Anderson County Review — January 10, 2017
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from January 10, 2017. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
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Colony youth
prepares to attend
inauguration.
ACHS 8th grade
girls finish
season strong.
See page 6A
SINCE 1865 151st Year, No. 22
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Its tea time – and
award time – for
Four Winds group.
See page 2B.
E-statements & Internet Banking
January 10, 2017
See page 1B.
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
City fails to test
water for lead
Former employee
forgot to send samples;
next due later this year
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-17-2017 / Vickie Moss
Anderson Countys elected officials were sworn into office Monday, Jan. 9, at the Anderson County Courthouse, as a result of the Nov.
8, 2016, election. Pictured from left, front row: District Judge Eric Godderz, County Clerk Julie Heck, Register of Deeds Sandra Baugher,
Sheriff Vernon Valentine; back row: County Attorney Brandon Jones, County Commissioner Jerry Howarter and County Commissioner
Dave Pracht. Heck and Pracht are new to their respective offices; the others are incumbents.
Want to help law
enforcement?
Donate carefully
Donations like food, money
can send wrong impression;
know the rules before you give
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Charitable donations are
a great way to help people in need, but
Anderson County Sheriff Vernon Valentine
reminds people to keep a few rules in mind
before you bring in a gift to his department.
Most police and sheriffs departments
have policies that prohibit officers and
staff from accepting gratuities or gifts,
including money or food. Even though
such gifts typically are made with good
intentions, it could give the appearance of
impropriety or favoritism.
I would like to thank everyone who has
brought items to the Sheriffs Office. At the
same time I need to remind everyone that
the Sheriffs Office cannot accept money,
gifts or food for things we do for our citizens, Valentine said.
Valentine said the department also cannot accept donations like food items for
inmates at the county jail.
Letters of thanks are an acceptable way
to express your appreciation to an officer,
Valentine said.
SEE DONATE ON PAGE 2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – An employee no
longer with the city forgot to
submit water samples to the
state to test lead and copper
levels last fall, leading city officials to notify residents of the
failure in its most recent quarterly newsletter.
Garnett City Manager Joyce
Martin said the issue was discovered soon after the employee quit for an unrelated reason Sept. 30. Butch Rocker, a
retired city supervisor, came
back to help the water depart-
ment and discovered water
samples to test for lead and
copper had not been sent to
the state as required. The former employee simply forgot,
Martin said.
She assured residents that
previous test samples had not
violated lead and copper levels. The problem was the citys
failure to submit samples; it
doesnt mean the city has a
problem with lead or copper.
The city is required to submit 20 water samples to the
state every three years to test
for lead and copper levels. The
city last submitted the required
samples between June 1 and
Sept. 30, 2013. Officials were
supposed to submit 20 more
samples between June 1 and
SEE WATER ON PAGE 2A
Commissioner reflects on 20-year experience
Gene Highberger ends service on
county commission, cites teamwork
as vital to countys overall success
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Its more than a Monday.
Thats how outgoing Anderson County
Commissioner Gene Highberger described the
job hes held for 20 years. While most people
know the three people on the commission meet
each Monday morning to take care of the countys business, theres much more to the job.
Its a team effort. It requires research and
listening to all sides of an issue. Its making difficult decisions that are sometimes unpopular,
sometimes successful and sometimes just dont
work out the way you hope.
Its also about serving your community outside those Monday meetings. Each commissioner takes on extracurricular activities,
as Highberger calls them, by serving on local,
regional and state adivsory boards and committees. Hes served on the Anderson County
Hospital board, the Area Agency on Aging
board, the SEK Health Department and the 4th
Judicial Judge selection committee.
Highberger reflected on his 20 years on the
commission last week as his term came to an
end. He was recognized at a reception Friday
afternoon, Jan. 6.
Highberger first considered a run for a seat
on the Anderson County Commission in 1992,
but his wife, Marjorie Mike, was not in support of it. Four years later, as her health was
Gene Highberger.
failing, she told him to go for it. Unfortunately,
she passed away before he was elected.
My goal was to make Anderson County a
safer place to live and work on the road system,
he said. Anderson County has been good for
me, and I thought I could be good for Anderson
County.
Twenty years later, Highberger decided it
was time to let someone else take over the seat.
Nobody should vote for anybody thats 89
years old, he said.
The past 20 years have brought many chang-
es to Anderson County. Some of them make
Highberger proud, such as new facilities like a
new shop for the road department, a new jail
and the county annex building, as well as new
equipment for rural fire departments. The county courthouse itself has undergone extensive
improvements during that time, such as waterproofing the basement, fixing a radon problem,
installation of an elevator, new windows and
more.
SEE HIGHBERGER ON PAGE 3B
Weather: Enjoy brief warm up
Bitterly cold temps last week
subside for pleasant week until
freezing rain, sleet, snow arrives
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Bitterly cold temperatures ushered in the first week of the new year, but
local residents should expect to thaw out a
little bit this week before a weekend full of
snow, sleet and freezing rain.
A little less than an inch of snow – 0.8 inches – fell over the area in the 24 hours preceding Thursday, Jan. 5. That amounted to just
0.05 inches of precipitation.
But the cold temperatures made more of
an impact, with two days reaching highs
only in the teens and lows around 0. The lowest temperature recorded last week was 0 on
Jan. 7. But the rest of the week wasnt much
warmer, with low temperatures of 1 degree
on Jan. 6; 8 on Jan. 5 and 9 on Jan. 4.
High temperatures reached only 14 as
recorded on Jan. 6 and 12 on Jan. 7. The
official weather monitoring station in this
area is at the Garnett Industrial Airport and
is recorded each morning, so temperatures
actually reflect the 24 preceding hours. That
means temperatures recorded on Jan. 7 likely reflect temperatures that occurred on Jan.
6.
The highest temperatures last week
reached a high of 55 on Jan. 3, and 46 on Jan.
1.
Temperatures should be close to that starting today, according to forecasts from the
National Weather Service at Topeka. The
high is expected to reach 53 today, but it
could get windy. Gusts could reach 25 mph.
Low temperatures tonight are expected to be
around 34.
On Wednesday, highs could reach 60
degrees, with winds still around 25 mph.
The approaching weekend could bring
another change in the weather, though.
Expect a chance of snow and sleet before
3 p.m. Friday, Jan. 13, changing to snow
between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., then back to snow
and sleet after 5 p.m., followed by freezing
rain and sleet between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.,
and then freezing rain after 10 p.m. High
temperatures will be around 27, with lows
around 18.
More freezing rain could follow Saturday
and Sunday.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-17-2017 / Vickie Moss
Gary Hayes sweeps snow from the entrance to ReFined ReCherished and HayesBrand Molding Inc., at 614
S. Oak St. in Garnett Thursday morning after a little less than an inch of snow fell overnight.
Glossy 4 color printing – brochures, flyers, booklets, magazines. Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
VFW BREAKFAST
The Garnett VFW will offer
breakfast from 7 a.m. to 9
a.m. Saturday, Jan. 14. Menu
includes biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage and eggs.
PIPELINE TRAINING
The Kansas Pipeline Association
is offering quality first responder
training. Work a simulated product release with local pipeline
operators. Register online or
learn more at kpa-awareness.
com. A program is offered at
11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 17,
at Ottawa.
PRAYERS CONTINUE
Now that the election is behind
us, prayers will continue at the
Archer Room of the Garnett
Library for national healing and
reunification. Meetings are from
7 a.m. to 8 a.m. every Monday.
You may stay for the entire hour
but are free to come and go
whenever you are able.
DRUG TAKE BACK
The Anderson County Sheriffs
Department has purchased a
drug take-back box using money
collected from registered offenders. It is located just inside the
front office door of the sheriffs
department. Drop off expired
or unused medication 24 hours
a day, seven days a week.
Remember you are on survelliance camera so do not try and
remove anything from the box.
Do not place needles in the box.
Dispose of sharps by placing
them in plastic laundry detergent bottles or a plastic milk jug,
secure the lid and throw them in
your trash.
SUICIDE AWARENESS GROUP
A new group, SAM – Suicide
Awareness Members, a division
of SASS-MoKan – meets on the
first Tuesday of the month from
6:30-7:30 at the Garnett Library
located at 125 W 4th Ave in
Garnett. This group is for family
and friends who have lost a loved
one to suicide. All are welcome
to attend. The facilitator is Lu Ann
Nichols, who may be reached at
lu.ann.nichols.1956@gmail.com.
HELP FOR ANIMALS
Anyone willing to donate kitty litter, canned dog food or canned
cat food, dog and cat toys,
paper towels, laundry and cleaning supplies, or newspaper to
help support Prairie Paws Animal
Shelter can contact Lisa at (785)
204-2148.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month at Park
Plaza North Club House, 105
Park Plaza North, Garnett. For
more information, call Phyllis
at ECKAAA, (800) 633-5621 or
(785) 242-7200.
TOPS GROUP
TOPS, Taking Off Pounds
Sensibly, is a national not-forprofit weight loss support group.
It offers weekly meetings with
private weigh-in, healthy eating
programs and information, eating plan with no food to buy,
online resources, group support,
contests and recognition. Cost
is $32. For more information, go
to www.tops.org. To learn more
about when and where the local
group meets, contact Beverly at
(316) 755-1055 or email bednasek@networksplus.net.
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS DEC. 27
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on December 27, 2016
at the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Executive Session
Commissioner
Highberger
moved to recess into executive
session for 10 minutes for the
discussion of land acquisition with
Scott Cooper and David Pracht
in attendance. Open meeting to
resume at 9:15. Commissioner
McGhee seconded. Approved
30. No action after executive
session.
CMB License
Commissioner McGhee moved
to approve the renewal of a cereal
malt beverage license for Sandras
Quick Stop.
Commissioner
Highberger seconded. Approved
30.
Jail HVAC
Ben Trout, EPM met with the
commission. He presented the
commission with a breakdown
of the cost savings his company
could provide if the county would
purchase a temperature control
system for the Law Enforcement
Center. If the commission is interested in going forward the county
will need to hire an engineer to
write specs so that bids can be
taken. Decision tabled.
Sheriff
Sheriff Valentine and James
Campbell, County Counselor met
with the commission. The deeds
for the tax sale are ready to be
signed. Discussion was held on
the proposal for the temperature
control system for the jail. The
sheriff is needing to purchase
battery backups for the security
system for the jail. Commissioner
McGhee moved to purchase battery backups for a cost of $3,300
plus labor out of the Jail Reserve
Fund. Commissioner Highberger
seconded. Approved 30.
Abatements
Abatements B17138 through
B17152 were presented and
approved.
Meeting adjourned at 12:05 PM
due to no further business.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
January 3, Jason Spencer vs,
Kimberly Spencer, petition for
divorce.
CIVIL CASES FILED
January 3, Midland Funding
LLC., for WEBBANK vs. Donald
Zimbelman, asking $1,957.09
plus interests and costs.
January 3, Midland Funding
LLC., for Credit One Bank, N.A.
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AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
vs. Gina M. Veerkamp, asking
$676.85 plus interests and costs.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
January 4, Little Peoples
Learning Center vs. Robin M.
Farrar, asking $2,866.50 plus
interests and costs. Hearing set
for February 7.
January 4, Little Peoples
Learning Center vs. Audrey R.
Land, asking $680.75 plus interests and costs. Hearing set for
February 7.
January 4, Portfolio Recovery
Associates, LLC. vs. Bernard M.
Garrett Jr., asking $1982.96 plus
interests and costs. Hearing set
for March 7.
January 4, Edward C.
Morgan vs. Robert Baker, Emily
Vannorman, and known or
unknown other persons, asking
eviction and restitution plus costs.
Hearing set for January 17.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Osten Montgomery Odell, 74
mph in a 65 mph zone, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Blair H. Auld, 74 mph in a 65
mph zone, diversion filed, $253
fine and costs.
Alyssa Danielle Blevins, 70
mph in a 55 mph zone, guilty plea,
$183 fine.
Corey Tyler Emerson, 74 mph
in a 65 mph zone, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Jeremiah Joe Hoggatt, 74 mph
in a 65 mph zone, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Erin Denise Pavlicek, 75 mph in
a 65 mph zone, guilty plea, $153
fine.
Kelly D. Peters, 82 mph in a 65
mph zone, guilty plea, $195 fine.
Steven Wayne Rivers, 74 mph
in a 65 mph zone, guilty plea,
$153 fine.
Kodi S. Ulrich, 93 mph in a 65
mph zone, guilty plea, $240 fine.
State of Kansas vs. David H.
Hamilton, 75 mph in a 65 mph
zone, dismissed by way of diversion.
Other
State of Kansas vs. Jo. A. Wittry,
expired registration, dismissed.
Ruth Guliatte, hunting without
a valid white tailed deer permit,
diversion filed, $308 fine and
costs.
Milton B. Hosler, hunting without a valid white tailed deer permit, diversion filed, $308 fine and
costs.
Michael C. Miles, hunting without a valid white tailed deer permit, diversion filed, $308 fine and
costs.
GARNETT MUNICIPAL COURT
CASES RESOLVED
Speeding Violations:
Sean M. Anderson, Topeka, 44
mph in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Joseph
Ben-Hananialenz,
Overland Park, 45 mph in a 30
mph zone, $231 fine.
DONATE…
FROM PAGE 1A
Some departments allow
special circumstances, such as
if the item does not benefit officers or staff. For example, at
times the sheriffs department
has accepted toys and stuffed
animals to give to children who
must spend time at the office,
such as children who have been
taken away from a dangerous
or abusive home environment
or who were involved in some
type of accident or incident.
Valentine said he wanted to
thank someone who recently
made an anonymous donation
of new toys and stuffed animals
for those children. In this case,
the donation was acceptable
because it was made for children in need during emergencies, and not for any officer or
employee.
Sometimes
though,
Valentine and staff at the
Sheriffs Department instead
recommend donors take such
items across the street to the
local ECKAN office at 132 E. 5th
Ave., Garnett.
CELEBRATE RECOVERY
Celebrate Recovery, a Biblebased Christ-centered recovery
program for those who struggle with lifes hurts, habits and
hang-ups, meets each Monday
evening at the Garnett Church
of the Nazarene. It begins at
6 p.m. with meal and fellowship, followed by worship service
and small groups until 8:30 p.m.
Childcare is provided. Recovery
is for a variety of lifes hurts, not
just those with alcohol or drug
problems. Call (785) 304-1819
for information.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
RECORDS
Heather
Deanne
Heck,
Westphalia, 46 mph in a 30 mph
zone, $180 fine.
Other:
Erik K. Spurgeon, Garnett,
theft, 30 day jail, 15 days credit,
15 days suspended, 1 year probation, $450 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On November 23, a report of
criminal damage to property in the
700 block of East Fourth Terrace.
Reported damaged, was a chain
link fence valued at $1,000.
Arrests
On January 2, David Marrs,
Almeda CA. was booked into jail
for transporting an open container.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Accidents
On December 17, a vehicle driven by Nathan K. Hill, 24, Iola, traveling northbound on US Highway
59 went off the road striking several trees, when it struck ice. While
the entire vehicle was damaged,
the driver was not injured.
