Anderson County Review — February 18, 2014
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from February 18, 2014. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
Re-connect the dots.
Our new neurology program combines the comforting care of our rehab
therapies with personalized psychological and supportive services for
those suffering from stroke or brain injury.
38482
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Contents Copyright
2012 Garnett
Inc.
Bush City,
Colony,Publishing,
Garnett, Greeley,
Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
Creative Kids.
Celebrate
FFA Week.
Ads and stories
by local youth.
See Pages 8-9A.
See pages 3-7B
E-statements & Internet Banking
Seat belt
crackdown
High schools will be
focus of seat belt
enforcement effort
BY VICKIE MOSS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Whos
afraid of a
needle?
Get ready for a
birthday bash.
CELEBRATING A 150 YEAR NEWS HERITAGE
1865-2015
(785) 448-3111
flatten the roadway
Traffic between Welda, Welda,
and improve intersections and
Garnett will be closed overall safety along the stretch.
Its slated to begin in 2017 and
or reduced in 2017
will last through 2019.
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELDA A major highway
closing on U.S. Highway 169
between Garnett and Welda will
be the subject of an open house
event sponsored by KDOT Feb.
27, in hopes of educating local
drivers early about what will be
a major change in local driving
that will last for two years.
The project will improve a
dangerous stretch of highway
between Welda and the U.S. 59
junction at the Kincaid turnoff from U.S. 169. The project
will widen highway shoulders
between that junction and
SEE SEAT BELTS ON PAGE 3A
Police plan
bike rodeo
An open house planned for
5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb.
27, at the Welda Community
Center will allow residents
and others to learn more about
the Kansas Department of
Transportations plans for the
project. No formal presentation is planned, so the public
can stop by at anytime during
the open house to review project maps and displays. KDOT
staff will be on hand to provide
information, answer questions
and receive comments.
Construction is expected
to start in the spring of 2017
SEE HIGHWAY ON PAGE 3A
City bumps up guest tax
increase the amount of money
Tourism could get boost the city uses to promote events
as guest tax increases and activities. By increasing
the tax, tourism supporters also
to 5 percent in July
will be able to consider new
Voluntary bike registry
could help police find
owners of lost bikes
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
SEE BIKES ON PAGE 3A
Its our 150th
in 2015!
| review@garnett-ks.com
2-year highway
project ahead
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – City commissioner
Preston Peine remembers when
he was a young boy and his
bicycle kept disappearing off the
front porch. Usually, he would
find the bike nearby and speculated that someone took it for
a brief joyride. He had to start
locking up his bike after awhile.
He also remembers how
Garnett police at the time helped
him and other young bike owners. They had a bike rodeo and
SINCE 1865 148th Year, No. 31
(785) 448-3121
Member FDIC 1899-2012
GARNETT Local cops are
poised to start a crack-down on
high school drivers to make sure
theyre wearing their seat belts.
A special enforcement effort
between Feb. 24 and March 7
in Anderson County will target
local high schools before and
after school. Officers will look
for people who are not wearing
seat belts and will issue citations
that could cost between $10 and
$152, Anderson County Sheriff
Vernon Valentine said.
As a former teenager, I
BY VICKIE MOSS
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
FEBRUARY 18, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Vickie Moss
Duke, a Great Dane owned by Amanda Miller of Greeley, right, is a little apprehensive about
his vaccination shots given by Ottawa veterinarian Ed Smith. Duke and other area pets were
able to get shots at the annual pet vaccination clinic sponsored by Lambda Beta Sorority
Wednesday, Feb. 11, at Greeley City Hall.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Visitors who stay
in motels, hotels and bed-andbreakfast facilities in Garnett
are going to have to pay more
for the privilege less than
a dollar per night after city
leaders agreed to a 66 percent
increase of a guest tax that
funds local tourism.
In a rare split vote, city commissioners voted 2-1 to increase
the transient guest tax from 4
percent to 5 percent. The citys
tourism committee had asked
for the increase as a way to
ways to use the money, such
as helping organizers launch a
new event.
The transient guest tax
funds are collected by hotels,
motels and bed-and-breakfast
facilities. People who rent a
room are charged the extra fee,
which goes to the city for use in
promoting tourism. In theory,
tourism leaders use the tax to
promote events to bring more
visitors to the city, which translates to more rooms rented and
more money collected to promote the events.
SEE TAX ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Vickie Moss
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Kevin Gaines
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Melissa Hobbs
Seniors Lee Koch and Tara Meyers were crowned king and queen
at homecoming activities at Anderson County High School Friday,
Feb. 14.
Jordan Horstick was crowned king and Emily Holloman was
crowned queen of the Central Heights homecoming during a ceremony Friday, Feb. 14.
King Brock Ellis and Queen Erin Steedley take the court during
homecoming activities at Crest High School in Colony Friday, Feb.
14.
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
RECORD
NEWS
IN BRIEF
RICHMOND MEETING
The Richmond Community
Building board of Directors will
be holding its annual Open
meeting on Tuesday, February
18 at 7 p.m. in the Community
Building. Have some questions?
Now is the time to ask them.
Find out whats new, whats still
in progress, what the plans for
the future are.
SUPPORT GROUP FORMED
A support group can help people
who are struggling with some of
lifes choices, or who are looking
to overcome something but cant
seem to muster the strength,
or who are looking for a way
out. The group will meet each
Sunday evening at 6:30 p.m. at
the Anderson County Extension
Office, 411 S. Oak St., south
door. For more information, call
(785) 304-2478 or (785) 4331444.
TOPS GROUP FORMING
People who are interested in losing weight can join TOPS (Taking
Off Pounds Sensibly), now forming evening groups in Garnett.
The annual cost is $28. Visit a
group on Tuesdays at 9 a.m.
at the First United Methodist
Church, 205 S. Oak, Garnett. For
more information, call (316) 7551055 or Jan at (785) 448-7990.
FSA OPEN HOUSE
The Anderson County FSA staff
will host a Customer Appreciation
Day Wednesday, Feb. 19. Stop
by the office between 9 a.m. and
2 p.m. to enjoy refreshments,
and learn about all the programs
USDA has to offer. The staff
would like to say thank you to
all who are involved in feeding
America.
HUNTERS EDUCATION
2014 Kansas Hunter Education
Class, a three-day traditional
course is approaching. Classes
will be 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday,
March 9, for orientation with
classroom instruction; 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Saturday, March 15, for
classroom instruction (bring your
own lunch and drinks); and 12:30
p.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, March
16 for Field Day exercises (will
be much like an actual hunt as
possible with live fire and outdoor activities. All firearms and
ammunition will be provided. It is
recommended to wear boots or
walking shoes and long pants.)
Classes are at the Optimist Youth
Building at the North Lake in
Garnett. Students must be 11
to become certified and attend
all 3 days. Donations accepted
at the door to help cover costs.
Students must be pre-registered
to attend. Limited class size. For
more information call (785) 8356580.
HUNTERS BANQUET
The Church of the Nazarene
will be holding their 5th annual
Hunters Banquet on Saturday
March 1. The event begins at
6:00 p.m. at the church, 258 W.
Park Rd, Garnett. The evenings
guest speaker is Jeff Danker host
of BuckVentures which airs on
the Sportsman Channel. Jeff
grew up on a small horse farm
in Chandler, Oklahoma and was
raised in a Christian home by
his parents. The event includes
a game meal, prizes including 2 bows, 2 guns and many
other giveaways. Men & women
are welcome and a $5 donation is suggested. Contact Mick
Bowman at (785) 448-8673 for
more information.
BANQUET RESCHEDULED
The
Anderson
County
Conservation Awards Banquet
has been rescheduled for Feb.
26 at Anderson County High
School in Garnett.
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONER FEBRUARY 3
Chairman James K. Johnson called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 a.m. on
February 3 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, met with the
commission. Commission reviewed
applications for operator of the Welda
Sewer District. Decision tabled. They
will be advertising for a grader operator
at Westphalia as the current operator is
retiring. Lester has received bids on tires
from Greeley Implement and Wolken
Tire. Lester recommended the tires from
Wolken Tire. Commissioner Howarter
moved to approve the purchase of tires
from Wolken Tire for $11,031.14 less 2%
if paid within 10 days of invoice, out of the
Road and Bridge Fund. Commissioner
Highberger seconded. Approved 3-0.
He has received bids on signs from
National Sign and Lowen. Commissioner
Highberger moved to approve the bid
of signs from National Sign at a cost
of $21,181.80 out of the Road and
Bridge Fund. Commissioner Howarter
seconded. Approved 3-0. Commissioner
Highberger moved to approve an agreement with KDOT in regards to Project
#169-2 KA-2380-01. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. Fuel
bids for the month of February were
presented. Lybarger received the total
fuel bid for the month.
House Disposal Application
Commissioner Highberger moved to
approve the free house disposal application as presented. Commissioner
Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0.
Courthouse Heating and Cooling
John Barney and Dana Dunn, P1
Group, met with the commission. They
talked to the commission about how they
would like to create a master plan for
reducing the costs of heating and cooling the courthouse. Commission stated
they had hired a company to look at
the energy lost through the doors and
windows and would like to keep the P1
Group, open to bid any future project.
Executive Session
Commissioner Highberger moved to
recess into executive session for 10 minutes for the discussion of non-elected
personnel with Ray Peine, Custodian,
and Phyllis Gettler, County Clerk, in
attendance. Open meeting to resume
at 10:40. Commissioner Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0. No action after
executive session.
Emergency Management
JD
Mersman,
Emergency
Management Director, met with the
commission. The new fire truck for
Colony will be picked up in Maryland on
February 11th or 12th. The best lease
purchase he found was by GSSB for
3.005% for a five year lease purchase.
Discussion was held on the rotation of
trucks when the new truck for Colony
comes in. He is looking at moving the
old Colony truck to Greeley to improve
the ISO rating. Chairman Johnson stated
his top priority is safety. JD is looking at
needing to replace a tank at Welda that
NEWS
IN BRIEF
INTERNET FIELD DAY
An Internet Field Day/Testing
Session is approaching. Limit 20
students. It will be 9:30 a.m. to
6 p.m. Sunday, March 16, at the
Optimist Youth Building, North
Lake, Garnett. Internet Students
must complete the online portion of the course at www.
kdwp.com or (https://programs.
ksoutdoors.com/prg/Programs/
Hunter-Education-Certification)
prior to attending the field day.
Please read all instructions
online: students are required to
bring to class the Certificate of
Completion at the end of the
course. Each student will be
issued a pre-test over the online
materials. A passing score of 22
correct answers out of 25 questions is required to proceed with
the rest of the course. Students
failing to achieve the minimum
score of 22 will be dismissed
from the class. Internet students
are required to complete classroom training and participate in
the Field Day exercises; it will
be much like an actual hunt as
possible. It is recommended to
wear boots or walking shoes and
long pants. Students must be 11
to become certified and attend
all 3 days. Donations accepted
at the door to help cover costs.
Students must be pre-registered
to attend. Limited class size. For
more information call (785) 8356580.
is leaking. Ingrams has one in stock for
$3,660. They would also like to put a
flatbed on the truck rather than the stock
bed that is currently on it. Commissioner
Howarter moved to purchase a new slide
in unit from Jerry Ingram Fire at a cost
of $3,660 out of the Rural Fire Reserve
Fund. Commissioner Highberger seconded. Approved 3-0. Commissioner
Highberger moved to approve the purchase of a hose reel from Jerry Ingram
Fire at a cost of $710.00 out of Rural
Fire. Commissioner Howarter seconded.
Approved 3-0. Commissioner Highberger
moved to approve the purchase of a
radio from TFM Comm out of the Rural
Fire Fund. Commissioner Howarter seconded. Approved 3-0.
Abatements
Abatements B14-164 through B14178 were presented and approved.
Sheriff
Sheriff Valentine met with the commission. Discussion was held on the
possibility of hiring a county employee to
serve as cook at the jail versus continuing a contract with CBM to serve the
meals at the jail and supply the cook.
Sheriff Valentine reported that he is still
waiting for a proposal from the Anderson
County Hospital to cover patient care.
We currently use the Anderson County
Hospital however he has received a
proposal from National Heath Care that
works with numerous jails for health care
of inmates.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 p.m. due
to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
James D. and Mary K. Young to Luis
A. Lopez and Belinda Zamora, a tract of
land in SW4 19-22-21 as follows: beginning at SW corner of said SW4, thence
North 00000 East (assumed bearing)
along West line of said SW4,1653.78;
thence North 892351 East 2537.07
to East line of said SW4; thence South
01508 East along East line of said
SW4, 1653.58 to SE corner of said
SW4, thence South 892340 West
along South line of said SW4 2544.35
to POB.
Luis A. Lopez and Belinda Zamora
to Jonathan Thornberry, a tract of land
in SW4 19-22-21 as follows: beginning at SW corner of said SW4, thence
North 00000 East (assumed bearing)
along West line of said SW4, 1653.78;
thence North 892351 East 2537.07
to East line of said SW4; thence South
01508 East along East line of said
SW4, 1653.58 to SE corner of said
SW4, thence South 892340 West
along South line of said SW4 2544.35
to POB.
Neil Hermreck to Virgil J. and Linda L.
Katzer, the NW/4 of the NE/4 of 27-2019 except that part lying North and West
of Cedar Creek; also all of the NE/4 of
the NE/4, lying West of the public road
of 27-20-19, except the building right
of way of the City of Garnett for water
purposes.
Paul A. Stephens and Cathy J.
Stephens to Sandra J. Depoe, the E/2
of Lot 8, all of Lot 9 and 32 off the West
side of Lot 10 in Block 34 to the City of
Colony, and Lots 11 and 12 and 18 off
the East side of Lot 10, all in Block 34 in
the City of Colony.
Darrel W. Booth and Janice K. Booth
to Darrel W. Booth and Janice K. Booth,
E2 SE4 23-22-19 and SW4 24-22-19.
includes choice of side, salad and roll
*Price good for dine-in only, offer not valid on catering.
Prime rib offer good only with purchase of drink.
Price subject to change without notice.
785-448-2616
Find us on facebook for more weekend specials!
On the Square – At the corner of 4th and Oak
Downtown Garnett
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Board of County Commission vs. 117
defendants, default judgment granted.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Donna M. Kesner vs. Tom Winterringer,
petition for protection from staking.
Donna M. Kesner vs. Gladys
Winterringer, petition for protection from
stalking.
Katie Elaine Whitcomb vs. Jason
Allen Whitcomb, petition for divorce.
Katyln Dawn McVey and Denton
Richard McVey, petition for divorce.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Diana Lynn Jahn vs. Larry Ervan
Jahn, divorce decree granted.
Sarah Jean Dionne vs. Robert Dionne,
final protection from abuse order.
Karen Johnson vs. Shawn McAlpine,
final protection from abuse order
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Family Dentistry vs. Tony R. Thornton
and Margaret Thornton, asking $201.00.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Garnett Family Dentistry vs. Jessica
Mackler, $276.00 plus interest and
costs.
SMALL CLAIMS RESOLVED
A & H Air Conditioning and Heating
vs. Vickie L. Moss, $444.07 plus cost.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Laury L. Hunsaker, giving a worthless
check, arraignment set for February 25
at 9:00 a.m.
Joseph T. Daulton, interference with
LEO, arraignment set for February 25 at
9:00 a.m.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Darrell L. Vockham, $165 fine.
Delbert Phlipot, $159 fine.
James A. Bradshaw, Sr., $143 fine.
Ami Goldner, $165 fine.
Lorie K. Boyd, $171 fine.
Kimberly E. Lindsay, $177 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Clarissa Lee Swartz, $10 fine.
Shandale Rene Yackle, $10 fine.
Austin Henderson, $10 fine.
Other:
William Daniel Travis, Jr., criminal
discharge of firearm, $258, and criminal
hunting, $100 fine.
Amanda M. Ysusi, operate a motor
vehicle without a valid license, $156
fine.
Lillian D. Lacey, liquor purchase/consumption by minor, $406 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on February 6 of
theft and burglary of two air conditioners and 500 of copper wiring valued
at $20,000 and occurred on East 4th
Avenue.
A report was made on February 7 of
criminal damage to property and disorderly conduct to a hollow core wooden
door valued at $100 and occurred on
South Pine Street.
A report was made on February 8 of
burglary and theft of a door and fame, a
window, 20 miscellaneous Xbox games,
a Dell laptop computer, miscellaneous
tattoo equipment, a 50 Vizio television,
an Xbox 360 Halo edition with five controllers, a buck skinning knife, and an
Energizer controller charger all valued
Need help with
TAXES?
Saving on
These
taxes requires
area tax
year-round
preparation
planning…
services
can meet
your
needs.
You dont have to do it alone.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on January 4 of
theft and criminal damage to property
to a 2006 Ford F150 and .22 and .45
caliber rounds and occurred on SW 200
Road, Colony.
Accidents
An accident was reported on February
3 when a vehicle driven by Duane Allen
Heck, 47, Westphalia, was traveling
southbound on Division Street and made
a right hand turn onto Lincoln Avenue.
After completing the turn, now heading
eastbound on Lincoln Avenue, the vehicle slid on an ice covered road striking
another vehicle which was unoccupied
and legally parked.
An accident was reported on February
6 when a vehicle driven by Wesley Todd
Ahring, 20, Garnett, was traveling westbound on K-31 Highway at Meade Road
when the vehicle hit ice and lost control.
The vehicle left the roadway, entered
the North ditch, impacted an elevated
field entry, and came to rest 382 from
departure leaving the roadway.
JAIL LOG
David Eugene Hiner, 43, Garnett,
February 7, domestic battery and disorderly conduct, bond set at $1,000.
Brady Ray Hiner, 20, Garnett,
February 7, failure to appear, bond set
at $195.
Joshua Wade Heubach, 22, Garnett,
February 9, theft of property, bond set at
$300.
Carl Eldon Damron, 27, Garnett,
February 9, flee or attempt to elude, no
bond set.
Herbert Robert Hayden, 69, Garnett,
February 9, criminal trespass, bond set
at $500.
Julia Marie Davis, 35, Garnett,
February 10, DWS 2nd or subsequent
conviction, bond set at $1,000.
William Daniel Travis, 49, Eureka,
February 10, failure to appear, bond set
at $1,000.
JAIL ROSTER
Andrew Bettinger was booked into jail
on January 20 for a 30 day writ x2. (60
days)
James Justice was booked into jail
on November 16, 2013 for Anderson
County, bond set at $10,000 x2.
Jorden Vender was booked into jail on
January 13 for Anderson County, bond
set at $10,000.
Jeremy Thomas was booked into jail
on December 9, 2013 for 6 months with
21 days credit.
Jason Hermreck was booked into jail
on January 9 for Anderson County for 30
days.
Aaron Stephenson was booked into
jail on January 16 for Anderson County,
bond set at $5,000.
James Atkisson was booked into jail
on January 14 for Anderson County,
bond set at $1,500.
Scott Hobbs was booked into jail
on November 19, 2013 for Anderson
County for a 90-day writ.
Jesse Hunter was booked into jail on
August 13, 2013 for Anderson County,
bond set at $75,000 with conditions.
Carl Damron was booked into jail on
February 9 for Anderson County for a
5-day writ.
FARM-INS
Earl Bryson was booked into jail on
November 13, 2013 for Miami County.
Austin Lyons was booked into jail on
January 16 for Miami County.
Harry Wilson was booked into jail on
October 3, 2013 for Miami County.
John Simons was booked into jail on
October 18, 2013 for Linn County.
John Vaughan was booked into jail on
January 824 for Linn County.
AD
2×2
Goals For Your Retirement!
If your goals for Retirement are…
100% Safety of Principal & Interest!
Highest Returns Possible!
Reasonable Access To Your Money!
Tax Advantages!
Call Us, We Can Help You
Achieve These Goals!
Scott Schulte – Financial Advisor
Helping Secure Your Financial Future!
Check us out on Facebook at
234 S. Main
P.O. Box 1020
Ottawa, Kansas 66067
Saving for retirement?
Our great rates
can help.
at $4,505 and occurred on West Kaw
Avenue.
A report was made on February 11 of
burglary and theft of a cell phone valued
at $150 and occurred on South Walnut
Street.
Arrests
Theodore
Wilson,
Richmond,
February 7, disorderly conduct, criminal
damage to property.
Herbert Hayden, Garnett, February 7,
criminal trespass.
Julia Davis, Garnett, February 10,
DWS 2nd or subsequent conviction.
785-448-6191 or 1-800-530-5971
(785) 242-3170
Fax: (785) 242-9250
www.agc-cpas.com
all about taxes
2×2
Interest rates up to:
2.65%
2
Our fixed annuities can grow your savings
at a competitive interest rate and provide
a guaranteed1 income for when you retire.
Contact me today.
$11.99*
PRIME RIB Friday & Saturday Night
CIVIL CASES FILED
Bank of America, NA vs. Michael
Louis Sitler, John Doe, Jane Doe, and
unknown spouse of Michael Sitler, asking $67,743.78.
305 N Maple
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-6125
1The guarantees expressed are based on the claims-paying ability of Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company and current
guaranteed interest rate is 1.00%. 2Based on the Company?s 10/1/13 declared interest rate for the Flexible Premium
Portfolio 10 option of the non-participating annuities (Select IV Fixed Annuity). Assumes a premium payment of $100,000 or
higher with the following additional premium bandings: $25,000 – $99,999 (2.40%) and $0 – $24,999 (2.05%). Listed rates
are neither guaranteed nor estimated for the future. Please call 800/247-4170 for today?s rates. A 10% tax applies to most
withdrawals made from an annuity prior to age 59 1/2. Surrender charges may apply to any withdrawals. Surrender charge
periods for a Select IV Portfolio 10: 9% – 0% over ten years for issue age 60+ or 10% – 0% over ten years for issue up to age
59. Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company*, West Des Moines, IA. *Company provider of Farm Bureau Financial Services
A134-MS-1 (11-13)
PROFESSIONAL
TAX PREPARATION
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
BURCHAM
January 10, 1920-February 16, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published February 18, 2014
Chloralee Billie Burcham, age
94, of Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on
Sunday,
February 16,
2014 at Golden
Heights
in
Garnett,
Kansas.
Billie was
born January
10, 1920, near
C e n t e r v i l l e,
Burcham
Kansas, the
daughter of
Thomas LeRoy and Josie Pearl
(Ogg) Drake. She was the fifth of
eight children. She grew up on a
farm in the Keokuk neighborhood
and at the age of 16 she graduated
from Parker Rural High School. She
was the valedictorian of the class
of 1936. She attended business college in Kansas City, Missouri and
worked as a secretary at a food brokerage company prior to her marriage. In later years she worked for
Civil Service at various Air Force
bases, retiring on March 1, 1983.
On July 11, 1943, Billie married
Loyd C. Burcham at Centerville,
Kansas. This union was blessed
with one daughter and one son.
During Loyds Air Force career
they lived on a number of Air
Force bases. Following his retirement from the Air Force in 1969,
they first moved to Florida, then
to South Carolina before moving to
Cheyenne, Wyoming and finally to
Garnett in 1997.
Billie was baptized at the age
of 18 and joined the Christian
Church (Disciples of Christ). She
has served as deaconess, financial secretary, group leader, and
Sunday School teacher. When
she moved to Garnett she transferred her membership to the First
Christian Church of Garnett. While
her children were growing up she
was active in Scouting, serving as
Girl Scout neighborhood chairman,
Scout Leader, and Cub Scout den
mother. She loved playing bridge;
Billie was a Silver Life Master and
was a long time member of the
American Contract Bridge League
Billie was preceded in death by
her parents; her husband, Loyd
Burcham on September 2, 2010;
three brothers, Thomas L. Drake
Jr., Burt Drake, and Keith Drake;
and three sisters, Mary Ellen Mays,
Shirley Brownback, and Phyllis
Singer.
She is survived by her daughter, Barbara Kinder of Shawnee,
Kansas; one son, Alan F. Burcham
of Reno, Nevada; one granddaughter, K. Michele Kinder of Shawnee,
Kansas; and one brother, Larry A.
Drake and wife, Marilyn, of Moran,
Kansas.
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 PM, Thursday, February
20, 2014 at the First Christian
Church, Garnett. Burial will follow in the Centerville Cemetery,
Centerville, Kansas. The family
will greet friends from 5:00-7:00 PM,
Wednesday evening at the funeral
home in Garnett. Memorial contributions may be made to the First
Christian Church Building Fund
and left in care of the funeral home.
Condolences may be left at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com.
AYERS
October 14, 1940-February 11, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published February 18, 2014
Larry E. Ayers, age 73, of
Garnett, died Tuesday, February
11, 2014, at Olathe Medical Center
in Olathe, Kansas.
He was born on October 14, 1940,
at Selma, to Paul and Juanita (Hale)
Ayers.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, and his sister, Rosalee
Leonard.
Survivors include his two aunts,
Lucille Davis and Goldie Gull of
Garnett; niece and nephew, Debbie
Wells of Garnett and David Wells of
Fort Scott, Kansas.
Memorial services will be held
at 10 a.m., Wednesday, February
19, 2014, at the Feuerborn Family
Funeral Service Chapel in Garnett,
Kansas. The family will greet
friends following the service.
EASH
May 28, 1931-February 10, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published February 18, 2014
YODER – Ervin P. Eash, 82, passed
away February 10, 2014 at Hospice
House, Hutchinson.
He was born May 28, 1931 in
Yoder, Kansas the son of Perry and
Anna Yoder Eash.
On May 8, 1952 he married Alice
Yoder in Yoder. She survives.
Other survivors include his
children Betty Schrock of Haven,
Vernon Eash of Bentley, Elmer
Eash of Haven, Carol Yoder of
Garnett, 3 brothers, Alvin Eash of
Abbyville, Sam Eash of Burrton,
Perry Edward Eash of Haven, 1
sister, Clara Mae Yoder of Haven,
17 grandchildren, 2 step grandchildren, 28 great grandchildren and 7
step great grandchildren. He was
preceded in death by his parents.
The
funeral was Friday,
February 14, 2014 at his residence,
4318 E. Longview Road, Haven.
Burial was in the Amish Church
Cemetery, Haven.
REMEMBRANCES
CALLAHAN
June 24, 1926-February 5, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published February 18, 2014
Harold D. Callahan, 87, of
Randolph, Kansas, died Wednesday
February 5, 2014 at his home in
Randolph.
He was born on June 24, 1926
in Kansas City, Kansas, the son
of Dennis Callahan Sr. and Mary
S. (Smerchek) Callahan. He graduated from Garnett High School
in 1944 and then entered the U.S.
Marine Corps. After serving in the
marines he attended Kansas State
University and earned a Bachelors
Degree in Agriculture in 1950.
On June 23, 1956 in Garnett,
Kansas he was united in marriage
to Jeanette Canright. She preceded
him in death in 2004.
Harold worked as an insurance agent for Farm Bureau for
42 years before retiring. He was
a life member of the American
Legion in Olsburg, Kansas and also
a life member of the VFW #6397 in
Garnett, Kansas.
Harold is survived by his
daughter, Tonya Harrel (Sam), of
Kansas City, KS; his granddaughter, Brandie Hoelting (David), of
Kansas City, KS; his sister, Mary
Ellen Kelley, of Plano, TX and his
sister-in-law, Phyllis Callahan, of
Garnett, KS; also his 1 great-grandchild, one niece and four nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
grandson, Sammy Harrel III; brother Dennis Callahan Jr., nephew
Patrick Callahan and niece Pamela
Pizzel.
Services for Harold will be held
at a later date.
The Yorgensen-Meloan-Londeen
Funeral Home, 1616 Poyntz Avenue,
Manhattan, Kansas 66502, is assisting the family with the funeral
arrangements.
