Anderson County Review — February 22, 2022
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from February 22, 2022. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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February 22, 2022
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Weber takes plea in
2020 child sex case
Covid delays, volume of alleged
victims makes court-appointed
lawyer eligible for extra pay
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A 63 year-old Garnett man was
sentenced to nearly 13 years in prison last
week in connection with 2020 felony child sex
abuse charges.
Barry Weber, 63, originally faced a total
of eight felonies in connection with the incident including rape, aggravated indecent liberties. He was arrested February 15, 2020, after
Garnett police received a report of an incident
involving Weber and a female child under the
age of 14, according to a press release from the
Garnett Police Department.
As part of a plea deal worked out with
Special Prosecutor Stephen Maxwell, Weber
took a plea for a single charge of Electronic
Solicitation of a child, said GPD Detective
Todd Turner. Through the investigation,
numerous other child victims were identified,
however none could be charged due to the statute of limitations pertaining to the time span
from when the incidents took place to when
they were discovered, Turner said.
Court records showed Webers case took two
years to move through the system due to complications with the volume of alleged victims
and several amendments to charges against
him. Weber waived a preliminary hearing in September
of 2020 and was arraigned
on charges the following
November, with an amendment to his charges nearly
a year later in September
2021. Based on the eventual
plea deal, his charges were
amended to the single count
Weber of electronic solicitation in
November 2021.
Anderson County District Court Judge
Eric Godderz signed an order February 16
declaring Webers an exceptional case due
to Covid delays, multiple off-grid sex offense
charges and a large volume of discovery of
evidence in the case. Kansas law allows for
court-appointed attorneys to derive additional compensation from the state if a case is
deemed exceptional, limited to $8,000 per
case.
Schmidt files suit to challenge
opponents of redistricting map
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 2-22-22 / SUBMITTED
A contract bus carrier transporting 21 work release inmates from Topeka to a work project in Iola ran off
the road while southbound on U.S. 169 about three miles southwest of Welda about 3 p.m. Saturday.
The bus hit a culvert just south of the highways intersection with Kentucky Road. Anderson County
Sheriff Vern Valentine said two minor injuries which did not require hospitalization were reported in the
accident. After a tire on the vehicle was repaired reports said it was driven from the scene. All the work
release subjects were accounted for.
TOPEKA Kansas Attorney General Derek
Schmidt last week filed an original action in
the Kansas Supreme Court asking it to hold
that legal challenges to the recently enacted
congressional district map may not be brought
in state courts and requesting that two district-court lawsuits filed earlier this week in
Wyandotte County be dismissed.
That map moves Anderson County from the
2nd Congressional District to the 3rd District,
and has become a lightning rod for opponents
in Wyandotte County, which is bisected by the
new map, and for Lawrence, which would be
moved from the 2nd District to the expansive
1st District.
For the first time in
Kansas history, lawsuits
have been filed in state court
asking a state district court
judge to hold that redistricting legislation for federal
congressional maps violates
the Kansas Constitution,
Schmidt wrote in the petition
filed on behalf of Secretary
Schmidt of State Scott Schwab and
Wyandotte County Election
Commissioner Michael Abbott. There is a
SEE MAP ON PAGE 1B
Parents Bill of Rights would force school
districts to be more open about class work
Depends on
where you look…
Local supers say rapport
with parents, students key to
issues over whats being taught
Snowfall total tough
to count in drifts;
chillier this week
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT As a Covid-era wave of parent concern over public school curriculum continues to surge in the country, a
Kansas House of Representatives committee earlier this month introduced a
Parents Bill of Rights bill that if made
law would require school districts to offer
a website portal detailing whats being
taught and how its being taught so
parents can keep an eye on it.
A hearing on the bill was held last
week in Topeka.
Local educators in Anderson County
say as small school districts, parents
already have ready accessibility to their
district staffs, teachers and information
on curriculum. But parent concerns
fueled by social media circulation of videos dealing with race, sex and other sensitive issues, shot by students during
school lockdowns when teachers across
the country taught classes online, continues to drive the move for more direct
accountability to parents for the content
being presented to their kids.
Parents in school districts across the
country say some of those examples
are striking. In one instance, parents
protested a graphic novel in a Hawaii
school library that depicted gay sex;
books in a Virginia high school library
include depictions of pedophilia. News
services rebroadcast presentations from
the National Association of Independent
Schools (NAIS) encouraging teachers to
implement graphic sexual material into
curricula for grades K-8.
Some parents in the Shawnee Mission
school district near Kansas City protested
a teacher training program called Deep
Equity. They say it is rooted in the tenets
of critical race theory the idea that slavery, Jim Crow and systemic racism are
key to understanding American history
and culture.
One parent told the House K-12
Education Budget Committee last month
that she was barred from viewing program materials because they were copyright protected.
District spokesman David Smith said
Deep Equity training sessions werent
recorded, and materials presented during
them arent district property. But parents
who ask could view workbooks or other
materials the district has.
Sometimes people, rather than speaking with their teacher or principal or
somebody in the central office, they will
go to somebody outside of the system and
complain, Smith said. And that creates
the appearance of a problem when, in
fact, it doesnt exist.
USD 365 Superintendent Don Blome
said the local district already offers parents options to preview some materials.
Access to USD 365 school district curriculum and activities are posted online
Curriculum section (www.usd365.org)
for most classes and subject areas, Blome
said. Furthermore, several teachers
use Google classroom and other online
means to communicate daily lessons with
students. I am not sure what its like
in Washington D.C., but since we are a
somewhat small rural school districts,
parents can contact teachers by phone,
email or in-person conference regarding
lessons or other subjects relative to their
student(s).
We have a well-trained group of teachers that care about what our students
learn, Blome said.
Shane Walter, superintendent at Crest
USD 479, echoed the sentiment.
We are a small school district, Walter
said. Our administration, teachers, and
counselor are able to communicate and
work with parents if there are issues
related to lessons or students. Our board
also puts value into working with parents
and garnering their feedback.
If the bill is made law, Kansas K-12
schools and libraries would no longer
be exempt from obscenity laws, opening
them to potential criminal charges if they
distribute material found to be harmful to
minors. It also would shield teachers who
refuse to teach against their religious or
philosophical beliefs.
People have seen the news stories,
and I think parents are saying, Wait a
second, is this happening in my kids
classroom, too? said Rodney Penn, good
reason these lawsuits find no support in
precedent: Neither the federal nor the
Kansas Constitution authorizes state
courts to pass on the validity of federal
BY DANE HICKS THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Cold, snow,
warm, melt, cold again.
Last weeks Wednesday
night/Thursday snowfall
was hard to measure due to
high winds and drifting accumulation, but precipitation
measuring equipment at the
Garnett Industrial Airport
measured estimated a total of
about six inches.
Measurements had to be
taken fast, however, as temperatures Sunday edged to 63
and an estimated high of 70
was expected Monday afternoon. Except for those drifts
and some lingering puddles,
most of the snow was history
by 3 p.m. Monday.
More seasonal temps are
expected this week, with a
high of 33 expected for today
with 26 on Wednesday/
Thursday climbing to 31/41
on Friday/Saturday. Lows
will run between 8 and 18
degrees with windy conditions most of this week.
SEE CURRICULUM ON PAGE 4B
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2A
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SPRING SOCCER SIGNUPS
The City of Garnett soccer registration has begun.
Registration period is underway until February 25th.-2/25.
Late fee will be applied starting 2/26-3/4. Get your kids
signed up today. Register at
GarnettRecreation.RecDesk.
com/
PAIR OF CITY COMMITTEES HAVE VACANCIES
The City of Garnett has
vacancies on the Park & Rec
Advisory Committee and the
Tourism Advisory Committee.
Interested persons are encouraged to complete a Statement
of Interest form available at City
Hall or at www.simplygarnett.
com.
SEEKING DONATIONS
The Garnett Senior Center is
seeking donations of used
medical equipment such as
walkers, wheelchairs, scooters,
shower chairs, etc. Call 4484518 for the item to be picked
up.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Kansas VINE
is free and anonymous and
provides victims of crime and
the general public the ability to
search for an offender housed
in a county jail and receive
notifications.
Call to
Subscribe
(785) 448-3121
LAND TRANSFERS
Curtis R Mersman and Kathleen
Mersman to Curtis R Mersman
Trustee, Kathleen Mersman Trustee
and Curtis R & Kathleen Mersman
Living Trust Dated 5-21-2021: South
990 of n2 of 8-20-20 lying east of
Neosho Road & a strip of land 25
wide off north side of sw4 9-20-20
described as com at center of said
section, township and range, and running thence west along north line of
sw4 thereof 160 rods to west line of
said section, thence south 25 and
thence east a distance of 160 rods to
east line of said section and thence
north 25 to pob.
Lauren Hugle and Lauren E Mundell
A/K/A to Justin Metcalfe: Beg at nwcor
s2 ne4 18-21-20, thence south 854,
thence east 236 to west r/w of us Hwy
59 & 169; thence north along said r/w
854, thence west 236 to pob; less
hwy.
Christin L Weller to Brian R Weller:
Lots 16 & 17 blk 38 City of Garnett.
Tiffanee A Hermreck and Haley
Nicole Ladewig to Mark L Magner:
Lots 11, 12, 13, 14 & 15 blk 10
Mandovi Addition to City of Garnett.
CREST UNIFIED SCHOOL
DISTRICT NO. 479
BOARD MEETING MINUTES,
FEBRUARY 14TH, 2022
The regular monthly meeting of the
Board of Education of Crest Unified
School District #479 was held at
the Crest Board Office, Colony, on
Monday, February 14th, 2022. The
meeting was called to order at 7:00
p.m. by Board Vice President Kevin
Nilges.
Roll Call
Board Members Present – Jason
Beckmon, Nathan Beckmon, Seth
Black, Kevin Nilges, Lance Ramsey
and Laura Schmidt.
Others Superintendent Shane
Walter, Board Clerk Lynette Prasko,
Phillip Jordan, Steve Gorsline and
Rosy Ramirez.
Approval of Agenda
It was moved by Mr. Nathan Beckmon
and seconded by Mr. Jason Beckmon
to approve the agenda as presented.
Vote: 6-0
At 7:03 p.m. Board President Travis
Church arrived and conducted the
remainder of the meeting.
Approval of Consent Agenda
It was moved by Mr. Jason
Beckmon and seconded by Mr. Kevin
Nilges to approve the consent agenda
including the minutes of the January
10th regular board meeting, bills in the
amount of $404,904.55, Enrollment
Reports and Budget Status Ledger
report. Vote: 7-0
Information Items
ANW Special Education Minutes
The minutes of the January
12th, 2022 ANW Special Education
Cooperative meeting were reviewed.
Superintendent/Principal Report
Mr. Walter invited board members
to the February 24th KESA/DLT meeting. On March 4th there will be a
Teacher In-service day (no school
for students). The Community Mental
Health Night was held earlier in the
gym and attendance was lower than
expected.
Items of Business
Senior Trip
Mr. Walter presented the senior trip
to Branson for March 25th-27th and
it was moved by Mr. Kevin Nilges and
seconded by Mr. Nathan Beckmon to
approve the senior trip as presented.