On December 18, a vehicle
driven by Andrew J. Hodo, 58,
LaHarpe, traveling South on U.S.
169 near 1100 Road, when it
struck a patch of ice and left
the roadway and went down an
embankment. While the entire
vehicle was damaged, the driver
was not injured.
On December 18, a vehicle
driven by Sharon K. Minckley,
71, Colony, traveling east on 300
Road, by Georgia Road, hit a
deer. The vehicle was damaged
in the front and right side. The
driver was uninjured.
On December 22, a vehicle
owned by Heather Joann Owens,
Iola was struck in the left rear
fender by a vehicle driven by
Michelle L. Hendrix, Colony, while
parked in the 600 block of East
3rd Avenue in Colony.
On December 23, a vehicle
driven by Wyatt Michael Gray, 18,
Shawnee, traveling west on US 59
Highway, failed to stop at the intersection of US 59 Highway and
US 169 Highway, ran across the
intersection, off the roadway on
the west side of US 169 Highway,
and crashed through a barbed
wire fence, into a field. Neither
the driver, nor passenger, Faith
Marie Larson, 18, Shawnee were
injured, nor was the vehicle damaged.
On December 30, a vehicle
driven by Buddy Thomas Murray
Rist, Jr. traveling East on K31
Highway, blew a tire, damaging
the headlight and wheel well. The
driver was not injured.
On December 31, a vehicle
driven by James Harland Kerr,
63, Garnett, traveling East on
K31 Highway near Harper Road,
struck a deer in the roadway. The
vehicle was damaged in the front
and right fender, the driver was
County. Bond set at $20,000.
Joshua Heubach was booked
into jail October 14 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000 x 3.
Brian Franklin was booked
into jail October 26 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $20,000.
Gary Colston was booked into
jail November 23 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $25,000.
Jeremy Spurlock was booked
into jail November 24 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $2,000 + No
bond hold for Miami County.
Joseph Dalton was booked
into jail December 2 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000.
Roger Lindsey was booked into
jail December 16 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $100,000.
Celso Carrillo was booked
into jail January 2 for Anderson
County. 5 day writ.
Jessica Orange was booked
into jail January 4 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $20,000.
not injured.
Incidents
On December 3, a report of
theft of property/services reported
in the 29000 block of Northwest
Jackson Road. Reported stolen was a Kansas tag, valued at
$1.00.
On December 24, a report of
Burglary and criminal damage
to property in the 33000 block
of Northwest Crawford Road in
Williamsburg. Reported damaged
was a wood entry door valued at
$150, and reported stolen was a
church bell ringer, valued at $500.
JAIL BOOKINGS
January 3, Chandra Dawn Oasis
Dewitt, 25, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Johnson County Sheriff
Department for warrant, Bond set
at $5,000. Released January 3.
On January 2, Celso Morin
Carrillo, 49, Topeka, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriffs Office on suspicion of
driving while suspended or
revoked. Non-Bondable.
On January 4, Jesse Dean
Osborn, 28, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Linn County Sheriff
Office on suspicion of probation
violation. Non-Bondable.
On January 4, Thomas Lynn
Gibson, 32, Independence, MO.
was booked into jail by Linn
County Sheriff Office on suspicion
of burglary. No bond set.
On January 4, James Mathias
Folsom, 36, LaCygne, was
booked into jail by Linn County
Sheriff Office for warrant. Bond
set at $500,000.
On January 4, Dakota Thomas
Gile, 18, Osawatomie, was
booked into jail by Miami County
Sheriff Office on suspicion of possession of opiates/opium. NonBondable.
On January 4, James Lawton
Thornton, 45, Houston, TX.,
was booked into jail by Miami
County Sheriff Office on suspicion of possession of stimulants/
Hallucinogenic drugs. No bond
set.
On January 4, Jessica Dawn
Orange, 36, Topeka, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriffs office for failure to appear.
Bond set at $20,000.
FARM-INS
Michael Jason Kinder was
booked into jail July 26 for
Anderson County to serve a sentence.
Colton Sobba was booked into
jail August 5 for Anderson County.
Court appearance.
Bradlee Pratt was booked into
jail September 10 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $25,000.
Has holds from Harvey County
and the City of Newton.
Phillip Proctor was booked into
jail September 19 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $50,000.
Eric Mersman was booked into
jail September 22 for Anderson
Brad Gilchrist was booked into
jail June 30 for Miami County.
Rhonda Jackson was booked
into jail July 27 for Allen County.
Bradley Pharris was booked
into jail September 13 for Linn
County.
Andrew Yeager was booked
into jail September 20 for Linn
County.
Gary Keith was booked into jail
October 4 for Linn County.
Joel Sanchez was booked into
jail October 7 for Miami County.
James Folsom was booked into
jail October 26 for Linn County.
Franklin Walker was booked
into jail November 10 for Linn
County.
Jacob Hays was booked into jail
November 22 for Linn County.
David Bohlken was booked into
jail December 2 for Linn County.
Brian Hermreck was booked
into jail December 9 for Douglas
County.
Darrell Peters was booked
into jail December 15 for Miami
County.
Johnathon Ramsey was
booked into jail December 15 for
Linn County.
Krista Clayton was booked into
jail December 22 for Linn County.
Robert Mace was booked into
jail December 23 for Linn County.
Austin Lyons was booked into
jail December 23 for Linn County.
Thomas Gibson was booked
into jail January 4 for Linn County.
Jamie Carr was booked into jail
December 27 for Linn County.
Dakota Gile was booked into jail
January 4 for Miami County.
James Thornton was booked
into jail January 4 for Miami
County.
Lead can cause delays in
physical or mental development in infants and children;
children could show slight deficits in attention span and learning abilities. In adults, lead can
cause kidney problems and
high blood pressure.
Copper can cause gastrointestinal distress and liver or
kidney damage.
The issue of lead in water
systems rose to national attention in the past couple of years,
after lead was discovered in the
drinking water in Flint, Mich.
The city switched water sources to save money in 2014, and
problems with lead in the water
were discovered in 2015.
JAIL ROSTER
WATER…
If you want to make donations to the sheriffs department,
there are agencies that understand the various prohibitions
and can make sure donations
are done appropriately. The
Kansas Sheriffs Association
recently changed the way it
accepts donations because of
scams that solicit money in
the name of law enforcement
agencies. The Association,
as well as the National Child
Safety Council, no longer make
phone calls and will only send
items through the mail. Any
such item sent by those groups
should have the signature of
the local county sheriff; in this
county, Valentines signature.
Valentine urges anyone who
receives a request through the
mail to verify the signature of
the local sheriff.
FROM PAGE 1A
Sept. 30, 2016, but failed to do so.
The error was discovered
soon after the Sept. 30 deadline,
Martin said, and city officials
immediately contacted the
Kansas Department of Health
and Environment to see if the
samples could be submitted
late. A state official said it was
too late, and to submit samples
between June 1 and Sept. 30,
2017, Martin said.
You name it,
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(785) 448-3121
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
HARRIS
DECEMBER 25, 1923-JANUARY 3, 2017
Julia Mary Gotheridge
Harris, 93, of Blue Mound,
Kansas passed away January 3,
2017 at Olathe Medical Center.
Mary was born December
25, 1923 to
Daniel H. and
Lulu Wilmoth
(Freeland)
Gotheridge
at
Culver,
Missouri,
northeast of
Butler.
In
February
Beachy
1925, at the
age of one,
Mary moved with her parents
and two brothers to a farm
north of Selma, Kansas where
she lived until she married.
She attended Minkler Country
School through 8th grade walking a mile each morning and
evening and also met the bus at
the school for four more years
while completing her education at Kincaid High School
where she graduated in 1941.
Mary met the love of her
life, Warren Kenneth Harris in
early 1941. They were engaged
before Warren left for the Army
Air Corp on October 9, 1942 to
serve in World War II. They
married on August 2, 1943 in
Iola, Kansas while Warren was
home on leave. Warren was
sent to the European Theatre
soon after their wedding and
they kept in touch by daily letters across the ocean. Warren
returned to his love on August
2, 1945, their second wedding anniversary. They then
started their life together in
a two-room apartment in Blue
Mound before renting a farm
with a four-room house in 1946.
In 1948 they bought a 160 acre
farm west of Prairie Valley
School near Blue Mound. As
finances allowed they progressively made improvements to
their own farmstead until finally moving into a newly completed home there in 1964.
Mary and Warren were
blessed with two children,
Dennis K. Harris on May 1,
1948 and Jacqueline Sue Harris
on November 2, 1950.
Warren and Mary joined
Blue Mound Methodist Church
together in 1949 and were
charter members of the 49ers
Sunday School Class. Mary
and Warren worked side by
side farming, haying, raising
lots of cattle, hogs, bottle calves,
pigs, and lots of chickens. In
turn, Warren would help Mary
with housework. They enjoyed
working together and were
usually seen together whatever
the occasion. Mary did lots
of sewing for their children
and numerous school projects
as she was room mother for
both children for several years.
Mary belonged to Prairie
Valley Circle and Blue Mound
United Methodist Church. She
was a stay at home mom and
wife. She most enjoyed being
with her husband and children.
Mary also enjoyed solid walnut
furniture and had several pieces which she and Warren purchased at auctions. In her later
years, Marys hobbies included
collecting dolls, dishes, quilts,
and other interesting items.
Mary loved to be busy. She
was not an idle person.
Mary was preceded in death
by her parents; two brothers,
Robey and Walter; two sisters
in infancy; her husband of over
68 years Warren; her beloved
daughter, Jackie Harris Norris;
and a great-grandson, Jaden
Terry.
She is survived by her son,
Denny Harris of Blue Mound;
granddaughter,
Angela
Kay Harris Terry and three
great-grandchildren, Brandon
Terry, Austin Terry, and Jenna
Terry all of Louisburg, Kansas.
Mary said, Happiness will
be being together with Warren
and Jackie forever. My biggest
worry will be leaving my son
Denny.
A funeral service for Mary
was Saturday, January 7, 2017 at
Blue Mound United Methodist
Church. Burial followed in
Sunny Slope Cemetery.
The family suggests contributions to Blue Mound
Cemetery Improvement and
Beautification Fund in care of
the Schneider Funeral Home,
P.O. Box J, Mound City, Kansas
66056. Family and friends may
leave online condolences at
www.schneiderfunerals.com.
Arrangements: Schneider
Funeral Home & Crematory,
Mound City Chapel.
GARNETT
JANUARY 20, 1929-JANUARY 3, 2017
Jane Garnett, 87, of Topeka,
passed away on Tuesday,
January 3, 2017 at a Topeka
hospital. She was born January
20, 1929 in Thermopolis, WY,
the daughter of Virgil and
Kathryn (Henderson) Tucker.
Jane graduated from Kincaid
High School in Kincaid, KS.
She was employed by Highland
Park State Bank for many
years. She was a member of
Countryside United Methodist
Church.
Jane married Richard
Dick Garnett. He preceded
her in death on September
18, 2002. She was also preceded in death by her son, Randy
McAtee on August 4, 1998 and
her sister, Nola Schultz.
Survivors include three
grandchildren, Jamie McAtee-
Smith, Casey McAtee and
Whitney
McAtee,
three
great-grandchildren, Jack,
Sloan and Harper and her siblings, Lillian, Virginia, Virgil
and Tom, five nieces and one
nephew.
Services were Friday,
January 6, 2017 at PenwellGabel Southeast Chapel.
Burial followed in Mount Hope
Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be given to
Countryside United Methodist
Church, 3221 SW Burlingame
Rd., Topeka, Kansas 66611.
To leave the family a special
message online, please visit
www.PenwellGabelTopeka.
com.
GARBER
FEBRUARY 28, 1956-JANUARY 2, 2017
Shannon Garber, age 60, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Monday, January 2, 2017,
at Overland Park Regional
Medical Center, Overland
Park.
She was born February 28,
1956 at Hays, to Robert Glen and
Maxine Pearl (Sims) Bowlin.
She married Leslie Garber
on June 21, 1975 in Chapman.
She was preceded in death
by her father, Robert Bowlin
and stepfather, Jesse Wilson
Lawrence.
Surviviors include her husband, Leslie Garber, of the
home; three sons, Benjamin
Garber of Olathe; Patrick
Garber of Overland Park; and
Christopher Garber of Garnett;
three grandchildren; one brother, Brad Young and wife Cathy
of El Dorado; and her mother,
Maxine Lawrence of Augusta.
Funeral services were
Thursday, January 5, 2017,
at First Christian Church,
Garnett. Burial followed in the
Garnett Cemetery in Garnett,
Kansas.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to W.I.N.G.S. or
Boy Scout Troop #126. You may
send your condolences to the
family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
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3A
REMEMBRANCES
CALLAHAN
FURSMAN
NOVEMBER 26, 1951-JANUARY 1, 2017
DECEMBER 26, 1925-JANUARY 5, 2017
Francis Catherine Fursman,
age 91, a former resident of
Colony, Kansas, and more
recently of Ft. Scott, Kansas,
passed
away
Thursday,
January 5,
2017, at the
Franklin
H o u s e
Assisted
Living in Ft.
Scott.
S
h
e
was
born
December
Fursman
26, 1925, in
Bronson,
Kansas, the daughter of John
Fletcher Harris and Maude
Geyer Harris. She grew up
on the family farm west of
Bronson and graduated from
the Moran High School with
the Class of 1943.
She married her high school
sweetheart, Bob Fursman, on
April 11, 1945, at Ft. Scott.
Prior to her marriage,
Francis taught at two rural
grade schools. The Fursmans
owned and operated Fursman
Ranch & Elevator located near
Welda, Kansas for many years.
They made their home on the
ranch as well as in Garnett,
Kansas. They later remodeled
the Lone Elm Grade School
into their home and lived there
for several years prior to moving to Colony in 1986.
While living in Colony,
Francis worked for a time at the
Senior Citizens Center where
she helped organize congregate
meals. She also enjoyed drinking coffee with her friends at
the Colony Caf. She had been
an active member of TOPS and
enjoyed walking for her health.
She also enjoyed sewing, playing cards and spending qual-
ity time with her family and
friends. She had a simple faith
and so believed that Heaven
was real. She was a devoted
wife, mom and grandma who
will be dearly missed by her
two daughters and her grandchildren.
Survivors include her two
daughters, Sheila Blubaugh
and husband, Dave, of Ft. Scott,
Kansas and Sharon Madison,
and husband, Don, of Wichita,
Kansas; five grandchildren,
Joan Kramer and husband,
Tim, Tom Madison and wife,
Kitty and Karen Traynor and
husband, Kip, all of Wichita
and Brad Blubaugh and wife,
Bethany, of Ft. Scott and
Amanda Smilie and husband,
Ethan, of Chanute, Kansas; and
fifteen great-grandchildren,
Ashley Kramer, Catherine,
Sam and Elizabeth Madison,
Robert, Rowan, Rachel and
Rafe Traynor, Max, Grant and
Reed Blubaugh and Helena,
Ben, Cecilia and Gerard Smilie.
