Anderson County Review — December 9, 2014
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from December 9, 2014. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
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Contents Copyright 2014 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Did you win $50 in the
Great Christmas Giveaway?
Wrestling season
begins for ACHS.
Find ticket numbers
on Pages 2-3B.
See page 8A
E-statements & Internet Banking
December 9, 2014
SINCE 1865 149th Year, No. 20
(785) 448-3121
Its our 150th
in 2015!
CELEBRATING A 150 YEAR NEWS HERITAGE
1865-2015
Get ready for a
birthday bash.
Member FDIC 1899-2012
A Victorian Crystal
Christmas Home Tour
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Anderson County
Hospital employees will get a
special present for Christmas
this year: A sneak preview of
the new hospital.
Instead of a typical holiday
reception at the Knights of
Columbus Hall, ACH employees instead will celebrate the
season Dec. 20 at the new
hospital building. Major construction on the facility was
recently completed, but it wont
be unveiled to the public until
after Jan. 6.
Marilyn Bennett of Ottawa looks at a nativity display at the Candy and Rick Hewes home at 237 West 4th Avenue during the
Friends of the Garnett Library Holiday Homes Tour Sunday, Dec. 7. The Hewes home was one of three homes featured on the
tour, which also included a host church and the library. The Hewes home celebrated A Victorian Crystal Christmas.
Help still needed for Christmas season
Spirit of Christmas plans
to help more than 100
local families this year
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT More than 100
families in the local area are
expected to need help this
Christmas season, and a local
organization is ready to make
sure theyll get what they need.
The ECKAN office in Garnett
has received more than 100
applications for assistance for
the holidays, human service
coordinator Brandi Lopez said
Monday morning. EKCAN,
through a Spirit of Christmas
committee, provides meals and
toys to families in need for the
Christmas holiday.
The deadline to apply was
Friday, Dec. 5, and she hadnt
yet tabulated exactly how
many applications had been
received. However, last year
ECKAN helped about 110 families in Anderson County, and
it appears there are slightly
more families applying for help
this year, she said. Anyone
who missed the Dec. 5 deadline
should call her to see if they
can still receive assistance.
Families that need assistance
come from a varied background,
Lopez said. Some are singleparent families. Some are twoparent families with children.
She said ECKAN has received
fewer applications from larger
families this year compared to
previous years, although she
isnt sure the reason.
Theres really no norm. Its
a variety of families, Lopez
said.
SEE CHRISTMAS ON PAGE 3A
(785) 448-3111
Hospital employees
to get first look at
new ACH facility
Major construction is
complete as building
gets ready for reveal
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Vickie Moss
| review@garnett-ks.com
The employees have been
so engaged in planning and
helping, and doing everything
they can in their departments
to prepare for this, so we wanted to open it up to employees
before anyone, ACH CEO
Denny Hachenberg said.
The
hospital
recently
reached the substantially
complete phase, which means
major construction has been
finished. Although crews still
are completing a punchlist
of items like painting touchups
and minor repairs, the building
was turned over to its owners, the Anderson County government, and to Saint Lukes
Health System, which leases the
building and provides health
SEE ACH ON PAGE 3A
Mental health experts:
Recent suicides can start
difficult conversations
Friends, family find it
difficult to talk about
subject, experts say
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT As friends and
family cope with three suicides
in the local community within
recent weeks, mental health
professionals say this is a good
time to talk about a difficult
subject.
In addition to typical
grief reactions, suicide often
elicits other strong emotions.
Families are left in shock and
disbelief, questioning if their
loved could have actually ended
their own life, Doug Wright,
director of crisis services for
Southeast Kansas Mental
Health Center, which serves
Anderson County, said. The
circling thoughts and waves of
emotions often leave survivors
of suicide emotionally, physically, and spiritually exhausted.
For friends and other family
members, it can be difficult to
know how to talk to someone
SEE SUICIDE ON PAGE 2A
Jobless rate decreases in area, state
County unemployment
rate drops to 4.2%,
follows state trend
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
TOPEKA The number of people
jobless in the county, region and
state dropped significantly in
October, with state officials attributing the decrease to a growth in
private sector jobs.
The private sector continues
to lead Kansas comeback from
the Great Recession. This month,
employers boosted job levels to
a new record high, said Justin
McFarland, Director, Labor
Market Information Services for
the Kansas Department of Labor.
Kansans also saw their earnings
increase by 3.3 percent over the
year. The increased income will
continue to drive growth.
In Anderson County, unem-
ployment dropped to 4.2 percent
in October, down from 4.9 percent
in September and down a full percentage point, from 5.2 percent, a
year ago. Out of a civilian labor
force of 4,231, only 176 people
were unemployed in Anderson
County in October.
The states October seasonally
adjusted unemployment rate was
4.4 percent, down from 4.7 percent in September and down from
5.2 percent in October 2013.
Kansas gained 13,900 seasonally adjusted private sector jobs,
an increase of 1.2 percent since
last year, and 13,800 nonfarm
jobs, a 1 percent increase. Since
last month, Kansas gained 7,500
seasonally adjusted private sector jobs, a 0.7 percent increase.
The state gained 8,400 seasonally adjusted total nonfarm jobs,
a 0.6 percent increase since last
month.
Labor market conditions
improved with record high
employment and a 0.3 percentage point decrease in the unemployment rate from 4.7 percent
in September to 4.4 percent in
October, said Efua Afful, Labor
Economist. With higher consumption capacity, we expect
greater demand for goods and
services with benefits for consumers and businesses.
Other area counties reported
similar results. They include:
Allen County: 3.4 percent
unemployment in October; 4.1 in
September; 4.7 in October 2013.
Coffey County: 3.7 percent
unemployment in October; 4.5 in
September; 4.5 in October 2013.
Franklin County: 4.3 percent
unemployment in October; 5.2 in
September; 5.5 in October 2013.
Linn County: 5.3 percent
unemployment in October; 5.7 in
September; 6.2 in October 2013.
Miami County: 3.8 percent
unemployment in October; 4.3 in
September; 4.9 in October 2013.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Vickie Moss
Garnett Elementary School kindergarteners belt out some traditional Christmas tunes during
their winter Red & White Concert Thursday, Dec. 4, at the school. The concert was directed by
music teacher Bonnie Kubacka.
Reach 29,000 readers with your classified ad in the Review and Trading Post. Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS
IN BRIEF
RICHMOND BREAKFAST
The Richmond Community
Building will be having a
Community Appreciation breakfast on Saturday, December 20,
from 7-10 a.m. This breakfast is to
show appreciation to all those who
have supported the Community
Building this year. This is a Free
breakfast to show appreciation for
all that people have done for the
building in 2014.
GARNETT TRASH PICK UP
The City of Garnett will have a
different trash pick-up schedule for the weeks of Christmas
and New Years. The week of
Christmas: Monday and Tuesday
routes will be picked up on
Monday. Wednesday route will
be picked up Tuesday. Thursday
and Friday routes will be picked
up Wednesday. City Hall will be
closed Thursday and Friday. The
week of New Years: Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday routes
will be picked up on the regular
schedule. Thursday and Friday
routes will be picked up on Friday.
City Hall will be closed Thursday.
FOOD DISTRIBUTION
The Emergency Food Assistance
Program Distribution will be 4
p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 17, at the
Anderson County Fairgrounds
Community Building.
RICHMOND CHRISTMAS
The Annual Richmond Christmas
Festival will be held on Saturday,
December 13. The festival will
start with the lighting of the City
Tree at 6 p.m. From there everyone is invited to the Community
Building where there will be a
soup & chili supper. After dinner
the city mayor Scott Snow will
read The Christmas Story to
the children. Following the story
Santa will arrive for the children.
At the end of the night the winners
will be drawn for the Richmond
Public Library Christmas Raffle.
VFW BREAKFAST
The next VFW Breakfast will
be 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Saturday,
Dec. 13, at the post in Garnett.
Menu includes biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage
and eggs.
COW/CALF PRODUCERS
A
Cow/Calf
Producer
Informational Meeting to focus
on cow herd management, calving time problems and delivery
assistance will be 6 p.m. Tuesday,
Dec. 16, at the Coffey County
Kelly 4-H Building Fairgrounds in
Burlington. A light supper meal is
available. Sponsored by Coffey
County K-State Research &
Extension & Coffey County KLA.
CHURCH SERVICES
Trinity Lutheran Church in Garnett
has announced its holiday schedule. Advent services will be
Wednesday, Dec. 10 with a supper at 6 p.m. and worship service
at 7 p.m.; Wednesday, Dec. 17
with a supper at 5:45 p.m. and
worship service at 7 p.m.;and
Christmas Eve Candlelight
Service Wednesday, Dec. 24 with
communion at 11 p.m.
COMMUNITY DINNER
The First Christian Church of
Garnett Community Dinner will be
5-6:30 p.m. Dec. 23 and Dec. 29.
Donations accepted.
MEMORIAL BRICKS
Inscribed bricks are being sold for
the Anderson County Veterans
Memorial and will be used in
the creation of the walking area.
Bricks can be inscribed with
whatever names the purchaser
desires. A minimum $25.00 donation is requested. Forms for the
bricks are available in the office of
the Anderson County Clerk.
MEMORIAL NAMES
The Anderson County Veterans
Memorial Committee is requesting the communitys assistance
in obtaining a precise and correct
list of the veterans who have
served our country from Anderson
County. Lists from the different
conflicts are available in the office
of the Anderson County Clerk for
review and revision.
CARE GIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month from 1-2
p.m. at the Garnett Recreation
Center. For more information call
Phyllis at ECKAAA, (800) 6335621.
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD
OF COMMISSIONER NOV. 24
Chairman James K. Johnson called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 a.m. on
November 24 at the County Commission
Room. Attendance: James K. Johnson,
Present: Eugene Highberger, Present:
Jerry Howarter, Present. The pledge
of allegiance was recited. Minutes of
the previous meeting were approved as
presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor, met
with the commission. Highway permit
14,1124:1, 14,1124:2, and 14,1124:3 for
RWD #5 were presented and approved.
Lester talked to the commission about
the possible purchase of a new grader.
Dan Harden, BG Consultants, joined
the meeting. He reported the Federal
Fund Exchange has reported they will
reimburse any road work we do up to
$116,000. Since Lester spent $120,000
on millings this year we could apply
for the Federal Fund Exchange on that
purchase. We could then transfer that
money into special bridge and use the
money to replace the Morgan Bridge.
Hospital Update
Vicki Mills, ACH Financial Director,
and Nick Durand, Turner Architects, met
with the commission. They updated the
commission on the progress at the hospital. They reported the construction is
substantially complete and they are currently doing touchups and training. Plans
are still to open in the new facility at 6:00
a.m. on January 29th.
Budget Amendment
Budget amendment hearing was
opened. Commissioner Highberger
moved to amend the Solid Waste
Fund expenditures from $171,000 to
$221,000. Commissioner Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. Budget amendment hearing closed.
Planning and Zoning
Tom Young, Zoning Director, met
with the commission. Commissioner
Highberger moved to approve Resolution
2014,1124:1 for Special Use Permit
#SUP2014-04 to permit a new retail
business to sell agriculture painted steel
for building siding in an A-2 Transitional
Ag District. Commissioner Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. Discussion was
held on the need of getting a burned
house east of Lone Elm demolished.
Commissioner Highberger noted there is
a house by Westphalia that also needs
looked into.
Rural Fire
JD Mersman, Rural Fire Director, met
with the commission. He reported he
has finally received the fire truck they
purchased for Westphalia. He questioned if the commission was ready to
sign the Emergency Preparedness Plan.
Commission signed plan. There is a forestry grant that would pay for a portion of
the cost of new radios. He will wait until
after the first of the year to finalize the
request.
HVAC
Dan Harden, BG Consultants, met
with the commission concerning the
HVAC project. He presented an estimated time frame for the project. Discussion
was held on coming up with a needs
assessment.
Abatements
Abatements B15-118 through B15125 were presented and approved.
Meeting adjourned at 11:50 AM due to
no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
Howard Williams Jr. to Rita Williams,
Dale E. Williams, and Angela A.
Williams, Lots 13 and 14, Block 40, City
of Garnett.
Ellen T. Marlier to Nicholas J. Leblanc,
Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 Block 71, City of
Garnett.
CIVIL CASES FILED
Shawn A. Chambers vs. State of
Kansas Department of Revenue, defendant requests reinstatement of driving
privileges.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Beth Moss vs. Jason Ralph Moss,
divorce decree granted.
Cassandra Marie Jewell vs. Brandon
Edward Mills, final protection from abuse
order filed
Cassandra Marie Jewell vs. Nancy
Rippy, final protection from abuse order
filed.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Saint Lukes Hospital, Inc. d/b/a
Anderson County vs. Garett L. Honn
and Regina Honn, asking $593.88.
Saint Lukes Hospital, Inc. d/b/a
Anderson County vs. Jennifer L. Young,
asking $1,079.34.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Security Credit Services vs. Thomas
J. Pavicic, $6,416.42 plus interest and
costs.
Owen H. Waddle vs. Matthew Wayne
White and Stephanie Fields, $1,200.00
plus interest and costs.
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country
Mart Garnett vs. Zachery D. Peres, dismissed.
Bobs Supersaver d/b/a Country Mart
vs. Vickie L. Moss, $501.36 plus interest
and costs.
SMALL CLAIMS RESOLVED
Debra Oswald vs. Danny G. Brown,
$1,000.22 plus interest and costs.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Alli Ganesh, $201 fine.
Christopher Alan Giddings, $177 fine.
Stanley T. Pattison, $153 fine.
Dustin Gene Summers, $153 fine.
David Ezra Jamison, $183 fine.
Other:
Jamie Donovan Holstine, violation of
offender registration act 1st offence,
sentencing set for December 22 at 9:00
a.m.
Eduardo Vazquez Candelario, DWS
1st conviction, $243 fine.
Frankie Lee Herod, driving while
habitual violator, $443 fine.
Glenn A. Johnson, unlawful vehicle
registration, $168 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Arrests
Temira
Walkerbaker,
Garnett,
December 4, domestic battery and disorderly conduct.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on September 23
of theft and unlawful access to a computer of $17,500 and occurred at BB Oil
Recovery on NE 2250 Road, Greeley.
A report was made on October 6 of
burglary and theft of a Ruger 357 caliber
handgun valued at $500 and occurred
on South Commercial Street, Kincaid.
Accidents
An accident was reported on October
25 when a vehicle driven by Stephen
J. Walburn, 71, Colony, was traveling
northbound on US-169 Highway at 700
Road when his vehicle struck a deer.
An accident was reported on
November 21 when a vehicle driven by
Phillis M. Carney, 75, Iola, was traveling
southbound on US-169 Highway when
her vehicle crossed into the north bound
lane of travel near 100 Road and struck
another vehicle driven by Johnny F.
Phelps, 56, Lansing.
An accident was reported on
November 21 when a vehicle driven by
Alexandra J. Choma, 17, Kansas City,
Missouri, was traveling northbound on
Neosho Road when she observed a
black truck on her side of the roadway
SUICIDE…
FROM PAGE 1A
who lost a loved one to suicide. said Justin Nutt, director
of Anderson County Mental
Health. Survivors likely are
feeling a wide range of emotions, from sadness to guilt to
anger.
The biggest thing is not to
say, I know what youre going
through unless you actually
have lost someone in that way,
Nutt said.
Other important advice he
can offer is simply to be there
for someone and wait for them
to talk.
A lot of times were so
uncomfortable we want them
to talk and theyre not ready,
Nutt said. When you talk to
them, its a matter of letting
them know its OK to be sad,
its OK to be hurt, its OK to be
mad at that person. Its not a
fair thing in life and whatever
emotion theyre having, its OK
to have it.
Everyone grieves in their
own way, and the path to recovery starts with communication,
Wright said.
We need to share what we
are feeling and experiencing,
and we need to know that others
support us. This support may
come from family and friends,
clergy, mental health professionals, or others, Wright said.
Many are not prepared for the
waves of emotion that will hit
in the weeks, months, and even
years ahead. Preparing for
likely triggers can help us face
these difficult times. Birthdays,
holidays, and anniversary dates
are often triggers for a new a
wave of pain and emotion. It is
important to reach out to our
supports at these times.
The recent suicides in
Anderson County present an
opportunity to open a conversation about issues like depresssion and suicide, Nutt said.
People typically avoid talking
about those difficult subjects
until a celebrity or someone
close to them commits suicide,
he said.
Its important to use those
times to open up a dialogue, he
said.
When suicide affects someone close to a child, it can be
especially difficult to know how
to talk about difficult subjects
like depression and death, Nutt
said. The type of conversation
you have depends on the childs
age. Nutt said he has spoken
to many high school students
about depression and suicide.
He tries to start with simple,
inquisitive questions like How
many of you have ever been
dumped by a girlfriend or boyfriend? and work up to questions like How many thought
about killing yourself because
you felt sad? He said he frequently sees the same number
of hands raised for both those
questions.
In a roomful of 100 kids, 99
of them dont care what you
have to say but theres always
that one who comes up to me
after and wants to talk, Nutt
said. No one around them ever
realized it because theyre that
happy kid on the soccer team
with lots of friends. But a lot of
times we put on a front.
Moving on after a loved one
has committed suicide also presents special challenges, Wright
said. Some find it helpful to
commemorate their loved one
in a special way, such as something public like establishing a
scholarship in the loved ones
name, or something private like
putting together a scrapbook,
writing stories about the loved
one or simply setting aside time
to think about that person.
We somehow feel that
moving on with our own lives
dishonors our lost loved one,
Wright said. We know that
they would want us to find joy
and happiness again, but this
rational thought often is countered by powerful, even if illogical, thoughts to the contrary.