BIKES…
FROM PAGE 1A
distributed a tag that would
identify the bike if it was stolen.
The main thing I remember
is getting to meet the officers,
Peine said of the event. When
youre this tall and the officers
are joking around with you, its
a big deal.
Garnett police officers
plan to bring a bike rodeo and
bicycle identification program
back to town. The event is in
its earliest stages, so there
are few details about how the
program will be organized or
even when and where it will
be located. But police officer
Jason Sumner said he and
Chief Kevin Pekarek have been
looking at community policing
options, and decided a bicycle
program to help youth would
benefit people the most, he said
during a presentation to city
commissioners Tuesday, Feb.
11.
Commissioners and city staff
expressed support for the program. Commissioner Gordon
Blackie, who recently criticized
the police department for having an image problem but
wouldnt go into details about
those problems, said he thought
the bicycle program could go a
long way to build bridges with
kids and make friends.
Sumner said the police
department frequently recovers bicycles that were lost, stolen or taken for joyrides like
the bikes from Peines youth.
But once those bikes are recovered, it can be difficult to find
the proper owner. The police
officers plan to organize some
sort of voluntary registry
that would allow them to easily track the owners of a bike
when it is found by police.
Police likely will launch the
registry during a bike rodeo, an
event that teaches safety using
various activities. Children ride
their bikes through a series
of obstacles to test balance.
Officers teach kids how to obey
traffic signals and other rules
of the road. Police also could
check helmets or offer helmets
for sale.
Peine suggested Sumner contact a local insurance company
that has sponsored bike rodeos
in the past. Organizers of those
past events could offer suggestions or may want to help sponsor the event, he said.
SEAT BELTS…
FROM PAGE 1A
would much rather use that
money for gas than give it to
the cops, Valentine said. So
please, buckle up.
The enforcement effort is
part of the Kansas Department
of Transportations traffic safety program, SAFE (Seat Belts
Are For Everyone).
KDOT statistics show that
43 children between ages 13
and 19 lost their lives in vehicle
accidents in 2012, and 74 percent of them were not wearing
seatbelts.
Law enforcement and SAFE
teamed up in 2013 with the goal
of reducing that number. In
2013, 33 teens were killed in car
wrecks, and of those 57 percent
were unrestrained. All but one
of those 57 percent were ejected
from the vehicle.
WELCH
November 25, 1912-February 15, 2014
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published February 18, 2014
Capitola Tola Welch, age 101,
of Overland Park, died Saturday,
February 15, 2014, at Overland
Park.
She was born on November 25,
1912, in Kansas City, Missouri, to
Carl and Augusta (Klagus) Wilson.
She married G. Murlin Welch.
He died in January of 1997.
Survivors include her son,
Michael Welch; two grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2:00 PM, Wednesday, February
19, 2014 at the Feuerborn Family
Funeral Service, 344 N. Cedar,
Moran, Kansas. Burial will follow
in the Moran Cemetery.
HIGHWAY…
FROM PAGE 1A
and be completed in the spring
of 2019. U.S. 169 will be closed
from Welda north to the U.S. 59
junction, with traffic detoured
on U.S. 59 and U.S. 54. One-lane
traffic will be carried through
construction on the section
from the U.S. 59 junction north
to the roundabout.
The U.S. 169 project is
funded under T-WORKS, the
statewide transportation program approved by the Kansas
Legislature in 2010. For more
information about T-WORKS
projects and funding, visit the
website at www.ksdot.org/
tworks.
YOUR LIFE IS A STORY.
TELL IT WELL.
Garnett Monument
& Glass
126 West Fifth Garnett, KS 66032
Remember.
Forever.
(785) 448-6622
Todd Barnes
PROFESSIONAL
TAX PREPARATION
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
chamber players
4×8.5
3A
City wants to fix
parking lot problem
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A busy parking
lot that spans an alley has provoked complaints from area
residents, and city leaders plan
to step in to solve the problem
using a secret weapon: Paint.
A parking lot at Short
Stop on U.S. 59 spans an alley
between Fourth and Fifth avenues. Because of the way the lot
crosses the alley, it appears to
many motorists as if the alley
is part of the lot. Delivery drivers and patrons of the business
frequently park in ways that
block the west side of the alley.
That poses a problem for
residents who live in the area
and use the alley. The alley
is marked as one-way, forcing
traffic to exit to the west. But
when cars and trucks block
the west exit, residents have
no choice but to head east and
break the citys traffic laws.
The building was built
several years ago as a convenience store and fueling station, and featured a fast food
drive-through on the east side.
Because the drive-through funneled traffic into the alley, city
leaders restricted traffic to oneway to avoid having business
traffic drive through a residential alley.
An easy solution would be
to lift the one-way restriction
because the drive-through is
not used by the buildings current occupants, Commissioner
Gordon Blackie said.
But Mayor Greg Gwin, who
raised the issue after hearing
from residents who live near
the alley, said that would only
create more problems. The residents like having the one-way
alley because it continues to
prevent large amounts of traffic from utilizing the residential alley. If Short Stop customers were able to use the alley
as another exit, it could create safety issues and hazards,
Gwin and City Manager Joyce
Martin said.
With all the traffic that goes
to Short Stop, I imagine a great
deal of them would try to go
east, Martin said. There are
five houses right in this area,
so it could be a problem for
them.
Instead, Gwin suggested city
street crews use paint to better mark the alley so customers know its not part of the
parking lot. He also suggested
attaching a sign to a pole near
the highway to let people know
not to block the alley.
Martin said she planned to
talk to the business owners to
see if they could do anything to
further alleviate the problem.
TAX…
FROM PAGE 1A
Tax supporters say because
the tax is assessed to visitors,
some of the burden to promote
tourism is kept off of local taxpaying residents. But Mayor
Greg Gwin, who opposed raising the tax, said he objects to
the city increasing a tax by
66 percent in less than a year.
Commissioners in January
2013 approved increasing the
tax from 3 percent to 4 percent.
The change didnt take effect
until July 1, which means the
city has collected the tax for
about six months before tourism leaders asked for another
increase.
I personally feel its too
much, too soon, Gwin said.
Susan Wettstein, city assistant administrator, gave a presentation about tourism activities and the transient guest tax
during a late-January meeting. During the presentation,
she and other tourism leaders
said the increase would bring
in an extra $5,000 that could
be used to expand the services
they now provide. They pointed
to a recent request from the
Anderson County Fair Board to
help pay for a deposit to bring
a carnival to the 2014 county
fair. Commissioners scrambled
to find money to meet the fair
boards request; the process
could have been much easier if
they could have used transient
guest tax money for the event,
Wettstein said.
The money also could be
used to help groups start new
events, or provide matching
funds for grants to improve
tourism or arts. They pointed
to efforts to bring a Grand Prix
sports car rally to Garnett, an
event that would bring in many
out-of-town guests.
The money also could be
used to improve infrastructure, such as extending utilities
to a park for a special event,
Wettstein said.
In the end, Commissioners
Preston Peine and Gordon
Blackie voted to approve the
increase, with Gwin voting
against it.
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
EDITORIAL
From Russia with …eww
Im a little excited for the end of the
Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, because
Im interested to hear more about stray dogs
roaming the hotel hallways.
Welcome to Russia, comrade, and try not
to leave any scraps on the room service tray
outside your door.
I love Russia. Russia is like your brotherin-law whos bound and determined he can
rebuild the transmission in your car and
then keeps it in his garage so long you just
go ahead and buy another one. Russia is
the neighbor kid whos convinced he can
build his own space shuttle; the waitress who
brings three drinks to your table with a great
big smile and her fingers inside the glasses.
Russia feels obligated to prove its a member
of the world stage but cant guarantee the
footlights will work or anybody will be in the
box office to sell tickets.
Which is why the first stories out of Sochi
werent about the amazing human interest
stories behind the athletes. Instead they were
about warnings from the front desk clerk that
journalists in the hotels shouldnt wash their
faces with the water coming out of the tap in
the bathroom.
The most expensive Olympics preparation
of all time the Russians claim to have spent
$51 billion preparing Sochi for 17 days in the
world competitive spotlight has yielded
some of the most quintessentially Russian
horror stories of any Olympics so far. Mitt
Romney, who turned around the financially
troubled organization that put on the 2002
Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, is probably laughing so hard its making his hair
move.
It has to do with something central to
Russian life, and thats the legacy of 80 years
of communism; the theme that its the governments job to do it, but that really, it
will probably never get done anyway.
I got to travel in Russia for 8 days back
in 1993 (missed my flight out of Moscow, but
thats a topic for another column) and I got
to see first-hand some examples of how the
rusted engine of Russian life works.
The one that stays with me the most is
a highway traffic accident we passed on the
highway between Moscow and Serpukhov.
A vehicle was overturned on the far right of
the three lanes, driver and passengers were
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
sitting along the side of the highway clutching makeshift bandages to their heads, and
the only people stopping to help so far were a
couple of other motorists or the uninjured in
either of the cars involved.
Not an ambulance or fire truck in sight.
I could tell by the distance the antifreeze
and (gulp!)- gasoline- from the vehicles had
spread across the pavement, that this wreck
hadnt just happened; these folks had been
sitting here for quite some time. I asked my
interpreter why there was no ambulance.
Sometimes they come, sometimes they
dont come, she replied matter-of-factly.
I reached down to click on my seat belt in
our drivers Lada. There wasnt one.
It isnt that Russians dont care about
each other. I found them personally to be
very warm and caring people. But modern
Russians spent most of their lives through
the early 1990s being told the great benefactor of communism was taking care of all
their needs, but still realizing they were going
without. They grew up never really expecting
more.
Except the crooks. Russian mobsters were
the only ones who really ever understood
capitalism, and when it began to seep into
the country after the fall of communism, they
were the ones on top. My bet is their pockets
are where most of that $51 billion ended up.
So once out from under the public relations pressure of not angering their Russian
hosts, I have a feeling the stories from journalists covering Sochi in the weeks after competitions end are going to be even more illuminating. Unfortunately the victims of the bad PR,
as always, will be the Russian people.
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.
Hi, theres something that Ive
noticed in the last few years about
various colleges that offer our local
high school athletes scholarships.
When they do a picture in the paper
for the signing of the letter of intent
to go to that certain school, how
come nobody from that college or
university ever shows up anymore?
This is a special moment for that
player and that family and their
high school, but I guess its too
much trouble from anybody from
the college to come down to be
involved in the event? Is this just a
photo op to publicize the college, or
do they really care that this young
person is coming to their school
to compete and hopefully do well
academically? I for one think they
Democrats: The Party of Less Work
The Democrats once styled themselves the
party of workers. Now, they are the party of
people who would have been workers, if it
hadnt been for Obamacare.
The Congressional Budget Office released
a new analysis of the economic effects of the
health-care law that estimates that it will
reduce the number of workers, in effect, by
2.5 million in 2024.
This unleashed a torrent of arguments
from the Democrats implicitly denigrating the value of work. Perhaps not since
Southern fire-eaters attacked Northern
wage slavery in the mid-19th century has a
good honest days work been talked about so
dismissively.
The old jobs crisis was people not having
jobs; the new jobs crisis is people having
to work. The party devoted to combating
inequality is now blithely unconcerned about
a law discouraging people — especially people
down the income scale — from earning more.
So much for its championing of economic
mobility.
A few caveats are in order: We arent talking about jobs that are eliminated in the usual
sense of discouraging employers from hiring,
as some Republican talking points suggested.
And the 2.5 million number isnt for jobs per
se, but for full-time equivalent positions,
i.e., the cumulative lost hours of millions of
people deciding to work less.
Nonetheless, the number is devastating.
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
Democrats want to pass it all off as ending
the job lock that keeps people in a job only
to preserve their health insurance. There is a
little something to this, but it isnt the main
problem. Obamacare has created a vast apparatus of subsidies, penalties and taxes that is
effectively anti-work.
The CBO explains that Obamacares subsidies, by giving people more resources, allow
some people to maintain the same standard
of living while working less. And the way
they phase out creates another disincentive,
as subsidies decline with rising income (and
increase as income falls), thus making work
less attractive. The penalties and taxes,
meanwhile, will ultimately induce some
workers to supply less labor.
Democrats consider all this and pronounce
themselves well-pleased. Rep. Mark Pocan,
D-Wis., sees only upside in people working
less: What that means is instead they might
be able to tuck their child in bed at night and
read a bedtime story, or go to an activity,
which means theyre better off.
White House economic adviser Jason
Furman made an inapt comparison. Getting
rid of Social Security and Medicare would
cause more 95-year-olds to work, he said.
You wouldnt judge whether Social Security
or Medicare are good or bad based on what
they do to labor supply.
No, you wouldnt — because they are programs for the elderly. Discouraging work
among 95-year-olds is different than discouraging work among people in the prime of
their lives. No one told us when the bill was
being considered that Obamacare would have
some of the same effects as a retirement program.
The latest CBO numbers are part of the
growing list of facts about Obamacare that, if
they had been widely acknowledged before its
passage, would have doomed it in Congress.
But that debate seems so long ago. It was back
when both political parties professed to be
pro-work.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
Take your frustrations out on the refresh button
Theres a new pastime among Kansas
Statehouse insiderswere calling it
ReFresh Friday.
Huh?
Yes, its the act of hitting the refresh button
on your computer to see whether the Kansas
Supreme Court has issued at about 9:30 a.m.
on any Friday, along with its other decisions,
the Gannon v. Kansas school finance case
decision.
Because the 9:30 a.m. release time is not
precise (thats why you have to ReFresh the
court website frequently, and we figured the
odd capitalization might give someone an idea
for a T-shirt plus ReFresh Friday makes a
nice companion day to Throwback Thursday,
the day you post old photos on social media),
you hit the button over and over again to
check.
Catching the first glimpse of the decision
that might order the state to spend upwards
of $440 million on school finance is something that will carry bragging rights…no
matter which way the decision goes.
A decision that the state has under-funded
its support for K-12 education sets off a battle
between the Legislature, the governor and
the courts over who is responsible for financing education and whether the court can
order the state to actually pay a judgment
handed down by the court. It gets into tricky
constitutional law, whether the Supreme
Court can order the Legislature to make an
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
appropriation.
A no-harm, no-foul ruling? A possibility,
too.
But the legislative anxiety over the decisionand being the first to know ithas
apparently spurred a couple of bills that
target the Kansas Supreme Court and specifically its Chief Justice Lawton Nuss for a trim
of his authority.
One of those bills flatly orders that no
court in Kansas can spend any money on
hiring lobbyists. Not a lot of court-hired lobbyists around the Statehouse, lobbying, for,
say, nicer robes, or maybe softer chairs, but
its a little tug on the leash for the Kansas
judiciary.
Another takes from the chief justice the
authority to designate the chief judge of each
of the states 31 judicial districts. Thats a
little perk of being chief justice, designating the district court chiefs. The bill would
have the judges in each district vote among
themselves for the job of being in charge, and
making an extra $1,000 a year.
The bill would also have the 14-member
Court of Appeals elect its own chief judge
just another diminution of the chief justices
authority that might lead to some interesting
little campaigns that the general public will
never hear about.
And, of course there are the resolutions
that would let the governor choose his own
Supreme Court justices without any nomination commission in the way…and another
that would elect those justices.
Oh, and did we mention that the Supreme
Court needs a little extra money in its budget
to avoid furloughs for its non-judge staff ?
Makes you wonder how hard some legislators are hitting that ReFresh button, doesnt
it?
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
could show a little more respect and
send someone to at least stand there
for a picture. Thank you.
Hey Garnett, hate to break it to you
but there are other kinds of music
besides country music. Why dont you
have another kind of music at your
thing for a change, like Raekwon or
Easy-E or Heavy D? Lets put Jethro
back on the tractor and send him
home and rock the house. Thanks.
I wanted to say congratulations to QSI
at Richmond on their recent expansion project. I think its wonderful to
see a local success story and a company thats growing and providing
jobs instead of businesses that are
declining. Were glad you are in our
community.
I just wanted to say that officer
Thompson is an incredible police officer and Im really glad that hes on
our police force and he helped us out
a lot today.
What happened to wearing a suit and
tie if youre an administrator principal, superintendent, athletic director and so on? If youre an administrator you should wear a professional
suit and tie. Also Id like to comment
on the corrections director wasting
money in this district. Its taxpayers
money and they should be aware of
how much is being wasted.
Contact your
legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
e-mail pat_roberts@roberts.senate.
gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building,
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2715 Fax (202) 225-5124
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep Lynn Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-6601
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
LEGAL
County publishes notice of delinquent property tax sale
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
OF THE COUNTY OF ANDERSON, KANSAS
Plaintiff,
vs.
WILLIAM J. FOXX, FOXX FAMILY REVOCABLE
TRUST; et al.
Defendants,
Case No. 13 CV 38
PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 60 AND 79 OF
KANSAS STATUTES ANNOTATED
SHERIFFS NOTICE OF SALE
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that
under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued
to me out of the District Court of Anderson
County, Kansas, in the above-entitled action,
I will on Monday, March 24, 2014, at 1:00 p.m.
on said day, in the front lobby of the Courthouse
in the City of Garnett Anderson County, Kansas,
offer at public sale, and sell to the highest and
best bidder for cash in hand, all of the following
described real estate situated in Anderson
County, Kansas, to-wit:
Item # 01
Description:
Beginning 760 feet East; North 470 feet to the
Southwest corner of Lot Four (4), Block One (1)
(iron bar in place) Wohler Addition to the City of
Garnett, Kansas thence North 97.5 feet more
or less, East 188 feet more or less, South 97.5
feet more or less, West 188 feet more or less
to point of beginning, the Northeast Quarter
(NE/4) of Section Twenty-five (25), Township
(20) South, Range Nineteen (19) East of the
Sixth Principal Meridian;
NAME (S) OF OWNERS & INTERESTED
PARTIES:
William J. Foxx and (deceased 3-29-01)
Georgetta Foxx, Co-Trustees of the Foxx
Family Revocable Trust, under
agreement dated October 1, 1991
Tax ID#: 1-00201671
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014:
$25,944.77 + 2.50 / day
Special Assessment is included
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 02
Description:
Lot Three (3) in Block One (1) Mays Addition to
the City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas
NAME(S) OF OWNERS:
H. Robert Hayden and Marlys A. Hayden
410 N. Grant
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00201920
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Garnett State Savings Bank,
Garnett, KS recorded in Book 192 of Mortgages,
at page 25, was assigned to Farm Bureau
Property and Casualty Insurance Company,
recorded in Book 91 Mcl., at page 232.
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014:
$22,814.01 + $2.53/ day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 03
Complete Description:
Beginning 1118 feet South and 1957.5 feet
West of the Northeast corner of the Southeast
Quarter (SE/4) of Section Twenty-five (25),
Township Twenty (20) South, Range Nineteen
(19) East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in
the City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas,
thence West 306 feet, thence North 250 feet,
thence East 306 feet, thence South 250 feet to
the place of beginning;
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Guest Home Estates of Garnett, L.L.C.
%James Laidler
P.O. Box 961
Frontenac, KS 66763-0961
Tax ID#: 1-00202980
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to CoreFirst Bank & Trust, P.O. Box
5049, Topeka, KS 66611, recorded in Book 240
of Mortgages, at page 31.
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014:
$184,849.23 + $40.23 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 04
Complete Description:
Thirty-seven (37) feet off the west side of Lot
Nineteen (19) in Block Twenty-three (23) in the
City of Garnett;
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Steve Beals
429 E. 3rd
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00208920
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
08 DM 120
Ivy D. Beals
vs.
Steven R. Beals
(property omitted from divorce)
09 CV 42
Ivy D. Beals
vs.
Betty Still and
Steven R. Beals
(dismissal against Betty Still filed 9-30-10)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $786.33
+ $.08 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 05
Complete Description:
Lots Nine (9), Ten (10), Eleven (11) and Twelve
(12) in Block Thirty-nine (39) in the City of
Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Roger Scheckel and Roberta Scheckel
502 E. 3rd
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00209350
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
05 ST 19
State of Kansas Department of Revenue
vs.
Roger A. Scheckel
DBA Scheckel Service
Sales tax
08 PT 51
Anderson County Treasurer
vs.
Roger A. Scheckel
Personal property tax
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $11,113.33
+ 1.25 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 06
Complete Description:
The South Eighty (80) feet of Lots Eight (8) and
Nine (9) in Block Six (6) in the City of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
H. Robert Hayden and Marlys A. Hayden
410 N. Grant
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00210120
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to State Bank of Colony, P.O. Box
278, Colony, KS 66015, recorded in Book 175
of Mortgages, at page 60, was assigned to
Farm Bureau Property and Casualty Insurance
Company, recorded in Book 92 Mcl., at page
6.
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $14,029.80
+ 1.42 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 07
Complete Description:
West 3 feet of the East 100 feet of Lot Thirteen
(13) in Block Two (2) in Whiteford Addition to
the City of Garnett, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Mark Moody
902 Charles St.
Bronson, KS 66716
Tax ID#: 1-00210580
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $1,253.13
+ .13 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 08
Complete Description:
Lot Five (5) and the East 24 feet of Lot Six (6)
in Block Five (5) in Chapmans Addition to the
City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas, less
the following: Commencing 62 feet North of the
center of the South line of Lot Six (6) in Block
Five (5) in Chapmans Addition to the City of
Garnett, thence North 58 feet to the center of
the north line of Lot Six (6) in Block Five (5),
thence East 72 feet to the northeast corner of
Lot Five (5), thence South 58 feet, thence West
72 feet to the place of beginning.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Ronald E. Castleberry, Sr. and Laura
Castleberry
P.O. Box 617
Wellsville, KS 66092-0617
Tax ID#: 1-00215330
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Advanta National Bank, 10790
Rancho Bernardo Road, San Diego, CA
92127, recorded in Book 183 of Mortgages,
at page 33.
Mortgage to Advanta National Bank, 850
Ridgeview Drive, Horsham, PA 19044, recorded in Book 183 of Mortgages, at page 34.
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
01 CV 22
Olathe Medical Center
vs.
Ronald E. Castleberry
Judgement in 99LM182 moved to 01CV22
filed 5-18-99
01 CV 36
Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corporation
vs.
Ronald E. Castleberry Sr., Laura Castleberry,
Advanta National Bank N.A. and Olathe
Medical Center
Sheriffs return filed 12-31-01, no confirmation
or sheriffs deed recorded.
01 CV 50
In the Matter of the Complaint of
R.G. Doran, City Manager
vs.
Ronald Castleberry, Sr. and Laura Castleberry,
Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp., Mortgagee
Filed 11-9-01 order to demolish filed 12-18-01
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014:
$18,394.48 + 1.88 / day
Special Assessment is included
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 09
Complete Description:
Lots Twelve (12) and Thirteen (13) in Block
Thirteen (13) in Chapmans Addition to the City
of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
William A. Roberts
311 N. Burruss St.
Hamilton, MO 64644-11130
Alice Roberts, her heirs
Tax ID#: 1-00216250
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Deed from W. A. Thomas and Irene Thomas,
husband and wife, to Alice Roberts recorded
in Book 98, Page 146. (We find no probate of
Alice Roberts estate)
Deed to William A. Roberts, conveyed from
Thomas W. Roberts and Dotette Roberts, husband and wife, and Lewis L. Roberts and Millie
Irene Roberts, husband and wife, recorded in
Book 132, Page 261
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $4,140.52
+ .39 / day
Special Assessment is included.
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 10
Complete Description:
Beginning 100 feet South of the Northeast
Corner of Lot One (1), Block Eleven (11),
Chapmans Addition to the City of Garnett,
thence South 99 feet 6 inches, thence West
89 feet 3 inches, thence North 8 feet 7 inches,
thence East 9 feet, thence North 95 feet, thence
East to place of beginning, and
Beginning at the Southeast corner of Lot
Twelve (12), Block Eleven (11), Chapmans
Addition to the City of Garnett, Kansas, thence
North 58 feet, thence West 98 feet, thence in
a South-westerly direction to the Southwest
corner of Lot Twelve (12), thence East to the
place of beginning, being all of Lot Twelve (12)
and 12.2 feet of Lot Nine (9), all Block Eleven
(11), Chapmans Addition to the City of Garnett,
Kansas, and
Commencing at the Northeast corner of Lot
One (1) in Block Eleven (11), in Chapmans
Addition to the City of Garnett, Kansas, thence
South 100 feet, thence West 39 feet, thence
North 10 feet, thence West 10 feet, thence
Northeast 97 feet, thence East 15 feet to the
place of beginning
Being also described as Lots One (1), Four (4),
Five (5), Eight (8), Nine (9) and Twelve (12) in
Block Eleven (11), in Chapmans Addition to the
City of Garnett, Kansas, along with the N/2 of
vacated Tenth Avenue.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
J. C. Wray and Amanda Louise Wray (both
assumed deceased;
23799 S. Shawnee Heights Rd. Lot 38 survived by Chryl Durham,
Vassar, KS 66543-9232
adult
daughter, address and other heirs unknown)
Mrs. King Stilwell (deceased)
heirs:
Floyd T. Stilwell, husband, (deceased)
heirs:
Ralph Caven, nephew
Ralph Stilwell, nephew
Cecile M. Powell, granddaughter, (unknown
address or if deceased)
Marjorie L. Dalton, granddaughter, (unknown
address or if deceased)
Virginia E. Herman, granddaughter,
(deceased)
Heirs:
Susan E. Catron
6407 W 143rd Terr.
Overland Park, KS 66223
Barbara K. Tucker, daughter,
(deceased)
only heir:
Tom Tucker
27 Lakeview Drive
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00216310
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Household Finance Corporation III,
1700 SW Wanamaker Road, Wanamaker SO
CTR, Ste. 250, Topeka, KS 66604.
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
08 CV 20
Joyce E. Martin, City Manager
vs.
Heirs of J.C./& Amanda Wray, Deceased
Cheryl Durham, Household Finance Corp III
Premises unfit for human use or habitation and
dangerous.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014:
$19,752.16 + 2.40 / day
Special Assessment is included
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 11
Complete Description:
Lots Seventeen (17), Eighteen (18), Nineteen
(19) and Twenty (20) in Block Forty-three (43)
in the City of Garnett, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Steve Cooney
% Mark Upp
1119 Franklin
Wichita, KS 67203
Tax ID#: 1-00216890
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $8,917.20
+ .97 / day
Special Assessment is included
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 12
Complete Description:
Lots One (1), Two (2) and Three (3) in Block
Fifty-eight (58) in the City of Garnett, Anderson
County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Jap Lankard and Minnie Lankard (both now
deceased)
% Mrs. Sean Conner
114 S. Locust St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
Tax ID#: 1-00217380
MINERAL INTEREST:
None.
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
None
Tax liens:
None
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
11 CV 20
Joyce E. Martin, City Manager
vs.
