, mostly
in Kentucky, struck the town of
Mayfield, population 10,017, about
10 p.m. Saturday night.
J.D. Mermsman, director of
Anderson County Emergency
Management, said the key is to
have more than one way of being
alerted.
Nighttime tornadoes are
always the worst, said Anderson
County Emergency Preparedness
December 14, 2021
SINCE 1865
(785) 448-3121
Member FDIC Since 1899
Getting
the Word
Safest option is to have
more than one way to be
warned, ACEM head says
O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
Director J.D. Mersman. Its so
hard for supports (on the ground)
to confirm what National Weather
Service is seeing on radar.
That danger is complicated
after bedtime when residents of
a threatened area may not hear
storm sirens and may have their
cell phones located in other rooms
away from them. Alerts sent to
cell phones only work if people
can hear that alert, Mersman said
and the urgency may not come
through if the alert sounds like a
regular text message.
With the county-administered
CodeRED it will only call and/
or text you, so whatever your
default ringtone is is what our
CodeRED will alert as, Mersman
said. Residents can sign up for
the CodeRED system at the county
website.
Mersman said the Wireless
Emergency Alert (WEA) system
that is operated by FEMA is automatically sent to most modern
mobile devices and comes through
SEE WARNING ON PAGE 2A
Ho, Ho
Hot
Balmy Nov.-Dec.
brings season records,
precipitation worries
BY DANE HICKS
THE KANSAS NEWS SERVICE
WICHITA Worried about safety, resistant to mask orders and
troubled by a lack of confidence
in public schools, thousands more
Kansas parents are opting to teach
their kids at home.
The shift comes in the wake of
the pandemic that convinced those
families they could handle the job.
We just had call after call after
call, said Bert Moore, who oversees home-school registrations
for the Kansas Department of
Education. And they continue to
call us. This isnt something that
occurs in just August. . . . It will
be May before we have the final
number.
During a normal school year,
about 1,400 Kansas families newly
register to home school. Last year
that number more than tripled
to 5,527 and the trend doesnt
seem to be slowing. So far this
year, more than 2,250 new families
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
MANHATTAN Theres something not right with Santa
Claus in shorts.
But thats what Anderson
County and most of the rest
of Kansas may be looking at
through the next few weeks,
with weather specialists at
Kansas State University predicting continued warmer
than average weather now
through the end of December
and maybe beyond.
The warmest temperatures are coming this week,
said Chip Redmond, Assistant
Meteorologist at the KSU
Weather Data Library. It
looks like some cooler weather
is on the way this weekend closer to normal at least. Long
term, there is definitely some
question as to when or if we
will see some influence from
the Alaska/west Canada much
below normal conditions.
KSUs agronomy eupdate for last week said since
Thanksgiving, 111 maximum temperature records
have been broken in Kansas
as of December 4 and another 19 records were tied. Of
these records, nine different
locations broke their record
by nine or more degrees.
Seventeen monthly records
were broken during the period and seven tied. With seven
SEE TEMPS ON PAGE 5A
Pandemic prompts more
parents to home school option
BY SUZANE PEREZ
| review@garnett-ks.com
(785) 448-3111
SEE SEAT ON PAGE 5A
Disenchanted with local
public schools, Kansas
parents find alternatives
156th Year, No. 1
have registered.
Experts say the switch to remote
learning during the pandemic persuaded record numbers of families
to consider home-schooling longterm. Some want more flexible
schedules or greater control over
their childrens lessons. Others are
disillusioned with the traditional model of education or worried
about plummeting test scores.
This increase in homeschooling is something that was ratcheting up for many years prior to
the pandemic, but the pandemic
has certainly jump-started it and
caused it to spike, said Lance
Izumi, author of The Homeschool
Boom.
During the early stages of lockdowns, parents got front-row seats
to their childrens schooling. That,
Izumi said, demystified the learning process for them.
Youre seeing people discovering home-schooling as something
that is doable, which they thought
was not prior to the pandemic, he
said.
Moore, the state education official, said its hard to know whether
COVID-19 is causing a temporary
increase in home-schooling or a
larger shift that will continue after
the virus is controlled.
The number of students
enrolled in Kansas public and private schools dropped by more than
15,000 in 2021 compared to 2019,
according to state data. Some of
those students may have moved
out of the state, but many likely
enrolled in virtual or homeschooling.
Its not going to be a momentary blip, said Izumi, the author.
Thats the incentive for regular
public schools to address those
gaps in order to entice these parents to come back.
Enrollment in Wichita, the
states largest district, fell by 5.6%
during the 2020-21 school year
much of that in pre-school and
kindergarten. Officials hired two
full-time staff members to visit preschools and daycare centers in an
attempt to recruit them back.
Across the country this fall, a
record 8 million students are being
home-schooled, including a growing number of Black children.
SEE EXODUS ON PAGE 4B
$1,000 shopping prize drawing next week
GARNETT
Today
kicks off the final week
to collect tickets for the
Reviews Great Christmas
Giveaway, with a grand
prize $1,000 ticket number to be published next
Tuesday on Dec. 21.
Four final weekly prize
ticket numbers are included in the Great Christmas
Giveaway ad section on
pages 2B-3B of todays
paper, each worth $50. If
any of the final weekly
prizes arent claimed by
Friday Dec. 17 at 5 p.m.,
theyll be lumped in with
the winnings awarded to
the grand prize winner.
The person with the
grand prize winning
number has until noon
Monday, Dec. 27, to claim
the $1,000 grand prize.
Should the grand prize
not be claimed by the deadline, another grand prize
number will be published
in the Dec. 28 newspaper
with a deadline of the following Friday, Dec. 31, at 5
p.m.
As of Friday more than
8,000 tickets had been distributed based on receipts
submitted from participatSEE PRIZE ON PAGE 2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-14-2021/ DANE HICKS
The Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce celebrated a ribbon cutting cerermony for
Jammin Nutrition in downtown Garnett last week. Front row from left: Mike Norman,
chamber manager Kris Hix, Jammin principals Randa Teagarden and Ben Reese
and Gloria Henggeler. Back row: Helen Norman, Courtney Tucker, Travis Wilson and
Amanda Taylor.
U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Toys For Tots drop off at Garnett Publishing, Inc., by December 10
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SENIOR CENTER
CHRISTMAS DINNER
The Garnett Senior Center
will host Christmas dinner on
December 25th beginning at
noon. Those attending are
asked to bring a side dish.
TREASURERS OFFICE TO
OPEN LATE DEC. 15
The
Anderson
County
Treasurers Office will open
late, Wednesday, December
15th due to training from the
State of Kansas. The office will
open around 9:30 a.m.
COUNTY OFFICE CLOSED
The
Anderson
County
Treasurers Office will close at
noon on Thursday, 12/23 and
be closed Friday 12/24/2021 for
the Christimas Holiday.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 breakfast will
be Sunday, December 19 from
9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Biscuits and
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage and eggs will be
served.
CHRISTMAS BAKE SALE
Christmas Bake Sale on
December 24, from 9 a.m. 3 p.m. There will be cakes,
breads, rolls, noodles, pies,
etc. at the Prairie Home Flea
Market, 600 N. Maple, Garnett.
SEEKING DONATIONS
The Garnett Senior Center is
seeking donations of used
medical equipment such as
walkers, wheelchairs, scooters,
shower chairs, etc. Call 4484518 for the item to be picked
up.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Kansas VINE
is free and anonymous and
provides victims of crime and
the general public the ability to
search for an offender housed
in a county jail and receive
notifications.
PRIZE…
FROM PAGE 1
submitted from participating
area merchants.
To play the contest, shop the
merchants who placed ads in
our Great Christmas Giveaway
advertising section found on
Page 2B-3B of todays newspaper. Bring in your receipts to
the Review at 112 W. 6th in
Garnett, and well award you
a drawing ticket for every $10
in purchases with qualifying
receipts, up to 250 tickets per
transaction. Everyone can get
a free ticket every week just by
dropping by our office.
Winning numbers are placed
in random ads in the weekly Great Christmas Giveaway
section. Find your number in
one of the ads and youre the
winner!
Sponsors of this years
Great Christmas Giveaway are
AuBurn Pharmacy, Pizza Hut,
Baumans Carpet & Furniture,
QSI (Richmond), Wolken
Tire, 6th Avenue Boutique &
Bronze, Garnett Dairy Queen,
4th Street Flea Market, Garnett
Publishing, Inc. (The Anderson
County
Review),
1-Stop
(Parker), D&M Mini Barns, 7th
Street Grocery, Garnett Home
Center, Dutch Country Caf,
Trade Winds Bar & Grill, GSSB,
Prairieland Partners (Iola).
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
DECEMBER 6, 2021
Chairman Leslie McGhee called the
meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00
AM on December 6, 2021 at the
Anderson County Commission Room.
Attendance: Leslie McGhee, Present:
David Pracht, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The pledge of
allegiance was recited. Minutes from
the previous meeting were approved
as presented.
Road & Bridge
John Louk, Road & Bridge Shop
Foreman, met with the commission.
He presented an alternate dump truck
proposal since the one on order has
been delayed until fall 2022. After discussion, the commissioners decided
to continue with the Kenworth that is
ordered.
Audit
Rodney Burns, Auditor, met with
the commission. He presented the
2020 audit review.
Property Valuation Division
Mike Dallman, PVD, presented
the results from the 2021 compliance
review. He showed the commissioners documentation on how Anderson
County was out of compliance in
2021.
Sheriff
Vern Valentine, Sheriff, met with the
commission. He will need to update
the fingerprint system at the jail. Hes
working on getting bids and will present at a later date.
Emergency Management
JD
Mersman,
Emergency
Management Director, met with the
commission. The department will
be receiving a $150,000 grant from
the Patterson Family Foundation to
build a supply building which will be
located next to the new fire station
on Westgate Rd. A red-light permit
was presented for Alex Dennison.