Her husband, Bob, preceded her in death on August 15,
2014. She was also preceded
in death by her parents, a sister, Elizabeth Townsley, and a
brother, John Harris.
Lloyd Houk will conduct
funeral services at 11 a.m.
Friday, January 13, at the
Cheney Witt Chapel. A graveside service will be held at 2:30
p.m. Friday at the Colony City
Cemetery in Colony, Kansas.
Memorials are suggested
to the Charity of the Donors
Choice and may be left in care
of the Cheney Witt Chapel, 201
S. Main, P.O. Box 345, Ft. Scott,
KS 66701. Words of remembrance may be submitted to
the online guestbook at cheneywitt.com.
WELDIN
MARCH 3, 1915-JANUARY 2, 2017
Glen Edward Weldin, age
101, of Colony, Kansas, passed
away on Monday, January 2,
2017, at the Anderson County
Hospital, Garnett, Kansas.
He
was
born March
3, 1915, at
Tonganoxie,
K a n s a s ,
the son of
E d w a r d
and Laura
(Hamilton)
Weldin.
Weldin
Glen married
Carol
Fay Spencer in December 1934
at Erie, Kansas. This union
was blessed with two children.
They settled on the family
farm at Colony for the last 77
years. He farmed until two
years ago and rode the neighborhood on his Gator and
Grasshopper, which was one of
his greatest pleasures.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, Edward and
Laura Weldin; his wife, Carol
Weldin; one son, Floyd Weldin;
three brothers, Edwin, Vernon
and Virgil Weldin; one sister, Maxine Harris; two great
grandsons, Eric Weldin and
Matthew Weldin; two great
granddaughters, Amy and
Alisha Weldin.
Glen is survived by his
daughter, Phyllis Goodell
and husband Bill of Colony,
Kansas; seven grandchildren,
Trena McKinsey and husband Scott, Tadd Goodell and
wife Lori, Terry Weldin and
wife Wanda, Merriul Thomas
and husband Michael, Cindy
Williams and husband Danny,
Timothy Weldin, and Mike
Weldin and wife Sandy; several great grandchildren and
great-great grandchildren; and
one daughter-in-law, Kathryn
Weldin.
Cremation is planned.
Services will be scheduled at a
later date.
You may send your condolences to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com.
ODELL
JANUARY 7, 1943-JANUARY 3, 2017
Carolyn ODell, age 73, of
Greeley, died Tuesday, January
3, 2017, at Guest Home Estates
in Garnett.
Carolyn Geraldine Gilner
was born on January 7, 1943
in Hackensack, New Jersey,
to James P. and Beatrice T.
(Lickteig) Gilner.
She
married James W.
ODell on May 21, 1975 in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Carolyn was preceded in
death by her husband, Jim on
February 29, 2012; her parents,
Jim and Bea Gilner; brother,
Bernie Gilner in 2010.
Survivors include three sisters, Betty Wellman of Meriden;
Mary Katherine Kakie
Honn of Mound City; Terry
Jasper of Garnett; four broth-
ers, Frank Archie Gilner
of New Hampton, New York;
Bob Gilner of Overland Park;
Andy Gilner of Tonganoxie;
and Jimmie Gilner of Garnett,
Kansas; step-daughter, Melody
ODell of Garnett; many nieces
and nephews.
Mass of Christian Burial
was Monday, January 9, 2017,
at St. Johns Catholic Church
in Greeley. Burial followed in
St. Johns Catholic Cemetery in
Greeley.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to St. Johns
Catholic Church or St. Rose
School. Condolences may be
left at www.feuerbornfuneral.
com.
Ronald Ray Callahan, age
65, of Garnett, Kansas, passed
away on Sunday, January 1,
2017 at his home in Kingston,
Oklahoma.
He
was
born
on
November
26, 1951, in
Garnett,
K a n s a s ,
the son of
Dennis Jr.
and Phyllis
( T e t e r )
Callahan
Callahan. He
graduated
from Garnett High School in
1969, attended Allen County
Community College and graduated from Kansas City Kansas
Community College with a
degree in Mortuary Science in
1977. He served in the Army
National Guard from 1969 to
1975.
Ron was united in marriage to Vicki Powers in 1972.
Two sons, Eric Ray and Brian
Christopher, were born to this
union. They later divorced.
In 1983, Ron married Beth
Kennedy. They had a son,
Joshua Cody, and daughter,
Courtney Megan. They were
later divorced.
Ron farmed with his father
and brother, Pat until after
graduation from KCKCC when
he began a career in the funeral
business. He worked in funeral homes in Garnett, Turon,
Wichita and Eureka, Kansas
and eventually purchased the
funeral home in Eskridge,
Ks. In 1988, Ron moved to
Kingston, Oklahoma and purchased a motel and fishing
guide service. Most recently,
he was owner operator of his
own independent trucking
operation.
He enjoyed fishing, visiting with friends, rides on his
Harley and spending time with
his family. He took great pride
in being a life-long blood donor,
donating often due to the rarity
and need of his blood type.
Ron was preceded in death
by his father, Dennis Callahan
Jr., his brother, Patrick
Callahan and his niece, Carissa
Callahan.
He is survived by his four
children and nine grandchildren, son Eric Callahan,
Doreen Arbelo and children
Gabriella and Brinnley of
Garnett, Kansas; son Chris
Callahan and wife Yan and
children Audrey and Teagan,
Rogers, Arkansas; son Cody
Callahan and wife Britney and
children Brayden, Carenza and
Jacob, Verdigris, Oklahoma;
daughter Courtney Lee and
husband James and children
Skylar and Harlie, Chelsea,
Oklahoma; mother Phyllis
Callahan of Garnett, Kansas;
brother Mike Callahan and
wife Joyce of Baldwin City,
Kansas; and nephew Wesley
Callahan, Washington D.C.
Funeral services were
Saturday, January 7, 2017 at
Holy Angels Catholic Church
in Garnett. Burial followed in
the Holy Angels Cemetery in
Garnett, Kansas.
Memorial contributions
can be made to Holy Angels
Catholic Church or St. Rose
School. Condolences may be
sent to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com
RILEY
FEBRUARY 13, 1939-JANUARY 5, 2017
LaVerne Riley, age 77, of
Iola, Kansas, passed away on
Thursday, January 5, 2017 at
the Allen County Regional
Hospital.
She was born to Robert
and Lucy (Humphrey) Lane
on February 13, 1939 in Cape
Giradeau, Missouri.
She married Robert Lee
Riley on June 11, 1955 in
Mississippi.
LaVerne was preceded in
death by her husband, Robert,
on October 30, 2009; an infant
daughter; four sisters Mickey
Barlow, Vickey Bruner, Ellen
Fulkerson, and Ann Conaway.
Survivors include four sons,
Rick Riley of Iola; Joe Riley
of Platte City, Mo.; Michael
Riley of Iola; and Brian Riley of
Humboldt; nine grandchildren;
eight
great-grandchildren;
six sisters Ruthie Neuman
of Suwanee, Georgia, Bobby
Counce of Iuka, Mississippi,
Kay Polac of St. Louis, Missouri,
Barbie Eberle of Winchester,
Virginia, Pammy Cloutier of
Cummings, Georgia, and Cindy
Powell of Colony.
Funeral services were
Monday, January 9, 2017, at the
Fellowship Regional Church,
Iola.
Memorials are suggested to
Hope Unlimited and may be
left with the funeral home.
Condolences may be left at
www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
HERMANN
APRIL 30, 1943-JANUARY 4, 2017
Harold Hermann, age 73, of
Garnett, died January 4, 2017,
at his home.
He was born April 30, 1943,
at Harris, to Albert John and
Mary Catherine (Wilper)
Hermann.
He married Pauline Foltz on
February 12, 1966 at Garnett.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Albert and Mary
Catherine Hermann; and one
brother, Albert Hermann.
Survivors include his children, Mackayla Martin and
Michael Hermann, both of
Garnett; and Marty Hermann
of Omaha, Nebraska; eight
grandchildren; siblings, Mary
David of Girard; Richard
Hermann and Frank Hermann
of Garnett; Dorothy Mathers
of North Platte, Nebraska,
Sister Alberta of Atchison, and
Clarence Hermann of Garnett;
numerous nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m., on Tuesday, January
10, 2017, at Holy Angels Catholic
Church, Garnett, with burial to
follow.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to
the Harold Hermann Memorial
Fund.
You may send your condolences to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com
In observance of
Martin Luther King Jr.s
birthday, we will not be
open for business
Monday, January 16th.
2×3
gssb
We will re-open Tuesday
for regular business hours.
Ask about our 18 month & 30 month CD Special.
HASTERT
APRIL 17, 1935-JANUARY 6, 2017
Dennis Hastert, age 81, of
Greeley, Kansas passed away
Friday, January 6, 2017 at the
Residential Living Center,
Garnett, Kansas.
Dennis was born April 17,
1935 at Garnett to Tony and
Mary (Katzer) Hastert.
On July 20, 1957 Dennis married Joyce Benefiel at Holy
Angels Church, Garnett.
He was drafted into the US
Army in February of 1958. to
December 1959.
He was preceded in death
by his parents; brother, Don;
and his brother-in-law, Tommy
Thompson.
Survivors include his wife,
Joyce of the home; four children, Dennis Hastert Jr. of
Garnett, Anthony Merle
Hastert of Overland Park, Mike
Hastert of Garnett, and Susan
Grant of Garnett; 12 grandchildren; 7 great-grandchildren;
sister, Darlene Thompson of
Garnett; two brothers, Vernon
Hastert of Ulysses, and Glenn
Hastert of Garnett; and numerous nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m., Wednesday, January
11, 2017 at the Feuerborn
Family
Funeral
Service
Chapel, Garnett. Burial will
follow in the Holy Angels
Cemetery, Garnett. The family
will greet friends from 12:30
until the time of the service
on Wednesday at the funeral
home.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to the Greeley
First Responders and may be
left in care of the funeral home.
Condolences may be left at
www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
We will not be open for
business
Monday, January 16th
in observance of Martin
Luther King, Jrs birthday.
2×3
farmers state
bank
We will re-open for
normal business hours the
following Tuesday.
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
OPINION
Liberal Hollywood clings to pouting
Ill be honest: Im not sure Ive ever seen the
Golden Globe awards. I had to Google it to find out
what it actually is. But like the president-elect, considering its made up mostly of liberal Hollywood
types getting together once a year to remind
themselves how important they are, I wasnt too
surprised to find out the most recent installment
turned into a big Trump bashing party.
From what has become the Party of Pouters,
another public tantrum too late to matter.
I know, its odd. Such unbridled criticism for
an elected president with a different way of doing
things who hasnt even taken office yet (but already
preserved several thousand U.S. jobs) coming from
those in the political spectrum who claim to be the
most tolerant and open minded. The message from
leftist Hollywood is clear: Trumps a rich, white
meanie; but those theaters were producing movies
for that charge working folks $17 for a popcorn and
a Dr. Pepper well, theyre okay.
Not that everybody agrees with every president
about everything, or has to. And true, we all have
our right to free speech but then again no one
really expects liberal Hollywood to give a conservative a fair shake. Liberals are just that way. I
mean, a conservative will tell you he never liked
Barack Obama but he sure did the right thing in
not stopping the CIA from snuffing Osama bin
Laden. Liberals on the other hand believe the only
way to convince you somethings bad enough that
the government (that means you) must create
a way to fix it is to convince you that the sky is
always falling.
Its similar to the way liberal newspapers in
Kansas treat Governor Brownback and Secretary
of State Kris Kobach. Brownback could pole vault
into the second floor of a burning building in
downtown Topeka, rescue all the orphans that live
there, and Monday mornings editorials would
lament that budget cuts no longer allow the state
capital to enforce its city-wide burn ban.
But dont despair, you movie-loving deplorables. There is still a ghostly though dwindling
number of conservative entertainers out there
drawing breath and you can enjoy them from time
to time. They may have to keep a pretty low profile
out in the Land of Fruits and Nuts, but you can
still find them if your stomach just cant handle
the constant waterworks of the next Meryl Streep
wrist slitter.
Cindy Crawford, for instance, although you
never see her in anything but her own infomercials. Still a lot better preserved than Meryl
Streep.
Clint Eastwood, whose quizzical empty chair
talk at the 2012 Republican Convention turned
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
out to be prophecy four years later. At 86 hes still
writing, directing and producing some of the best
stuff made in my lifetime. Unforgiven, Grand
Torino and The Outlaw Josey Wales, and one of
my favorite quotes: If you want a guarantee, buy
a toaster.
Brittany Spears, believe it or not, has espoused
some very conservative viewpoints and supported
Republican candidates even though she cant
always remember to wear her nickers. Well, you
cant have everything
Dwayne The Rock Johnson. Lets face it,
theyll never give him the Oscar for Best Actor,
but hes a pretty funny guy who doesnt take himself too seriously and wants to be in the business
bad enough to make Tooth Fairy.
Dont fret, there are more in the list: Heather
Locklear, Jessica Simpson, Stacey Dash, Gene
Simmons, Jerry Bruckheimer, Kelly Clarkson,
Simon Cowell, Hillary Duff, Kid Rock, Tom Selleck,
Ted Nugent, Elizabeth Hasselbeck, Bruce Willis,
Adam Sandler, Kelsey Grammer, Jon Voight,
Arnold Schwarzenegger maybe a small contingent, but effective. And being effective, no matter
the names someone else calls you or the half-baked
evidence they use to criticize you, is most in keeping with the modern conservative philosophy.
And that is the thing most irritating about
Trump to Hollywood no longer are the liberals
running roughshod over the White House and
Washington. Their influence is gone. No matter
what they say, they cant affect who Trumps cabinet picks will be; they cant save the Obamacare
debacle; they cant affect Trumps Supreme Court
Justice selections; their seeping socialism no longer fertilizes the nations weeds.
Pouting, indeed, is all they have left. Frankly
my dears, Trump doesnt give a damn.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
The more I read your front page article
about how the lady trapped in the fire was
probably intoxicated and all that, I know
you didnt make it up but I really thought
it was in poor taste to publish that in your
paper, especially on the front page. What
are her kids gonna think reading that now?
Her parents, her friends? Theres utterly no
reason for that to be made public. Nobody
cares. It didnt cure anything, didnt help
anything, didnt fix anything. I think its
horrible you did that. Ive just lost all faith
in you and your newspapers. Thats just too
much trying to sell newspapers with crap
like that. Ive heard other people that died
and had autopsies and you never read this
about them, course they may be a little
richer.
Defund the UN, demand accountability
Weve come a long way from Daniel
Patrick Moynihan excoriating the U.N.s
1975 Zionism is racism resolution in one of
the finer exhibits of righteous indignation in
the history of American speechifying.