Heirs of Minnie Lankard, deceased, which
include the following
Jeanette Hiatt
346 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett, KS 66032
James Lankard
23884 NW Mitchell Rd.
Garnett, KS 66032
Ruth Hatch
310 Olive St.
Eldon, MO 65026-1459
Bill Lankard
1445 Autumn Valley Cir.
Mulvane, KS 67110-1119
Bob Lankard
13671 Harmonburg Rd.
Meadeville, PA 1635-8753
Donna Conner
114 S. Locust
Ottawa, KS 66067-2230
Covering all Lots 1 & 2 Block Fifty-eight (58), in
the City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas
Structure unfit for human use.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Information obtained outside this office
Living children of Jap and Minnie Lankard:
Jeanette I. Hiatt
346 E. 4th
Garnett, KS 66032
James H. Lankard
23884 NW Mitchell Rd.
Garnett, KS 66032
Bill D. Lankard
1445 Autumn Valley Circle
Mulvane, KS 67110
Robert L. Lankard
13671 Harmonburg Rd.
Meadville, PA 16335-8753
Ruth Hatch
20709 Wilkes Creek Rd.
Eldon, MO 65026
Deceased children of Jap and Minnie Lankard
Eugene Lankard
Delbert W. Lankard
Sammy D. Lankard
Leonard L. Lankard
Mary A. Hunsaker
Donald G. Lankard
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $4,088.33
+ .38 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 13
Complete Description:
Lots Eight (8) and Nine (9) in Block Fifty-nine
(59) in the City of Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Paul W. Vogeler and Carol A. Vogeler
7524 Kay Linn Rd
Overland Park, KS 66223
Tax ID#: 1-00217530
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014:
$16,317.57 + 1.68 / day
Special Assessment is included
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 15
Complete Description:
The South 84 feet of Lot One (1), and the South
84 feet of the East 27 feet Two (2) in Block
Sixty-four (64) in the City of Garnett, Anderson
County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
James Steven Whitesell and Marita C.
Whitesell
25923 NE 1700 Rd.
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00218000
MINERAL INTEREST:
None.
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to American Equity Mortgage, Inc.
recorded in Book 170 of Mortgages, at page
22. Assigned to The Bank of New York,
as Trustee under the Pooling and Service
Agreement dated as of August 31, 1996m
Series 1996-C, 20 Broad Street, LL-2, New
York City, NY 10005.
Tax liens:
10 ST 18
Kansas Department of Revenue
vs.
James S. Whitesell and Marita C. Whitesell
Income tax.
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
97 JL 03
Chrysler Financial
Vs
James A. Whitesell and Marita C. Whitesell
Journal Entry of Judgment from Case 97LM-39
99 C 36
The Bank of New York as Trustee under the
Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of
August 31, 1996, Series 1996-C
vs.
James Steven Whitesell and Marita C.
Whitesell
Journal Entry of Judgment of Foreclosure dated
November 1, 1999
(last entry in file)
09 CV 68
Ford Motor Credit Company
vs.
James S. Whitesell and Marita C. Whitesell
Journal Entry of Judgment dated November
23, 2009
Note on public access computers these are
tagged Bankruptcy Stay
11 PT 53
Personal property taxes for 2010.
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $2,377.47
+ .28 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 16
Complete Description:
Lots Six (6), Seven (7), Eight (8), Nine (9), Ten
(10) in Block Two (2) in Mandovi Addition to the
City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Zelma Bowman
(acquired via quit claim
deeds)
1345 Maple Lane
Lawrence, KS 66044
Tax ID#: 1-00218390
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Deed to Jesse Gibson in 1920, ( no probate
estate)
Warranty Deed from Mabel Gibson, widow of
Jessie Gibson, deceased, to John C. Gibson.
Quit Claim Deed from Martha E. Gibson, widow
and sole heir of John C. Gibson, deceased (no
probate estate) to
Nadine Wilburn; Delores Landis; Thelma
Wouster; Zelma Bowman; Minnie Hooten;
each a 1/6th interest; and Jackie Gibson;
Phyllis Gibson; and Karen Gibson, each a
1/18th interest.
Minnie Hooten (no marital status)
Thelma Worster (no marital status)
Iris Gordanier (no marital status)
Delores Landis (no marital status) all quit
claimed to Zelma Bowman
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $3,620.92
+ .36 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 17
Complete Description:
Lots Eleven (11), Twelve (12), and Thirteen (13
in Block Two (2) in Mandovi Addition to the City
of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Zelma Bowman
(acquired via quit claim
deed)
1345 Maple Lane
Lawrence, KS 66044
Tax ID#: 1-00218400
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Deed to Jesse Gibson in 1923, (no probate
estate)
Warranty Deed from Mabel Gibson, widow of
Jessie Gibson, deceased, to John C. Gibson.
Quit Claim Deed from Martha E. Gibson, widow
and sole heir of John C. Gibson, deceased (no
probate estate) to
Nadine Wilburn; Delores Landis; Thelma
Wouster; Zelma Bowman; Minnie Hooten;
each a 1/6th interest; and Jackie Gibson;
Phyllis Gibson; and Karen Gibson, each a
1/18th interest.
Minnie Hooten (no marital status)
Thelma Worster (no marital status)
Iris Gordanier (no marital status)
Delores Landis (no marital status) all quit
claimed to Zelma Bowman
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $2,723.85
+ .27 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 18
Complete Description:
Lot Sixteen (16) in Block Three (3) in Mandovi
Addition to the City of Garnett, Anderson
County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Annie Gibson
517 S. Hayes
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00218460
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $366.48
+ .02 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 19
Complete Description:
Lots One (1), Two (2), Three (3), Four (4),
Five (5) and Six (6) in Block Sixteen (16)
in Mandovi Addition to the City of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Beverly Brockus
708 W. 15th St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
Robert Caylor
P.O. Box 368
Ottawa, KS 66067
William A. Dempsay
1662 N. Painted Hills Road
Tucson, AZ 85745
Clifford O. Dempsay
407 Senior St.
Waverly, KS 66871
Connie Lee Dempsay
2192 Vermont Road
Rantoul, KS 66079
Maynard Goings
2781 S. Yates Street
Denver, CO 80236-2018
Twila (Briles) Lindsay
P.O. Box 743
Ottawa, KS 66067
Tax ID#: 1-00218910
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to The Pacesetter Corporation, 9280
Flint, Overland Park, KS 66214, recorded in
Book 163 of Mortgages, at page 169.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Ownership obtained in:
01 PR 45
In the Matter of the Estate of
Fayne L. Caylor, deceased
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $5,195.10
+ .54 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 20
Complete Description:
Lots Eleven (11), Twelve (12), Thirteen (13),
Fourteen (14), Fifteen (15), Sixteen (16),
Seventeen (17), Eighteen (18), Nineteen
(19) and Twenty (20) in Block Sixteen (16)
in Mandovi Addition to the City of Garnett,
5A
Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Beverly Brockus
708 W. 15th St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
Robert Caylor
P.O. Box 368
Ottawa, KS 66067
William A. Dempsay
1662 N. Painted Hills Road
Tucson, AZ 85745
Clifford O. Dempsay
407 Senior St.
Waverly, KS 66871
Connie Lee Dempsay
2192 Vermont Road
Rantoul, KS 66079
Maynard Goings
2781 S. Yates Street
Denver, CO 80236-2018
Twila (Briles) Lindsay
P.O. Box 743
Ottawa, KS 66067
Tax ID#: 1-00218930
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to The Pacesetter Corporation, 9280
Flint, Overland Park, KS 66214, recorded in
Book 163 of Mortgages, at page 53.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Ownership obtained in:
01 PR 45
In the Matter of the Estate of
Fayne L. Caylor, deceased
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $2,684.46
+ .30 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 21
Complete Description:
Lots Nineteen (19) and Twenty (20) in Block
Seventeen (17) in Mandovi Addition to the City
of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Beverly Brockus
708 W. 15th St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
Robert Caylor
P.O. Box 368
Ottawa, KS 66067
William A. Dempsay
1662 N. Painted Hills Road
Tucson, AZ 85745
Clifford O. Dempsay
407 Senior St.
Waverly, KS 66871
Connie Lee Dempsay
2192 Vermont Road
Rantoul, KS 66079
Maynard Goings
2781 S. Yates Street
Denver, CO 80236-2018
Twila (Briles) Lindsay
P.O. Box 743
Ottawa, KS 66067
Tax ID#: 1-00218940
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Ownership obtained in:
01 PR 45
In the Matter of the Estate of
Fayne L. Caylor, deceased
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $220.45
+ .00 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 22
Complete Description:
Lots One (1), Two (2) and Three (3) in Block
Twenty-six (26) in Mandovi Addition to the City
of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Beverly Brockus
708 W. 15th St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
Robert Caylor
P.O. Box 368
Ottawa, KS 66067
William A. Dempsay
1662 N. Painted Hills Road
Tucson, AZ 85745
Clifford O. Dempsay
407 Senior St.
Waverly, KS 66871
Connie Lee Dempsay
2192 Vermont Road
Rantoul, KS 66079
Maynard Goings
2781 S. Yates Street
Denver, CO 80236-2018
Twila (Briles) Lindsay
P.O. Box 743
Ottawa, KS 66067
Tax ID#: 1-00219180
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Ownership obtained in:
01 PR 45
In the Matter of the Estate of
Fayne L. Caylor, deceased
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $896.60
+ .04 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 23
Complete Description:
Lot Four (4) East of railroad in Block Twenty-six
(26) in Mandovi Addition to the City of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Justin D. Ashburn
% Mary Fleming
2430 SE Ohio Ave.
Topeka, KS 66605
Tax ID#: 1-00219190
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $229.04
SEE SALE ON PAGE 6A
6A
SALE…
FROM PAGE 6A
+ .00 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 24
Complete Description:
Lots One (1), Two (2), Three (3), Four (4),
Five (5), Six (6), Seven (7), Eight (8), Nine
(9) and Ten (10) in Block Twenty-seven (27)
in Mandovi Addition to the City of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Beverly Brockus
708 W. 15th St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
Robert Caylor
P.O. Box 368
Ottawa, KS 66067
William A. Dempsay
1662 N. Painted Hills Road
Tucson, AZ 85745
Clifford O. Dempsay
407 Senior St.
Waverly, KS 66871
Connie Lee Dempsay
2192 Vermont Road
Rantoul, KS 66079
Maynard Goings
2781 S. Yates Street
Denver, CO 80236-2018
Twila (Briles) Lindsay
P.O. Box 743
Ottawa, KS 66067
Tax ID#: 1-00219200
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Ownership obtained in:
01 PR 45
In the Matter of the Estate of
Fayne L. Caylor, deceased
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $2,406.27
+ .23 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 25
Complete Description:
Beginning at a point 70 feet West of the northeast corner of Lot Nine (9), Block Forty-eight
(48) in the City of Greeley, Anderson County,
Kansas, thence West 25 feet, thence South to
the South line of Lot Ten (10), thence East 25
feet, thence North to the place of beginning,
including one-half interest in party wall on East,
and the land on which it stands, all in Lots
Nine (9) and Ten (10), Block 48, in the City of
Greeley
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Robert D. Pool
7284 W. 1400 Rd.
Centerville, KS 66014-91921
Tax ID#: 1-00301520
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to American State Bank, Osawatomie,
KS, recorded in Book 162 of Mortgages, at
page 167.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $2,147.16
+ .25 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 26
Complete Description:
The North Half (N/2) of Lot Two (2), in Block
Forty-two (42), according to the original plat of
the City of Greeley, being also known as Lot
Sixteen (16), in Block Forty-two (42), according
to the Subdivision plat of Greeley, Anderson
County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
CAB-TEL Corp.
% Attn: Shannon
1880 McKenzie Dr, Ste. 202
Arlington, OH 43220
Tax ID#: 1-00301970
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $1,593.80
+ .14 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 27
Complete Description:
Beginning at the Northwest corner of the
Southwest Quarter (SW/4) of Block Twenty-four
(24) in the City of Greeley, Anderson County,
Kansas, thence running East 150 feet, thence
South 50 feet, thence West 150 feet, thence
North 50 feet to the place of beginning, said
description being the same as the North Half
(N/2) of Lot Seven (7) in Block Twenty-four (24)
in the City of Greeley
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Michael G. Mauldin and Jennifer L. Esquivel
122 E. 2nd Ave.
Garnett, KS 66032
Tax ID#: 1-00302380
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
06 CV 01
Ford Motor Credit Company
vs.
Jennifer L. Esquivel
Judgment dated March 6, 2006 to plaintiff in
amount of $14,185.58 + interest + costs
Renewal affidavit filed April 15, 2010.
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $5,856.97
+ .64 / day
Item # 28
Complete Description:
Lots Seven (7), Eight (8), Nine (9), Ten (10),
Eleven (11) and Twelve (12) in Block Nineteen
(19) in the City of Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson
County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Betty Lou Huffman
6500 Kansas Ave. #84
Kansas City, KS 66101
LEGAL
Tax ID#: 1-00500270
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $460.17
+ .04 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 29
Complete Description:
Lots One (1), Two (2), and Three (3) in Block
Eleven (11) in the City of Kincaid, Kansas,
Anderson County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Betty Lou Huffman
6500 Kansas Ave. #84
Kansas City, KS 66101
Tax ID#: 1-00500470
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $825.18
+ .08 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 30
Complete Description:
Lot Fifteen (15), Sixteen (16), Seventeen (17)
and Eighteen (18) in Block Eleven (11) in the
City of Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson County,
Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Sam Davidson
P. O. Box 123
Kincaid, KS 66039
Tax ID#: 1-00500480
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $318.00
+ .01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 31
Complete Description:
Beginning 80 feet East of the Southeast corner
of Block Two (2), thence North 100 feet, thence
East 265 feet, thence South 100 feet, thence
West 265 feet to the point of beginning, in the
City of Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson County,
Kansas, being further described as the South
100 feet of Block 0.2, Reserve Strip to the City
of Kincaid, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Robert Bennett and Mary Bennett
843 N. Washington Ave.
Iola, KS 66749
Tax ID#: 1-00500590
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $3,015.20
+ .23 / day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 32
Complete Description:
Lot Nine (9) and Ten (10) in Block Twenty-six
(26) in the City of Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson
County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Melissa Weaver, aka Melissa C. Weaver
7234 Ridge Ave.
Kansas City, KS 66111
Tax ID#: 1-00500810
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Garnett State Savings Bank,
Garnett, KS, recorded in Book 170 of
Mortgages, at page 91.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $4,315.25
+ .44/ Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 33
Complete Description:
Lots Three (3) and Four (4) in Block Twenty-six
(26) in the City of Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson
County, Kansas.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Alfred Smith and Mary Swepston
1309 S. Washington Ave.
LaHarpe, KS 66751-1829
Tax ID#: 1-00500840
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to TMS Mortgage, Inc., dba The
Money Store, 12351 W. 96th Terrace, Suite
207, Lenexa, KS 66215, recorded in Book 177
of Mortgages, at page 63.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $2,535.63
+ .22 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 34
Complete Description:
All of Block Forty-one (41), in the City of
Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson County, Kansas
Include in the tax sale: along with the adjacent
S/2 of vacated Second Avenue, the adjacent
W/2 of vacated Blaker Street and the adjacent
N/2 of vacated First Avenue.
(Dena
wants combined)
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Harry S Funk, III and Connie Jo Funk
P.O. Box 1C
Kincaid, KS 66039
Tax ID#: 1-00500900 & 1-00500900A
MINERAL INTEREST:
None.
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to MERS, with a lender of Capital
One Home Loans, recorded in Book 226 of
Mortgages, at page 19; was assigned to
CitiMortgage, Inc., 1000 Technology Drive,
OFallon, MO 63304, recorded in Book 91
Mcl., at page 202.
Tax liens:
13 ST 20
Kansas Department of Revenue
Vs.
Harry S. Funk, III and Connie Funk
2010, 2011 income tax $1,703.19
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
10 CV 9
Ford Motor Credit Company
vs.
Harry S. Funk III and Connie J. Funk
Judgment $9,311.63 + int + costs filed 4-5-10
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $626.10
+ .02 / Day and $142.56 + $.01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 35
Complete Description:
Lot Nine (9), Ten (10), Eleven (11), and Twelve
(12) in Block Thirty (30), in the City of Kincaid,
Kansas, Anderson County, Kansas
Include in the tax sale: along with adjacent S/2
of vacated Second Avenue and the adjacent E/2
of vacated Blaker Street.
(Dena
wants combined)
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Harry S Funk, III and Connie Jo Funk
P.O. Box 1C
Kincaid, KS 66039
Tax ID#: 1-00500920 & 1-00500900A
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to MERS, with a lender of Capital
One Home Loans, recorded in Book 226
of Mortgages, at page 19; was assigned to
CitiMortgage, Inc., 1000 Technology Drive,
OFallon, MO 63304, recorded in Book 91
Mcl., at page 202.
Tax liens:
13 ST 20
Kansas Department of Revenue
Vs.
Harry S. Funk, III and Connie Funk
2010, 2011 income tax $1,703.19
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
10 CV 9
Ford Motor Credit Company
vs.
Harry S. Funk III and Connie J. Funk
Judgment $9,311.63 + int + costs filed 4-5-10
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: 817.76 +
.08 / Day and $142.56 + $.01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 36
Complete Description:
Lot Nine (9), Ten (10), Eleven (11), Twelve
(12), Thirteen (13) and Fourteen (14) in Block
Twenty-eight (28), in the City of Kincaid,
Kansas, Anderson County, Kansas,
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Nicholas Pasternak
19 N. Grace
Kincaid, KS 66039
Tax ID#: 1-00501580
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
The Defendant for Item #36, Nicholas
Pasternak, filed an Answer in the matter.
Judgment was granted to the Plaintiff for the
amount prayed for.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $4,084.04
+ .48 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 37
Complete Description:
Lot Twelve (12) in Block Twenty Nine (29) in
the City of Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson County,
Kansas.
Included in the tax sale: the adjacent E/2 of
vacated Blaker Street.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Effie Tate
38 Quail Meadow Dr.
Mound City, KS 66056
Tax ID#: 1-00501650 & 1-00501650A
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Farmers State Bank, Blue Mound,
KS 66010, recorded in Book 190 of Mortgages,
at page 60.
Mortgage to Farmers State Bank, Blue Mound,
KS 66010, recorded in Book 192 of Mortgages,
at page 65.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $472.37
+ .05 / Day and $108.59 + $.01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 38
Complete Description:
Lots Nine (9) and Ten (10) in Block Twenty-nine
(29) and beginning at the Southeast corner of
Lot Nine (9) in Block Twenty-nine (29) thence
South 80 feet, thence West 140 feet, thence
North 80 feet, thence East 140 feet to the place
of beginning, all in the City of Kincaid, Kansas,
Anderson County, Kansas
Included in the tax sale: the adjacent E/2 of
vacated Blaker Street.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Harry S Funk, III and Connie Jo Funk
P.O. Box 1C
Kincaid, KS 66039
Tax ID#: 1-00501670
Parcel# 197-36-0-40-45-007.00
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to MERS, with a lender of Capital
One Home Loans, recorded in Book 226
of Mortgages, at page 19; was assigned to
CitiMortgage, Inc., 1000 Technology Drive,
OFallon, MO 63304, recorded in Book 91
Mcl., at page 202.
Tax liens:
13 ST 20
Kansas Department of Revenue
Vs.
Harry S. Funk, III and Connie Funk
2010, 2011 income tax $1,703.19
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
10 CV 9
Ford Motor Credit Company
vs.
Harry S. Funk III and Connie J. Funk
Judgment $9,311.63 + int + costs filed 4-5-10
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $704.90
+ .07 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 39
Complete Description:
Lot Five (5) in Block Twenty-nine (29), in the
City of Kincaid, Kansas, Anderson County,
Kansas,
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Effie Tate
38 Quail Meadow Dr.
Mound City, KS 66056
Tax ID#: 1-00501700
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Farmers State Bank, Blue Mound,
KS 66010, recorded in Book 190 of Mortgages,
at page 60.
Mortgage to Farmers State Bank, Blue Mound,
KS 66010, recorded in Book 192 of Mortgages,
at page 65.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $1,578.57
+ .18 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 40
Complete Description:
All of Block Forty-two, in the City of Kincaid,
Kansas and also beginning at the Southwest
corner of the Southeast Quarter (SE/4) of
Section Thirty-six (36), Township Twenty-two
(22) South, Range Twenty (20) East of the Sixth
Principal Meridian, thence North 100 feet to the
Southwest corner of Block Forty-two (42) in
the City of Kincaid, Kansas, thence East to the
Southwest corner of Block Twenty-nine (29) in
said City of Kincaid, Kansas, thence South 100
feet and thence West to the place of beginning
Include in the tax sale: along with the adjacent
S/2 of vacated First Avenue and the adjacent
W/2 of Blaker Street.
(Dena wants combined)
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Harry S Funk, III and Connie Jo Funk
P.O. Box 1C
Kincaid, KS 66039
Tax ID#: 1-00501730 & 1-00500900A
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to MERS, with a lender of Capital
One Home Loans, recorded in Book 226
of Mortgages, at page 19; was assigned to
CitiMortgage, Inc., 1000 Technology Drive,
OFallon, MO 63304, recorded in Book 91
Mcl., at page 202.
Tax liens:
13 ST 20
Kansas Department of Revenue
Vs.
Harry S. Funk, III and Connie Funk
2010, 2011 income tax $1,703.19
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
10 CV 9
Ford Motor Credit Company
vs.
Harry S. Funk III and Connie J. Funk
Judgment $9,311.63 + int + costs filed 4-5-10
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $761.19
+ .07 / Day and $142.56 + $.01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 41
Complete Description:
Lots Five (5), Six (6), Seven (7) and Eight (8) in
Block Six (6) in the Town of Reeve, commonly
called Lone Elm;
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Charles L. Gracheck and Lenora G. Gracheck
Edith West
Ethel F. Steinhauser
Kincaid, KS 66039
Tax ID#: 1-00600110
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $294.30
+ .01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 42
Complete Description:
Lots F and G in Flusches Subdivision of
Block Eleven (11) in the City of Westphalia,
Kansas;
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Larry McDaniels
2124 Kafir Rd. NW
Lebo, KS 66856-9230
Tax ID#: 1-00700370
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $323.83
+ .01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Item # 43
Complete Description:
Lot Six (6) in Block Fourteen (14) to the City of
Westphalia, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Justin Ashburn
% Mary Fleming
2430 SE Ohio Ave
Topeka, KS 66605
Tax ID#: 1-00700560
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $416.09
+ .04 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 44
Complete Description:
Block Five (5) in Highbergers Addition to the
City of Westphalia, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Leo V. Smith
2075 SW Fillmore St.
Topeka, KS 66604-3075
Tax ID#: 1-00700670
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $1,218.55
+ .15 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 45
Complete Description:
Block Eight (8) in Highbergers Addition to the
City of Westphalia, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Leo V. Smith
2075 SW Fillmore St.
Topeka, KS 66604-3075
Tax ID#: 1-00700680
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $114.44
+ .00 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 46
Complete Description:
Lots Thirteen (13), Fourteen (14), Fifteen (15),
Sixteen (16), Seventeen (17) and the South 18
feet of Lot Eighteen (18) in Block Seventeen
(17) in the Supplement to Merrills Addition to
the Town of Westphalia, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Bobby R. and Mary K. Craig
722 Oak
Humboldt, KS 66748
Tax ID#: 1-00701410
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $435.09
+ .02 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 47
Complete Description:
Beginning Five Hundred Sixty-two (562) feet
West of the Southeast corner of Southwest
quarter (SW/4), thence West Sixteen (16) feet,
thence North One Hundred Forty-two (142)
feet, thence East Sixteen (16) feet, thence
South One Hundred Forty-two (142) feet to
the point of beginning in Section Twenty-five
(25), Township Twenty-one (21) South, Range
Seventeen (17) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, Anderson County, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Unknown
The heirs of John Hempfling and Joseph
Hempfling
(Deed Book 41 at Page 32, is the only place we
find any ownership of this property.)
Tax ID#: 1-00701570
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $196.80
+ .00 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 48
Complete Description:
Lot Six (6) and Seven (7) in Block One (1) in
the what was formerly Mineral Point aka Amiot,
located in the Southwest Quarter (SW/4) of
Section Thirty-six (26), Township Nineteen (19)
South, Range Seventeen (17), along with 12
of vacated alley and street adjoining said property.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Unknown
The heirs of John A. Moler, Sina C. Moler, Albert
Moler and Mary A. Moler and Mineral Point
Presbyterian Church
Tax ID#: 1-02600930
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
We find no conveyance to Mineral Point
Presbyterian Church, except for the mention of
this belonging to them in deed recorded in Book
86, at page 469.
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $240.76
+ .00 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 49
Complete Description:
All lots Twelve (12), Thirteen (13), Fourteen
(14), Fifteen (15), Sixteen (16), Seventeen (17)
and Eighteen (18) in Block Eighteen (18) to
the City of Harris, Kansas, Anderson County,
Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Robert T., also known as Robert P. and Sherry
M. Riggs
Doris C. Droemer
2374 20th Rd.
Waverly KS 66871
Tax ID#: 1-02605400
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $907.95
+ .07 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 50
Complete Description:
Lots One (1), Two (2), Three (3), Four (4),
Five (5), and Six (6) in Block Six (6) in the
Town of Bush City, formerly known as Haskell,
Anderson County, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Francis R. and Ellen K. Weaver
2036 N 115th St.
Kansas City, KS 66109-4801
Tax ID#: 1-04600450
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Beneficial Mortgage Co. of Kansas,
Inc., 330 W. 15th Street Ste. #4, Lawrence, KS
66049, recorded in Book 175 of Mortgages,
at page 72.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $1,121.60
+ .11 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 51
Complete Description:
Lots One (1) and Two (2) in Block Nine (9)
in the Town of Bush City, formerly known as
Haskell, Anderson County, Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Francis R. and Ellen K. Weaver
2036 N 115th St.
Kansas City, KS 66109-4801
Tax ID#: 1-04600570
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Mortgage to Beneficial Mortgage Co. of Kansas,
Inc., 330 W. 15th Street Ste. #4, Lawrence, KS
66049, recorded in Book 175 of Mortgages,
at page 72.
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $245.74
+ .00 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 52
Complete Description:
Abandoned railroad right of way west of alley in
Block Nine (9) in Bush City, Anderson County,
Kansas
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
James E. Finley
% Ed Finley
PO Box 173
Garnett KS 66032-0713
Tax ID#: 1-04600580
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
90D19
Angela J. Finley
vs.
James E. Finley
Child support
01D105
Betty L. Finley
vs.
James Edward Finley
Child support
07MV14
Russell B. Cloon
DBA Cloon Legal Services
vs.
James Finley
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $287.31
+ .03 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 53
Complete Description:
Beginning 330 feet South of the Northeast corner of the Northwest Quarter of Section Sixteen
(16), Township Twenty-one (21) South, Range
Twenty-one (21) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, thence West 222.7 feet, thence South
214.5 feet, thence East 222.7 feet, thence
North to the place of beginning.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Nick Gutierrez
PO Box 426
Iola, KS 66749-0426
Tax ID#: 1-04600870
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $179.94
+ .01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 54
Complete Description:
Block Four (4), except Lot One (1), but including all reversionary right in school sites, streets,
alleys, and railroad right-of-way, in the Town
of Selma.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Donald D. Mitchell and Marie E. Mitchell
5452 S. Gold Ct.
Wichita, KS 67217
Tax ID#: 1-11000670
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Conflict
Paul L. Montague and Amy J. Higman
31440 SE 800 Rd.
Kincaid, KS 66039
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $252.04
+ .02 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
SEE SALE ON PAGE 7A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
SALE…
FROM PAGE 6A
October 1, 2012
Item # 55
Complete Description:
Blocks Five (5) and Six (6), including all reversionary right in school sites, streets, alleys, and
railroad right-of-way, in the Town of Selma.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Donald D. Mitchell and Marie E. Mitchell
5452 S. Gold Ct.
Wichita, KS 67217
Tax ID#: 1-11000680
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Conflict
Paul L. Montague and Amy J. Higman
31440 SE 800 Rd.
Kincaid, KS 66039
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $380.79
+ .00 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 56
Complete Description:
Lots Four (4), Five (5) and Six (6) in Block
Seven (7), in Jacksons Addition to the Town
of Selma.
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Donald D. Mitchell and Marie E. Mitchell
5452 S. Gold Ct.
Wichita, KS 67217
Tax ID#: 1-11000830
OTHER REMARKS: (Include, for example,
any information relating to adverse claims of
owners, or supposed owners.)