Part of moving on is often
challenging our own irrational
thinking.
There is no magic answer
that I can offer those surviving the suicide of a loved one,
but I hope you will take solace
in the knowledge that it will
get easier. The pain of losing
a loved one never goes away,
but the intensity does subside
and there will come a day when
you can feel joy again. When
that day comes let yourself feel
that joy and share it with others, just as you share your pain
now.
The
National
Suicide
Prevention Lifeline offers a list
of signs that may mean someone
is at risk for suicide. The risk of
suicide is greater if a behavior
is new or has increased and
if it seems related to a painful
event, loss, or change.
Talking about wanting to
die or to kill themselves.
Looking for a way to kill
themselves, such as searching
online or buying a gun
Talking about feeling hopeless or having no reason to live.
Talking about feeling
trapped or in unbearable pain.
Talking about being a burden to others.
Increasing the use of alcohol or drugs.
Acting anxious or agitated;
behaving recklessly.
Sleeping too little or too
much.
Withdrawing or isolating
themselves.
Showing rage or talking
about seeking revenge.
Displaying extreme mood
swings.
If you or someone you know
exhibits any of these signs,
seek help as soon as possible by
calling the Lifeline at 1-800-273TALK (8255).
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
and she swerved to avoid the vehicle.
She lost control and slid off the roadway
causing her vehicle to flip on its side. The
only injury she reported was a leg injury
and was transported to the Anderson
County Hospital.
An accident was reported on
November 29 when a vehicle driven
by April L. Mynatt, 25, Kansas City,
Missouri, was traveling eastbound on
US-169 Highway at Maryland Road
when she lost control of her vehicle and
rolled into the south ditch.
JAIL LOG
Taylor Paul Brown, 21, Parker,
November 27, DUI 1st conviction,
bond set at $1,000.
Hope Elise Hunter, 39, Kincaid,
November 28, for a 48-hour writ.
Jerred Evan Price, 33, Ottawa,
November 29, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of certain hallucinogenic drug, bond set at $500.
Spencer Ryan Walter, 18, Garnett,
November 30, obstructing apprehension
of prosecution and purchase/consumption or possession of alcohol by minor,
bond set at $1,000.
Shawn Kelley Green, 24, Williamsburg,
November 30, DWS, bond set at $500.
Barton Alendander Fromme, 43,
Lenexa, December 2, probation violation, bond set at $5,000.
Terry Lee Clay, 37, Topeka, December
2, failure to appear, bond set at $450.
JAIL ROSTER
Samuel Van Patton was booked
into jail on November 21 for Anderson
County, bond set at $100,000.
David Gordon was booked into jail on
October 27 for Anderson County for 12
months.
David Engel was booked into jail on
November 24 for Anderson County, bond
set at $7,500.
Jacob Kratzberg was booked into jail
on October 28 for Anderson County, 90
days + 180 days.
Brandon Dulin was booked into jail on
November 1 for Anderson County, bond
set at $10,000 x2.
Dustin Johnson was booked into jail
on April 16 for Anderson County, bond
set at $10,000.
Chad Mueller was booked into jail on
July 29 for Anderson County, for a 236
day writ, release date of February 22,
2015.
Angel Prather was booked into jail on
November 7 for Anderson County, bond
set at $5,000.
Carl Hermreck was booked into jail
on September 12 for Anderson County,
bond set at $1,000.
Zebulon Akes was booked into jail on
August 1 for Anderson County, for KDOC
+ 2 holds.
George Voorhees was booked into jail
on September 18 for Anderson County,
bond set at $100,000.
Joseph Heubach was booked into jail
on November 21 for Anderson County,
for a 28-day sanction.
Starrett Burrough was booked into jail
on September 25 for Anderson County,
bond set at $10,000.
Barton Fromme was booked into jail
on December 2 for Anderson County,
bond set at $5,000.
FARM-INS
Jason Graves was booked into jail on
November 7 for Franklin County.
Matthew Broyles was booked into jail
on November 26 for Linn County.
Billy Richardson was booked into jail
on November 7 for Franklin County.
Bryan Troxel was booked into jail on
November 8 for Miami County.
Zach Johnson was booked into jail on
November 24 for Miami County.
Gary Burkholder was booked into jail
on November 7 for Franklin County.
Brandon Stoner Thebo was booked
into jail on November 26 for Linn
County.
Jessica Montgomery was booked into
jail on November 23 for Miami County.
Amber Baker was booked into jail on
November 17 for Douglas County.
Brett Emery was booked into jail on
October 17 for Miami County.
John Simmons was booked into jail
on November 15 for Linn County.
Jesse Irby was booked into jail on
November 15 for Linn County.
Douglas May was booked into jail on
November 13 for Miami County.
Malcolm Davis was booked into jail on
November 19 for Miami County.
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785-448-2616
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On the Square – At the corner of 4th and Oak
Downtown Garnett
Health Services
DIRECTORY
Eye Care
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
Pharmacy
Chiropractic
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Introduces
Chelsie Stainbrook, D.C.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
Rehabilitation
Specializing In
Manual Adjusting
Activator Technique
Acupuncture
Soft Tissue Therapies
To advertise in this
guide, contact Stacey
at The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
M-T-W-F 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Sat. 8-10 a.m.
After Hours By Appointment
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
STAHL
June 14, 1969-November 28, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published December 9, 2014
Russell Alan Stahl, 45, of
Garnett, passed away Friday, Nov.
28, 2014.
Memorial
services
are planned
for 10 a.m.
We d n e s d a y,
Dec. 10, at
Carnegie
Cultural
Center,
501
Stahl
S. Main in
Ottawa.
He was born June 14, 1969, in
Garnett, the son of John R. Stahl
and Bernice (Welsh) Decker.
He attended Holy Angels K-8 in
Garnett. He graduated Garnett
High School in 1987.
Russell was united in marriage
to Shelly Clark in September 1999
in Colorado. This marriage was
blessed with two children.
Russell was united in marriage
to Wendy Hicks on March 28, 2004,
in Garnett. They were blessed to
raise six children together for 15
and a half years.
Russell worked in construction
most of his adult life.
He enjoyed woodworking, making furniture and tinkering in his
shop. His passion was arrowheads
and he spent many days and nights
hunting them with his family and
friends. He also loved animals and
will always be remembered for the
love and compassion he had for his
dogs. He also was a huge K-State
fan and loved to watch football with
his boys.
Russell is survived by his wife,
Wendy Stahl, of the home; his
daughters, Jessica and her husband, Jerry Johnson of Ottawa; his
son, Jacob Stahl of Garnett; his
stepsons, Harley, Kody and Chevy
Crook of Garnett; two grandchildren, Bentley Crook of Garnett
and Raylee Johnson of Ottawa; his
father, John Stahl and wife Donna
of Williamsburg; his mother,
Bernice (Welsh) Decker of Garnett;
his brother, Richard Stahl and his
wife, Charlene, of Missouri; and
numerous aunts, uncles, cousins,
nieces, nephews and other relatives
and friends.
All flowers and contributions
can be sent to Ottawa Municipal
Auditorium, 301 S. Hickory, Ottawa
KS, in care of Wendy Stahl.
Farm Bill informational
meetings offered
Area farmers and ranchers
are invited and highly encouraged to attend one of the FSA
informational meetings to learn
about the farm program options
that are contained in the 2014
Farm Bill. The Agricultural
Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price
Loss Coverage (PLC) are the
two program options within the
bill. Learning more about ARC
and PLC is extremely important
for producers who must make a
one-time decision about base
and yield updates as well as
ARC or PLC election and enrollment decisions.
Attendees
will receive basic information
about the programs, learn the
eligibility requirements of the
programs, and be made aware
of the applicable deadlines for
the decisions that will need to
be made throughout the enrollment process. A representative
from the Extension Service will
also share information about
some tools they have available
to assist in deciding which program option may best fit your
particular farm. The meeting
times, dates, and locations are
as follows:
December 16, 1:30 p.m.,
at Allen Community College
Theatre Room in Agriculture/
Technology Building, 1801 N.
Cottonwood St., Iola.
December 16, 6:30 p.m. at
Allen Community College,
Theatre Room in Agriculture/
Technology Building, 1801 N.
Cottonwood St., Iola.
December 17, 1:30 p.m. at
Anderson County Fairgrounds,
Community Building, 709 N.
Lake Road, Garnett.
December 17, 6:30 p.m.,
Anderson County Fairgrounds,
Community Building, 709 N.
Lake Road, Garnett.
Persons needing special
accommodations should contact Doug Peine at 620-365-2901
or 785-448-3128 prior to the
meetings.
CHRISTMAS…
FROM PAGE 1A
ECKAN tries to find others
in the community willing to
adopt a family for Christmas.
By adopting a family, a person or family or organization
will provide gifts and food for
another family. The Angel Tree,
found at Alco and Garnett City
Hall, features families available
for adoption.
But last year, only 35 families out of 110 were adopted.
Lopez expects similar numbers this year. That means
the majority of families will
be helped directly through
ECKAN, which provides meals
and toys via donations from
people in the community,
organizations and businesses.
Lopez said volunteers with the
Spirit of Christmas committee
work to make sure every family
receives a meal and children
receive toys for Christmas.
Various businesses in the
community have set up collection boxes for people to leave
donations, including Dollar
General, Yoders Country
Store and Refined Recherished.
Anyone who wants to make a
donation also can do so directly
to ECKAN, by calling Lopez t
(785) 448-3670 or stopping by
the office at 132 E. Fifth Ave.,
Garnett. The office is open
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday,
Wednesday and Thursday; and
8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday and
Friday.
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
Santa now has a
direct mailbox here
in Garnett!
Write your letters and bring them to the mailbox located
at the Garnett Library by Dec. 17 during open hours.
In a few days, Santa will write a letter back to you!
So you better not pout, you better not cry.
Be kind to others! Because Santa is coming to town!
Parents: Be sure that the childs address is clearly
marked on the envelope so Santa can write back.
Sponsored by Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce and Santa
PROFESSIONAL TAX PREPARATION
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
Enrolled Agent
Representing Clients Before:
IRS Exam Division
IRS Collection Division
IRS Appeals Division
JO WOLKEN
TAX-TIME TAX SERVICE, INC.
785-448-3056 415 S. Oak, Garnett
New hospital provides full array of
out-patient specialty care services on-site
GARNETT As the doors to the new
Anderson County Hospital are about to
open, patients can expect to experience
true convenience in their health care delivery. Located just inside the entrance of the
hospital, the regions most respected and
highly-trained specialists will see patients
in the new hospitals out-patient specialty
clinic.
The clinic features 17 specialty clinics,12
exam rooms, and two procedure rooms.
In addition to on-site clinics, the new InTouch telecommunication technology
will expand specialty services through new
e-health technology, which allows out-oftown physicians to provide face-to-face
care without being physically on-site. The
hospital recently was able to add a pulmonology and cardiology clinic through
this technology. The list of specialty clinics now includes audiology; cardiology;
cataract surgery; dermatology; ear, nose &
throat; gastroenterology; gynecology and
obstetrics; neurology; orthopedics; podiatry; psychiatry; pulmonology; general surgery; rheumatology; a veterans clinic; and
urologyand it is expected to grow in the
near future.
The current list of specialists on staff at
the new hospital is extensive and includes
highly trained cardiologists who are on
staff at Saint Lukes Mid-America Heart
Unfiled Returns
Offers in Compromise
Liens & Levies
Innocent Spouse Relief
Audit Reconsiderations
Payroll Tax Problems
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
Institute, neurologists from Saint Lukes
Marion Block Neuroscience Institute, an
orthopedic surgeon and a general surgeon
from Saint Lukes South Hospital, and
hard-to-find specialties in rheumatology
and dermatology.
We want to be sure the community
knows that these specialists will be available each month at the Anderson County
Hospital Specialty Clinic, said Meggan
Newland, M.D., a Saint Lukes dermatologist who provides services for patients at
the specialty clinic. Bringing Saint Lukes
world-class level of care here to Garnett
on a regular basis is an invaluable benefit
to our patients and to those in need of specialty care.
Dr. Jeffrey Salin, orthopedic surgeon
at the new hospital, said, We are truly
excited to move into the new facility and
expand our services for the community.
As a surgeon, I appreciate the comprehensive scope of services available through
Anderson, with a full-service lab and radiology department on-site, and the opportunity to follow up with my patients locally
after procedures.
Out-patient rehabilitation, another
service on the continuum of care offered
to patients at the new Anderson County
Hospital, will be located just off the main
corridor of the new hospital. The new
Rehab Center will offer patients and families a variety of services to help them
achieve their optimal quality of life including physical, occupational, and speech
therapies. The new center has a large gym
with the latest rehabilitation equipment to
help patients reach their maximum potential after injury, illness, or decline. Large
full-length windows look out onto the outdoor rehabilitation area, which contains
different surfaces, steps, and a path so that
patients can work on maneuvering in all
terrains. Private treatment rooms, a kitchenette, and a bathroom model will help the
therapy team ensure all areas of care can
be addressed during treatment. The center
will provide in-patient and out-patient services to ensure patients have consistency
throughout their treatment plan.
According to Ryan Meyer, physical therapist and rehabilitation services manager,
Patients will have excellent opportunities
to recover with the full array of services
that were able to offer on-site. We are very
excited to continue caring for our patients
with the convenience of one location. Our
patients will appreciate the beautiful new
setting and the seamless care that we will
provide.
To find out more about out-patient services at Anderson County Hospital visit
saintlukeshealthsystem.org.
ACH…
FROM PAGE 1A
care services and staff.
The next couple of months
will be a whirlwind of preparation, as a transition team
gets the new building ready for
patients and prepares to vacate
the current facility. The team
is led by someone experienced
in moving hospitals, and has
helped staff think about things
like how to move patients
around the building.
You cant take your old
ways with you, Hachenberg
said. We had to arrive at the
conclusion of whats best for
patients. The building is very
patient-focused whats best
for them, how convenient is it
to check in and find out where
youre going.
Hachenberg thinks people
will be impressed with the new
building. Taxpayers should be
comforted knowing the project stayed within its $26 million budget, he said. In fact,
the project was so fiscally efficient that they were able to
take the unused contingency
fund money held aside for
unexpected problems and use
it to add two additional acute
care rooms and four additional
beds in the long term care unit,
he said.
Our financial and construction people have been watching expenses very closely.
Taxpayers are going to get a
very good value, Hachenberg
said.
Officials broke ground on
the facility in August 2013 after
county voters though only
38 percent of those eligible
approved a bond issue by 130
votes. That tax support leveraged a new lease arrangement
with St. Lukes Health System
that effectively increased the
lease payments frm $440,000
to about $1 million per year
which, if maintained through
the 30-year term of the bonds,
applies St. Lukes lease funds
to some 70 percent of the bond
payments.
Patients will be moved to
the new hospital on Jan. 29.
Hachenberg said that process
has undergone extensive planning, with a dress rehearsal,
dry run planned in hopes the
actual move will flow smoothly.
In the meantime, some equipment already is being installed
while other equipment wont
December 13 Garnetts Second Saturday
Folk Art Show Trimming of the Trees Caroling
Santa & Mrs. Claus Kids Art Golden Ticket Giveaway
Visit www.experiencegarnettks.com for
updates on Second Saturdays activities,
specials and entertainment.
garnett true value
4×6
Letters From Santa
3A
REMEMBRANCES
be moved until closer to the
transition date. Various private
and, later, public tours will be
offered before patients move in.
That will give people an opportunity to view parts of the hospital that wont be accessible
after it begins operating.
After patients move in, salvage work will begin to remove
outdated or unneeded items
from the old building. Some
items will be offered for public
sale, with money going back
to county coffers. Other salvage items, like scrap metal,
also will be sold before demolition of the old building begins.
Because of asbestos in some
areas of the 1949-era building,
particularly in the long term
care area, asbestos will need to
be mitigated before the demolition can be completed.
After the building is torn
down, construction can begin to
build a parking lot over the old
facilitys site. Hachenberg said
parking will be an issue between
landmark
2×4
January and about April, when
the parking lot is expected to
be completed. However, the
City of Garnett and Anderson
County Historical Society
Museum have agreed to allow
some parking at the museum.
Although hospital patrons will
need to cross the highway and
walk some distance to the new
building, it will offer additional
parking.
Were asking everyone
to have patience with us,
Hachenberg said. It will be difficult, but I think people will be
really impressed with the new
hospital.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc..
(785) 448-3121
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
EDITORIAL
The lies of Ferguson
A kid went bad, and at the age of 18 it
ended up costing him his life.
Everyone even those who indulge in their
heady denial of accountability in order to gain
political advantage from the incident knows
thats the real tragedy from Ferguson, Mo.;
that, and the fact race relations are probably
now at a 30-year low in the country after the
debacle that followed the exoneration of the
city cop who shot him.
But there are lies and there are truths
from Ferguson. There are superfluous posers
anxious for political gain from the deaths of
Michael Brown and more recently Eric Garner,
another black man who resisted arrest in New
York and died after a cop administered a choke
hold. Another grand jury reviewed that case
and last week agreed not to charge the officer.
The truths are hard ones for black culture
in America to confront. Accountability takes
guts and many not all but many folks in
the black community dont have what it takes
to admit the problem much less solve it. Its
far easier and more media-savvy to inflate a
scapegoat surrounding mistreatment by white
police, to deny obvious truths and to sound the
siren of racism in response to any argument.
Sometimes the lies are outright. As the St.
