Anderson County Review — January 13, 2014
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from January 13, 2014. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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January 13, 2015
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New hospital ready for reveal
Open house, ribbon cutting
scheduled Saturday; governor
to return to birthplace for event
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Kansas Gov. Sam
Brownback will return to the hospital
where he was born to help usher in
a new era in healthcare in Anderson
County.
Brownback will join county residents, public officials, staff and volunteers for the official ribbon cutting
ceremony at the new Anderson County
Hospital, beginning at 10 a.m. Saturday,
Jan. 17. The hospital will be open until
2 p.m. For an open
house and public
tours. The hospital
officially opens Jan.
29.
Brownback
was
born at the Anderson
County
Hospital
Sept. 12, 1956, when
Brownback
the building was just
seven years old.
The hospital was built in 1949, but
failing infrastructure and other problems led voters in 2013 to approve construction of a new, $26 million hospital
building and long-term care facility.
Major construction on the new hospital
building was completed in December.
Patients will move into the building
Jan. 29, which will kick off the official
opening and beginning of operations
at the new hospital. Demolition of the
old building and construction of a new
parking lot on its site will continue until
sometime this spring.
Saturdays ribbon cutting event and
open house will begin promptly at 10
a.m. With a welcome from hospital CEO
Denny Hachenberg. An invocation by
hospital chaplain Ron Jones will follow. Brownback and other officials with
ACH and St. Lukes Health System are
expected to speak briefly after that. The
ribbon cutting will take place at about
10:30 a.m.
SEE HOSPITAL ON PAGE 4B
A ribbon cutting and open house is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Saturday,
Jan. 17, at the new Anderson County Hospital.
Theres still time to
Work doesnt stop because its cold file for spring election
Farmers, service workers
find cold weather doesnt slow
daily activities at their jobs
BY VICKIE MOSS
Only three people sign
up for coming election;
deadline is noon Jan. 27
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Although a weather warmup is headed to the area by this weekend, last weeks bitterly cold temperature serves as a reminder of the dangers
of working outside.
The crew at Wolken Tire, 601 S. Oak
St. in Garnett, knows the challenges of
working in temperatures near or below
zero degrees. Owner Jack Rundle says
about once a day, his staff will be called
to help someone in need, like a woman
who faced a flat tire at the Post Office
in Garnett last week, or the woman
who needed a tire changed at the roundabout intersection of U.S. 59 and 169
south of town Monday morning, Jan. 11.
Farmers call, asking for help to fix tires
on their feed trucks and tractors.
The tractor needs fixed so they can
feed the cows, he said.
Its a service the business provides
with the community in mind, and
Rundle often doesnt charge an extra
service fee for those in town. Sometimes,
the service will be as simple as giving a
jump start to someone with a dead battery.
But working in cold temperature
brings its own challenges, beyond what
someone might face on an average workday.
Nothing wants to work right when
its cold, Rundle said. Tools like impact
wrenches stutter because of moisture in
the line. Glove-wrapped fingers struggle
to twist off lug nuts.
And even though workers try to stay
prepared for the cold weather by dressing in thermal underwear and heavy
outwear like coats, gloves and boots,
even the clothes you wear can take a
toll, Rundle said.
At the end of the day, youre too
tired from wearing all those heavy
SEE COLD ON PAGE 2A
BY VICKIE MOSS
So far, only three people have
filed for numerous school board
and city council positions up
for election this spring.
As of Monday morning,
only one person had filed for
a seat on each of the countys
two school boards, and one person filed for a city council seat.
Anyone interested in running
for public office has until noon
Jan. 27 to file. The election is set
for April 7.
SEE ELECTION ON PAGE 4B
AC sheriffs office helps
solve regional burglary
Burglaries in Coffey
County solved after
interviews in Anderson
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
BURLINGTON A Garnett man
recently was sentenced to two
years probation for stealing
items from a farmhouse, shop
and other buildings in Coffey
County one year ago.
Jason Karl Stifter, 33 of
Garnett, pleaded no contest
to a charge of burglary Nov.
5 and was sentenced Dec. 4 to
21 months in prison. That sentence, however, was suspended
in favor of 24 months supervised probation.
The conviction was credited to a tip from the Anderson
County Sheriffs Office and
video surveillance from two
recycling centers, according
to a report from the Coffey
County Republican newspaper. Anderson County Sheriffs
SEE CRIME ON PAGE 4B
Unemployment remains low
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-13-2015 / Dane Hicks
With Tuesday morning temperatures hovering at around 4 degrees, Wolken Tire
employee Daniel Holstine changes a flat for a customer at the Garnett Post Office.
Dont forget about Fido and Fluffy when temps drop
GARNETT Whether an animal is a pet
or part of a working farm, cold weather
brings special care considerations, local
experts say.
Veterinarian Amanda Allison with
Countryside Veterinarian Clinic of
Garnett said the recent cold weather
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
They include:
Cleon Rickel, an incumbent, filed to retain his Position
7 At-Large seat on the USD 365
Board of Education.
Rickel, Garnett, has served
in the at-large Position 7 for
eight years.
Im proud to say that while
Ive been on the board, the
district has reached several important goals, including
the new elementary school
in Garnett and significant
improvements to other buildings in Greeley, Westphalia and
Mont Ida thanks to the bond
issue approved by district vot-
hasnt resulted in very many problems
with animals, but staff typically see
more cold-weather related problems
later in January. Some common problems include newborn calves that suffer
frostbite to the tips of their ears or frozen feet, or cats that come in with frozen
ear tips.
Dramatic changes in weather are especially difficult for livestock, Shannon
Blocker, agriculture agent with Frontier
Extension District in Anderson County,
said. Cattle do better when they stay at
SEE ANIMALS ON PAGE 4B
Countys jobless rate 177 unemployed workers
out of a civilian labor force
of 4,291. Unemployment in
drops from 6.0 in July
Anderson County has conto 4.1 in November 2014 sistently dropped since July,
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
TOPEKA The number of jobless Anderson County residents
remained low in November,
following a pattern of falling
unemployment that began
about five months earlier.
The number of unemployed workers in Anderson
County fell to 4.1 percent, or
when the rate was 6.2 percent.
Novembers rate was 4.1 percent, the same as October,
and down from 4.9 percent in
September. A year earlier, in
November 2013, unemployment
was 4.8 percent.
The states unemployment
rate dropped slightly from
4.4 percent to 4.3 percent. In
SEE JOBLESS ON PAGE 3A
Custom printed BUSINESS CARDS – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
CREATIVE KIDS CONTEST
Are you a 4th, 5th or 6th grader in
the area who likes to write and/or
draw? The Reviews Creative Kids
Creative Writing and Advertising
Contest is headed your way! Cash
prizes of $25, $15 ad $10 will be
awarded to creative writing submissions and advertising designs
in each grade, with winning entries
and honorable mentions published in the Review. Your classroom can also win $100 in cash
for your submissions. Ask your
teacher for materials and details
which were delivered to schools
Friday, January 9. Deadline to
return entries to your school office
is Friday, January 23. Questions?
Contact the Review at (785) 4483121.
BPW SCHOLARSHIPS
Reminder that the Kansas
Business and Professional
Womens Foundation Scholarships are due to Garnett BPW by
January 15th for submission. The
Kansas Foundation have awarded up to $13,000 in scholarship
funds yearly to statewide recipients. In years past some of
those funds have helped local
Anderson County high school college bound students and current
college students. Please contact Helen at 448-3826 for more
details and visit the Kansas BPW
website for the scholarship packet. www.kansasbpw.org
CITY SEAT ELECTION
The City of Garnett will have one
(1) vacancy to fill on the City
Commission this year. Preston W.