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $262.22
+ .01 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
Item # 58
Complete Description:
Section 17, Township 22, Range 21 Subdivision
JO1 Block 7 Lots 1,2 & 3
NAME (S) OF OWNERS:
Barry Ayres & Mary L. Lightfoot
Tax ID#: 1-11000820
MORTGAGES: (and other liens appearing in
Register of Deeds office):
Unknown
Tax liens:
Unknown
DISTRICT COURT: (Cases pending, judgments and probate proceedings.)
Unknown
Amount Owed as of March 24, 2014: $143.74
+ .00 / Day
+ Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs as
well as interest on the principal from and after
October 1, 2012
The above described real estate is taken
as property of the respective defendants designated herein as the owner thereof and is to be
sold and will be sold without appraisement to
satisfy said Order of Sale and the respective
adjudged liens thereon.
WITNESS my hand at Garnett, Kansas,
this 13th day of February, 2014.
Vernon L. Valentine, Sheriff of Anderson
County, Kansas
ATTEST:
|s| Phyllis J. Gettler
Clerk of Anderson County, Kansas
JAMES R. CAMPBELL – S.C. #14631
Anderson County Counselor
Anderson County, Kansas
fb18t3
Notice to sell Mains property
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, February 4, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
Anderson County, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Nationstar Mortgage LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Michael J. Mains, et al.
Defendants,
Case No. 13CV47
Court No.
Title to Real Estate Involved
Pursuant to K.S.A. 60
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under
and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me
by the Clerk of the District Court of Anderson
County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of
Anderson County, Kansas, will offer for sale
at public auction and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand at the West Side Entrance of
the Anderson County Courthouse, Kansas, on
February 26, 2014 at the time of 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
LOTS NINETEEN (19) AND TWENTY
(20) IN BLOCK SEVENTEEN (17) IN THE
CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS. Tax ID No. 00208480, Commonly
known as 327 E 2nd Ave, Garnett, KS 66032
(the Property) MS155722
to satisfy the judgment in the above
entitled case. The sale is to be made without
appraisement and subject to the redemption
period as provided by law, and further subject
to the approval of the Court.
Anderson County Sheriff
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
By: Chad R. Doornink, #23536
cdoornink@msfirm.com
11460 Tomahawk Creek Parkway, Ste. 300
Leawood, KS 66211
(913) 339-9132
(913) 339-9045 (fax)
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS ATTORNEYS
FOR Nationstar Mortgage LLC IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND
ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
fb4t3
Notice of appraisal market
study results for 2014
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, February 18, 2014)
Results of the Market Study Analysis for
Anderson County
For the Appraisal Year 2014
January 1, 2014
Pursuant to L. 1991, ch 279
A study of the real estate market in
Anderson County indicated that approximately
50 percent of the non-agricultural real properties
in the county will trend upward in market value
from 2013 to 2014. The average increase was
less than two percent for residential properties
and less than three percent for commercial
properties. Forty-eight percent of the parcels
will trend downward. The average decrease
in value will be less than two percent for residential properties and less than three percent
on commercial properties. The remaining two
percent of the parcels will see no change in
value. Values on specific properties change
because of corrections of descriptive information based on field visits by the appraisers
office, from calibration of residential values
based on comparable sales of similar properties in the county, recalibration of the countys
cost tables for both residential and commercial
properties or from changes to the income and
expense tables for commercial properties.
In accordance with the provisions in
K.S.A. 79-1476, the Property Valuation
Department (PVD), Kansas Department of
Revenue is required annually to furnish each
county the results of its study relating to changes, if any, to the use value of agricultural land.
Changes can and do occur as a result of several factors including cropping practices, commodity prices and production costs. Based on
the values per acre provided by PVD the value
of cropland in Anderson County will typically
increase between; 13% to 20% depending on
the soil type. Both pastureland and tame grass
values on the average will decline between; 5%
to 12%. Overall 60 percent of the agricultural
parcels will see value increases from 2013 to
2014 while 40 percent will either decline or stay
the same.
City increases guest tax Notice of hearing on sewer
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, February 18, 2014)
Charter Ordinance No. 22
A CHARTER ORDINANCE EXEMPTING THE
CITY OF GARNETT, KANSAS FROM K.S.A.
12-1692, K.S.A. 12-93, K.S.A. 12-1695, K.S.A.
12-1696, K.S.A. 12-1697 AND K.S.A. 2316,101, RELATING TO THE PROMOTION OF
TOURISM AND CONVENTIONS WITHIN THE
CITY OF GANRETT, KSANSAS THROUGH
A TAX LEVY COMMONLY CALLED A
TRANSIENT GUEST TAX; AND PROVIDING
SUBSTITUTE AND ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS
ON THE SAME SUBJECT; REPEALING
CHARTER ORDINANCE NO. 21.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY
OF THE CITY OF GARNETT, KANSAS:
SECTION 1: The City of Garnett,
Kansas, by the power vested in it by Article
12, Section 5 of the Constitution of the State
of Kansas, hereby elects to exempt itself from
the provisions of K.S.A. 12-1692, K.S.A. 121693, K.S.A. 12-1695, K.S.A. 12-1696, K.S.A.
12-1697 AND K.S.A. 12-16,101, parts of an
enactment which do not apply uniformly to all
cities.
SECTION 2: The following is hereby
substituted for the provisions of K.S.A. 121692:
As used in this Charter Ordinance, the
following words and phrases shall have the
meanings respectively ascribed to them:
Person means an individual,
firm, partnership, corporation, joint venture or
other association of persons;
Hotel, motel or tourist court
means any structure or building which contains
rooms furnished for the purpose of providing
lodging, which may or may not also provide
meals, entertainment or various other personal
services to transient guests, and which is kept,
used, maintained, advertised or held out to the
public as a place where sleeping accommodations are sought for pay or compensation by
transient or permanent guests having more
than two bedrooms furnished for the accommodation of such guests, but does not include
an apartment or house;
Transient guest means a person who occupies a room in a hotel, motel or
tourist court for any period of time, but shall not
include a person who occupies an apartment or
house;
Business means any person
engaged in the business of renting, leasing
or letting living quarters, sleeping accommodations, rooms or a part thereof in connection with
any motel, hotel or tourist court;
Convention and tourist promotion means: Activities to attract visitors into the
community through marketing efforts, including
advertising, directed to pleasure travelers and
others whose presence in the community is
likely to increase local business activity or
which encourage increased lodging facility
occupancy.
Accommodations broker means
any business which maintains an inventory of
two or more rooms in one or more locations
which are offered for pay to a person or person
SECTION 3: The following is hereby substituted for the provisions of K.S.A. 12-1693
In order to provide revenues to
promote revenues to promote tourism and
conventions, the Governing Body of the City of
Garnett, Kansas does hereby levy a Transient
Guest Tax at the rate of five percent (5%) upon
the gross receipts derived from or paid by
20%30%
CHEAPER
AD
2×4
NOTICE OF ROAD VACATION PROCEEDING
TO ALL PERSONS:
Please take notice that the Board of
County Commissioners of Anderson County,
Kansas will consider the possible vacation of
the following road:
All of the public road described in Book
#4, Page 7, in the NW/4 of the NW/4 of Section
34, Township 20, Range 19 East of 6th P.M.
The Board of County Commissioners
of Anderson County, Kansas will take up the
matter of the possible vacation on the 24th
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
ATTEST:
PHYLLIS GETTLER,
Anderson County Clerk
fb18t1
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, February 18, 2014)
Colony, KS Final Performance Hearing Public
Notice
The city of Colony, KS will hold a public
hearing on Wednesday, February 26th, 2014
at 7pm in the Colony City Hall for the purpose of evaluating the performance of Grant
No. 12-PF-013 which was for the upgrade of
approximately 2,500 LF of interceptor sewer
main, upgrade of influent and transfer structures at the WWTP, upgrade of approximately
500 LF of sanitary sewer piping, addition
of rock slope protection to the center dike
at the WWTP, and CCTV of approximately
29,400 LF of collection system sewer main. All
proposed activities were accomplished. This
grant was funded, all or in part, from the
Kansas Department of Commerce, Small Cities
Community Development Block Grant (CDBG)
funds. All aspects of the grant will be discussed
and oral and written comments will be recorded
and become part of the city of Colonys CDBG
Citizen Participation Plan.
Reasonable accommodations will be
made available to persons with disabilities.
Requests for accommodations should be submitted to the city clerk by February 25th, 2014
(620) 852-3530.
fb18t1
Notice to inject saltwater
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, February 18, 2014)
BEFORE THE STATE CORPORATION
COMMISSION
OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
NOTICE OF FILING APPLICATION
RE: Tom Miller dba Miller Oil and Cattle
Application for a permit to authorize the
enhanced recovery of saltwater into the F &
R Miller 6-I and F & R Miller 7-I ; Section 13,
Township 21 South, Range 19 East located in
Anderson County, Kansas.
TO: All Oil & Gas Producers, Unleased Mineral
Interest Owners, Landowners, and all persons
whomever concerned.
You, and each of you, are hereby notified
that Tom Miller dba Miller Oil and Cattle has
filed an application to commence the injection
of saltwater into the Squirrel formation at the F
& R Miller 6-I, located 3287 FSL, 2360 FEL ; F
& R Miller 7-I , located 3609 FSL, 2357 FEL, ;
Section 13 Township 21 South, Range 19 East;
Anderson County, Kansas, with a maximum
operating pressure of 400 psi and a maximum
injection rate of 100 bbls per day.
Any persons who object to or protest this
application shall be required to file their
objections or protest with the Conservation
Division of the State Corporation
Commission of the State of Kansas within thirty
(30) days from the date of this
publication. These protests shall be filed pursuant to Commission regulations and must
state specific reasons why granting the application may cause waste, violate correlative
rights or pollute the natural resources of the
State of Kansas.
All persons interested or concerned shall
take notice of the foregoing and shall
govern themselves accordingly.
Tom Miller dba Miller Oil and Cattle
2526 North Funston Street
Iola, KS 66749
620-496-6652
fb18t1
Notice to foreclose mortgage
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, February 18, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Nationstar Mortgage LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Julie Frazier, Jane Doe, and John Doe, et al.
Defendants,
Case No. 14CV3
Court No.
Title to Real Estate Involved
Pursuant to K.S.A. 60
NOTICE OF SUIT
STATE OF KANSAS to the above named
Defendants and The Unknown Heirs, executors,
devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of
any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers,
successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of
any defendants that are existing, dissolved or
dormant corporations; the unknown executors,
administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors,
successors and assigns of any defendants that
are or were partners or in partnership; and the
unknown guardians, conservators and trustees
of any defendants that are minors or are under
any legal disability and all other person who are
or may be concerned:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a
Petition for Mortgage Foreclosure has been
filed in the District Court of Anderson County,
Kansas by Nationstar Mortgage LLC, praying
for foreclosure of certain real property legally
described as follows:
LOT 11, IN BLOCK 7, IN BAILEYS
ORCHARD PARK ADDITION (REVISED 1978)
TO THE CITY OF GARNETT, ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax ID No. 00200810
for a judgment against defendants and
any other interested parties and, unless otherwise served by personal or mail service of
summons, the time in which you have to plead
to the Petition for Foreclosure in the District
Court of Anderson County Kansas will expire
on April 1, 2014. If you fail to plead, judgment
and decree will be entered in due course upon
the request of plaintiff.
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
By: Chad R. Doornink, #23536
cdoornink@msfirm.com
Travis Gardner, #25662
tgardner@msfirm.com
11460 Tomahawk Creek Parkway, Ste. 300
Leawood, KS 66211
(913) 339-9132
(913) 339-9045 (fax)
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION
OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
Deena Ross
Millsap & Singer, LLC
612 Spirit Drive
St. Louis, MO 63005
Telephone (636) 537-0110
Facsimile (636) 537-0067
fb18t3
Online at www.garnett-ks.com
Health Services
DIRECTORY
Eye Care
fb18t1
of February, 2014, in the Anderson County
Commission Room or the Anderson County
Courthouse Annex at 9:45 a.m. The public
is invited to attend the meeting and to make
comment on he proposed action. Any person
or persons may make written application to the
county commissioners for payment for damage
to property caused by such action.
This Notice Shall be published one (1)
time in the Official County Newspaper.
transient guests for sleeping accommodations
in any hotel, motel or tourist court within said
city.
Any Transient Guest Tax levied
pursuant to this Charter Ordinance shall be
based upon the gross rental receipts collected
by any business.
The taxes levied pursuant to this
Charter Ordinance shall be paid by the consumer or user to the business, and it shall be the
duty of each and every business to collect from
the consumer or user the full amount of any
such tax or an amount equal, as nearly as possible or practicable, to the average equivalent
thereto. Each business collecting any of the
taxes levied hereunder shall be responsible for
paying over the same to the State Department
of Revenue in the manner prescribed by the
provisions of K.S.A. 12-1694 or as that section
may hereafter be amended, and the State
Department of Revenue shall administer and
enforce the collection of such tax the same as
if such were levied under the authority of K.S.A.
12-1693.
The collection of a Transient
Guest Tax levied as authorized under this
Charter Ordinance shall commence on the
1st day of the calendar quarter next following
the 30th day after the receipt by the Kansas
Department of Revenue of a certified copy of
this Charter Ordinance.
SECTION 4: The following is hereby
substituted for the provisions of K.S.A. 12-1695
and K.S.A 12-16, 101:
The City of Garnett, Kansas shall be
and is authorized to expend the funds raised
by the levy of any tax under the authority of
this Charter Ordinance on such programs and
projects as reasonably may be excepted to
promote tourism or conventions benefitting the
City of Garnett, Kansas. The City manager is
hereby authorized on behalf of the Governing
to make such expenditures directly or contract
for convention and tourism programs to be
implemented.
SECTION 5: If any part of this Charter
Ordinance shall be declared void by a court of
competent jurisdiction, the remaining portions
thereof not declared void shall remain in full
force and effect, it being the declared intention
of the Governing Body that such as remains
and are not void would have been adopted as
and for the text of this ordinance.
SECTION 6: This Charter Ordinance
shall be published once each week for two
consecutive weeks in an official newspaper of
the City of Garnett, Kansas.
SECTION 7: This Charter Ordinance
shall take effect sixty-one (61) days after final
publication, unless a sufficient petition for a
referendum is filed requiring a referendum to
be held on this Ordinance as provided in Article
12, Section 5 of the Constitution of the State of
Kansas, in which case this Charter Ordinance
shall become effective only if approved by a
majority of the electors voting thereon.
SECTION 8: Charter Ordinance #21 of
the City of Garnett, Kansas, is hereby repealed;
PROVIDED HOWEVER, this repealer shall not
take effect until the 1st day of the calendar
quarter next following the 30th day after the
receipt by the Kansas Department of Revenue
of a certified copy of this Charter Ordinance.
PASSED by the Governing Body of the
City of Garnett, Kansas, not less than two-thirds
(2/3rds) of its members elect voting in favor
thereof on this 11th day of February, 2014.
/s/ Greg A. Gwin
Mayor
ATTEST:
/s/ Kristina L. Kinney
City Clerk
fb18t2
Notice to vacate rural road
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, February 18, 2014)
7A
LEGAL
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
8A
FFA
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Anderson County High School FFA
Anderson County FFA. Front row, from left: Brandon Calloway, Cassidy Lutz, Grady Schuster, Bailey Wolken, Bryce Dieker, Maci Rockers,
Lexi Pedrow, Melissa Kropf, Jeff Gillespie; second row: Reagan Jirak, Jami Sutton, Ashley Boardman, Alex Dennison, Bailee Wilson,
Justin Jumet, Josh McAuley, Stephen Hoffman, Alexy Lickteig, Austin Akes, Miranda Akes, Kyle Lamb; third row: Maddie Goode, Remi
Burns, Cheyenne Eddings, Tyler Wolken, Zane Phelps, Trent McDaniel, Ryan Wittman, Michael Bachman, Manny Jackman, Adam Kropf,
Trent Lutz, Preston Cornett; fourth row: Zeke Hermreck, Mason SKiles, Kinlee Jones , Zach Miller, Colby Whitman, Ian Comfort, Garrett
Filburn, Keith Sears, Tim Comfort, Garrett Scott, Roman Davison, Michael Mader, Alan Scheckel; fifth row: Derrick Nelson, Chase Ratliff,
Jacob Rundle, Trey Ahring, Storm Pracht, JP Murphy, Hunter Gilbreth, Josh Hermreck, Chance Lee, Lauren Egidy, Madison Ratliff, Tayler
Porter; sixth row: Hannah Steele, Eric Small, Mackenzie Lutz, Andrew Johnson, Morgan Egidy, Tyler Jumet, Syerra Emperly, Jessica
McCuller, Nicole Wittman, Sam Fletcher, Madison Balog, Bryce Feuerborn, Sam McCullough; seventh row: McKenzi Huettenmueller,
Brandy Grimes, Katie Lybarger, Sydney Scheckel, Callie Magee, Maycee Ratliff, Amber Owens, Hunter Spencer, Matt Dieker, Mason
Louk, Stephen Pozzie, Allie Ball, Caleb Anderegg, Bailee Rockers.
Central Heights High School FFA
ACHS celebrates FFA Week
INDIANAPOLIS – Anderson
County FFA Chapter will celebrate National FFA Week
February 15-22, 2014. Ignite.
Leadership. Growth. Success.
is this years theme. More than
half a million nationwide members will participate in National
FFA Week activities at local,
state and national levels.
FFA members are the innovators and leaders of tomorrow. Through agricultural education and hands-on learning,
they prepare for the more than
300 career opportunities in the
food, fiber and natural resources industry.
National FFA Week is a
special project of the National
FFA Foundation and annually
encompasses Feb. 22, George
Washingtons birthday.
Anderson County FFA
Chapter FFA members will celebrate National FFA Week by
participating in the following
activities:
Monday: No school/Make
Teachers Breakfast.
Tuesday: Greenhand Day
and Wear Your Chapter TShirt; chapter picture retake in
gymnasium.
Wednesday: Official Dress
Day/ Chapter Lunch Day; Car
rally scavenger hunt starting at
6:30 p.m.
Thursday:
Business
Appreciation Day/ Personality
Day.
Friday: Flannel Friday and
Drive Your Tractor to School
Day.
Central Heights celebrates FFA
Central Heights FFA. Front row, from left: Advisor Aaron Cubit, Student Teacher Cody Mc Reynolds, Will Thoele, J.R. Dunnivan, Tristan
Davis, Madison Blevins, Chase Brown , Cade Hibdon, Advisor Trent Page; second row: Megan Davis, Demeree Pendleton, Jake Savage,
Alex Jones, Amanda Raby, Eli Davis, Chad Snow, Trent Coulbourn; third row: Savannah Ormsby, Cierra Jensen, Kayde Ledom, Jordan
Surber, Tancy Hall-Goodwin, Caylie Stottlemire, Heather Valdiviez, Ciara Malone; fourth row: Ron Hunter, Wyatt Thompson, Colton Bosse,
Blake Massengale, Travis Collins, Mychaela Clissold, Alyssa Dunnivan, Kaye Cunningham, Kristen Baker; fifth row: Jason Clissold, Jacob
Pryor, Tanner Johnson, Austin Massengale, Tyler Wilson, Dalton Riemer, J.R. Kimball; sixth Row: Sabrina Carlson, Troy Herring, Morgan
Jilek, Ashlynn Brockus, Brent Rodina, Cody Hermreck, Matthew Johnston, Jake Dryden, Christian McCall; back row: Ethan Shields, Cody
Surber, Ben King, Wyatt Ogle, Nate King, Krysten Tidwell, Nate Emert.
Crest High School FFA
National FFA week is
February 15-22, the Central
Heights FFA Chapter has fun
events planned for every day of
the school week.
Early Monday morning
members will prepare the staff
breakfast, and later that day
they will compete against other
FFA chapters at the Ottawa
NAPA chili cook-off.
Tuesday will be K-State/KU
day where members can wear
their favorite team apparel.
Wednesday is the official
dress day; members, who wear
their official dress, white but-
ton up shirt, slacks or black
skirt, FFA jacket, tie or scarf,
all day long are invited to the
Ag room for pizza provided by
the Chapter.
Thursday is cowboy/cowgirl
day where members can dress
as western as possible.
Friday, the final day of FFA
week members will drive tractors to school and wear their
camo for camouflage day.
Friday night there will be
an all night long lock-in where
members have fun, play games,
and eat snacks.
Crest plans week of events
Crest has planned a week of
events to celebrate FFA Week.
Some events will take place
throughout the week. They
include:
FFA sponsored dodge ball
tournament.
Ag awarness, prizes for all
students.
Monday: No school.
Tuesday: Favorite sports
team day.
Wednesday: Greenhand /
Redneck day, Faculty breakfast, Movie night.
Thursday: Camo day.
Friday: Blue and gold day,
chapter lunch
Saturday: Ski/snowboard
trip to Snow Creek in Weston,
Mo.
FFA facts and trivia
Today, there are 540,379
FFA members, aged 12-21, in
7,489 chapters in all 50 states,
Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin
Islands.
43% of FFA members are
female; women hold approximately 50% of state leadership
positions.
76% of our membership
is Caucasian; 16% is Hispanic;
4% is African-American; 2% is
Native American.
88% of FFA members are
in grades 9-12; 7% are in middle
school; 5% are high school grad
uates.
70% of FFA members live
in rural/farm areas; 19% live in
small towns; 10% live in urban/
suburban areas.
Crest FFA. Front row, from left: FFA Sponsor Levi Arnett, Dal Lacey, Cody Vermillion, Landon Stephens, Emmalee Seabolt, Preston
Henson, Kyle Riblet, and Emily Webber; second row: Kellen Ramsey, Taryn Covey, Maya Piper, Karlee Hammond, Madison Covey, Lupita
Rodriguez, Kaden Strickler, Garrett Sipe, and Rene Rodriguez; back row: Taylor Davis, Colton Strickler, Shelby Ramsey, Lyndia Bradshaw,
Braden McGhee, Clayton Miller, Kyler Bowen, and Miranda Golden.
beachner
2×2
farmers state bank
2×2
E-Statements and Internet Banking.
8 Locations to Better Serve You!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
FFA
A Brief History of the National FFA Organization
The passage of the SmithHughes Vocational Education
Act in 1917 not only provided
federal funds to states for high
school courses in vocational
education (agriculture, family and consumer sciences, and
trades and industries) but it
also led to the idea for an organization that is known today as
the National FFA Organization.
In the early 1920s, just a few
years after the Smith-Hughes
Act was enacted, Virginia
formed a Future Farmers of
Virginia club for boys in agriculture classes. Other states
soon followed Virginias lead
and formed their own Future
Farmers organizations. The
next logical next step was to
create a national organization
to bring together all of the state
organizations.
In 1928, a group of vocational
agriculture students were in
Kansas City, Mo., for the third
annual National Congress
of Vocational Agriculture
Students, which was held during
the American Royal Livestock
and Horse Show. On Nov. 20, 33
of those students from 18 states
met at the Baltimore Hotel in
Kansas City and formed the
Future Farmers of America
(FFA).
FFA was for young men who
were studying vocational agriculture in public secondary
schools, and the new organization was designed to develop
agricultural leadership, character, thrift, scholarship, cooperation, citizenship and patriotism.
The organization was structured on three levels local,
state and national with students starting their FFA experience by joining a local chapter at their school, where the
agriculture teacher serves as
the chapter advisor. As part
of the larger program that is
now called agricultural education, FFA members are encouraged to participate in all three
components of the program:
(1) classroom/laboratory work
(through enrollment in agriculture classes); (2) membership
in FFA; and (3) hands-on work
experience through the supervised agricultural experience
(SAE) program.
Each FFA chapter develops
and follows an annual program
of activities, and all members
share in planning the program
and participate in its execution.
Through their participation,
members learn how to take part
in meetings, follow parliamentary procedure, speak in public
and cooperate with their fellow
students.
Student officers are elected on each level to lead the
organizations activities, and
FFA members receive recognition for their achievements
through competition and award
programs. The annual national
convention offers FFA members
an opportunity to come together
from across the country and celebrate their accomplishments
over the past year.
By 1935, FFA membership
had topped 100,000 with more
than 3,900 chapters in 47 states,
Hawaii and Puerto Rico. That
same year, the New Farmers of
America was established to provide leadership opportunities
to African-American students
enrolled in vocational education classes.
Land was purchased in
Alexandria, Va., for the
National FFA Headquarters in
1939, and in 1944, the National
FFA Foundation was created
to raise funds from business
and industry to help support
the many new programs being
developed for the growing FFA
membership. In 1950, Public
Law 740 was passed by the U.S.
Congress, granting FFA a federal charter and requiring that
a U.S. Department of Education
staff member be the national
FFA advisor.
FFA membership took a leap
in 1965 when 58,000 members of
the New Farmers of America
merged with the Future Farmers
of America. This followed an act
of Congress that prohibited segregation in public schools. Four
years later, delegates at the 1969
National FFA Convention voted
to allow women to be members
of the FFA.
In 1976, Alaska became the
50th state to obtain a state charter. An all-time membership
high was recorded in 1977, with
509,735 members in 8,148 chapters in all 50 states, Puerto Rico
and the Virgin Islands.
By the 1980s, the Future
Farmers of America had
become more than an organization for rural farm students. In
1988, the delegates at the 61st
National FFA Convention voted
to change the organizations official name from Future Farmers
of America to the National FFA
Organization. This change was
made to recognize that FFA is
not only for those interested in
farming, but it is also for those
with more diverse interests in
the industry of agriculture,
encompassing science, business
and technology in addition to
production farming.
The late 1990s marked a
period of location changes for
the National FFA Organization.
The National FFA Center was
moved from Alexandria, Va.,
to Indianapolis, Ind., where a
new building was dedicated on
July 20, 1998. And after 70 years
in the same city, the national
FFA convention was held for
the last time in Kansas City,
Mo., in 1998. The 72nd National
FFA Convention in 1999 moved
to Louisville, Ky., where it
remained for seven years; in
2006, the national FFA convention moved to Indianapolis.
Attendance at the national
convention reached an all-time
high in 2008 when 54,731 FFA
members, advisors and supporters came to Indianapolis for the
81st National FFA Convention.
Over the years, FFA has shown
the value it places on service to
country and community. This
was never more evident than
in 2005. Following Hurricane
Katrina, the National FFA
Organization raised more than
$835,000 through their Seeds
of Hope campaign to help FFA
members, chapters and agricultural education facilities affected by the hurricane.
Today, the National FFA
Organization is a premier youth
leadership organization with
507,753 members in 7,439 chapters in all 50 states, Puerto Rico
and the Virgin Islands. The FFA
mission is to make a positive difference in the lives of students
by developing their potential
for premier leadership, personal growth and career success
through agricultural education.
For more information about
the history of the National FFA
Organization, please visit the
website of the National FFA
Archives at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis
(IUPUI): Blue Jackets, Gold
Standards: 75 years of living the
legacy a book about FFA history– is available at Shop FFA,
the online store for the National
FFA Organization.
Proud to support
our area FFA!
Were Proud of our area FFA Chapters!
Lime Spreading
Winter Special over 200 ton order.
Variable rate using Record Harvest.
BRUMMEL
Farm Service
Purina Dealer
8th & Oak St. Garnett, KS 66032 785-448-5720
farmers one and all.
Proudly supporting
FFA and our
area youth!
Anderson County
Farm Bureau
Association
305 N. Maple
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-0099
leroy coop
2×3
Collins Farms
785-733-2428
Were proud to support FFA…
the future of our
agricultural communities.