Chairman McGhee signed the permit.
Road Vacation
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
authorize the County Clerk to provide
notice of a possible road vacation as
provided by statute, concerning the
portion of SE Virginia Rd from SE 200
Rd south for three-quarters of a mile,
and that portion of SE 100 Rd from SE
Virginia Rd west for one half mile. All
voted yes.
Abatements & Adds
Abatements B22-117 through B22122 and Adds A22-101 through A22102 were approved as presented.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00PM due
to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
Paula E Weers to Jake Austin Miller
and Haleigh Pruitt Hartwig – Lot 4 blk
3 Evergreen Meadow, a subdivision to
City of Garnett.
Grizzley Properties LLC to Kyle
Meeker and Ashley Meeker: East 15
lot 10 & west 25 lot 9 blk 64 City of
Garnett.
Pamela
Hardwick,
Michael
Hardwick and Amanda L Gray to
Jason L Mills and Sandra Ann Mills:
Tract 1: Lots 11 & 12 blk 49 City of
Garnett. Tract 2: W2 lot 9 & all lot 10
blk 49 City of Garnett.
Kimberly Sue Wiedner, Kimberly
Sue Nevius F/K/A and Jeffrey L
Wiedner to Brian R Weller: N2 lot 1
& n2 lot 2 & n2 e2 lot 3 blk 38 City of
Garnett.
James A Myers and Jennifer J
Myers to Tracy L Ray: Lots 7, 8, 9,
10, 11 & 12 blk 9 Bronston Heights
Addition to City of Garnett.
Jere J Patterson and Daisy L
Patterson to Erin E Rios: N2 lot 49 &
all lot 50 Haydens Lakeview Estates
Addition (revised 1977) to City of
Garnett.
Darrell D Erhart, Jamie L Erhart
and Jamie L Katzer F/K/A to Curtis
D Leiker and Davina M Leiker: Se4
ne4 29-19-21 & a tract of land in ne4
29-19-21 being described as follows:
beg at necor said section 29; thence
along east line of said ne4, south
01452 east 1323.37 feet; thence
north 892746 west 1327.30 feet;
thence north 01147 west 148.12
feet; thence south 893852 east
9.80 feet; thence north 01610 west
152.48 feet; thence south 593320
east 40.00 feet; thence along a curve
to right having a chord bearing north
540719 east 102.27 feet, a central
angle of 472122, a radius of 127.33
feet and an arc length of 105.24 feet;
thence north 774803 east 109.28
feet; thence north 712755 east
766.66 feet; thence along a curve to
left having a chord bearing of north
525213 east 351.24 feet, a central
angle of 292033 a radius of 693.39
feet and an arc length of 355.10 feet;
ANDERSON COUNTY
LIMITED ACTION CASES FILED
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Yvonne
Bauman in the amount of $1,551.44
for unpaid Individual Income taxes
from 2020.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Lisa R
Sears in the amount of $1,590.55 for
unpaid Individual Income taxes from
2017.
LoanCare, LLC has filed a Petition
for Mortgage Foreclosure against
George E. Fischer (deceased), Evelyn
R. Fischer, John Doe (unknown), own
tenant/occupant), Jane Doe (unknown
tenant/occupant), George E Fischer
(deceased), Evelyn R Fischer, and all
other persons and/or legal entities who
are or maybe concerned including the
unknown spouses of any defendants,
together with the unknown heirs, devisees, beneficiaries, executors, administrators, trustees, guardians, conservators, assigns, successors and creditors of such defendants in the amount
of $54,500.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Tracy L
Weese in the amount of $2,278.25 for
unpaid Individual Income taxes.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Carissa
D Garcia in the amount of $3,020.80
for unpaid Individual Income taxes
from 2020.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Jared
T Snavely in the amount of $4,355.84
for unpaid Individual Income taxes
from 2020.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Ryan
D Yutzy in the amount of $1,957.48 for
unpaid Individual Income taxes from
2020.
ANDERSON COUNTY
ACCIDENT REPORTS FILED
A vehicle driven by Janet K Storck,
Chanute, was in the roundabout going
south past the entrance from Highway
59 when a vehicle driven by Dustin
Hall, Welda, was going south from
Highway 59 entrance and failed to
yield hitting the first vehicle in the
right passenger door area causing the
vehicle to go over the curb to the west
before coming to stop.
ANDERSON COUNTY
TRAFFIC CASES FILED
Bernhardt Joseph Outram has
been charged with speeding.
Larry Douglas Grammer has been
charged with speeding.
Osaac Weber Arremdondo has
been charged with speeding.
David R Tinsley has been charged
with vehicle not registered.
ANDERSON COUNTY
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Jennifer L McBrearety has been
charged with possession of methamphetamine, violation of the Kansas
Offender Registration Act and possession of drug paraphernalia.
Delbert R Beechy has been
charged with interference with law
enforcement, speeding and driving
while suspended.
ANDERSON COUNTY ARRESTS FILED
On December 1, Shawn Dasting
Weers, Ottawa, was arrested for failure to appear.
On December 2, Jason Patrick
Marnell, Garnett, was booked as a
hold for the Franklin County Sheriffs
Department as he was arrested for an
oustanding warrant.
On December 3, Crystal Marie
Schweizer, Burlington, was arrested
for failure to appear.
On December 3, Samuel Laverne
Yoder, Garnett, was arrested to serve
a court ordered sentence.
On December 4, Alina Nicole
Hibbs, Iola, was booked as a hold for
the Douglas County Sheriffs Office as
she was arreted for failure to appear.
On December 4, Brandon Louis
James Richardson, Garnett, was
arrested for abuse of a child.
On December 6, Jennifer Leanna
McBrearety, Greelely, was arrested for
violation of offender registration act,
possession of drugs and possession
of drug paraphernalia.
On December 7, Zachary Robert
Snapp, Topeka, was arrested for a
probation violation.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Barry Weber was booked into jail on
February 15, 2020.
Giovanni Rodriguez was booked into
jail on March 3, 2021.
Joshua Evans was booked into jail on
April 21, 2021.
Zachery Kirkland was booked into jail
on June 23, 2021.
Joshua Heubach was booked into jail
on August 9, 2021.
David Ashley was booked into jail on
August 12, 2021.
Cade Goodman was booked into jail
on September 1, 2021.
Robert Soulia was booked into jail on
October 4, 2021.
Garrett Russell was booked into jail
on October 6, 2021.
Nicholas Buchanan was booked into
jail on October 17, 2021.
Jerred Conner was booked into jail
on October 18, 2021.
Darren Dicenzo was booked into jail
on October 25, 2021.
Robert Sparks was booked into jail
on October 26, 2021.
Roy Teal was booked into jail on
November 11, 2021.
Sabre Suire was booked into jail on
November 12, 2021.
Joshua Skinner was booked into jail
on November 15, 2021.
Mason Offutt was booked into jail on
November 28, 2021.
Shawn Weers was booked into jail on
December 1, 2021.
Crystal Schweizer was booked into
jail on December 3, 2021.
Jennifer McBrearety was booked into
jail on December 6, 2021.
Zachary Snapp was booked into jail
on December 7, 2021.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL
FARM-INS ROSTER
Zachery Whalen was booked into jail
on May 19, 2021.
Edwin Soto-Galarza was booked into
jail on May 19, 2021.
Chase Porter was booked into jail on
August 9, 2021.
Dylan Parks was booked into jail on
November 13, 2021.
Risk management skills series for Kansas women in agriculture
The Frontier Extension
District is hosting a local
site for this program series.
Each session will be held at
the Franklin County Annex
Commission Chambers, located at 1418 South Main St.,
Ottawa
Program Description
This workshop series will
teach principles of determining
cost of production, developing
a marketing plan, purchasing
WARNING…
FROM PAGE 1
with a distinct alert tone.
That alert does sound a very
distinct alert over cell phones,
Mersman said. People primarily receive WEA messages for
Amber Alerts but they also
should receive alerts for immediate life threats such as flash
flood and tornado warnings.
He said location of the user in
relation to the warning area
issued by the weather service
will determine who receives it.
He said the best option was
still a NOAA Weather Radio
designed specifically for emergency alerts.
They do sound a very
loud alarm when a warning is
issued, Mersmand said. They
can be programmed to receive
only certain weather alerts and
for certain counties.
Anyone with questions
about programming their
NOAA Weather Radio should
contact ACEM at (785) 448-6797.
crop insurance, and participating in farm programs (ARC/
PLC). Participants will work
with a case farm to apply these
topics to a real-world farming
operation. An optional 5th session will cover similar risk
management principles for
beef cow/calf operations. The
program will be a combination
of broadcasted keynote speakers, local speakers, and facilitators to assist in completing the
Public
Notice
hands-on activities. The goal is
for participants to acquire risk
management skills they can
apply directly to their farming
or ranching operations.
Registration Information
A $50 registration fee will
cover all meals and program
materials if registered before
Dec. 31st ($75 late registration
fee) Add $10.00 registration fee
for optional 5th session.
Register for the series by
visiting: https://kstate.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_bHtbfGu2WLJBuui or by contacting
your local Extension Office.
Ottawa – (785)-229-3520, Lyndon
– (785)-828- 4438, or Garnett (785)-448-6826.
Program Schedule
All sessions will begin with
dinner at 5:30 pm and conclude
by 8:30 pm.
January 12th, 2022 Enterprise Budgeting
January 19th, 2022 – Crop
Insurance & Stress and
Resiliency
January 26th, 2022 Crop Marketing & Family
Communication
February 2nd, 2022 – Farm
Bill Programs & Beef/Cow/
Calf Risk Management
Optional Session #5
February 23, 2022 Enterprise Budgeting, Cattle
Marketing & Insurance Options
Notice of City of Garnett budget amendment
(First published in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, December 14, 2021)
The Anderson
County Review is
the official newspaper of record
for Anderson
County, The City
of Garnett, USD
365, and the other
incorporated cities in Anderson
County. Notices
published here
meet all required
statutory legal
parameters.