Peine currently holds the position
that will be voted on. Anyone
interested in filing for this position
will need to file with the City Clerk
at City Hall by noon on January
27, 2014. The election will be held
on April 7, 2015.
VFW CHILI, SOUP DINNER
On Thursday, January 22nd the
Garnett Veterans of Foreign Wars
will be holding their annual chili
and soup dinner. Featured dishes
offered besides chili will be chicken/noodle soup and Clarence
Hermanns fabulous potato soup.
Dinner will available from 11:00
AM – 1:00 PM and again at supper from 5:00 PM -?????. Price
will be $7 for adults and $3.50 for
children under 12 years.
LOOKING FOR LOCAL TALENT
The Garnett Area Chamber of
Commerce and Walker Art
Committee are joining forces to
pursue the Taste and Talents of
2015. This event is scheduled for
April 11, 2015. Please contact the
chamber at 448-6767 to showcase your talents and be added
to the list.
COLD…
FROM PAGE 1A
clothes to lift your arms up, he
said. Ive been doing this for
20-plus years and it still gets to
me.
Temperatures last week
dipped to minus-1 Jan. 8 and
reached a high of only 37
degrees on Jan. 4 and Jan. 11,
according to weather statistics at the Garnett Industrial
Airport. Windchill readings
often were below zero, but airport manager Gary Ecclefield
said those numbers arent
recorded. So far, only 0.23 inches of precipitation has fallen
since Jan. 1.
While many people may prefer to hole up inside a home or
office where its nice and warm,
some professions require working outside in cold temperatures.
Farmers and ranchers, for
example, dont get a break
from the weather, especially
if they have animals to care
for. One of the most common
chores is ensuring animals
have access to water, which
often means breaking up ice on
a pond, Shannon Blocker, an
agriculture agent with Frontier
Extension District in Anderson
County, said.
A farmer or rancher doesnt
get to choose when they want to
work, Blocker said. Whether
you are sick or just want to
stay where its warm, there are
minimal chores like feeding or
breaking ice. Its not an option.
You either do it or suffer severe
consequences. Its a very unappreciated part of what it takes
to be an ag producer.
Blocker recalled her days
on the farm as a young child.
Unlike most of her peers, she
didnt get to enjoy snow days,
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS DEC. 29
Chairman James K. Johnson
called the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 a.m. on December 29, 2014
at the County Commission Room.
Attendance: James K. Johnson,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Jerry Howarter, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor,
met with the commission.
Harschmanns is wanting to get rid
of the rock in Settlemyers Quarry
as they are planning on closing
the quarry and want it sold. They
have now reduced the price to
$5.00 a ton but Lester wants to
see if he can get permission from
the landowner to haul it out in the
future as needed, possibly within
the next two years.
Senior Citizens
Ron Zimmerman met with the
commission. He informed the
commission he is on the board
of directors of the Senior Citizens
Center. They are looking at possibly purchasing an adjacent property that would then be demolished and the site used for parking. He questioned if the county
would waive dump fees at the
landfill if they did purchase the
adjoining property. Commissioner
Highberger moved to waive dump
fees. Commissioner Howarter
seconded. Approved 30.
Abatements and Escaped Tax
Abatements B15164 through
B15184 and Escaped Tax
E15105 were presented and
approved.
Meeting adjourned at 11:15
a.m. due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
Francis G. McDonald and
Janice McDonald to Lisa
McDonald, SW4 SE4 19-19-18
and SE4 SW4 19-19-18 less
commencing at SW corner SW4
19-19-18, thence North 875826
East 1321.55 along South line of
said SW4 to SE corner W2 of said
quarter, being marked with a 1/2
iron bar, and true POB; thence
North 021545 West 1279.35
on East line of W2 of said quarter
to 1/2 iron bar; thence South
272703 East 553.71 to 1/2
iron bar; thence South 141900
East 797.53 to South line of SW4,
being marked with a 1/2 iron
bar; thence South 875826 West
402.22 to POB.
Francis G. McDonald and
Janice McDonald and Lori Turner
and Todd Turner, W2 SW4 19-1918 and commencing at SW corner SW4 19-19-18, thence North
875826 East 1321.55 along
South line of said SW4 to SE
corner W2 of said quarter, being
marked with a 1/2 iron, and true
POB; thence North 021545
West 1279.35 on East line of
W2 of said quarter to 1/2 iron
bar; thence South 272703 East
553.71 to 1/2 iron bar; thence
South 141900 East 797.53 to
South line of SW4, being marked
with a 1/2 iron bar; thence South
875826 West 402.22 to POB.
Marvin Benjamin and Janet M.
Benjamin to Patrick G. Callahan,
N2 NWFR4 2-21-19.
Gary Benjamin and Linda S.
Benjamin to Patrick G. Callahan,
or the days when school was
canceled for bad weather.
Those days meant she and her
sister had to help with those
bitterly cold chores, like scooping out uneaten, frozen cattle
feed and breaking ice at the
pond.
I liked it better when we
had school, she said.
In addition to farmers and
ranchers, some people have no
choice but to work during bad
weather. People like plumbers
and other types of construction
must fix problems often caused
by bad weather, like frozen
pipes.
Despite the recent deep
freeze, however, city officials
have heard few reports of problems caused by frozen pipes.
One water leak near the recreation center was reported in the
past week or so, and construction crews took frequent breaks
and kept a vehicle running so
crews could warm up, City
Manager Joyce Martin said.
They know their limitations, Martin said. Theyve
been very careful and are using
the safety tips theyve been
taught.
That especially applies
to city trash employees.
They must still pick up trash
throughout the city, no matter
what the temperature. Martin
said she encourages them to
take frequent breaks, so people should not be alarmed if
they see trash crews sitting
in trucks or if trash service is
slightly delayed.
The Kansas Department of
Health and Environment offers
tips for people in the event of
cold weather. Those who must
travel should keep a winter
emergency kit if they should
N2 NWFR4 2-21-19.
Harbour Portfolie VII LP to
Rocktop Partners I LP, Lot 9,
Block 7, Baileys Orchard Park
Addition (Revised 1978) to City of
Garnett.
Seth J. Brubaker and MAK
Properties LLC, Lots 24 and
25, Block 2, New Orchard Park
Addition to City of Garnett.
Kenneth W. Miller and Rebecca
Miller and Erik M. Scarborough
to Anna M. Scarborough, Lot 18,
Block 13, City of Garnett.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Kevin Lutz DBA Lutz Truck
Line vs. Kansas Department of
Revenue, petition for quiet title
granted.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Wendy Sue Fitzwater vs. Rick
D. Fitzwater, divorce decree
granted.
Lisa Mersman vs. Richard Lee
Mersman, divorce decree granted.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Great Southern Bank vs. Rose
Anne Peine, $510.65 plus interest
and cost.
LVNV Funding LLC vs. Stanley
T. Pattison, $903.44 plus interest
and cost.
Saint Lukes Health System,
Inc. dba Anderson Co. vs. Daisy
Patterson and Jere Joe Patterson,
$279.38 plus interest and cost.
Saint Lukes Health System,
Inc. vs. Michael D. Giffin and
Debbie Giffin, $16,636.25 plus
interest and cost.
Saint Lukes Hospital, Inc.
dba Anderson Co. vs. Paul Eric
Richardson $2,329.12 plus interest and cost.