The Obama administration acceded to
— and, reportedly, assisted behind the scenes
— a less notorious but still noxious Security
Council resolution condemning Israeli settlements. By the administrations lights, the
action is clever — it will be extremely difficult
to reverse and will increase Israels international isolation.
But the bipartisan outrage over a resolution that, once again, demonstrates the
U.N.s hostility to our closest ally in the
Middle East affords an opportunity to force
an overdue crisis in the U.S.-U.N. relationship. We are the chief funder of a swollen,
unaccountable U.N apparatus that has been
a gross disappointment going on more than
70 years now.
We came up with the idea for the United
Nations. Franklin Roosevelt thought that the
Four Policeman of Britain, the United States,
the Soviet Union and China would keep the
peace in the post-World War II world. This
vision immediately foundered on the reality
of power politics. The first major event in the
U.N.s life after the Security Council began
meeting in New York City was a threatened
Soviet walk-out.
It turned out that states with different
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
interests and values werent going to act as
a band of righteous international enforcers.
In fact, as demonstrated in Rwanda and
the Balkans, when confronted by hideously
predatory forces bent on mayhem and murder, U.N. peacekeepers would simply stand
aside.
In the decades after the U.N.s founding,
the influence of Third World dictatorships
grew, and so did the institutions anti-Western and anti-Israel orientation, culminating in the Zionism resolution. That vote
was finally reversed in 1991, but prejudice
against Israel has become one of the U.N.s
core competencies — as well as impenetrable
bureaucracy.
We pay more than anyone else to keep
the U.N. in business, about 22 percent of the
U.N.s regular budget. As Brett Schaefer of
The Heritage Foundation notes, the U.S. is
assessed more than 176 other U.N. member
states combined.
Its hard to even know how much the U.S.
pays in total, but its probably around $8
billion a year. We should withhold some significant portion of it, and demand an end to
the U.N.s institutional hostility to Israel and
the implementation of reforms to increase
the organizations accountability. There are
individual U.N. agencies that do good work,
and we can continue to support those.
Realistically, though, the U.N. will always
be a disappointment. The fact is that the closest thing to what FDR envisioned in the U.N.
is NATO, a like-minded group of nations
that has been a force for peace, order and
freedom. This is why President-elect Donald
Trump should embrace NATO and turn his
critical eye to the U.N., where there is the
genuine opportunity to, if nothing else, save
the U.S. some money and rattle the cages of
people taking advantage of our beneficence.
Charles de Gaulle dismissively called the
U.N. the thing. The thing will always stumble on, but maybe Donald Trump can teach it
a lesson or two about how we truly value our
ally and its nemesis, Israel.
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
That freshman caucus might make its first
priority figuring out a chant or a bumper
sticker that implores Kansans to disregard
their votes in their first year in office, and
decide on re-election based on the second
year of their terms.
Politically, the other track in which the
Legislature becomes sharply divided is for
those newbies to decide that the returning
legislators caused the problem with their
votes for tax cuts, and tax hikes to fill in the
hole the cuts created, and see whether voters
will toss out all the experienced lawmakers.
It can be done on a new/old decision by voters in two (House) and four (Senate) years.
And, it will give the candidates for governor
in 2018 something to campaign on.
Or, without the new/old lawmaker gambit,
theres a strictly party-line option. Now that
Democrats have increased their numbers in
each chamber (by a dozen in the House for
a new 85R/40D count, and narrowly in the
Senate, to a new 31R/9D count), Democrats
could simply vote to tax LLCs and then quit
Contact Your
Legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
email pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521. Fax: (202) 228-6966
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep. Lynn
Jenkins
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
What kind of legislative session will we see?
Statehouse insiders, and probably even
Kansans who dont follow state government
activity as a condition of probation, are figuring it may take two, maybe three weeks to
determine whether were looking at a strictly
political 2017 Legislature or a hold-your-nose
and fix the problem session.
Now, the politics are fun, the strategies
intriguing, but at some point, we must
remind ourselves that we live in Kansas.
The options are relatively simple. Its trim
the budget, raise revenues (thats the word
lawmakers like to use instead of taxes) and
still provide for the education, health, highways, public safety and such that we expect
state government to take care of. Or, its
not vote for anything unpleasant, shift the
current responsibilities of state government
to cities and counties, and talk about local
control.
Frankly, at this point, nobody is sure
which way the Legislature is going to go. It
appears Gov. Sam Brownback is taking himself out of the picture, with a budget that was
held secret until his State of the State address
and his now familiar Its the Legislatures
responsibility to balance the budget mantra.
So, what happens?
Theres some interest in those new legislators starting their own caucus, and since
most of them were elected on the widely
popular premises (a premise is just shy of a
promise) they are going to put taxes back on
Limited Liability Corporations (LLCs) and
improve school funding, they may be key
players. Orthey might decide that they are
not going to get re-elected if they make some
votes that will inconvenience their constituents.
It was interesting to read in the Phone Forum
this week the comments from the caller about
the county emergency department getting all
the grants and matching funds and constantly
getting new equipment and so on. Its interesting because if you look at that you can
understand how our government continues to
grow and grow and grow and taxes go up and
up and up, but I ask you does anything really
ever change? Does your insurance premiums
for your house ever go down because your fire
department got a new ladder truck or a new
whatever? Sure we want good equipment to
keep people safe but wheres the end to it? You
end up with a bunch of really good equipment sitting around having to be maintained
and having to train people to use it and that
all costs money. And the other part of the
matching funds that goes to buy these things,
lets remember, its not free. It has to be paid
by state or federal taxes or something from
somewhere. It might be free to the county but
you know we paid for it all somewhere. I dare
the paper to go back 20 years and look at what
the county budget was then and the property
valuation and property taxes and then compare it to what it is this last go-round. Lets
see whats grown the most and what probably
hasnt grown at all. I bet you would be surprised. Thank you.
voting.
Huh? Yes, theres a political undercurrent
among some Democrats that Republicans
have run the state since conservative
Brownbacks first term and Democrats are
going to sit politely and quietly and watch
Republicans fight each other to get the budget balanced.
That might make Republicans the only
legislators with their DNA on the unpleasant
budget fixes and tax increases needed. It
would make Democrats look pretty un-involved in the business of state government,
but ready to point at the Republicans for
the pain needed to heal the budget. Or, of
course, it also would mean Republicans take
credit for fixing the budget, and, they, not
Democrats, fixed things.
This 2017 can go several different ways,
depending on how key players decide they
want to go with it, and whether there are new
members who are first interested in fixing
the state and then considering, after their
first jobs where someone else will buy their
lunch and probably drinks, how their votes
are going to look on a campaign palm card in
a couple years.
Were figuring we may be able to tell
which road the Legislature will take in two
or three weeks.
Its going to take longer than figuring out
whether that first date is going to lead to anything, but then, that date didnt determine
state tax policy, did it?
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC
of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of
Hawvers Capitol Reportto learn more about
this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 225-6601
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
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AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
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., 2016.
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, January 10, 2017
5A
LOCAL
Do not put your Central Heights honor rolls announced
salvation at risk
Thomas Goodwin an English
Puritan theologian and preacher of the 16th century made
the following statement. Stop
depending on your own feelings
and performance for peace with
God. Rest in Christ. The one
thing that is the most difficult
for people to let go of is their
independence. There is a lot of
pride in most of us which manifests itself in our desire to be
independent.
I can understand how people can feel they are totally in
charge of their lives when they
are awake but how can this be
the case when they are asleep.
The situation can become even
more critical when we are
affected by some circumstance
beyond our control such as
sickness, loss of a loved one or
an accident. If we truly had
control of our lives we would
certainly avoid these issues or
schedule them when we could
best deal with them.
The Apostle Paul provides
us with a good example. Saul,
who later became the Apostle
Paul, had every reason to feel
like he was in control of his life.
In Philippines 3:4-6, Paul says,
If anyone else thinks he has
reasons to put confidence in the
flesh, I have more: circumcised
on the eighth day according
to Jewish law, of the people of
Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin,
a Hebrew of Hebrews; with
regard to the law a Pharisee; as
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
for zeal persecuting the church;
as for legalistic righteousness,
faultless.
Paul was depending on his
feelings and his performance
to achieve his salvation. On a
journey to Damascus to arrest
followers of the Way Paul met
Jesus Christ and his life was
transformed.
Paul says in
Philippines 3:7, concerning his
prior life. But whatever was to
my profit I now consider loss for
the sake of Christ.
We must learn to find our
rest in Christ. Jesus tells us in
John 14:6, I (Jesus) am the way,
and the truth, and the life. No
one comes to the Father except
through me. Peace with God
comes through a relationship
with Jesus Christ. Christ died
on the cross taking our sins
upon himself and at the same
time transferring his perfect
righteousness to us which
makes you and I, sinners,
acceptable to God. Christ made
peace with God for us through
his death and resurrection. To
ignore this is to put ones salvation at risk.
Central Heights Elementary and
Middle Schools have announced honor
rolls for the second quarter, and for the
second semester at the middle school.
Central Heights Elementary
Principals Honor Roll (3.7 gpa): Nash
Cardell, Emma Cubit, Drake Weber,
Colton Caswell, Chrome McCleary,
Ridge Smith.
Honor Roll (3.3 gpa): Caden Newell,
Ashlend Roehl, Kennedy Thao, Gabe
McMechan, Maisy Moore, Ethan Rowan,
Ana Williams.
Central Heights Middle School
Second Quarter
All As
Eighth Grade: Cass Burroughs,
Luke Cotter, Nikita dAugereau, Emily
Hale, Cheyenne Higbie, Dylan Kimball,
Faith Mildfelt, Leah Swartley, Isaiah
Thao.
Seventh Grade: Brock Clifton, Taryn
Compton, Lily Roll.
Sixth Grade: Luke Brown, Luke
Burkdoll, Ely Burroughs, Jacey Clancy,
Trey Hamblin, Emma Jumet, AnneLeese
Thao.
Principals Honor Roll
Eighth Grade: Thomas David Craft
III, Luke Detwiler, Tessa Evans, Reagan
Lee, Crais McGurk, Caelie Mills.
Seventh Grade: Kierstyn Blaufuss,
Kaydance Bond, David Krone, Rylee
McCurry, Lily Meyer, Grace Wilson.
Sixth Grade: Lydia Burbank,
Benjamin Detwiler, Chase Jamison,
Lilie Johnson, Leo Kirkland, Chloe
LaDuke, Aiden Welch.
Honor Roll
Eighth Grade: Alyssa Beets, Alex
Bellinger, Orvel Broce, Cheyanne
Burnett, Brady Burson, Jadon Crawford,
Jarod Crawford, Mikaela Dock,
Anna Farris, Lucas Herman, Phoebe
Hutchinson, Jarrett Lee, Chloe Moore,
Joseph Roberts, Mary Roehl, Sarenitty
Siefkas, Kaylee Stone, Anna Thompson,
Mya Williams.
Seventh Grade: Alexis Bowker,
Christopher Burris, Tyler Calvert,
Anthony Detwiler, Jennifer Hale, Alexis
Haynes, Emma Loewen, Dominic Lopez,
Cameron Peel, Austin Richardson,
Sheridan Weber.
Sixth Grade: Bailey Brockus, Taylor
Chrisjohn, Mieka Crump, Tyler Emert,
Ryan Hale, Erykah Haynes, Carlee
Johnson, Christian Johnson, Kaden
Krone, Ashtyn New-Reeves, Tynan NewReeves, Jessy Stalford, Carson Wood.
Second Semester
All As
Eighth Grade: Cass Burroughs,
Luke Cotter, Nikita dAugereau, Emily
Hale, Cheyenne Higbie, Dylan Kimball,
Faith Mildfelt, Isaiah Thao.
Seventh Grade: Kaydance Bond,
Brock Clifton, Lily Meyer, Lily Roll.
Sixth Grade: Luke Brown, Luke
Burkdoll, Ely Burroughs, Jacey
Clancy, Trey Hamblin, Emma Jumet,
Leo Kirkland, AnneLeese Thao, Aiden
Welch.
Principals Honor Roll
Eighth Grade: Luke Detwiler, Tessa
Evans, Kennz McCleary, Crais McGurk,
Caelie Mills, Leah Swartley.
Seventh Grade: Kierstyn Blaufuss,
Taryn Compton, Anthony Detwiler,
Rylee McCurry.
Sixth Grade: Benjamin Detwiler,
Chase Jamison, Lilie Johnson.
Honor Roll
Eighth Grade: Alyssa Beets,
Cheyanne Burnett, David Thomas Craft
III, Anna Farris, Reagan Lee, Joseph
Roberts, Mary Roehl, Kaylee Stone, Mya
Williams.
Seventh Grade: Alexis Bowker,
Jennifer Hale, David Krone, Cameron
Peel, Austin Richardson, Grace Wilson
Sixth Grade: Bailey Brockus, Lydia
Burbank, Maxson Cannady, Taylor
Chrisjohn, Mieka Crump, Tyler Emert,
Ryan Hale, Erykah Haynes, Carlee
Johnson, Christian Johnson, Kaden
Krone, Chloe LaDuke, Ashtyn NewReeves, Tynan New-Reeves, Carson
Wood.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Duplicate bridge played
Steve Brodmerkle and Anita
Dennis won the duplicate
bridge match January 4th in
Garnett. Charles and Peggy
Carlson placed second. Lynda
Feuerborn and Faye Leitch
came in third.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all
bridge players Wednesdays at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
Greeley announces honor
rolls for quarter, semester
Greeley Grade School has
released its honor rolls for the
second quarter and first semester.
The following students are
on the Honor roll for the second
quarter of the 2016-2017 school
year:
All As
Sixth Grade: Emma Schaffer
Fifth Grade: Preston Kueser,
Alex Schaffer
Third Grade: Isaac Richards,
Zach Schaffer, Brooklyn
Strobel
A/B
Sixth Grade: Reggi Lickteig,
Bryce
McCurdy,
Lane
Richards, Tayven Sutton
Fifth Grade: Kyson Hayes,
Brendan Teal, Cadence Wilper
Fourth Grade:
Dalton
Howard
Third Grade: Sam Parris,
Opportunity to own a piece of history right off the town square. One big commercial space or easily divide into two store fronts. Run your own business or
rent for investment income. Lots of work already started upstairs to have a nice
upstairs apartment. Options endless as to how you can make money and enjoy
owning this great property! Only asking $37,500! And owner says all reasonable
offers will be considered. Call Chris at Property Source, LLC, with any questions
or to set up a time to take a closer look at (785) 418-5435.
Mitchell Richards, Braelyn
Sutton
The following students are
on the Honor Roll for the first
semester of the 2016-2017 school
year:
All As
Sixth Grade: Emma Schaffer
Fifth Grade: Preston Kueser,
Alex Schaffer
Third Grade: Zach Schaffer
A/B
Sixth Grade: Reggi Lickteig,
Bryce
McCurdy,
Lane
Richards, Tayven Sutton
Fifth Grade: Kyson Hayes,
Brendan Teal, Cadence Wilper
Fourth Grade:
Dalton
Howard
Third Grade: Sam Parris,
Isaac Richards, Mitchell
Richards, Brooklyn Strobel,
Braelyn Sutton
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AD- Fix up this 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath home just the
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VIEWS-VIEWS – 10 acres, Big hillside, water meter included,
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LOCATION – 8.5 Acres, Corner on 59 Hwy., close to Princeton,
Central Heights Schools, Water Meter Included. $37,500.