Dc14t2*
Notice to creditors
Notice of hearing
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, December 14, 2021)
2×4 KPA
KDOT
thence along a curve to left having
a chord bearing of north 192507
east 275.81 feet, a central angle of
373337, a radius of 428.37 feet and
an arc length of 280.82 feet; thence
north 22426 east 231.97 feet to
pob; & beg at necor se4 29-19-21,
thence south 330 feet, thence west
1320 feet, thence north 330 feet,
thence east 1320 feeet to pob; along
with a 20 feet easement for access
from existing county road located in
sw4 ne4 said section 29.
Randal S Beckmon and Marsha N
Beckmon to B&B Farms: Sw4 nw4
16-23-21, less east 300 sw4 nw4
16-23-21.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
WANDA LEE CASELMAN, Deceased.
Case #AN-2021-PR-000029
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 David Lance
Caselman, one of the heirs at law, devisee and
legatee of Wanda Lee Caselman, deceased,
praying that Last Will and Testament of Wanda
Lee Caselman, dated April 13, 2016, and
admitted to probate in decedents resident state
of Arkansas on or about February 24, 2021,
authenticated copies of said will and order are
filed with the petition be admitted to probate
and record in Kansas; that the court find that no
administration of the estate in Kansas is necessary; and that the said will be construed and the
Kansas real estate owned by the decedent be
assigned in accordance with the terms of said
last will and testament.
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before January 5, 2022, at 9:00
a.m. in the district court in 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 said petition.
DAVID LANCE CASELMAN
Petitioner
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, November 30, 2021)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
PATRICIA L. LARMAY, Deceased.
Case #AN-2021-PR-000028
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i) four months from
the date of the first publication of this notice as
provided by law or (ii) thirty days after actual
notice was given as provided by law to those
creditors whose identity is known or reasonably
ascertainable; and if their demands are not thus
exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
PAMALYNNE HUNTER-BRADLEY
Administrator
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Administrator
nv30t3*
Public Notice
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St, – P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
Dc14t3*
Your RIGHT to know,
guaranteed by
Kansas Law.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
EGIDY
AUGUST 31, 1964 – DECEMBER 7, 2021
Tammy Felter Egidy, age 57,
of Greeley, Kansas, was born
the last of four children to
Earl Felter Jr. and Charlotte
(Ambler) Felter in Eureka,
Kansas on August 31, 1964.
She passed away on Tuesday,
December 7, 2021, at Stormont
Vail in Topeka, Kansas with
her family by her side.
Tammy met the love of
her life, Terry Ray Egidy in
Americus, Kansas while on a
blind date on New Years Eve
in 1986. They were married in
Americus in 1988. In March of
1998, they adopted their daughter Morgan and in 2000 they
added Matheu to their family
through adoption.
She loved children and
this was evident in her work
experiences as well as in her
devotion to her children and
grandson, London. She began
her career working with children at LakeMary Center in
Paola, Kansas. She also worked
for the Southeast Mental
Health Center in Garnett and
KVC in Ottawa as a case worker for children. She was at
EKAN and Southeast Kansas
Head Start and finished her
career at K-State Research and
Extension in Garnett, Kansas
as the 4-H Program Manager.
She also volunteered with Big
Brothers and Big Sisters.
Tammy and Terry were
4-H leaders for the Dynamite
4-H Club in Greeley, Kansas
for several years. She served
on the Future of Anderson
County Education (FACE)
Committee. She also received
the Woman of the Year award
from the Garnett Business
and Professional Women. Her
greatest joys were her children. She was proudest of her
role as Nonny to grandson
London. She talked with him
daily and spoiled him as any
grandmother should.
Tammy enjoyed spending
time with family, especially
London. She was an avid quilter and enjoyed cooking. She
was well known for her pies.
Tammy was a selfless woman
and gave to others of her time
and talents generously. She
served as a role model for her
own children, the children
she helped through work, and
those that she served through
4-H.
Tammy was preceded in
death by her father, Earl Felter
Jr. her mother, Charlotte
Felter, one sister Carolyn Jo
Felter, father-in-law Ralph
William Egidy, mother-in-law
Mary Ann Egidy, brothers-inlaw Charles Edward Egidy,
David Lee Egidy and Patrick
Allen Egidy.
She is survived by her husband, Terry of the home, her
daughter Morgan Egidy and
grandson London Egidy of
Council Grove, Kansas, and
her son Matheu Egidy of the
home; sisters, Rose Stephenson
(Royce) of Belle Plaine, Kansas
and Karren (Matt) Hulse of
Newton, Kansas, sisters-in-law
Julie Worser (Lee) of Smithville,
Missouri and Dorothy Erwin
(Tim) of Viola, Kansas, two
aunts, Mary Billups of Viola,
Kansas and Margie Morgan of
Greeley, Kansas; and grandma,
Mary Rickabaugh of Greeley,
Kansas. She also leaves behind
loving cousins, nieces, nephews as well as great nieces and
nephews.
Mass of Christian Burial
was Saturday, December 11,
2021, at St. Boniface Catholic
Church, Scipio, Kansas. Burial
followed in the St. Boniface
Catholic Cemetery.
Memorial contributions
may be made to W.I.N.G.S.,
Anderson County 4-H, or to the
Hope and Love of The Laity
(H.A.L.L.) Fund and left in care
of Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service. Condolences may be
sent to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com
MAGNER
JANUARY 6, 1969 – DECEMBER 6, 2021
Di Magner, age 52, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Monday,
December
6, 2021, at
W e s l e y
M e d i c a l
C e n t e r ,
Wichita,
Kansas.
She was
born January
Magner
6, 1969, in
Ulysses,
Kansas, the daughter of Cloyce
Vern and Madgelene (Bowling)
Armstrong. Di graduated from
Ulysses High School with the
Class of 1987, and attended
Southwest Community College
in Liberal, Kansas.
Di married Mark Magner on
December 27, 1988 in Liberal,
Kansas, this union was blessed
with three children.
She worked for the Grant
County Treasurers Office
as a clerk for two years, the
Anderson County Hospital for
three years, the Miami County
DMV Office for three years,
and then the Anderson County
Courthouse from 2006 to present as the District Court Clerk
Deputy.
Di lived life always to the
fullest. She was never afraid to
start a new journey and share
her smile with everyone who
crossed her path. She was as
bright as the stars and could
always help someone find a
smile on their darkest days.
She had a wide array of hobbies she enjoyed, anywhere
from riding motorcycles, trivia
nights and traveling to a new
city. She shared these things
with friends and her children
but most of all her best friend,
her husband. Her biggest
cherish in her final years was
watching her grandchildren
grow and seeing her childrens
happiness with their families.
She was preceded in death
by her parents, Cloyce and
Madgelene Armstrong; one
brother, Devon Armstrong;
one son-in-law, Dustin Dozier;
one grandson, Kason Dozier;
and mother-in-law, Shirley
Magner.
Di is survived by her husband, Mark Magner, of the
home; her children, Kelsea
Magner, Jake Magner, and
Maddie Hoy, all of Garnett; four
grandchildren, Killian Magner,
Cloyce Dozier, Jace Hoy, and
Larkin Hoy; father-in-law, Lyle
Magner of Liberal, Kansas; sister-in-law, Kay Chaffin and husband Robert of Liberal, Kansas;
three brothers-in-law, Terry
Magner of Optima, Oklahoma,
Chad Magner and wife Nikki
of Colorado Springs, Colorado,
Kile Magner and wife Joy of
Ellinwood, Kansas; and several
extended family members and
friends.
Dis family was present
to greet friends on Monday,
December 13, 2021, at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to
Di Magner Memorial Fund.
SCHECKEL
MAY 23, 1984 – DECEMBER 9, 2021
Michael Paul Scheckel, age
37, of Princeton, Kansas, passed
away on Thursday, December
9, 2021, at Advent Health
Shawnee Mission.
He was born on May 23, 1984,
in Garnett, Kansas, the son of
Lynard Scheckel and Pamela
(Olsen) Scheckel.
He was united in marriage
to Melissa Tevis in Miami,
Oklahoma on May 30, 2014.
Funeral services will be held
at 10:00 AM, on Wednesday,
December 15, 2021 at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett. The
family will greet friends following the service.
Obituary charges, policy
Full obituaries are published as submitted in the Review at the rate of
15 per word and include a photo at no charge.
Death notices are published free and include name, date of birth and death,
name of parents, spouse and service information. A photo may be added to a
death notice for a $10 fee.
3A
REMEMBRANCES
Do not listen to what Satan
is whispering in your ear!
In Genesis 3:1, Satan says to
Eve, Did God really say, you
must not eat from any tree in
the garden?
You see Satan deals in generalities not specifics. There is
nothing genuine about Satan.
Gods words to Adam were.
You are free to eat from any
tree in the garden, but you
must not eat from the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil,
for when you eat of it you will
surely die. This is very specific. God always states what
actions are out of bounds and
he always spells out the consequences for this action. Satan
twisted Gods words and failed
to include any consequences
that would follow. What Satan
is doing here is what he does
every day all day long. He
makes an attack on the character and nature of God.
And who do we know God to
be?
1) We know him to be our
Father who knows how to give
good gifts and keeps us from
what is less than the best.
2) We know him to be the
God who demonstrated this
kind of love and wisdom and
generosity by giving the life of
his Son, Jesus Christ for our
sake.
Jesus and Satan met head
on in Jesus temptation after
his baptism. Again Satan twist-
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
ing the words of scripture
ultimately offers Jesus all the
kingdoms of the world if he
would only bow down and worship him. Satan did not offer
Jesus anything he wouldnt
ultimately possess by fulfilling
his work, to die on a cross for
the sins of man. Satan makes
deals God doesnt. Satan will
offer you a shortcut just as he
offered one to Jesus here. In
John 5:34, Jesus summarizes
his calling as follows. My
food, said Jesus, is to do the
will of him who sent me and
to finish his work. Jesus did
that ultimately sitting down at
the right hand of God. Jesus
did not walk out on God, neither should we. Do not listen
to the lies Satan is whispering
in your ear.