Saint Lukes South Hospital,
Inc. vs. Mary E. Allen and Charles
E. Allen, $2,131.67 plus interest
and cost.
Saint Lukes Hospital, Inc. dba
Anderson Co. vs. Garett L. Honn
and Regina Honn, $593.85 plus
interest and cost.
Saint Lukes Hospital, Inc.
dba Anderson Co. vs. Jennifer
L. Young, $1,079.34 plus interest
and cost.
Saint Lukes Health System,
Inc. vs. Jo L. Jewell, $6,141.29
plus interest and cost.
Patriots Bank vs. Dawn M. Land
and Stephen J. Land, $209.81
plus interest and cost.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Stephanie Joanna Fedorowicz,
$153 fine.
Hiram Lee Raby, $153 fine.
Zachary Keith George, $171
fine.
Melissa D. Pugh, $253 fine.
Christian Tyler Kneibler, $159
fine.
Other:
Gavin Edward Smith, giving a
worthless check, $203 fine.
Earl T. Hanson, battery, sentencing on January 27 at 10 a.m.
Jennifer Kaye Nunley, DWS 1st conviction, $243 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on
December 8, 2014, when there
was a criminal deprivation and
duty of driver to report accident
of a 1995 Nissan Pathfinder all
valued at $1,059.12 and occurred
on West K-31 Highway.
A report was made on
December 23, 2014, of disorderly
conduct and occurred on East 7th
become stranded. A basic winter car survival kit in your
vehicle can include: cell phone,
flashlight, batteries, blanket,
snacks, water, gloves, boots,
sand, a first aid kit, jumper
cables, ice scraper and road
flares.
KDHE also warns of the
dangers of falls on slick spots
caused by ice or snow. During
the 2010-2011 winter, there
were 2,012 falls related hospital discharges, making up
half of all injury discharges
during that time period (52.1
prcent). Almost half (46.9%) of
those occurred among those 80
years and older and 65.5 percent occurred among females.
People can help by removing
snow and ice from sidewalks,
laying sand and helping elderly
friends and neighbors. Its also
important to check on friends
and loved ones who are especially at risk from cold weather,
KDHE recommends.
The National Weather
Service at Topeka predicts the
weather will warm up by this
weekend. Although there is a
chance of flurries tonight with
temperatures expected to reach
a low of 18, the rest of the week
should be near or above freezing. High temperatures Friday
could reach 50, and are expected to stay around 50 or the
upper 40s for a high throughout
the weekend, with lows around
30.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Avenue.
A report was made on December
31, 2014, of forgery and theft of
a false Federal Reserve note of
$50 and funds were credited and
occurred on East 5th Avenue.
Arrests
Cody Thompson, Richmond,
January 1, warrant arrest by LEO.
Keith Devoe, Garnett, January
6, pedestrians under influence.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
A report was made on
December 10, 2014 of burglary
and theft of handicap placard and
occurred on East 7th Avenue.
A report was made on
December 20, 2014 of theft of
handicap placard and occurred on
Southeast Nevada, Kincaid.
A report was made on December
30, 2014 of possession of drug
paraphernalia of glass tube with
burnt residue and occurred on
Southwest Kentucky, Welda.
A report was made on
December 30, 2014 of possession
of drug paraphernalia of glass
pipe with residue and rectangular
box with writing, all valued at $2
and occurred on East 5th Avenue,
Colony.
A report was made on December
31, 2014 of possession of drug
paraphernalia and possession of
certain depressants- white pill,
hydrocodone, and occurred on
East 1st Avenue.
Accidents
An accident report was made
on December 17, 2014, when a
vehicle driven by Ashley Elaine
Reno, 32, Humboldt, was traveling
northbound on US-59 Highway at
US-169 Highway, when the driver
lost control of the vehicle.
An accident report was made
on December 18, 2014, when a
vehicle driven by Brian Michael
Jones, 30, Garnett, was traveling
eastbound on K-58 Highway at
Florida Road, when the driver lost
control of the vehicle.
An accident report was made
on December 18, 2014, when
a vehicle driven by Brenda Sue
Long, 32, Garnett, was traveling
northbound on US-59 Highway at
1400 Road, when the vehicle slid
off roadway into the east ditch.
An accident report was made
on December 19, 2014, when
a vehicle driven by Sadie M.
Engebretson, 24, Richmond, was
driving northbound on US-59
Highway at Northwest 2350 Road,
when the driver dropped off east
edge of roadway. Driver over corrected, then lost control going into
east ditch and through a fence.
An accident report was made
1×5
nccc
NOW
on December 23, 2014, when a
vehicle driven by Tony B. Wilson,
43, was driving westbound on
1600 Road at Florida Road when
he had some mechanical problems and went into the ditch on
the south side of the road.
An accident report was made
on November 24, 2014, when
a vehicle driven by David Allen
Engel, 43, Chanute, was traveling eastbound on 900 Road at
Colorado Road, when the driver
lost control of the vehicle
An accident report was made on
December 27, 2014, when a vehicle driven by Sheral Lynn Jones
Jr., 45, Glenpool, Oklahoma, was
driving southbound on US-59
Highway at Northeast Neosho
Road when a northbound semitruck came into the southbound
lane. Driver went over to the
shoulder as far as he could. The
second trailer pulled both the tractor and trailers into ditch where the
second trailer tipped over.
An accident report was made
on December 31, 2014, when
a vehicle driven by Joshua W.
Betts, 23, Garnett, was driving
northbound on US-169 Highway
at Northeast Neosho Road, when
driver struck a coyote that had
entered the roadway.
JAIL LOG
Natashya Sage Davis, 29,
Duncan, Oklahoma, December
30, 2014, identity theft, bond set
at $5,000.
Betsy Ann Jives, 40, Richmond,
December 30, 2014, giving a
worthless check, bond set at
$1,000.
Cody Eugene Thompson, 22,
Richmond, January 1, warrant
arrest by LEO, bond set at $391.
Frankie Lee Herod, 37, Garnett,
January 2, DWS, no bond set.
Joseph Allen Coty Owens, 23,
Garnett, January 3, DWS, bond
set at $500.
Jennifer Kaye Nunley, 40,
Olathe, January 4, failure to
appear, bond set at $1,000.
Christopher Wayne Bosler, 25,
Peculiar, Missouri, January 4,
DUI, possession of certain hallucinogenic marijuana, possession
of drug paraphernalia with intent
to use in human body, bond set at
$1,000.
Jamie Donavan Holstine, 24,
Garnett, January 6, failure to comply with offender registration act,
no bond set.
JAIL ROSTER
Barton Fromme was booked
into jail on December 2, 2014 for
Anderson County, bond set at
$5,000.
Robert Blurton was booked into
jail on December 26, 2014 for
Anderson County, 30-day writ.
Chad Mueller was booked into
jail on July 29, 2014 for Anderson
County, 236-days-56=180 days
left.
Dylan Sicka was booked into
jail on December 9, 2014 for
Anderson County, bond set at
$10,000.
David Gordon was booked
into jail on October 27, 2014 for
Anderson County for 12 months.
Samuel Van Patton was booked
into jail on November 21, 2014
for Anderson County, bond set at
$100,000.
Starrett Burrough was booked
into jail on September 25, 2014
for Anderson County, bond set at
$5,000.
Jacob Kratzberg was booked
into jail on October 28, 2014 for
Anderson County, 90 days + 180
days.
Brenna Brockman was booked
into jail on December 26, 2014 for
Anderson County, 32-day writ.