Princeton Goal Busters
4-H Club has meeting
The monthly meeting of
the Princeton Goal Busters
4-H club was called to order
on December 5th at 7:00 P
M. Morgan Jilek called the
meeting to order. Flag salute
and songs were led by Max
Cannady, Addison Ouellette,
and Jayley Ferguson. Roll call
was answered by your favorite past Christmas present
and we had 31 members, 14
parents, and one leader present. Kamryn Stinebaugh read
the secretary minutes and gave
the 4-H council report. Megan
Davis is the new 4-H Council
reporter.
During the community service report we decided to go
ring the Salvation Army bells.
The 4-H Sunday committee
reported that they will be setting up a time for us to come.
Club T-shirts are in and
can be paid for and picked up.
Dylan Kimball moved that the
club pay for half the cost of
the t-shirts. Max Cannady seconded and the motion passed.
State fair premiums must be
picked up at the extension
office. Livestock premiums will
be mailed from Hutchinson.
Our theme was to wear ugly
Christmas attire and we had 11
participants.
For our programs we collected gloves for Hope House
and made goodie trays for our
clubs supporters. We also
packaged non-perishable food
items to give to our two adopted families. Kamryn and Karlie
Stinebaugh will be giving programs next month. Taylor Jilek
moved to adjourn the meeting
and Winston Ogle seconded.
Meeting was adjourned. Our
next meeting will be held on
January 9th at 7:00 PM at the
Princeton Methodist church.
Submitted by: Karlie
Stinebaugh, Reporter
BEST BUY – 7.5 Acres, just outside Ottawa, paved road,
area of nicer and newer homes. Bank Owned Bargain. Price
Reduced, Only $22,900 $21,900.
Need to sell? Just call, well get it done!
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
2×5
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This house has a lot of new! New paint inside and out. New roof and
gutters. New flooring in the kitchen and in the master bath. Large family
room with carpet and ceiling fan. Eat-in kitchen with lots of cabinets. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths. Extra room next to the kitchen. 1 car attached
garage. Very shaded backyard. Close to city park. $76,900.
Very neat ranch style home, with a complete and open floor plan! This house
recently received new flooring, has a fairly new roof and a freshly stained privacy
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On the edge of town! Beautiful ranch home with 3 bedrooms, 1.5
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softener. Laminate hickory wood floors. Laundry room & a large walk-in
pantry. Family RM/brick fireplace. Basement rec. room & 2nd fireplace.
Also has a den or another bedroom. Covered patio. Outdoor sink. 5+
acres of timber. So much more! $225,000.
Beautiful, well taken care of home with all kinds of storage. 2 beautiful brick fireplaces, one with granite hearth, 1 gas & 1 wood burning,
bar downstairs, 2 sump pumps. All appliances stay with home. Nice deck
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Ask about our Real Estate Auction Service 785-448-6191
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
Agents to assist you:
Carla Walter, Broker
(785) 448-7658
114 W. 4th, Garnett
(785) 448-6191
(800) 530-5971
(785) 448-6200
info@garnettrealestate.com
Visit our informative website at:
www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all
MLS listings & more.
Serving our
community for
over 50 years.
Carol Barnes (785) 448-5300
Delton Hodgson (785) 448-6118
Ron Ratliff
(785) 448-8200
Scott Schulte (785) 448-5351
Michelle Ware (785) 214-8489
Ryan Walter
(785) 448-4323
Ginger McLeod (785) 214-2912
Call us for a quote on all of your insurance needs
2×5
AD
$163,500. METICULOUSLY MAINTAINED &
RESTORED HOME offers Historical Charm with
modern amenities to include 3 bedrooms & 2 baths
that were completely gutted & redone. The newly
renovated 1st floor bath includes the laundry. The
kitchen was completely gutted & redone with beautiful
glass fronted, lighted cabinets. Larger formal dining
room. Bright & airy living room has brick tiled fireplace,
small sitting room. 3 bedrooms with original transform
windows above the doors. Original stained glass entry
door. The entrance foyer boasts a beautiful original
chandelier & wood carved staircase. Enjoy the screened
in sun porch with tiled floor. Large back deck for
summertime fun. All hardwood has been refinished.
New plumbing, elec., new furnace & AC, new water
& sewer lines. Original crown molding & doors with
original glass knobs. New roof.
MOVE-IN READY.
$155,750. LOOK AT ALL THE NEW. New wood flooring
in living room, hall, kitchen and dining area. New kitchen
counter tops. Some new paint. Brick fronted ranch has
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Native stone wood-burning
fireplace. Large 2 car garage. 1 car detached garage
with workshop. RV shed. Circle drive. Large beautiful
landscaped corner lot. Seller offering Home Warranty.
$222,500. A BEAUTIFUL SUNRISE AND SUNSET
is an added BONUS with this home. Every morning
you enjoy the front veranda and evenings you enjoy
the backyard/deck. There is an open and airy feel in
this brick ranch home with 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths
and 2120 sq. ft. of living space. Seller is giving a
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Building Lots
Lot on 169 Highway
The Best of Both Worlds. 3.8 Acres located at the edge of town on blacktop.
Great building site for those wanting country, but the convenience of town. $37,500
Lakeview Estate building lot, 1 block from the lake. $17,495
6A
Eagles soar
past Bulldogs
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELLSVILLE The first
week following the holiday
break didnt end well as the
Anderson County Bulldog boys
traveled to Wellsville Friday
and were handled easily, 74-30.
The Eagles didnt waste
any time, virtually putting the
game out of reach after the first
quarter as they erupted out to a
20-5 lead.
The Bulldogs didnt fare as
bad in the second period, but
still went into halftime trailing
39-18.
Wellsville imposed their will
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
SPORTS
in the second half as well as
they outscored the Bulldogs
35-12 to finish out the impressive victory.
The Bulldogs were led by
Trevor Johnston with 7 points
and Denver Welsh was close
behind with 6 points on the
evening.
Box Score
Anderson County 5 13 8 4 – 30
Wellsville 20 19 19 16 – 74
Anderson County Johnston 7,
Welsh 6, Rockers 5, Kueser 4, Spencer
3, Allnutt 3, Rundle 2
Wellsville Smith 16, Powelson 12,
Powelson 11, Sanders 8, Mann 6, Vance
6, Dwyer 5, Crist 4, Kearney 4, Hosford 2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-10-2017 / Photo Submitted
The Anderson County High School eighth grade girls basketball teams have wrapped up their season under coach Travis Persinger. The
A Team had a record of 13-1; they were co-League champs and placed first in their tournament. The B Team had a record of 15-1; they
were League champs and placed second in their tournament. Pictured from left, front row: Axel Roberts, Abbigale Jackson, RJ Wittman,
Kameron Simpson, Maclaine Sears, Aubree Holloran, Lily Gruver, Kaylyn Disbrow; second row: Coach Persinger, Madolyn Honn, Abby
Lickteig, Ellie Pedrow, Hailey Gillespie, Marah Lutz, Cali Foltz, Avey Sumner and Makenzie Kueser. Not pictured: Rayna Jasper and Carla
Williams.
Viking boys fall
Fourth quarter propels Lancers to win
to Mission Valley
BY KEVIN GAINES
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND In a battle of
the Vikings, Mission Valley
used a strong first quarter en
route to a win Friday night
over Central Heights, 61-47 in
boys basketball action.
Mission Valley played well
on both ends of the court over
the games first 8 minutes to
take an early 19-6 lead, which
was too much for Central
Heights to overcome the final
three periods.
In the final three quarters,
Mission Valley kept Central
Heights just at arms length
edging them 42-41 over that
span.
Cole Speaks hit double figures for Central Heights with
12 points.
Box Score
Mission Valley 9 8 14 9 – 40
Central Heights 8 9 4 6 – 27
Mission Valley Gleason 12, Atwood
11, Rudeen 9, Parks 9, Durkes 8, Phillips
5, Godfrey 5, Wendland 2
Central Heights Speaks 12, Meyer
12, Palmer 6, Sommer 5, Seyler 4,
Shields 3, Brotherton 3, Thompson 2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
ARMA Tuesday night,
the Crest Lancer boys kicked
off the new year in winning
fashion with a solid 52-45 victory over the Northeast-Arma
Vikings.
Crest led 16-13 after the first
quarter, but the Vikings flipped
the script in the second with a
12-9 advantage to tie it up at
intermission.
The Vikings had a slim 1
point advantage in the third
quarter to give them the edge
heading into the fourth, 35-34.
Crest warmed up in the final
period with an 18-point outburst to claw out a tough win
on the road over the Vikings.
Hayden Hermreck led the
way offensively for the Lancers
draining 4 out of 6 three pointers en route to 16 points on the
game.
Crest connected on 7 out of
12 from long distance against
the Vikings.
The solid display offensively
was overshadowed by the sloppy play throughout the evening
that led to 25 turnovers, which
allowed NE-Arma to hang
around.
Head coach Travis Hermreck
wasnt overly pleased with the
win but did have plenty of positives for his team to build upon.
It was a good win for us
tonight, albeit an ugly win,
Hermreck stated. Hermeck
added, If ugly is what it
takes for us to win, then thats
alright.
The Lancers put things
together at just the right time
for the Lancers head coach.
We were out of sync all
night and turned it over way
too many times, Hermeck said.
Defensively we werent very
Offense hard to find Lady Bulldogs fall to Wellsville
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND Friday night
the Central Heights Lady
Vikings struggled offensively
in a sluggish 40-27 loss at home
against the Mission Valley
Vikings.
The first half was back and
forth which ended in a 17-17 tie
at intermission.
Central Heights was ice cold
in the second half as Mission
Valley took over by controlling
the third quarter and outscored
Central Heights 14-4.
Paige Stockard led the
Vikings with 8 points on the
evening.
Box Score
Mission Valley 9 8 14 9 – 40
Central Heights 8 9 4 6 – 27
Mission Valley Martin 23,
Enzbrenner 6, Halupa 5, Hittle
2, Bond 2, Martin 2
Central Heights Stockard
8, Hettinger 6, Burson 4, Brown
4, Clancy 3, Cotter 2
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELLSVILLE A poor
second quarter went a long
way in deciding the outcome
of the Anderson County Lady
Bulldogs loss to the Wellsville
Eagles Friday night as they
dropped the game 49-35.
The Bulldogs trailed 8-7
starting the second quarter,
but were limited to just 5 points
for the period while the Eagles
tallied 13 to take a 21-12 lead
Lady Lancers overcome Crest girls
edge Moran
early deficit for win
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
ARMA Just a couple of
days into the new year and the
Crest Lady Lancers are hoping
they can build on a come-frombehind win over the NortheastArma Vikings last Tuesday,
60-54.
Arma held a 19-9 first period lead, but the Lady Lancers
didnt let the early deficit derail
them and flipped the initiative
to outscore the Vikings 19-10 in
the second to cut the halftime
deficit to 29-28.
The momentum continued
for the Lancers coming out of
the halftime break. Once again
they notched 19 points for
the period while limiting the
Vikings to just 9. The Vikings
chipped away at the lead late,
but Crest was able to hold on
for a hard fought, 6-point victory.
Laurel Godderz notched 21
points to lead the Lady Lancers.
Box Score
Crest 9 19 19 13 – 60
NE Arma 19 10 9 16 – 54
Crest L. Godderz 21, Golden 14, R.
Godderz 11, McGhee 10, Strickler 4
NE Arma Choate 23, M. Walker 11,
A. Walker 8, Watson 8, Zornes 4
Lancers win third straight
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY The Crest
Lancers jumped up early on
the Marmaton Valley Wildcats
and rode their early success to
a 63-55 victory.
Coming into the season,
Head Coach Travis Hermreck
knew his young squad would
struggle early on in the season
and after opening the season
with four straight defeats, he
was spot on.
Now that his Lancers have
won the past three games,
Coach Hermreck likes what he
is seeing but also understands
his boys still have plenty to
improve on going forward.
Crest led 19-8 after the first
quarter and stretched that lead
out to 37-20 at intermission.
The Wildcats did claw their
way back into the game in the
second half, but the Lancers
wouldnt allow the comeback to
be completed.
A solid evening shooting free
throws helped them close out
the win. The Lancers connected on 20 of their 27 attempts,
which was good for 74%.
Hayden Hermreck led the
way for the Lancers again with
20 points.
Box Score
Marmaton Valley 8 12 14 21 – 55
Crest 19 18 8 18 – 63
Marmaton Valley Pugh 22, Elliot 19,
Griffith 6, Wise 6, Hall 2
Crest Hermreck 20, Seabolt 10,
Stephens 9, Hendrix 8, Vaughn 8, Berry
8
2×4
yutzy
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
MORAN The Crest Lady
Lancers held their momentum
from a scrappy win over NE
Arma in the first days back
from the Christmas break to
best Marmaton Valley 42-40 in
the weeks local 1A girls basketball finale.
A 9-9 first period stalemate
saw Crest edge ahead by a basket 20-18 at the half, and keep
the lead by a nose through the
second half to the buzzer.
Crest
Miranda Golden 5 (0) 0-2 10pts,
Laurel Godderz 4 (0) 0-0 8 pts, Regan
Godderz 2 (0) 4-9 8pts, Callie McGhee
1 (1) 1-4 6pt, Jewel Armstrong 1 (1)
0-0 5pts, Makayla Jones 1 (0) 1-1 3pts,
Cassie Bowen 1 (0) 0-2 2 pts.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
into intermission.
Wellsville was able to fend
off the Bulldogs in the second
half by narrowly winning the
third and fourth quarters for a
28-23 second half advantage.
Anderson County was led
by the trio of Emily Fritz,
Adrianna Pedrow and Alexis
Feuerborn who all scored 6
points on the night.
35
Box Score
Anderson County 7 5 8 15 –
Wellsville 8 13 11 17 – 49
Anderson County Fritz 6,
Pedrow 6, Feuerborn 6, Ratliff
5, Lickteig 4, Lybarger 4,
Lickteig 4
Wellsville Aamolb 19,
Dwyer 18, Patton 4, McDaniel 3,
McDaniel 3, McCoy 2
3×10
acllen regional hospital
solid until the fourth quarter.
I was proud of how we pinned
our ears back and got some
stops late.
Box Score
Crest 16 9 9 18 – 52
NE Arma 13 12 10 10 – 45
Crest Hermreck 16, Vaughn
12, Hendrix 10, Berry 8, Seabolt
4, Stephens 2
NE Arma McDowell 16,
Cleland 9, Cashero 7, Dale 6,
Adkins 5, Dugan 2
1×2
AD
Karen Gillespie,
now 40 years old,
was born when roads
were drifted with snow.