Ministry on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback
on Facebook
2×3
Agency West
Our
Ottawa
Office:
Our Ottawa
office:
Sheri
Agent
HannahLickteig,
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427
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Ottawa
427 S S.Main
St. St.Ottawa
(785)
521-2030
785-521-2030
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker, Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
FAMILY-STYLE!
Every Sunday
Friday: Chicken fried steak
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
or chicken fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
Homemade
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
PAN-FRIED
2nd Saturday:
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CHICKEN
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
2×3
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We have
pizza!
Sunday: Homemade
pan-fried chicken w/sides
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-14-2021 / SUBMITTED
Don and Sue Dean married December 26th, 1971 in
Louisville, Illinois. They had 3
kids Travis Dean, now deceased
of Chanute, KS,
Kristin
Halfhide of Concordia, KS and
Justin Dean of Concordia, KS.
They have 5 grandchildren
(3 granddaughters and 2 grand-
sons) and 1 great grandson.
Don continues to work as a
civil engineer in Concordia for
Campbell and Johnson and Sue
is retired after many years as
a teacher and school librarian.
Cards can be sent to their home
at 611 E 5th St. Concordia, KS
66901.
Senior Center pitch results
On December 9th, eleven
jolly Christmas elves came
together for a fun evening of
13-point pitch.
The winners were as follows: Most games won (7 of 10)
Dorthy Spencer, fewest games
won Loydene West, Shari
Friesen won 50/50 and the most
perfect games (3) Jan Wards.
We would love to have more
of you join us at the Senior
Center on Thursday evening
at 6 o'clock for an evening of
good clean fun. Even if you
don't know how to play there is
plenty of help available.
Jan Wards reporting
Area Agency on Aging hosts
a Cup of Necessity for
conversation and support
205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
Deans 50th Anniversary
The East Central Kansas
Area Agency on Aging
(ECKAAA) would like you to
join us for a cup of coffee and
great conversation! If you are
helping a neighbor, a friend, or
a family member navigate medical appointments, health concerns or treatments, adapting
to life after the loss of a loved
one, transition from living at
home to an apartment, senior
housing or a nursing home or
simply helping someone by
checking in to make sure they
are alrightthis group is for
you. Come for support, encouragement, resources, and friendship.
A Cup of Necessity will meet
the 3rd Thursday of the month
at the Garnett Public Library
in the Archer Room from 10:00
to 11:00 AM. The December date
is Thursday, December 16th.
If you have questions or need
more information please contact Shannon at ECKAAA at
785-242-7200.
2×2 McIntosh
Booth
2×2
Reeble
Iola Location:
202 S. State St.
Iola, KS 66749
620-363-5005
Emporia Location:
1 S Commercial St.
Emporia, KS 66801
620-342-5573
Ottawa Location:
Corner K68 & Main
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-229-0684
Ottawa, Kansas
W E R E R E A DY TO S E RV E YO U I N
4×5 Ottawa Guide
D&S DOOR
Garage Doors Openers Service Calls
(785) 242-4814
Mobile: (785) 229-6694
RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL
The areas rst and best!
,Ottawa
402 N. Main 785-242-8916
Jeff & Lou Baker – Owners
1-800 -CARSTAR – 24/7 Accident Assistance.
Relax, well take it from here.
PAINT WALLPAPER
CUSTOM WINDOW BLINDS
CUSTOM FRAMING & SUPPLIES
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
East side of historic
downtown OTTAWA
785-242-3723
Fine Senior Living.
701 S. Poplar
Ottawa
785-242-6655
OTTAWA PAINT
FRAMES & DECOR
Contact Heidi at
785-242-5007
Suttons Jewelry
109 S. Main
Ottawa, KS
Property managed by
Kay Management Company.
Obituaries, jpeg photos and death notices may be emailed to
review@garnett-ks.com with a phone number for confirmation.
Payment may be arranged through your funeral home or
directly with the Review. We accept all major credit cards.
Questions? Call (785) 448-3121.
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4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
OPINION
Left makes Dole a Trojan Horse
The wistful lament in many quarters of the
country last week over the passing of Kansas
Senator Bob Dole has contained, sublime within
its woeful melancholy, a corresponding tearful
longing for the days when Republicans werent
such meanies and could reach across the
aisle to compromise with earnest, virtue laden
Democrats.
It was a standard litany among mainstream
media surrounding the swan song for the pragmatic Kansan who was wounded in war and
pledged to public service thereafter: Gone are
those days of understanding, settlement and
concession among Republicans, we were told by
those who despised most of what Doles public
life had stood for. The passing of the Great Lion
himself signifies it, they said his end punctuates the transition of the GOP from the party
that helped save Social Security in 1980 to the
froth-mouthed crazies who elected Trump and
then did his diabolical bidding on January 6.
Yes, Democrats and the leftist-embracing
media repeatedly handed Republicans a hanky
last week to wipe their eye at the news of Doles
passing and celebrated the sharp stick concealed within it.
Of course this longing for the civility of old
was a point made by the left while their flagship racial justice organization, Black Lives
Matter, was resting up from burning and looting American cities and calling for boycotts of
White-owned businesses this Christmas season.
Indeed is it really modern Republicans who
are most in need of civility?
The dirge we sing for Dole comes with an
undeniable companion also dead and gone
is any semblance of the tempered but rational
Democratic Party of decades ago, with whom
Dole and other Republicans in congress were
able to find common ground. After all, its hard
to find common ground with people who raise
bail money for criminals who burn American
cities to honor a dead thug.
While its true the core of Doles Republican
Party has edged more to the right, the glaring
slide of Democrat leadership off the ledge of
political and cultural sanity is apparent in every
new initiative Democrats announce.
The core ideals of Republicans today are
pretty much the same as when Ronald Reagan
salvaged the party from Nixonian disgrace in
1980 pro-business and private job creation,
pro-individual rights and accountability, proBill of Rights, strong national military positioning, pro-law enforcement, anti-fetal murder,
anti-government regulation, anti-taxation and
anti-government growth. The precepts were true
for Bob Dole in the 1970s and theyre true for the
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
GOP today.
Dole may have on occasion leaned a little
further on important issues like Social Security,
but only because he could see leadership among
Democrats leaning his way from the other side.
The difference? While modern Republicans
have maintained their footing on issues, modern Democrats are so far left of center they dont
even seem to be on the same planet anymore.
The Democrat Party of our fathers and mothers favored government that helped the working
man operative word working. Would they
have embraced policy for taxpayers to provide Universal Basic Income to everyone?
Would the Democrat Party of our parents have
embraced a blatantly racist, militant, Marxistinspired organization that burned American
cities, murdered their residents and declared
autonomous zones where existing law has
been suspended?
Would those Democrats recognize their partys modern obsession with anti-white hate, the
embrace of Critical Race Theory in education
and the re-writing of history and its markers
along racial lines? Would they support a medical
mandate mentality from the federal government
that violates individual civil rights? Would they
endorse the outright attack on female athletes
with policy that gives preference to men who
want to compete as women in womens sports?
When the culture and values of one side of
a political continuum are that distant not just
from the arguments of its opponents but also
from the mainstay of traditional American culture, compromise becomes social and cultural
suicide.
Bob Dole started out as a soldier who recognized what was right and defended it against
the scourge of those who would have replaced it
with tyranny. Hopefully, Republicans will continue to do the same thing.###
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Several people have died of the coronavirus.
The ones that have been taken from us are the
ones that have not been vaccinated mostly.
Why dont you just get vaccinated for your
loved ones, not for yourself or your political
party? Its very sad when theyre gone. Thank
you.
If you still hate Trump after the (deleted) show
weve been living for the past year, your commitment to stupidity is impressive.
The City of Garnett and the residents are the
meanest, cruelest animal abusers Ive ever
seen. They want these animals to starve to
death. I do not believe the people at the annex
building and the residents of Garnett will let
these animals starve. I have to feed my cat at
the back door because I cannot catch him. Hes
registered, hes been fixed and had all his shots.
But yet I get turned in because Im feeding my
cat. That is wrong. Not only is it wrong but its
wrong because theyre letting all the other cats
starve.
Biden helps Putin Make Russia Great Again
The two-hour video tete-a-tete on Tuesday
between President Biden and Russian strongman Vladimir Putin has predictably not borne
fruit for America. Biden issued stern warnings about sanctions that were widely celebrated in the American press. But Putin was
already well aware of these warnings. The
session was, in fact, a hollow exercise in showmanship. And Putin stole the show.
Instead of being a moment for projecting
US resolve, the meeting was just another step
in Bidens ongoing, unintentional plan to help
Putin make Russia great again by allowing
the Russian president to reassert his influence
over the nations of the former Soviet Union.
The mere act of Putin having a one-onone meeting with the US president is a win
for Moscows spymaster, who craves being
perceived as a top dog in global geopolitics. It
makes Russia seem on a par with the United
States, which it certainly is not.
The call was followed by a terrible blunder.
Biden granted Moscow the guarantee that the
US will not use force to stop Russias invasion
of Ukraine. While using force against Russia
is a bad idea with respect to Ukraine, which
is not part of NATO or a critical US asset,
Biden abandoned a valuable tool, the principle of strategic ambiguity. Biden could have
kept Putin off balance and unsure of what we
would do. But by stating that force was not
COMMENTARY
REBEKKAH KOFFLER, AUTHOR
on the table, Biden may have guaranteed that
Russia will proceed militarily into Ukraine.
The US presidents threat of sanctions has
little effect on the Russians, who have historically endured far worse deprivation than anything US economic measures could inflict on
them. For Putin, control of Ukraine is a red
line, and he will do what he has to in order to
maintain it.