Louis County Grand Jury checked and double
checked witnesses who gave testimony from
the Ferguson incident, it became clear that
many of them didnt tell the same story every
time. In fact despite the prosecutors office
never having put it so bluntly in public, a
number of those witnesses flat out lied to
the Grand Jury. Many claimed to have witnessed the incident and later, upon struggling
cross examination, admitted they were simply
regurgitating the narrative that had become
popularized the false hands up, dont shoot
story. Yet, they were willing to perjure themselves in order to whitewash Michael Browns
final moments and have officer Darren Wilson
charged with a crime he didnt commit.
Another truth that cannot be spoken in
the post-Ferguson dialogue is that cops not
just white cops but any cops are more suspicious of potential black offenders because
of their own experience and because of statistical realities. According to a 2011 Bureau
of Justice Statistics report black offenders
nationwide outpaced white offenders nearly
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
800 percent, 34.4 per 100,000 for blacks and 4.5
per 100,000 for whites. So too are blacks more
often targeted as victims of crime six times
more often than whites according to the same
report 27.8 per 100,000 compared to 4.5 per
100,000. If cops are more nervous, suspicious
or cautious in their interactions with blacks
on their beats, its because facts bear out that
blacks (mostly young black men) are more
often a general threat particularly to those
of their own race.
Those stats dovetail even with the Michael
Brown incident, with surveillance video of
Brown stealing cigars from a local convenience store and strong arming its clerk shortly before he met up with Wilson.
Yet the dominant message coming from
black protesters is that blacks are targeted
wrongfully by law enforcement. That false
argument becomes justification in some segments of black culture for disobeying police
and resisting arrest. For most of us the idea
of confronting a cop or grabbing for his gun is
ludicrous, but not among black thug culture.
The same goes for looting and burning the
properties of innocent people to protest the
perception of some injustice.
The truth is Michael Brown and Eric
Garner would be alive today had they simply
complied with lawful police instructions. The
path that brought them to their final moments
was warped long ago by influences that had
nothing to do with white cops. To claim any
less is simply untrue.
No amount of excuses for bad judgment
and bad behavior will ever nor should ever
replace evidence in the eyes of a Grand
Jury.
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.
Hey I have a question for you, why should
the county give you a turkey? Are you
freakin kidding me? Uncle Obama has
given you so much for free without you
having to work like the rest of us that
now you think the county ought to give
you a turkey? If you dont want to go
to church, let me tell you, none of us
will miss you. Stay home and eat Spam.
Merry Christmas.
Hi, I thought the story on the Garnett
police department trying to find good officers and what they pay them and where
they make them live was very interesting.
Garnett and Anderson County both have
a big tendency to low-dollar everything
whether its people or equipment or whatnot. If you want good people youre going
to have to pay for good people. Thank you.
Why would any restaurant allow a person to loiter on their premises and create
such a mess in their bathrooms? Some of
us have just decided we cant eat there
anymore. We just dont understand why
this would be allowed in a public place.
Thank you.
To the person who keeps calling the Phone
Forum and complaining about the churches in town begging for money and not giving away turkeys and all this, and I assume
you are the same person because the last
several weeks Ive seen the same type of
comments in the Phone Forum going after
the churches, I have a suggestion for you.
Why dont you spend more time listening
to the message in your church and less
time judging them for everything they
do or dont do that doesnt suit you? You
might get more out of church if you adjust
your own attitude a little. Thank you.
The last thing we need in this town is a
Wal-Mart of any kind. Lets find something else to go into that ALCO building.
Key actors continue to play out Ferguson Charade
The White House response to Ferguson
wouldnt be complete without a meeting with
Al Sharpton, the infamous agitator who has
become President Barack Obamas go-to man
on race, in the words of a Politico headline
from last August.
So Sharpton was inevitably one of the civilrights leaders at the White House. The president no doubt passed up the opportunity to
direct Sharpton to the Treasury Department
up the street, which would surely love to have
him visit and make good on all the taxes he has
avoided paying through the years.
A New York Times report found that there
are $4.5 million in state and federal tax liens
against him and his businesses. If the rest of
the country had Sharptons accountant, there
would be no reason for anyone to call for tax
cuts. Our complex and onerous tax code would
be rendered irrelevant by simple nonpayment.
Sharpton has leveraged himself into respectability with the Democratic establishment by
making himself central to any national racial
controversy. By rights, he should have given
up any pretense to criminal forensics after his
defamatory role in the Tawana Brawley hoax
in the 1980s, but there he was at Ferguson, Mo.,
suggesting the worst despite what turned out to
be strong evidence that Officer Darren Wilson
acted lawfully.
When the grand jury found there was insuf-
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
ficient evidence to indict Wilson, Sharpton pronounced that the Ferguson protesters had lost
the battle, but not the war. What are they going
to do to win, go out and find another cop to
falsely accuse of a racial assassination and
attempt to railroad into an indictment and
conviction?
The Ferguson story has progressed from the
tragedy of the initial incident to the outrage of
the violence of the protests to a new phase of
charade. The federal government must pretend
to do something because it must … do something.
But what national initiative is going to stop
police officers from defending themselves when
they feel as if they are under mortal threat, as
Officer Wilson says he did?
The president wants funding for more bodyworn cameras for local police, a worthy-enough
experiment. But such a camera, assuming that
what it captured was consistent with the most
credible evidence, would have served to vindicate Wilsons version of events rather than the
protestors narrative of an extralegal killing.
The most needful reform in Ferguson and
surrounding communities, per the excellent
reporting of Radley Balko of The Washington
Post, is the end of the obnoxious and parasitic
practice of squeezing revenue out of residents
with fines from traffic and other petty offenses.
This creates an incentive for police to hassle
motorists and is especially burdensome to poor
residents. Since this issue is exceedingly local
and dull, almost no one talks about it.
The facts have stopped mattering in
Ferguson, if they ever did. It is probably destined to live on in the roll call of locales, like
Selma and Birmingham, that are bywords for
civil-rights abuses. Never mind that this distorts what happened in Ferguson and belittles
the memory of past civil-rights battles. There
are too many people too vested in the myth,
with Al Sharpton leading the way.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Legislators will decide what Kansans dont need
Already, there is a gnawing back-of-the-mind
feeling that this may be the first Legislature
weve seen in recent memory that has been
elected to take things away from the people they
represent.
That puts a whole new face on the Legislature
which generally people elect in hopes that their
state government is going to do nice things, fix
problems, make things, well, better and more
convenient for all of us.
Now, this cutting of services isnt going to be
the way it will be presented, of course. But very
practically, this will be the session where budgets, and the services they provide, either get
cut or the cost of those services gets shunted to
other units of government that dont have a link
to the State General Fund where the state keeps
its tax money.
Thats what happens when tax cuts two years
ago reduced revenue and the state starts spending down the reserves in the State General
Fund.
Last summer on July 1, the state budget
looked like this: $709 million of carryover from
the previous fiscal year, revenues of $5.6 billion, and a total of about $6.3 billion to spend.
Lawmakers approved a budget that spent just
$5.9 billion, and there was a surplus of $380 million in the general fund. Not bad.
But for this year, that carryover money, and
about $5.7 billion in new revenues plus spending
of $6.3 billion, puts the state about $280 million
in the red. The year after this? Estimates are
that there will be $5.8 billion in revenues and
expenditurescut by about $150 millionbut
still about $435 million less than needed to keep
up with costs, such as K-12 education aid, pen-
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
sion funding and care of the poor.
So, were looking at either an increase in
taxesunlikelyor further cuts in spending.
Which means that things that the state does
nowmaybe contributing toward public education, providing care for the poor, repairing
highways, fighting crime and even making sure
that the food served in restaurants is safewill
have to be reduced.
So, essentially, those 19 fresh-faced new legislators who get sworn in next month get to start
chopping away at spending. Its making those
cuts in the most politically acceptable way that
is the real challenge.
You may not care that cattle on Kansas farms
are brand-inspected to make sure they havent
been stolen. If thats not a big deal, or you just
eat the meat, not the branded hides, well, you
might not care about brand inspection. But
were betting if you had a couple hundred head
of cattle worth $2,000 or $2,500 each, youd want
to make sure that they dont get stolen.
Now, thats a single issue. But, what if, to
make the budget numbers work, the Legislature
had to cut the Highway Patrol budget about the
time you get sideswiped on the highway, or your
school district says without more state aid, its
going to have to increase the number of children
in classrooms or raise your property taxes to
pay for the cost of teachers for reasonable-sized
classes?
What can you do without? Or, what can city
dwellers do without that rural Kansans need?
Maybe nobodys shooting pheasant from your
deck, but there are thousands of square miles
of land owned by rural Kansans who want and
need that hunting to be regulated.
So, does it come down to cutting spending
in a manner that the fewest Kansans notice?
Or just finding some percentage by which all
spending on everything is cut, and everything
seems, well, fair, but not really businesslike?
Thats the real choice here.
And, its probably worth remembering that
every dollar the state spends is to do something
that a majority of Kansans, or at least their
legislators, think is a necessaryor maybe just
nicething to do.
Thats what makes the upcoming session a
little different than weve seen in recent years.
Its about what lawmakers and the governor
take away.
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of
Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawvers
Capitol Reportto learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the
website at www.hawvernews.com
So should you get a ticket in this town if
you warn people that there is radar by
flashing your light? If you do, thats taking
our taxpayers money and the police are
using it against us. Just food for thought.
I just want to say I am going to miss
ALCO.
The City of Garnett should do away with
the police department since we have the
highway patrol and the sheriffs department here in town, and shame on the
City of Garnett and Anderson County for
hiring officers who still live with their
parents.
GACC parade
was a success
Letter to the Editor:
Another year of a successful Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce parade. It would not
be successful without the Chamber Board, the
City of Garnett and the many, many people that
entered floats, walked, danced and played music
in the parade.
We have alot
of background
people to thank
starting with
Joyce Martin
and City crews
for the lighting of the beautiful lights, Preston
Peine for the announcing, Everett Cox and family for the music and PA system. The Second
Saturday singers and their performances after
the parade. The Fire Dept for letting Santa visit
with over 70 children in the firehouse at their
annual chili supper. Thank you to the whole
community for supporting the efforts of this
project. Thank you to the judges, which was a
very hard job.
All floats were winners, but the top three are:
1st Place Kincaid-Selma; 2nd Place Patriots
Banks; 3rd Place Friends of the Prairie Spirit
Trail. Congratulations to Don and Bonnie Lile,
this years Grand Marshalls and to Garrett Bures
for naming our Christmas parade.
Again thank you all for joining us downtown
on the square for a beautiful warm evening to
bring celebration to the holiday season.
Many thanks,
Helen Norman
GACC President
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
5A
LOCAL
Notice to foreclose mortgage Notice to settle Stifter estate Notice to settle Beachy estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, December 9, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
MidFirst Bank
Plaintiff,
vs.
Larry D. Herlocker; Crystal D. Herlocker; United
States of America, Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development; United States of America,
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development;
John Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Mary Doe
(Tenant/Occupant),
Defendants.
Case No. 14CV44
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
NOTICE OF SUIT
THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the abovenamed defendants and the unknown heirs,
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
creditors and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants;
the unknown officers, successors, trustees,
creditors and assigns of any defendants that
are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators,
devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and
assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians,
conservators and trustees of any defendants
that are minors or are under any legal disability;
and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns
of any person alleged to be deceased, and all
other persons who are or may be concerned.
You are notified that a Petition has been
filed in the District Court of Anderson County,
Kansas, praying to foreclose a real estate mortgage on the following described real estate:
THE EAST 40 FEET OF LOTS 121, 123,
125, 127, 129, 131, 133 AND 135 IN BLOCK
TWENTY (20) , TOGETHER WITH THE WEST
HALF (W/2) OF VACATED ARTHUR STREET
IN WHAT WAS FORMERLY ORCHARD PARK
ADDITION TO THE CITY OF GARNETT BEING
A PART OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER
(NE/4) OF SECTION TWENTY-FIVE (25),
NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION
TWENTY-FIVE (25) , TOWNSHIP TWENTY
(20) SOUTH, RANGE NINETEEN (19) EAST
OF THE SIXTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, IN
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS ALSO MORE
CORRECTLY DESCRIBED AS: THE EAST
40 FEET OF LOTS 121 123, 125, 127, 129,
131, 133 AND 135 IN BLOCK TWENTY (20) ,
TOGETHER WITH THE WEST HALF (W/2) OF
VACATED ARTHUR STREET IN WHAT WAS
FORMERLY ORCHARD PARK ADDITION TO
THE CITY OF GARNETT BEING A PART
OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER (NE/4) OF
SECTION TWENTY-FIVE (25) TOWNSHIP
TWENTY (20) SOUTH, RANGE NINETEEN (19)
EAST OF THE SIXTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN,
IN ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS, commonly
known as 805 First Avenue West, Garnett, KS
Anderson
County Farm
Bureau has
babysitters
clinic Nov. 22
The Babysitting Clinic was
held Saturday, November 22 at
the Anderson County Annex
sponsored by Anderson County
Farm Bureau Association.
Guest speakers were: Deputy
Steve Duckworth, Anderson
County Sheriff Dept., spoke
on how to handle 911 emergencies and personal safety;
Liza Perry, Anderson County
Junior High School Counselor
spoke on managing young
children at different age levels and Emergency Medical
Technicians Jason McManus
and Michael Steedley for the
Anderson County Ambulance
Service, spoke on first aid and
how to handle medical emergencies.
Completing the course
were Alison Brown, Katina
Brown, Maddison Buster, Ally
Duke, Lily Feuerborn, Hallie
Fritz, Addey Froggatte, Anna
Hermreck, Madison Hermreck,
Abby Johnston, Remi Kennard,
Alex Knight, Brooke McAfee,
Mya Miller, Allaire Reed,
Zilly Reed, Alex Sommer, Zee
Sommer, Evelan Steele, Sydney
Stephans, Braxton Weide,
Abbie Wiesner, Amie Wiesner
and Lathan Woodson.
Anderson County Farm
Bureau provided lunch and
packets of babysitting information. Cindy Ecclefield,
Anderson Co. Farm Bureau
Coordinator put on the clinic.
Helping that day was her husband Gary Ecclefield.
Organizers said they were
grateful to speakers for taking the time out of their busy
schedules to help present this
important program.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.. (785)
448-3121
66032 (the Property)
and all those defendants who have not
otherwise been served are required to plead
to the Petition on or before the 19th day of
January, 2015, in the District Court of Anderson
County,Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment
and decree will be entered in due course upon
the Petition.
NOTICE
Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. 1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt
may be given without the prior consent of the
consumer given directly to the debt collector or
the express permission of a court of competent
jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to
collect a debt and any information obtained will
be used for that purpose.
Prepared By:
South & Associates, P.C.
Mark Mellor (KS # 10255)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS 67202
(316)684-7733
(316)684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(150892)
dc9t3
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, December 9, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
ROY A. STIFTER, Executor of the
Estate of John L. Stifter, Decd
Plaintiff
Vs
BANKERS TRUST COMPANY OF
CALIFORNIA,
FENLAR FSB, and the unknown assignees,
If any; and the unknown officers, Successors,
trustees, creditors, and assigns of any defendants which are existing, dissolved or dormant
corporations or similar entities; the unknown
executors, administrators, devisees, trustees,
creditors, successors and assigns of any
defendants who are or were partners or in partnership and all other persons or entities who
may have or claim to have an interest in the
property hereinafter described,
Defendants
Case No. 14-CV-47
NOTICE OF SUIT
The state of Kansas to Bankers Trust
Company of California and FENLAR, FSB, and
all other defendants named above by class
and to all other persons who are or may be
concerned:
You and each of you are hereby notified
that a petition has been filed in the abovenamed court by plaintiff, praying that his decedents title to a manufactured home, more particularly described in said petition and which is
presently situate in Anderson County, Kansas,
be quieted, and that you and each of you, and
any person claiming by, through or under you
and any of you, be forever barred restrained
and enjoined from setting up or claiming any
right title, interest, estate, equity, lien or claim in
or to said manufactured home.
You are hereby required to plead to the
petition on or before the 20th day of January,
2015, in the above court at Garnett, Kansas. If
you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be
entered in due course upon said petition.
ROY A. STIFTER, Executor of
John L. Stifter, Decd
Plaintiff
TERRY J. SOLANDER #7280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
dc9t3
Holiday
Shopping
Guide
For someone who has everything,
give kitchen gadgets
Grab
& specialty foods.
A Dip
Let these local
businesses
help you nd
the perfect gift
for the special
someone in
your life.
Mix
Make your presents felt
421 S. Oak Garnett 785-448-3038
Open Monday thru Saturday to Christmas
facebook.com/Josephinesgifts
Come in for the
Best Selection of
Wines & Spirits.
If we dont have
what you are
looking for,
we will
special order
it for you.
Askins-Beller Liquor
Corner of 1st & Hwy. 59
Garnett
785-448-5524
Fridays 1:0023
– 5 p.m.
Saturdays 10:00 24
– 5:00 p.m.
Sundays 12:00 25
– :00 p.m.
Open Evenings 5:30 – 10:00
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
and Christmas Eve
AD
3×10.5
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, November 25, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Anna M. Beachy, deceased.
No. 14PR29
NOTICE OF HEARING AND NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are notified that a Petition was filed
in this Court by Raymond Yoder, conservator
for Mahlon J. Beachy, a beneficiary of Anna M.
Beachy, deceased, requesting that, the foreign
will of Anna M. Beachy be admitted to probate
and record in this Court, no administration of
the Estate is necessary; the will be construed,
and the following Kansas real estate owned
by the decedent, situated in Anderson County,
Kansas:
Undivided 1/14 interest in the The West
Half (W/2) of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4)
of Section Twenty-one (21), Township Twenty
AD
2×5
(20), Range Nineteen (19), Anderson County,
Kansas.