Vote: 7-0
Phillip Jordan, Alloy Architecture
Presentation Phillip Jordan with Ally Architecture
presented information about his
company, facilities construction and
explored how the bond process works.
At 7:36 p.m. Principal Travis Hermreck
arrived.
Snow Days/Make Up Days
Snow Days and Make Up Days
were reviewed by the board with
no action taken at this time and no
changes to the to school calendar.
Property/District Insurance
It was moved by Mr. Nathan
Beckmon and seconded by Mr. Seth
Black to approve the property and district insurance renewal from Personal
Service Insurance as presented in the
amount of $47,088.00. Vote: 7-0
2022-2023 School Calendar
It was moved by Mr. Jason
Beckmon and seconded by Mr.
Nathan Beckmon to adopt the 20222023 Crest USD 479 district calendar
as presented. Vote: 7-0
ANDERSON COUNTY ARRESTS
On February 9, Russell Raymond
Rohr, Kincaid, was arrested for
domestic battery.
On February 11, Daequan Jermaine
Rayton was booked as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriffs Office as he
was arrested for murder in 1st degree.
On February 11, Mehki Jovan
McDaniel, Topeka, was booked as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for murder
Trevor Holman Adam Caylor John Scheckel Jory Ramsey
3×4 Trevor Holamn
Saturday, Feb. 26
9 p.m.1 a.m. 18 to enter, 21 to drink
Piqua Knights of Columbus $10 cover
Dance to Red Dirt/Classic Country & help support LIVE MUSIC in Eastern Kansas!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
in the 2nd degree.
On February 11, Gage Anthony
Wright, Tonganoxie, was booked as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for unknown
charges.
On February 11, Lee Willie Howard,
Lawrence, was booked as a hold for
the Douglas County Sheriffs Office
as he was arrested for aggravated
battery.
On February 11, Cordero Pewe
Riley, Lawrence, was booked as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for aggravated robbery.
On February 13, Jessica Lynn
Koopman, Yates Center, was arrested
for failure to appear.
On February 14, Amanda Sue Jane
Enns, Welda, was arrested for failure
to appear.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Barry Weber was booked into jail on
February 15, 2020.
Giovanni Rodriguez was booked into
jail on March 3, 2021.
David Ashley was booked into jail on
August 12, 2021.
Cade Goodman was booked into jail
on September 1, 2021.
Nicholas Buchanan was booked into
jail on October 17, 2021.
Robert Sparks was booked into jail
on October 26, 2021.
Roy Teal was booked into jail on
November 11, 2021.
Sabre Suire was booked into jail on
November 12, 2021.
Mason Offutt was booked into jail on
November 28, 2021.
Teela Meineke-Sumner was booked
into jail on January 7, 2022.
Eric Collins was booked into jail on
January 23, 2022.
Jeremy Wickwire was booked into jail
on January 31, 2022.
Alicia Ellis was booked into jail on
January 31, 2022.
Nathan Thompson was booked into
jail on February 1, 2022.
Amanda Enns was booked into jail
on February 14, 2022.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL
FARM-INS ROSTER
Zachery Whalen was booked into jail
on May 19, 2021.
Edwin Soto-Galarza was booked into
jail on May 19, 2021.
Chase Porter was booked into jail on
August 9, 2021.
Richard Page was booked into jail on
December 10, 2021.
Mehki McDaniel was booked into jail
on December 20, 2021.
Dusin Lane was booked into jail on
January 4, 2022.
Christopher Dale was booked into jail
on January 4, 2022.
Seth Bulmer was booked into jail on
January 26, 2022.
Heidi Skiles was booked into jail on
January 26, 2022.
Brandon King was booked into jail on
January 31, 2022.
Victoria Jenkins was booked into jail
on January 31, 2022.
Lee Howard was booked into jail on
February 11, 2022.
Daequan Rayton was booked into jail
on February 11, 2022.
Cordero Riley was booked into jail on
February 11, 2022.
Gage Wright was booked into jail on
February 11, 2022.
2×2 Good
Shepherd Hosp
2×2
Reeble
Iola Location:
202 S. State St.
Iola, KS 66749
620-363-5005
Emporia Location:
1 S Commercial St.
Emporia, KS 66801
620-342-5573
Ottawa Location:
Corner K68 & Main
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-229-0684
IN BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
You saw this.
So will your
customers.
Service Sales Installation Repairs
Garage Doors & Openers
242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
You saw this.
So will your
customers.
Advertise here
for just $8/week.
(785) 448-3121
Advertise here
for just $8/week.
(785) 448-3121
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
You saw this.
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
customers.
7-Block Certified
LicensedElectricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
QualityServiceFor
Over 20 Years.
ServingAnderson
&FranklinCounties.
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
Matters
So will your
Advertise here
for just $8/week.
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
(785) 448-3121
Howard Yoder
Just 8 bucks a
block per week to
list your
business here!
You saw this.
So will your
Hecks Moving Service
customers.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Advertise here
for just $8/week.
(785) 448-3121
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Ashton Heck
(785) 204-0369
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 489-2212
Inspected Facility
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
LEIM
CASS
JANUARY 18, 1926 – FEBRUARY 10, 2022
Alice Marie Leim, age 96,
of Garnett, Kansas, passed
away on Thursday, February
10, 2022, at
Marantha
Village,
Springfield,
Missouri.
She was
born January
18, 1926, in
Garnett,
Kansas, the
Leim
daughter of
Walker and
Bessie Nichols. Alice graduated high school in Garnett
in 1944. Alice was united in
marriage to Loren Hinkle on
DECEMBER 30, 1947 – FEBRUARY 13, 2022
October 25, 1947. They had one
daughter, Mary Hinkle, born
April 17, 1959. Both Loren and
Mary preceded Alice in death.
Alice was united in marriage
to Carl Leim on March 31, 1995,
at the First Christian Church
in Garnett, where he and Alice
were both members.
Funeral services will be
held at 2:00 P.M., on Friday,
February 25, 2022, at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett, with
burial following in the Garnett
Cemetery.
Memorial contributions
may be made to First Christian
Church in Garnett, Kansas.
MAINS
MAY 28, 1934 – FEBRUARY 12, 2022
Floyd Sanders Mains, age 87,
of Greeley, Kansas, passed away
on Saturday, February 12, 2022,
at Salem Home
in Hillsboro,
Kansas.
He was born
May 28, 1934,
in
Garnett,
Kansas, the
son of Ralph
and Thelma
(Sanders)
Mains
Mains.
He
grew
up
in the area, graduating from
Garnett High School. He served
four years in the United States
Army, then transferred to the
reserve for two more years.
Floyd was united in marriage
to Shirley Thomlin, this union
was blessed with four children.
He was an over-the-road
truck driver from grain, to cattle, to rock. Floyd enjoyed playing cards and eating, always
getting his moneys worth at
the buffet. He also loved picking
up scrap, but mostly aluminum
cans. At the Greeley Smoke-Off,
he and his late brother, Larry,
had boundaries, Larry at the
ballpark, and Floyd at the city
park. Floyd also had a can
route, starting at the Greeley
Implement, and ending up in
Lane, Kansas.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Ralph and Thelma
Mains; mother of his children,
Shirley Mains; two brothers,
Larry Mains and Harold Mains;
twin sisters, Lorine Turner
and Florine Morgon; and two
step-sons, David Nutt and Roy
Wheeles.
Floyd is survived by his
two daughters, Bernice Mains
(Troy Hett) of Tampa, Kansas;
Janet Mains (Curtis Cooper)
of Carbondale, Kansas; two
sons, John Mains (Kerri Carr)
of Cherryvale, Kansas; Paul
Mains (Debbie Rittgers) of Lebo,
Kansas; nine grandchildren;
and many great grandchildren.
Memorial services will be
held at 10:30 A.M., on Saturday,
February 26, 2022, at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett, with
inurnment to follow in the
Garnett Cemetery. Floyds family will greet friends at the funeral home on Friday, February 25,
2022, from 6:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to Floyd Mains
Memorial Fund, to fund a
park bench at the city park in
Greeley.
3A
REMEMBRANCES
Victoria Evelyn Vickie
Cass, age 74, of Garnett, Kansas,
passed away on Sunday,
February 13,
2022, at St.
Lukes South
Hospital in
Overland
Park, Kansas,
surrounded
by her three
daughters.
Vickie
Cass
was
born
December
30, 1947, in Jackson County,
Missouri, the daughter of
Joseph Roe and Martha
(Wallace) Crawford.
Vickie Boo Boo married
Forrest Cass on June 10, 1972,
in Garnett, Kansas, this union
was blessed with three daughters.
She worked as a CNA for
McCleods Nursing Home for
years spreading her love to
others, later she worked as a
machine operator at Warners
Manufacturing for many years
until they went out of business, where she then joined the
Anderson County Hospital in
Environmental services, until
she retired in 2012. Well, not
technically, because she was
busier after retirement with
her grandbabies and great
grandbabies.
Vickies greatest passion
was her family and caring for
people. She enjoyed gardening, taking trips, especially to
Branson, where her kids and
grandkids made several lasting memories, riding horses,
fishing, relaxing on an afternoon drive, teaching her kids
and grandkids how to bake
and make her special coleslaw.
Vickie loved collecting salt and
pepper shakers and had over
200 sets that she has collected over the years from many
places and a frog collection.
She loved spending time with
friends and family playing pitch
that sometimes lasted till sunrise. Vickie had a heart of gold
and found great joy in helping
people. She opened her home
and her heart to everyone she
met and her smile would light
up a room. She made an impact
that will last forever. One of
Vickies wishes was that she be
Baptized and give herself to the
Lord, that was fulfilled as she
was Baptized in the presence of
her three daughters.
She was preceded in death
by her parents, Joseph Roe
and Martha Crawford; one
brother, Steve Roe; stepfather,
Rex Crawford, and one great
granddaughter, Kaycee Evelyn
Young.
Vickie is survived by her
husband, Forrest Cass, of 50
years; three daughters, Theresa
Cass of Ottawa, Kansas, Sheila
Stifter of Garnett, Kansas,
and Lisa Sears and husband
Edward of Garnett, Kansas;
eight grandchildren, Samantha
Young and husband Tyler,
Nicole Gibson and husband
Brandon, Keith Sears and
wife Alyssa, Colby Estes, Madi
Sears, Cheyenne Sears, Laura
Sears, and Charli Sears; five
great grandchildren, Trenton,
Justin, Jamison, McKinley,
and Emery; an adopted sister
Bonita Pulliam of lola, Kansas,
sister-in-law, Faye Cass of
Greeley, Kansas; three sisters,
Diana Oliphant and husband
Tom of Erie, Kansas, Carol Roe
of LaHarpe, Kansas, Denise
Morris of Arma, Kansas,
three brothers, Joe Roe Jr. of
Parsons, Kansas, Ronnie Roe
of North Carolina, and Walter
Roe of California, numerous
nieces, nephews, friends, and
kids she claims as her own.
A ceremony in honor of
her life was held Saturday,
February 19, 2022, at Feuerborn
Funeral Home in Garnett,
Kansas. Burial followed the
service at the Welda Cemetery
in Welda, Kansas.