Meanwhile, Putin has noticed Bidens other
weaknesses toward Russia. The US president
backed completion of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline into Europe, giving Russia a useful spigot
to turn on and off in order to force Western
Europe to do his bidding. Although the White
House reportedly would push Germany to
halt the project if Russia attacks Ukraine,
Washington is unlikely to sway Berlin, which
views Nord Stream 2 in purely commercial
terms and has been enjoying a blossoming
relationship with Moscow. And Putin is
already ratcheting up the pressure on Europe
which is critically dependent on Russian
gas by colluding with Saudi Arabia on
engineering a potential suspension of OPECs
collective increase in crude oil production.
How long will sanctions last when Putin is in
charge of heating the homes of the European
Union?
And where were the sanctions after cyberattacks earlier this year likely approved by
the Kremlin stymied our critical infrastructure, including energy reserves and the food
supply?
Putin views Biden as weak, and believes
his presidency presents a unique window of
opportunity. And so, he is working to both
intimidate Biden and butter him up.
Last month, Russia conducted two highly
consequential weapons tests that served as a
direct message to Washington.
On Nov. 29, the Russian navy successfully
test-fired a hypersonic cruise missile, which
Putin has been touting as capable of piercing
the US missile defense umbrella. And a recent
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
leagues that start out wanting to do business with China and end up complicit in the
regimes crimes by staying silent or explaining them away.
The difference is that the IOC claims to
be acting in support of high ideals. Bach
likes to quote the Olympic charter that says
Olympism exists to place sport at the service
of the harmonious development of humankind, with a view to promoting a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human
dignity.
Placing sport at the service of China does
the opposite on all counts. Chinas autocrat,
Xi Jinping, has been open about the political importance of the Olympics, Hosting an
excellent 2022 Games is a major task of the
Party and the country, and it is a solemn commitment to the international community.
Here, the interests of the CCP and the IOC — as
We the people of Garnett can do miracles for
our children. Yes, our children. By lighting
up Garnett with Christmas lights and your
light bulbs on your porch. I have seen so many
children with big eyes, big smiles on their face.
They are our angels. Thank you Garnett.
Want to know what we should really be afraid
of? Obesity. Porn addiction. Vitamin D deficiency. Dropping fertility rates. Physically inactive
children. Reduced birth rates among smart
people, educated, productive people. Young people with few interpersonal skills and waiting
longer to marry and some not having kids at
all. Decreasing testosterone rates. But you dont
think about these things because theyre not on
the news 24/7. Thank you.
What U.N. Agenda
21 and Agenda
2030 mean
Agenda 21/2030 is a United Nations protocol that is sold to local communities across
America under labels such as Sustainable
Development. Proponents argue that sociatal
decisions should be based on three criteria:
global land use, global education, global population control and reduction.
Its policies are implemented through
Public
Private
Partnerships (PPP),
deals made between
government and specific corporations which receive tax breaks,
grants, and wield governments Eminent
Domain. Wildlands Project, Resilient Cities,
Smart Growth, Local Visioning and others are
usually Going Green.
Communities pay dues to ICLEI, Local
Governments for Sustainability (International
Council for Local Environmental Initiatives),
to provide local community plans, its process
driven by foundation and government grants.
Individual rights will have to take a back seat
to the collective. Harvey Ruvin
Please view our podcast: www.odysee.com/@
molonlabetruth:8/bunkercast-4:3.
LETTERS
Wes Keller
Molon Labe Truth
Garnett
SEE KOFFLER ON PAGE 5A
China Olympics comes with concentration camps
It should be a rule of thumb that the
Olympic Games shouldnt be held in countries
that operate concentration camps.
If this strikes you as a reasonable demand,
you arent suited to serve on the International
Olympic Committee. The IOC has doggedly
defended Beijing as the host of the 2022 Winter
Olympics even as the Chinese Communist
Party pursues its campaign of unrelenting
barbarity against the Uyghurs.
The Biden administration just announced
a so-called diplomatic boycott of the games,
a gesture of disapproval that wont dent the
propaganda coup the IOC is handing the most
dangerous regime in the world.
The IOC is the World Health Organization
of sports. When China disappeared female
tennis star Peng Shuai for the offense of making an accusation of sexual assault against a
former high government official, the IOC happily assisted in the regimes crisis PR, lest the
shocking incident derail the games.
The president of the IOC, Thomas Bach, had
a video call with Peng where she said all was
well and Bach pretended to take her assurances at face value. Of course, Peng wasnt free to
speak her mind, but part of Bachs job now is
to look the other way at Chinas blatant abuses.
China has the great fortune to deal with
international organizations — except the
Womens Tennis Association, which is suspending tournaments in China — that lack all
self-respect.
The IOC is following in the well-trod footsteps of corporations, financiers and sports
This is the first time in history that the ineffectiveness of a medicine is being blamed on the
people who havent taken it.
well as the corporate sponsors of the games
— coincide.
The last time China hosted the Olympics,
the Summer Games in 2008, it used the opening ceremony to stage a gigantic and memorable regime-enhancing spectacle. Beijing
promised reforms to get awarded the games
and then, true to form, engaged in yet more
heavy-handed repression.
If the 2008 Beijing Games were ill-advised,
next years Winter Olympics are a complete
travesty. The atrocities in Xinjiang province
are a matter of public record and the quashing
of Hong Kong proceeds apace. No one who
crosses the regime is safe from imprisonment
or worse. China openly menaces Taiwan with
an invasion. Indeed, China could conceivably
be in a shooting war with the United States
within a year or two of using the presence of
our athletes, among others, to enhance the
rule of its dictator-for-life.
Bach insists that the IOC must always
be politically neutral. As Michael Mazza of
the American Enterprise Institute points out,
though, the IOC banned apartheid-era South
Africa from the games. There is no such thing
as neutrality when dealing with an all-encompassing police state for which politics
is a life-or-death matter. The games arent
being hosted by Switzerland or Norway — nice,
law-abiding countries with good ski slopes
— but a revanchist power that tramples on
human dignity and is a clear and present danger to international peace.
SEE LOWRY ON PAGE 1B
Contact your elected leaders:
President Joseph Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(202) 224-6521
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,
or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably
to assemble, and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2018.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Anticipation builds at current site
TEMPS…
FROM PAGE 1
DIGGING UP THE PAST
record high low temperatures
(warm overnights) set.
That dynamics been reflected in local data monitored at
the Garnett Municipal Airport.
Airport manager Pat Schettler
said Dec. 3 set a record high
at 74 degrees for that date, and
through Dec. 13 the average
high recorded in Garnett this
month is nine degrees warmer
than the past 12 years. So far
the average high for the month
has been 55.5 degrees and the
average low 31.7, both on the
high side, Schettler said.
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
A really nice afternoon and
boy did I ever take full advantage
of it. These artifacts were found
as I began excavating along the
house foundation. I hope this
is a good sign of things to still
uncover in the days ahead.
The other half of the Horse
shoe I had found earlier.
The two iron items Im not
sure of.
The remaining items are:
Old glass caster holder
Three iron pins
Small door hinge & pin
Window shade bracket
Iron weight
Fancy glass shard.
Broken cup hook
Brass harness rivet
5A
HISTORY
And unless it starts raining, were going to set a low
preceiptation record also,
Schettler said, noting only 0.10
inches of precipitation recorded for December.
But rain was forecast for the
area for this week with a possibility of rain or thunderstorms
Wednesday with a high of 70
and south-southwest winds at
25-35 mph.
The KSU report said this
recent warmth follows a
trend that has been associated
with both recent Novembers
and winters. According to
the National Centers for
SEAT…
FROM PAGE 1
22- rifle shell casing
Heavy wire hook
Three shards of porcelain
canning jar sealing lid.
Washer
Small section of Hacksaw
blade
HAYDEN ??
White glass button
Antique ladys stick pin.
(stones are all missing)
showered Biden with sweet
talk after the virtual meeting.
The official statement by the
Kremlin noted that the two
presidents reminisced about
the alliance between the two
countries during the Second
World War and stressed that
such an alliance must serve as
an example for todays framework for the Russo-US relationship and collaboration.
Putins assistant, Yuri
Ushakov, called the dialogue
candid and business-like
with successful exchanges of compliments and joking
around.
As an intelligence operative,
skilled at convincing foreign
leaders that he has a soul,
Putin is manipulating Biden to
craft a US-Russian relationship
on Moscows terms. And as the
Biden presidency oversees a
diminution of US power, Putin
will continue his long-term
project of reconstituting the
Soviet empire, with Ukraine as
the next step.
More local residents typically seek appointment to city
commission vacancies when
they arise than seek to run for
office when posts become up
for a vote every year, according
to recent city history. Many
seats in fact are often filled by
incumbents who end up running unopposed.
The last vacancy filled in
Garnett was that of former
commissioner Preston Peine in
2016. At that time four applicants were interviewed by
commissioners Greg Gwin and
former commissioner Gordon
Blackie, one of which was
Travis Wilson, who eventually
became Garnett City Clerk and
is now among the candidates
for consideration as city manager. Jody Cole was another
appointee interviewed in 2016,
and was subsequently appointed to the post where she still
serves.
Applicants for the position
must be 18 or over and city residents.
Respectfully submitted by: Henry
Roeckers. 1Dec2021
KOFFLER…
FROM PAGE 4A
anti-satellite missile test, in
which Russia bashed one of
its own defunct spy satellites
into smithereens on Nov. 15,
was Moscows demonstration
of intent to cripple Americas
warfighting capability, which
is critically reliant on space
birds for targeting, missile
warning and command and
control.
In the past year, Putin has
worked Biden to convince
him that Russia and America
could be partners. The Kremlin,
aided by the Russian press,
Environmental Information
(NCEI), Kansas has observed
as much as 0.2-0.3/decade
warmth in November and up
to 0.4/decade for all of winter. While these may seem like
small impacts, they can have
lasting results, the report said,
on agriculture, pests, and precipitation demand trends.