Undivided 1/14 interest in the The
Southeast Quarter (SE/4) of the Southeast
(SE/4) of Section Twenty (20), Township
Twenty (20), Range Nineteen (19), Anderson
County, Kansas.
Be assigned in accordance with the
terms of the Will.
You are required to file your written
defenses to the Petition on or before December
22, 2014, at 9:00 a.m. in the District Court, in
the City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas,
at which time and place the cause will be heard.
Should you fail to file your written defenses,
judgment and decree will be entered in due
course upon the Petition.
Raymond Yoder
Petitioner
Jesse T. Randall
Attorney at Law
512 Main Street, P.O. Box 301
Mound City, Kansas 66056
913-795-2514
Attorney for Petitioner
Nv25t3
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
LOCAL
Pieces and Patches Quilt Guild plans Christmas luncheon
The Pieces and Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
President, Charlotte Lutz, on
November 20, 2014 at 9:30am at
the Anderson County extension
meeting room. Roll call was
answered by 24 members and
one guest, Linda Miller. The
minutes of the October meeting
were approved as printed in the
newsletter. Terrie Gifford gave
the treasurers report.
Charlotte
Lutz
again
requested that members sign
up for committees for 2015 on
the sheet being passed around.
She reviewed the committee
members who have already
signed up for 2015.
Committee Reports:
Program — Bonnie Deiter
reported that the Quilt in a Day
books that had been ordered
have been distributed. Bonnie
reported on some upcoming
quilt shop sales. Chris from
Chriss Corners will present the
January program on Antique
Quilts. It was decided that the
February program would consist of members showing their
antique quilts. There seemed
to be some interest to take a
bus trip in the summer to the
Missouri Star company. Bonnie
will get more details.
Anderson County fair – Terrie Gifford reported that
she talked with Nancy Schuster
about items discussed at our
last meeting about the fair.
Nancy was fine with our ideas
and will try to have the judge
for the quilts come at noon
rather than 1pm.
Block of the Month Gayle
Metobo distributed the last patterns which includes the corner and center blocks and the
border. Bonnie Deiter reported that the 2015 Block of the
month will begin in January
and members will sign up for
each of the 12 months and
provide the instructions for the
block. It should be a 12 12 inch
unfinished open source block
and the member should be creative and provide copies of the
instructions and show the finished block at the meeting.
Christmas Luncheon The
luncheon will follow our meeting on December 18. The committee will provide the food
and members are to bring $3
to cover the cost. Secret sisters
will be revealed at this meeting and for members who do
not have a secret sister if they
wish they may bring a gift to
exchange.
Quilt Rack Charlotte
suggested that this committee
come up with ideas for funds
for new quilt racks.
Care and feeding of farm animals
Farmers and ranchers have
always adhered to sound principles of animal husbandry while
providing the best care for their
livestock. Societys views on
animal welfare, on the other
hand, continue to evolve.
Today, people are becoming
more concerned for the animals quality of life.
While there are extreme
fringe groups, activists if you
will, many people today have
honest questions and concerns
about the quality of life for animals while they are in the production environment.
Who are these people?
These people are average
individuals. Some are like you.
Others may be like me. Many
are one, two, three or more
generations removed from the
farm and no longer understand
what goes into the care and
feeding of farm animals.
Most of these people are not
opposed to eating meat. They
believe it is OK for people to
eat animals for food. They just
want to know while that sow is
going through the production
cycle she has a reasonable quality of life.
Raising livestock on the farm
or ranch is a dynamic, specialized profession that has proven
one of the most successful in
the world. Only in the United
States can less than 2 percent
of the population feed 100 percent of our population and
other people around the world
as efficiently as we do.
Todays animal husbandry is
no accident. Because our livestock are the best cared for, we
can provide such efficiency.
Farmers and ranchers work
hard, long hours to care for
and nurture their livestock.
Farmers and ranchers are neither cruel nor naive. A farmer
would compromise his or her
own welfare if animals were
mistreated.
We love our animals, says
Dana Pieper. We want to produce healthy animals that will
one day feed others. We produce beef animals that are destined to be food for all of us.
Insight
by John Schlageck
Kansas Farm Bureau
Dana and David Pieper operate Pieper Land & Cattle Co.
near Palco in northwestern
Kansas. The land where they
run cattle and farm has been
in Danas family for more than
130 years. Her grandpas greatuncles settled this land on a
timber claim from the Union
Pacific Railroad.
Pieper is the 5th generation
to farm and ranch in Rooks
County. More than anything,
she wants to carry on her family
livestock operation and provide
an opportunity for her children
to continue this legacy.
Ive always known this is
where I would one day end up,
Dana says. I hope one day our
children, Cody and Cady, will
raise and care for cattle here.
Dana is a hands-on producer
and their family herd consists
of approximately 40 fall calving
cows, 150 registered Hereford
spring calving cows and 150
commercial black and black
baldie spring calving cows.
Our cattle eat, sleep, drink,
walk and reproduce, Pieper
says. Theyre living creatures.
Caring for them gives us a
chance to be in charge of each
and every animals welfare.
Many
consumers
are
unaware of a farmers relationship with their animals. They
dont know how meat, milk,
eggs and other food products
wind up on their dinner table.
Few know all that goes into caring, feeding and nurturing of
livestock on farms and ranches
across Kansas.
Kansas farmers and ranchers are committed to continuing the enhancement of animal
well-being throughout the life
cycle of their food-producing
animals. Todays producers
remain dedicated to using all
the scientific measures avail-
able to develop long-term management options and short-term
production practices based on
scientific research findings
about animal well-being.
That said, todays consumers will continue to regard
the profession of farming and
ranching highly, and embrace
a quality, abundant food source
they value second to none.
John Schlageck is a leading commentator on agriculture
and rural Kansas. Born and
raised on a diversified farm in
northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.
The
Garnett
Area
Community Band will be
performing a special The
Wild West Meets Christmas
concert for the holidays at
3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 14, at
the auditorium at Anderson
County Jr./Sr. High School.
Under the direction of
Jeff Russell, the program
will
combine
Western
and cowboy songs, such
as Rawhide, Blazing
Saddles, The Garry Owen
March, She Wore a Yellow
Ribbon, Hoe Down, and
more, with traditional favorites: A Canadian Brass
Christmas Suite, How the
Grinch Stole Christmas,
and traditional carols.
The Garnett area musicians are joined by musicians
from LaCygne, Richmond,
Lane, Lawrence, Olathe,
Ottawa, Osawatomie and
Westphalia. There will be a
special performance by The
Depot Brass.
As in years past, refreshments (free-will donation)
will be served immediately
following the concert in the
Commons Area. Everyone is
encouraged to come, enjoy
the entertaining music and
visit with friends, family and
neighbors.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.. (785) 448-3121
Motivated seller! Beautiful home with awesome front porch!
Large eat-in kitchen. Large living room. Full finished basement
with game room. Three large bedrooms up. Master bedroom is on
the main level with large master bath. Every man will love this
40×36 heated building with sliding doors on the west and the south.
Price reduced! $247,400. To learn more about this listing or for a
showing, contact Carla Walter, C.D. Schulte Agency, Inc., 114 W.
Fourth Ave., Garnett KS. (785) 448-6191.
MOTIVATED SELLER! THIS HOME NEEDS A FAMILY! Beautiful
home with lots of room! 3 bedrooms and 3 full baths. Large eat-in
kitchen. Formal dining & living room. Very Cozy family room with
wood-burning fireplace. Large laundry room with lots of storage.
Full finished basement. 2 car attached garage and storage building.
Covered patio with a good size yard. PRICE REDUCED $146,995.
BEAUTIFUL CHARMING HOME on corner lot. 4 Bedroom, 2 1/2 bath. Galley kitchen. Formal dining room. Large living room with gas fireplace. Beautiful woodwork
throughout the home. Also has beautiful hardwood floors. Full basement with a
beautiful rock fireplace. 2 car detached garage. House sits on a very treed corner lot.
PRICE REDUCED $120,000.
MOTIVATED SELLER! BRING OFFERS! Beautiful home! Enjoy the
new changes! New carpet. New kitchen floor. Newly painted kitchen
cabinets with all new hardware. Living room and kitchen have new
paint. Garage floor is new. Roof was new in 2008. 3 bedroom and
2 bath. Good size deck with lots of shade. Plenty of yard room for a
garden. Storage shed. Great neighborhood. LOWERED TO $110,000.
THIS SMALL TOWN CHARMER IS AMAZING! There is so much character in this
home, its a must see. Wonderful front porch for your porch swing. Hardwood
floors throughout the home, thermal windows with wooden blinds, a wonderful
kitchen with a breakfast nook, & back porch, mud room, office – you could use it
for almost anything, walks out to nice deck in back yard. Lots of storage space, full
unfinished basement with several separated rooms for your choice of what to use
them for & a 1/2 bath too. $118,614.
Consumer
Corner
Ask about our Real Estate Auction Service 785-448-6191
by Derek Schmidt
Agents to assist you:
Carla Walter, Broker
(785) 448-7658
114 W. 4th, Garnett
(785) 448-6191
(800) 530-5971
(785) 448-6200
Kansas Attorney General
nizations you are interested in.
Most charitable organizations
in the state are required by law
to register with the Secretary
of States Office. You can check
a charitys registration online
at www.KsCharityCheck.org.
On that website, you will also
find helpful information about
the organization, including how
much of the money it raises
goes to support the charitable
purpose and how much is spent
on fundraising expenses.
Check with your tax preparer. If youre planning on
taking a tax deduction for your
contribution, check with your
tax preparer to make sure the
organization qualifies to receive
tax-deductible contributions.
Document the transaction.
Keep records of how much you
donated and where you sent the
check. Always give by check
or credit card so the transaction can be traced. Never wire
funds or send money on prepaid cash cards. Once money
is sent by these methods, it
is almost impossible to get it
back.
For more safe giving tips,
or to report a suspicious charity, visit the attorney generals
consumer protection website
at www.InYourCornerKansas.
org, or call (800) 432-2310.
a t shirt scarf, Sharon Rich a
quilt, Joan Truhe 2 lap quilts
and 2 baby quilts for charity,
Lou Ann Shmidl napkins and
gift bags, Violet Holt 2 table
runners, Marlene Walburn 2
charity quilts, Joleata Kent a
rug hooking bench cover, Judy
Stukey Dancing Star quilt top,
Lynn Wawrzewski Christmas
ornaments, Ruth Theis a quilt,
Terrie Gifford a quilt and baby
blanket.
Judy Stukey provided a
donation and challenged other
members to donate to the Quilt
rack Fund.
Nancy Kreibach presented
the program on Paper Piecing.
Garnett band to give Christmas concert
Give wisely this holiday season
The holiday season is once
again upon us. As we gather
with our families to give thanks
for our blessings over the past
year, it is also the time of year
we especially think of those in
need.
Kansans are generous, giving people, with both their time
and money. Whether it is volunteering time to serve your
community or donating money
to a worthy cause, these efforts
make Kansas a great place to
live.
Unfortunately, while there
are many fine charitable organizations in our state worthy
of our support, there are also
scam artists who know that
this is a tempting time of year
to take advantage of Kansans
giving spirit. Here are some
helpful hints to make sure your
donations go to support a good
cause, not to a scammers pocket:
Be cautious. Scammers
often take advantage of recent
tragedies to lure you into giving to a fake charity. Recently
our office has received reports
of solicitations for Ebola relief
and help for areas hit by natural disasters. Instead of giving
over the phone, ask them to
send you information in writing so you can verify that the
charity is legitimate.
Plan your giving. Make a
list of charitable organizations
you want to support and a budget for how much you plan to
give each organization. Do not
wait for a solicitation to come
by mail or the telephone and
get pressured into making a
donation.
Do your homework. Take
the time to research the orga-
Old Business Rose
Dennison moved and it was
seconded by Lou Ann Shmidl
to continue to draw for Secret
Sisters but to remember only
their birthdays. Motion carried.
New Business Terri
Gifford suggested that members who are interested bring
a sack lunch to the January
meeting and then stay in the
afternoon to work on Charity
quilts or a project of their own.
Secret Sister gift was received
by Ruth Theis
Show and Tell — The following items were shown: Bonnie
Deiter a toilet bowl cover and
info@garnettrealestate.com
Visit our informative website at:
www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all
MLS listings & more.
Serving our
community for
over 50 years.
Sue Archer
(785) 448-3298
Carol Barnes (785) 448-5300
Ron Ratliff
(785) 448-8200
Scott Schulte (785) 448-5351
Michelle Ware (785) 214-8489
Juanita Brecht (785) 418-3883
Call us for a quote on all of your insurance needs
No step in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch. His and Her closets
in Master bedroom. Formal dining room and eat-in kitchen.
Large living room with lots of built-ins. 2 car attached garage.
$89,500.
There is plenty of room for the whole family
in this 1 1/2 story home. 3+ bedrooms, 2 baths.
Original woodwork. Enclosed front porch/
sunroom. Back patio. On a corner lot. Large
detached one car garage with workshop area.
Central heat. $39,500.
1930s style bungalow has 2 bedrooms and 1 bath. Bath
and kitchen have been remodeled. Original hardwood floors
under carpet. Dining room. Enclosed front porch. Detached
garage. On Large lot (180 x 140) where there is room for
garden, play area for children or whatever. Close to walking
trail and area park. Central heat and air. $49,500.
Commercial Lots
1.8 acres corner of 169 Hwy. and 4th Ave. City utilities
available Cement pad. Located near airport. Zone light
industrial/commercial. Reduced $24,500
3.8 acres zoned commercial. City utilities may be available.
Located across from new motel on 169 Hwy. $39,995
Cute and cozy bungalow home with 2
bedrooms and 1 bath. Bedrooms have double
closets. Large living room has new carpet.
Kitchen/dining combo. Beautiful wood cabinets
in kitchen. White picket fenced front yard. 1 car
attached garage. Central heat and air. $48,975.
Building Lots
Star & Hayes – Large corner lot located near
area JR-SR High School. $10,000
Lakeview Estates Lot – Reduced $17,495
913-884-4500
Chris Cygan – Broker 785-418-5435
100 ACRES – West Franklin County, crop, pasture, large
timber, river frontage, 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath home with
several updates. Hunting/Fishing Lodge? Tons of deer &
turkey. Hobby Farm? This is the small farm everyone asks for
and ONLY $295,000. Reduced to $289,000.
FALL BARGAIN – 37.5 Acres, good quality crop land, central
heights area, 2 water meters included! $89,900.
VIEWS-VIEWS – 10 acres, Big hillside, water meter included,
scattered trees. Opportunity Time $42,500. $39,900.
LOCATION, LOCATION – 8.5 acres on paved road corner, water
meter included $39,950. Owner finance with $1,950 down.
OFFICE- GREAT 59 Hwy. location! Use mobile office building in
place or build new. Great investment to rent or use. Tons of
options and price to sell at only $64,950. OWNER SAYS BRING
OFFERS!!
Need to sell? Just call, well get it done!
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Wright, Dick engaged
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
Kenneth and Terri Wright of
Garnett and Daniel and Rhonda
Dick of Garnett would like to
formally announce the engage-
ment of their children, Jena
Marie Wright and Wesley Todd
Ahring.
Artherton retires
Marilyn Artherton is retiring from her position as Senior
Coordinator for the First
Christian Church in Garnett.
She served in the position for
11 years and was also a teacher in USD 365 for 32 years.
She plans to move to Newton
and retire with her sisters.
A farewell open house
will be held for her Saturday,
December 13, from 2 to 4 at the
First Christian Church. The
public is invited to attend.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 /
Photo Submitted
7A
LOCAL
The best gift ever
In Isaiah 9:6-7 the word of
the LORD came to the prophet
and Isaiah prophesied concerning the birth of Jesus Christ
as follows. For to us a child
is born, to us a son is given,
and the government will be on
his shoulders. And he will be
called Wonderful Counselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting
Father, Prince of Peace. Of
the increase of his government
and peace there will be no end.
He will reign on Davids throne
and over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with
justice and righteousness from
that time on forever. The zeal
of the LORD Almighty will
accomplish this.
This prophecy is made centuries before the birth of Christ
and is so clear in Isaiahs mind
that he speaks concerning it
in the past tense, like it has
already occurred. At approximately the same time the word
of the LORD came to a minor
prophet by the name of Micah
who pronounced this oracle
over Bethlehem. But you
Bethlehem Ephrathah, though
you are small among the clans
of Judah, out of you will come
for me one who will be ruler
over Israel, whose origins are
from old, from ancient times.
(Micah 5:2)
We now have the announcement of the birth of Christ
as well as his birth place centuries before it occurred. In
Luke 2 we read of the birth of
Jesus. Required by a decree
from Caesar Augustus to
register for a worldwide census people returned to their
ancestral homes for registration which made it easier to
list families for the purpose
of taxation. Israel was under
Roman rule at the time and the
burden of taxation was heavy.
So Joseph and Mary traveled
Ga
Weekly
Devotional
by David Bilderback
from Nazareth to Bethlehem
to register. When they arrived
in Bethlehem the time came
for her to give birth and she
gave birth to her firstborn son,
wrapped in cloths and laid him
in a manger because there was
no room in the inn.
Nearby there were shepherds out in the fields keeping
watch over their flocks. And an
angel of the LORD appeared to
them and the glory of the Lord
shone round them. We read
that the shepherds were afraid
not unlike you or I would be if
we saw the glory of the Lord
shown round us and we saw a
multitude of the heavenly host
above us praising God. The
angel assured the shepherds
that the message was one of
good news and great joy for
all the people. We read then
that the shepherds went to
Bethlehem and found Jesus on
Christmas.
I dont know what your situation is this Christmas. A fair
question would be what does
Christmas mean to you? Is your
Christmas so crowded there is
no room for Jesus? You and I
must look into our heart to find
the answer to these questions.