She is sweet, full of fun,
music, sports and
nice to know.
Happy Birthday!
Love, Your Schmidt Family
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, January 10
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4:30 p.m. – Central Heights
Booster Club Walking Tacos
4:30 p.m. – ACHS basketball at
home with Prairie View
4:45 p.m. – Central Heights
wrestling at home with
West Franklin
5:30 p.m. – Central Heights
Elementary FAST
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
Wednesday, January 11
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Central Heights
Booster Club
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
Thursday, January 12
Central Heights Middle School
basketball tournament at
Mission Valley
5 p.m. – Crest Middle School
basketball at Uniontown
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
Friday, January 13
5 p.m. – Central Heights wrestling
at home for Randy Hinderliter
Duals
6 p.m. – Crest basketball
at home with Altoona
Saturday, January 14
Central Heights Middle School
basketball tournament at
Mission Valley
7 a.m. to 9 a.m. – Breakfast at
the Garnett VFW
Monday, January 16
No school, USDs 288, 365
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
5 p.m. – Westphalia basketball at
home with Pleasanton
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
6:30 p.m. – Bear (third grade)
Den Cub Scouts meeting
USD 288 Central Heights Board
of Education
Central Heights at basketball
tournament at Emporia all week
Tuesday, January 17
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4 p.m. – ACJH boys basketball
at Osawatomie
ACHS varsity boys basketball
at Baldwin Tournament
Wednesday, January 18
ACHS FFA Speech/Ag Sales
8 a.m. – Mont Ida spelling bee
10 a.m. – Westphalia spelling bee
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
Noon – Birthday dinner at Garnett
Senior Center, with
entertainment. RSVP to
(785) 448-6996 the day before.
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-17-2016 / Photo Submitted
Above, Carla Ewert of Four Winds Chapter of the National Society
of the Daughters of the American Revolution presents the chapters
Community Service Award to Edna Henderson.
At right, Iona Sweers gives a program on tea etiquette.
Four Winds group has
Christmas Tea Party
The Four Winds Chapter
of the National Society of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution held its Christmas
Tea Party on December 10, 2016
at the Garnett Public Library.
There were 33 people in attendance. The meeting was not a
formal business meeting, but
rather served as an opportunity to honor members of our
community and chapter, while
providing a fun holiday social
for members.
During the meeting, Edna
Henderson was honored as
the recipient of the Chapters
Community Service Award.
Henderson has been a volunteer for KCK Huggers, Inc./
Special Olympics for 24 Years.
She has served in various
capacities during her tenure
with the Huggers, from coaching to serving on the Board
of Directors. Henderson gives
opportunities for individuals
she coaches to experience a
variety of activities, providing
them with a sense of independence and self-worth. In addition to her work with the KCK
Huggers, Henderson actively creates and distributes an
informational treat bag during
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month to females in the community.
Following the presentation of the community service
award, Clara Ann Kempnich
and Marilyn Beck were recognized for having been members of the NSDAR for 10 years.
The program for the meeting
was given by Iona Sweers, and
introduced all in attendance
to proper tea etiquette. Tea,
refreshments, and fellowship
concluded the meeting.
Librarys winter adult
reading program returns
Need a break? Want to get
away? Its that time of year.
The Garnett Public Library is
sponsoring its 16th year of our
adult reading program Winter
Getaway XVI. This years program begins Monday, January
23rd and runs through Friday,
March 3rd.
This years plans include
a kick-off party Monday,
January 23rd at 7 p.m. in
the Archer Room here at the
library. There will be refreshments served, an explanation
of the program, a get acquainted activity and a prize or two.
Everyone eighteen years of age
and older is welcome to participate. On Monday, February
13th at 6:15 p.m. there will be
a midway event. The Winter
Getaway Program will conclude on Friday, March 3rd
with a celebration party on
Monday, March 6th at 7 p.m. in
the Archer Room at the library.
We want to encourage adults
to read. If you are already
a reader or havent read in
awhile, come join the fun. This
event is designed to allow a
reader to choose their own
material and their own pace.
A minimum of five books read
will make you eligible for the
grand prize drawing.
Mark your calendar, make
your plans and join the group.
Any questions, call the Garnett
Public Library at 448-3388.
Library to discuss Where
Lilacs Still Bloom book
The Garnett Public Library
will hold their book discussion
on Wednesday, January 25th
at 7 p.m. in the Archer Room
at the library. They are held
on the fourth Wednesday of
each month. This months book
is Where Lilacs Still Bloom
by Jane Kirkpatrick. After
twenty-six years of living on
Starvation Lane on a remote
ranch in Oregon, Kirkpatrick
and her husband Jerry, moved
back to Bend, Oregon. Where
Lilacs Still Bloom is Janes
twenty-second book, her nineteenth novel. She has two lilacs
from Hulda Klagers garden.
Leading our discussion will be
Paulabeth Henderson.
Based on the life of Hulda
Klager, Where Lilacs Still
Bloom is a story of triumph
over seemingly insurmount-
able odds and the power of a
generous heart. One woman,
an impossible dream, and the
faith it takes to see it through.
German immigrant and farm
wife Hulda Klager possesses only an eighth-grade educationand a burning desire
to create something beautiful.
What begins as a hobby to create an easy-peeling apple for
her pies becomes Huldas driving purpose: a time-consuming
interest in plant hybridization
that puts her at odds with family and community, as she challenges the early twentieth-century expectations for a simple
housewife.
The books are available
for checkout at the library.
Notification is posted in case of
cancellation.
3×10.5
walmart
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
LOCAL
Christmas is busy time for family visiting in Colony
UMC
Scripture at New Years
United Methodist Church services were Psalm 72:1-7, 10-14,
Isaiah 60:1-6, Ephesians 3:1-12
and Matthew 2:1-12. Pastor
Dorothy Welch presented the
sermon, Reveal.
Jolly Dozen
Club members held their
Christmas meal Dec. 19 at the
City Hall Community Room
with eleven members and six
guests. Following the meal,
bingo was played. Everyone
received a gift by drawing a
number. January 16 meeting
will be at the home of Twila
Luedke.
4-H
Seekers Not Slackers Club
celebrated the holiday at their
Dec. 11 meeting held at the
Lone Elm Community building. The event started off with
4-H members putting together
fruit baskets to be delivered to
local 4-H supporters. Then all
enjoyed a pot luck dinner.
Roll call was answered by
a Favorite Christmas Carol.
The flag salute and 4-H Pledge
was led by Blaine King. Song
leaders Owen Thompson and
Gunner Ellington led the
group in singing Frosty The
Snowman. Highlights from
the December meeting include
a review of important dates to
remember and the club deciding to participate in a model
meeting at county club days in
March. In addition, the Adopt
an Angel items were delivered
and a collection of food items
and toys were brought to the
meeting by 4-H members to
donate for a community service project. After the meeting
4-H members and their families
played Bingo.
The next club meeting will
be Jan. 16 at 7 p.m. at the Lone
Elm Community Building.
Tyler Gillespie, reporter
Around Town
Christmas night guests at
the home of Greg, Terri and
Tiffany Jackman were: Luke,
Jessica, Kallie, Kamrie, and
Karlie Feuerborn, Garnett;
Andrew, Crystal, Arabella,
Aydan, Mathew and Calan,
Richmond; Zachary, Linsey
and Emmilene Jackman,
Dean Hamm, Decker and
Sandy Spillman, Jeff, Missy
Katrina and Kaden Strickler,
all of Colony; Devin Davidson,
Humboldt; Tanner Strickler,
Wisconsin; Vance, Barbara,
Mayson and Ethan Spillman,
Texas; Dollene Jackman,
Humboldt; Shane, Rita, Kayla,
Hannah and Erin Drybread,
Buffalo.
Jay and Virginia Dutton
were Christmas guests of their
daughter and family, Jim and
Jane Miller, Garnett. Their
son, David, Granger, Ill. Is visiting in the area and will spend
New Years with his parents.
Dennis Allen who underwent heart surgery Nov. 30
at the Kansas Heart Hospital,
Wichita is recovering well at
his home, but will be off his
work several more weeks. His
family has been busy helping with farm chores. Holly
Ellington has been substitute
as well as other relief carriers
in his mail route.
Christmas Eve Day former
resident, Myrtle Francis now
resident of Greystone Manor
Iola, had lunch in Iola with
her daughter Janila Preston,
Uniontown. Myrtle enjoys
Promote: Write your
business life story
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
Calendar
11-Rural
Water
District
No, 5 board meeting, board
office, 7:30 p.m.; 16-Seekers
Not Slackers 4-H Club, Lone
Elm, Community building, 7
p.m.; Jolly Dozen Club, 7 p.m.;
17-Library board meeting, City
Hall Community Room, 5:30
p.m.
School Calendar
13-No School, high school basketball at Liberal, MO; 12-middle school basketball at Crest
vs. St. Paul, 5 p.m.; 17-high
school basketball at Liberal,
MO.
Meal Site
11-chicken kiev, augratin potatoes, Mediterranean veggies,
roll, raisin pudding; 13-baked
catfish, peas, macaroni and
cheese, bread, cherry crisp;
16-Martin Luther King Day,
kitchen closed. Phone 620-8523457 for meal reservation
Christian Church
Scripture at New Years
service was Rev. 1:1-3. Pastor
Andrews Zolls sermon- Why
Care about Revelations. (This
is the beginning of a study of
the book of Revelations) Cross
training Classes at 9:30 a.m.
each Sunday. Worship Service
at 10:a.m. Mens Bible Study
Tuesday Morning, 7 a.m.; Jan.
8-Church potluck lunch at the
City Hall Community Room
following church service; Jan.
11Working Wonders CWC, 7
p.m..
Cowboy Church
High Point Cowboy Church
was excited to welcome 32
worshippers Sunday morning,
January 1, for the inaugural
service in 2017.
Pastor Jon Petty introduced
himself, his wife, Becky, and
other staff members to the
crowd before sharing his personal testimony and the vision
God gave him to start churches Praise and worship music
was provided by Eldon Wright,
Billy and Cindy Beckman.
Okay, so youre no Mark
Twain or Ernest Hemmingway
or Stephen King, but you can
still write the life story of your
business in an exercise you
will end up loving and which
in the end, will help you sell
stuff.
Lots of people get all freaked
out when you tell them you
want them to write but dont
sweat this unlike all the bad
grammar and misspellings
and pictures of food you see on
Facebook, no one ever has to
see this but you.
How long? It doesnt matter.
I just want you to tell your
story. Stop when you feel like
youve covered it. Approach it
like youre telling this story to
your grandkids, except continue through all the way to the
end, or until youve gone as far
as now.
I dont do this with the intention youll publish it and sell a
million copies or sell the movie
rights to Hollywood and end up
with Tom Cruise playing you
in the lead role; I ask you to do
this because its an exercise in
concentration. It also reminds
and reaffirms to you what
makes your business good and
illustrates ways to make it better.
Just try it. Write single sentences if you want they dont
really even have to connect to
the ones that follow. Shouldnt
take any more than half an
hour an hour tops if youre
really into it.
How did you get here? Did
your car break down in front of
a pizza place once, so you decided youd open one of your own?
Did your father pass away and
you saw first hand the value of
life insurance, so you opened an
agency? Did you always have a
knack for taking things apart
and putting them back together? Somehow, theres a trail
leading back from right now
in your business and it leads to
what you were; go back there,
now with the advantage of later
years perspective, and tell me
what circumstances put you
here.
Who helped you? Was it a
teacher? A stranger? A mentor?
A spouse? What did he/she do
for you that you couldnt do or
didnt know how to do for your-
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
the wonderful memory of her
birthday open house her family gave her, all in a book she
can enjoy again and again. She
so much appreciates all that
attended, cards, calls, wonderful memories all in a book put
together for her by her family.
Guests Christmas Eve
Wallace and Delores Strickler
hosted a pizza evening meal
with their children Denise
and Larry Gilmore, rural Iola,
Garret and Shelly Strickler,
rural Colony. Later their children Denise Gilmore, Garret
and Shelly Strickler and son
Darrell provided an overnight
stay in Kansas City. Denise,
Garret and Shelly accompanied
them but Darrell was unable to
attend.
Christmas Day the families
of Doris Church held a get-together at the home of her son,
Jody Church, Colony. Her
daughters, Patty Jo Ramsey,
Kincaid, Linda Ellis, LaCygne,
Susan Luedke, Colony and their
spouses, also son Jody attended
and some of the grandchildren
and great grandchildren.
Thelma Cullers son Dr.
James Smart and Emily,
LaHarpe spent Christmas Eve
day with her. Her son Jerald
Smart, Scipio also joined them.
Holiday food and gift exchange
was enjoyed. Christmas Day
Thelma was a guest at the home
of Dr. James Smart and Emily.
His daughter Annie Davis and
baby son Louk Troy, Moran
were guests, also Van Smart,
Cedar Rapids, Iola, and Nathan
Smart, Manhattan.
Word has been received of
the death of Pauline Kelley
Alexander, Little Rock, Ark.
She passed away Jan. 1. She
was a 1963 Colony graduate.
Funeral services were held
Jan. 7 at Smith-North Little
Rock Funeral Home; entombment in Rest Hills Memorial
Park.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-10-2017 / Courtesy Photo
Crests 14 year old, 9th grader Gregory Hardwick has received his
instructions to the 2017 58th Presidential Inauguration. It includes
what to expect on arrival day, schedule highlights, departure day
reminders, safety and security, important reminders before you
arrive and helpful resources. The leadership summit is held Jan.
18-22.
Gregory has
worked hard, is
a good student,
active in basketball. football
and track. In
addition he is
a member of
Crests Student
C o u n c i l ,
N a t i o n a l
Honors Society
and he plays
the trombone
for the school
band. Donations to help him attend have been appreciated. His
parents, Timothy and Sandy Hardwick and his granddad have been
his good supporters.
In the second photo, from left, Dad Timothy Hardwick, Gregory,
and granddad, Robert (Bob) Hardwick following a fabulous game.
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary & Birth Announcements Business News
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
HOW TO SELL STUFF
ANDERSON
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
self? Why was it important, and
how is it still important today?
Whats changed? No matter
if you just started in business
two weeks ago or if this is your
companys 50th year, somethings not the same as it was
when you started. Youve probably seen numerous changes.
Were they positive or negative?
Did you react right or wrong
to them? What lessons did you
learn?
Why did you make it? Youre
still here, right? So you must
have had some modicum of success in your business. Why do
you think that is? How did you
out-gun the competition? What
was it that made you valuable?
How did you tool yourself up to
serve customers better? How
did you make money materialize to pay bills when it seemed
like the coffers were empty?
What tricks did you have?
What luck did you take advantage of?
What happens now? Are your
customers going to remain
the same? Will your product
change? Will your product
become obsolete? Who will the
competitors be? What changes
do you see a need for, but are
avoiding? Based on facts, what
is your hope for the future?
What is your fear?
As you move through this
exercise with your concentration focused on writing your
answers, you no doubt will
have revelations and brainstorms and ideas. Its like
sharpening a knife, and in the
end it will help you sell stuff!