This doesnt mean that
there arent outliers with cold
months and seasons, just that
long-term averages are indicative of slow trends over time,
the report read.
Rebekah Koffler is a former
Defense Intelligence Agency officer and the author of Putins
Playbook: Russias Secret Plan
to Defeat America.
IN BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
You saw this.
So will your
customers.
Service Sales Installation Repairs
Garage Doors & Openers
242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
785-448-3056
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
Securities offered through Avantax Investment Services,
Member FINRA, SIPC. Investment advisory services
offered through Avantax Advisory Services. Insurance
services offered through an Avantax affiliated insurance
agency, 415 S. Oak Street, Garnett, Ks., 66032.
Advertise here
for just $8/week.
(785) 448-3121
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
You saw this.
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
customers.
7-Block Certified
LicensedElectricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
QualityServiceFor
Over 20 Years.
ServingAnderson
&FranklinCounties.
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
Matters
So will your
Advertise here
for just $8/week.
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
(785) 448-3121
Howard Yoder
Just 8 bucks a
block per week to
list your
business here!
You saw this.
So will your
Hecks Moving Service
customers.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Advertise here
for just $8/week.
(785) 448-3121
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Ashton Heck
(785) 204-0369
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 489-2212
Inspected Facility
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
LOCAL
s
y
a
d
i
l
o
HOME for the H
Genuine Leather
Sofa & Loveseat
Available
SUPER
SALE
$539
Sug. Retail: $759
Our Price: $599
Baumans
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$1499
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Sug. Retail: $2,169
Our Price: $1,629
While Supplies Last!
$1599
Sug. Retail: $2,299
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SUPER
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POWER HEADREST
$2699
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Sug. Retail: $4,029
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POWER RECLINE
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POWER HEADREST
$2899
Sug. Retail: $4,309
Our Price: $3,239
POWER RECLINE
Coaster Kids
Table
SUPER
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$299
$739
Farmhouse
TV Console
Sug. Retail: $499
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Legends Counter Top Table
with 4 Stools
SUPER
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OVER $1,000,000 OF INVENTORY!
In stock and ready for immediate Pickup or Delivery.
When To Shop:
M-F 8:30-5:30
Sat. 9:00 – 4:00
36 Hour
notice required
for pickups
1B
B
Section
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
CALENDAR
Tuesday, December 14
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preshchoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, December 15
9:00 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, December 16
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
10:00 a.m. – A Cup of Necessity
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committee Mtg.
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch at the Senior
Center – Bring a Snack
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, December 17
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Saturday, December 18
6:00 p.m. – Gospel Music on the Square
Sunday, December 19
9:00 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
Monday, December 20
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club Meeting
Tuesday, December 21
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preshchoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
5:30 p.m. – BPW Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – Planning Commission Mtg.
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, December 22
9:00 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, December 23
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
10:00 a.m. – A Cup of Necessity
2:00 p.m. – Emergency Food Assistance
Program (Harvesters)
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch at the Senior
Center – Bring a Snack
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, December 24
Christmas Eve
Saturday, December 25
Christmas Day
12:00 p.m. – Senior Center Community
Christmas Dinner
Monday, December 27
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
New exhibit on display
at Garnett Public Library
On display during the
month of December, in the
West Gallery of the Garnett
Public Library, are Nativity
Sets belonging to the members
of the Walker Art Collection
Committee.
These unique Nativity Sets
are beautiful in very different ways. Religious Art and
wreaths on the wall make the
West Gallery look especially
beautiful.
Make plans to stop by
during December to enjoy this
exhibit.
2×4
Sonic
Top Dog
Top Dog
of the
Week!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11/14/2021 / TERESA YOUNG
Review publisher Dane Hicks and USMC Sergeant Juan Vanegas prepare to load up toy donations for
the Toys for Tots program last week. Hicks said this years program was a great success, due to the
generosity of area donors.
Pracht awarded Optimist Scholarship
Ridge Pracht is the recipient
of the 2021 Ed Britton Memorial
Optimist
Scholarship.
He
attends
Kansas State
University
and is majoring in Animal
Science and
Industries.
Pracht
Ridge is a
member of the
KSU Collegiate Farm Bureau,
Collegiate Cattlemans Club
and Knights of Columbus.
The Ed Britton Memorial
Optimist
Scholarship was
established in honor of Ed
Britton and his loyalty to the
Garnett Optimist Club. He was
a founding member of the local
club and worked to further
community and educational
pursuits of local youth. He modeled good citizenship through
his volunteer efforts and advocacy for youth. To be eligible
for the Ed Britton Memorial
Scholarship applicants are
required to be residents of
Anderson County, have completed at least 60 hours of college credit, be of good academic
standing and be representative
of the traits that Ed Britton
exhibited through his years of
work and dedication with the
Garnett Optimist Club.
Ridge is the son of John and
Reva Pracht of Westphalia.
AJ
Schaffer
The ACHS Bulldog wrestler
was dominant in all 5 of his
matches in his class (126) to
finish first at the 2021 Anderson County Invitational.
Top Dog of the Week wins a $10 Sonic gift card and our
special recognition vehicle window decal. Watch for
them on the road, and each week in
Quality Care Is Minutes Away
Anderson County Hospital is part of Saint Lukes and
offers local access to advanced specialty providers.
LOWRY..
FROM PAGE 4A
The IOC could have taken an
off-ramp from these games
at any point. Instead, its attitude is going to be, Enjoy the
snowboarding, never mind the
concentration camps.
Rich Lowry is editor of the
National Review.
Four
Color
Printing
Garnett
Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Ralph Hall, DO
General surgery
See an expert at our Specialty Clinic:
Ralph Hall, DO, is a board-certified
general surgeon with nearly
30 years of experience caring
for patients in southeast Kansas.
He specializes in procedures of
the abdominal region including
colonoscopies and colon surgeries,
endoscopy procedures, gallbladder
removal, and hernia repair.
Audiology
Ophthalmology
Cardiology
Orthopedics
Dermatology
Pain management
Ear, nose, & throat
Podiatry
Endocrinology
Psychiatry*
Gastroenterology
Pulmonology*
General surgery
Rheumatology
Nephrology
Urology
Neurology
Veterans clinic
OB/GYN
*Services are offered through Telemedicine
Find a doctor
saintlukeskc.org/anderson
785-204-8000
y
a
d
i
l
o
H
Shopping
Guide
Let these local businesses help you make your holidays perfect!
2×3
josephines
Just
microwave & cuddle…
Warmies
The perfect gift for your holiday season…
2×2 My Sonic Gift Cards.
Dutch Country
Great Christmas gifts
Now available
to send electronically
to your friends and family.
421 S. Oak, Garnett (785) 448-3038
Tues – Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2
Sonic Hwy 59 in Garnett
785-448-6393 or 785-448-6494 Call-ins Welcome!
Memory
Lane
2×5
Christmas
Tree Farm
Memory Lane
A tree lasts a few weeks memories last a lifetime!
Drive-thru
Light Display
Open evenings 5:30-9 p.m.
Fri., Sat., Sun
& Christmas Eve
We
support
From Garnett:
Hwy. 59 north to John Brown Rd., at Princeton, go east
8 miles to Vermont Rd., then 2 miles north of Rantoul.
Weather updates 1-800-296-6745 www.pleasantridge.com
2B
THE REVIEWS 23RD ANNUAL
RULES
1. Collect your receipts and coupons
dated Nov. 16-Dec. 17 from any of
these participating merchants, and
bring your receipts and coupons
to Garnett Publishing each week.
Receipts must be turned in by 5 p.m.
Dec. 17, 2021.
2. For every $10 spent at these participating merchants, receive one
ticket (excludes bank deposits).
Maximum 250 tickets per receipt.
Take your receipts and coupons to
Garnett Publishing to receive your
tickets.
3. In additon to sales receipts,
Garnett Publishing will issue one
ticket per week, per household, no
purchase necessary. Simply stop
by 112 W. 6th Avenue in Garnett
to get your weekly ticket. Garnett
Publishing, Inc. is also a participating merchant and will issue tickets
for every $10 of your purchases.
4. Grand prize winning ticket number published in the December 21
edition of The Anderson County
Review. Grand prize must be
claimed by noon Monday, Dec. 27.
5. Weekly winning ticket numbers
will be hidden within The Great
Christmas Giveaway ad section
during the Nov. 23, Nov. 30, Dec. 7,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
LOCAL
Last weeks $50 prize winners
and Dec. 14 issues of the Review.
Weekly winning ticket numbers
must be claimed by 5 p.m. each
respective Friday.
6. All prize monies are issued in
certificates redeemable only at The
Great Christmas Giveaway participating merchants.
Martha Moyer received $50 in GCG coupons after Gary Steele received $50 in GCG coupons after
finding a winning ticket number in ads last week. finding a winning ticket number in ads last week.
7. Any unclaimed prizes as of 5 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 17, will be awarded to
the Grand Prize winner.
8. Must be 14 or over to play.
Business owners, employees and
their families are eligible to play, but
may not submit receipts from their
affiliated business.
Save your receipts and merchant-issued GCG coupons from these
merchants today and earn your tickets. The more you spend, the
more tickets you earn. Watch these ads each week for your ticket
numbers and win instant weekly $50 prizes!
PRIZES:
$1,000
GRAND PRIZE
Adorable kids
play
2x5houses!
D&M Mini
Barns
and eight
$50 weekly prizes
Need Christmas ideas?
1-Stop Gift Certificates
make great gifts!
Call (913) 898-6211
You can win extra
SPENDING MONEY
just by watching these
merchants ads in The Review.
Scratch your
6th
Ave.
way
to savings!
Boutique
banquet events
Scratch the card with your
purchase and get 10-30% Off!
Let Dutch Country Cafe take
the hassle out of your event
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-2276
2×5
QSI
Now scheduling
Solidly constructed and designed
for decades of urban or farm use.