It is my hope and prayer that if
you dont know Jesus you will
find him this Christmas just
as the shepherds did. Accept
Jesus as a gift from God just
as you would accept any other
gift.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
Brittni L Sayers (on left) pictured with her nurse manager Sandi
Jenson(right at the Colmery-ONeil VA Medical Center in Topeka,
Kansas. Brittni was selected as a VALOR (Veteran Affairs Learning
Opportunity Residency) Student in April 2014. Brittni was recently
awarded a National Ranger Memorial Foundation scholarship.
Sayers earns scholarship
CENTERVILLE – A nursing
student from Garnett attending Baker University has been
awarded a $1,000 scholarship
from a national foundation that
supports U.S. Army Rangers
and their families past and
present.
The
National
Ranger
Memorial Foundation, Inc.,
awarded Brittni Sayers of
Centerville the scholarship
after her application was evaluated on the basis of leadership, future goals and previous
honors and awards received.
Applicants also were required
to have a minimum 3.0 grade
point average to qualify. Sayers
won a 2009 award from the foundation just prior to her freshman year after she graduated
from Anderson County High
School. Both Sayers father and
brother served as U.S. Army
Rangers.
Brittni Sayers was in
the 2/4 Infantry, 3d Infantry
Division, LRRP (Long Range
Reconnaissance Patrol) which
was later designated one of the
predecessor units to the 75th
Ranger Regiment. Her brother,
Kurt, was in the 75th Ranger
Regiment and he is also a graduate of the US Army Ranger
School.
Sayers was one of 30 NRMF
scholarship winners this year.
The scholarship fund was
established in 1999 as part of
the continuing mission of
the foundation to support the
Ranger community past, present and future. An endowment
fund was created that year to
fund the annual awards.
She is the daughter of Loren
and Susie Sayers of Centerville.
She attends the Baker
University School of Nursing.
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday 9am
Wednesday 7:30pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Mark McCoy
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School 9am
Morning Worship 10:00am
Evening Worship 6:30pm
Wednesday Service 7pm
(785) 448-3208 258 Park, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Phil Rhoades
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 10am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Pastor Darrel Herde
Youth & Childrens Pastor – Chris Goetz
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3558
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
LWML 2nd Sunday 11:30am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ervin A. Daugherty Jr.
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9 am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9:28 am
Sunday Worship 10:28 am
Childrens Church 10:30 am
Wed. Evening Bible Study 6:28 pm
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Mike Farran
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm, Youth Mtg. 7pm
Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ron Jones
BEACON OF TRUTH
Saturday Sabbath Worship 9:30am
Saturday Evening Service 6pm
(except 4th Saturday)
Wednesday Evening Prayer Svc. 7:00pm
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
email review@garnett-ks.com
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – Andy Frye
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15am
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am/Thurs 7pm
Chancel Bells Wed 6pm
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
Jr. & Sr. UMYF Sundays
U.M. Women 1st Wednesday
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
Reverend – Bill Driver
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:45am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
Pastor – Butch Ritter
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
GREELEY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship 9am
Bible Study (Teens, Adults) 10am
Sunday School (Children) 10am
204 N. Main, PO Box 37, Greeley, KS 66033
(913) 755-2225
Pastor – Bill Driver
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 489-2440
RR 1, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Kenneth Davidson
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 8:30am
Fr. Marianand Mendem
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Marianand Mendem
(620) 364-2416
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
25,000 customers read us
EVERY WEEK just for your ads!
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
ads@tradingpostdeals.com
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Heating &
Air Conditioning
(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Sunday School 9:30am
Worship Service 10:30am
2nd & Pine, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Cody Knapik
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 10:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Minister – Rev. John G. Sheehan
For additions, subtractions or changes to your
church information, a church official may
contact the Review at (785) 448-3121.
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
8A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
SPORTS
Bulldogs struggle at Fort Scott Dual Tourney Hicks earns Sunflower
The Anderson County high
school wrestling team traveled to Fort Scott on Saturday,
December 6, and wrestled in
the Fort Scott Dual tournament
against some tough competition against Paola, Blue Valley
Southwest, Louisburg, Shawnee
Mission West, and Fort Scott.
The Bulldog wrestling squad
did not win a dual but many
individuals did well on the
team.
The first dual of the day was
against a very tough Paola team
with eight seniors on the fourteen team member squad and
only open in one weight class
they won the tournament going
5-0 on the day. The Bulldogs
fell 72-9 as team but first year
wrestler Asa Young, wrestling
at 182 pounds received a forfeit
and 126 pounder Blade Marmon
won by decision in a tough
match for his first win of his
Junior campaign.
Next the AC team faced an
always fundamentally tough
Fort Scott Tiger wrestling team
losing 18-66. Asa Young continued his winning, by pin in only
his second wrestling match of
his life, over Torres in the 2nd
period. Freshman Isaiah Levy,
wrestling at 160 pounds, won by
pin over his opponent in the 1st
period after taking him down
two times. Kyle Lamb, wrestling at 170 pounds, won his
first match of his Sophomore
year, pinning Cooley in the 1st.
Blue Valley Southwest
defeated the Bulldogs 6-71
and finished 2nd at the meet.
Sophomore Michael Bachman
won his first match of his
Sophomore year to get the
Dogs on the board. Blue Valley
Southwest will be here next
week for the AC Invitational on
Saturday the 13th of December.
The Dogs faced Shawnee
Mission West after a short
lunch break more energized
but still lost 23-46, but won
4 matches in the dual. Blade
Marmon received a forfeit at
126 pounds to get 6 points and
League gymnastics honor
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
ACHS sophomore Kyle Lamb wrestles against a Louisburg competitor in the 170 pound division at the
Fort Scott Dual Tournament Saturday, Dec. 6.
get the Bulldogs on the board.
Junior Shiloh Sutton, wrestling
at 132 pounds, scored a technical fall by getting 15 points
ahead of his opponent ending
the match winning 22-6. Tyler
Belshe, Junior 138 pounder,
pinned Signoi in the 1st period
in just 22 seconds to get his
first win of the season. Another
Junior, Matt Kirkland wrestling
at 152 pounds, also won by pin
in the first period to get in the
win column for the year.
The final dual of the day
was against Louisburg, the AC
Bulldogs once again wrestled
very tough up and down the
roster but fell short losing 21-54.
Junior Blade Marmon, won his
third match on the day by fall
in the 2nd period, over Batten
going 3-2 for the tournament.
Sophomore Manny Jackman
went out and took just 14 seconds to take his opponent down
and pin him to score his first
victory of the year. Kyle Lamb,
Sophomore 170 pounder, also
took little time in pinning his
opponent to get his second win
of the day in the 1st period.
Overall the AC wrestling
team wrestled well against
some tough competition and
have a long way to go yet in
the season. The coaching staff
stated we need to get in better shape, a little more experience, and refine some of the
basics. After that we will be
good. The wrestling team will
be in action again Tuesday
night in Wellsville for a triple
dual against Wellsville, Central
Heights, and JayHawk Linn, the
Junior Varsity team will travel
to Santa fe Trail High School
on Friday night the 12th for
a tournament, and the annual
Anderson County Wrestling
Invitational is Saturday the
13th of December at AC high
school starting at 9 am.
Please come out and support the AC wrestling team
and watch some great competition in the exciting and faced
paced sport of wrestling, as
the Bulldogs face off against 12
other area wrestling teams.
I would love for anyone to
come to any meet and watch the
wrestling, stated Coach Jason
Brown, it is exciting and the
team loves the support from
the community and the school.
Even If you have never watched
a wrestling match before and
have no idea what is going on,
it is still a thrilling sport to
watch!
Community Christmas caroling, Trail of Trees, folk
art show highlight next Second Saturday in December
GARNETT – Garnetts Second
Saturdays tradition continues into December and features a Community Christmas
Caroling event as the main
attraction.
Organizers are
inviting the entire community and surrounding area to
join on the Anderson County
Courthouse lawn at 5:00 p.m. on
Saturday, December 13th. City
of Garnett employees and area
churches will be providing free
hot chocolate, coffee and homemade cookies for this socially
fun sing-along.
But dont wait until the
evening to enjoy Garnetts
Second Saturdays. Be sure to
shop Second Saturday participating businesses throughout
the day for unique sales and
exclusive specials. Pick up your
Golden Tickets while visiting
these retailers: Blackhorse
Trading Co, Royal Rubbish No.
2, Bluebeards History House
Antique Gallery, Trade Winds
Bar & Grill, Front Row Sports,
Scipio Supper Club, Garnett
Flowers & Gifts, Josephines,
Sandras Quick Stop, Maloans
Bar & Grille, Family Treasures,
Re-fined Re-cherished and
Racers Lounge.
Included in the December
13th Second Saturday events is
a Folk Art Show presented by
Robert Cugno in the West Wing
of the Walker Art Gallery located in the Garnett Public Library
building, 129 W. 4th Avenue.
Complimentary refreshments
will be served 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
No admission is charged, the
public is encouraged to browse
at your leisure.
The Creative Business
Partnerships Committee is
hosting a Trail of Trees project on the Prairie Spirit Trail.
Cedar trees will be placed along
the trail prior to December
13th. Organizations, families,
individuals and businesses are
AD
1×2
invited to adopt a tree for
$10. Those adopting trees will
decorate the trees prior to or
on December 13th. The Trail of
Trees will be judged and prizes
will be awarded. Tree adoption
papers are available at Garnett
City Hall or the Chamber
Office.
The kiddos will have the
opportunity to meet and greet
Santa and Mrs. Claus at the
Chamber Office, 419 S. Oak
from 3:30 to 4:45 p.m. Bring
your cameras!
At 4:00 p.m. bring the kids to
the Anderson County Annex
Building for some fun. The Life
Assembly of God Church will
have some easy and fun gift
ideas for the children to make
for their parents. This activity
is free.
The Golden Ticket Giveaway
drawing will be held at 5:00 p.m.
at the gazebo on the Anderson
County Courthouse lawn. The
drawing will be for $50 in gold
dollar coins. Golden tickets
can be acquired by shopping
participating Second Saturday
businesses. If the person whose
ticket is drawn is present,
they will win the cash prize.
If not, the money is saved for
the January Golden Ticket
Giveaway drawing held on the
next Second Saturday.
Following the drawing
the Community Christmas
Caroling will begin.
Reiterating the Second
Saturday Schedule:
Activities:
1:00-4:00 p.m. – Folk Art
Show in West Wing Gallery of
Walker Art Gallery/Garnett
Public Library Building, 129
W. 4th Avenue. Complimentary
refreshments in Archer Room.
1:00 p.m. – Trimming of
the Trees, Trail of Trees on
Prairie Spirit Trail between 4th
& 5th Avenue on Main Street.
Adopt your tree by contacting Garnett Tourism prior at
City Hall, 131 W. 5th Avenue
or Chamber Office, 419 S. Oak.
Call (785) 448-5496 for information.
3:30-4:45 p.m. – Meet
Santa and Mrs. Claus (Bring
your cameras!), Garnett Area
Chamber of Commerce, 419 S.
Oak.
4:00 p.m. – Kids Art: Bring
the kids to the Annex Building,
421 S. Oak where they will make
Christmas gifts for their parents! This activity is free and
hosted by the Life Assembly of
God Church.
5:00 p.m. – Golden Ticket
Giveaway ($50.00), must be
present to win!
You Are The Entertainment!
5:15 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Community
Christmas
Caroling, Anderson County
Courthouse Lawn, hosted by
City of Garnett Employees.
Free hot cocoa and homemade
cookies for everyone!
Additional entertainment
in local shopping and dining
establishments TBA.
900 E. Logan
Ottawa, KS
785.242.2067
www.neosho.edu
Bulldogs struggle in opener
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
PARSONS It was a long drive
to Parsons for the ACHS boys
season opener Friday night, and
after taking a 69-32 shellacking
it was a long drive home.
AC was out-gunned from
early in the first period, with
the Viking Joe Harris drilling
two three-pointers on the way
to Parsons 25-5 first quarter
domination. AC failed to contain Isaiah Taylor in the second period as Taylor banged in
five buckets. It was 47-17 at the
half.
ACs Chase Ratliff burned a
three-pointer early in the first
period and Trevor Johnston
drilled one in the second period, but neither could spark a
scoring run by the struggling
Bulldogs. Ratliff hit 4 of 7 free
throws in the game.
Derrick Nelson was ACs top
scorer with 8 points, Ratliff had
7. John Rundle 6, Jake Rundle
5, Johnston 3, and DAnthony
Fredricks 2. Isaiah Taylor led
Parsons with 16.
SCC edges Crest by 2
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY Nobody wants a
two-point loss. To a rival. At
the first of the season.
But thats where the Crest
Lancers found themselves at
games end Thursday night
with a 48-46 loss to the Southern
Coffey County Titans. There
were problems on the Lancers
end, but not to worry, says head
coach Travis Hermreck.
Its a part of the process,
he said. We will be fine no
need to send up distress signals
after one game.
The Titans built their margin
in the first period, when Crest
was unable to thwart SCCs
Josiah Witteman. Witteman
led the Titans in scoring and
banged in four buckets and a
free throw in the first period,
when SCC outscored Crest 157. Crest narrowed the deficit
in the second period with help
from an Austin Green threepointer and help from scoring
leader Evan Godderz, Brandon
Brallier and Christian Troxel,
but still trailed 25-19 at the
half.
In order for us to be successful we have to be in sync
with each other, Hermreck
said. Tonight there was not a
lot of that. Too many defensive
breakdowns, too many mental
mistakes, not enough commitment to our teammates.
Crest powered back in the
third period and led 39-38 at its
conclusion. Godderz rapid-fired
in four buckets and Hunter
Frazell nailed two big threepointers to pull the Lancers
ahead, but there just wasnt
enough left in the final period
to preserve that narrow a lead.
Godderz led Crest with 13
points. Green and Frazell had
9 each, Kellen Ramsey had 8,
Brallier 4, Troxel 2 and Garrett
Sipe 1.
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
third consecutive 6A state title.
The Sunflower League is
made up of Shawnee Mission
East, North, Northwest, South
and West High Schools, as
well as Olathe East, North and
Northwest, Lawrence Free
State, Lawrence High School
and Leavenworth High School.
Hicks is the daughter of Barb
and Dane Hicks of Greeley.
NOW
Semester Classes
begin
January 2, 201
Hicks
Visit Iola & Allen County!
nccc
ENROLL FOR SPRING
1×5
LAWRENCE Callie Hicks was
one of two Lawrence Free State
High School gymnasts selected
to the Sunflower All-Conference
gymnastics team for 2014, based
on the average of each athletes
top three scores in various
events for the 2014 season.
Hicks, a junior, notched
a 9.08 average in the uneven
parallel bars, behind Olathe
Northwest senior Jessie Payne
with a 9.36 top average. The
Sunflower Conference awards
league honors to the top five
scorers in the bars, vault, balance beam and floor exercise
competitions.
Free State senior Grace
Bartle received selections in
vault, balance beam, floor exercise and all-around competition
scoring. Bartle, Hicks, Haley
Johnson and Carrie Howland
massed points in the Kansas
6A State Gymnastics meet
last October to eek out a 47
hundredths-of-a point championship win over rival Olathe
Northeast. It was Free States
COMMUNITY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
CALENDAR
Tuesday, December 9
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Crest Basketball at Humboldt
Tournament
4 p.m. – ACJH girls basketball at
Burlington
5 p.m. – ACHS wrestling at
Wellsville
5 p.m. – Bulldog-Wildcat basketball
Classic at ACHS/Ray Meyer
Gym
5 p.m. – Community Dinner,
First Christian Church, Garnett
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
7 p.m. – Greeley Winter Program
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
Wednesday, December 10
6 p.m. – Supper at Trinity Lutheran
Church, Garnett, followed by
worship service at 7 p.m.
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
5:30 p.m. – ACHS JV basketball
at Ottawa
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
Thursday, December 11
Crest Basketball at Humboldt
Tournament
4 p.m. – ACJH girls basketball at
Wellsville
4 p.m. – ACHS JV Scholars Bowl
at Paola
5 p.m. – Bulldog-Wildcat basketball
Classic at ACHS/Ray Meyer
Gym
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
7 p.m. – Westphalia Christmas
program
Friday, December 12
Crest Basketball at Humboldt
Tournament
4 p.m. – ACHS JV wrestling at
Santa Fe Trail
5 p.m. – Bulldog-Wildcat basketball
Classic at ACHS/Ray Meyer
Gym
Saturday, December 13
7-10 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
9 a.m. – ACHS Invitational
wrestling
Monday, December 15
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
5 p.m. – Westphalia basketball
at home with Crest
5:30 p.m. – ACHS JV basketball
at Ottawa
6:30 p.m. – GES PTO
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Cub
Scouts meeting
6:30 p.m. – Bear (third grade)
Den Cub Scouts meeting
Tuesday, December 16
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4:30 p.m. – ACHS freshman/JV/
varsity basketball at home with
Girard
5 p.m. – Crest basketball at home
with Pleasanton
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
7 p.m. – Mont Ida Christmas
Program
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
1B
LOCAL
Second Saturdays Musicians Perform Together
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
Talented musicians and singers who have performed during Second Saturdays events came together for a public jam session on Saturday, November 29th
following the Christmas parade in Garnett. Visitors packed The Studio at 107 W. 4th after the parade to almost midnight. Among the performers participating
were Jordan Rickabaugh, Honky Tonk Legend (Eric Brummel and Dane Hicks), Bert Peterson, Tori Ponce and Angie Huff.
Harvest your email
for more sales
If used effectively and not
overused, email is an incredibly effective marketing tool.