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to
him at review@garnett-ks.com
or (785) 448-3121.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Sales & Service
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery M-F
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
213 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Millers Construction, Inc.
Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
To advertise in this
contact Stacey at
Cooper Jetzondirectory
Kumho
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
3B
LOCAL
ACHS presents A Night of Shorts: Student-directed plays
Anderson County High School
Drama Club is proud to present its
annual 2017 Student-Directed One-Act
Plays featuring six short one-acts, Tis
Not Me She Loves, Bothered, Cirrius,
Nebraska, Leslie and the Boys, Out
to Lunch, and Fairy Tale Network.
The plays take place beginning at 7
p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, at the ACHS
Auditorium.
In Tis Not Me She Loves by Steven
Stack, the feud between the Hatplains
(Grace Urquhart, Paige Rupp, Katelyn
Phelps) and the McCroys (Jenna
Schmit, Eddie Gruver) has been in
a slump for some time now. Both
families agree that theres only one
way to reignite the feud: a forbidden
love between Romero McCroy (Adam
Kropf) and Julia Hatplain (Samantha
Nickell). A ridiculously fun melodra-
matic comedy thats half Romeo and
Juliet and part Hatfields and McCoys.
Bothered by Colleen Neuman
Elizabeth (Jasmine White) and Mark
(Owen Lutz) are saying good night
at the end of a disastrous first date.
Elizabeth expected an elegant evening
at a French restaurant. Mark took her
to a baseball game. Now, with mustard
down the front of her new silk dress,
Elizabeth reaches her breaking point.
She inflicts on poor Mark a lesson in
how to take a woman out on a date.
Smitten, Mark uses the lesson to get a
second date with Elizabeth.
In Cirrius, Nebraska by Nick
Vigorito, Jr., the town of Cirrius is so
small that the mayor (Nick Lybarger)
is also the judge and the postmaster.
But the secret the townspeople hold
is no small one, as a New York busi-
nessman (Austin Wickwire) discovers
on a trip to the Brigadoon-like town.
After a few meals with the locals at
the bed and breakfast, the stranger
soon finds that while warm and kind,
nobody can take a joke. Through a
string of comically awkward interactions with the tight-lipped townsfolk,
the secret behind the serious mood
comes out… it is against the law to
laugh. When Rose (Averi Wilson), the
local school teacher, tells the stranger
about the fateful day the bizarre law
went into effect, he begins to understand.And in sharing their secret
with a stranger, a glimmer of hope for
change creeps through the gray clouds
that have been hanging over Cirrius
for years.
Leslie and the Boys, by Tim
Mogford, has a funny spin on the pain
and absurdity of young love. Leslie
(Waltham Farren) arrives at Alexs
(Nate Gainer) house to get a male perspective on something. Instead, she
encounters Luke (Virgil Wight), who
has little perspective on anything.
Next is Out to Lunch by Susan
Stepp, three hypocritical women
(Miranda Akes, Kate Dieker, Katelyn
Alley) show you what women really
talk about during a lunch date.
Finally, there is Fairy Tale Network
by John Woodard. The Fairy Tale
Network is a television network that
needs to improve its viewership ratings with exciting new programming.
The three mice (Hayden Hermann,
Becky Kropf, Gabby Spring) working
as creative consultants for the studio
each must come up with a story idea to
pitch to their new chief, the Cat (Lakin
Katzer). And they need to pitch their
ideas fast before they become a fancy
feast! They retell the well-known tales
of Little Red Riding Hood, The Three
Pigs, and Goldilocks and the Three
Bears, but now with new, unexpected
twists.
The plays are directed by Matt
Dieker, Trevor Johnston, Katie
Lybarger, Vicki Markham, Grace
Urquhart, Katelyn Phelps, Austin
Wickwire, Hayden Hermann, Bethany
Powell, Jade Todd, Jasmine White and
Waltham Farren.
The cost to attend is $5.
Performances will take place at
7 p.m. on Saturday, January 14, at
the Anderson County High School
Auditorium. Come out and support
the ACHS Theatre Program!
Chamber plans annual banquet
Garnett Area Chamber
of
Commerce
Annual
Banquet will be held on
Thursday, January 26, 2017
at the Garnett Knights Hall.
Member meeting will begin
at 5:30 p.m., auction at 6 p.m.
with dinner following.
The Chamber is honored
to announce guest speaker, Antonio Soave, Kansas
Secretary of Commerce.
Soave was the chairman and
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-10-2017 / Photo Submitted
This brass Civil War officers button was found while metal detecting on an old dirt road.
Civil War officers
button found
A few years ago I had the
opportunity to metal detect
after several hours of researching my great grandfathers old
homestead. It was while I was
conducting a metal detecting
survey on an old dirt road leading back to this site and near
the small stream crossing, that
I found this brass button. This
button isnt just another old
button, but it is a very unique
and rather rare one.
It is a Civil War officers
button bearing the State Seal of
Wisconsin.
This button depicts a badger
over a shield with symbolism
of agriculture, mining and commerce. It was intended to be
worn by Civil War officers of
units from Wisconsin, a sparsely populated frontier state at
the time. It features a shield
embellished with points at the
top and the badger has a very
large tail.
On the Reverse side are the
words Extra Quality between
two stars and two circular rings
of small dots. Scoville Button
Mfg.Co. produced these buttons
in 1860.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
During the Civil War 18611865 period, each state had
its own coat of arms and with
many, especially the Southern
States, the coat of arms were
very prominently displayed.
This was true not only of battle flags, but also of the design
on belt buckles, cartridge
box plates and especially on
BUTTONS.
If only my old button could
talk. Just when and who was
wearing it at the time it was
lost. My great grandfather
wasnt in the Civil War, but he
had two brothers that were.
Another
wonderful
Anderson County find!
Frontier Extension District
offers help for ag producers
in struggling farm economy
Frontier Extension District
is co-hosting an educational
meeting January 19, 2017 at the
Shawnee County Farm Bureau
Office 3801 SW Wanamaker
Topeka. The meeting Top 10
Considerations to Navigate a
Struggling Farm Economy is
to help farmers and ranchers
make it through these rough
financial times. Registration
will begin at 8:30 a.m. and the
meeting will start promptly
at 9:00 a.m. and last until 3:30
p.m. Please RSVP to Shawnee
County Extension Office at
785.232.0062 or jdomme@ksu.
edu or by calling Rod Schaub,
at the Frontier Extension
District Office in Lyndon at
785.828.4438.
Farmers and ranchers are
currently experiencing one
of the biggest downturns in
history with many parallels
to the 1980s. Kansas Farm
Management
Association
farms recorded a substantial
drop in accrual net farm income
for 2015 with the average net
income at $4,568, down more
than 95% from the net income
level of $128,731 in 2014 and
down from a five-year average
of nearly $120,000. Commodity
outlooks remain pessimistic,
indicating tight financial conditions for farmers into the
future.
This program will focus on a
host of different topics to start
thinking critically about how
the farm operation might withstand these hard times. Each
topic will provide the decision
framework of how to evaluate
what viable options or opportunities exist to become more
efficient and to strengthen the
farm business.
Topics for the day include:
Maintaining Working Capital;
Restructuring Debt; How Long
Can I Afford to Lose Money on
Rented Ground; Opportunities
to Save on Cost of Production;
Getting
Creative
with
Enterprise Diversification;
Managing Machinery Expense;
Safety
Nets
(Marketing,
Insurance, Gov. Payments);
Income Tax Management; Is it
Time to Retire? What about the
Next Generation; and Family
Living Expenses.
If you are interested in
attending please call to reserve
your spot as soon as possible as
space is limited.
CEO of Capistrano Global
Advisory Services (CGA).
In a career spanning more
than 20 years, he has helped
numerous entrepreneurs and
businesses to expand and
grow. He previously served
as an adjunct professor of
international economics and
finance at the Walsh College
of Business in Troy, Mich.
and was an intern in the
White House Office of Public
HIGHBERGER
FROM PAGE 1A
Those are the just physical changes. The county also
instituted a planning and
zoning commission with the
help of former director Larry
Walrod. Highberger said the
zoning department is important to help protect peoples
rights. The department has
been instrumental over the
years to help guide commissioners through controversial
issues like whether to approve
a rock quarry near Garnett
or proposals for dog kennels.
Currently, the zoning commission is weighing rule change on
whether to allow wind farms.
Highberger also recalled
other controversial issues that,
in time, proved beneficial for
the county. That includes a dedicated effort about 10 years ago
that brought in consultants to
make Anderson County wages
competitive with others in the
area.
Im real proud of the workforce. Its real stable, and we
tried to see they got decent
wages and a good benefits package, he said.
But county commissioners didnt always get it right,
Highberger admits.
The church furniture
fiasco. Im not proud of that
at all, he said, referring to
efforts about 20 years ago by
the county and City of Garnett
to help the struggling Garnett
Church Furnishings – at the
time, the oldest manufacturer in Garnett – with financing
to build a new manufacturing
facility. The business ultimately failed, leaving the county
and city holding the debt for an
empty building that eventually
was sold to East Kansas AgriEnergy.
But at the time, Highberger
and other county and city
commissioners wanted to protect the jobs of the people who
worked for the church furniture factory.
We should have just let
them go broke, Highberger
said. Those people still ended
up losing their jobs.
In spite of the wins and losses, a successful county commission is a team, Highberger said.
When you work as a team, you
can weather challenges and
accomplish great things for the
people you represent.
Ive met some really great
people and helped some causes, Highberger said. The
team effort starts with those
three people on the commission.
2×2
AD
During Highbergers tenure, only one of the three seats
changed hands with any sort
of regularity. Highberger fended off a couple of challengers
to consistently retain his post.
Another former longtime commissioner, Dudley Feuerborn,
served alongside Highberger
most of the time except for
four years after he lost an election, only to regain his seat the
next term. Feuerborn retired a
few years ago, and his seat is
now held by Jerry Howarter.
The third seat has been held
by Howard Thompson, Dean
Register, Jim Johnson and now
Les McGhee.
Highbergers seat is now
filled by Dave Pracht, of
Westphalia. Highberger is confident Pracht will be a good
fit for the position. His advice
to Pracht and other future
commissioners is to come in
with an open mind and do your
homework.
Highberger will be watching
as the next commission works
on ongoing projects, such as
installation of a new elevator
at the courthouse and the pending wind farm issue. Hes most
looking forward to seeing a veterans memorial constructed
on the courthouse lawn, a project that has been underway for
years.
I had three brothers in the
service. They all made it back
home. People that served their
country ought to be recognized
for it, he said.
Highberger was born and
raised in Westphalia. He is a
farmer and has raised cattle.
He has five children, 10 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren.
His interest in public service began with serving on the
Westphalia school board in the
late 1960s, and he was part of
the board during the unification of Kansas school districts
in the late 60s and early 70s.
That experience made him
well-prepared for the challenges of the county commission.
Hes also a member of the
St. Teresa Catholic Church in
Westphalia, the Lions Club
and Knights of Columbus. He
plans to continue his work on
the 4th District judge selection
committee. Other than that, he
plans to continue farming and
raising cattle.
I
am
so
blessed,
Highberger said. It was a real
pleasure to serve on the commission, and very rewarding.
Liaisons Department of
Foreign Policy and Defense
under President Ronald
Reagan.
All current and prospective members are encouraged to attend the Annual
Banquet. Current members
can purchase tickets at
the Chamber office for $20,
non-members $25. Corporate
tables of 8 can be purchased
for $160 members, $190
non-members.
Members are also encouraged to utilize FREE marketing by sponsoring a table.
Non-members can sponsor a
table for $20.
For tickets and information please contact the
Garnett Area Chamber of
Commerce at 785.448.6767 or
visit www.garnettchamber.
org.
Hospital auxiliary meets
The Anderson County
Hospital Auxiliary held their
first meeting of 2007 on Jan.2
with 30 members present. New
President Nancy Horn conducted the meeting.
A review of last year projects and new year projects was
discussed by Betty Lybarger.
Officers for the 2017-18 years are
Nancy Horn President, Ruth
Theis, Vice President, Betty
Lybarger, Treasurer, Joen
Truhe, Past President Janice
Hodgson, Member at Large
Pam Howater. Hospital and
Coordinator Karen Gillispie.
The Auxiliary meets every
other month.
Volunteer Members donate
approximately 3,000 hours a
year at the front desk, hospitality desk, RLC Bingo, and silverware wrap.The group does hold
fundraisers to help with hospital projects. Projects include
Christmas and Easter bake
sales. Book sale, Jewelry Sale,
and Mountain Man Candy and
Nuts.
Anyone interested in joining
this active and fun organization, call Nancy Horn or any
member. Your name can be
left with one of the greeters or
hospitality worker at the back
desk.
2×4
AD
Paul Smitheran Annual
OYSTER SUPPER
2×3
c e n t e r vFriedlOysters,
l soups, salads and desserts.
Sat., Jan 14, 2017
5pm – 6:30pm
Centerville
Community Church
Free Will Donation
2×3
allen comm college
4B
CLASSIFIEDS
Notice to settle
Bomberger estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
PROBATE DEPARTMENT
In the Matter of the Estate of
LORETTA BOMBERGER, Deceased.
Case Number 16-PR-36
Chapter 59
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in this Court by JEANNE ELAINE
MEADOR, as an heir at law of LORETTA
BOMBERGER, deceased, praying for determination of the descent of the following described
real estate:
A tract in the SE corner of the Northwest
Quarter (NW1/4) and the Northeast Quarter
(NE1/4) of the Southwest Quarter (SW1/4) of
Section Thirty (30), Township Nineteen (19),
Range Twenty-One (21) in Anderson County,
Kansas, commencing at a point, which is at the
intersection of the west side of Water Street and
the Missouri-Pacific R.R. right-of-way, where
an elm tree stands, also a stone on the East
line of the Southwest Quarter (SW1/4) of Sec.
30, Twp. 19, Rang. 21, thence due North along
the West side of Water Street on the half
section line 118 feet, thence West 141 feet,
thence South 174 feet, thence East 83 feet to
the Prairie Pipe Line Company road, thence
Northeasterly on the West side of said road 87
feet to the place of beginning;
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
the 23rd day of January, 2017, at 9:00 a.m.,
in this Court in Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, at which time and place the cause will
be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and
decree will be entered in due course upon the
petition.
JEANNE ELAINE MEADOR, Petitioner
SAM H. SHELDON, Attorney at Law
320 South Main
Post Office Box 454
Ottawa, Kansas 66067
(785) 242-1113
samsheldonlaw@gmail.com
Attorneys for Petitioner
dc27t3
Notice of intent to
sell Bristol property
(First published in The Anderson County
Review Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Jimmy D. Bristol, Michelle C Bristol , et al.,
Defendants.