Memorial contributions in
honor of Vickie can be made
to the Vickie Cass Memorial
Fund.
UPDATED Contractors Guide
We cant control the
wind but we can
adjust the sails
On a calendar at home is the
following statement, We cant
control the wind but we can
adjust the sails. In John 3:8,
Jesus tells Nicodemus, The
wind blows wherever it pleases. You hear its sound, but you
cannot tell where it comes from
or where it is going.
The winds of adversity often
blow through our lives and just
like it says in the statement
above, we cant control them.
Life is full of times when we
have to walk into a stiff wind
and we often feel as helpless as
a ship tossed by the sea. In Acts
27:13-15, Luke tells of Pauls
trip to Rome by ship. When
a gentle south wind began to
blow they thought they had
obtained what they wanted;
so they weighed anchor and
sailed along the shore of Crete.
Before very long a wind of hurricane force, called a northeaster swept down from the island.
The ship was caught by the
storm and could not head into
the wind, so we gave way to it
and were driven along.
I have always found that
life is full enough of wind
storms without me causing
them myself. Storms like the
loss of a job, a sudden reversal of finances, the loss of a
parent, child or spouse. When
these storms hit us like a cold
January wind what do we do?
This is when we have to adjust
the sails. Now I wouldnt make
a very good sailor because
I dont know the first thing
about adjusting a sail. I would
need an experienced seaman to
help me learn. I also need an
experience problem solver to
help me deal with the storms of
life. For situations like I mentioned above I have found the
best source of help is my cre-
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
ator and sustainer, Almighty
God. I have found it is safe to
put all your trust in God.
Many times we are like the
pilot and owner of the ship that
Paul started out to Rome on.
When a gentle south wind
began to blow they thought
they had obtained what they
wanted. They ignored the
more important and less apparent sign. The time that they
were sailing was, after the
Fast or late in the year. We
read in Acts 27:41, But the
ship struck a sandbar and ran
aground. The bow stuck fast
and would not move, and the
stern was broken to pieces by
the pounding of the surf.
We can and do make shipwreck of our lives by excluding
God. However many people
seem to do quite well excluding God from their life because
God is patient with them. But
John the Baptist warns the
Pharisees and the Sadducee;
The axe is already at the root
of the trees, and every tree that
does not produce good fruit
will be cut down and thrown
into the fire.
When you read that it kind
of makes you want to adjust
your sails.
Ministry on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback
on Facebook
4A
FRAME JOB
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
Criminal filings charge
Clinton staffers worked to
frame Trump with collusion
BY GREGG JARRETT
FOX NEWS
The stunning revelation that lawyers for the Hillary Clinton campaign
paid a computer technology company
to surveil a sitting president, Donald
Trump, shows that more than half a
dozen crimes may have been committed to advance the false accusation
that he colluded with Russia.
Some background is in order. After
a 22-month probe, Special Counsel
Robert
Mueller
found no evidence of
a criminal collusion
conspiracy because
none ever existed.
U.S. Attorney John
Durham was then
tasked to investigate
how the odious lie
arose and whether
crimes were perpetrated to accomplish
it.
Later
elevated
to special counsel
status, Durham has
indicted three people
so far as he continues to doggedly pursue his investigation of wrongdoing by others.
In a recent federal court filing, he
disclosed that Clinton campaign lawyers hired a tech company to infiltrate computer servers housed in
Trump Tower, and later, the White
House.
As first reported by Fox News, the
goal was to generate an inference or
narrative that Trump was colluding
with Russia and then feed the phony
information to the FBI to trigger an
investigation of him.
The methods behind the brazen
smear were remarkably devious.
The tech outfit exploited its access
to non-public and proprietary internet data on servers at Trump Tower
and the White House, according to
Durham.
It was equivalent of breaking into a
computer except the technicians had
special access since the company was
performing whats called resolution
services on those highly sensitive
accounts.
The cyber sleuths then covertly
penetrated the servers without authorization. Once inside, they commandeered innocuous information and
peddled it as nefarious back-channel
communications between Trump and
a Kremlinlinked financial institution called
Alfa Bank.
It was July 26, 2016,
when (Hillary) Clinton
personally approved
the plot to vilify Trump
with the bogus collusion
claims, according to CIA
documents.
It
was
insinuated
that Trump
and his associates were
secretly communicating
with Russia.
Naturally, the
media was
tipped off and
went full-throttle with wild claims
that Trump was a Russian asset.
In reality, much of the tech companys pilfered information turned out
to be routine Internet traffic such as
computer-generated and automated
advertising that came from a mass
marketing email company that located its server in Trump Tower.
Shockingly, the surreptitious intrusions continued when the new president moved into the White House. But
no evidence of Russian collusion was
discovered because it was, after all, a
cunning hoax conjured up by Hillary
and her acolytes.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
OPINION
This brings us to the present.
Clinton campaign lawyer Michael
Sussman has been criminally
charged with lying to the FBI
about the Alfa Bank fiction.
In a court filing last Friday,
Durham offered the appalling
new details of how Trump
was the victim of an insidious secret surveillance
operation at the hands of
his political opponent in
the 2016 presidential election. More indictments
could be forthcoming for
a variety of felonious conduct.
It is a crime to provide a
law enforcement agency such
as the FBI with knowingly false
information. Specific charges
might include the making of false
statements, as well as fraud. If
two or more people were involved,
it would constitute a conspiracy
to defraud the government under
18 USC 371. Depending on how the
fabricated information was communicated, charges of wire fraud and
mail fraud could be added.
The activity described
by Durham also bears close
resemblance to the crime of
computer fraud and abuse
under 18 USC 1030. Then there
are the racketeering statutes to
be considered. The Clinton
secret surveillance ring
sounds very much like a
criminal enterprise engaged
in an illegal scheme involving fraud and obstruction of
justice.
As with any well organized criminal exercise, it
is exceedingly difficult to
nab the person at the top.
Hillary Clinton is no different. She carried out her
machinations in smart
and clever ways. She had
Cappers lasting legacy for farmers
February, 2022 marks the 100th anniversary of the Capper-Volstead Act. This is one
of the most important agricultural laws ever
passed for farmers.
Capper-Volstead gave agricultural producers the right to form cooperatives to for the
handling, production and marketing of farm
products outside the reach of federal antitrust
laws. This is commonplace today, but it was
innovative and very much needed in 1922.
Prior to Capper-Volsteads passage, producers
attempting to join together for the purpose of
pricing their commodities could have civil
penalties brought against them.
The sponsors of this act were Senator
Arthur Capper, R-Kansas and Representative
Andrew Volstead, R-Minnesota. They both
wanted farmers to enjoy the same rights
which businesses were using to gain wealth.
Rep. Volstead pointed out when discussing
the bill that businessmen could combine by
putting their money into corporations, but it
was impractical for farmers to combine their
farms into a similar corporate form. Volstead
also said the bill would enable farmers to take
advantage of the form of organization that was
used by business concerns.
The Capper-Volstead Act relieved farmers
COMMENTARY
BRUCE SHULTZ, VICE-PRESIDENT NFO
of the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890. This
is the law which Theodore Roosevelt used to
break up Standard Oil and other monopolies.
The Sherman Antitrust Act was amended
in 1914 by the Clayton Act. The Clayton Act
authorized labor unions to collectively bargain for better wages and working conditions while sanctioning the establishment of
agricultural co-ops. This was the first time
collective bargaining was mentioned in U.S.
law. Prior to that time, co-ops were allowed,
but they were now being challenged in court
under the Sherman Antitrust Act. However,
there were still inconsistencies in the Clayton
Act which led to court cases involving co-ops.
The Capper-Volstead Act was introduced to
aid farmers, while once and for all legalizing
who could be exempt from previous antitrust legislation. Capper-Volstead benefitted
farmers in two ways. One, it provided limited antitrust immunity to farm co-ops. And
two, it enabled farmers to come together and
collectively set a price for their production.
Without Capper-Volstead, farmers would be
in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.
Capper-Volstead established rules for a co-op
to be exempt from antitrust laws. This meant
that all voting members must have production; a co-op must have one-member one- vote
rule or limit amounts of dividends paid to 8
percent; and more than half of the production
that was collectively bargained must come
from members themselves.
My wife, Wendy and I operate a cow/calf
ranch in Montana. Capper-Volstead is why
I have a larger market presence by being a
member of National Farmers Organization.
We generally have one load of mixed calves
to sell every fall. Because of Capper-Volstead,
we have the ability to sell our calves and cull
SEE SHULTZ ON PAGE 5A
Clintons Russian collusion lie hurt Democracy
From the perspective of several years ago,
its the stuff of an implausible political thriller
or a conspiratorial YouTube account.
One presidential campaign spies on another as part of a broad effort to get government
agencies to pick up the baton and launch a
high-stakes investigation of the new president
that hampers his first years in office and consumes massive public attention.
Where could such a thing happen? Maybe
Brazil or Equatorial Guinea? Well, we now
know it happened in these United States.
The latest from Special Counsel John
Durham is that a tech executive connected to
the Clinton campaign mined internet contacts
between Russia and the entities connected to
Donald Trump in a search for material to try
to, as Durham put it in a court filing last week,
establish an inference and narrative tying
then-candidate Trump to Russia.
Durhams probe is a righteous effort to
get to the bottom of a matter that deranged
American politics for two solid years but has
been derided or ignored by the mainstream
press, with baleful consequences.
Russiagate did more than its share to undermine the norm that losing campaigns should
accept the result of free and fair elections
and to erode confidence in institutions at the
highest levels of our government. One way
to minimize the harm is to insist on accountability. The people who were most invested in
Russiagate for the longest, though, are least
interested in revisiting its origins, let alone
in apologizing for their own credulousness or
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
malice.
According to Durham, a tech executive
named Rodney Joffe engaged in the information operation against Trump and his campaign. He allegedly coordinated with Michael
Sussmann, a lawyer for the Clinton campaign,
and his highly connected law firm, Perkins
Coie LLP, that did work for both the Clinton
campaign and the Democratic Party.
Durham notes that Joffe also joined up with
an investigative firm that Perkins Coie hired
on behalf of the Clinton campaign, numerous
cyber researchers, employees at various internet companies, and researchers at a U.S.-based
university. He sought, he said, to please VIPs
in both the Clinton campaign and Perkins
Coie.
One can only guess that he succeeded.
According to Durham, Joffe exploited his
access to non-public and/or proprietary internet data, and the university researchers he
tapped were receiving and analyzing large
amounts of internet data in connection with
a pending federal government cybersecurity
research contract.
Joffe analyzed so-called domain name system internet traffic connected to Trump Tower
and Trumps Central Park West apartment
building. Shockingly, the data effort continued
after Trump was inaugurated. Joffe took advantage of his companys sensitive arrangement
to provide services to the executive office of the
president for the purpose of gathering derogatory information about Donald Trump.
Meanwhile, Sussmann used the deceptive
work product from all of this sleuthing to try to
convince the FBI and apparently the CIA that
Trump was colluding with Russia. (Durham
has indicted Sussmann for lying to the FBI to
try to hide his connection to the Clinton campaign.)
Durham pointedly refers to what Sussmann
was hawking as purported data. This operation was of a piece with the spurious Steele
dossier that helped launch the FBI probe of
the Trump campaign that morphed into the
Mueller investigation.