Miranda Callahan was booked
into jail on December 18, 2014 for
Anderson County, total bod set at
$12,500.
Jamie Holstine was booked into
jail on January 6, for Anderson
County, 5-day writ.
George Voorhees was booked
into jail on September 18, 2014
for Anderson County, bond set at
$100,000.
FARM-INS
Michelle Fennel was booked
into jail on December 29, 2014 for
Miami County.
Eric Thomas was booked into
jail on December 30, 2014 for
Lynn County.
Jesse Irby was booked into jail
on December 30, 2014 for Lynn
County.
Brett Emery was booked into
jail on October 17, 2014 for Miami
County.
John Simons was booked into
jail on November 15, 2014 for Linn
County.
2×6
diversified contracting
Commercial Residential Agriculture
ENROLL FOR SPRING
Semester Classes
begin
January 20, 2015
Keith Allan Devoe, 25, Garnett,
January 6, pedestrians under the
influence of alcohol or drugs, bond
set at $250.
SERVICES
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For more info and/or reservations:
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If weather is questionable,
please call.
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at (785)
913-294-2929
448-3121.
308 N. Hospital Drive Paola
For more info call
(913) 285-0076
To consign items
call for an appointment
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
REMEMBRANCES
WEBB
CLEMANS
December 19, 1922-January 8, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
Mary Elizabeth Clemans, 92,
of Colony, Kansas, went home to
be with the Lord on Thursday,
January 8, 2015.
Mary was
born December
19, 1922, at
Roseland,
Kansas,
the
daughter
of
William Henry
and Nannie Lee
(Mishler) Best.
Clemans
She graduated
from McCune
High School in 1940 and attended Pittsburg Teachers College in
Pittsburg, Kansas.
On May 17, 1942, Mary married
Earl R. Clemans, Jr. at the home of
her parents south of McCune. They
moved to Colony in August of that
year where they lived for 66 years.
Mr. Clemans preceded her in death
Jan. 7, 2009.
Mary received her Associate
Degree from Allen County
Community College and B.S.
degree in education from Emporia
State University. Mary loved to
teach school. She taught in several
one room schools in the mid to
late 1950s and later taught at Lone
Elm, Kansas, LeRoy, Kansas and
taught many years at Burlington
Elementary school retiring in 1984.
She lived her retirement life to
the fullest, enjoying many hours
of fishing, bike riding, riding four
wheelers and Earls Bronco scooter
with Earl, her children and grandchildren. She lived everyday to
the fullest and especially enjoyed
June 8, 1930-January 9, 2015
antiquing with Earl and Bonnie.
She also loved to play and coach
softball and cheering for Earls basketball teams. She collected hundreds of hats. She was known as
The Hat Lady and would present
programs on them.
Mary was a member of the
Colony Community Church since
it was organized in 1957, and she
taught Bible School. She has also
served as librarian at the Colony
City Library for a number of years.
Survivors include three sons:
Dwight Clemans and wife, Edie
of Marshall, TX, Marvin Clemans
and wife, Wanda of Derby, KS and
Arvin Clemans and wife, Kathy of
Iola; a daughter: Bonnie Sjogren
and husband, Charles of Concordia;
a brother-in-law: Julius Clemans
and his wife, Janice of Jacksonville,
Fla.; 17 Grandchildren, 37 Great
Grandchildren, 15 Great Great
Grandchildren and 7 Great Great
Great Grandchildren
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Earl R. Clemans,
Jr., two brothers, John Best and
Miles Richard Best, and two sisters,
Dorothy Sartin and Anna Irene
Hornbeck.
Services were Monday, Jan. 12,
2015, at Colony Community Church
in Colony, with burial at the Colony
Cemetery.
Memorials may be made to the
Colony Community Church or The
Gideons International. Memorial
gifts may be left with the WaughYokum and Friskel Memorial
Chapel of Iola, which is in charge
of arrangements.
To sign the guestbook online
or leave a condolence, go to www.
iolafuneral.com.
WEBER
December 2, 1923-January 8, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
Dale Leonard Weber, age 91, of
Westphalia, Kansas passed away on
January 8, 2015 at Golden Heights.
Dale,
the
only child of
Leonard
J.
Weber
and
Edna (Hartman)
Weber was born
December 2,
1923 in Ottawa,
Kansas.
He
Weber
grew up on
the
family
farm
north
of Westphalia, attending school
at Oak Valley, a half mile south
of his house and graduated from
Westphalia High School. He was
a great roller and ice skater and
shared with us when going to
school in the winter that it was
more important to remember your
ice skates than your lunch bucket.
Dale married Arvetta Mae Hirt
on May 14, 1944. Dale and Arvetta
purchased a farm southeast of
Westphalia and farmed there until
Arvetta passed away on September
9, 1949. One son, Gary Dale Weber
was born to their marriage. Shortly
after this, Dale moved to the family
farm north of Westphalia where
he remained the rest of his life. On
April 25, 1952, Dale married Dorthy
Dean Gillogly of the Welda area.
Dorthy took in Gary as her own
son and their marriage was blessed
with three more children, Larry,
Judy, and Shirley.
Some of the things we remember
he enjoyed were playing games on
winter evenings, fishing, hunting,
photography, cherry nut ice cream,
the Grand Ole Opry on Saturday
night radio and work.
Dale loved the outdoors, farming and livestock. In his younger years, his farm consisted of a
dairy cow herd and row crops. As
time went by, he gave up the dairy
although he continued to raise row
crops. He raised lots of different
kinds of livestock over the years
including hogs, sheep, beef cattle,
and chickens. He eventually began
to raise mostly chickens and at one
time was producing approximately
120,000 pullets a year. In his later
years, he planted his crop land to
grass and produced beef cattle.
His passion was serving God
and he could be found early every
morning reading his Bible and
praying. He was a charter member of the Garnett Church of the
Nazarene and in 1962, spent many
weeks along with others building the original church that still
remains. He was a strong supporter
of missions and participated in several overseas mission work trips.
Dale was a member of the local
Gideons Chapter and was actively involved at the local and state
level for 40 years. Over the years,
he seldom ever missed a meeting
or activity. He served as the local
Gideon president and other Gideon
positions for most of those years.
He was instrumental in the recruiting and mentoring numerous men
to be Gideons.
Dale is survived by his four children, Gary Weber and wife Dianne
of Edmond, Oklahoma; Larry
Weber and wife Dena of Westphalia,
Kansas; Judy Ryman and husband
Kerry of Garnett, Kansas; Shirley
Fischer and husband Jon of Quito
Ecuador; eight grandchildren and
nine great grandchildren.
Funeral services were Monday,
January 12, 2015, at the Church of
the Nazarene, Garnett; burial was
at Bethel Cemetery, Westphalia.
Memorial contributions may be
made to Gideons International.
You may send your condolences
to the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
Virginia Lee Webb, age 84, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away on
Friday, January 9, 2015, at Life
Care Center,
Burlington,
Kansas.
She
was
born
June
8, 1930, in
Hutchinson,
Kansas,
the
daughter
of
George Ted
Webb
and Mae (Cole)
Dean.
She
attended country schools in Reno
County, Kansas.
Virginia married Kenneth
Quinton Webb on September 10,
1948 in Partridge, Kansas. This
union was blessed with six children.
Virginia worked at Kresss
Department Store in Hutchinson.