Stop by and tour our lot for great storage ideas.
(785) 504-9625 24751 N Highway 169, Garnett
www.dmminibarns.com
4855541
2×5
Prairieland
Partners
Day, evening or catered occasions
Year-end Business Banquets
Family Get-togethers
School Reunions
Holiday and Birthday Celebrations
Call Jodie today and get
your reservation booked.
(785) 433-3003 or
email orders@dutchcountrycafe.com
309 N. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-5711
www.dutchcountrycafe.
Its not too late,
to get your Flu Shot!
2×5
Baumans
Lots of
in-store
inventory.
Come check
it out!
Walk-In
FLU SHOTS Available
EVERY DAY!
*Flu-Shot recipients must be 6 or older in Kansas.
2849650
Caring for the health of you and your community
429 N. Maple M-F 8:30-7; Sat. 8:30-2 448.6122
805 N. Maple Garnett (785) 448-3216
M-F 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-4
Online refills are available at:
www.auburnpharmacies.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Save your
receipts and
merchant-issued
GCG coupons from
these merchants
today and earn
your tickets.
The more you
spend, the more
tickets you earn.
Watch these ads
each week for your
ticket numbers
and win instant
weekly $50 prizes!
3B
LOCAL
Sponsors of the
Great
Christmas Giveaway!
SPONSORS
(Cut this out and take it with you when you shop!)
1-Stop – Parker
4th Street Flea Market
6th Avenue Boutique
7th Street Grocery
The Anderson County Review
AuBurn Pharmacy
Baumans Carpet & Furniture
D&M Mini Barns
Dairy Queen-Garnett
Dutch Country Cafe
Garnett Home Center
GSSB
Pizza Hut – Garnett
PrairieLand Partners- Iola
QSI- Richmond
Trade Winds Bar & Grill
Wolken Tire
PRIZES:
$1,000
GRAND PRIZE
and eight
$50 weekly prizes
You can win extra
SPENDING MONEY
just by watching these
merchants ads in The Review.
Some gifts
only give once…
7th Street
Grocery
Your Christmas
baking headquarters!
…but a gift subscription to
The Anderson County Review
gives year round!
52 issues, $48.66 (tax included)
Subscribe by phone
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
Mon.-Fr. 8-5:30 Sat. 8-4 Closed Sun.
22800 NW 1700 Rd Garnett (785) 204-1961
Get Your Vehicle
2×5
Ready For Winter!
Wolken Tire
(785) 448-3212
2×5
TradeWinds
The only number you
need for the Best Service!
Tires, Oil Changes and Alignments
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
785-448-3212
Ask
about
our
fixedrate
home
loans.
LOCK
IT IN
2×5
Pizza Hut
4867301
Stuff your stocking
with Trade Winds
gift certificates.
110 W. 5th Garnett
(785) 448-5856
Dairy Queen
Grillburgers and Cheeseburgers
The perfect sandwich, any time of year!
From early dinners with family to post-game
celebrations with the team, DQ burgers are the
choice to fill your tank. Try them as a combo
with fries and a drink or alone to savor the
flavor. DQ Grillburgers make Happy Taste Good.
2859178
(785) 448-3111
Garnett DQ Grill & Chill
212 N. Maple St Garnett (785) 448-5800
4th St. Flea
Market
3 full floors of merchandise
thousands of various items
more than 50 booths
booth space available $1/sq.ft.
new inventory arriving
all the time
come browse & enjoy!
121 E. 4th Street, Garnett, Ks.
(785) 418-1060 (785) 418-1508
Open Tues-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Closed Sun. & Mon.
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
SPORTS
Zook finishes first in Breakaway competition
Over Thanksgiving weekend, 15 year old Brylee Zook
squared off with some of the
top competition in the Midwest
and came away with a first
place finish in the 19 & under
Breakaway girls at the Rising
Stars Calf Roping competition
in Guthrie, Oklahoma.
She finished with a top time
of 12.46 seconds.
Brylee also finished second
in the Short Go competition,
with a time of 2.91 seconds,
less than a half a second out of
first.
Brylee is no stranger to competing. She has been rodeoing
since she was 7 years old.
The ultimate goal for Brylee
is hopes of traveling the rodeo
circuits competing at the professional level one day.
Brylees parents are Erin
and Justin Zook. She also
has three younger siblings,
Breckyn, Britni and Kaxton.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-14-2021 / SUBMITTED
Fifteen year old Brylee Zook recently finished 1st overall in the 19 &
under Breakaway girls competition at the Rising Stars Calf Roping
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-14-2021 / KEVIN GAINES
Anderson County hosted their annual 2021 Anderson County Invitational on Saturday. The Bulldogs
finished 7th out of 17 teams. Pictured is Connor Prothe of the Bulldogs.
Vikings drop 2 of 3 in tournament
Bulldogs host wrestling invite Saturday
RICHMOND Central Heights
jumped out to an early 11-6 lead
after the first quarter en route
to a 41-30 win at home against
Lebo to open the Ike Cearfross
Invitational.
Lebo battled back in the second quarter and cut the lead
to 15-12 at halftime, but the
Vikings outscored Lebo by 4
points in the third and fourth
quarters to finish off the victory.
GARNETT Sixteen schools
traveled to Garnett on Saturday
as the Bulldogs hosted the 2021
Anderson County Invitational,
ACHS finished 7th overall.
The highlight of the day was
AJ Schaffer (126) winning all 5
of his matches to finish first in
his class.
Schaffer won his first four
matches by fall and his final
match over Drake Brooks of
Girard to win the gold.
The Bulldogs also had a
pair of third place finishes as
both Masten Wright and John
Wright won their 3rd place
matches.
M. Wright went 3-2 on the
day, downing Andy Lanter of
Pleasant Ridge by Fall (0:45) in
his 3rd place match.
J. Wright went 4-1, downing
Noah Martinez of Wellsville by
Fall (1:41) in his final match.
Colten Wittman won by
major decision over Preston
Wry of Labette County to finish 5th as he finished the day
winning 3 of his 5 matches.
Louisburg rolls past Lady Bulldogs
LOUISBURG It was a rough
end to a tough week for the
Anderson
County
Lady
Bulldogs as they dropped their
road game on Friday 48-21 to
Louisburg.
The offensive struggles continued. AC shot just 21% from
the field, including 0-8 from the
three-point line.
It was close early on as the
Bulldogs trailed just 10-8 heading into the second quarter
but Louisburg dominated the
second quarter, 18-3, to take
control leading 28-11 at intermission.
Louisburg kept the clamps
down on the Bulldogs throughout the second half, limiting
them to just 11 points in the
second half as well while tacking on 20 more to close out the
win.
Kylie Disbrow led the
Bulldogs with 7 points, had 10
rebounds and 6 blocks.
Caitlyn Foltz had 8 rebounds
and also had 6 blocks.
Lady Bulldogs struggle in loss to Baldwin
BALDWIN The Anderson
County Bulldogs shot just 25%
from the field last Tuesday in
their 50-19 defeat to Baldwin.
Baldwin led 18-8 after the
first quarter and then limited
the Bulldogs to just 2 points
in the second quarter to take a
28-10 lead at halftime.
The second half was much of
the same. Baldwin doubled up
the Bulldogs in both the third
and fourth quarters.
Baldwin scored 14 in the
third and 8 more in the fourth
while limiting the Bulldogs to
7 and 4 points in the final two
quarters respectively.
Baldwin dominated nearly all aspects of the contest.
They outscored the Bulldogs
15-0 in fast break points. They
outscored the Bulldogs 22-0 off
of turnovers. They had a 20-2
advantage in steals.
Anderson County did hold
an 11-0 advantage in blocked
shots. Seven of those blocks
came from Kylie Disbrow, she
also scored 10 points and pulled
down 9 rebounds.
She now stands alone as she
broke her own record, that was
previously shared. The record
was 5 blocked shots in a game
which was shared by Lexee
McDonnell versus Erie in 2002
and Kylie in 2021 versus West
Franklin.
Ethan Rowan led all scorers with 13 points, including a
perfect 6-6 from the free throw
line and also pulled down 13
rebounds.
Luke Brown was the only
other scorer in double figures
with 11 points.
In the second round, the
Vikings came up short against
Santa Fe Trail 70-57.
Three Vikings scored in double figures. Connor Peel had 15
points, Rowan 13 points and
Brown tacked on 10 points and
also pulled down 10 rebounds.
On Saturday, Heritage
Christian Academy downed
the Vikings 50-42.
The trio of Brown, Peel and
Rowan all recorded double figures with 12, 12 and 11 points
respectively. Rowan added 9
rebounds and Brown tacked on
8 boards.
Wichita and the Kansas News
Service. You can follow her on
Twitter @SuzPerezICT.
The Kansas News Service
is a collaboration of KCUR,
Kansas Public Radio, KMUW
and High Plains Public Radio
focused on health, the social
determinants of health and
their connection to public policy.
Kansas News Service stories
and photos may be republished
by news media at no cost with
proper attribution and a link to
ksnewsservice.org.
EXODUS…
FROM PAGE 1
A survey by the U.S. Census
Bureau showed that more than
16% of Black families were
homeschooling in the fall of
2020 up from about 3% the
previous spring.
Some education advocates
raise concerns about the quality of home schools, since there
is little state oversight.
There are good quality programs out there for
home-schooling, Moore said.
But I am concerned about students exposure to collaboration, to cooperative learning, to
working in teams and having
that experience of participating in the things that students
in our schools get to experience.
Suzanne Perez reports
on education for KMUW in
2×4 KPA
Kanas Housing
Please dont eat the newspaper.
Read it instead.
Subscribe today by calling (785) 448-3121 or email admin@garnett-ks.com.
6×1.5 – NCCC
6×6 Shop @ Home
KANSAS STATEWIDE
ADVERTISING
Send your ad to more than
100 Kansas newspapers.
Ask us for details.