Or, to use Durhams terms, purported data
drove purported investigations and ungodly
amounts of purported journalism, all building
toward purported collusion that eventually,
under the weight of facts and logic, came to
absolutely nothing.
SEE LOWRY ON PAGE 5A
others do her dirty work
for her and maintained a distance separated through an
elaborate chain of
people. It was akin
to a money laundering
scheme,
except dirty information was being
washed.
U n l e s s
people in the
chain break
their silence
and implicate Hillary,
she will likely
escape culpability.
Evidence
SEE FRAME
ON PAGE 1B
The Anderson County Reviews
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Hey everybody March is coming. Itll be the
second anniversary of two weeks to flatten the
curve.
Dear high school boys who are candidates or
attendants for homecoming: The young lady
you are escorting has spent a lot of money on
a nice dress and done herself up nice for this
occasion. Its a big deal. You need to treat it like
a big deal too. The least you can do is put on a
suit or a jacket and slacks and something other
than tennis shoes. Yes a suit. If you dont have
one, get one. Pay respect to the occasion and to
the young lady youre escorting. Thank you.
Just wondering why its been over two years
since a local resident was caught in possession
of hundreds of thousands of dollars of stolen
equipment and no charges have ever been
filed? There was only one little article in the
local paper. There had to be other law enforcement agencies, KDOT, insurance companies
and even the Department of Revenue surely
involved yet nothing was ever done. Is this
case over, or just swept under the rug by local
law enforcement agencies?
When I first moved here several years ago I
went to every church to ask for help. Every
church I went to said we cant help you, but
we will pray for you. Can we just think about
that? Love you all.
Its so funny that people complain about wearing a mask over their face. In cold weather
my mom used to put a scarf over my face so I
wouldnt breathe the cold air and get sick.
SEE FORUM ON PAGE 4B
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2018.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
HISTORY
Time to plan 20 years ago…Winter storm leaves residents without power for days
THAT WAS THEN
for KATP
Field School
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
Its that time again. Time
to start planning for the 2022
Kansas Archeology Training
Program Field School. This
years Field School will be
held at Brown vs. Board of
Education National Historic
Site in Topeka, Ks., June 3-18,
2022.
Registration to the public will be available online
through KSHS.org from March
1-May 31, 2022. Registration is
limited and will be taken on a
first-come, first-served basis.
The registration fee for members of the Kansas Historical
Society and the Kansas
Anthropological Association is
$35 for standard participants,
$25 for participants 65 or older,
and $15 for students currently enrolled at a middle school,
high school, or college. For
individuals who are not members of either organization, the
fee is $90.
This project will help tell the
crucial time between the Civil
War and the Civil Rights eras,
which profoundly impacted
peoples lives throughout the
nation.
Research goals will be
shaped with input from the
National Park Service.
I will keep you updated as
I receive further information
about this Training School.
10 years ago…
Like a family that upgrades
to a bigger house, the next question for USD 365 will be how
to fill all the rooms of the new,
bigger Garnett Elementary
School. School board members
approved more than $160,000 in
technological equipment and
installation for the new elementary school. That doesnt
include furniture and playground equipment. Those bids
are expected to come soon.
20 years ago…
So if the storms over, whens
the power going to come back on?
Thats the question numerous
Anderson County residents are
still asking, while work crews
continue to clean up and reconnect power to thousands of residences and businesses left without juice after last Wednesdays
ice storm. About 70-80 percent of
the power in the City of Garnett
had been restored Monday
morning, but the further out in
the country you live, the longer
you may be waiting for service
to be restored.
30 years ago….
Construction on the new 7-12
facility for USD 365 seems to be
right on schedule according to
a report from Superintendent
Kenneth Woods. Woods said the
contracted had hoped work on
the gymnasium portion of the
facility would have gone a little
Melissa Hobbs
SEND LOCAL HISTORY PHOTOS, INFORMATION TO
REVIEW@GARNETT-KS.COM
faster than it did, but workers
were able to get the roof over
the auditorium portion of the
facility and would be finishing
up work on the gym roof.
40 years ago…
Utility bills which were
received this past week by
Garnett residents have been the
main topic of discussion around
the city because they were so
much higher than ever before.
Most of the increase was due
to the fact that the cost of gas
has gone up so much in the past
year. A year ago the price of
natural gas to users was $2.55
per mcf and now it is $3.67 per
mcf, a raise of 44%.
100 years ago…
Rumor was around that
Colony wasnt incorporated,
which is false. Papers were
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 2-20-22 / ARCHIVE
Circa February 2002 – A winter ice stormed swept across the area leaving residents.without electricity.
found that the petition was
presented to Judge Benson
on January 15, 1886, and bore
the names of 106 signers. J.J.
Burke was publisher of the Free
SHULTZ…
Press and had official notices
published January 21-28, 1886.
The election was held February
4 and the town duly incorporated
on February 5. First officials were
LOWRY..
FROM PAGE 4A
with our friends and neighbors.
In other words, marketing together.
We put our calves in with a
block of other producers and
sell ten loads not just our load
alone. We are able to combine
our block of calves with another
National Farmers block about 30
miles away in order to create a
block of about 20 loads. This is
an example of how we use collec-
5A
tive bargaining. I know without
Capper-Volstead, Wendy and I
would be forced to take our cattle
to the sales ring. We would be
at the mercy of a few buyers on
that particular day. Instead, we
can forward contract our calves
and culls with our neighbors to
capture the most profit we can.
Bruce Shultz is vice-president of the National Farmers
Organization.
FROM PAGE 4A
If anyone involved in this investigative and journalistic fiasco is embarrassed by it, they havent shown
it. If any of them thinks its bad practice to spy on a
campaign and a newly elected president to use the
resulting information to try to gull U.S. government
agencies, they havent said so. If any of them are
thinking never again, they wont admit it.
Until they do, maybe they should temper their
preachiness about threats to our system and norms.
C.P. Walker Mayor, J.W. Bush
Sr. Police/Judge, D.I. Welsh City
Clerk, and council were C. Kramer,
C.E. Smith, O.R. Herrick, and S.T.
Gilbert.
Call
to
Subscribe
(785) 448-3121
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Best of luck at
STATE WRESTLING!
6×12 State Wrestling
ACHS 4A Boys Qualifiers: Masten Wright (138), A.J. Schaffer (126). ACHS 4A Girls Qualifier Clarissa Sheahan (143), CHHS 2A Qualifier Jotham Meyer.
Tonys Pizza Events Center Salina, KS Girls: Feb. 23-24 Boys: Feb. 25-26
These area businesses proudly support our youth…
Adamson Bros.
Heating & Cooling
Ottawa
(785) 242-9273
Anderson County Abstract
Garnett
(785) 448-2426
Anderson County Review
Garnett
(785) 448-3121
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett
(785) 448-6122
Barnes Seed Service, LLC
Garnett
(785) 304-2500
Beckman Motors
Garnett
(785) 448-5441
Benjamin Realty
Garnett
(785) 448-2550
Bluestem Farm & Ranch
Emporia
(620) 352-5502
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett
(785) 448-2888
Bones Rock Yard
Ottawa
(785) 242-3070
Farmers State Bank
Garnett
(785) 448-5451
Brand N Iron
Princeton
www.thebrandniron.com
Flynn Appliance Center
Iola
(620) 365-2538
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett
(785) 448-5720
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
Garnett
(785) 448-7106
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett
(785) 448-6602
GSSB
Garnett
(785) 448-3111
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Midwest Collision
Paola
(913) 294-4016
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett
(785) 448-6393
Natures Touch
Garnett
(785) 448-7152
State Farm Insurance
Ryan Disbrow-Agent, Garnett
(785) 448-1660
CARSTAR
Ottawa
(785) 242-8916
Dairy Queen
Garnett
(785) 448-5800
Dodds Memorials
Ottawa
(785) 242-3350
Patriots Bank
Garnett
www.patriotsbank.com
Member FDIC – Equal Opportunity Lender.
PrairieLand Partners
Iola
(620) 365-2187
Quality Structures
Richmond
800-374-6988
Terry Solander, Atty. at Law
Garnett
(785) 448-6131
Tom Adams Construction
Garnett
(785) 448-3997
Valley R Agri-Service, Inc.
Garnett
(785) 448-6533
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Wittman Auto Parts
Garnett
(785) 448-6611
Wolken Tire
Garnett
(785) 448-3212
Yutzy Custom Structures
Garnett
(800) 823-8609
6A
SPORTS
Bulldogs sending pair of wrestlers to State
FRONTENAC AJ Schaffer
(126) and Masten Wright (138)
finished 3rd and 4th respectively over the weekend at the 4A
Regionals in Frontenac to earn
a trip to the state tournament
this February 25th and 26th at
the Tony's Pizza Events Center
in Salina.
Schaffer qualified by winning 4 of his 5 matches on the
day. Shaffer won by fall (3:35)
over Dallas Scott of Columbus
in the opening round. In the
quarterfinal Schaffer defeated
Corbin Cloud of Iola by major
decision (9-0). The semifinal
was Schaffer's only defeat on
the day, losing to Brody Gomez
of Fort Scott by major decision
(13-0). Schaffer qualified for
the 3rd place match with a win
by decision (8-2) over Drake
Brooks of Girard before winning the 3rd place match due
to a medical forfeit by Cooper
Anderson of Independence.
Masten Wright had a long
route as well to qualify for
the state tournament. Wright
won 4 of 6 matches, his only
two losses came to Braxton
Harding of Chanute. The first
loss sent Wright to the consolation bracket in the second
round and the second time was
in the 3rd place match.
Wright did have wins
over Tucker Vessey of Field
Kindley by TechFall (16-0),
won by fall over both Hagain
Page (Osawatomie) and Tucker
Williams of Burlington. In the
consolation semifinals, Wright
won by decision over Saxton
Renfro of Independence.
Complete Results
113
Connor Prothe (9-21)
Quarterfinal – Kolton Misener
(Chanute) 37-3 won by tech fall over
Connor Prothe (Garnett-Anderson
County) 9-21 (TF-1.5 2:30 (25-8))
Cons. Round 1 – Bryce Reece (Girard)
1-8 won by decision over Connor
Prothe (Garnett-Anderson County)
9-21 (Dec 6-5)
126
Aj Schaffer (33-10) placed 3rd
Champ. Round 1 – Aj Schaffer
(Garnett-Anderson County) 33-10 won
by fall over Dallas Scott (Columbus)
4-14 (Fall 3:35)
Quarterfinal – Aj Schaffer (GarnettAnderson County) 33-10 won by
major decision over Corbin Cloud
(Iola) 19-11 (MD 9-0)
Semifinal – Brody Gomez (Fort Scott)
26-3 won by major decision over Aj
Schaffer (Garnett-Anderson County)
33-10 (MD 13-0)
Cons. Semi – Aj Schaffer (GarnettAnderson County) 33-10 won by
decision over Drake Brooks (Girard)
19-14 (Dec 8-2)
3rd Place Match – Aj Schaffer
(Garnett-Anderson County) 33-10
won by medical forfeit over Cooper
Anderson (Independence) 32-6 (M.