They moved to Satanta, Kansas,
where she baked pies and doughnuts for a local caf. They moved
the family to Englewood, Kansas,
where Kenneth began managing
Co-op and Virginia was a stay at
home mom. Moving to Burlingame,
she began cake decorating, specializing in wedding cakes. They
moved to Garnett in 1978, and she
began working as a nurse aid at
the hospital. She enjoyed painting,
KRATZBERG
November 2013, the states
unemployment rate was 5 percent.
Kansas showed positive economic signs this month including a decrease in the unemployment rate, which marks a
full year under 5 percent unemployment, said Lana Gordon,
Secretary of Labor. In addition, wages showed significant
growth since this time last year,
furthering the growth seen in
past months.
Other area counties also
reported low unemployment,
although in some cases numbers were equal or even slightly higher than the previous
month. They include:
Allen County: 3.5 percent in
November; 3.3 in October; 4.3 in
November 2013.
Coffey County: 4.5 percent
in November; 4.0 in October; 4.5
in November 2013.
Franklin County: 4.4 percent in November; 4.3 in
October; 4.6 in November 2013.
Linn County: 5.6 percent in
November; 5.2 in October; 5.9 in
November 2013.
Miami County: 4.2 percent
in November; 3.8 in October; 4.7
in November 2013.
KOONTZ
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
Dorothy Fern Hodgson Hosley
Koontz passed away December 12,
2014, in Littleton, Colorado. She
was 100 years old. Always known as
Fern she was
the youngest of
seven children
and the only
girl. All of her
brothers preceded her in death.
Her brother,
Emmett, lived
in Garnett for
Koontz
many
years
with his wife,
Ozella, and their family. Emmetts
daughter, Donna Umbarger and his
son, Delton Hodgson, still live in
Garnett.
Fern was born on a farm in
Linn County, Kansas, to Stephen
and Cora Dell Hodgson. She graduated from Parker High School
in Parker, Kansas, and attended
Pittsburg College in Pittsburg,
Kansas, where she met and married James L Hosley in 1936. They
lived briefly in Cullison, Kansas,
later moving to Salina, Kansas,
where James taught at Salina High
School and where their daughters
Saundra Beth and Karen Lea were
born.
Fern was active in the First
Methodist Church and many other
groups and organizations. For
many years she was a poll worker
for local, state and national elec-
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
kinds, especially gardening. Roger
also enjoyed spending time with his
children and granddaughter.
Roger was preceded in death
by his parents, Edward and Freda
Kratzberg; and his brother, Alan
Kratzberg.
He is survived by son, Keith
Kratzberg of Garnett; daughter,
Kady Kratzberg of Iola; granddaughter, Traci Kratzberg; two
brothers, Larry Kratzberg of
Riverside, Missouri; Dale Kratzberg
of Richmond; three sisters, Carol
Green and Eileen Kratzberg, both
of Shawnee; Jean Tate of Ottawa;
many nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were Saturday,
January 10, 2015 at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel,
Garnett; burial followed in the
Greeley City Cemetery, Greeley.
Memorial contributions may be
made to Roger Kratzberg Memorial
Fund.
You may send your condolences
to the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com
Roger Lee Kratzberg, age 52, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away on
Monday, January 5, 2015, at his
home.
He was born
February 26,
1962, the son of
Edward John
and
Freda
Pauline (Fuller)
Kratzberg.
R o g e r
worked as a
Kratzberg
welder
for
Missouri
Pacific Railroad for 19 years. He
worked as a machinist at TaylorForge in Garnett and Paola for several years. He was a member of
Boilermakers Local Lodge #83 of
Kansas City, Missouri.
He loved riding his HarleyDavidson; Roger also enjoyed
smoking meat and had built many
grills and smokers over the years.
He enjoyed outdoor activities of all
HIGGINBOTTOM
November 12, 1945-January 5, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
her parents; her husband, Sidney
Higginbottom; and her brother,
Harry J. Fields.
Survivors include her daughter,
Donis Fields of Westphalia; a sister,
Harrietta Burrious of Blackwell,
Oklahoma; and a brother, Jerry
Fields of Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Funeral services were Saturday,
January 10, 2015, at the First
Christian Church in Garnett.
Burial followed in the Garnett
Cemetery, Garnett, Kansas.
Norma Lee Higginbottom, age
92, of Garnett, died Wednesday,
January 7, 2015, at Golden Heights
in Garnett.
She was born on July 13, 1922,
in Garnett, to Harry and Frances
(Brown) Fields.
She
married
Sidney
Higginbottom on November 6, 1948,
in Iola.
She was preceded in death by
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Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-6125
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Indiana; son, Mark Kemp and
wife Leona of Hutchinson, Kansas;
two daughters, Barbara Yoder
and husband Howard of Welda,
Kansas; Carolyn Yoder and husband Alvin of Garnett, Kansas;
four brothers, Harvey Kemp and
wife Barbara of Goshen, Indiana;
Marvin R. Kemp and wife Loretta;
Raymond Kemp and wife Judy;
Melvin Kemp and wife Gayle, all
of Nappanee, Indiana; four sisters,
Arlene Schwartz and husband
Walter of Etna Green, Indiana; Eva
Burkholder and husband Walter
Jr.; Wilma Mast; and Marilyn
Yoder and husband Richard; all of
Nappanee, Indiana; 17 grandchildren; 5 great grandchildren.
Funeral services were Friday,
January 9, 2015 at the First
Christian Church, Garnett. Burial
followed in the Garnett Cemetery.
Memorial contributions may be
made to the Eldon Kemp Memorial
Fund.
You may send your condolences
the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com .
Eldon Eugene Kemp, age 69, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away on
Monday, January 5, 2015, at his
home.
He was born on November 12,
1945 in Elkhart, Indiana, the son
of Daniel Ellison and Clara Mae
(Miller) Kemp.
Eldon married Sarah Mae Mast
on September 15, 1965 in Nappanee,
Indiana; this union was blessed
with three children. They moved
to Garnett in 1976, making their
home here. He was a trailer factory
worker making R.V.s and was a
self-employed carpenter for over 30
years.
He was an avid fisherman, loving the outdoors. Eldon enjoyed
traveling, especially to Colorado
and Branson, loving his guitars.
He was preceded in death by his
father, Daniel Kemp.
Eldon is survived by wife,
Sarah Kemp of Garnett; his mother, Clara Kemp of Nappanee,
July 13, 1922-January 7, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
tions. Fern worked as a nursery
school teacher and, for a time, ran
her own nursery school. After the
death of her husband in 1961, Fern
served for three years as a sorority housemother at Kansas State
University in Manhattan, Kansas.
Fern later married Arthur
Allen of Topeka, Kansas, where
they lived for 25 years. In 1992, she
moved to Littleton, Colorado, to be
near family.
In 2001 she married former high
school sweetheart, Donald Koontz
of Garnett, Kansas. They spent
more than ten happy and active
years together. Don Koontz passed
away in January of 2012, at age 100.
Ferns interests included sewing, cooking, playing cards, oil
painting, and flower arranging. She
made several beautiful and intricate quilts for family members. Her
family compiled many of her recipes in a cookbook. Among her most
beloved recipes were apple crisp,
German chocolate cake, angel food
cake, Christmas cutter cookies,
vegetable beef stew, rhubarb pie
and caramel nut cinnamon rolls.
Fern is survived by her daughters Saundra Sheffer of San Dimas,
California, and Karen Barrett of
Littleton, Colorado; five grandchildren, six great-grandchildren,
and one great-great-grandchild.
Memorial service and interment of
ashes will be in Salina, Kansas, in
the spring of 2015.
More information at www.newcomerdenver.com.