Gathering email addresses
should be an ongoing effort at
your business regardless of its
size in order to keep this line
of communication to prospects
and customers flourishing.
While email is crucial dont
lean on it too hard. Nobody
wants a daily barrage of spam
to sift through, and one sure
way to put a negative imprint
on a customer even one whos
voluntarily provide his/her
email address to you is to
abuse that trust. If youre not
doing followups or servicing an
existing client, keep the unsolicited contacts to every few
weeks or so and be sure youre
providing something in the way
of content to your list members
if they dont take you up on
whatever offer youre rolling
into it. An example is a free tip
specific to your industry, a recipe, a web address connected to
some timely event, etc.
Here are some tips on gathering email addresses:
1) Sign-up sheet: The dinosaur of email gathering, but
still effective. A simple lined
form placed on your counter or
by your register Sign up to get
our calendar of monthly specials. Dont forget to impress
on your staff the importance of
asking do we have your email
address for our monthly newsletter?
2) Old billing: Run through
your existing billing for email
addresses you should have in
your electronic contacts but for
some reason dont. If you have
a larger base of customers, you
might be surprised by the ones
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
that arent getting your periodic emails.
3) Website signups: Use
a sign up field on your website to gather addresses from
prospects whove found you
by web search. Facebook also
provides a platform to gather
addresses. Look into services
like Constant Contact to help if
youre unsure how to proceed.
4) Check your card
clump: In your wallet or
Rolodex or top desk drawer you
probably have a bunch of business cards youve collected.
Go through them and add the
email addresses that may still
have some prospect value.
5) Sack or box stuffers: If
you ship products or if you put
purchased items in sacks for
customers, drop in a flyer with
your email address so your customer can send you an email to
get on your list.
Manage it right, and email
is a great way to help you sell
stuff.
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.
Bridge match played Dec. 3
Peggy and Charles Carlson
won the duplicate bridge match
December 3 in Garnett. Steve
Brodmerkle and Anita Dennis
came in second. Patty Barr and
Dave Leitch tied for third and
fourth with Mary Margaret
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
BUSINESS BEAT
Thomas and Tom Peavler.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club invites all bridge
players to join them at 1:00 each
Wednesday at the Garnett Inn.
December 10th is the Christmas
party.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
Creative Business Partnerships Chairman Tami Hiestand presents a basket of prizes to winner Debbie Wilper. The basket was part of a Second Saturdays Second Chance drawing.
Wilper wins Second
Saturdays Second
Chance drawing
Debbie Wilper of Garnett
was the winner of the Second
Saturday Second Chance
drawing held just prior to
the kick off of the Christmas
parade. The basket included
several nice prizes, including:
One night stay in the
Jacuzzi Suite at the Garnett
Inn;
$20 gift certificate courtesy of Garnett Flowers &
Gifts;
Scarf and glove set from
Blackhorse Trading Co;
$20 gift certificate from
Front Row Sports;
Countdown to Christmas
wall decor valued at over $50
from Refined Recherished;
$10 gift certificate,
koozies, etc. from Scipio
AD
1×2
Supper Club;
Surprise gift from
Maloans Bar & Grille;
Nativity Figurines donated by Bluebeards History
House Antique Gallery;
Pocket watch and $20
gift certificate from Royal
Rubbish No. 2;
A bottle of Mean Green
Jalapeno Pepper Sauce courtesy of Josephines;
John Deere pocket
knive courtesy of Family
Treasures;
T-shirt and jumbo ink
pens provided by Trade
Winds Bar & Grill;
Two insulated travel
mugs and 2 gift cards for
medium Simple Simons
Pizzas from Sandras Quick
Stop;
Santa Fe Depot Holiday
Note Cards, T-shirt and
Travel bag PLUS $50 dollars in GOLD DOLLARS
AD
2×2
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
SUBSCRIBE TO THE REVIEW BY CALLING (785)448-3121
courtesy of Garnett Tourism
and Creative Business
Partnerships. This basket
has value at more than $500!
All of the tickets from
past Second Saturday Golden
Ticket Giveaway drawings
were combined into this one
huge drawing. Names were
called out until a winner was
determined present. Debbie
Wilper claimed the prize.
Join us on Saturday,
December 13th for Second
Saturday activities, including the Trail of Trees, childrens art of making gifts for
parents, visit Santa and Mrs.
Claus, and a Community
Christmas Caroling event
hosted by City of Garnett
employees on the courthouse
lawn. Free hot cocoa, coffee
and cookies will be provided
to carolers. For more information visit www.experiencegarnettks.com.
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
LOCAL
THE REVIEWS 15TH ANNUAL
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.
RULES
1. Collect your receipts and coupons
dated Nov. 18-Dec. 19 from any of
these participating merchants, and
immediately bring your receipts and
coupons to Garnett Publishing each
week. Receipts must be turned in by 5
p.m. Dec. 19, 2014.
2. For every $10 spent at these participating merchants, receive one
ticket (excludes bank deposits). Take
your receipts and coupons to Garnett
Publishing during the week of your purchase to receive your tickets.
3. In additon to sales receipts, Garnett
Publishing will issue one ticket per
Stop in & Register
to win a Super
Colossal Christmas
Stocking!
Drawing to be
held Dec. 20.
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 numbers
published in the December 23rd edition of The Anderson County Review.
AD
2×5
5. Weekly winning ticket numbers will
be hidden within The Great Christmas
Giveaway ad section during the Nov.
25, Dec. 2, Dec. 9 and Dec. 16 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.
7. Any unclaimed prizes as of Monday
Dec. 29th, 5 p.m., will be awarded to
the Grand Prize winner.
Twas 16 Days Before Christmas
Give an uncommon
gift this year to your
special someone.
Sun-Thurs. 11am – 8pm
Fri & Sat. 11am – 9pm
Dine In, Carryout & Delivery
Drive thru window on north
side of building.
(785) 448-6582
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Grand prizes must be claimed by 5
p.m. Monday Dec. 29th (need not be
present to win).
25% Off Jewelry
through
Second Saturdays
Dec. 13, 2014
1 lb. Butter
Quarters
$
2.99
14.5 oz. to 15.25 oz.
2 1
FOR $
Progresso
Soups
Blue Bonnet
Quarters
18.5 oz. to 19 oz.
16 oz.
2 3
Every Friday until
the end of 2014,
take an extra
10% off your purchase.
Vegetables
FOR $
69
Prices good Dec. 10-16, 2014.
Royal Rubbish No. 2
Painted Furniture Home Decor Textiles
Tami Hiestand 501 S. Oak Garnett
(913) 645-3403
etsy.com/royalrubbishno2
Hours: Wed. – Fri. 12-5
Sat. 10-3
425 N. Maple Garnett 785-448-2121
Do your Holiday Shopping with us!
We have Great Gifts
New Zum Bar Holiday Scents
Wallets & Cosmetic Bags
Bling Bracelets
Candles
Haircare Products
From All of Us
At
N. HWY 59 GARNETT (785) 448-5512
Toll Free: 1-877-592-2743
www.lybargeroil.com
146492
146 E. 5th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-4746
Take a break from your
busy holiday schedule
and let us do the cooking!
Full Breakfast
Lunch Specials & Soup Everyday
Full Salad Bar
$5 Friday Lunch Specials
Hours: Tues. – Fri. 7 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Sat. 7 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
Christmas & New Years Holiday Hours
We will not be open Dec. 24 & 25
and Dec. 30 – Jan. 5
130 E. 5th Garnett (785) 448-2253
Shop With Us!
Save your receipts for
more chances to win in
The Great Christmas Giveaway!!
Fuel
Seven Cedars
Pizza Program
Liquor Store
Cigar Humidor
Purina Feed
and MUCH MORE!
Gift Certificates Available!
FUEL PROPANE LUBES
Get Your Vehicle
Ready For Winter!
(785) 448-3212
The only number
you need for the
Best Service!
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
785-448-3212
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
3B
LOCAL
Clip this out for handy reference when shopping this Holiday
season! Shop or visit these merchants and win prizes from the
AD Great Christmas Giveaway!
2×5 Pharmacy
AuBurn
Plaschka & Kramer Liquor/
Carla Ewert (above) and Doris
Rommelfanger (not pictured)
each won $50 in last weeks
drawing.
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!
Barneys Liquors
Princeton Quick Stop
Beckman Motors
Prairie Belles Kitchen
Bluestem Farm & Ranch
& Catering
Caseys
Royal Rubbish
Country Mart – Garnett
Salon Connection
Front Row Sports
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett Publishing
Suttons Jewelry
Garnett True Value Home Center Vision Source
Wolken Tire
GSSB
Lybarger Oil, Inc.
AD
2×5
Reflection Beads Memory Bracelets
Check out the wide selection of beads on our
products page at www.suttonsjewelryinc.com
Special orders available. Order early.
AD
2×5
Great selection of
Melissa & Doug
Toys and Puzzles.
Compare our reflection beads to Pandora and you
will be getting the same quality at lower prices.
Reflection beads can be used on Pandora bracelets.
Our Prices are our best prices!
No negotiating needed.
No need to go anywhere else this Holiday Season.
Suttons Jewelry, since 1950,
giving you the old fashioned feel of excellent
customer service and its what you deserve from
a full service hometown jeweler.
Many other
gift selections
throughout the
store!
Suttons Jewelry
207 S. Main
Downtown Ottawa
(785) 242-3723
Since 1950
Bench Jeweler on Location
www.suttonsjewelryinc.com
Come see
loans with
low fees.
Longer Term
Loans on
Homes and
Ag Land.
Internet
banking
e-statements.
Garnett True Value
www.truevalue.com/garnett
FREE
Gift Wrapping
Give the Gift of
Hometown News
Come by and see
the new 2015
Chevrolets, Buicks &
Fords, and
check out the
Great Savings!
$46.34
$55.42
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
1228077
Check out our Holiday Gift Sets
for your Holiday Gift Giving or
This Holiday
Season…
See Better,
Look Great,
Save Money!
Get $50 Off Exam
(Normal price $124)
Cannot be combined with insurance.
FREE Single Vision Lenses
with purchase of Frame
Cannot be combined with insurance.
Mike & Cathy Barnes
313 S. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-3815 197048
Offers good through January 31, 2015
115 N. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-6879
AD
2×5
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
HISTORY
1984: Richmond to get new water tower
Dec. 7, 2004
County
attorney
Fred
Campbell said he expects to file
charges this week against a former county employee accused
in the disappearance of $1,721.48
in landfill dumping and permit
application fees taken from the
Anderson County Engineers
Office. Campbell said theft
charges will be filed against
Shawn Colgan, an administrative assistant in the county
engineers office since April
1997. Colgan was fired after a
Nov. 1 executive session meeting of the county commissioners and county engineer Donna
Schmit. A sheriffs report said
money was taken between Oct.
12-26.
Officials from the City of
Garnett, East Kansas Agri
Energy and Anderson County
agreed Wednesday night to split
$410,000 three ways in order to
pursue $1.6 million in new highway work near Garnett for the
EKAE ethanol plant.
Dec. 5, 1994
If somebody were making a
movie about a track star from
the 1940s and they needed a vintage era track to shoot scenes
on, the track used by USD 365
would be perfect. Some patrons
of the districts track program
want to step into the 1990s, or
at least the late 1970s, and run
on one of the new generation
of all-weather track surfaces
currently provided by nearly all
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
schools in the area. Supporters
of the new track proposal say
no schools want to come to
Garnett. The cinder track is not
safe, the curbing is crumbling,
its not measured in metric distances and the markings are
difficult for school personnel to
maintain.
The Anderson County
Hospitals two-year struggle
for additional physician office
space entered its final phases
Thursday night, when the ACH
Board of Trustees gave the goahead for the City of Garnett to
construct a new facility which
the hospital will lease. The cost
is estimated at $331,500.
Dec. 3, 1984
The City of Richmond is
building a new storage tower to
be used in its almost new water
system. Earlier this year, the
city built and put in operation
a new water treatment plant.
The capacity of the new water
storage tower is 100,000. The
tower will be erected before
Christmas, however painting
of the tower will not be done
until springtime when weather
is warmer. The method to place
the new tank online is complicated. The system will not be
put online until spring unless
the City of Richmond requests
it. The project will cost about
$140,000.
Dec. 8, 1913
In district court yesterday,
many witnesses testified in the
creamery trust investigation.
Mr. W. F. Dyas, it is understood,
brought about the investigation
on account of his treatment by
the alleged trust and for the
benefit of farms and independent purchasers of cream. We
understand that it is charged
that the creamery trust systematically and arbitrarily deducts
a portion of the weight of butter shipped and sold through
commission firms and keeps
all butter makers out of the
market who will not stand
this deduction, and reimburse
themselves of fraudulent test of
cream purchased by them from
the farmers. Mr. Dyas claims he
has been forced out of business
and damaged financially by the
trust methods. If a trust can be
proved, he can sue the creameries in it for damages.
Richmond Libary gets ready for holidays
This November the Richmond
Library had several craft days
planned for the holiday. First
up there was a senior craft day
where they made pumpkins
from canning jar rings.
Saturday, November 15,
was International Game Day
at Your Library. The library
stayed open an extra hour for
this event. The patrons played
several different board games
that day.
November 21 was adult fall
craft day. The adults decapodged
leaves onto glass bowls.
November 24 the kids had a
Turkey craft day.
Coming up in December
there will be a Senior craft
day on the 11th; they will be
making Christmas Tree boxes.
On December 15th adults are
invited to the library to learn
how to turn a paperback book
or magazine into an angel or
Christmas tree. December 19th
will be a Christmas craft day
for the kids.
In November the library
purchased a few new DVDs:
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
Senior adults created pumpkins from canning jar rings at the
Richmond Library in November.
Charlie Brown Christmas
Tales
Maleficent
Planes: Fire & Rescue
Tammy
How to Train Your Dragon
2
X-Men: Days of Future
Past
Why See A Chiropractor?
Chiropractic care is for more than just back pain.
Regular spinal adjustments can help keep
your body in balance and stimulate its ability
to fight pain, stress and disease.
Come in and see how we can help you.
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
519 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F: 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. T/Th: 9 a.m. – Noon
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
This Civil War identification tag belonged to William Vess, a prominent Anderson County settler. Descendants are urged to contact Henry Roeckers so he can return it to the family. It was
recently recovered in an archaeological dig.
Historic find belongs to Vess family
In the field of archaeology,
just when you think youve
found the greatest artifact
ever, you dig up another one
even greater. Thats exactly
what happened to me on the
afternoon of Nov. 6, 2014.
It may appear as just
another small oval brass tag
or a rolled out copper penny
to you, but what a history
this little tag artifact has.
Across its face are the
words W. VESS GARNETT,
KANS. There is also the
outline of an Eagles wings
and 17 Stars.
Here is what my research
of this tag has revealed thus
far:
William Vess was a
prominent settler in May
1857 on North Sugar Creek,
Lincoln Township, Anderson
County.
William served in the 2nd
Kansas Calvary Company A
QUALITY Service You DESERVE
FIVE STAR FACILITY
Short Term Rehab Outpatient Rehab
Aaron Lizer
Aaron
Lizer
305 S.
N Maple
120
Maple
Garnett, KS
Garnett,
KS 66032
785-448-6125
785-448-6125
Auto
I
Home
To see how simple it can be to save for your
future, contact me today.
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
as a Private and later the
11th Kansas Company F as
a Corporal during the Civil
War.
In 1864, William Vess was
united in marriage with
Mary E McAfee of Anderson
County. Six children were
born of this Union.
July 30, 1909, William Vess
died at the Old Soldiers Home
near Dodge City, Kansas. He
was a well respected citizen
and Veteran of the Civil
War.
diebolt
2×2
Wound Care IV Therapy Respite Care 24 Hr. Nursing Care
Specialized Alzheimers/Dementia Unit
601 Cross Street
620-364-2117
Burlington
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN
MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
I
Life
I
Business
I
College
I
Retirement
1The guarantees expressed here are based on the claims-paying ability of Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company. Note: Bank
CDs are FDIC insured, the other products referenced here are not federally insured. Securities & services offered through FBL
Marketing Services, LLC+, 5400 University Ave., West Des Moines, IA 50266, 877/860-2904, Member SIPC. Farm Bureau
Property & Casualty Insurance Company+*, Western Agricultural Insurance Company+*, Farm Bureau Life Insurance
Company+*/West Des Moines, IA. +Affiliates *Company providers of Farm Bureau Financial Services A132-ML-1 (2-12)
AD
2×4
Henry Roeckers
20%30%
CHEAPER
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
(785) 448-5441
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
111 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg. Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Patriots Bank Bldg. Richmond
(785) 835-6161
DC Solutions LLC
Foundation &
Drainage Repair
Licensed & Insured
785-448-3056
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
305 N. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
(913) 256-9163
www.facebook.com/DC Solutions LLC
www.dcsolutions@osawatomie.com
Millers Construction, Inc.
In 1911 or 1912, Williams
body was exhumed and
moved to the Garnett
Cemetery.
June 29,1924, Mrs. Mary
Vess passed away at the
age of 75 years. Mary was
laid to rest beside her husband William in the Garnett
Cemetery.
It is my desire for 2015 to
locate a direct descendant of
William and Mary Vess and
return this precious artifact
back to the family.
Only a few days ago I
learned that this small artifact is truly an authentic
Civil War ID tag once belonging to William Vess.
P.S. If anyone remembers
the VESS family, especially
the names or location of any
of the six children or any
other family information
please get in touch with me.
Inhouse Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapy
Looking for a better return?