For.)
132
Trinton Guernsey (15-16)
Champ. Round 1 – Kohen Wright
(Independence) 29-6 won by fall
over Trinton Guernsey (GarnettAnderson County) 15-16 (Fall 1:33)
Cons. Round 1 – Trinton Guernsey
(Garnett-Anderson County) 15-16
received a bye () (Bye)
Cons. Round 2 – Trinton Guernsey
(Garnett-Anderson County) 15-16 won
by fall over Jacob Mills (LaCygnePrairie View) 3-22 (Fall 1:53)
Cons. Round 3 – Trinton Guernsey
(Garnett-Anderson County) 15-16
won by decision over Cedrik Martin
(Fort Scott) 11-14 (Dec 7-0)
Cons. Semi – Chance Mitzner
(Osawatomie) 18-3 won by fall
over Trinton Guernsey (GarnettAnderson County) 15-16 (Fall 1:17)
138
Masten Wright (33-15) placed 4th
Champ. Round 1 – Masten Wright
(Garnett-Anderson County) 33-15
won by tech fall over Tucker Vesey
(Coffeyville-Field Kindley) 6-10 (TF1.5 2:32 (16-0))
Quarterfinal – Braxton Harding
(Chanute) 19-16 won by fall over
Masten Wright (Garnett-Anderson
County) 33-15 (Fall 1:02)
Cons. Round 2 – Masten Wright
(Garnett-Anderson County) 33-15
won by fall over Hagan Page
(Osawatomie) 4-18 (Fall 0:35)
Cons. Round 3 – Masten Wright
(Garnett-Anderson County) 33-15
won by fall over Tucker Williams
(Burlington) 26-14 (Fall 1:43)
Cons. Semi – Masten Wright
(Garnett-Anderson County) 33-15
won by decision over Saxton Renfro
(Independence) 27-9 (Dec 9-8)
3rd Place Match – Braxton Harding
(Chanute) 19-16 won by fall over
Masten Wright (Garnett-Anderson
County) 33-15 (Fall 0:56)
145
Colten Wittman (13-21)
Champ. Round 1 – Zach Nordgren
(LaCygne-Prairie View) 14-19 won
by decision over Colten Wittman
(Garnett-Anderson County) 13-21
(Dec 10-6)
Cons. Round 1 – Colten Wittman
(Garnett-Anderson County) 13-21
received a bye () (Bye)
Cons. Round 2 – Colten Wittman
(Garnett-Anderson County) 13-21
won by fall over Tanner Templeton
(Altamont-Labette County) 8-16 (Fall
2:12)
Cons. Round 3 – Colten Wittman
(Garnett-Anderson County) 13-21
won by decision over Chase Davis
(Frontenac) 19-13 (Dec 6-4)
Cons. Semi – Lennox Vann (Fort
Scott) 21-14 won by fall over Colten
Wittman (Garnett-Anderson County)
13-21 (Fall 1:31)
152
John Wright (31-9)
Champ. Round 1 – John Wright
(Garnett-Anderson County) 31-9
received a bye () (Bye)
Quarterfinal – Trenton Smith
(Columbus) 29-10 won by fall over
John Wright (Garnett-Anderson
County) 31-9 (Fall 5:07)
Cons. Round 2 – John Wright (GarnettAnderson County) 31-9 received a bye
() (Bye)
Cons. Round 3 – John Wright (GarnettAnderson County) 31-9 won by fall
over Aden McManus (Burlington)
19-24 (Fall 1:40)
Cons. Semi – Kedric Emling (Chanute)
33-12 won by fall over John Wright
(Garnett-Anderson County) 31-9 (Fall
0:31)
160
Dallas Kueser (10-26)
Champ. Round 1 – Garret Cullor
(LaCygne-Prairie View) 19-17 won
by fall over Dallas Kueser (GarnettAnderson County) 10-26 (Fall 2:45)
Cons. Round 1 – Dallas Kueser
(Garnett-Anderson County) 10-26
received a bye () (Bye)
Cons. Round 2 – Andon Searles
(Altamont-Labette County) 17-11 won
by fall over Dallas Kueser (GarnettAnderson County) 10-26 (Fall 0:36)
170
Trey Clark (14-24)
Champ. Round 1 – Damien Kline
(LaCygne-Prairie View) 14-8 won
by fall over Trey Clark (GarnettAnderson County) 14-24 (Fall 0:23)
Cons. Round 1 – Trey Clark (GarnettAnderson County) 14-24 received a
bye () (Bye)
Cons. Round 2 – Amanie Luten
(Coffeyville-Field Kindley) 10-7 won
by fall over Trey Clark (GarnettAnderson County) 14-24 (Fall 3:12)
182
Porter Foltz (8-26)
Champ. Round 1 – Ethan Line
(Independence) 7-9 won by fall over
Porter Foltz (Garnett-Anderson
County) 8-26 (Fall 3:16)
Cons. Round 1 – Porter Foltz (GarnettAnderson County) 8-26 received a bye
() (Bye)
Cons. Round 2 – Porter Foltz (GarnettAnderson County) 8-26 won by fall
over Mario Ayala (Fort Scott) 9-22
(Fall 2:40)
Cons. Round 3 – Cordell Searan
(Girard) 3-14 won by fall over Porter
Foltz (Garnett-Anderson County) 8-26
(Fall 1:21)
220
Damon Moyer (1-22)
Champ. Round 1 – Dayton Kline
(LaCygne-Prairie View) 24-17 won
by fall over Damon Moyer (GarnettAnderson County) 1-22 (Fall 1:12)
Cons. Round 1 – Damon Moyer
(Garnett-Anderson County) 1-22
received a bye () (Bye)
Cons. Round 2 – Aaron Gharmalkar
(Parsons) 15-12 won by fall over
Damon Moyer (Garnett-Anderson
County) 1-22 (Fall 0:52)
285
Dalton Kellerman (18-13)
Champ. Round 1 – Dalton Kellerman
(Garnett-Anderson County) 18-13
won by fall over Zack Benso (Girard)
0-13 (Fall 0:49)
Quarterfinal – Dalton Kellerman
(Garnett-Anderson County) 18-13
won by fall over Kainen White
(Coffeyville-Field Kindley) 17-8 (Fall
3:31)
Semifinal – Jake Eddington
(Columbus) 22-7 won by fall over
Dalton Kellerman (Garnett-Anderson
County) 18-13 (Fall 1:13)
Cons. Semi – Bryan Jackett (Chanute)
12-15 won by decision over Dalton
Kellerman
(Garnett-Anderson
County) 18-13 (Dec 6-2)
fall (3:19). Meyer advanced in
the next round with a bye and
won the consolation semifinal
with a win by fall (1:56) over
Ryker DeSerano of Silver Lake.
Renyer knocked off Meyer
again in the 3rd place match by
decision (11-10).
Meyer (10-13) will open up
the state tournament against
the top overall seeded Chase
6×10.5
Evergy
Johnson (29-1).
Other Viking grapplers competing were Angel Lopez (145),
Gavin Peine (145), Owen Miller
(152), Kennedy Thao (195) and
Aiden Welch (285).
Lopez dropped both of his
matches by fall. Peine won his
first match over Micas Bolley
of West Fanklin before dropping his final two matches.
Crest rolls past Uniontown
UNIONTOWN The Crest
Lancers jumped out to an early
lead in last Tuesday's game and
thanks in large part to a career
night by an unlikely player, the
Lancers rolled past Uniontown
68-44.
Crest led 18-11 after the first
quarter and stretched their
lead slightly in the second to
take a 32-23 lead into halftime.
The Lancers opened the
game up in the third quarter
with a 19-8 advantage to take
a commanding 51-31 lead heading into the fourth quarter.
Crest continued to hit on all
cylinders over the last 8 minutes, taking on 17 more points
while limiting Uniontown to 13
to account for the final tally.
Tucker Yocham is the Crest
Lancer that had a career night
to help spark the Lancers.
Yocham entered the game scoring 16 points on the season,
which is good for an average
of a point a game and knocking
down 5 three-pointers.
Coming off the bench last
Tuesday, Yocham knocked
down 8 of 16 three-point
attempts en route to scoring a
career high 28 points. Yocham
also added 4 rebounds and 2
assists in the game.
Stetson Setter was the only
other Lancer in double figures
with 12 points.
Ethan Prasko tacked on 9
points and tallied 8 rebounds to
lead Crest.
2×5
Sonic
TDOTW
Top Dog
of the
Week!
Tucker
Yocham
Crest Lancer, Tucker Yocham,
scored a career high 28 points
off of the bench, knocking
down 8 three-pointers in a
win over Uniontown 68-44.
Top Dog of the Week wins a $10 Sonic gift card and our
special recognition vehicle window decal. Watch for
them on the road, and each week in
Viking wrestler heading to State
SILVER LAKE – Freshman
Jotham Meyer (106) made
an unlikely run to qualify
for the KSHSAA 3A/2A/1A
Championships this Friday
and Saturday at Fort Hays
State University's Gross
Memorial Coliseum in Hays.
Meyer qualified by rebounding from an opening round loss
to Caleb Renyer of Sabetha by
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
After a first round bye,
Miller promptly lost his next
two fights by fall. Thao had a
bye sandwiched between a pair
of losses by fall and Welch lost
his first match by fall and the
last match by decision (4-1).
Call to subscribe
785-448-3121
1B
B
Section
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
MAP…
CALENDAR
Tuesday, February 22
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preshchoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, February 23
9:00 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
7:00 p.m. – Book Discussion
Thursday, February 24
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
2:00 p.m. – Harvesters Emergency
Food Assistance Program
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch at the Senior
Center – Bring a Snack
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, February 25
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Monday, February 28
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
Tuesday, March 1
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preshchoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
4:30 p.m. – Tourism Advisory Board Mtg
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Community
Foundation Board Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:00 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
Board Meeting
Wednesday, March 2
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
5:30 p.m. – ACHS Booster Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Elementary Site
Council Meeting
6:00 p.m. – GES PTO Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Colony Lions Club Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club Meeting
Thursday, March 3
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch at the Senior
Center – Bring a Snack
6:30 p.m. – Historical Society Meeting
6:30 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment Assoc
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:00 p.m. – USD 365 BOE Meeting
FROM PAGE 1
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 2-22-22 / SUBMITTED
On Tuesday, February 15th Crest honored their character champs that Never Give Up. Every day
they work hard to instill perseverance, grit, and determination in students. These students chosen have
demonstrated the outstanding combination of resilience, perseverance, and grit! When things get difficult the following students rise to the occasion and press on! Front row, from left: Zayne Francis (Pre-K),
Petyon Ball (Pre-K), Madilynn Sanchez (1st grade), Thaddeus Beckmon (3rd Grade), TJ Beckmon (4th
Grade), Summer Valentine (6th Grade), Levi Prasko (8th Grade). Back row, from left: Custen Allen (9th
Grade), Liliana Blaufuss (10th Grade), Kamryn Luedke (11th Grade), Keaton Davis (12th Grade). Four
students missed the presentation. They are pictured in the bottom corner, from left: Phillip Warren (7th
Grade), Blake Maddux (2nd Grade), Ty Coberley (5th Grade), Emmett Beebe (K).