KEMP
February 26, 1962-January 5, 2015
JOBLESS…
FROM PAGE 1A
crafts, sewing, and quilting, and
traveling. She looked forward to
spending time with her grandchildren, attending school events, and
their visits during the summer.
Virginia was preceded in death
by her parents; her husband,
Kenneth Webb; one son, Jerry Dean
Webb; one great-grandson, R.J.
Rojas; a sister-in-law, Betty Dean.
She is survived by five daughters, Carol Scheuerman and husband Michael of Garnett, Kansas;
Mary Ann Webb and Donald Kittle
of Garnett, Kansas; Beverly Yoder
and husband Vernon of Garnett,
Kansas; Janice Davidson and Roger
Burgess of Burlingame, Kansas;
and Joyce Trammell and husband
Eric of Garnett, Kansas; one brother, Teddy Dean of Austin, Texas;
twelve grandchildren and sixteen
great grandchildren.
Graveside services will be held
at 2:00 p.m., on Thursday, January
15, 2015 at the Memorial Park
Cemetery in Hutchinson, Kansas.
The family will be present to
greet friends from 7:00 to 8:00 p.m.
on Wednesday at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel,
Garnett.
Memorial contributions may
be made to the Virginia Webb
Memorial Fund to be established at
a later date.
Condolences to the family may
be left at www.feuerbornfuneral.
com.
3A
GIFFORD
August 19, 1941-January 6, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published January 13, 2015
Larry L. Gifford, age 73, of
Garnett, died Tuesday, January 6,
2015, at his home.
He was born on August 19,
1941, in Garnett, to Leon and Hazel
(Huggins) Gifford.
He served in the U.S. Navy,
including one Tour of Duty in
Vietnam from June of 1966 to July
of 1967.
He married Mary Richardson
on November 17, 1972, in Upper
Marlboro, Maryland.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, Leon and Hazel Gifford.
Survivors include his wife,
Mary Gifford, of the home; sons,
Sean Sawyer of Elkton, Maryland;
Andrew Gifford of Garnett; daughter, Hazel Stringham of Paola; two
grandchildren; brother Richard
Gifford of Garnett; sister Elnora
Lybarger of Topeka; and numerous
other family and friends.
Funeral services were Saturday,
January 10, 2015, at the Feuerborn
Family Funeral Service Chapel
in Garnett. Burial followed in
the Garnett Cemetery in Garnett,
Kansas.
We will not be open for
business
Monday, January 19th
in observance of Martin
Luther King, Jrs birthday.
2×3
farmers state
bank
We will re-open for
normal business hours the
following Tuesday.
RECYCLE!
3×4
Anderson County Recycle Trailer Schedule
anco recycle
January 13-31, 2015
13
Welda
18
25
Harris
14
Welda
15
20
21
22
Westphalia
Westphalia
Westphalia
Westphalia
26
27
28
29
Greeley
Greeley
17
23
24
Welda
19
Greeley
16
Greeley
Harris
Harris
30
Bush City
31
Bush City
Holidays, weather and breakdowns may alter schedule.
Any questions call (785) 448-3109
In observance of
Martin Luther King Jr.s
birthday, we will not be
open for business
Monday, January 19th.
2×3
gssb
We will re-open Tuesday
for regular business hours.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
EDITORIAL
Bad TV more entertaining
I was nursing a cold over the weekend and had the opportunity to camp
out for a few hours in front of the tube
on Sunday afternoon with Antenna TV,
and my eyes were opened to a whole
realm of bad entertainment Id completely forgotten.
Small Wonder was a TV sitcom that
ran from 1985 to 1989 about a family,
the Lawsons, headed by a 1980s tech
titan (which at the time meant he
probably had his own Amiga 1000 computer sizzle-sizzle) who had managed
to design a robot in the form of what
else a 10 year-old girl.
VICI of course possessed super
strength, super speed, super intellect
and was powered by a tiny nuclear
reactor just the thing youd want living in your house with your family and
pets. She could speak albeit in a low
monotone and on the outside looked
amazingly like a child actor from the
1980s with life-like hair and everything.
The plot, if there really was one,
was that she posed as a visiting relative who rarely went outside other
than to attend school, where apparently none of the kids or teachers or appliance repair shops ever got wise to her
true nature.
Listen, I watch reruns of Good
Times and can sometimes make it
past three of Jimmy Walkers Dyno-mites!, but Im telling you Small
Wonder was awful.
The writing sounded like the kind
of dialogue youd hear in a Russian hat
factory; the adult actors had this look
on their faces like they were questioning whether making this months car
payment was really worth the possibility that this atrocity might eventually
be shown to their grandkids. I will
say this however taking into consideration that this was a family sitcom
from the 80s, I noticed a distinct lack
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
of sexual innuendo in the dialogue.
Thats far from the case today, when
every sitcom writer has learned the
Golden Rule of getting a laugh every
two minutes: just have your character
say penis.
VICI (Tiffany Brissette), whos
now 40 according to her Wikipedia
entry, tried to stay in acting but left the
lens behind for good in 2007 now shes
a nurse. Jerry Supiran, whos 41 now
and played the ornery, fully-fleshed
12-year old son of the Lawsons, apparently never found work after his voice
changed. Perhaps his own Wiki entry
tells his story best:
On May 31, 2012, it was reported that Supiran was homeless in
California and living at a shelter he
volunteers at or under a bridge. He
blamed his financial and social condition on a stripper he dated when he
was 18 years old.[1] He also blamed a
former adviser for stealing half a million dollars from him. Supiran said
he worked as a waiter in Henderson,
Nevada until he was laid off in 2010 due
to the economic downturn.
I wonder what it takes to be the
Black Sheep of the Supiran family, anyway?
Yep, its a treasure trove of bad vintage TV out there, and the great thing
is they churn out more all the time.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
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Cuomos unfinished business
I am one of those who mourn the passing of Mario Cuomo, and celebrate his life.
Among the more enjoyable experiences of
my time as a younger reporter were various conversations I was privileged to have
with him during the quiet that would precede the storm of news. He could argue
without offending, unless he wanted to, be
provocative without provoking. He was an
unabashed progressive and will be remembered as one of his generations most exciting speakers, inspiring with his rhetorical
style as well as his ideas.
Unfortunately, when it comes to the causes he championed, he leaves behind a soci-
When Obamacare came to Harvard
Obamacare has come to Harvard, and the
faculty is in a state of shock and dismay.
In what has to be considered an early
contender for the most hilarious and enjoyable news story of the year, The New York
Times recounts the tumult over Obamacare
in Cambridge.
For years, the Times writes, Harvards
experts on health economics and policy have
advised presidents and Congress on how to
provide health benefits to the nation at a
reasonable cost. But those remedies will now
be applied to the Harvard faculty, and the
professors are in an uproar.
In other words, they are getting the change
they believed in — good and hard. As a wag
commented on Twitter, karma is a pre-existing condition. The Harvard imbroglio is a little like the famously free-market University
of Chicago economics faculty launching a
revolt against tax cuts or deregulation.
The enrollment guide from Harvards
human-resources department explains that
rising health-care costs, some caused by
Obamacare, account for the changes hitting
the pocketbooks of the custodians of learning
at Harvard. It cites specifically free preventive services and the extension of coverage
for younger adults up to age 26 (as well as the
impending Cadillac tax on pricey health
plans).
The obstructionists on the Faculty of Arts
and Sciences voted by a lopsided margin
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
against the health-care changes, but they
were too late.