Case No. 16CV9
K.S.A. 60
Mortgage Foreclosure
(Title to Real Estate Involved)
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order
of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court
in and for the said County of Anderson, State
of Kansas, in a certain cause in said Court
Numbered 16CV9, wherein the parties above
named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said
County, directed, I will offer for sale at public
auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash
in hand at 10:00 AM, on 01/19/2017, at the
front door of Anderson County Courthouse, the
following described real estate located in the
County of Anderson, State of Kansas, to wit:
SOUTH 9 FEET OF LOT SIX (6), ALL
OF LOT SEVEN (7) AND THE NORTH 15
FEET OF LOT EIGHT (8) IN BLOCK ONE (1)
IN HIGHLAND ADDITION TO THE CITY OF
GARNETT, ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS.
SHERIFF OF ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS
Respectfully Submitted,
By:
Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542
Michael Rupard, KS # 26954
Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152
Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office)
12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555
St. Louis, MO 63141
Phone: (314) 991-0255
Fax: (314) 567-8006
Email: mrupard@km-law.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
dc27t3
Notice of intent to
settle Gray estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estates of
DELLA B. GRAY and MICHAEL L. GRAY,
both deceased
Case No. 16-PR-35
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in this court by William J. Gray, an
heir at law of Michael L. Gray, praying that
descent be determined of decedents, Della B.
Gray and Michael L. Gray, in any Kansas real
estate as they may have owned, and all personal property wheresoever situated, owned by
said decedents, and either of them, at the times
of their respective deaths and that the interests
of either be assigned in accordance with the
laws of intestate succession.
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before the 23rd day of January,
2017, at 9:00 a.m. in the District Court, Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the petition.
WILLIAM L. GRAY
Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #07280
503 S. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
dc27t3
Notice to dispose
of saltwater
(Published in The Anderson County Review
Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017)
BEFORE THE STATE CORPORATION
COMMISSION
OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
NOTICE OF FILING APPLICATION
RE: Iantha Resources, LLC Application
for a permit to authorize the disposal of saltwater into the Minckley 1-INJ, Minckley 2-INJ,
Minckley 3-INJ, Minckley 4-INJ, Minckley W-14,
& Minckley W-15; Section 3, Township 23
South, Range 19 East located in Anderson
County, Kansas.
TO: All Oil & Gas Producers, Unleased
Mineral Interest Owners, Landowners, and all
persons whomever concerned.
You, and each of you, are hereby
notified that Iantha Resources, LLC has filed an
application to commence the Disposal of saltwater into the Squirrel formation at the Minckley
1-INJ, located 1860 FSL, 1525 FWL, and the
Minckley 2-INJ located 1860 FSL, 1195 FWL,
and the Minckley 3-INJ located 1860 FSL, 865
FWL, and the Minckley 4-INJ located 880 FSL,
2200 FEL, and the Minckley W-14 located 880
FNL, 880 FWL, and the Minckley W-15 located
1320 FNL, 880 FWL; Section 3 Township
23 South, Range 19 East; Anderson County,
Kansas, with a maximum operating pressure of
700 psi and a maximum injection rate of 70 bbls
per day.
Any persons who object to or protest this
application shall be required to file their objections or protest with the Conservation Division
of the State Corporation Commission of the
State of Kansas within thirty (30) days from the
date of this publication. These protests shall be
filed pursuant to Commission regulations and
must state specific reasons why granting the
application may cause waste, violate correlative
rights or pollute the natural resources of the
State of Kansas.
All persons interested or concerned shall
take notice of the foregoing and shall govern
themselves accordingly.
Iantha Resources, LLC
21517 NW 1650 Road
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-8363
ja10t1
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
HELP WANTED
SERVICES
3 bedroom, very clean, formal
dining, central heat and AC,
garage. $650/month. (785) 4185435.
ja3tf
For rent: 3 bedroom, 2 bath.
$475 per month. 410 South Elm,
Garnett. Ozrents.com (316) 6096799. ja10t4*
New on the Market! 3 bedroom
1 bath ranch home in established quiet area of Mclouth.
Gorgeous hardwood floors,
new kitchen, new bath, and
paint. 3rd bedroom has its own
entrance and could make a wonderful at home office or studio.
Outside features an oversized
garage, and a covered patio.
Perfect for older couple, first
time buyers or a rental! Hurry
$97,500. Pictures at www.piafriend.com. Darrell Mooney, Pia
Friend Realty 785-393-3957 *ja3*
Coal Creek Estates last 2-acre
building site for sale by owner.
Includes water meter ($6,000
value). On paved road 3 miles
north of Baldwin City, approximately 10 miles from Lawrence.
Requires septic system. No
owner financing. $51,500. Ralph
Earles. (785) 594-3529, (785) 5507332.
**nv24yr**
Linwood, Kansas, 2 residential building lots. 60 x 120
downtown cul-de-sac with specials paid. Walkout lots back up
to city park $6,000 each or both
lots for $10,000. 785 843-7007 or
morley702@gmail.com
*sp27*
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.
Crane Handyman Service.
Tree trimming, painting, gutter cleaning. Odd jobs. (785) 4488203. ja10t1*
REAL ESTATE
Owner will finance – 50
acres 3 miles west of Waverly,
fenced, pond, trees and wildlife.
(913) 669-1873.
*oc25*
For sale by owner – 14.2 acres,
wooded, 2 water meters, electricity, fruit trees, metal barn
with concrete floor (24×40 with
10×12 overhead door on front
side and sliding door on side).
Hay shed, misc. buildings,
small pond and spring. (785)
615-1413 after 1pm $89,000.
*ag16*
Mini Farm on almost 2 secluded acres just West of Meriden.
Totally renovated 3 Br farmhouse and some small outbuildings. New roof, siding,
plumbing, electrical, foundation, carpet, paint, …move in
Ready! Outside features fruit
trees, garden area, flower beds
and an old smoke house that
would make a great studio,
guest quarters or shop. Located
on a paved Rd, just 15 min
from Topeka, and 30 min from
Lawrence. $130,000. pictures
at www.piafriend.com Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty 785393-3957
*ja3*
schulte
1×3
HELP WANTED
Part-time
help
needed
at
Wilson
Chiropractic.
Pick up application at 414
W. 1st or send resume to
wilsonchiro@embarqmail.com
.
ja10t1
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. MondayFriday office help wanted in
small but busy office. Motivated
self-starter with drive and
desire to grow, good customer service skills, experience
with QuickBooks, Microsoft
Excel and Word a must. Salary
negotiable with experience.
Send resume to PO Box 409 B,
Garnett KS 66032.
dc27t4
Experienced Pulling Unit
Operator needed. Pay based on
experience. Oilfield labor needed. Experience unnecessary.
Call (405) 641-6538.
ja10t2
1×2
1×3
SERVICES
Printing: Business cards, custom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
ryter
(913) 594-2495
1×3
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
dc8tf
Pasture clearing, references.
(620) 365-9437.ja10t2*
1×2
AD
JB Construction
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
GRE ATER
KANSAS
JAN 26 29
CENTURY II
WICHITA, KS
2×2
kpa wichita
kansasrvshows.com
Edgecomb Builders
new.ads.multiple_Layout 1 10/10/12 9:21 AM Page 4
An Understanding of Horses
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
RENTAL HOUSING DIRECTOR
HORSE BARN | RIDING ARENA | HAY STORAGE
A Commitment to Quality
Morton Buildings understands that safety & quality are the most
important factors when constructing a horse facility. Thats why
we manufacture many of our own components, including stalls.
Eight offices serving Kansas
800-447-7436
mortonbuildings.com
2012 Morton Buildings, Inc. Morton Buildings is a
registered trademark of Morton Buildings, Inc. All
rights reserved. A listing of GC licenses available at
mortonbuildings.com/licenses.aspx. REF CODE 043.
800-447-7436 mortonbuildings.com
2×3
eckan
ECKAN in Ottawa, Kansas is seeking to fill a full-time
Rental Housing Director position in Franklin County.
You must be well organized, because the paperwork is
intensive, you must be a people person because we serve
the community, must be able to climb stairs and ladders,
because there is some physical work involved. Must be
willing to travel. Prefer someone with low income housing
program or related social service program experience,
must have supervisory experience and computer skills.
For a full job description and printable application,
visit www.eckan.org or you can submit
your resume to sdrake@eckan.org.
If you have any questions please feel free to contact
Stephanie Drake, 785-242-7450, ext. 7209
EOE/MFHV
Anderson County Sheriff Office
Is Now Taking Applications For
2×4 12-28-2016 – Until position filled
Starting pay $14.22 Hr.
anco sheriff
1 Full-time & 2 Part-time Jail Detention Officers
Applications are available at the Anderson County
Sheriff Office, 135 E. 5th, Garnett, KS, Mon. – Fri. Must
have a high school diploma or equivalent, be able to
obtain a Kansas Drivers License. Applicants will
be subject to a battery of tests including an extensive
background check. A portion of the job requires
employees being able to enter data on computers.
Employees are subject to working days, nights, holidays,
weekends, swings and alternating shifts. Starting pay
$14.22 an hr. Anderson County is an Equal Opportunity
Employer and the position is Veterans
Preference Eligible (VPE), State Law – K.S.A. 73-201.
Want a new BOSS?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017
5B
CLASSIFIEDS
Check our classified job listings!
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
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
MISCELLANEOUS
Lenders Offering Special Govt
Programs for Mobile Homes
and $0 Down for Land Owners.
Promo homes with reduced
down payments. Use Tax
Refund for additional incentives. Singles from $39,900.
Doubles from $59,900. 866-8586862
100 pieces more or less of seasoned barn wood. Mixed species. 46 inches long by varying
widths 6 inches to 12 inches 3/4
inch thick. Great for framing
or craft projects. You haul. $3/
linear foot. Greeley KS. (785)
304-3870. ja10tf
Hot water pressure washers.
See one at R&R Equipment in
Greeley. Reconditioned units.
Call Wholesale Washer Co.,
(620) 583-2421. dc20t8*
AUTOS
delp
AUTOS
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
1×4
STILES
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
1×2
AD
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
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AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
Spacious Units
Custom Shelving Available
24/7 Access
Pest Control
FOUND
Found: Groove joint pliers.
(785) 204-2044. ja10t2*
516 E. 5th Ave. Garnett
NOTICES
40
Grade
A
Steel
Cargo
Containers $1500.00
in KC. $2200.00 in Solomon
Ks. 20s 45s 48s & 53s also
available Call 785 655 9430 or go
online to Chuckhenry.comfor
pricing, availability & Freight
estimates.
Happiness is… Thanking
Kevin Maloan for hosting the
Senior Center Christmas dinner. ja10t1*
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary & Birth Announcements Business News
GRAND
Border collie. Reg. puppies.
(620) 365-9437. $350 each. ja10t2*
MISCELLANEOUS
Happiness is… Breakfast
at the VFW, 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.
Saturday, Jan. 14. Biscuits and
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage and eggs. ja10t1*
Happiness is… having your
engagement announcement
and photo published FREE
in the Review! Go to www.
garnett-ks.com and click the
form under Submit News.
Available FREE 24 hours/day!
mc1tf
2×2
OPENING
wild car storage
Brand New
PETS
Know how old youll be when
you learn to paint? Same
age youll be if you dont.
Watercolor class, Tuesdays,
5:30, (913) 594-1903. ja10t1*
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Being married
to Marilyn 33 years Jan. 14,
2017. Marilyn, youre the reason for everything wonderful
n my life. Ive never known
such a warm, kind, loving
giving person as you. Im so
glad you are my wife. Happy
Anniversary. Love you bunches, George. ja10t1*
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ach
Join
our team and work at the Best Place to Get Care!
2×3
beckman
Outstanding Performance in
Anderson County Hospital, Saint Lukes Health System
The following job opportunities are available:
Certified Nursing Assistant full time all shifts in
Residential Living Center
Paramedic – full time in EMS
Advanced Practice Provider full time at
Family Care Center
Registered Nurse PRN all shifts in Med/Surg or ED
Certified Nursing Assistant PRN all shifts in Med/Surg
Medical Assistant PRN with potential for full time
in Specialty Clinic
Physical Therapy Assistant (PTA) PRN in Rehab
AEMT/EMT/Paramedic PRN in EMS
Other PRN or part time jobs: Nutrition Services Aide,
Housekeeping Associate, Office Assistant in FCC
GM Sales for all of Kansas
Eight
FREE
2×3
BUY 3, GET
1
sek
mental
ONhealth
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
DO YOU SUFFER FROM SLEEP
PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH
LEWY BODY DEMENTIA?
Trouble Sleeping? Moving or Talking in Your Sleep?
Vivid or Intense Dreams?
Experience Sleep Disturbances?
CNAs, Cooks,
Accounts Payable/Payroll Clerk
Life Care Center of Burlington
2×3
CNAs – Full
time & part time
lifecare
burlingCooks – Full time & part time
ton
Accounts Payable/Payroll Clerk Full time
Please apply at
http://lifecarecenterofburlington.com/careers,
in person at
601 Cross St.
Burlington, KS
or send your resume to
Tracy_Bartley@lcca.com
For More Information, Please Contact
Rowe Neurology Institute,
Dr. Vernon Rowe or Leigh Kreshel at (913) 827-4262
301 First Street
Osawatomie, KS 66064
913-755-3025
www.tri-ko.com
2×6.5
triko Walk-in Interviews!
Supported Living Assistant
$10.50 per hour
Osawatomie, Paola, LaCygne and Garnett Locations
Including day, evening, night and weekend shifts
Home Guide
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AD
Is your
Insurance agent
Free to get you
a better deal?
You may qualify for a research study that is evaluating the safety
and effectiveness of a new investigational medication that
may help to reduce the symptoms of Lewy Body Dementia or
Parkinsons Disease Dementia if:
You are aged 50 – 85 years with a diagnosis of
Dementia with Lewy Bodies
You regularly experience issues sleeping or
reaching REM sleep
You are willing to take part in Overnight Sleep
Lab studies
Medications you take have been on a consistent
dose for at least 4 weeks
Apply online at www.saintlukeshealthsystem.org/jobs
We hire only non-tobacco users. EOE.
For more information email Karen Gillespie
at kgillespie@saint-lukes.org
$10.50 per hour
Noon to 8:00 p.m.
Days may vary including weekends
Residential Manager
$13.26 per hour
Prefer a minimum of 2 years experience in the human services
field, preferably in a residential setting.
Monday through Friday – Noon to 8:00 p.m. – days/hours may vary.
Vocational Instructor
$9.50 per hour
Daytime hours – Monday through Friday
only an IndePendent agent
Has tHe Freedom you need.
With access to many different providers, independent
agents have more options at their fingertips. They have
the freedom to competitively shop around for you and put
together a plan that suits both your needs and your budget.
Find your local independent agent and
find a better deal at trustedchoice.com
Transportation/Vehicle Maintenance Manager
Monday – Friday – 8:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
CDL with the passenger endorsement required
Associates Degree or 3-5 years auto tech experience
Wages dependent upon experience
Quality Assurance/Accounting Clerk
Conducts audits of records and other accounting functions
Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Wages dependent upon experience
6B
LOCAL
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 10, 2017