Horn receives award
The Frontier Extension
District would like to congratulate
Nancy Horn
on
receiving the 2021
Extension
Appreciation
Award.
N a n c y
has been a
Horn
committed,
passionate
supporter
of 4-H and K-State Research
and Extension for many years.
Nancy was appointed to the
Anderson County Extension
Council in 2013 and continued
Goetz graduates from MSU
SPRINGFIELD, MO – Missouri
S t a t e
University
a w a r d ed
1,509
degrees to
students
in fall 2021.
The commencement
ceremonies
took place
Goetz
to serve as a board member
when Anderson County joined
the Frontier District (Franklin
and Osage counties) in 2014,
until 2019. During that time, she
also served on the Family and
Consumer Sciences Program
Development
Committee,
which serves as an advisory
for the family and consumer
sciences programming in the
district.
After retiring from nearly 30
years in teaching in 1999, Horn
covered the Anderson County
Fair for The Anderson County
Advocate taking pictures and
writing stories for the newspaper's special fair edition.
Restaurant Coffee Shop Bakery Catering
309 N. Maple Garnett Mon-Sat 6AM-2:30 PM
2×4
Yutzy
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
Daily Lunch Specials:
Monday:
Taco Salad
Tuesday:
Dutch Country Cheese Steak
Wednesday:
Hot Beef Sandwich
Thursday:
Fried Chicken
Friday:
Meat Loaf
Saturday:
Chicken Fried Steak
Your satisfaction
is our #1 goal
www.yutzyconstruction.com
Weekly Baked Goods Special:
Four-pack
of our cinnys!
Saturday Breakfast Buffet 7:30-11:30
Quality Care Is Minutes Away
Anderson County Hospital is part of Saint Lukes and
offers local access to advanced specialty providers.
Gregg Jarrett is a Fox
News legal analyst and commentator, and formerly worked
as a defense attorney and
adjunct law professor. He is
the author of the No. 1 New
York Times best-selling book
The Russia Hoax: The Illicit
Scheme to Clear Hillary Clinton
and Frame Donald Trump.
His latest book is the New York
Times bestseller Witch Hunt:
The Story of the Greatest Mass
Delusion in American Political
History
Sara Clift, PA-C, WCC
Wound Care
Sara Clift, PA-C, WCC, specializes
in treating patients suffering
from hard-to-heal wounds,
including diabetic wounds,
venous and pressure ulcers,
and surgical wounds that have
not healed.
See an expert at our Specialty Clinic:
Audiology
Ophthalmology
Cardiology
Orthopedics
Dermatology
Pain management
Ear, nose, & throat
Podiatry
Endocrinology
Psychiatry*
Gastroenterology
Pulmonology*
General surgery
Rheumatology
Nephrology
Urology
Neurology
Veterans clinic
OB/GYN
Wound care
*Services are offered through Telemedicine
Find a doctor
Anderson County Review
Editorial Podcast
Available on:
Spotify, Google Podcasts
Garnett
Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Dutch Country Cafe
FROM PAGE 4A
* Specializing in
Post Frame Buildings
Hobby Shops
Garages
Equestrian
Commercial
Homes
Dec. 17, 2021, at JQH Arena in
Springfield.
Natasha Goetz of Garnett
(66032) graduated with a
Master of Arts in Teaching.
Goetz graduated with a
cumulative GPA of 4.0 en route
to her Degree of Masters of
Arts in Teaching. She specialized in K-12 Vocal Music.
Four
Color
Printing
Call (785) 448-5711 text (785) 204-1382
FRAME…
of her role has slowly emerged
from declassified records. It
was July 26, 2016, when Clinton
personally approved the plot to
vilify Trump with the bogus
collusion claims, according to
CIA documents. The genesis
of the smear came from Hillary
herself as a strategy to distract
from her own email scandal.
Two days later, President
Obama was alerted but appears
to have done nothing except
keep the matter concealed.
Intelligence officials then sent
an investigative referral on
Clinton to then-FBI Director
James Comey and his deputy,
Peter Strzok. Predictably, it
was buried.
Make no mistake –it was
Clinton who invented the elaborate collusion hoax, financed
it, and directed the process
by which it was circulated to
the media and the FBI. Her
false claims were then disseminated by a cadre of cronies
and dirty-tricksters working
secretly in the shadows.
As I explained in my book,
Witch Hunt, Hillary was the
architect and master designer
of the greatest mass delusion in
American political history.
Unraveling her web of deceit is
John Durhams immense challenge.
good reason these lawsuits
find no support in precedent:
Neither the federal nor the
Kansas Constitution authorizes state courts to pass on the
validity of federal congressional maps, and certainly not
under the legal theories the
Plaintiffs in the recently filed
cases advance.
Schmidt said bringing the
suit directly in the Kansas
Supreme Court would enable
an expedited decision, which
is needed because of election timelines. He said it also
squarely presents the federal
question, which the Wyandotte
County plaintiffs carefully avoided, whether the U.S.
Constitution prohibits Kansas
state courts from entertaining
state-law challenges to federal
congressional district boundaries.
Schmidt also asked the
Kansas Supreme Court to rule
that the Kansas Constitution
does
not
prohibit
the
Legislature from considering
political objectives when drawing congressional districts,
just as the U.S. Supreme Court
has ruled the U.S. Constitution
does not.
Plaintiffs political gerrymandering claim is not
justiciable under the Kansas
Constitution, Schmidt wrote.
No judicially manageable
standard for evaluating such
claims exists, Kansas courts
have not historically entertained such claims, and the
Kansas Constitution has nothing at all to say about political
gerrymandering.
Finally, Schmidt asked the
Kansas Supreme Court to hold
that the plaintiffs in Wyandotte
County district court have not
alleged racial gerrymandering
that is judicially actionable.
[A] claim of unconstitutional vote dilution requires proof
of discriminatory purpose,
which Plaintiffs have failed to
allege, Schmidt wrote.
A copy of Schmidts petition
is available at https://bit.ly/3s0RKEj.
saintlukeskc.org/anderson
785-204-8000
2B
LOCAL
Area schools
celebrate
National
FFA Week
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
February 19-26
NATIONAL
FFA WEEK
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 2-19-2019 / Photo Submitted
Anderson County High School FFA: Front row, from left: Austin Teter, Tyler Gillespie, Braxton
Spencer, Caden Register, Amelia Cubit, Ella Reichard, Spencer Rockers. Second row, from left:
Carson Kuhlman, Tristian Ewert, Quinton King, Brody Barnes, Brooke Hughes, Emily Moyer, Evie
Foltz, Emma Self, Kallie Feuerborn, Skylar Baumann, Delaney Ramsey, Lily Keith, Sayleen Partida,
Talon Jasper. Third row, from left: Michael Mains, Noah Porter, Isaak Porter, Brylee Zook, Cadence
Wilper, Karyn Yoder, Dean Dietrich, Addy Kueser, Huck Young, Jack Crane. Fourth row, from left: AJ
Schaffer, Jason Allison, Zane Pedrow, Tyler Mucklow, Brooklyn Strobel, Kayla Melton, Chase Crane,
Tarin Rues, Dallas Kueser, George Kent. Fifth row, from left: Rhett Davison, Trey Clark, Colten Wittman,
Riley Young, Brandon Kiatoukaysy, Brittany Hurt, Colten Wilson, Hunter Palmer, Taryn Morrow, Alyssa
Coyer. Sixth row, from left: Wyatt King, Tyler Stinnet, Zach Sawyer, Jaden Teter, Avery Coyer, Brylie
Kohlmeier, Brooke Kent, Bryar Self, Brekyn Zook, Brooklyn Nicholls, Emma Harvey. Seventh row, from
left: Cheyenne Sears, Brynleigh Morrow, Averie Keith, Alice Tucker, Brooklyn Kellerman, Maggie Self,
Bristol Barnes, Emma Good, RaeLynn Morrison, Keirstynn Jones.
About the Kansas FFA
The Kansas FFA Association
is experiencing exciting
growth, a surge of new opportunities for its members, and
increasing support from the
community and former members. Kansas FFA was chartered by the National FFA
Organization in 1928. Since
1928, our membership has
grown to over 10,000 members in more than 220 chapters across the state. There
are FFA chapters in 225 high
school agriculture education
departments, in 216 unified
school districts. Kansas FFA
members can be found in 103 of
the 105 counties across Kansas,
including both rural and urban
areas. Our membership strives
to create a sense of inclusivity
while celebrating our unique
backgrounds, stories, and experiences within the agriculture
industry.
The association is led by a
state officer team dedicated to
forming the next generation
into future agriculturists. The
team is filled with six students
who are freshman and sophomores in college serving as
Proudly supporting
1×2
FFA and our
AndCo
area youth!
Anderson
County
Farm
Farm Bureau
Association
Bureau
213 S. Maple
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-0099
2×4
R&R Equipment
Proud to support our area FFA Chapters!
president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, reporter,
and sentinel. In addition, adult
guidance and leadership is
provided by the state advisor
and executive secretary. The
Kansas FFA Association is run
by the voices of its members.
Therefore, chapter members
from across the state serve as
delegates at state convention,
elect the state officers, and
conduct official business of the
association.
The official duties of the
Kansas FFA Association could
not be accomplished without
2×3
GSSB
the amazing support we receive
from local communities, agribusinesses, alumni, foundation, members and individuals who know the importance
of agriculture education. Our
annual State FFA Convention
continues to evolve into one
of the premier state conventions in the nation highlighted
by our action-packed general
sessions and our ever-growing
career show. This opportunity
continues to provide our members with leadership experiences, meaningful connections
and endless memories that
help make this organization so
impactful.
One of the most important
aspects of Kansas FFA is its
dedication to creating a new
generation of agriculturists
through the experiences students have in agriculture education classes. Agriculture
is the wave of the future and
will continue to be an essential
aspect of our lives, infrastructure and supply chain. Todays
agriculture education students
will be the leaders and innovators of tomorrows agriculture industry. Each one of our
members roles will be different; however, they can all take
part in advocating for the agriculture industry they know
and love. The need for agriculture advocates will always be
prevalent. Therefore, Kansas
FFA is proud to be at the forefront of preparing students for
premier leadership, personal
growth and career success in
agriculture and many other
industries.
A Salute To FFA
We congratulate our local FFA
members for their hard work
and dedication to agriculture
and our community.
E-Statements and Internet Banking.
8 Locations to Better Serve You!
Proud to support
our local FFA Chapters!
2×2 Barnes
Seed Service
Keegan Barnes
Were proud to support our
next generation through FFA.
2×3
EKAE
Ethanol – Fueling A New Generation
1200 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett, KS 66032 785-304-2500
keegan.barnes@plantpioneer.com
2×2
ValleyR
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
3B
LOCAL
Proud to support
2×5 our area FFA!