If you have CDs about to mature or other assets to
invest, consider all of your options. Not only do our
fixed annuities offer you a competitive return, they
also offer you flexibility, security and guarantees.1
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
5B
LOCAL
Posting Date December 8, 2014
1. MATH: What is the Arabic equivalent of the Roman numerals MMDLVII?
2. LITERATURE: Who wrote the story The Murders in the Rue Morgue?
3. TELEVISION: What superhero
pops up repeatedly in episodes of the
Seinfeld sitcom series?
4. INVENTIONS: Who is credited
with inventing the electric razor?
5. MOVIES: What was Forrest Gumps
home state?
6. MUSIC: What group performed the
hit Papa Was a Rollin Stone?
7. CHEMISTRY: What is the symbol
for the element tungsten?
8. GEOGRAPHY: What modern European country was called Lusitania in
Roman times?
9. LANGUAGE: In Latin names for
the days of the week, what god is represented by Wednesday?
10. ANIMAL KINGDOM: What is a
group of weasels called?
2014 King Features Synd., Inc.
Trivia Test Answers
1. 2,557
2. Edgar Allan Poe
3. Superman
4. Jacob Schick
5. Alabama
6. The Temptations
7. W (wolfram)
8. Portugal
9. Mercury (Dies Mercurii)
10. A gang
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
LOCAL
REAL ESTATE
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
Smaller 2 bedroom very clean,
garage, $400/month. (785) 4185435.
nv18tf
1 1/2 story 3 bedroom, 2 bath
house in Linn County. CH/CA,
kitchen appliances included.
$600 down, $600/month. No
pets, no smoking. References
required. (913) 898-2957. dc2t2*
Newer 3 bedroom, 2 bath
mobile home for rent in Garnett.
$450/month. (913) 669-9599.
dc9t2
Houses for rent 2 bedroom, 1
bath, $400; 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
newly remodeled, $600. (785)
204-1585.
dc9t4
2 bedroom 1 bath ranch, nice
location, 4 references a must.
(785) 448-5893.
dc9tf
MOBILE HOMES
MOBILE HOMES
2 bedroom mobile home for
sale in Garnett, $3,500. (913) 6699599.
dc9t2
Lenders offering special
government programs for
Manufactured Homes. $0 Down
for Land Owners. FHA for first
time Buyers. VA – $0 Down for
Veterans. Section 184 for Federal
Tribe members. Lenders accepting less than perfect credit. 866858-6862
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
poss
1×1
schulte
1×1
property
source
CARS & TRUCKS
AUTOS
Wanted unwanted cars,
wrecked, running or damaged.
Cash for your car today. Fast,
friendly serivce. Cash 4 Cars.
(913) 594-0992, www.cashforcars-junkcars.net.
nv11t12*
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Butler Transport Your Partner
In Excellence. CDL Class A
Drivers Needed. Sign on Bonus.
All miles paid. 1-800-528-7825
or www.butlertransport.com
Drivers – No experience? Some or
lots of experience? Lets Talk! No
matter what stage in your career,
its time, call Central Refrigerated
Home (888) 670-0392 www.
CentralTruckDrivingJobs.com
Great Plains Trucking of Salina,
KS is looking for experienced
OTR Tractor Trailer Flatbed
Drivers or recent Driving
School graduates. Our Drivers
travel 48 U.S. states as well as
the lower Canadian provinces.
We offer excellent compensation, benefits, home time and
equipment. Please contact
Brett or Randy at 785-823-2261
or brettw@gptrucking.com,
randyl@gptrucking.com
Northside Cafe now hiring AM
server. Apply in person, 604 N.
Maple, Garnett. dc16t3
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m.,
105 1/2 East 4th Ave., (620) 2282597 or (785) 241-0586. nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services
to victims of domestic violence
and sexual abuse. Call (620)
365-7566 or Kansas hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
Ottawa Retirement
Village
Check out our
Monthly Specials
HELP WANTED
JOIN OUR TEAM!
CNAs & CMAs
LPN and/or RN
1100 W. 15th, Ottawa, KS
Apply in person at:
Richmond Healthcare &
Rehabilitation Center, LLC
340 South St.
Richmond, KS
2005 Dodge Gr. Caravan SXT Minivan
Need something with plenty of room to go
Christmas Shopping? We have the answer! This was
a trade in by a previous customer. Medium blue
metallic, cloth quad seating, auto, lots of power
options, AM/FM CD, front/rear heating & A/C! With
4 doors there is easy access to rear seating & the
best part, it has STOW N GO! Only $4988.00!
2002 Ford Focus ZX3
They will see you coming in this little gas saver!
Bright yellow with gray cloth, auto, A/C, pw, p
locks, cruise control & AM/FM stereo & CD player.
Fuel efficient 4 cyl., the perfect car for that long
commute to work! On sale for only $4988.00!
1997 Toyota Camry XLE 4 Dr.
Want a car that will last forever? Okay, maybe
not forever, but Toyotas are known for being very
dependable. Tan metallic, matching leather, all the
power options including electric sunroof & only
95,000 ONE OWNER MILES! Hurry, cars like this
dont last long!
Wellsville, KS (785) 883-2913
www.breeautosales.com
pulse poll – kpa
2×4
Your Needs, Our Passions…Every Day!
SERVICES
SERVICES
SERVICES
AD
1×2
Garrison Concrete Inc
Work Done Right
Replacement Repair Brand New
Dave Garrison Jr. Dave Garrison Sr.
Estimator/Supervisor
Owner
785-393-0806
785-393-2833
www.garrisonconcreteinc.com
Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express
(913) 594-2495
COMPUTER
WORK
MANOR:
CNA and CMA, All shifts
Cook
VILLAGE WEST:
Cook, FT
CNA and CMA, PT
PLAZA:
CNA, Night shift
Anderson County Sheriff Office
Is Now Taking Applications For Two Positions
1 FULL-TIME JAIL SHIFT LEADER $14.06 hr.
AND 1 PART-TIME JAILER $13.08 hr.
Until 01-10-2015
Applications are available at the Anderson County
Sheriff Office, 135 E. 5th, Garnett, KS 66032, Mon. – Fri.,
785-448-5678. Must be 18 years of age, have a high
school diploma or equivalent and able to obtain a valid
Kansas Drivers License. Shift leader must have good
people, finance, and computer skills and be able to follow,
and enforce ALL policies. Applicants will be subject to a
battery of tests including an extensive background check.
You will be subject to working days, nights, holidays,
weekends, swings, alternating shifts and overtime.
Anderson County is an Equal Opportunity Employer and
the position is Veterans Preference Eligible (VPE),
State Law – K.S.A. 73-201.
785.304.1843
Preschool Youth Specialist
Enjoy working with preschoolers? Want to help children prepare
for kindergarten? Elizabeth Layton Center has part-time positions
available in Paola to co-lead groups and work individually with
preschoolers and their families to achieve treatment goals. ELC staff
guide and teach social and emotional regulation skills for successful
classroom learning. Candidates must be at least 21 years of age for
insurance purposes related to transporting youth to ELC. Applicants
must have valid drivers license with good driving record. Paid
training is provided. Submit resume/letter: ELC, PO Box 677,
Ottawa, Kansas 66067 or by email to hr@laytoncenter.org. EOE.
Youth Specialist (Ages 6+)
Enjoy working with youth? Elizabeth Layton Center has part-time
positions available in Paola to co-lead groups and work individually
with youth. Hours are 2:30 to 8:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. ELC staff focus
on assisting youth/families in achieving treatment goals.
Candidates must be at least 21 years of age for insurance purposes
related to transporting youth to ELC. Applicants must have valid
drivers license with good driving record. Paid training is provided.
Submit resume/letter: ELC, PO Box 677, Ottawa, Kansas 66067 or by
email to hr@laytoncenter.org. EOE.
focus
2×4
kmca – kpa
2×4
ANTIQUE AUCTION
Saturday, December 13 10:00 a.m.
qsi – kpa
2×4
8739 W. 1525 Rd. Centerville, KS
The following Antiques will be offered for public aution located indoors 8 miles north of
Mound City, KS on Hwy. 7 to 1525 Road, then 5 miles west. Watch for signs. AUCTION IS INDOORS!
AUCTION
SAT., DEC. 13, 2014 9:30 A.M
12700 NW 2300 Rd. Garnett, KS
(Approx. 15 miles northwest of Garnett on Hwy. K-31 OR Approx.
11 miles east of Waverly on Hwy. K-31 OR Approx. 6 1/2 miles south of
Williamsburg on Colorado Rd. to Hwy. K-31 then 1 1/2 miles
south OR 1 1/2 miles south of Emerald Church. Watch for signs)
Appraisal Tech
The Anderson County Appraisers office is seeking an
Appraisal Tech. This is a new full time position. The
person selected to fill this position will have both
GIS and real estate appraisal responsibilities. Some
of the duties of the position will be working with
splits and combinations, interpreting legal property
descriptions, measuring buildings, identifying
structural features, and working with the public.
Knowledge of GIS systems along with appraisal
experience would be beneficial. The starting salary
will be commensurate with experience. Applications
can be picked up at the Anderson County Clerks
office at the county courthouse at 100 E. 4th Ave.,
Garnett, KS 66032. The deadline for applications
is Tuesday, December 29. Anderson County is
an equal opportunity employer.
TRACTOR & LOADER: John Deere 2520 tractor w/Westendorf TA-26 loader.
EQUIPMENT: 14 HP hvy. dty. log splitter; 3 pt. 8 blade; 6 3 pt. rotary mower; 2 wheel trailer.
FOUR WHEELER: 2000 Kawasaki Automatic 400, 4×4.
3 WHEEL POSTAL VEHICLE & TRAILER: 1964 Rand Postal vehicle. 14 hp. Onan 2 cyl., new tires
& paint; Trailer Special built to haul Postal vehicle.
TOOLS, POWER TOOLS, LATHES, WELDERS: Sidney Machine Tool Co., lg., Hvy. Dty., lathe w/3
& 4 jaw chucks; No. 13 metal lathe; Lincoln 225 AC welder; Miller Matic 200 Mig welder; cutting
torch set; Miller 200 Amp AC/DC gas welder w/cutting torch set all mounted on 2 wheel trailer;
30 ton hyd. Press; 20 ton hyd. Press; 8 ton hyd. Press; welding rod; welding rod heater; welder
parts; Dura Craft 15 drill press; air conditioning vacuum pumps, 34A & R-12; valve hard seat
grinder; anvil; sev. tool boxes & tool cabinets, most all are full of tools; log chains & boomers;
3500 watt RV generator; Onan 5,000 watt 1800 RPM RV generator; ton & 1 ton chain hoists;
metal cut off saw; load box for welder; Pro Series metal cutting saw; 4000 lb. plus engine lift; 3
hp air compressor; Craftsman 220v air compressor; air tools; air wrenches; bolt cutters; power tools; grinders; bench grinders; gear pullers; socket set; sockets; 10 ton floor jack w/
foot pump; 3 ton floor jack; jack stands; 1 ton elec. hoist; Master cylinder fluid balls; chain hoist;
glass beader; tire changer; testing stand for alternators & generators; Amp probe set; many
wrenches large to small; socket sets; many, many, hand tools; welding vise; power band saw;
elec. drills; clamps; AC gauges; drill bits; pry bars; valve spring compressions; socket sets; lg.
multipurpose vise; Black & Decker valve grinding machines; work table on rollers; micrometer
set 0 thru 12; specialty tools; tap & dies; work bench; gear pullers; many, many, tools not listed.
SMALL ENGINE: Many, many, small engine parts; Onan parts; Koler parts; small engine tools;
repair manuals.
MISC.: Snapper 5 hp riding mower; 12 v. lawn sprayer; many nuts, bolts, hardware; many electrical & plumbing supplies; 1951 Johnson Seahorse 5 hp boat motor; ConSew model 18 walking
foot Commercial sewing machine; battery charger; fuel cans; propane space heater; spare oxy
bottle; grease guns; ratchet straps; shop fan; elec. motor; 5 hp 220v elec. Motor; 300 gal. fuel
tank; sev. rolls of copper magnetic wire; some scrap iron; 5 old steel wheels; ladders; 28 alum.
exten. ladder; sev. parts bins; file cabinets; hp winch; balance scales; computer; TV; water
pump w. foot assembly; rocking horse bodies; lots & lots of misc. too numerous to mention.
NOTE: Mr. & Mrs. Penson have sold their home. Partial list. Many, many, items, too many to list.
Good Quality tools & equipment. We will sell from 2 auction rings for part of the day. Tractor,
Postal Vehicle, 4 Wheeler will sell approx. 1:00 P.M.
* Check www.kansasauctions.net/griffin FOR FULL LIST & MANY PICTURES *
Refreshments by Richie Richs BBQ
DON & PAT PENSON
Griffin Auctions
Buddy Griffin
TERMS: Cash or Check with
positive ID. We do not accept
Credit or Debit Cards. Not
responsible for accidents or loss.
Ottawa, KS 785-242-7891
www.kansasauctions.net/griffin Allen Campbell
INDIAN PRINTS – Pete Peterson original pen and ink also Folk Art portraits; CM Russell wood framed
painting and other western prints. ARCADE HORSE – 10 cent Crusader Mechanical Horse approximately
4 tall, early 50s nice. IRON WHEELED WAGON – Wooden box wagon with iron wheels. 2 WHEEL
DRIVING CART – Wooden single buckboard 2 wheel driving cart with shaves Perry brand wooden wheels
Nice. AMISH CHURCH PEW – WHISKEY BARREL – Wooden Jack Daniels whiskey barrel. ENAMEL SIGNS
– Double sided porcelain McCormick Service Sign; Drink Dr. Pepper. ANTIQUES – Coke trays; Iron wheels;
Galvanized wash tub; RR oil can; Hamilton Beach and Craft Malt machines; Big Boy Restaurant advertising dolls; Tonka pickup and trailer; Steam gauge; Framed Victorian portrait; Electrified Brass lamp; Treadle
sewing machine stand; Cast iron bean pot; Emerson brass bladed fan; Bottle opener; extra nice Flexible
Flyer childs sled; Large offering of single trees, double trees and neck yokes; Advertising tins; Horse tin
mold; Studebaker pickup tailgate; Harness parts including hames and collars; Primitive trunks; Blue fruit
jars; Toy metal Texaco truck & military truck; Brass spittoons; Vintage saddles; Antlers; Toy metal grader;
Cast iron kettle; Baby doll with glasses bank; Little red wagon; Primitive wooden boxes; Rainbo bread and
coke metal signs; Dial scales; 2 lightning rods; Duck decoys; Kizum Health Spray thermometer; Dinosaur
bank; Primitive bottles incldg vintage pop; Metal bankers boxes; Primitive propeller blades; Vintage Adirondacks print; Buggy seat; Wash boards; Beautiful dovetailed 2 box; Adv. Milk bottles in crate; Enamel
ware; Vintage books; Lard press; Purina bucket; Wooden and crock bowls; Egg basket; Religious artifacts;
45 records; Slot car set; Zarda tin milk coolers; Sambo axle grease bucket; Metal oil cans; Well pulleys;
Horse head tie racks; Lanterns; Collectible lunch boxes; Apothecary canisters; Lots of Marbles; egg scales;
Model Conestoga; Salesman sample anvils collection; Metal Marx toy filling station; License plates; Old
padlocks; Old wooden telephone (insides are missing) and more. ANTIQUE FURNITURE – Childs rocker;
Architect chair, Victorian; Metal 40s Motel chairs; Single seat school desk; Library table; Metal bed parts
incldg. Head & foot boards; Metal bed; Primitive jelly cabinet. ANTIQUE TOOLS – Wooden buck saws;
Crosscut saw; Railroad tie tongs; Hand corn planters; Bluegrass stripper; Oil cans; Windmill tail fan; Metal
implement seats. MUSIC BOX – Thorens music box. CROCKS – Bowls; #5 churn, #2 jug, Spouted water
crock with Blue Ring. COKE ADVERTISING – Vintage Coke trays & Coke vintage framed print; also Dr.
Pepper sign. SADDLES & TACK – WATER PUMP – Homelite 140 GPM 2 water pump. BROODER – Top
for electric brooder. HOUSEHOLD – UTILITY SHED – New metal sided 9X12 utility lawn shed with loft.
LAWN & GARDEN – Stihl chainsaw; Garden hand tools incldg. Pitch forks, rakes, hoes, shovels and more.
TOOLS – Metal tool chest on wheels with tools; Masonry tools. DOG CRATES – Wire dog and animal cages
up to 3 ft. MISCELLANEOUS
Terms and Conditions: Not responsible for accidents.
Verbal statements made day of sale take precedence over written material.
For full listing and pictures visit: www.kansasauctions.net
Sale conducted by:
Marty and Beverly Read
Charley Johnson, Assistant Auctioneer
Mound City, KS 66056 913-795-2508
Real Estate, Antique, Farm, Livestock & Commercial
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
LOCAL
Need a place
to hang your hat?
Check out our
7B
Real Estate Classifieds!
SERVICES
AD
1×1
MISC. FOR SALE
For Sale pool table, rack, cues,
balls, $800, 211 N. Lincoln, 4485486.
nv18tf
Piano Sale: Final Week! Pianos
as low as $488! Grands, verti cals, digitals and player pianos!
Hurry, sale ends Dec. 13! Mid
America Piano, Manhattan. 800
950-3774, www.piano4u.com
Sawmills from only $4397.00 Make and Save Money with
your own bandmill- Cut lumber
any dimension. In stock ready
to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www.
NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800
578-1363 Ext. 300N
SERVICES
Outdoor Power Equipment
THIS IS THE SEASON
FOR A NEW JONSERED SAW
Available from $199.95 & Up
Jonsered Full Line Servicing Dealer
CALL US FOR A WINTER SERVICE!
MOST ALL MAKES!
Chain Sharpening Chain Repair
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN MON. – FRI. 8 A.M. – 6 P.M.