According to the Times, history professor
Mary D. Lewis is a leader of the faculty opposition, which makes her practically the Mitch
McConnell of Harvard University. Lets hope
she has a plausible repeal-and-replace plan
and isnt merely campaigning on the power
of sheer, nihilistic rejectionism.
Richard F. Thomas, a Virgil scholar, said
the health-care changes are deplorable.
(Quoth the poet, Each of us bears his own
Hell.) They are deeply regressive. (It
never troubles the wolf how many the sheep
be.) And they are a sign of the corporatization of the university. (O accursed hunger
of gold, to what dost thou not compel human
hearts!)
Dont worry, Harvard faculty, Texas Sen.
Ted Cruz is coming to the rescue. Who better
than a Harvard Law graduate to swoop in to
save professors at his dear old alma mater
from the consequences of their own folly?
Actually, the changes Harvard is experiencing are quite mild. By any measure, the
schools plan is still incredibly generous.
Faculty will, for instance, now have an annual deductible of $250, which is hardly exorbitant. Perhaps the Harvard faculty foolishly
believed that other alum, President Obama,
when he said Obamacare would save the
average family $2,500?
In a properly constructed market, consumers — even including Harvard professors
— should indeed bear more of the costs of
their health care directly. But in todays system, consumers tend not to have free choice
of their plans, and Obamacare layers on top
of that system costly mandates that make no
sense.
The Harvard faculty can whine and stew
all it likes, but the president has sent an
unmistakable message to such malcontents:
The law is the law. Harvard won the healthcare debate years ago, and theres no going
back on it now.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Same education funding problem, no easy answers
Another court panel has said, again, that
the state isnt spending enough money to
provide K-12 students in every school district
in the state with the education they need to
meet the states new Rose Standards, which
presumably set them up for successful lives.
The decision, which will presumably
someday be affirmed or modified by the
Kansas Supreme Court, has already set off
some predictable, and some unanticipated,
response from the Legislature.
The simplest reading of the decision is
that Kansas needs to send more money from
Topeka to those districts. But, as with nearly
every issue with a pricetagan estimated
$548 million boost in funding this yearthe
details almost overwhelm the problem, if a
majority of legislators concur that there is a
problem.
There are dozens of legislators who believe
that the state is spending enough money now
on K-12, and that local school districts are
misspending that moneyeither on administrators who dont actually teach children
how to read or do long division, or by not running their districts in a tight, businesslike,
economical manner.
And, there are dozens, too, who believe
that if the state would spend more money
on schools, then local property taxpayers
would see savings, children would have more
teachers and wed have a state rife with children who are going to succeed in their lives,
whether its learning a vocation or going on
to higher education and becoming prosperous members of society.
Oh, and there are probably also dozens
of legislators who believe the courts dont
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
have any business meddling in education and
the finance thereof, and that nobody really
knows whether our kids in schools are getting a sound education or not.
It doesnt get a lot more confusing, does it?
The whole issue that everyone supports
getting Kansas kids the best education possiblegets dissected so many ways, looked at
from so many vantage points, that the focus
can be lost. Remember, this funding issue is
a legislative issue, which means that 63 votes
in the House and 21 in the Senate decide the
response.
There are some obvious included issues to
be fought out. If the state spends more money
on school finance, what else in government
doesnt get funded, and does the state need
to raise more moneythats taxesto fund
schools and everything else?
Property tax-financed local option budgetsoriginally designed to allow districts to
provide the special services that are import-
ant to the constituents of school board membershave now been hijacked to pay for
basic costs that the judges last week said the
state isnt adequately financing anymore.
The local option portion of school finance
isnt really optional anymore.
So, does the Legislature just rename and
claim credit for that local option budget,
which at least on paper appears to make the
state more supportive of the basic cost of
keeping the schools open? There are takers
for that option, and the judicial panel did in
its findings say that the state making pension
payments for teachers is part of support for
public education.
Andthere are those Rose Standards
which are the new measurement of quality
education in Kansas. Those standards havent been reduced to a test so that from the
vantage point of Topeka, lawmakers can tell
whether whatever money is spent on K-12 is
getting the results that the state wantsor
notand why.
So, besides this little budget problem
aheadcutting about 10 percent of state
spending or some lesser amount balanced by
tax increasestheres the school issue to deal
with.
Well have to see where this goesor
if lawmakers decide to just study school
finance for another couple years while the
kids get older
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
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
BOB FRANKEN, King Features Syndicate
ety that is still struggling. After all, this is
the man who thrilled the 1984 Democratic
Convention in San Francisco by deriding
President Ronald Reagans repeated references to the United States as a shining city on
the hill. He brought the house down with his
description of an out-of-touch president who
had a limited view from the portico of the
White House or the veranda of his ranch,
continuing, There is despair, Mr. President,
in the faces that you dont see, in the places
that you dont visit in your shining city.
Instead, he roared, America is a tale of two
cities, of rich and poor, the haves and havenots.
Here we are, slightly more than 30 years
later, where the same two cities description is used to paint a picture of a worsening
divide. The nations wealth inequality is far
greater than it was then, fewer and fewer hold
more and more while the bulk of our society
struggles to get by on scraps.
As weve seen, the lives of whites and
people of color still are separated, both culturally and physically. Even though Barack
Obama will go down in history as Americas
first black president, his contention during a
recent NPR interview that we are less racially divided than when he took office in 2008
must be juxtaposed with the bitter feelings
between blacks and police.
New York Police Commissioner Bill
Bratton, who is assuming a role as bridge
builder, argues that the problem is just the
tip of the iceberg.
This is about the continuing poverty rates,
the continuing growing disparity between the
wealthy and the poor, he said. Its about
unemployment issues. There are so many
national issues that have to be addressed that
it isnt just policing, as I think we all well
know.
It is also about a society so divided that our
various communities have become isolated
enclaves where no one is even willing to
consider the experience of them, meaning
anyone else. Its hard to think about bridging
cultural gaps when no one understands why
thats a good thing.
We seem to have hit a wall when it comes to
embracing our differences. We are obviously
failing when it comes to sharing our wealth.
Along the way we have lost much our luster,
falling behind in health care, education and,
as the polls show, hope for a better life.
Mario Cuomo said one time that he would
like his epitaph to read He tried. As much
as we note his remarkable life and aspirations, when it comes to his vision, we are
failing.
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 Periodiacls class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
5A
LOCAL
DAR learns about Christmas with the Revolutionary troops
GARNETT The Four Winds
Chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution met
on December 4, 2014 for their
meeting and Christmas party.
There were ten members and
one guest present. Hostesses
were Iona Sweers and Ruth
Allen. The members enjoyed
a Christmas Party with many
delicious snacks.
The meeting was called to
order by Regent Alice Walker.
The minutes were read and
approved as read. The treasurers report was given and
filed for audit. The audit committee was appointed and consists of Iona Sweers, Juanita
Kellerman, and Betty Penn.
The chapter will be purchasing
a DAR marker for the grave of
former member Laura Cox. All
volunteer service hours for the
year are to be reported to Alice
Walker by December 31.
The next meeting will be on
Saturday, February 4th at 1:30.
Juanita Kellerman will serve
as hostess. The program will
be the honoring of our chapter American History Award
Winners, Good Citizen Award
Winners, and the Junior
American Citizen Contest
Winners. The essay winners
will read their winning essays.
The program was given
by Regent Walker. Her topic
was most informative and was
titled Christmas With the
Revolutionary Troops. She
shared how the conditions
were not filled with lots of celebrating as we might think. The
conditions that our forefathers
endured were quite different
and difficult. She started by
telling that the first Christmas
during the war was in 1775.