Brummel
8th & Oak St. Garnett, KS 66032 785-448-5720
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 2-19-2019 / Photo Submitted
Central Heights High School FFA. Front row, from left: Jr. Advisor Marcius Englund, Reporter Dakota Willcut, Vice President Emma Cubit,
President Kierstyn Blaufuss, Secretary Carter Kimball,Treasurer Chris Burris, Sentinel Lane Kimball. Second row, from left: Advisor Aaron
Cubit, Paige Powell,Melaney Chrisjohn, Addison Ouellette, Ashlee Stone, Emily Hough, Advisor Nathaniel McGee, Student Teacher Gavin
Fry. Third row, from left: Stacy Hill, Gage Overton, Kaden Krone, Abigail Roullett, Jaley Ferguson, Colton Caswell, Gavin Peine. Fourth
row, from left: Malakai Dionne, Caden Newell, Luke Burkdoll, Cameron Peel,Trevor Martin-Harralson. Fifth row, from left: Blake Clouse,
Lawson McGurk, Max Cannady, Aubrie Savage, Ridge Smith, Jacob Griffin, Kenton Stottlemire. Back row, from left: Landon Lopez, Connor
Burkdoll, Ethan Kimball, Tristan Kimball, Dominic Lopez, Clay Garrett, Tyler Emert, Alex Skeet.
See us for all your Spring
2×3
Agriculture
& Livestock needs
Bluestem
Sullivans
Livestock Show Supplies Cattle Working Equipment
Proud supporters of
Fencing: steel posts, barbed
wire, gates, panels.
Animal Health Supplies:
salt blocks, mineral feeders,
feed, bagged mineral, fly
tags, ID tags, livestock
vaccinations and supplies.
…and so much more- come in and browse!
Store Hours Mon-Fri 7 am6 pm, Sat 7 am5:30 pm
Celebrating agriculture education
as a prime focus for the future.
Dean Goodell
Associate Broker,
Crown Realty, Kansas
Licensed in Kansas & Missouri
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 2-22-2022 / Photo Submitted
Above, Crest High School FFA. Front row, from left: Theo Church,
Drake Weir, Jensen Barker, Logan Walter, Avery Blaufuss, Tucker
Yocham, Josh Sandness, Ethan Prasko, Colby McAdam. Second
row, from left: Allison Weatherman, Aylee Beckmon, Max Black,
Teagen Allen, Gunner Ellington, Gentry McGhee, Jacob Zimmerman,
Matt Beckmon, Kade Nilges, Denton Ramsey. Third row, from left:
McKenna Powell, Elizabeth Ellington, Kinley Edgerton, Josie Walter,
NATIONAL FFA WEEK
THANK YOU
Supporting our students & teachers in their ag pursuits.
for being good stewards of our precious farmland.
Kimora Coleman, Kaelin Nilges, Tara Weller, Ruthie Dietrich, Trevor
Church, Stetson Setter, Ryan Golden. Fourth row, from left: Aubrey
Allen, Blaine King, Sydney Stephens, Karlee Boots, Dalton Kersley,
Caty Nolan, Kami Luedke. Fifth row, from left: Lonna Belshe,
Haylee Beckmon, Holden Barker, Karter Miller, Ty Chambers,
Zander Dickerson. Back row, from left: Brenton Edgerton, Brock
Weatherman, Brayden Goodell, Kyree Puckett.
2x3glad to honor our
Were
And.
local
schoolCo.
FFA programs
Review
during
National FFA Week.
Sunflower Association of Realtors
(Emporia-Topeka MLS)
Kansas City Area Assc. of Realtors
(Kansas City MLS)
(785) 229-5547
2×2 Farmers
St. Bank
www.fsbkansas.com
205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
Our Ottawa office:
706 N. Lindenwood Dr.
Hannah Morgan, Agent
Olathe, Ks. 66062
427 S Main St. Ottawa
(913) 661-0466
785-521-2030
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker, Agent
Courtney
Tucker, Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
I believe in the
2×3
future of farming, with
Ottawa Coop
a faith born not of
words but of deeds.
NATIONAL FFA WEEK FEB. 19-26, 2022
785-242-5170
302 N. Main,
Ottawa, Ks
Supporting
2x3youth in
our
PSI
agriculture.
Commercial Farm
Life Auto Crop
Insurance
(620) 237-4631
Moran, KS
Proud supporters
2×3
of FFA programs,
Patriots Bank
students and
instructors in
our area high
www.patriotsbank.com
schools.
2×3
Leroy Coop
PSI
(620) 365-6908
Iola, KS
2×2
Beachner Grain
Sheri Lickteig, Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
slickteig@agencywest-ins.com
(913) 837-7825
Mound City, KS
2×5
QSI
4B
Public
Notice
LOCAL
CURRICULUM…
FROM PAGE 1
congressional maps, and certainly not under the legal theories the Plaintiffs in the recently filed cases advance.
Schmidt said bringing the
suit directly in the Kansas
Supreme Court would enable
an expedited decision, which
is needed because of election timelines. He said it also
squarely presents the federal
question, which the Wyandotte
County plaintiffs carefully avoided, whether the U.S.
Constitution prohibits Kansas
state courts from entertaining
state-law challenges to federal
congressional district boundaries.
Schmidt also asked the
Kansas Supreme Court to rule
that the Kansas Constitution
does
not
prohibit
the
Legislature from considering
political objectives when drawing congressional districts,
just as the U.S. Supreme Court
has ruled the U.S. Constitution
does not.
Plaintiffs political gerrymandering claim is not
justiciable under the Kansas
Constitution, Schmidt wrote.
No judicially manageable
standard for evaluating such
claims exists, Kansas courts
have not historically entertained such claims, and the
Kansas Constitution has nothing at all to say about political
gerrymandering.
Finally, Schmidt asked the
Kansas Supreme Court to hold
that the plaintiffs in Wyandotte
County district court have not
alleged racial gerrymandering
that is judicially actionable.
[A] claim of unconstitutional vote dilution requires proof
of discriminatory purpose,
which Plaintiffs have failed to
allege, Schmidt wrote.
A copy of Schmidts petition
is available at https://bit.ly/3s0RKEj.
Coffeyville man sentenced
to life for 2019 murder
INDEPENDENCE
A
Coffeyville man has been sentenced to life in prison without
the possibility of parole for 25
years for first-degree murder in
a 2019 shooting death in southeast Kansas, Attorney General
Derek Schmidt said today.
Benjamin Job Mason II, 20,
of Coffeyville, was sentenced
Tuesday in Montgomery
County District Court by Judge
F. William Cullins on one count
of first-degree murder.
Mason pleaded no contest
to the charges on December
20, 2021, for his role in the 2019
shooting death of Kimberly
Meeks in Independence. The
case was investigated by the
Kansas Bureau of Investigation,
the Independence Police
Department,
Montgomery
County Sheriff and U.S. Postal
Inspectors.
The case was prosecuted by
Assistant Attorneys General
Michael Gayoso and Stephanie
Plaschka of Schmidts office.
FORUM…
FROM PAGE 4A
We are all so weak. We fall for everything. We think we deserve
what others have without earning it. We are a spoiled nation and
we are letting commercials convince us to buy things because we
think we deserve it. Quit falling into these traps and teach your
children better.
Youve got to have cats so they can kill rats and the black plague.
Get an encyclopedia and look it up what happened in England.
Your
RIGHT
to know,
guaranteed
by
Kansas Law.
thence West 12 rods and 12 feet, thence North
16 rods and 7 feet to the place of beginning,
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS IN THE FOURTH
JUDICIAL DISTRICT
and all other property, real and personal, or
interests therein, owned by the decedent at the
time of death; and you are hereby required to
file your written defenses thereto on or before
March 3rd, 2022, 9:00 a.m. of said day, in
said court, in the City of Garnett, in Anderson
County, Kansas, at which time and place said
cause will be heard. Should you fail therein,
judgment and decree will be entered in due
course upon said petition.
TO THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition
has been filed in this court by Diana L. Dunn,
a surviving daughter of David Lee Bryan,
deceased, praying for the determination of
descent of the following described real estate,
to-wit:
Commencing at the Northwest corner of the
Southwest Corner (SW/4) of Section Two (2),
Township Twenty (20) South, Range Nineteen
(19) East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in
Anderson County, Kansas, thence East 12 rods
and 12 feet, thence South 16 rods and 7 feet,
(Published in the Anderson County Review,
February 22, 2022)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the Anderson
County Planning Commission will hold a Public
Hearing on March 21, 2022 at 7:00 P.M. in
the Anderson County Annex, 409 South Oak,
Garnett, Kansas to consider:
All that part of the Northwest Quarter Section
19, Township 19 South, Range 20 East,
Anderson County, Kansas, described as follows: Commencing at the Southwest corner
of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 19;
thence N15722W, along the West line of
said Northwest Quarter, a distance of 1157.61
feet; thence N882801E, a distance of 88.19
feet, to a point on the East right-of-way line
of U.S. Highway 59, said point of being the
Point of Beginning; thence N882801E, a
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, February 8, 2022)
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice of public hearing
Special Use Permit application #SUP202202(Uhlig) to operate a fireplace/irrigation business in a R-E residential estate district. Said
property is located at:
Notice of hearing
in Bryan Estate
In the Matter of the Estate of
DAVID LEE BRYAN, Deceased.
Case No. 22-PR-1
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
Diana L. Dunn,
Petitioner
PREPARED AND APPROVED BY:
/s/William C. Walker
William C. Walker, No. 11978
112 West Fifth St., PO Box 441
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3747
FAX: (785) 448-5529
walkerlaw66032@yahoo.com
Attorney for Petitioner
fb8t3*
distance of 1106.54 feet, to a point on the
Southwesterly line of the Prairie Spirit Trail
right-of-way; thence S403149E, along said
Southwesterly right-of-way line, a distance of
407.21 feet; thence S882801W, a distance of
1390.80 feet, to a point on the East right-of-way
line of U.S. Highway 59; thence N15940W,
along said East right-of-way line, a distance
of 54.00 feet; thence N880020E, along said
East right-of-way line, a distance of 30.00 feet;
thence N15219W, along said East rightof-way line, a distance of 262.24 feet to the
Point of Beginning, containing 9.00 acres more
or less.
Any person concerned with this request may
attend the public hearing or submit written comments, opposed or in support, to the Planning
Commission. The Planning Commission may
continue this hearing date to a future date, if
necessary, without further notice.
/s/
Thomas R. Young
Planning & Zoning Director
fb22t1*
Notice of Buchanan tax sale
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, February 15, 2022)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
DIRECTOR OF TAXATION,
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
STATE OF KANSAS,
Plaintiff, Kansas Department of Revenue
vs.
Defendant, Nicholas G Buchanan
Case No. AN-2021-ST-000092
NOTICE OF TAX SALE
TO: The above-named Defendant and to
all persons who are or may be concerned:
Under and by virtue of a Tax Warrant filed
in the above-entitled action, and pursuant to
K.S.A.79-3617, K.S.A.79-32,107, K.S.A.793235, K.S.A.79-3212/3413, K.S.A.79-34,100,
K.S.A.79-5212 or K.S.A.79-6a11, I have levied
upon and will offer for sale at an online internet
auction at www.totallyauction.com starting 1st
day of March 2022 at 11:00 A.M. and sell to
the highest and best bidder for cash in hand
at, 1002 East 14th St Chanutee, KS 66720 the
7TH day of March 2022, closing at 7:00 P.M of
said day, the Business and personal property
of Nicholas G Buchanan which was located at
US 169 & 600 E County Rd Colony, KS 66015,
including but not limited to:
2011 Gray Mazda 6 SedanThe above-described property is taken as property of the Defendant and will be sold, without
appraisement, to satisfy said Tax Warrant.