The Anderson County Review
785-448-3121
ANDERSON COUNTYS ONLY
LOCALLY-OWNED NEWSPAPERS
785-448-3121 / FAX 785-448-6253
email: review@garnett-ks.com
Anderson County
Hospital
SAINT LUKES HEALTH SYSTEM
saintlukeshealthsystem.org
421 S. Maple Garnett, KS 66032 (785) 448-3131
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Classied ads
only three dollars.
WOLKEN
TIRE
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak Garnett
(785) 448-3212
The most
reliable
overnight
shipping
service.
118 E. 5th, on the square, Garnett
(785) 448-3841
DELI BAKERY PHARMACY
The World On Time
Available at Garnett Publishing, 112 W. Sixth, Garnett
AT THE INTERSECTION OF
Hwy. 31 (Park Rd.) & Hwy. 59 in Garnett
785-448-2121
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To advertise your business
here, contact Stacey
at 785-448-3121.
421 S. Oak Garnett
Tues – Fri. 10-5
Sat. 10-2
785-448-3038
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
5B
LOCAL
Order your
Holiday Meal
Glazed ham, mashed potato, gravy, green beans, roll
and pie, $13.00 per meal.
Deadline to place order is 8 am on
Monday, December 20.
Contact to place orders
785-448-5711 or
orders @dutchcountrycafe.com.
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 14, 2021
CLASSIFIED
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EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
REAL ESTATE
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
Chris Cygan
785-418-5435
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
1×3
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
MISCELLANEOUS
FARM & AG
NOTICES
Never pay for covered home
repairs again! Complete care
home warranty covers all
major systems and appliances.
30 Day risk free. $200.00 Off + 2
free months! 844-237-1432
Update your home with beautiful new blinds & shades. Free
in-home estimates make it convenient to shop from home.
Professional installation. Top
quality – made in the usa. Call
for free consultation: 844-7400117. Ask about our specials!
Bath & shower updates in
as little as one day! Affordable
prices – no payments for 18
months!Lifetime warranty &
professional installs. Senior
& military discounts available.Call: 844-980-0025
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
Lowest prices on health insurance. We have the best rates
from top companies! Call now!
855-656-6792.
Attention Medicare recipients! Save your money on your
medicare supplement plan. Free
quotes from top providers.
Excellent coverage. Call for a
no obligation quote to see how
much you can save! 855-587-1299
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
mc10tfn
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tf
REALTOR
(785)
hermreck
448-8345
mikehermreck@crownrealty.com
MISCELLANEOUS
Winfield Isle of Lights. One
of the best christmas light
displays in the nation! Open
nightly 6:00 pm – 10:00 pm now
– December 30, 2021 http://
www.Isleoflights.Org/
Long distance moving: Call
today for a free quote from
americas most trusted interstate movers. Let us take the
stress out of moving! Speak
to a relocation specialist, call
888-788-0471
ANIMALS/LIVESTOCK Black/white face 2 year old
Use Xylecide anti-fungal
shampoo to treat ringworm on
dogs & horses. Eliminates shedding & doggy odor. At Orscheln
Farm & Home (www.fleabeacon.com)
cow disappeared south of
Greeley Tuesday. (913) 285-2000.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,dc14t1*
SERVICES
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… breakfast
at the VFW, 9 a.m. – 1 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 19. Biscuits &
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage & eggs.
dc14t1
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Newspaper carrier the
anderson county review is
looking for a newspaper carrier for a garnett route. Available
january 1. Present route sales
$60 per month but you can
expand your customer base.
Pick up at 6 a.M. Each tuesday for morning delivery. Must
be dependable and have own
transportation. Apply at garnett publishing, 112 w. 6th, garnett.
Oc19tf
Convoy systems is hiring
class a drivers to run from kansas city to the west coast. Home
weekly! Great benefits! Www.
Convoysystems.Com call tina
ext. 301 Or lori ext. 303 1-800926-6869.
Card of Thanks
The family of Regina Miller
would like to thank you for
thinking of our family during
this difficult time. All the
prayers and thoughts were
very much appreciated.
1×3
Regina
A special thanks to Pastor
Miller
Chris Goetz for the lovely
service and to Natasha for her
wonderful music.
Also to the First Christian
Church, who provided the
meal, the procession from the
Garnett VFW and the
American Legion Color Guard
in her memory.
2×2 JB Construction
jb const
Decks Siding
Pole Buildings Garages
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joe.borntreger@yahoo.com
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
General Contractor
edgecomb
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Happiness is… Scramble
Squares, games, puzzles,
Melissa and Doug toys. All at
Josephines. 421 S. Oak. dc14t1
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Bulk Water Station Locked
2×3
Our
Bulk Water Station at the South Lake is under
lock
and key.
our mission and goal to keep this
City
ofIt isGarnett
service available to all who need it. With we have had
problems
vandalism Sta
here recently. If you need
BulkwithWater
water, the office number (785) 448-3327) is posted
on the building for assistance. We will gladly come
help you. Our office hours are from 5am – 10pm
Monday through Friday and 5am – 5pm on Saturdays and Sundays. Please feel free to contact James
Howard (785-304-5207) with
any other questions, comments, or concerns.
Guest Home Estates
2×2
guest homes
is looking for full-time CMAs, shift varies, who are
wanting to work with our team.
We offer Health Insurance and Competitive Wages.
If you are interested in this position,
please contact Sandra Johnson
at 785-448-6884
or come by our home
at 806 West 4th, Garnett.
We are excited to meet with you.
HELP WANTED
Ag Choice Moran/Blue Mound, Kansas is a retail fertilizer, feed, seed and
custom application business located in Southeast Kansas.
We have an employment opportunity for a motivated individual. Duties include
general labor, some custom application, and all activities associated with
day-to-day operations. CDL or ability to get one a must. Seasonal long hours
can be expected. Safety is a priority. Excellent benefit package including health
insurance, 401K, retirement, safety bonuses, and profitability bonuses
included.
Call 620-237-4668
CDL TRUCK DRIVER
Mid-American Machine & Equipment, Inc. has an immediate opening
for a CDL driver. We are a well-established company with over 20
years in business. Lanes covered include anywhere in the Midwest
to Southeast. Mid-American Machine pays all miles, drivers are
paid for loading and unloading and for extra stops. We have top of
the line semis. Our drivers earn good money and we offer a benefit
package along with a clean inspection bonus. AOBRD electronic
logs instead of ELD giving our drivers much more flexibility. Our
drivers are generally out 2 to 3 weeks with good, long miles.
QUALIFICATIONS:
Class A CDL
Minimum 25 years of age or older.
Must have at least 2 years verifiable driving experience.
Clean MVR and PSP; we work with a lot of drivers
that other companies wont.
Must be able to pass a pre-employment drug screen
We take good care of our drivers
and pay well. If interested please
call David at 620-964-2156.
Happiness is… subscribing to
the Anderson County Review!
Call (785) 448-3121.
my19tf
2×5
Taylor Forge
1×1
rytter
(913) 594-2495
1×2
edg
Happiness is… Winning
$1,000 in the Great Christmas
Giveaway! See todays paper
for details.
nv16t5*
Happiness
is…
Buying
Christmas plates and napkins
at Josephines. Love Whats
Local. 421 S. Oak.
START YOUR NEW CAREER TODAY!
HELP WANTED
Call
(785) 448-3999
Mike
Hermreck
1×1
LOST & FOUND
Happiness is . . . Christmas
Bake Sale, Dec. 24, 9 a.m. – 3
p.m. Cakes, breads, rolls, noodles, pies, etc. at Prairie Home
Flea Market, 600 N Maple, Garnett.
dc14t1
We are a leading manufacturer of large custom fabricated steel products that help our customers fuel the
world, defend our country, and explore the universe.
We are seeking quality individuals that either have
experience or want to learn a profitable trade and join a
stable organization.
Currently we are looking for:
Shop Supervisor
Automatic Welder
Forming Operator
Machinist
Welder
Helper
Maintenance Mechanic
We offer a competitive salary and an attractive benefits package. Individuals seeking a stable opportunity to
grow and succeed are urged to apply at www.tfes.com.
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems, 208 North Iron Street,
Paola, KS, 66071 (913) 294-5331
EOE/Veterans/Disabled
Logistics Clerk
Detail oriented, self-motivated individual to perform management of parts inventory, shipping,
and customer service-related duties. 40-lb lifting capability required. Target of 20 hours per
week with potential opportunity for additional
hours. Paid hourly at a level commensurate with experience. Office-based in
Garnett. E-mail your resume to:
officeusa@jygatech.com
CITY COMMISSIONER
There are no words that can ease the loss of a loved one.
Commissioner Cody Gettler touched the lives of many people
both inside and outside this community. In sorrow, we mourn
those weve lost. In gratitude, we embrace the memories of
all of the good times that were had. Cody made a difference,
and wanted to make the community better. That vision of a
better Garnett doesnt have to stop with Cody. If you feel you
can continue that vision and make a difference, we encourage you to apply for City Commissioner. Applications can be
found and submitted to the City Clerk at 131 W. 5th Avenue
Garnett, KS 66032. Must be a City
of Garnett resident to apply. Applications will be accepted until the
end of business December 17th.
Spray Foam Insulation and more
Closed and Open Cell Insulation
2×2
Attic Blown Fiberglass Insulation
Batt Insulation
precision foarm
Licensed and Insured
Foam Insulation
JD Yutzy
785-448-8727
Call today for all your insulation needs
Quality and customer satisfaction is #1
Newspaper Carrier Wanted
The Anderson County Review
is looking for a newspaper carrier for a Garnett route. Available January 1. Present route
sales $60 per month but you can
expand your customer base. Pick up at
6 a.m. each Tuesday for morning delivery. Must be
dependable and have own transportation. Apply at
Garnett Publishing, 112 W. 6th, Garnett.