Welda District
(785) 448-4800
In case of pipeline emergency
please call 1-800-324-9696.
Were proud to support our
next generation through FFA.
We appreciate the role FFA plays in building
students leadership skills and personal growth,
so they may be successful in life and in their
career choices.
Ethanol – Fueling A New Generation
Aaron Lizer
Proud to support FFA
and our area Youth!
valley r
2×2
9A
305 N. Maple Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6125
gem farm
2×2
mcconnell
2×2
Proudly supporting our
area FFA Chapters!
Proudly supporting area
youth and
FFA Chapters!
S. J. AUTO ELECTRIC
Steve Spangler
103 S. Maple Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-6364 Home: (785) 448-6569
Proud to support
our local FFA Chapters!
Keegan Barnes
25624 NE 2180 Rd.
Garnett, KS 66032 785-304-2500
keegan.barnes@plantpioneer.com
10A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
SPORTS
ACHS wrestler headed to OU
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 06-29-2010 / Photo Submitted
Dallas Cox signs a letter of intent to wrestle for Ottawa University for the 2014-15 season. Cox
is from Garnett and attends Anderson County High School. Cox earned four letters in wrestling,
three in football, two in baseball, and one in track for Anderson County High School. He earned
All-League honors in wrestling and was a 2013 Kansas 4A State Wrestling participant.
Cox is the son of Tim Cox and Theresa Rockers and plans to concentrate on general studies
before deciding on a major.
Wellsville downs ACHS boys 60-46
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Kevin Gaines
Central Heights Tanner Erhart had 19 points in the Vikings 38-22 win over Iola Friday night. The
Vikings and other local teams have another week on the regular game schedule before starting substate tournament play the first week of March.
Viking defense shuts down Iola
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
The Central Heights Viking
boys defense completely dominated the Iola Mustangs in an
impressive 38-22 victory Friday
night at home.
The Vikings took advantage
of early struggles offensively
by Iola to jump out to a 12-6 lead
after the first quarter.
An 8-2 run keyed by back to
back three-pointers in less than
a minute by Central Heights
to begin the second quarter
seemed to deflate Iola. Halfway
through the second quarter the
Vikings led 20-8. By the end of
the period, the score was 23-12.
Defensively we were really
good. We had a look in our eyes
that we havent had all year,
Coach Randy Cannady said.
They were together from the
tip. They sat down and guarded
as well as I have seen.
Coming out of halftime, Iola
needed to make a run to get
back into the game. The Vikings
quickly squashed any ideas of
losing the game as they scored
the first 11 points of the third
quarter to put the Mustangs
away. In fact, Iola didnt even
get on the board in the third
until the final minute of the
period.
We were excellent on
defense in the third quarter.
You know things are going good
when you catch yourself watching kids play instead of coaching them, a happy Cannady
said.
With the Vikings protecting
a lead, the pace really slowed in
the fourth quarter. Iola scored 7
points and held the Vikings to
just 4.
Following the impressive
win, Cannady had this to say
about his team. We couldnt be
more proud of our kids. We are
proud coaches tonight.
Leading the way for Central
Heights offense was Tanner
Erhart with 19 points.
Box Score
Iola (22) – Latta 5, Wallace 4,
Endicott 4, McIntosh 4, Kauth
4, Peterson 1
Central Heights (38) – Davis 9,
M. Brown 3, Horstick 4, Pryor 2,
Erhart 19, Hendron 1
BY KEVIN GAINES
Tuesday night, for the second time in less than a week,
the Wellsville Eagles had the
Bulldogs number as they
cruised to a 60-46 victory.
After losing just last
Thursday to Wellsville 86-63,
the Bulldogs knew they would
need to tighten up their defense
and play great offensively to
pull off the upset.
Unfortunately the struggles
continued for the AC boys.
Wellsville had a 13-9 lead after
the first quarter and expanded
that lead to 29-19 at the break.
Any hopes of a comeback
for the Bulldogs were quickly
put to rest as the Eagles put
their best quarter offensively
together in the third quarter.
Wellsville outscored AC 20-11 in
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
On Friday night at home,
the Central Height Viking girls
came up on the wrong end of a
41-33 defeat at the hands of the
Iola Fillies.
In the first quarter the teams
exchanged baskets and saw the
score knotted up at 9 at the end
of the period.
Iola created a little breathing
room in the second quarter as
they clamped down defensively
holding the Vikings to just 4
points as they opened up a 19-13
lead at intermission.
To begin the third quarter,
Central Heights did just what
they needed to do. Just over 2
minutes into the third quarter, the Vikings cut the lead to
19-17. Iola then showed great
resiliency as they countered the
Viking run by scoring 7 straight
in less than a minute to push
the lead to 26-17. Heading into
the fourth, the score was 30-21.
The Vikings outscored the
Fillies 12-11 in the fourth quarter to hang on for the victory.
Central Heights was led by
Mayer with 13 points.
Box Score
Iola (41) Wade 11, Piazza 2,
Lohman 2, Haar 18, Driskel 4,
Macha 4
Central Heights (33) Erhart 6,
Kraus 2, Schaefer 2, Markley 8,
Mayer 13 Hayward 2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
The third time was a charm
for the Wellsville Eagle girls as
they figured out a way to knock
off the AC girls for the first time
in three tries this season, winning the game 41-32.
The Bulldogs and Eagles
played a competitive, back and
forth, first half of basketball.
Wellsville led 10-8 after the first
before the Bulldogs responded
in the second quarter outscoring the Eagles 12-8 to take a slim
20-18 lead into intermission.
Wellsville took control coming out of the locker room and
took a 33-29 heading into the
fourth quarter.
With the game still well within reach, the AC girls went ice
cold in the fourth quarter only
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
The Crest boys have had a
tough last week and a half as
they are needing a confidence
boost following their recent
losing streak, including a 72-57
loss Friday night at home to
Oswego.
Poor first quarters have been
a problem during their recent
skid and the game against
Oswego wasnt any different as
they saw themselves looking at
a 15-6 deficit after the first.
Both teams picked it up offensively in the second. Oswego
was able to extend their lead by
outscoring the Lancers 22-18 in
the period.
After another solid third
quarter that saw Oswego outscore Crest 20-17, the Lancers
saw themselves in a 57-41 hole
heading into the fourth quarter.
The two teams played an
MSRP $18,535.00
connecting for 3 points. The
Eagles pulled away slightly as
they scored 8 in the final period
for the victory.
Box Score
ACHS (32) Scheckel 11, Lutz 6,
Jirak 5, McCullough 5, Rockers
5
Wellsville (41) Kayhill
15, Newhouse 8, Sparks 6,
Graniewski 6, Patton 4, Geist 2
$1,000.00
LANG DISCOUNT
________________
In a 56-40 loss to the Olpe
Eagles, any chance the Lancers
had at pulling off the upset was
made incredibly difficult following a first quarter dominated by
Olpe, 16-3.
In a back and forth second
quarter, Crest and Olpe both
scored 14 points to make the
score 30-17 heading into intermission.
The Lancers started out well
in the third period, cutting the
lead to as little as 8 at one point
before the Eagles responded
and pushed their lead back up
to 12 heading into the fourth.
Crest outscored Olpe 17-16 in
the period.
Crest just couldnt make a
run in the fourth quarter. Olpe
only scored 10 points, but Crest
responded with just 6 of their
own.
$29,749.00
$2,750.00
________________
PER MO. FOR
24 MOS.*
MSRP $31,445.00
$1,130.79
LANG DISCOUNT
________________
$30,314.21
$3,400.00
________________
ALL REBATES
ALL REBATES
2014 BUICK ENCORE FWD ISB
2014 BUICK ENCLAVE FWD
even fourth with Crest slightly
outscoring Oswego just 16-15.
Four players hit double figures for the Lancers, led by
Hunter Frazell with 14 points.
Box Score
Oswego (72) Eckermann 12,
Oldham 15, B. Yeohman 8, K.
Yeohman 17, Kirkpatrick 2,
Schenker 16, Williamson 2
Crest (57) Frazell 14, Green 11,
Godderz 1, Stephens 10, Davis
2, Ellis 11
Olpe improved to 14-2 with
the victory and Crest dropped
to 6-7 following the loss.
Leading the way for Crest
was Hunter Frazell with 16
points.
Box Score
Olpe (56) Krueger 16, Cole 15,
Smith 12, Redeker 4, Stout 4,
Scheidegger 3, Hall 2
Colony (40) Frazell 16, Green
7, Ellis 7, Davis 5, Stephens 3,
Brallier 2
MSRP $33,030.00
$17,535.00
$2,000.00
________________
#70475
$3,281.00
LANG DISCOUNT
________________
ALL REBATES
2014 CHEVROLET 4X4
#42336
#80604
WITH CONVENIENCE
GROUP, ULTRA LOW
MILEAGE, LEASE FOR
WELL-QUALIFIED
CURRENT NON-GM
OWNERS/LESSEES
$2,289 DUE AT
SIGNING AFTER ALL
OFFERS
MO. FOR
24 MOS.*
PER
ULTRA LOW MILEAGE
LEASE FOR WELLQUALIFIED CURRENT
NON-GM
OWNERS/LESSEES
$2,689 DUE AT
SIGNING AFTER ALL
OFFERS
No security deposit required. Tax,title, license, and dealer fees extra.
Mileage charge of $0.25/mile over 20,000 miles. At participating dealers only.
No security deposit required. Tax,title, license, and dealer fees extra.
Mileage charge of $0.25/mile over 20,000 miles. At participating dealers only.
2014 BUICK LACROSSE WITH eASSIST
2014 BUICK VERANO 1SD
PER MO. FOR
24 MOS.*
ULTRA LOW MILEAGE
LEASE FOR WELLQUALIFIED CURRENT
NON-GM
OWNERS/LESSEES
$1,839 DUE AT
SIGNING AFTER ALL
OFFERS
No security deposit required. Tax,title, license, and dealer fees extra.
Mileage charge of $0.25/mile over 20,000 miles. At participating dealers only.
2014 GMC ACADIA
FOR PLUS
APR
60 MOS.*
PRESIDENTS DAY
BONUS CASH
Not available with loyalty offer. Monthly payment is $16.67 for every
$1,000 you nance. Example: down payment is 15.6%. Some customers
will not quality. Take delivery by 2/28/14. See dealer for details.
PER MO. FOR
24 MOS.*
ULTRA LOW MILEAGE
LEASE FOR WELLQUALIFIED CURRENT
NON-GM
OWNERS/LESSEES
$2,609 DUE AT
SIGNING AFTER ALL
OFFERS
No security deposit required. Tax,title, license, and dealer fees extra.
Mileage charge of $0.25/mile over 20,000 miles. At participating dealers only.
2014 GMC TERRAIN SLE-1
LOW MILEAGE
LEASE FOR
WELL-QUALIFIED
LESSEES
$2,739 DUE AT
SIGNING AFTER
ALL OFFERS
PER MO. FOR
24 MOS.*
ALL-NEW 2014 GMC SIERRA
1500 DOUBLE CAB
WITH SLE VALUE PACKAGE & EPA-EST 24 HWY MPG
$2,688 PRESIDENTS DAY DISCOUNT
$1,750 PRESIDENTS DAY BONUS CASH
$750 OPTION PKG DISCOUNT
+_________________________________
$2,400 TOTAL ALLOWANCE
Not available with loyalty offer. Tax,title, license, and dealer fees extra.
No security deposit required. Your payments may vary. Mileage charge of
$0.25/mile over 39,000 miles. At participating dealers only.
UP TO
TOTAL VALUE
See dealer for details.
*On select vehicles to qualied buyers. Not all buyers will qualify for rebates. GM retains the right to amend or modify incentives. See dealer for details. All deals with approved
credit, taxes, title, license, extra. *Customer must put same amount down as rebate or equal in trade to get sale price. Exclusions apply. In stock models only. See dealer for details.
Chevrolet Buick
GMC Trucks
VIEW OUR INVENTORY
24 HOURS A DAY We rBsu!!y
Award winning
75017196
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
2013 GMC SAVANA VAN
2013 CHEVY SONIC LT
Slow start dooms Crest boys against Olpe
BY KEVIN GAINES
frs
2×4
3×9.5 Come Home to Country!
Crest boys drop 4th straight
BY KEVIN GAINES
Box Score
Wellsville (60) Breithaupt 2,
Silsby 13, Gretencord 2, Smith
2, Kearney 18, Mann 13, Meyer
4, Klamm 6
ACHS (46) Woodard 11,
Lickteig 6, Ratliff 1, Hilliard 2,
Comfort 5, Small 6, Walter 13,
Nelson 2
THE LANG ADVANTAGE
langCAR BUYING MADE SIMPLE
Bulldog girls fall to Wellsville
BY KEVIN GAINES
the period.
Facing a 49-30 deficit heading
into the fourth, the Bulldogs
outscored the Eagles 16-11 in
the final period.
Leading the way for the
Bulldogs was Spencer Walter
who had 13 and Tyler Woodard
with 11.
See more
sports
stories on
Page 8B.
Iola knocks off Viking girls 41-33
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
www.langchevy.net
Ca
913-294-5375
Like Us On
Facebook!
COMMUNITY
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
CALENDAR
Tuesday, February 18
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4 p.m. – Crest basketball at Lebo
7 p.m. – Legion Bingo at VFW
Wednesday, February 19
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony Methodist Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club
at Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, February 20
4 p.m. – Crest basketball at home
with Jayhawk (senior night)
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44
Saturday, February 21
7 a.m. to 9 a.m. – Breakfast at
First United Methodist Church
Monday, February 24
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade)
Den Cub Scouts and Wolves
(second grade) Den Cub
Scouts meeting
Tuesday, February 25
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Chamber Players offer
Dixie Swim Club
The Dixie Swim Club will
open at the Thelma Moore
Community Playhouse on
Thursday, Feb. 27 until March
2 and continue March 6-9. This
is the third dinner theatre comedy in the Chamber Players
23rd season.
Written by the team of Jessie
Jones, Nicholas Hope, and
Jamie Wooten, its the hilarious and touching story of five
women who first met as teammates on their college swim
team. Every August since
graduation, theyve gathered at
the same beach cottage on the
Outer Banks of North Carolina
with three simple rules: No
men, no kids, no work!
The team is introduced in
their mid-40s: the team captain, the nun, the man-chaser,
the lawyer and the hard-luck
school teacher. Over 4 weekends spanning 30 years, their
outrageous personalities and
fierce loyalty get them through
the challenges of men, children, and aging with southern
flair and an endless supply of
martinis. For every curve that
life throws their way, the team
provides a hearty laugh, some
southern-fried wisdom and a
collection of strong shoulders.
Melissa Story of Ottawa makes
Time to get
down and derby
her Chamber Players debut
alongside four of the most experienced actresses on the Garnett
stage: Denise Scheibmeir,
Allison Russell, Karen Katzer
and Shauna Devening. Tom
Emerson, Jr. and David Carr
direct the play. Catering is by L
& M Catering of Garnett. The
meal is a mixed greens salad,
oven-baked chicken quarters,
mashed potatoes and chicken
gravy, corn and southern style
buttered biscuits.
Tickets go on sale Monday,
Feb. 17. Advanced reservations
are required and can be made
by phone, (785) 304-1683, or
email (chamberplayersgarnett
@gmail.com). Tickets may also
be purchased in person at the
theatre during box office hours
from 4-6 p.m. Feb. 17-21. Tickets
cost $22 each for adults and
$17 for students in high school
or younger. Performances
begin with dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Thursdays through Saturdays
and begin with lunch at 12:30
p.m. on Sundays.
The Chamber Players are
a non-profit theatre company
located in the Thelma Moore
Community Playhouse at
140 W. 5th Ave. in Garnett.
Visit their website at www.
TheChamberPlayers.org.
BUSINESS BEAT
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
STINSON
MEATS
FRESH LOCAL GRASS FED
Ottawa, KS
(785) 242-2254
stinsonmeats.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Vickie Moss
Spectators watch an open class Pinewood Derby competition get ready to take off at the
Garnett Cub Scouts Pinewood Derby Sunday afternoon at Garnett Elementary School. The
derby, an annual favorite, featured Cub Scout categories and open classes that allowed girls
and non-Scout members to compete with their custom-made pinewood derby cars.
Ross Kimball, M.D., joins Anderson County Hospital Family
Care Center in April. He is pictured with wife Jennifer, son
Carter (7), and daughter Kenna (3).
Kimball to join
Family Care Center
GARNETT Ross Kimball,
M.D., board-certified family medicine physician, will
begin seeing patients at the
Anderson County Hospital
Family Care Center in April
2014.
We are thrilled to welcome
Dr. Kimball, his wife, and two
children to the Anderson
County Hospital family, said
Denny Hachenberg, Anderson
County Hospital CEO. He
grew up in this area, trained
in a rural health care setting,
and is dedicated to bringing
his experience and knowledge
to our growing practice.
Dr.
Kimball
earned
his medical degree at the
University of Kansas School
of Medicine and completed
his residency at Smoky Hill
Family Medicine Residency
Program in Salina. Dr.
Kimball is currently practicing in Pleasanton and
will join Anderson County
Hospital Family Care Center
on April 1.
Im excited by the opportunities available at Anderson
County Hospital, including
the chance to work with an
amazing staff at Family Care
Center and at a brand new
hospital later this year, said
Dr. Kimball.
Dr. Kimball provides primary care to patients of all
ages, with clinical interests in
preventive medicine, sports
medicine, and management
of chronic diseases. To make
an appointment with Dr.
Kimball, call (785) 448-2674.
MORE CARS & TRUCKS
lang LESS BUCKS PAY LESS
FOR
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
Studies say as much as
85% of shoppers list color as
a prime reason they bought a
certain product. Consumers
place visual appearance and
color – at 93% – above factors
like sound, smell or texture
when shopping for new products.
Keep these color tips in
mind:
Yellow: Its upbeat and
exudes youth; effective in
window displays for its sense
of vibrancy.
Black: Its the color of
luxury; conveys power and
sleekness. Think of a sports
car and you naturally think
of red or black.
Red: Conveys energy and
literally increases heart rate
in people when tested. Use it
in clearance sales to communicate urgency.
Pink: Obviously feminine,
hints at romance. Pink is the
color that talks to women and
young girls.
Blue: Demonstrates trust
and security – look how many
bank logos and motifs you see
in blue.
Green: Analogous in the
mind to wealth, it is the color
the human eye processes fastest. Conveys relaxation and
contemplation.
Tip: The human eyes most
recognizable color combination is not black on white; its
black on yellow.
Color fact: Shoppers in one
study spent about 50% more
on televisions that were posed
in front of a blue display; In
front of a red display, twice
as many postponed their purchase.
Dane Hicks is president
of Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Please direct questions or comments to this newspaper.
#PG 788B
#8561A
#PA820B
2005 Chevy Impala 2003 Chevy Impala LS 2003 Oldsmobile Alero GL
Another Nice Trade.
Now Only
$5,995
Leather, Loaded, Local Trade, 3.8V6!! Red and Ready, Sun Roof, Only 96,000 Miles.
$6,995
NOW
2008 Saturn Vue
AWD, Local Trade, Very Clean.
Now Only
$7,995
NOW
$6,995
#35277Q
#47594B
#8947A
2002 Chevy Trailblazer 2005 Chevy Trailblazer LT
4×4 LTZ
Leather, Traded.
Leather, DVD, Sun Roof.
Now!!
$8,995
#3066A
Now!!
$9,995
#10530A
#84913B
2010 Chevy Impala 2011 GMC Acadia SLT AWD 2007 Chevy Trailblazer LT 4×4
Local Trade, Nice Ride.
Now Only
$8,995
Leather, Loaded, Local trade.
Now Only
$10,995
#25122B
2009 Honda Civic
Now Only
Local Trade Slick !!
Now
$10,995
#84718N
2008 Ford Explorer Sport Trac XLT
Local Trade, Only 51,000 miles.
$13,995
Rare!! None Nicer
NOW
#PL808A
2013 Chevy Captiva
Like New, Factory Warranty.
$15,995 Now Only $17,995
Chevrolet Buick
GMC Trucks
Like
7501719575016404
HOW TO SELL STUFF
IN PAOLA
3×9.5
The color of selling
When I was a kid, my dad
had a top water bass lure
about the size of a pill bottle
that was colored with the old
red and white Budweiser can
design. I inherited it and from
time to time I put it on my
line if nothing else is working.
It never worked, but the
double treble hooks are good
for clearing pond weeds and
moss. Clearly the color of that
lure was designed to hook my
dad, not a fish. In that respect
it was a huge success.
And scientists and media
researchers tell us colors
really do make a difference
when we buy things. So naturally, it should play into your
plans when selling things.
In the same way a fish
associates certain colors and
hues with food, we associate
certain colors with things like
comfort, satisfaction, action,
etc. Those can be important
pieces of information when
designing product displays
for your business, packaging
– even a logo design and interior retail area design.
1B
LOCAL
Award winning
Us On
VIEW OUR INVENTORY Facebook!
y
u
B
e
W
24 HOURS A DAY
s!!
Car
www.langchevy.net
913-294-5375
HOURS: SALES MON.-FRI. 8-6 / SAT. 8-3 SERVICE MON.-FRI. 8-5:30 / SAT. 8-12
SUBSCRIBE TO THE REVIEW BY CALLING (785)448-3121
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
HISTORY
Wiesner 50th anniversary
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Photo Submitted
John and Mitzi Wiesner,
Garnett, married Feb. 1, 1964,
at Holy Angels Church.
They have three children,
Curt Wiesner and wife, Debbie;
Chrisy Fritz and husband,
Wes; Denis Wiesner and wife,
Jeannette, all of Garnett. They
also have 15 grandchildren and
four great-grandchildren.
They took a trip to Las
Vegas and Yuma and stopped
at Phoenix to visit their oldest
granddaughter, Sister Mater
Dei.
Rosary ring unearthed in 2007
Is this artifact rare?
Perhaps, but I believe it is a
very unique discovery. I found
it while metal detecting a lawn
here in Garnett in 2007. At the
time I dug it, I had no idea as
to what I had uncovered. After
researching I have found out it
is a One-Decade Silver Hand
Finger Rosary Chaplet Ring
with Crucifix.
Single-Decade rosaries,
also referred to as Chaplets,
can also be used to pray the
Rosary; the person who is
praying counts the same ring
of ten beads repeatedly for
every decade. During religious
conflict in 16th and 17th century Ireland severe legal penalties were prescribed against
practicing Roman Catholics.
Small easily hidden rosaries
were thus used to avoid identification and become as Irish
Penal Rosaries. Sometimes
rather than a cross, other symbols of specific meanings were
used, such as a Hammer to
signify the nails of the cross,
Cords to represent the scourging, a Chalice to recall the Last
Supper, or a crowing Rooster
signifying the Resurrection of
Christ.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
A rosary ring is a ring worn
around the finger representing one decade of a rosary.
These rosaries were given to
some Catholic nuns at the
time of their solemn profession. A finger rosary is similar to a ring, but is somewhat
larger. Rosaries like these are
used by either rotating or just
holding them between a finger and thumb while praying.
Small ring rosaries became
known as Soldiers Rosaries,
because they were often carried into battle, most notably
during World War I.
This ring rosary I found is
known as a Basque Rosary,
it is a finger ring with eleven
knobs on it, ten are round and
one is a crucifix.
2004: Geese shut down airport
Feb. 17, 2004
Losing last weeks basketball game to Gardner was bad
enough, but the ACHS team
returned to the locker room after
the loss to find pilfered belongings and more than $300 in cash
missing. The thief apparently
gained access through one of
two doors to the visitors locker
room at Gardner-Edgerton High
School. The Gardner principal
sent a letter apologizing for
the situation and commending
the conduct of the Anderson
County players and coaches,
saying Even though they were
frustrated and angered from
the loss of their personal items,
they remained respectful and
cooperative throughout the
time the SRO was completing
the individual reports.
Safety concerns over a
flock of geese prompted the
closing of Garnetts airport
last Wednesday morning. The
airport manager first noticed
several thousand of the bids
leaving the vicinity of the airport Tuesday evening, but since
they were leaving he didnt give
it much thought. But the birds
returned Wednesday morning,
landing on property just south
of the airport. They were in a
location where they could have
interfered with airplanes on
approach and take off, posing a
serious safety threat if they collided with a plane. Police used
a shotgun to scare the birds
away, but were not certain if
they would be able to scare the
geese away permanently.
Feb. 26, 1994
State funding amounting to $200,000 for the Prairie
Spirit Rail Trail was approved
by the Kansas House of
Representatives Appropriations
Committee Monday with a few
strings attached. The money,
which will be part of the Kansas
Department of Wildlife and
Parks budget, will go before the
full House for approval. KDWP
originally proposed a $75,000
line item in its 1994 budget that
would be used for the trail and
would be used as match money
for a $1.375 million federal
grant. Without the $275,000,
the federal grant would not be
approved. The money was cut
last year, but if it is approved by
the house and senate, it stands
a good chance of being reinstated in the state budget.
If your computer suddenly
blinked off in the middle of that
huge spreadsheet or your television went black at that pivotal point of the Oprah Winfrey
show Monday afternoon, then
you already know all too well
that the power was off for at
least a short period of time. You
can thank a backhoe owned by
THAT WAS THEN
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
Youve Got A Lot of Nerve(s)!
An inflamed or tense spine will influence the
functioning of your nervous system, causing pain,
illness or disease. Chiropractic care can help you
maintain your health and wellness.
Dont wait for pain to tell you theres a problem.
Come see what we can do for 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
A Rosary ring is worn around the finger representing one
decade of a Rosary. They were given to some nuns at the time
of their profession. This one is a Basque Rosary.
REAL ESTATE
Vickie Moss
Brokers and Related Services
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
the contractor working at the
city water plant for the power
outage. The backhoe dug up
control cables at the substation.
Feb. 16, 1984
There have been conflicting
reports about the association
of the sponsors of a meeting
held last Friday, though proposal presented at the meeting
stated the purpose was to help
farmers in financial trouble.
People in attendance stated
that the National Agricultural
Press Association, or NAPA,
was involved in the meeting.
Law enforcement sources say
NAPA was a newspaper public relations arm of the Posse
Comitatus organization, which
is a far right social movement
that opposes the federal government. People at the meeting said one lady mentioned a
method to harass bankers by
calling their wives, then stating that they had been told
by the banker that this was a
good time to catch him at home
alone.
A $243,234 proposal for an
elevator and fire alarm system for the Anderson County
Courthouse was presented by
the architect to the Anderson
County Commission. The proposal would build an elevator in
the courthouse without undue
disturbance of existing structures.
Feb. 18, 1914
Our Lone Elm correspondent
sends the following account of a
distressing accident: Saturday,
Eugene Bibens, aged 9 years,
the only son of Mr. And Mrs.
Bibens, who live three miles
south and a half a mile west of
the place, was out with his sister,
playing at hunting in the snow,
when they came upon which
they supposed to be a brush
pile, and thinking to frighten
any hiding rabbits from cover,
they jumped upon it, when to
their horror, the brush gave
way and the little boy fell into
an old well consisting eight feet
of water, where he drowned
before anyone could come to
his assistance, although his sister, aged 10, made all possible
haste after extricating herself,
for she nearly shared her brothers fate.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Photo Submitted
Also, be sure to check the Reviews Regional Classifieds for listings.
B
R
Benjamin Realty
AFFORDABLE HOME LOANS
Sherry Benjamin,Broker
Land Homes Commercial
201 N. Maple
Garnett, Ks 66032
benjaminrealty@earthlink.net
REALTOR
Office: (785) 448-2550
Home: (785) 241-0532
Cell: (785) 304-2029
ANDERSON
To be added to this
once-a-month real estate guide
Call Stacey at (785) 448-3121.