Director of Taxation
Kansas Department of Revenue
Randy Wharton
Attorney for Plaintiff
Kansas Department of Revenue
Scott State Office Bldg.
120 SE 10th St
Topeka, Kansas 66612
Phone: (785)296-6124
fb15t2*
City of Kincaid Annual Report
(First published in the Anderson County Review, February 22, 2022)
You name it,
Anderson County does a very fine job of maintaining of their
roads. Ha. In the summer there is a strip of grass in the middle of
the road. In the winter there are very big snow drifts for the mail
carry lady to get stuck in and there is no maintainer man in sight,
in fact he is just like the dodo, almost extinct or extinct.
we print it.
Garnett
Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
2×4 kpa morton
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
FAMILY-STYLE!
Every Sunday
Friday: Chicken fried steak
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
or chicken fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
Homemade
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
PAN-FRIED
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
CHICKEN
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
Sunday: Homemade
pan-fried chicken w/sides
We have
pizza!
2×3
205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
Our Ottawa office:
706 N. Lindenwood Dr.
Hannah Morgan, Agent
Olathe, Ks. 66062
427 S Main St. Ottawa
(913) 661-0466
785-521-2030
2×4
kpa kdot
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker, Agent
Courtney
Tucker, Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
Sheri Lickteig, Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
slickteig@agencywest-ins.com
Dining
&
Entertainment
4×5 Entertainment Guide
GUIDE
We welcome you to enjoy our
Farm-to-Table Country Cuisine!
Proudly Serving Locally-Raised Beef & Pork.
Full Menu Online: thebrandniron.com
Full Bar
Kitchen Hours:
Wed. & Thur. 4 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 10 p.m.
1457 Hwy. 59 Princeton, KS 785-937-2225
To advertise your business here
contact Stacey at (785) 448-3121
or email review@garnett-ks.com for
more information.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
5B
LOCAL
Need a Fistful of Dollars?
Sell your items in the
Anderson County Review classieds!
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
9.54
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
HELP WANTED
WANTED:
WATER/WASTEWATER
NON-CERTIFIED
OPERATOR:
1×3
city of
burlington
City of Burlington, Ks., requesting applications: Water/Wastewater Non-Certified Operator.
Position open until filled. Citys
Ap available at City Hall, 1013
N. 4th, P.O. Box 207, Burlington,
Ks., 66839; online: burlingtonkansas.gov, phone (620) 3645334. HS diploma/GED; Kansas
CDL within 30 days; be able
to operate dept. equipment.
Competitive wages based on
skill & experience. EOE
Sandras Quick Shop/Simple
Simons is hiring part-time
positions. Apply within. (785)
448-6602.
dc21tf
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Tina ext. 301 or Lori ext. 303
1-800-926-6869.
Wanted Shop Technicians:
Competitive wages, Health/
Dental
Insurance,
Yearend Bonus Program, 401K,
possible relocation assistance,
GOLD KEY REALTY family housing available, excellent benefits, Oakley, KS. www.
mitteninc.com or 785-672-2744.
REAL ESTATE
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
MISCELLANEOUS
Never clean your gutters
again! Affordable, professionally installed gutter guards
913-884-4500 protect your gutters and home
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS! from debris and leaves forever!
For a free Quote call: 844-607LAND-FARMS
Chris Cygan Investment Property
1363
RESIDENTIAL
785-418-5435
Long distance moving: Call
today for a free quote from
Americas Most Trusted
Interstate Movers. Let us take
the stress out of moving! Speak
to a Relocation Specialist, call
888-788-0471
Never Pay For Covered Home
Repairs Again! Complete Care
Home Warranty covers all
major systems and appliances.
View all local properties for sale at our website:
30 day risk free. $200.00 off + 2
www.KsPropertyPlace.com free Months! 844-237-1432
Now offering
Update your home with
Auction
Beautiful New Blinds & Shades.
Services!
FREE in-home estimates make
Call
it convenient to shop from
(785) 448-3999
home. Professional installation. Top quality – Made in the
USA. Call for free consultation: 844-740-0117. Ask about
REALTOR
our specials!
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
1×3
ksprop
Mike
Hermreck
1×1
(785)
hermreck
448-8345
mikehermreck@crownrealty.com
USE
MAKE MONEY
THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
2×2 JB Construction
jb const
Decks Siding
Pole Buildings Garages
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joe.borntreger@yahoo.com
Haying of Swank Park
2×3
and co road
and bridge
Anderson County is now accepting bids to hay Swank
Park, approximately 70-acres. A three-year lease
agreement/contract will need to be signed once bid is
awarded. Hay needs to be put up by August 1, 2022,
and needs to be removed within one week of being
bailed, weather permitting. It will be your responsibility to spray for any noxious weeds during contract
period also. Payment will be made with half paid by
April 18, 2022, and other half paid when hay is bailed.
Please submit bids by March 21, 2022, at 8:30 a.m.
to the Anderson County Road Dept., 823 W. 7th Ave,
Garnett KS 66032.
Questions, please call 785-448-6632.
SERVICES
MISCELLANEOUS
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more for only $300/
week. Find employees, sell
your home or your car. Call
the Kansas Press Association
@ 785-271-5304 today!
B a t h r o o m
Renovations. Easy, one day
updates! We specialize in safe
bathing. Grab bars, no slip
flooring & seated showers. Call
for a free in-home consultation: 855-382-1221
Medical Billing & Coding
Training.
New
Students
Only. Call & Press 1. 100%
online courses. Financial Aid
Available for those who qualify. Call 888-918-9985
New Authors Wanted! Page
Publishing will help you
self-publish your own book.
FREE author submission
kit!
Limited offer!Why
wait? Call now: 855-939-2090
DirecTV Satellite TV Service
Starting at $74.99/month! Free
Installation! 160+ channels
available. Call Now to Get the
Most Sports & Entertainment
on TV! 888-721-1550
Never clean your gutters
again! Affordable, professionally installed gutter guards
protect your gutters and home
from debris and leaves forever!
For a free Quote call: 844-6071363
Top ca$h paid for old guitars! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin,
Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone,
Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker,
Prairie State, DAngelico,
Stromberg.
And
Gibson
Mandolins / Banjos. 855-4546658
Paying top ca$h for sports
watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Discount Air Travel. Call
Flight Services for best pricing on domestic & international flights inside and from
the US. Serving United, Delta,
American & Southwest and
many more airlines. Call for
free quote now! Have travel
dates ready! 833-381-1348
1×1
rytter
(913) 594-2495
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tf
WANTED
Need roommate – and place to
rent in Garnett. (785) 204-1022.
fb15t2*
Wanted to buy – white laying
hens. Also, want to buy 1 ton
truck with bed and hoist. (785)
937-4540.
fb22t2*
Available FREE 24 hours/day.
Happiness is… Having the
Reviews EagleEye News
Drone do aerial photography or
videography for your wedding,
special event, property survey,
promotional video, high-altitude equipment or building
inspection, etc. Real-time view
from up to 400 feet elevation, up
to nearly 1 mile range. Contact
the Anderson County Review
at (785) 448-3121 for more info.
oc11tfn
Card of Thanks
Monthly Specials
FARM & AG
HOAGBA/Gardner Auction March 19, 8:00am. Fairgrounds,
Gardner, KS. For information
and consignments: https://
hoagbagardneraution.org/ or
call (913) 879-2587.
fb15t4*
Alfalfa & oat straw. Round
bales. (785) 448-8527. Text or
voicemail.
fb8t4*
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
THANK YOU
1×2
Coffey and Anderson
County area firefighters, law
COT family & friends
enforcement,
To all the
HAPPY ADS
that helped protect our home
& property during
the recent fire.
With deepest gratitude.
Happiness is… subscribing to
the Anderson County Review.
Call (785) 448-3121.
my19tf
Doug & Teresa Young
Happiness is . . . submitting
your FREE wedding announcement ONLINE for publication in The Anderson County
Review. Go to www.garnett-ks.
com and click the form under
Submit News. Fill in the
form and click SUBMIT.
1×2
AD
2×3
Parkview
Looking
for
Heights
LAWN & GARDEN
Gravely ZTHD 48 zero turn.
3 bag bagger, mulching kit, 4
new tires, Kohler engine w/200
hours. (785) 304-0251
fb1t8*
Spray Foam Insulation and more
Closed and Open Cell Insulation
2×2
Attic Blown Fiberglass Insulation
Batt Insulation
precision foam
Licensed and Insured
Foam Insulation
NOTICES
JD Yutzy
785-448-8727
Call today for all your insulation needs
Quality and customer satisfaction is #1
Guest Home Estates
is looking for full-time CMAs, shift varies, who are
wanting to work with our team.
We offer Health Insurance and Competitive Wages.
If you are interested in this position,
please contact Sandra Johnson
at 785-448-6884
or come by our home
at 806 West 4th, Garnett.
We are excited to meet with you.
Warehouse Attendant Westphalia
Qualifications are to be Self-Motivated, be able to lift 50+
pounds, and be detail oriented.
Duties include loading feed, chemical, grain & fertilizer.
Full time position, excellent benefits include clothing allowance, vacation & sick paid time off, retirement & Leroy Coop
pays 100% employee and family health insurance.
Call Nathan at 785-489-2521 or stop by the Westphalia office.
Applications can be picked up at any branch location or printed off at www.leroycoop.coop under
the forms tab.
Applications will be taken until the
position has been filled.
Positions available:
CNA Full Time Evenings
a meaningful CNA Part Time Evenings/Nights
Housekeeping Part Time
career?
Dietary Cook Part Time
2018, 2019, 2020 designated Great Place to Work!
Apply at www.parkviewheights.com
101 N. Pine St. Garnett, KS.
(785) 448-2434
2×2
YODER
BORING
yoder boring
We save your yard by boring under it!
Call us for all your underground
boring needs. Horizontal drilling for:
Power Lines Water lines
Phone lines Drain lines, etc.
(660) 723-5165
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
City of Garnett
Part-time
Parks & Cemetery
Maintenance Worker
The City of Garnett is seeking a part-time Park and Cemetery
Maintenance Worker. Work is seasonal, from March until October,
not to exceed 999 hours annually. Duties include manual labor
assisting the Parks Department in maintenance of city parks, ball
fields, lakes, cemetery, city properties, as well as nuisance properties and other related duties. Skills required include the ability
to operate lawn mowers, tractors, weed eaters, chain saws, brush
cutters, and gravesite preparation. For a complete job description
and application, stop by City Hall, 131 W. 5th Avenue, Garnett.
Pay is based on qualifications, $10.0014.00/hr. The position will remain open
until filled. EOE.
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, February 22, 2022
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805 N Maple St. Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-3216
!
W
O
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HURRY
:30PM
8:30AM – 5DAYS
y
a
id
Fr
N
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CLOSED SU
URS: Mond
STORE HO 9:00AM – 4:00PM |
Saturday
NOW THROUGH
MARCH 12TH!
Check out our
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of in-stock
appliances!