Sat. By Appt. Closed Sunday
NOTICES
ADOPTION
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (816) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
mc25tf
Lease the Hunting Rights to
your land and earn top $$$. Call
for free quote & info packet.
Hunting Leases. Done Right
since 1999. 1-866-309-1507.
www.BaseCampLeasing.com
A childless, married couple
seeks to adopt. Will be handson mom/devoted dad. Love,
laughter, learning. Financial
Security. Expenses paid. Jeanne
and Damian 1-855-563-8901
WANTED
WANTED
Wanted – unwanted cars,
wrecked, running or damaged.
Cash for your car today. Fast,
friendly service. Cash 4 Cars.
(913) 594-0992, www.cashforcars-lawrence-kansas-junk-carremoval
nv11t12*
PETS
Registered – Shih Tzu. Shots and
wormed. Male $250, female $300.
Older males, $100. (785) 733-2699
.
dc2t3*
ADOPTION
ADOPTION
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc..
(785) 448-3121
A childless married couple seek
to adopt. Love, Happiness and
Bright Future. Financial security.
Expenses paid. Lets help each
other. Lisa and Eric 1-855-9833121
Attention: Viagra and Cialis
Users! A cheaper alternative to
high drugstore prices! 50 Pill
Special – $99 FREE Shipping!
100 Percent Guaranteed. Call
now: 1-800-906-4338
Attention Hunters / Fur
Harvesters!!! Petska Fur running
routes in your area. Will buy (or
trade gloves) for deer/elk hides,
antler or fur. www.petskafur.
net, 308-750-0700.
MDS COORDINATOR
GREAT GIFT IDEAS! SARAH
MCLACHLAN 3-4
MICHAEL
stiefel kpa
UGLY DUCKLING 3-5
MCDONALD
2×2
DEC 16 CHRISTMAS &HITS
HUNGRY CATERPILLAR 1-17
CANTUS 2-8
DAVID SANBORN 2-14
WYNONNA & FRIENDS
STORIES & SONG 2-19
DIAMOND RIO 3-6
DAVE MASON 3-14
MARC
COHN 4-26
Happiness is . . . Garnett Area
Community Band, The Wild
West Meets Christmas Concert,
Sunday, December 14, 2014,
3:00 p.m. ACJSHS Auditorium.
Refreshments
following,
Commons area.
dc9t1*
AG EQUIPMENT AUCTION
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 17
Bidding starts to close at 10 a.m. CST
125+ ITEMS SELLING!
ALL ITEMS SELLING WITHOUT RESERVE! Including:
sprayers, tender trucks, grain carts, combines, balers, planting & seeding,
tank trailers, tractors and more. 10% buyers premium. 866.608.9283
JB Construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
Full time and Part time available.
151 S. Santa Fe, Salina 785-827-1998 M-F, 9-5
Administrator position open at SEK Multi County
Health Department in Iola, Kansas. Daytime position
7:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Monday – Thursday. Excellent
health and retirement benefits.
Apply online at www.lifecarecenterofosawatomie.com
Qualifications: BSN and public health and management
experience required, Kansas licensure.
Apply on-line:
www.lakemaryctr.org.
Lakemary Center, Inc.
100 Lakemary Drive Paola, Ks., 66071
of Osawatomie
SEEKING A Food Nutrition Program NUTRITION ASSISTANT
EOE
OMalley Equipment Co., Inc. a full line John Deere
Ag/Turf dealership, is seeking a Service Manager
for our Iola location. We offer competitive pay and
excellent benefits including health insurance,
training, paid vacation and a good working
environment. Responsibilities include, but are not
limited to, managing service operations within
the dealership to maximize excellent internal and
external customer experience. Must have experience
in Ag, Industrial or Automotive service
management. OMalley Equipment is an equal
opportunity employer. For more information,
please contact Dale Lalman at (620) 432-3671. Send
resumes to dlalman@omalleyequipment.com.
Lakemary Center is a not-for-profit organization serving individuals
with developmental disabilities. LMC ideal candidate profile
includes maturity, reliability, honesty, good problem solving and
communication skills, a demonstrated interest in assisting people
with disabilities, ability to cope with the physical demands of the
job, and basic language and math skills. LMC offers competitive
wage and benefits. Currently, we have direct care positions in our
Paola Childrens Residential Program & our Paola/Olathe Adults
Residential Program for evenings and overnights.
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
Evening/Weekend
LPN/RN
stiefeltheatre.org SEE THE STARS UP CLOSE
Direct Support Professional
Happiness is . . . A farewell Open
House for Marilyn Artherton, 24 pm, Saturday, December 13
at the First Christian Church.
Public invited to attend. dc9t1
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
JOE
NICHOLS 4 -3
Submit resumes to Traci@sekmchd.com
Applications available at:
411 N. Washington Iola, Kansas
or online at www.sekmchd.com
(620) 365-2191
Happiness is . . . Breakfast at
the Garnett VFW 7am-10am,
Saturday, December 13. Biscuits
and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage and eggs. dc9t1
kdan
1×2
HAPPY ADS
NOTICES
Full-time position available for a Kansas-licensed
RN with MDS 3.0 experience. Long-term care
experience preferred. We offer great pay and
benefits in a team-oriented environment.
Tracy Bartley
620-364-2117 620-364-2013 Fax
601 Cross St. Burlington, KS 66839
Tracy_Bartley@LCCA.com
LifeCareCareers.com
EOE/M/F/V/D – 53428
(785) 448-3121
FARM & AG
PETS
RN OPPORTUNITY
Life Care Center of Burlington
Advertise where people read.
kpa kcan
1×4
75 lb. lifting limit and drug screening.
Competitive wages & Benefit packages.
Did you know junk mail
mass mailings have as little as
a 2% response rate with customers?
Social Security Disability
Benefits. Unable to work?
Denied benefits? We Can Help!
WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact
Bill Gordon & Associates at 1800-737-4275 to start your application today?
Gun Show December 13-14
Saturday 9-5 & Sunday 9-3
Topeka Kansas Expocentre (19th
& Topeka Blvd.) Buy-SEell-Trade
Info: (563) 927-8176
303 S. Third Blue Mound, KS 66010
913-756-2282
Now Hiring:
Laborers
%
2
NOTICES
FARM AND AG
purplewave.com
K-State Research and Extension, Frontier District #11,
is accepting applications for an Extension Nutrition
Assistant I for the Family Nutrition Program (FNP) to
provide nutrition education to elementary children and
limited resource families throughout the Frontier District
and housed in Garnett. The position is 40 hours per week
with a minimum requirement High School Diploma or
GED. Applicant must have a valid drivers license, proof
of insurance and reliable trasportation, and must be able
to transport educational materials. Current rate is
$10.68/hr. plus benefits. Applications will be accepted
until January 8, 2015. This position is limited term,
ending 9/30/15 with the possibility of renewal.
For more information contact, Nancy Schuster at
(785) 448-6826 or by email nschuste@ksu.edu.
Requisition number 179322; apply online at
www.da.ks.gov/ps/esummary/es_ online/frmes1.asp
KSU is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer
of individuals with disabilities and protected veterans.
KSU encourages diversity among its employees.
Background check is required.
Now Hiring
Gates Corporation is a worldwide leader in the production of
hydraulic hose. We are a growing company and are looking
for only the finest employees for our manufacturing operation.
Positions Available On 2
Shift.
Please apply in person. Applications will be taken Weekdays 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Applications must be completed in the facility.
GED or high school diploma required.
Pre-employment background checks & drug screen required.
Gates Corporation
1450 Montana Road
Iola, Kansas
Equal Opportunity Employer
8B
Elementary Quiz Bowl Winners
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Dane Hicks
USD 365 elementary schools – Garnett, Westphalia and Greeley elementary schools – competed in an elementary school quiz bowl Nov. xx. First, second and third place teams are pictured.
Front row, first place, Westphalia students April Powls, Dylan Cole, Hannah Corley & Hannah
Gardner; second row, second place Garnett students: Bryar Wight, Abby Reid, Gabe Brown,
Carly Hicks, Colton Palmer; Back row, third place, Greeley students Orvel Broce, sixth grade;
Kyden Teal, fifth grade; Remi Kennard, Mya Miller and Alex Driever, all sixth grade.
Worthingtons named Oustanding 4-Hers
Dustin
and
Amber
Worthington of Wellsville,
Missouri were recently named
as the Outstanding 4-H Boy and
Girl Over 14 in Montgomery
County, Missouri. Dustin and
Amber are the grandchildren
of Max and Deb Worthington
of Garnett. Dustin has been
involved in 4-H for 8 years. He
has served as club president,
secretary, reporter, game leader, and song leader. He has
also served on the Montgomery
4-H Council for two terms.
Dustin was enrolled in Shotgun,
Aerospace,
Photography,
Wildlife, Floriculture, and
Electricity. He placed 5th in the
County 4-H Shoot in Shotgun/
Trapshooting and competed in
the State 4-H Livestock Judging
Contest. He also attended State
4-H Congress this year. This
is the 4th year Dustin has been
named the outstanding 4-H boy
in his age category. Dustin is
also active in FFA, Academic
Bowl, World Changers Missions,
and Speech and Drama Club.
He is currently a junior at
Wellsville-Middletown R-1 High
School.
Amber has been a 4-H member for six years. She has served
as club president, treasurer, secretary, game leader, and song
leader. She has also served
two terms on the Montgomery
County 4-H Council. Amber
completed projects in Arts
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 12-9-2014 / Photo Submitted
Dustin and Amber Worthington were named Outstanding 4-Hers in
Montgomery County, Missouri. They are the grandchildren of Max
and Deb Worthington of Garnett.
and Crafts, Photography,
Floriculture, Food Preservation,
Shotgun, and Bee Keeping. She
attended State 4-H Congress this
year and competed at the State
Livestock Judging Contest. This
is the 4th year Amber has been
named the Outstanding 4-H Girl
in her age category. Amber
is also active in FBLA, Math
Club, FFA, Cross Country, and
Track. She is a sophomore at
Wellsville-Middletown R-1 High
School. Dustin and Amber are
the children of Max and Karen
Worthington of Wellsville,
Missouri.
Introducing a new Minimally
Invasive Treatment Option for
Painful Spinal Compression
Fractures
Vertebral compression fractures (VCFs)
continue to affect our aging patient
population at an alarming rate. VCFs are the
most common fracture in patients with
osteoporosis, affecting about 750,000
people annually. Achieve rapid and lasting
pain relief from VCFs.
StabiliT Vertebral Augmentation
System
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, December 9, 2014
LOCAL
Location: Ransom Memorial Hospital Conference Rooms.
Location: Ransom Memorial Hospital Conference Rooms.
1301S.S.Main
MainSt.St.
Ottawa,
1301
Ottawa,
KS KS
Mealserved
servedatat5:30p,
5:30 presentation
p.m., presentation
by Dalenberg,
Dr. Dale Dalenberg,
to follow.
Meal
by Dr. Dale
to follow.
th
RSVP
to
785-229-8458
by
noon
on
Tuesday,
December
9,
2014.
RSVP by December
(785) 229-8458.
Church offers babysitting for holiday shopping
Calendar
Dec. 10-Rural Water District
No. 5 board meeting at board
office, 7 p.m.; 14-Senior Citizens
Banquet, City Hall community
room, 6 p.m.; 15-Seekers Not
Slackers 4-H Club, Lone Elm
community building, 7 p.m.;
Jolly Dozen Club, 7 p.m.; 16Library board meeting, City
Hall, 5:30 p.m.; 17- Lions Club,
United Methodist Church basement, 7 p.m.
School Calendar
11-12-high school basketball
tournament at Humboldt; 15Crest Board of Education, board
office, 7 p.m.; middle school basketball at Wellsville, 5 p.m.; high
school basketball at Pleasanton;
17-Christmas Program, K-12Crest Auditorium, 7 p.m.
Meal Site
10-hot turkey sandwich, mashed
potatoes, California blend,
wheat bread, blueberry crisp;
12-ham and beans, stewed tomatoes, roll, pineapple mango; 15chicken fried steak, mashed
potatoes, green beans, wheat
bread, orange juice. Phone 620852-3450 for meal registration.
Christian Church
Sundays scripture presented was John 17:20-26. Pastor
Mark McCoy presented the sermon Are You KID Enough…to
BE PURE? Celebrate Recovery
Sunday evening presented was
titled Hope for Recovery is
only found in Christ.
Babysitting
Babysitting for parents in the
area that want to go Christmas
shopping will be offered from
7:30 a.m. up to any time before
5:30 p.m. Dec. 13 at the Christian
Church. Contact the church at
620-852-3200.
Donations will be accepted.
This is a fundraiser for the
Colony Christian Teen Youth
to attend the North American
Christian Convention in
Cincinnati, OH this summer.
UMC
Scripture presented at
United Methodist Church
Sunday service was Psalm 11,
Jonah 1:1-17 and Isaiah 64:1-9.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, Just Say Yes!
Services included the confirmation of Makayla and Jerrick
Jones.
Senior Citizens Banquet
The 4-6 grade and 7-12 grade
youth groups will host a senior
citizen Christmas banquet on
Sunday, Dec.14, beginning at 6
p.m. at the City Hall community room. The guests are invited to hear Christmas music,
Christmas readings along with
dinner served.
Around Town
Our town welcomes new
resident, Judy Henderson. She
moved a double-wide home on
the lot she purchased known to
many as where the late Robert
and Ruth Luedke resided many
years.
Gary and Shirley McGhee
recently went on the 50 Plus
tour group from Ottawa to
Branson for a weekend. They
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
had a wonderful time.
Doris Churchs family held
a carry-in Thanksgiving dinner at the home of her son,
Jody Church. Doris daughters,
Susan Luedke, Colony; Patty
Jo Ramsey, Kincaid and Linda
Ellis, LaCygne, their spouses
and most of their families
attended.
Gareld
and
Shirley
McGhee hosted their family
Thanksgiving dinner at their
home. Attending were Darren
and Cindy McGhee Westphalia,
Joe and Vicki Atwood and
Chad Atwood, LaCygne, Derick
McGhee, Wellsville, Dustin
and Rochelle Smart Iola, Tyler
Atwood and Stephanie Willis.
Lawrence, and Dale Fooshee,
Topeka.
Cheryl Luedke, St. Augustine,
Fla called and visited with her
folks, Morris and Allene and
brother, Mark on Thanksgiving
Day.
Greg, Terri and Tiffany
Jackman
celebrated
Thanksgiving with guests
Dollene Jackman, Humboldt;
Dean Hamm, Decker and Sandy
Spillman, Jeff, Missy, Katrina
and Kaden Strickler, Colony;
Tanner Strickler, Wisconsin;
Luke, Jessica, Kallie, Kamrie
and Karlie Feuerborn, Garnett;
Andrew, Crystal, Arabella,
Aydan and Mathew Dunbar,
Richmond; and Shane, Rita,
Kayla, Hannah and Erin
Drybread, Buffalo.
Craig Luedke, Memphis,
Tenn., his sister and family
Julie and Dirk Nichols, Bryce
and Kimberlyn, Beloit were
Thanksgiving holiday guests of
their mother, Phyllis Luedke.
They also visited their dad,
Stanley Luedke and their brother and family, Brent and Angie
Luedke, Kamryn and Trewitt.
Bonnie Decker hosted a
Thanksgiving for her family. Attending were Connie
and Rick Thompson, Kincaid;
Justin Erin Zook, Garnett;
Brylee, Brekyn, Britni, Garry
and Paula Decker, Luke, Welda;
Garry and Kathy Holloway,
Westin and Elaine Holloway and
Nash, Lone Elm; Nancy and Ed
Ellington, Arden and Thelma
Culler, Roger, Ryan Culler and
Sklylar Slife, Colony; Justin
and Sarah Ellington, Jaylee
and Layla, Tulsa, OK; Jeremy
and Holly Ellington, Gunner,
Lizzy, Gracyn, Aubrey, JD and
Jamie Wilson, Tucker and Lane,
Iola; Erick and Kelcey Jesse,
Columbus; Nick Thompson,
Manhattan.
Thanksgiving evening Paul
and Cathy Stephens, Caleb
and Sydney, Kincaid hosted Thanksgiving with Dick
Crabtree, Colony; Gary and
Janet Crabtree, St. Louis, Mo;
Amanda Crabtree, Emporia;
Charles and Betsy Stephens,
Mary Decker, Colony; and
Garry and Paula and Luke,
Welda attending.
Mary Clemans enjoyed
Thanksgiving dinner with her
son Arvin and Kathy at their
home in Iola. Twenty-one members of the Clemans, Roe and
Diehl families attended. Marys
granddaughter Stacey and
Jeff Billingsley and children,
Stephanie and Kristin, Joplin,
Mo. Attended. On Friday
Marys granddaughter Karrie
Brown and daughter, Payton,
Kansas City, Mo visited her.
Marys son, Dwight, Marshall,
Tx will be visiting her the first
week of December.
Leonard
and
Debbie
Wools hosted the Johnston
Thanksgiving get-together at
their home on Saturday. All
their children and families
attended giving a total attendance of the Johnston families
of about 40.
Rosemary Gillaspie and
family met at the Colony
Community room Saturday for
their Thanksgiving get-together. Attending was Rosemarys
daughter Nancy and family,
Independence, MO, Mike and
family, Leawood, David and
family, Ottawa, Dennis, Topeka,
Kevin and Angel, Mary and family, Lawrence, Scott and family,
Lenexa and Daniel, Colony. All
enjoyed being together, eating,
visiting, catching up on family
news.
AD
2×2
29,00
Total R 0
eaders
!
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REACH,
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in The Review, get
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at 1/2 price.
Contact us for details.
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