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
Sell your stuff on
Let the Review do
all the work for you!
785-448-3121 or
800-683-4505
BECKMAN
MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
(785) 448-5441
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
DC Solutions LLC
Foundation &
Drainage Repair
Licensed & Insured
785-448-3056
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
Jo Wolken – Registered Representative
Securities offered through H.D. Vest Investment Services ,
Member SIPC. Advisory Services offered through H.D. Vest
Advisory Services 6333 N. State Highway 161, Fourth Floor,
Irving, TX 75038, 972-870-6000
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
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
(913) 256-9163
www.facebook.com/DC Solutions LLC
www.dcsolutions@osawatomie.com
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
3B
LOCAL
Alysa Wiederholt Sixth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Thurston
Creative Kids
Welcome to Reviews annual Creative Kids creative writing and advertising design section. Each year we tap the resource of local school students creativity in the 4th, 5th and 6th
grades. Students can write on any topic they choose in any format; area advertising clients also participate by sponsoring space and selecting from among competing ad designs the ads
you see here. The Review awards cash prizes of $25, $15 and $10 for 1st, 2nd and 3rd places in each grade, with additional top honorable mentions published here as well.
Thanks to our advertising clients, participating teachers and our students for making our annual contest possible.
Mr. Quirins sixth grade class at Garnett Elementary School won a pizza party
for having the most ad design entries.
The Tricky Owl
Khloe Utley
Crest
4th Grade, Mrs. Jones
Once upon a time a princess got roused by her sister
Midori. The princess got mad
and slapped Midori. Midori
started crying. The princess got
in trouble and got grounded for
a week. The princess got mad
and ran upstairs to her room,
climbed out of her window, and
ran away from home.
She was in a dark forest and
really scared. She heard a hooting sound and got frightened.
The owl flew down and sat on
her shoulder. Then the owl
said something, but the princess couldnt tell what she said.
Gold sword, I said, said the
the owl.
What do you mean? said
the princess.
I mean there is a golden
sword at the top of that mountain and my friend Bosco cant
fly without that sword because
Borne put a spell on him.
Whos
Borne?
asked
the princess.
Borne
is a very
m e a n
eagle,
and he
put a spell
on Bosco so now he cant fly
until we get the sword. Slow
down now, said the princess.
If we get the so called gold
sword your friend will be able
to fly again? Exactly! Well
then we better get going hadnt
we?
After a few days of climbing
they got too tired and almost
gave up. Can we take a break?
said the princess. No. We have
to find that sword or else Bosco
wont be able to fly anymore.
Please dont give up now. Youre
about half way there.
Ugh. The princess sighed.
Do you see that cave at the top
of the mountain? said the owl.
It was the brightest thing here.
Of course it is, the gold sword
is in that cave.
If I get the gold sword for
you, can I keep it? asked the
princess.
No because if y ou keep it
Bosco cant fly, said the owl.
Ok, so if we get the sword we
have to bring it back to Bosco?
asked the princess. Exactly!
said the owl. Then why did
I come all this way? said the
princess.
Back at the castle the mom
and dad are worried sick about
their little princess. Hon, have
you seen Monica? asked the
mom. No I havent see her in
three days. I hope she is ok. She
doesnt know anything about
the outdoors, said the dad.
Princess Monica had been
walking for four days and was
very tired. They had found
the sword and took it to Bosco
when…. Where is Bosco?
asked the princess. He is at
your castle, said the owl. Why
would he be at the castle? said
the princess. Well, because he
is a prince see, and the person
that picks up the gold sword
find their true love, and well,
that was just a story made I
made up to get you to come
along. said the owl.
So I came all this way for
nothing? asked the princess.
Well, I wouldnt say for
nothing, just yet, said the owl.
Why not? said the princess.
Well, because you have now
found your true love, said the
owl.
And why do you say that?
asked the princess.
Because you havent seen
Bosco. He is charming, and
very polite, and sweet, said the
owl.
How am I supposed to
believe you? Because you told
me we were going to get the
sword so Bosco could fly again,
but it turns out he never flew in
the past, said the princess.
Well, your mom has known
me ever since I was a baby
because she took care of me,
and she thought you were alone
way too much, said the owl.
Maybe I like to be alone. I
bet you never thought of that,
said the princess.
I sort of did, but I thought
it would be good to take a risk
every now and then, said the
owl.
Thats not the point. I dont
like you busting into my business, said the princess.
I am sorry for intruding,
said the owl.
Well you should be. Now
I am going to meet this Bosco
guy, said the princess.
Wait for me! Youre going
too fast! shouted the owl.
Mom! Mom!, said Monica.
Monica saw the prince and was
amazed.
Well hello there, said
Bosco. How are you doing?
I am doing good, said the
princess. Have you seen my
mom around here? I cant find
her anywhere.
She is in the kitchen cooking dinner, said Bosco.
I need to get her because
now I have a messed up life
because you are supposed to
marry me! said the princess.
Is there something wrong
with me? Is it my hair or my
uniform? said Bosco.
No, silly. Its that Im meant
to be alone.
But in the end they got married and lived happily ever
after.
stunned at the speeding stampede of
teens. At the last minute, he stepped
to one side. Salem, as a result, tumbled onto the ground with Chris and
Tony close behind her.
Yikes, what a dog pile. Glad I
wasnt part of that, he chuckled.
Now lets see if I can teach you how
to know when someone is going to
side step you.
Uhhhh, Chris, get your elbow
out of my mouth, and Tony your sitting on both of us, Salems muffled
voice groaned from beneath the pile.
Oh my, their father gasped in
astonishment, Salem dear, are you
down there?
Dad, I think she passed out,
Chris mumbled through a mouth
full of kicked up dirt.
No, not yet, but I might if I dont
get out from underneath you, she
threatened.
You know, I could do with a nice
glass of lemonade, Tony remarked
as he lay eagle-eyed on the top of the
dog pile.
Yeah, that does sound very
appealing. What about you Salem?
Chris questioned dreamily.
Well, I would go, but currently
I am being squashed by you day
dreaming dopes, she muttered
angrily.
Antonio, get off your brother
and Chris, help Salem out of the
dirt. After youve all done that, meet
me in the kitchen and Ill tell you
about our next vacation, he mentioned trying not to notice and not to
laugh at the excited yet questioning
looks on his childrens faces.
The three looked at each other
for maybe two seconds before they
jumped up and ran after their
father.
How was your trip honey?
Salems mother asked while washing
leftover salsa off the lunch plates.
Salems dad put a finger to his lips as
he mouthed saying one, two, three,
then pointed at the door. As if on cue
the teens burst through the door like
they were on a rampage.
You see, I know my children
well enough to know when theyre
Salems Mysterious Opponent
April Powls
5th Grade
Westphalia Elementary, Mrs. Ball
BANG! Salems stallion went wild
at the sound of the gunshot. Salem
held on for dear life as Artimes,
Salems 15 year old stallion, reeled
on all fours and charged through the
field. He had never done this before,
this was the first time in 15 years he
had ever gone wild at the sound of
a gunshot. There was definitely no
stopping him now.
Salem had to think fast if she were
to stop Artimes from running into
the neighbors fence. She grabbed
the noose in her messenger bag and
quickly made a loop. Salem began to
hear steady hoof beats behind her,
Chris and Tony, her brothers, had
come to help. Chris was beside her
now.
So whats the plan? Chris yelled
over the wind.
I was going to put a couple of
nooses around his neck and give
them to you and Tony. When you two
have a good hold on the ropes, Ill
give you the signal to stop your horses and pull. How does that sound?
Salem remarked as the wind caused
her eyes to water and burn.
Great just as long as it stops
Artimes, Chris replied. Tony, give
Salem your nooses. Chris barked as
he handed over his own.
Salem tied the nooses onto
Artimess neck as fast as the adrenalin pulsing through her body could
go. Finally she tied the last one.
She breathed a sigh of relief as she
threw the ropes to Tony and then to
Chris.
Tony, when I count to three,
you pull and stop your horse, Chris
barked, and of course, Salem could
clearly see he was enjoying the
authority greatly as his thirst for
adventure took him over.
One, two, three, PULL! Chris
commanded. He struggled to stop
his horse as its hooves made deep
ruts in the soft dirt. Tony was merely four feet behind Chris. At the
sudden jolt, Artimes reeled as he let
loose a noise Salem had never heard
a horse make. It sounded like fear,
wolken tire
3×5
Bralen Bowker Sixth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Thurston
anger, and shear confusion all mixed
up in one sound. After he seemed to
settle down, he still had a strange
and very wild look in his eyes.
A f t e r
the sudden
adventure,
they
all
decided to
go back to
the things
they were
d o i n g
before the
eerie gunshot. Salem
could tell
that Artimes had had enough excitement for one day. As he was walking
him back to the stables, her coppery,
dirty blond hair rippled slightly in
the gentle breeze, a breath after
destruction and turmoil.
I wonder what the shooter and
destination of that mysterious gunshot was and I wonder why it scared
Artimes so much, Salem pondered.
While she was unsaddling
Artimes, Salem noticed something in
his eyes was different, like he knew
something she didnt. Maybe you
can tell me about it, she thought.
She looked deeper, perhaps he could
give her a clue to the new development. She saw nothing but her
own hazel eyes staring back at her
clouded by his black ones.
BANG! Her ears pricked at the
sound of the car door. Dads
home! she gasped. Her father had
been gone on a business trip
for the past month. Salem dashed
across the yard toward the front
door. She heard the greenhouse
door slam as Tony and Chris left
their job of fixing the water pipe.
Is it him? they shouted over the
wind.
Yeah, I know that car door anywhere, she replied as she turned
and stopped to let them catch up
with her. Chris goldish blond hair
looked ablaze as he ran while Tonys
red tinted dark brown ear length
hair flew gracefully atop his head.
They raced across the yard at
what seemed at record speed. They
charged their dad as he looked
southern star
3×5
April Powls Fifth Grade Westphalia Mrs. Ball
SEE SALEM ON PAGE 7B
4B
LOCAL
Fortune Cookie Gone Wrong
Lilly Spring
6th Grade
GES, Mr. Quirin
There was once a girl named
Ally. Ally was just another
normal 16 year old girl living
in Norvelt, New York. She did
everyday things like everybody
else her age. In fact, she was
one of the sweetest girls in
town. Little did she know that
her life was about to completely
change. One day her two best
friends invited her to go out
for Chinese food after school.
She said she would join them
and that afternoon they all
piled into Allys car and headed
to the Chinese Palace. It was
the best Chinese restaurant
in town. Everything was good
and fine, actually they had very
much fun. Then of course when
they had finished their meals
the waiter brought them fortune cookies. Every girl took
turns reading the fortune they
got out loud. When it got to Ally
she opened up her package and
was about to read it to the other
girls, when suddenly her eyes
got really big, she dropped the
fortune, and ran out of the restaurant. Her friends grabbed
the fortune so they could get a
look at what was psyching their
friend out. The fortune said
this WARNING your life is in
danger. Say nothing to anyone
and leave town immediately.
NEVER RETURN!.
The next day at school Ally
was watching her every move,
yet she was still
having bad luck!
So far that day
a pencil almost
hit her in the
eye, and when
somebody was
chopping down
a tree on her
walk to school
they swung it
back and almost
chopped her head straight off.
She had explained to her parents that her family needed to
leave town, but they thought
it was silly she believed her
fortune.
So since Ally couldnt leave
town, she decided to go back to
the Chinese restaurant to see
if they could reset the
fortune, or if they knew
how. The owner told
Ally that the only way
she could reset the fortune she received was by
traveling all the way to
China. He told her if she
found the magical golden cookie hidden in the
factory that made her
fortune, World Cookies,
Inc. She thought that would
be perfect because it was only
three days to summer break
and her parents had planned
a trip to China. The minute
she got home from school on
the last day, her parents loaded
The Fantastic Day with Mozart
Lily Rolf
5th Grade
Westphalia Elementary, Mrs. Ball
Karoline, a 13 year old 7th
grader, loved music and sleeping in. Karoline, get up! Mom
shouted.
Uh! Its only 6:00, she
moaned rolling over and covering her face with a pillow.
No, its 7:30. Your clock is
way off and school starts at 8
a.m., Mom shouted.
Oh no! Karoline shouted.
Quickly Karoline bolted out of
bed and thought about what she
was going to wear.
You dont want to be late
Monday, composer day at
school, Mom said hooking her
short brown hair around her
ear.
Oh yippy! Karoline grumbled sarcastically. Do I have
to go today? Karoline asked
her mom, her short brown hair
sticking up everywhere from
static electricity as she got out
of bed.
Yes you do! You know
how important it is for you to
have a good education! Mom
growled.
You just dont get it mom.
Mrs. Storys my boring history teachers facts are not even
close to being right, Karoline
blasted with anger. Later at
school she reluctantly went to
history class.
Mrs. Story let her blond
hair flow loosely. Today we
will learn about Mozart, a
great man. He wrote wonderful
music, Mrs. Story started, as
I dozed off into a deep sleep.
Clomp, clomp, clomp, clomp,
clomp.
Did a horse and cart just
go by me? Am I in the 1780s?
Karoline asked.
Why yes you are young
lady, Mozart answered.
You are Mozart, the Mozart.
I am a huge fan of your music,
Karoline said with amazement.
Thank you, thank you,
Mozart replied as he adjusted
the ruffles on his shirt.
So where am I? Karoline
asked as she pushed up her
blue and black glasses.
You are in Vienna, he
answered with a big smile.
The Vienna, really, really,
wow! Karoline exclaimed and
when she said that her long
blond hair was just shining in
the sun and her smile was from
side to side.
You wrote so many songs,
Karoline declared.
Yes, but not just songs, but
symphonies, Mozart corrected.
What is the difference?
Karoline asked as she moved
her hair from her face.
A symphony is an elaborate musical composition for
an orchestra that usually has 3
or 4 movements.
A song
is something
to sing,
a small
poem,
Mozart
explained with a big breath of
air. Since we know who I am,
who are you?
Whoa, whoa, whoa, how did
you start to enjoy music? she
asked tilting her head.
Well, when I was three years
old I started to listen to my
sisters harpsichord lessons, so
I tried to copy what I heard.
My dad, who taught my sister
to play, heard me playing and
he gave me lessons, Mozart
explained while his white hair
was bouncing up and down.
Wow, how I started to like,
enjoy, and make music, was at
a music class at school, but all
I have now is a history teacher
who doesnt know her facts,
Karoline said with disappointment.
What is history class?
Mozart asked. He looked very
confused and was shaking his
head.
History is anything that
happened in the past. We have a
class to learn about it, Karoline
explained. She was wondering
how she got to be here with
Mozart in 1782. Did I die? If I
didnt die, will I ever get out?
So for me, learning to play
the piano was history? Mozart
asked and when he did his wig
almost fell off his head because
he was tipping it to the side.
Exactly, thats history. We
have class to learn about people,
because some of the important
things are dead in my time,
Karoline explained.
What is your time? Mozart
asked.
You know, 2014, Karoline
told him.
You are different than the
people around here, Mozart
stated.
Thats because Im not
from around here I am from….
Karoline started.
I knew it! Where are you
from? Mozart asked.
Well, as I was saying, I
dont know where Im at and I
dont know how to get back,
Karoline cried.
Its ok, its okay, just tell
me where youre from, Mozart
calmly said.
I am from a small town, by
a small school in Kansas, she
told him.
Thats the strangest place
I have ever heard of, but I will
still help, Mozart said.
Thank
you
Mozart,
Karoline told him.
I just have one question,
Karoline, why do you have
music class in history class?
he asked.
Well, the school had to cancel music class because they
couldnt pay the teacher, so the
history teacher, Mrs. Story,
said that we could study a new
composer each week, Karoline
said as she sighed, just thinking
about the fact that she doesnt
have music class anymore.
Karoline Space, get up right
now!! Mrs. Story yelled.
What? Am I in school
again? Karoline asked.
Yes, still, you were snoring again. For sleeping in class
you will have to write a 150
word report by tomorrow,
Mrs. Story told her. You managed to sleep right through the
bell ringing. Karoline looked
around and saw that all the
other students were gone.
My facts will be true, but I
cant speak for you, Karoline
murmured soft, but loud
enough for Mrs. Story to hear it
and decide she did not like it.
Make it 200 words, Mrs.
Story snapped. Her lips were
tightly pursed and she tapped
her toe.
Ah,
what?
Karoline
sighed.
Im always listening Space.
Now get to math class, Mrs.
Story told her. Later walking
home, Karoline told Hugo and
Jo about how she thought she
had been in 1782 with Mozart
but she was really sleeping in
Mrs. Storys class and that I
have to write a 200 word report
about Mozart by tomorrow.
Well, lets get home, Hugo
said as he ran ahead.
Hi Mom! We are home!
Karoline said excitedly.
Hi Margret Ethel Jr. the
Third, Mom said to Karoline.
That was one of the nicknames
her dad had given her.
Great, I slept in history
class so I have to write a 200
word report by tomorrow about
Mozart, Karoline said jumping
up and down.
Why are you so excited
about writing a report by tomorrow? Hugo asked Karoline.
Hugo, stay out of it. Why
are you excited? Mom asked as
she got done putting a snack on
the table.
This is my chance to prove
Mrs. Story wrong, Karoline
explained to all of them.
But a 200 word report by
tomorrow, Mom stumbled.
You better get upstairs and get
busy. So Karoline went up to
her room.
Now what did I learn about
Mozart? Karoline asked herself.
The next day at school the
class had a treat. We have a
special person that would
like to share a report because
she slept in my class, Mrs.
Story said proudly in a loud
voice. Karoline was so nervous
because she knew she didnt
have 200 words.
The first paragraph said:
Mozart was a great man. He
wrote wonderful music. He
learned to play the piano by
listening to his sisters lesson.
He tried to copy what he heard.
His dad heard him playing what
he heard and so he got lessons.
Wow that was really good,
but not 200 words, so you get a
B, Mrs. Story told her.
What? Only a B, Karoline
said disappointedly.
Okay, an A-, tell us more
about Mozart, Mrs. Story
insisted.
After school Karoline went
straight home.
Hi Karoline, Dad said.
Sup, Dad, Karoline said.
She went right to her room to
go to Mozart by sleeping knowing that Mozart was her true
role model.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
up the car and they left for the
airport. Once they got to China
her parents had checked into
their hotel and told Ally she
could go see sights but to meet
them in the hotel at 3 p.m. Ally
headed straight for the cookie
factory. She was determined to
stop her bad luck before she
died.
When she got there the back
door was open and she slipped
right in. Then she started
sneaking around searching
high and low for any signs of
the magic fortune cookie. She
was about to give up when out
of the corner of her eye she
saw a box that had a lock over
it. She ran over to the box and
took a bobby pin from her hair.
She was lucky to be able to get
it opened up and on the inside
were some directions and a
magic, golden, sparkly fortune
cookie. She read the directions
and they said to look straight
at the fortune cookie and say,
please, please, please reset my
fortune so nothing bad will continue to happen. She did as told
and suddenly the whole room
was glowing. Ally figured that
it had worked and she decided
it was time to go.
On her walk home nothing
happened to her. She was happy
knowing bad things wouldnt
constantly happen anymore,
and to make things better
that night for dinner they had
pizza.
The Princess and
Dobys Adventure
Marissa Lansdown
Crest
4th Grade, Mrs. Jones
Once upon a time
there was a princess who needed to get to a wizard in the
mountains. She needed to ask
the wizard a question. Would
she become a queen? She went
on her way. She went through
a cave and met an elf. The elfs
name was Doby. The princess
told the elf that she had to get
to the wizard.
Doby was no ordinary elf.
He was an elf that was the wisest of all. Doby had a special
route, the shortest route ever!
They went through the magical
rainforest, over the hilly hills,
then finally into the mountains.
They got to the wizards cabin.
The princess asked the question and the wizard said, Just
wait and well see.
What? said the princess.
The wizard pointed behind her
and a dragon popped out of
n owh e r e.
R i g h t
after that
happened
a sword
popped
i n t o
Dobys
hand. He
started to
stab the
dragon
but it wasnt powerful enough.
They needed more help. The
princess started running but
she couldnt control her body.
She started running towards
the dragon. When she got to the
dragon she started punching the
dragon. On her eleventh punch
the dragon blew up! Then her
question got answered. Doby
asked her to marry him and she
said yes. They got married, had
eleven kids and lived happily
ever after.
The end.
allen commuity
2×5
ller
1×4
Grace McAdam Sixth Grade GES Mrs. Self
gssb
2×5
omalley equip
2×5
frs
2×5
Hailey Gilbert Sixth Grade GES Mr. Quirin
Brooke Schettler Sixth Grade GES Mr. Quirin
Jorel Nicolas Fourth Grade GES Mrs. Graham
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
5B
LOCAL
The Wild Camping Trip
Amanda Miller
6th Grade
Mont Ida, Mrs. Rockers
I was very excited. My
friends Sylvia, Teresa and I
were going to go on a week
long camping trip to the mountains. We planned to go the next
Tuesday and come back the following week. Id already packed
everything I needed for the trip.
We would all take a few pots
and pans, a compass, matches,
sleeping bags, camping chairs,
tents, and a borrowed canoe.
That next Tuesday we said
our good-byes and headed for
the mountains on a bus. We
arrived that night. We made
a fire and fried a few fish for
supper. Then we sat around
and talked for a while before
going to bed. In the middle of
the night I was suddenly awak-
ened by a sound or
noise. I decided it
was new surroundings that made me
jumpy. I was almost
asleep when I heard
it again. It was the
oddest noise! It
seemed far away
and sorrowful.
Quickly I crawled out of my
sleeping bag and slipped out of
my tent. I listened for the sound
again. There it was again! It
was closer now. It sounded like
coyotes but a little stronger and
more sorrowful. I ran through
the thick forested mountain
side, slipping and stumbling as
I went. Suddenly I heard a panting noise right ahead of me and
a growl behind me. I whirled
to my right to get away and I
found myself staring into the
yellowest eyes I had ever seen.
Stuck in Time
Katie Schmit
5th Grade
Westphalia Elementary, Mrs. Ball
Help! Help! The earth is eating my leg! cried Peter. Help!
Come on dude. The earth
isnt eating your leg, chuckled
Robert. You stepped into a really deep hole, thats all.
Will you please get me out?
said Peter, very
embarrassed.
I am kind of
stuck.
I wonder who
put this here?
questioned
Robert as he
helped Peter out
of the hole.
I dont know,
answered Peter,
But there is something unusual
about that piece of paper in the
bottle down there in the hole.
It looks ancient and I think I
can see some writing on it. Lets
check it out!
After they got the bottle out of
the hole they sat on their favorite
rocks by the biggest tree in the
park called the Jumbo Mumbo.
It was Peter and Roberts favorite tree.
Ouch! yelped Peter as he
was trying to get the old ancient
piece of paper out. I got my
finger stuck in the top of the
bottle. POP! Ah, there it goes.
Quit messing around,
snapped Robert. Give it to me
and Ill tell you how to do it. Tip
it upside down and out it comes
easy as pie.
Will you hurry up and open
up the piece of paper, exclaimed
Peter. I want to know what it
says.
Ok, here it is, said Robert.
He read it aloud, Buried under
the yellow slide, you will find it.
Find what? Peter asked.
I dont know. Thats all it
says, said Robert. Except for
the year and his signature at the
bottom of the page.
What was the year? asked
Peter.
I think it says 1602, answered
Robert squinting at the piece of
paper because he did not put his
glasses on before he left like his
mother told him to.
I dont know about you, but I
am going to go check it out under
the yellow slide, said Peter, It
sounds like a mystery and I dont
want to be left out.
Wait for me! yelled Robert
chasing Peter to the yellow
slide.
My older brother told me
how to find buried treasure,
explained Peter. You stomp on
the ground until you find a different sound.
STOMP, STOMP, STOMP,
THUD!
I think I found it. Come on,
lets dig! shouted Robert.
Ten minutes later they
had dug up the hole and
found a very ancient
looking pocket watch.
We went through all
that work for just a little watch? questioned
Peter. Well I guess we
better make out what we
have. Lets look at it.
Five minutes later they
had opened the clock and
were looking inside.
Help! cried Peter and Robert
as they were getting sucked into
the clock. Help! Help!
When Peter and Robert got
sucked into the clock they got
knocked out for a half an hour.
Where are we? asked Peter
as he was getting up off a hard
wooden floor beneath them.
Robert was already up and looking at the walls of the mysterious place they were trapped in.
Hey! said Robert. We
learned these in school whenever we were in the 4th grade,
but that was two whole years ago
and I cant talk this language as
good as I used to.
Well can you try? asked
Peter. I wasnt paying attention
during that lesson.
I can try, but I might not get
all the words right, proclaimed
Robert.
Ok, then try, encouraged
Peter. At least we have some
hope.
Ok, I think it says, you will
have to fix this clock before sunset, I mean before sundown, or
else the world will end and all
will be destroyed, Robert said
reading the wall.
What? shouted Peter. Did
you just say that we will be in
this clock until sundown and
make it out ok if we fix it, but if
we dont fix it the world will end
and all will be destroyed?
Basically yes, but I did not
shout it like you did, announced
Robert calmly.
But Peter was not paying
attention. He was looking at
something different. He was
looking at three dozen rattle-
I gasped as I realized
I was surrounded by
wolves.
The wolves
were now so close
I could feel their
breath on my skin. I
tried yelling for help,
but my throat was so
dry with panic that
only a few croaks escaped. I
remembered that I had a flashlight with me with a red light on
it (which wolves are afraid of).
Quickly I grabbed it and turned
the red light on and shone it
straight into those yellow eyes.
The wolves yelped and ran one
by one into the dark forest.
Thats when I heard the voices
of my friends. They were looking for me. Im right here,
I yelled. Boy was I glad to see
them!
We found each other and
snakes coming towards him and
Robert.
Robert you might want to be
quiet and start running. Look
whats heading towards us,
interrupted Peter. And they do
not look nice at all.
Run! they both yelled as
they ran into a mysterious place
located on the other side of the
clock from where they were.
Wow, that was a close one,
said Peter almost out of breath.
Hey, whats this? exclaimed
Robert. It looks like a clue to
fixing the clock. Maybe it is.
Yes it is, announced Peter.
Maybe we will not be stuck in
here for a while after all. I will
read it so you will not have to
go through all that trouble. Here
is what it says, you are almost
done with your quest. Just one
more clue then you are done.
You will have to turn the clock
around by turning the switch
with a green knob in the door
with a square on it.
What time is it? asked
Robert.
According to my clock it is…
oh no! cried Peter. It is already
headed back to camp. By that
time the horizon was already
gray with the coming of dawn.
That day we had a lot of fun
exploring the area around us.
We were just sitting down to a
supper of wild nuts and berries wed found that day while
exploring when we heard a
crackling noise. It sounded like
a huge animal making its way
through the forest. We looked
at each other and ran for the
nearest trees. We had just seated ourselves in separate trees
when a huge bull moose came
trotting into camp. The moose
stopped to graze right under my
tree! I was so taken by the sight
of the moose that I lost my grip
and fell out of the tree. I landed
right on the big moose! Now I
was in for the ride of my life.
We crashed through the forest
with me clinging to everything
7:45 p.m. and the sun goes down
at 8 p.m. We better hurry or else
you know what.
The world will end! cried
Robert.
Instead of talking, lets go
find the door with a square in it
to find the switch with the green
knob, suggested Peter.
They both ran to the door
as fast as they could run and
opened the door. Creak! Went the
door as they opened it.
We have to hurry and find
the switch with the green knob
on it, said Peter nervously.
I think that will be hard to
do. Look at all these lasers blocking our way. Theres no way we
can make it through there,
announced Robert.
Yes there is, exclaimed
Peter. I took karate lessons
and took the extra class where
you learn how to jump through
lasers.
That sounds like a very weird
karate class, blurted Robert.
Yes, it was back whenever I
lived in Manhattan, informed
Peter.
I could find on the mooses back
(which was mostly hair). On
we went for what seemed like
ages. Then the moose decided
he wasnt going to get me off by
running so he started to buck
and rear up into the air. The
next thing I knew I was flying
through the air.
I guess I passed out because
when I came to I was back at
camp. Sylvia and Teresa were
there with me and I got better
after a days rest. Sure, I still
have a few scars, but not any
broken bones.
The next few days we had a
lot of fun by going canoeing,
fishing, staying up late and just
sitting around being lazy. On
Monday night we all sat around
the fire talking about the past
week and all the fun wed had
when all of a sudden we heard
this snuffling and snorting
noise. By now we had made a
dugout hideaway for emergencies like this. We all ran for the
dugout. We were just settled
when a big grizzly bear came
lumbering into camp. After
sniffing the pots and pans that
still held the aroma of cooked
fish, it lumbered over to the
fire which was now glowing red
coals. It stuck its nose into the
coals and jumped back in surprise at the sudden rush of pain
in its tender nose. It walked
around camp for a while before
lumbering away into the night.
My friends and I sighed in relief
when we found no damage.
The next night we were all
back home talking about everything that had happened in the
past week. Every night since
that trip I can still hear the
rushing of the stream and the
howls of distant wolves.
The Old Woman
and Her Daughter
Karyn Elisabeth Yoder
4th Grade
Mont Ida, Mrs. Johnson
Once upon a time I was taking a walk in the woods when
I saw a light in the distance. It
was night. When
I came up to the
light I realized
it was a house.
I sneaked up to
the window and
looked into the
house. There
was a woman
and her daughter in the house.
They were eating supper. I looked around to
the other side of the house and
knocked on the door.
The woman opened the door
and said, Hello. Whats your
name and how old are you?
My name is Tiena and I am
13, I said.
The womans name was
Helena and her daughters
name was Katina. She asked
me to stay for the night. I slept
with Katina and we laughed and
laughed until we cried. Katina
was born October 2, 2000, also.
We soon became friends.
Every day I came back
to visit. Nobody liked
Katina because they
thought she was a witch,
but she was a friendly
pal. We played hide and
go seek every day. We
even made a little playhouse out of wood. It was
cute. We liked to play in
the playhouse. We made
little bureaus and drawers. We
put stones and pretty things in
the drawers. We put a pretty tea
set in the bureau. The tea set
had little roses inside the teacups and plates. We even had
saucers to go with the cups and
plates.
SEE STUCK ON PAGE 6B
pizza hut
2×5
sandras
2×5
Bailey Gruver./ Rory Wedel Sixth Grade GES Mr. Lewis
Jusitce Quillin Fifth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Gonzalez
wittman auto
2×5
acr
2×5
schulte
2×5
Katie Schmit Fifth Grade Westphalia Mrs. Ball
Russell Peterson Sixth Grade GES Mr. Quirin
Hannah Gardner Fifth Grade Westphalia Mrs. Ball
6B
The Beast
Raven Maley
6th Grade
GES, Mr. Quirin
In the year 1944 a little baby
boy was born, but no one knew
that the little boy would one
day become a legend. Heres his
story. The baby boy is now 12.
His name is Logan and Logan
never really found any sport
that he was good at, but it didnt
really bother him because his
mom always said your day will
come.
Then his day came. It was the
football sign ups. He had never
thought about football because
he always thought he would get
hurt. Now he knows never to be
afraid again, and as he brought
the sign
up sheet
to
his
m o m
he said,
To d ay
is
my
day.
T h e
day is
h e r e
and it is
Logans first day of practice.
When he got there his coach
said, You look pretty fast. I
Vampire Cow
Kyden Teal
Greeley Elementary
4th Grade, Mrs. Miller
I had just got off the bus to
school and it was raining very
hard. I looked left and right.
Then I saw a very dark barn. I
didnt like school so I went over
there and saw the barn
doors were boarded.
I looked in my backpack for my toy hammer so I could pull
out the nails from
the boards. I used all
my strength to pull off
the nails with my toy
hammer.
Once I pulled all the
nails off the boards the door
opened by itself and made a
sound like one of those scary
movies you would hear on television. I looked around and saw
very bright red eyes. Next the
creature opened its mouth and
I saw huge sharp teeth with
drool coming down on the dark
ground. I looked very closely
and saw it was a cow hanging
upside down. I remembered all
the things I saw. Its a vampire
cow!
I ran as fast as I could. It was
faster than lightening. Then
it tackled me. I yelled
for help. Right then I
knew it would suck
the blood right out of
me. Finally I heard a
clown honk his nose.
The clown stabbed a
wooden stake through
the vampire cow. The
vampire cow blew into
dust. The clown asked
me why I wasnt in school. I
didnt tell him anything because
I was terrified. So the clown
took me to school and told the
teacher that I got lost and he
brought me back to school. I
never saw that cow again.
Important Event
Lindsey Godderz
4th Grade
Crest, Mrs. Jones
My family and I went
to St. Louis. First we
went to the hotel.
Then we went
to our room and
after that we
all went out for
lunch. We went to
go swimming in
their pool. After
that we went to the
St. Louis Zoo and got to
see really cool animals. Then
we went to this playground for
a little while. We also went to
the St. Louis Butterfly House.
It was so cool and had really
pretty butterflies. I saw this
butterfly that was blue, black,
and white. It was really pretty.
The next day the boys went
to the Cardinals game
while the girls stayed at
the hotel and hung out.
Then we went to the top
of the St. Louis Arch. It
was awesome to see all the
people from down below
and see the tall buildings
and Cardinals stadium and
all the cars on the streets
below. It was a really cool trip.
One I will never forget.
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
think Ill put you as running
back. All the other players got
there and the coach told them
their team mascot was the
Thunderbirds. Then the other
players started making fun of
Logan because he had never
played before. But he just kept
telling himself, Today is my
day.
Finally they started practice
and they had all their pads on
and Logan thought I really like
football. After warm ups the
coach had try outs for positions. The coach said running
backs to the left, wide receivers
to the right, and all the linemen
to the middle. Logan ran over
with the running backs and the
coach said get in a line.
Since Logan was new he
went last to make sure he did
the drill right. The coach said
just take the ball and run it
down the field. Do your best not
to get tackled. The first person
went, but he got tackled, and
then the second, then third, and
so on. Then the moment came
and it was Logans turn. All the
other players said he wasnt
going to make it, but he just
kept saying Today is my day.
He took the ball and ran down
the field. He dodged left, then
he dodged right, and finally
came to the biggest player on
the team and jumped right over
him! He did it! All the players
were amazed.
From that day on every practice went great. He was not tackled at all and finally at his first
game he was playing the Yellow
Jackets. He was nervous, but he
just kept saying Today is my
day. Come to find out, Logan
scored all his teams points and
the score was 24-0, and thats
when it happened, everyone
called Logan The Beast. Id
say he is one, dont you? All season long it was the same. Logan
scored all the points. They even
went to the championship game
and won!
Then Logan went all the way
through junior high and high
school being known as The
Beast. Then he went to play
college, and then the NFL. And
he made it into the NFL Hall of
Fame. Oh, and you know what
he said before every game?
Today is my day. But that
was a long time ago and I just
thought you wanted to hear the
story of The Beast, a football
legend.
Gabe Berry
5th Grade
Crest Elementary, Mrs. West
But that was just to buy the
people time to figure out how
they could solve their problem
once and for all.
In a secret meeting, the council came up with the names
of Dr. Tech and Earthquake,
two Grimseberg graduates who
had been high-school enemies but separately had
gone out into the world
to fight crime and evil.
But when the city council called each of them
hoping one of them would
come to help, surprisingly
they both showed up at the
next meeting.
Dr. Tech, the school nerd,
had been working on a special
suit that had a laser shooting
helmet, an iron fist that had
different tools, and hydraulic boots that allowed him
to jump as high or as far as
needed. Earthquake, the school
jock, had super strength and
could cause an earthquake of
any size, at any time or place.
But because Earthquake had
always stole the spotlight, he
and Dr. Tech had always fought,
so when they graduated, they
went their separate ways. But
now here they were back in
Grimsenberg ready to fight
together to defeat Emanon
Jones and restore peace to their
hometown.
Walking down the street,
Emanon Jones spies both
Earthquake and Dr. Tech, and
sensing problems, he immediately tells them Get out. This
is my town now. The pair of
them answer back NO WAY!
and the fight was on.
Emanon Jones had just
enough time to call his henchmen to the scene, and the next
thing he knew, Dr. Tech shot a
laser, knocking the phone out
of his hands. Jones henchmen
showed up, but Dr. Tech distracted them. Earthquake flied
into action, knocking Emanon
on the ground. Dr. Tech jumped
on, holding Emanon on the
ground. Earthquake stomped
his foot, causing just enough
earthquake to make a hole, big
enough for Emanon and his
henchmen to fall into.
At just that moment, the cops
arrive, handcuff Jones and his
hoods, and haul them off to
jail. Dr. Tech and Earthquake
realize that time has healed old
wounds, and they are better
together as a team than they
were alone. From then on, they
went out to fight evil as a team,
and Emanon Jones spent a long
time in jail thinking about his
poor choices.
THE END.
As Peter zoomed through the
lasers Robert would tell him
where to go. Left, no right, I
mean left. It is at the top of
that tall tower. Can you climb up
there? shouted Robert.
Yes, just give me a second,
answered Peter. As Peter climbed
up the tower Robert stood there
trembling and hoping he would
make it up the tower.
Yes! they both exclaimed
after Peter made it up the tower.
Now turn the knob and
lets get out of here! shouted
Robert.
Peter turned the knob and a
portal appeared. Lets go! he
shouted and they went through
the portal. One minute later they
made it to the park at exactly
7:59. They both went to Peters
house because Robert was spending the night there.
Where have you two been?
I was looking all over for you,
said Peters Mom.
Thats our little secret, they
both said with suspicious smiles
on their faces.
Enemies Unite
Grimsenberg was a peaceful
little city, until the long-time
mayor died, and rich, spoiled
Emanon Jones decided
he should be the new
mayor. His money
could buy anything he wanted,
except the approval of the people
in his hometown,
and he wanted that
more than anything. When the
votes came in, Emanon
Jones was not the mayor, and
this was more disappointment
than he could take. He went
on a rampage through the city,
terrorizing it until the people
gave in and he was appointed
the mayor by the city council.
STUCK…
FROM PAGE 5B
Well, lets hurry up. We only
have ten minutes left before sundown! shouted Robert.
I will turn the knob and you
tell me where it is, ok? suggested Peter.
Got it, Robert said sounding
like a super spy.
mcdonalds
2×5
rods
2×5
Claire Hasty Fifth Grade GES Mrs. Sullins
Tyler Stevenson Sixth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Thurston
farmers state bank
2×5
brummel
2×5
country mart
2×5
Hannah Jumet Sixth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Thurston
Sylvia Keim Sixth Grade Mont Ida Mrs. Rockers
Jaci Hirt Sixth Grade Westphalia Mrs. Brandt
Exploring the Outdoors
Tucker Yocham
Crest
4th Grade, Mrs. Jones
Have you ever taken a walk
through the woods by a stream?
There are so many cool
things to see. Have you
ever seen a beaver
slide or a dam built
by a beaver? The
beavers cut down
small trees with their
sharp, sharp teeth
and build a place to
live in the water. To
get the water from the
land, they slide their belly
across the ground and create a
path.
You can see all kinds of
animal tracks. There are deer,
turkey, coyote, bobcat, and
raccoon tracks in the mud. I
wonder where they are going?
As we walk along, I noticed a
tree that fell in the water. It
provides shelter for the
smaller fish. I really
wish I had my fishing pole so I could try
to catch one. I know
there are bass, catfish,
perch, crappie, and carp
in these waters.
There is so much to
see in the outdoors. You
should take a walk and find
some interesting things for
yourself.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
7B
LOCAL
The Big Game All Over Again
Corbin Danner
6th Grade
GES, Mr. Quirin
Basketball all-star John
Tibet had just lost his championship game. Lets just say
hes not too happy. He always
walked home after his game,
but today he didnt go home.
John went to the lake to think
about what he could have done
better. Honestly, there wasnt
really anything they could have
done better except their wings.
That night John made
a wish that he could
have this day all over
again. So after that
John walked home
and his mother
shouted,
Where
were you? He tried
to tell his mother
but she was too busy
screaming so he went
to bed.
He woke up the next morning and took a shower and went
to get ready. John was look-
ing in his closet and saw
his game uniform was
washed. So he went to
ask his mother what
day it was and she
said it was Wednesday
without freaking out. So
John replied, Yesterday
was Wednesday. His
mother said he had
something wrong. John
walked upstairs to his room
without saying anything and
got dressed, grabbed his backpack and ran downstairs. His
The Room Cleaner
Harlee Poage
6th Grade
Central Heights, Mrs. Thurston
Oh geez Stan, your room is
a mess!
But Mom!
You need to clean this by
tomorrow.
Ok fine.
Well, here I am cleaning
my room. I just hate this.
Why does my mom have to
make me clean my room?
So the next day I had just
got home from school and my
mom was at work. So I had time
to clean my room. I heard the
door shut and Mom said, Stan,
Im home. And my room is not
going to rampage into the kitchen,
their dad chuckled.
So whats the surprise? Salem
questioned with a serious expression, but you would instantly know
that she was hiding a curious expression underneath it.
Is it a mystery for us? Tony
speculated.
Of course its a new mystery!
Guess what? Their father didnt
wait for an answer as he blurted out.
clean. I feel this horrible feeling
in my stomach. My mom walks
through my bedroom door and
says, Stan, I told you to clean
your room.
I just got home from school
Mom.
Ok
Stan,
I will give you
one more day
to clean up this
mess.
Ok, this is my
nightmare. I cant
take it anymore. I
have to clean my
room. The next
thing I hear is Stan, supper
is done so I go downstairs to
the dinner table and were hav-
ing hotdogs and green beans.
My mom asked, Is your room
clean yet? I said yes. Mom told
me she was proud of me. So
when I went upstairs into my
bedroom I start to think why
did I lie to my mom? Next
thing I see is my moms head
peaking through my bedroom
door. Mom asked, Did you lie
to me?
Yes Mom. I just wanted to
make you happy. Im sorry.
Its ok, just get it done.
The next morning I see that
my room is cleaner than it has
ever been before. Then I realize
I can help around the house
and make my mom happy.
Its in Virginia!
Wow, for real? Chris gasped.
Virginia, Salem echoed. She
looked at her father to the calendar pinned to the wall. When do
we leave? She whispered with a
dreamy look in her eyes.
Tomorrow at five he proposed.
So I suggest that you all better
start packing. He snickered, Myself
included.
The family rushed upstairs to
their rooms. Salem ran into hers and
heard Chris and Tony on either side
of her room do the same. She rushed
to her closet and pulled out her blue,
black, silver Maxpetition, camouflaged suitcase and plopped it on her
bed. She rushed to her dresser and
started pulling clothes out of her
drawer with one hand while throwing them on the bed with her other
hand. Finally, she found the very
last thing she was looking for.
Now how do I get all these
clothes in my suitcase? she said to
herself as she stared down at the
mound of clothes completely hiding
her suitcase.
* See Editors Note below…
* Editors Note: This story exceeded the available space for this publication. If you would like to read the full story,
email The Review at review@garnett-ks.com to receive a full electronic version.
sonic
2×5
Billy said, Ready for the game
tonight? John looked puzzled
and told him he had asked him
that yesterday. Are you losing
it? Billy said. We have the big
game tonight. So John said
ok and went to class. Half of
Johns team asked him if he
was ready for the game and
John just kept playing along
and telling them yes.
Later that afternoon his
mom picked him up and took
him to the recreation center.
John put his basketball shoes
on and ran to the coach without saying anything and waited
for the rest of his team. Once
everybody got there John and
the other four guys walked onto
the court. John was the tallest
so he jumped. This time he got
the ball to his team, unlike last
time. Suddenly the ball came
to John. He could hear the
coaches yelling so John ran up
and passed it to the post. They
made it and ended up winning
and the team went out for ice
cream.
The Man
SALEM…
FROM PAGE 3B
mother said, Why arent you
wearing your game uniform?
And John told her his game
was yesterday and they lost. His
mother told him his game was
today and you never lose. So
John ran upstairs and quickly
put his game uniform on. John
ran back downstairs and ate
some pancakes and eggs for
breakfast. Then John went to
get in his mothers car and she
took him to school.
When he got to school he
ran inside and Johns friend
Abby Brown
6th Grade
Central Heights, Mrs. Thurston
The bell had just rung and
I was walking down the school
steps with Austin, Josh, and
Alex. Austin turned to me and
said, Hey Abby, are you ready
for the Chiefs game on Sunday?
Yeah, I said, not really paying attention. I was watching
a little squirrel run up a tree
with a nut in its mouth.
At dinner I was telling Mom
about our math assignment
when there was a big clattering sound on the front porch.
My dad went out to see what it
was. He was out there for a few
seconds before he came in and
said that he didnt see anything.
I really didnt think anything of
the incident.
After dinner Mom and Dad
went to their room and I went
to mine. I was just laying in
my bed, trying to sleep, when I
heard another clattering sound
outside of my window. I got up
out of my bed, walked to my
window, and looked. I almost
screamed so loud that somebody in Hawaii could hear me,
but I bit my bottom lip like I
was never going to let it go. The
man was staring at me from the
field. He was wearing a pair of
overalls, a straw hat, and had
leroy coop
2×5
a pitchfork in his hand. I went
over and laid down in my bed,
frightened of what I just saw. I
laid there for at least 45 minutes
before I got
even a little
sleepy, but
right as I
was about
to go to
sleep,
I
looked over
to my window and
saw the man
standing right there, staring at
me, just a few feet from my
window screen. He took his free
hand that was not holding the
pitch fork and pointed at me.
I immediately hid under the
covers and didnt open my eyes
again.
I must have fallen asleep
because when I opened my eyes
I saw light coming through my
window. I got up and out of
bed as fast as I could. I had to
tell my parents what had happened the night before. I ran
into the kitchen and saw a piece
of paper on the table that said,
Hey Honey. Youre father and I
decided to go to town for breakfast. Well be back in a couple
of hours. You can eat anything
you want. I really wished I
hadnt read that piece of paper,
because they left me alone with
the man and God only knew
where he was. He may be in my
closet for all I know.
I just hung out at my house
for a while and was thinking
about the night before. I was
starting to come to the conclusion that I had just imagined
the whole thing. Mom and Dad
came home a couple hours later.
I decided not to tell them about
the man. We went over to my
cousins house and stayed there
until after dinner and by that
time it was about 9 oclock.
I got home and got in my
bed. After a while of just laying there, facing the wall, and
thinking about the Chiefs game
tomorrow, I heard a rustling
sound coming from outside
my door. I just lay there frozen like a rock. Then I heard
my doorknob turn. I could see
light coming through my door.
I looked over and saw my dad.
He whispered to me and said,
Sorry to wake you. I just wanted to make sure you had all of
your dirty clothes.
I had no more incidents with
the man until about three weeks
later when I heard on the news
that a man with overalls and a
straw hat on and a pitchfork in
his hand had gotten run over
by a truck. He was pronounced
dead ten minutes later.
bank of greeley
2×5
Rylee McCurry Fourth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Cutburth
Hailey GIllespie Fifth Grade GES Ms. Burris
Mya Miller Fifth Grade Greeley Mrs. Weirich
auburn
2×5
farm bureau
2×5
beckman
2×5
Abby Reid Fifth Grade GES Ms. Peterson
Haley Schweizer Fifth Grade Westphalia Mrs. Ball
Darbie Lear Sixth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Thurston
8B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
LOCAL
How do you understand Notice to parents in childs case
the purpose for your life?
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014)
In his teaching Jesus always
used illustrations that were
applicable to his audience. The
crowds were always composed
of different classes of people.
There were the Pharisees, who
were the ruling authority at the
time, very powerful and rich
and there were the rest of the
people who one might classify
as the working class.
In Luke 12 Jesus begins
teaching his disciples and a
crowd of several thousand people gathers around. Initially
Jesus addresses his teaching to
the disciples until someone in
the crowd says to him, Teacher
tell my brother to divide the
inheritance with me. Jesus
then issues a stern warning to
them concerning greed, stating
a mans life does not consist in
abundance of his possessions.
He then relates this parable.
The ground of a certain rich
man produced a good crop. He
thought to himself, What shall
I do? I have no place to store
my crops. Then he said I will
tear down my barns and build
bigger ones, and there I will
store my grain and my goods.
And I will say to myself. You
have plenty of good things laid
up for many years. Take life
easy; eat, drink and be merry.
But God said to him, You fool!
This very night your life will be
demanded of you. Then who
will get what you have prepared for yourself ? This is
how it will be with anyone who
stores up things for himself but
is not rich toward God. (Luke
12:13-21)
Weekly
Devotional
by David Bilderback
Obviously this man had
worked hard and was a good
farmer. He would be no different than anyone of us today
who in our chosen profession
has accumulated a measure of
wealth. Year after year we continue to put away wealth for
that time when we, just as the
man in the parable, can take
our ease to eat, drink and be
merry. The issue that this man
and the issue that you and I
face is simply this. Our feelings
dont correspond with the state
of our soul. In this mans mind
he saw no need for God. His
sole purpose in life was to eat,
drink and be merry. It is very
easy for us to be blinded to the
things of God by the attractions
of this world.
The plan this man had and
the one we follow as well is not
a purpose but it is merely an
outcome of our own endeavors.
Until we know and understand
who Christ is we cannot understand the purpose for our life.
God created each of us for his
purposes. When we fail to follow Christ our life is merely a
series of outcomes and of no
value to God.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Alcantara promoted by Marines
Elizabeth Alcantara has been
promoted to the rank of sergeant as a non-commissioned
officer with the U.S. Marine
Corps.
She is a 2010 graduate of
Anderson County High School
and the daughter of Joe and
Dottie Blake, Garnett. She is
currently at Camp Pendleton,
Calif.
The promotion was not automatic and each non-commissioned offer must work hard
to develop
the ability to
lead their fellow Marines.
Alcantara
was carefully
selected for
promotion
based on her
Alcantara
past performance, selfconfidence, determination and
discipline.
Duplicate Bridge Club meets
Charles and Peggy Carlson
of Savonburg won the duplicate bridge match February
12th at the Garnett Inn. Steve
Brodmerkle of Neosho Falls
and Anita Dennis of Garnett
came in second. David Leitch
and Nancy Horn of Garnett
were in third place.
The Garnett Duplicate Bridge
Club plays each Wednesday at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn. All
bridge players are welcome.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
IN THE INTEREST OF
AUTUMN MUELLER
Case No. 2014-JC-000001
DOB xx /xx /2013
A female
NOTICE OF HEARING
Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-1581
TO: VICTORIA GRAIKA mother of child
A request for a Adjudication hearing
has been received by the Court and filed in
the above entitled case, and a hearing will be
held on the 25th day of March, 2014, at 11:00
AM The above-named parent(s) and any other
person(s) having legal custody are required to
appear before this court, or prior to that time file
a written response with the clerk of this court.
Failure to either appear or respond will
not prevent the Court from entering judgment.
The court may order one or both parents to
pay child support. If the court finds a parent
or parents to be unfit, the court may make an
order permanently terminating the parents or
parents parental rights.
Clerk of the District Court
2-14-2014
By: Carla J. SKiles
Clerk
fb18t3
Notice to parents in childs case
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
IN THE INTEREST OF
AUTUMN MUELLER
Case No. 2014-JC-000001
DOB xx /xx /2013
A female
NOTICE OF HEARING
Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-1581
TO: CHADLEY MICHAEL MUELLER putative father of child
A request for a Adjudication hearing
has been received by the Court and filed in
the above entitled case, and a hearing will be
held on the 25th day of March, 2014, at 11:00
AM The above-named parent(s) and any other
person(s) having legal custody are required to
appear before this court, or prior to that time file
a written response with the clerk of this court.
Failure to either appear or respond will
not prevent the Court from entering judgment.
The court may order one or both parents to
pay child support. If the court finds a parent
or parents to be unfit, the court may make an
order permanently terminating the parents or
parents parental rights.
Clerk of the District Court
2-14-2014
By: Carla J. SKiles
Clerk
fb18t3
Viking boys pull away late
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
The Vikings played three
very good quarters, but a
lethargic second quarter left
them playing catch up early in
the second half on their way to
a 52-42 victory against Prairie
View.
Central Heights used a strong
first quarter to set the tone for
the game as they jumped out on
top 15-4.
The Vikings head coach,
Rusty Cannady said Tonights
game started off really well.
Defensively we were active
and communicating (well).
Offensively we executed and
got high percentage shots.
All the momentum of
that strong first quarter was
quickly erased in the second
quarter. Prairie View tightened
down defensively and held the
Vikings to just 5 points and
scored 17 of their own to give
them a 21-20 lead into halftime.
The second quarter was a
different story. We started playing defense with our hands and
got into foul trouble. We didnt
communicate well. Offensively
we got lazy and started to stand
and watch, coach Cannady
stated.
Central Heights returned to
their first quarter form in the
second half. The Vikings outscored Prairie View 15-10 in the
third quarter and 17-11 in the
fourth to pull away for a 52-42
victory.
The second half I was
extremely pleased with our
kids. They were disciplined
on both ends. Defensively we
played good help defense and
on the offensive end we kept
feeding our posts, Cannady
said when describing the differences of the second half in his
teams performance.
Jordan Horstick and Tanner
Erhart led the way for Central
Heights with 20 and 15 points
respectively.
Box Score:
Prairie View (42) Barthol 16,
Ackerson 1, Spears 4, Lee 6,
Phelps 8, Ross 5, Robbins 2
Central Heights (52) Robertson
3, Holler 4, M. Brown 1, Horstick
20, Erhart 15, Hendron 9
Two Anderson County Lottery
players win Walking Dead prizes Fourth quarter collapse hurts
TOPEKA Two Anderson
County Lottery players won a
Walking Dead TV package in
the Lotterys third and final
second-chance Walking Dead
drawing.
The drawing was held last
week at Lottery headquarters
in Topeka.
Three of the five grand prize
winners were from Anderson
County. Each will receive a 32
TV, Blu-ray player and Blu-ray
DVDs of all three seasons of
The Walking Dead series.
The grand prize winners
from Anderson County are
Gary Reiter of Kincaid and
Craig McGee of Garnett.
Players who entered their
non-winning $2 The Walking
Dead instant scratch tickets
online through the Kansas
Lotterys Players Club became
eligible for the drawing. There
were approximately 34,775
entries in the drawing.
Jackson hosts JJJ Club
The JJJ Club met Feb. 12
with Bert Jackson. There were
six members present. Roll call
was answered and the minutes
of the last meeting read. Cards
were played with Irene Wittman
receiving high and Sondra
Baugher the low. Refreshments
of ice cream cups and several toppings with coffee were
served.
The next meeting is with
Darlene Thompson on March
12.
Greeley Senior Citizens meet
The Greeley Senior Citizens
met Wednesday, Feb. 12, at the
United Methodist Hall for a
carry-in dinner at noon with 12
attending.
Happy Birthday was sung to
Becky Roush. Bingo was played
with 20 prizes won. The next
meeting is March 12. Anyone is
welcome to attend.
Oswego cruises past Crest girls
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
On Friday night, the Crest
Lancers finished off a rough
week, in which they went 0-3,
with a 67-35 loss to the Oswego
Indians.
Early on the Indians seized
control of the game and never
relinquished. Oswego outscored
Crest 19-8 in the first quarter
and again in the second quarter
16-9 to take a 35-17 lead into halftime.
Oswego poured it on coming
out of halftime as they picked it
up offensively and put 22 points
on the board and held Crest to 9
points.
With the game well out of
reach, Oswego outscored Crest
just 10-9 in the fourth period to
finish out the impressive victory.
Leading the way for Crest
was Karlee Hammond with 14
points. Other scorers for the
Lancers were Madison Covey
with 8 points, Laural Godderz
had 7, Taryn Coven with 4 and
Clareissa McCulley chipped in
with 2 points.
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
On Friday night the Anderson
County Bulldogs were unable to
hold on to a 44-34 lead heading
into the fourth quarter on their
way to a disappointing setback
to Osawatomie, 59-51.
The Osawatomie Trojans
jumped up early on the Bulldogs
and raced out to an early 16-8
lead. This seemed all too familiar as the last time these two
teams squared off, Osawatomie
ran away with a 62-33 win.
This time though, the
Bulldogs had a lot more fight
in them. The boys countered
the bad start by outscoring the
Trojans 17-7 in the second quarter to take a 25-23 lead into
halftime.
Coming out of the locker
room, the boys seemed to ride
that second quarter momen-
tum and extended their lead
even further by outscoring the
Trojans 19-11 in the third quarter to take a 44-34 lead heading
into the fourth.
All that went right in the
second and third quarters
quickly went wrong in the
fourth quarter for the Bulldogs.
Osawatomie completed the
impressive comeback by dropping 25 fourth quarter points
and limited the Bulldogs to just
7 as they pulled off the come
from behind victory.
Spencer Walter scored 14
points for the Bulldogs to lead
the attack.
Box Score
Osawatomie (59) England 8,
Arts 2, Soucie 14, Rayl 15, Booe
20
ACHS (51) Woodard 6, Lickteig
9, Hillard 8, Comfort 3, Small 9,
Rundle 2, Walter 14
Your hometown.
Their future.
Imagine the possibilities for
your community if everyone
designated just 5% of their
estates to hometown needs.
With the help of community
foundations, we can create
permanent sources of
funding for local charities,
schools, churches, parks,
and so much more!
Learn more at
keepfiveinkansas.com
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Drivers – CDL-B, Great pay,
hometime! No-Forced dispatch! New singles from St.
Joseph to surrounding states.
TruckMovers.com or 888-567-48
61.
ja28t4*
Part-Time – Chiropractic
Assistant. Bring resume to
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic, 414
W. 1st, Garnett. (785) 448-6151.
fb18t1
JOIN OUR TEAM!
RN – 1 day per week
& as needed PRN
Housekeeping – Full Time
CNA & CMA – Full Time
Apply in person at:
Richmond Healthcare &
Rehabilitation Center, LLC
340 South St.
Richmond, KS
Your Needs, Our Passions…Every Day!
HELP WANTED
Drivers Wanted Immediately!
Haul railroad crews throughout Kansas 21+ Valid DL, Clean
MVR, Drug & B/G checks. Apply
online at: www.Renzenberger.
com
Heavy Equipment Operator
Training! Bulldozers, Backhoes,
Excavators. 3 Weeks Hands
On Program. Local Job
Placement Assistance. National
Certifications. GI Bill Benefits
Eligible. 1-866-362-6497
Partners In Excellence OTR
Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass
EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012
& Newer equipment. 100% No
touch. Butler Transport 1-800528-7825 www.butlertransport.
com
Software Development Manager:
Valley Hope Association, Norton
KS. Software/web development background, experience
w/object oriented programming. Relocation available.
Salary DOE. Email Resume:
Employment@ValleyHope.ORG
Drivers – CDL-A. Train and
work for us! Professional,
focused CDL training available. Choose Company Driver,
Owner Operator, Lease Operator
or Lease Trainer. (877) 369-7885
www.CentralTruckDrivingJobs.
com
Exp. Flatbed Drivers: Regional
opportunities now open with
plenty of freight & great pay!
800-277-0212 or driveforprime.
com
Ottawa Retirement
Village
1100 W. 15th, Ottawa, KS
Med Aide
LPN/RNs – All Shifts,
FT & PT
Cook – FT
MAKE MONEY USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!
ResCare HomeCare currently has
openings for CNAs & HHAs in the
Garnett/Anderson County area. Duties
may include light housekeeping, meal prep,
shopping/errands and personal care. Please
apply online at www.rescare.com or call
Aislynn at 785-241-3370. EOE M/F/D/V
Anderson County Solid Waste Dept.
will be accepting bids to install a heating
system in our recycling center. Propane
infrared heating system is preferable.
Bids accepted until 2/24/2014.
For more information contact
Anderson County Landfill
Scott Garrett 448-3109
$500 SIGN ON BONUS FOR
QUALIFIED CDL DRIVERS!
Hopper bottom company with regional,
dedicated runs, home on weekends.
Benefits include, paid vacation, company
contributed health insurance, safety incentive
bonus. Call Dan @ RC Trucking Inc.,
Gridley, KS 620-437-6616.
AuBurn Pharmacy
Administrative Assistant
Busy office looking for an experienced administrative professional
to serve as the point person for all visitors and callers in addition to
providing operational support for corporate staff.
This person must have the ability to interact positively with both
internal and external customers and have a working knowledge of MS
Office and event planning.
The ideal candidate must be proactive, detail oriented, organized,
self-motivated, and good at solving problems with little assistance.
They must also be able to take direction well and work effectively
under pressure on multiple projects simultaneously with frequent
interruptions.
Hours are negotiable. Excellent benefits, including company-paid
health and dental premiums for full-time employees, paid time off,
and generous 401K matching.
Please email resume and salary requirements:
tocjiles@auburnpharmacies.com.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
9B
LOCAL
Need a Fistful of Dollars?
Sell your items in the
Anderson County Review classieds!
MISC. FOR SALE
AUCTIONS
AUCTIONS
China Cabinet – 6-10 high
by 3-15 1/2 wide, nice wood,
glass doors, lighted. (7850 4483805, you haul, $600 cash only.
fb11tfn
DISH TV Retailer. Starting
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.)
Broadband Internet starting
$14.95/month (where available.) Ask About Same Day
Installation! Call Now! 1-800723-7142
508 Lot Coin Auction – Seller:
Harold Lingenfelter & other
seller. Saturday, February 22,
10am, Best Western: 3021 W. US
Hwy 50, Emporia, KS. Preview
8:30-10:00. Lots of Silver; 16 lots
of Gold; Misc. For a full list go
to our website or call us: Victor
& Hope Edelman – Swift-N-Sure
Auctions, Lebo, KS, (620) 3660729.
fb18t1
SERVICES
SERVICES
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
Check out our
Monthly Specials
COMPUTER
WORK
COMPUTER EXPERTS
785.304.1843
FARM & AG
FARM AND AG
Spring 2014 – Beef Dairy cross
calves. Heifers and bulls,
February-May. Nichols Dairy,
(620) 344-0790.
fb11t10*
LAWN & GARDEN
Complete Inventory of
Lawn Care Equipment For
Sale – Mowers, Trimmers,
Chainsaws, Trailer, etc.
785-448-2331
ADOPTION
WANTED
ADOPTION
Want to buy – homemade GN
with gravity flow box. (620) 8523379.
dc17tf
20-50 acres – of ag land, cash
buyer. Call Kevin at (913) 4245308.
fb4t3*
Wanted – Copy of Anderson
County Gleanings, Vol. 3 by
Dorothy Lickteig. Please email
Ridemiown10@gmail.com with
price or call (913) 775-1251.
fb11t2*
Warm, Fun, Professional
Couple Eager to Provide Your
Child Love And Happiness
Forever. Expenses Paid. Ann
and Peter. Call 1-800-593-1730
annpeter102@gmail.com or go
to www.annandpeter.info.
NOTICES
NOTICES
delphian
1×1
R&J fur
1×2
AD
1×1
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . NAPA Gold
Filter Sale, up to 55% off,
February 3-21. Wittman Auto
Parts, 138 E. 6th, Garnett. ja21t5
Happiness is . . . Ordering
business cards from Garnett
Publishing. Call (785) 448-3121
or stop by our office at 112 W. 6th
Ave. today!
fb11t3
Happiness is . . . Cold Weather
Special at Josephines. Flavored
coffees and soups are 25% off
during February. 421 S. Oak.
fb11t2
Happiness is . . . Sending your
customized coupon to every
local household on March 11!
Call Stacey at The Anderson
County Review to find out how
– (785) 448-3121.
fb11t3
Happiness is . . . A community
breakfast! Saturday, February
22, 7am-9am, First United
Methodist Church, 2nd & Oak,
Garnett.
fb18t1
AD
1×2
Happiness is . . . Ordering
Krispy Kreme Donuts from
ACHS Junior Class, February
10-21, $6/dozen. Purchase from
any junior or call (785) 04-4035
and leave message. Proceeds
benefit ACHS After Prom.
fb11t2
JB Construction
(913) 594-2495
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
AD
1×1
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
Country Clipper Mowers
Featuring: Stand up deck, Joystick or Twin Stick
Jonsered Power Equipment & Certified Dealer
Chain Saws Trimmer Sales & Repair
Chain Sharpening Lawn & Garden Equipment
Repair & Service We service all kinds of small engines!
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN MON . – FRI. 8 A.M. – 6 P.M.
Water & Gas Maintenance Worker I
The City of Garnett is taking applications
for Water & Gas Maintenance Worker I. This is an
entry level position assisting with installation,
repairs and maintenance of water and gas lines.
Complete job description and application available
at City Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave., Garnett
and www.hrepartners.com.
Salary commensurate with experience.
Experience the QSI Advantage
72x120x18
WANTED
AD
1×2
MISC. FOR SALE
SERVICES
$73,700
Help for people with
Macular Degeneration
Find out if special glasses can help
you see better.
Call for a FREE phone consultation
with Dr. Broyles, Optometrist.
Offices in: Blue Springs, Prairie Village, Kansas City
(816) 420-9989
Dr. Ryan J. Broyles LowVisionKC.com
1110 E. 23rd St
Lawrence, KS
Cell (785) 760-5054
Office (785) 843-8444
www.heritagetractor.com
Michael Wiederholt
Salesman
mwiederholt@hertitagetractor.com
Legendary Products. Extraordinary Service. Thats Our Heritage
ADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVE
The Miami County Newspapers is seeking an energetic Account Executive to sell print and online products to businesses in Miami County and the surrounding areas. Candidate should be highly motivated, CREATIVE, be able to
manage multiple projects, and have a bachelors degree or
equivalent work experience. Social networking skills are a
PLUS! Reliable transportation and valid drivers license required. Compensation package includes guaranteed base
plus incentives. Benets include 401(k), health insurance,
dental insurance, vision insurance, vacation and sick pay.
Email resume to teresa.morrow@miconews.com
or send to Miami County Newspapers,
c/o Teresa Morrow, P.O. Box 389, Paola KS 66071.
EOE / Drug free Workplace.
AD
2×2
KPA Stroke
2×4
AD
Morton
Kansas
City Farm Show- Feb 21-23
2×4
One 36×18 Split Sliding Door and One Solid Walk Door
Price Includes DELIVERY & INSTALLATION On Your Level Site.
Travel Charges May Apply
FREE ESTIMATES
AND ON-SITE CONSULTATION
800-374-6988
48 x 80 Farm Show Specials
Basic Farm and Ranch storage with 2 sliding doors & 1 entry door
Good $34,962 $9.10/sf
Better $35,925 $9.36/sf
Best $39,988 $10.41/sf
2/28/14.
MATERIAL KITS NOW AVAILABLE
www.qualitystructures.com
10B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Cold
Weather
Hot
Deals!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Dane Hicks
Pictured from left, front row: Firefighter Adam Witherspoon, Firefighter Glen Platt, Firefighter
Wes Skillman, Firefighter Dane Byerley.; back row: Gaylon Corley, EKAE maintenance manager; Doug Sommer, plant manager; Jeff Oestmann, CEO; JD Mersman, AC emergency
management director.
EKAE buys grain rescue equipment
On Jan. 10, Anderson
County emergency responders received equipment purchased by East Kansas AgriEnergy LLC of Garnett.
The Wall of Rescue
grain engulfment rescue
tube is a simple-to-use piece
of equipment designed to
be placed around a person
who has become trapped in
grain or other type of product found on many farms
througout Anderson County.
The simple design and ability to be broken down into
several pieces makes it ideal
for rescue use in confined
areas such as a grain bin.
Firefighters from across
Anderson County attended
training in 2013 conducted
by the University of Kansas
Fire and Rescue Training
Institute in grain engulfment rescue. An additional
training is scheduled for Feb.
22 in Westphalia.
This piece of equipment
is carried on an apparatus
stationed in Garnett that
is specifically designed for
various types of technical
rescue. This apparatus was
purchased with Homeland
Security money through the
Northeast Region of Kansas.
The equipment on this apparatus makes it a deployable
resource that can go anywhere within the State of
Kansas.
Recycle trailer changes location in Colony
Calendar
Feb. 14-Valentines Day; 16Christian Church Sweetheart
Supper, City Hall community
room; 17-Presidents Day, all
businesses closed, meal site
closed, no school; Seekers Not
Slackers 4-H Club, Lone Elm
community building, 7 p.m.;
Jolly Dozen Club meets at community room, 7 p.m.; 18-Library
Board meeting, city hall, 5:30
p.m.; 19-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement, 7
p.m.
School Calendar
Feb. 14-high school Homecoming
at Crest vs. Oswego, 4 p.m.;
16-State Scholars Bowl; 17-No
school, high school basketball at Uniontown; 18-Parent
Teacher Conferences, 3:45-7:30
p.m.; high school basketball at
Lebo, 5 p.m.
Meal Site
14-chicken-lasagna
rollup,
Italian veggies, bread, lemon
medley; 17-Closed, 19-Birthday
meal-fried chicken breast,
mashed potatoes, gravy, green
beans, roll, cake and ice cream
Phone 620-852-3450 for meal reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented Feb.
9 was Haggai 1:2-15. Mark
McCoys sermon was titled
The Story-Chapter 19-The
Return Home. Mens Bible
Study Tuesday mornings, 7
a.m. Sweetheart Supper Feb. 16
at the Community Center. Men
meet at 1:30 to go shopping.
Supper will be at 5:00.
UMC
Scripture presented Feb. 9
church service was Psalm 112:110, Isaiah 58:1-12, Corinthians
2:1-16 and Matthew 5:13-20.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon Are You
Salty?
Garden Center
Prestons Prairie Garden
Center will be opening for their
2nd year in business on March
8 at 10 a.m. Their new hours are
Tues-Fri-1-6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5
p.m. and Sunday 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
They announce new items also.
They have a website www.prestonsgc.com and their phone no.
is 785-448-8422. Their address is
14629 SE Wabaunsee Road, better known as Selma Road east
of Kincaid on highway 31. Go
north to first house on left side
(west) of Selma Road.
Recycle Trailer
Due to the upcoming opening of the Anderson County
Clinic trailer located on north
Pine Street in GSSBs bank
yard, the Anderson County
Recycle trailer which arrives
on Fridays (first full week of
each month) and is parked until
the following Tuesday is now
located on Cherry Street on the
west side of the Colony City
Hall playground area.
The move was necessitated
due to the Clinics need for
parking area.
85th Birthday
A card shower is requested
for Morris Luedke, 702 Pine
Street, Colony, KS 66015. He
will be 85 on Feb. 23. His son
plans to take his Dad and Mom
out for a noon meal that day.
For the remainder of the week
Feb. 24-28, friends, neighbors,
and family are welcome to drop
in the afternoon at his home to
visit with him or they are welcome to phone him.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 02-18-2014 / Photo Submitted
Always a Farmer. Happy 85th Birthday! Love, your family.
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
Around Town
Congratulations to Kobey
Miller, Crest 5th grade student
who was Anderson County
Spelling Bee runner-up. He is
the son of Brandt and Aundi
Miller, Welda. He will compete
in the regional spelling bee in
Topeka on March 8.
Wayne Luedke enjoyed his
90th birthday cards and time
spent with his family and
friends very much. Family
attending were his wife, Twila,
his son Doug Luedke and his
son Jacob, his daughter Marcia
and husband Jeff Harrington,
and her son Michael and wife
Kim Ashford and children
Luke and Alexandra. Friends
stopping in with good wishes
were Ralph and Evelyn Bunnel,
Virginia Weatherman, Jay and
Virginia Dutton, Wallace and
Delores Strickler, Weldon and
Wilma Goodell, Bill Goodell,
Maynard and Ila Belvoir, Gene
and Claudette Anderson and
Marie Goodspeed.
Doug Finley, nephew of
Wayne, Morris and Stanley
Luedke is very ill at the Hays
Hospital. He a son of Morris
twin sister, Doris Finley.
Colonys first snow of 2014
arrived Tuesday, Feb. 4, an estimated 4 inches. It came down
nicely and by the following
morning a total of around 5
to 6 inches had accumulated.
Wednesday brought beautiful sunshine, light northwest
wind and snowplows began
their work. School was closed
Tuesday thru Thursday.
Sympathy is expressed to
Bryan and Tina Miller for
the loss of his mother, Loetta
Miller-Roberts, 69, Moran.
Funeral services were held
Feb. 6 at Feuerborn Funeral
Service, Moran; burial followed
in Moran Cemetery.
Sympathy is also expressed
to relatives and friends of
Rachel Kelley, 85, El Dorado.
She passed away Feb. 5 at
Reflection Living in Wichita
following a battle with cancer.
Funeral services were Feb. 10
at Carlson Colonial Chapel,
El Dorado. Graveside services
were that afternoon at Colony
Cemetery.
diebolt
2×2
TRUCKS
2012 Ford F150 Lariat, Crew Cab, Auto., 5.0L V-8, Sync, 4×4, Leather, Heated & Cooled Seats, Memory Seat, Keyless Entry, Loaded,
local trade, 30K miles. $33,988
2012 Ford F350 Lariat, Crew Cab, Auto., 6.7L Diesel, Sync, Leather, Heated & Cooled Seats, B&W turnover ball, 4×4, Dual Rear
Wheels, Loaded, 1 owner, local trade, 32K miles. $44,288
2012 Ford F150 XLT, Crew Cab, Auto., 5.0L V-8, 4×4, Sync, Power windows, seat & locks, 1 owner, local trade, 36K miles. $27,488
2011 Ford F250 XLT, Crew Cab, Auto., 6.2L V-8, 4×4, Power Windows, locks & seat, 1 owner, local trade, B&W turnover ball, 101K
miles. $19,988
2011 Ford F350 Lariat, Crew Cab, Auto., 6.7L Diesel, Sync, Leather heated & cooled seats, 4×4, B&W turnover ball, Dual Rear
Wheels, Loaded, 1 owner local trade-in, 96K miles. $37,488
2011 Ford F250 Lariat Crew, Auto., 6.7L Diesel, 4×4, leather, heated and cooled seats, power windows, locks, seats & mirrors,
loaded, very clean truck, 34K miles. $42,688
2011 Ford F150 STX, Super Cab, Auto., 5.0L V-8, Nice, local trade, 60K miles. $19,988
2011 Ford F150 XLT, Crew Cab, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Sync, Power windows, locks & seat, 53K miles. $22,988
2011 Ford F150 XLT, Super Cab, Auto., 5.0L V-8, 4×4, Sync, Power windows, locks, very sharp, 1 owner, local trade, 42K miles.
$23,988
2011 Ford Ranger XLT, Super Cab, Auto., 4.0L V-6, Tonneau Cover, Bedliner, Power locks, Keyless Remote, 30K miles. $16,988 or
$269 mo.
2011 Toyota Tacoma SR5, Super Cab, Auto., 2.7L 4 cyl., Rear View Camera, Power locks, very low mileage, 13K miles. $19,988
2010 Ford F150 Platinum, Crew Cab, Auto, 5.4L V-8, 4×4, Leather, Power Running Boards, Heated seats, Power windows, locks &
seats, Sync, local trade, 49K miles. $31,888
2010 Ford F150 XLT Crew, Auto., 5.4L V-8, 4×4, Sync, power windows, locks & seat, very clean, 1 owner, local trade-in, 63K miles.
$22,988
2010 Nissan Frontier, Ext. Cab, Auto., 4.0L V-6, 4×4, Power windows & locks, Nice truck, local trade, 54K miles. $17,488
2008 Ford F150 XLT, Crew Cab, Auto., 5.4L V-8, 4×4, Power windows & locks, Bedliner, 74K miles. $20,988
2008 Dodge Ram 2500 Laramie, Crew Cab, Auto., 4×4, 6.7L Cummins Diesel, Leather, Loaded, local trade-in, 84K miles. $28,988
2008 Dodge Dakota Laramie, Quad Cab, 4.7L V-8, Auto., 4×4, leather, power windows, locks & seat, very sharp truck, 72K miles.
$17,988 or $299 mo.
2008 Ford F150 XL, Reg. Cab, Auto., 4.2L V-6, 1 owner, local trade, good work truck, 130K miles. $6,995
2008 Ford F150 XL, Reg. Cab., Auto., 4.6L V-8, 1 owner, local trade, clean vehicle, only 50K miles. $11,988 or $249 mo.
2008 Ford F150 XL, Super Cab, Auto., 4.6L V-8, local trade, Nice truck, 83K miles. $10,988 or $229 mo.
2007 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Classic, Crew Cab, Auto., 5.3L V-8, Power windows, locks & seat, 142K miles. $10,988
2006 Ford F150 XL, Regular Cab, Auto., 4.6L V-8, Bedliner, Nice clean truck, 76K miles. $7,995
2005 Chevrolet Silverado 1500, Reg. Cab, 5-speed manual, 4.3L V-6, good gas mileage, only 86K miles. $7,995
2003 Dodge Ram 1500, Reg. Cab, Auto., 3.7L V-6, Auto., local trade, 94K miles. $5,988 or $159 mo.
2001 Ford F150 XLT, Crew Cab, Auto., 4.6L V-8, Power windows, locks & seat, 119K miles. $7,488
1998 Chevrolet S-10, Reg. Cab, 5-speed, 2.2L 4 cyl, Bedliner, 120K miles. $3,488
SUVS & VANS
2013 Ford Edge Limited, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Leather, Sync, Power locks, windows & seats, My Touch, Heated Seats, Dual Climate
Control, Low miles, Certified Pre-Owned 7yr. 100K warranty, 11K miles. $27,988
2013 Ford Explorer XLT, Auto., 3.5L V-6, 4×4, Sync, My Touch, Leather, Power windows, locks & seats, clean, 31K miles. $29,988
2013 Ford Explorer Limited, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Leather, Sync, Power windows, locks, mirrors & seat, Sony sound system, 7-passenger,
1 owner, 28K miles. $32,488
2013 Ford Flex SEL, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Sync, Leather, My Touch, 7-passenger seating, Heated memory seats, Very clean, 25K miles.
$24,988
2012 Ford E350 Super Duty Van, Auto., 5.4L V-8, 12-passenger, Very clean, 31K miles. $19,988
2012 Ford E350 Super Duty Van, Auto., 5.4L V-8, 12-passenger seating, clean, 41K miles. $18,988
2012 Ford Escape Limited, Auto., 3.0L V-6, 4×4, Leather, Power windows, locks & seats, Navigation, Moonroof, Rear view Camera,
Sync, Loaded, Very low miles, Great buy, 9K miles. $23,988
2011 Ford Edge SEL, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Power windows, locks & seat, My Touch, 1 owner, local trade, 40K miles. $18,988 or $299 mo.
2011 Ford Escape XLT, Auto, 3.0L V-6, Power windows & locks, Moonroof, Certified Pre-Owned 7 yr. 100K warranty, 25K miles.
$17,988 or $279 mo.
2011 Ford Explorer XLT, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Leather, Heated seats, Sync, Navigation, My Touch, Moonroof, 1 owner, local trade, 49K
miles. $25,988
2010 Ford Edge Limited, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Leather, Heated seats, Power window, locks & seats, Dual Climate Control, 6 CD in dash
changer, 1 owner, local trade, 56K miles. $20,288
2010 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer, Auto., 4.0L V-6, 4×4, Sync, Leather, Power heated seats, Very Nice, 74K miles. $18,988 or $315 mo.
2009 Chevrolet Suburban LTZ, Auto., 5.3L V-8, 4×4, leather, heated seats, power windows, locks & seats, sunroof, rear head rest,
DVD systems, local trade-in, 69K miles. $28,988
2008 Ford Explorer XLT, Auto., 4.0L V-6, Power windows, locks & seat, Moonroof, 52K miles. $12,988 or $249 mo.
2008 Ford Escape XLS, Auto., 2.4L 4 cyl, Power windows & locks, 88K miles. $9,488 or $189 mo.
2008 Chevrolet Uplander LS, Auto., 3.9L V-6, power windows, locks & seat, 7 passenger seating, 1 owner, local trade, 78K miles.
$7995 or $211 mo.
2006 Ford Escape Limited, Auto., 3.0L V-6, Power windows, locks & seats, Leather heated seats, local trade, 115K miles. $8,488 or
$199 mo.
2005 Ford Escape Limited, Auto., 3.0L V-6, 4×4, leather, power windows, locks & seat, clean vehicle, 98K miles. $8995 or $199 mo.
CARS
2013 Ford Taurus Limited, Auto., 3.5L V-6, Sync, My Ford Touch, leather, heated & cooled seats, power windows, locks & seats, rear
view camera, sunroof, loaded only 11K miles. $23,688
2013 Ford C-Max SEL, Hybrid, Auto., 2.0L 4 cyl., Sync, leather, power windows, locks & seat, 43 MPG Wow, 21K miles. $24,988
2012 Nissan Altima, Auto., 2.5 L 4cyl., power windows, locks and seat, very clean, 40K miles. $13,988
2012 Ford Fusion SE, Auto., 2.5L 4 cyl., Sync., great gas mileage, 33 Hwy. , 20K miles & 7 yr. 100K warranty. $16,488
or $269 mo.
2011 Ford Fusion SEL, Auto., 3.0L V-6, Sync, power windows, locks & seat, leather, nice clean car, 43K miles. $14,988 or $249 mo.
2011 Nissan Altima, Auto., 2.5L 4 cyl., Remote keyless entry, Power windows & locks, 44K miles. $12,988
2009 Dodge Challenger R/T, 6 speed, 5.7L Hemi, power windows, locks & seat, local trade-in, lots of power, 57K miles. $20,988 or
$349 mo.
2008 Chevrolet Impala LS, Auto., 3.5L V-6, power windows, locks & seat, clean vehicle, 57K miles. $11,488 or $199 mo.
2008 Pontiac G6, Auto., 2.5L 4 cyl., power windows & locks, 108K miles. $6988 or $209 mo.
2008 Pontiac Grand Prix, Auto., V-6, Power windows & locks, clean car, 112K miles. $7988 or $239 mo.
2005 Chrysler 300 Limited, Auto., 3.5L V-6, power windows, locks & seat, leather, loaded, local trade-in, 65K miles. $11,688 or
$235 mo.
2004 Ford Taurus, Auto., V-6, Power windows & locks, only 99K miles. $5988 or $199 mo.
2003 Mercury Grand Marquis LS, Auto., V-8, leather, heated seats, power windows, locks & seats, local trade, 130K miles. $4995 or
$169 mo.
2501 N. State, Iola 800-407-TWIN
620-365-3632
Visit us online at www.twinmotorsfordks.com
Locally Owned. Locally Operated.
Parts. Sales. Service.