The colonists have been at war
for eight months. Some of the
troops who had enlisted for
a short time had gone home,
but a few did remain to hold
the line. The troops who were
together celebrated a cold, wet
Christmas without protection
from the elements.
The troops in the north
spent Christmas getting ready
for a siege of Quebec. The
idea of capturing Quebec and
Montreal was presented by
Benedict Arnold. The troops
had to wade through icy water
in the swamps and rivers.
Upon arrival to Quebec, the
river was crossed and they set
up to siege the city, but it could
not be taken. When the troops
combined they still could not
make any progress. The conditions were even getting worse.
The army endured five feet of
snow on the ground and their
provisions were running low.
The camps were undated with
dysentery and smallpox. The
Christmas was cheerless and
miserable. When December 31
came many men saw the end
of their enlistment and went
home. Half of the men were
taken prisoners. The men,
who did stay, set up siege lines
again.
The Christmas of 1776 found
General Washington and his
army around Morristown,
New Jersey. The troops were
going to head toward Trenton
overnight on the 25th to begin
attack on the Hessian mercenaries. It was extremely cold
and the Delaware River had
large blocks of ice which made
the travel miserable.
The
Hessians were caught completely unaware and on January 3,
1777, Washington had successfully taken Princeton and the
troops returned to winter at
Morristown.
Christmas 1777 the troops
were setting up the winter
camp at Valley Forge. The
troops were uncomfortable.
Food supplies were running
out and clothing and shoes did
not even exist. The area was
wooded and would provide fuel
for the campfires and wood
to build huts for shelter. The
building of the huts for the men
took longer than expected and
by the middle of February some
of the Officers still did not have
sufficient shelter. Somehow
enough food was found to have
the army survive.
By 1778, Washington and the
troops were going into winter
quarters scattered about over
a large area. Washington had
gone to Philadelphia to talk to
Congress about the plans for
the campaign of 1779. The winter was a milder one and the
troops did not suffer as they
had in the previous years.
Christmas
1779
found
the troops encamped at
Morristown for the winter
and it was a much worse than
it had been at Valley Forge.
The lack of clothing and shoes
were hard enough to bear as
well as the drought from the
summer before had resulted in
a bad harvest and food was
scarce. The heavy snow made
it difficult to get the scarce supplies to the army. At night,
the Officers, who had no huts
would lay down in groups of
five or six men with their feet
to the fire to keep from freezing
to death. Somehow the army
survived the winter and headed into the campaign of 1780.
The colonial army hit the
bottom of despair in 1780. Food
and supplies were at an all time
low. The troops were divided into small groups and sent
to small encampments for the
winter. The season was milder
but getting supplies such as
food and clothing was extremely difficult.
After the victory at
Yorktown, you would think
that this year of 1781 could have
been the best year yet, but the
war was not over. Washington
went to Philadelphia to report to
Congress and it was clear that a
to attend to and on December
23rd he met with Congress
and resigned his commission.
This Christmas he was a private citizen on his way home
to celebrate Christmas with his
family.
As we look at all of these
years and the way our ancestors endured the hardships of
cold, frigid, wet conditions with
little clothing or shoes, and little to no food, always hungry
and many with sicknesses, we
must not forget! They endured
all of these harsh conditions
because they had faith in what
they were fighting for. As their
descendants we must always
remember and honor their
memory this Christmas as we
prepare to celebrate.
Regent Walker presented
each member with a very special gift, a DAR mug! The meeting was adjourned.
campaign needed to be planned
for 1782. Washington spent the
holiday in Philadelphia with
Martha and it made the winter
the most pleasant so far.
1782 was a year with no military activity and a preliminary
agreement of peace was signed
in November. December 7th
the French troops were sailing home. Ten days later the
British fleets were also heading
home.
On January 20th, 1783
the formal treaty of peace
was signed but Washington
thought it was unwise to disband the troops so the army
continued to serve for another
year. The last of the British
troops left New York in late
November. So on December
4th, Washington gathered the
officers at Fraunces Tavern
to say their final farewells.
Washington had one final duty
2×3
allen comm
college
New Farm Bill decisions need made this winter
Hopefully many of you were able to attend
one of the 2014 Farm Bill Informational
Meetings that were held last month. If you
werent able to attend one of the meetings,
please realize it will be very important
for you to begin educating yourself on the
decisions that will need to be made and
the applicable deadlines associated with
each. The first decision is for landowners
to decide if they want to update yields and/
or reallocate base acres on their farm. This
decision must be made and applicable forms
signed by February 27, 2015.
Yields can be updated by providing your
local Farm Service Agency (FSA) office
with the average crop yield for the years
in which the crop was planted from 2008
through 2012. Producers must add the total
production produced and divide the total
acres planted for each crop planted by year.
Keep in mind this is done for each crop for
all acres planted on that particular FSA
farm number. Producers should also note
that soybeans planted after wheat in 2008
and 2009 were considered a double crop.
As a result, when computing the soybean
yield for 2008 and 2009 the double cropped
soybean acres and production need to be
included in the computations. The yield
update decision is done on a crop by crop
basis. For any year in which the crop was
planted and the production records are not
available the county substitute yield may
be used. The substitute yield can also be
used for years in which the actual yield
falls below the substitute yield for that year.
Producers need to realize if you choose
to update yields, the system is designed
to ensure your yield for the crop does not
decrease from its current value. As a result,
FSA highly encourages producers to consider updating the current yields on their farm.
Base reallocation is another decision that
must be made by February 27, 2015. Any
landowner on the FSA farm may choose
to retain the base crops and acres that are
present or allow the computer to figure the
average plantings of the base crops and
acres for years 2009 through 2012. Base
reallocation is an all or nothing decision in
which you choose to keep what you have or
what the system computes as your average
plantings. The total base acres on the farm
will not increase or decrease if you choose
to reallocate.
All producers who will share in the risk
of a crop grown on the farm must decide
which program option to enroll the farm in
by March 31, 2015. An agreement will need
to be made and all parties must sign and
return a form to their local FSA office by
the March 31st deadline. Farm operators
and/or landowners may choose to enroll
a crop into the Price Loss Coverage (PLC)
program or the Agriculture Risk Coverage
(ARC) County program. The other option
is to enroll the farm into the Agriculture
Risk Coverage (ARC) Individual program.
PLC or ARC County program options may
be elected on a crop by crop basis within an
FSA farm. The ARC Individual program
enrolls all crops on the FSA farm if this
elected by the producer.
Price Loss Coverage (PLC) program payments are triggered when the Market Year
Average (MYA) price of a crop falls below
the reference price that has been established for that particular crop. Average Risk
Coverage (ARC) County program payments
are triggered when actual county average
revenue falls below the five year weighted
county average revenue for that particular
crop. The Average Risk Coverage (ARC)
Individual program payments trigger if the
actual revenue of all crops planted on the
farm fall below the five year weighted revenue for those same crops. The actual yields
from the crops planted on the farm and the
historical yields of the crops produced on
that particular farm are used in the computations as opposed to county average yields
that are used in the ARC County program
option.
As stated previously, now is the time to
start educating yourself and gathering the
necessary yield data to make sure all decisions and necessary forms are signed and
returned to your local FSA office timely.
We have some reports available in the office
that will assist producers with the base
reallocation decision and a form in which
you can certify your yields. You will need
to provide the yield certifications before
we can generate the form that will need
signed and returned by February 27, 2015.
Producers can receive assistance from the
Extension Service to utilize tools that may
assist in deciding if PLC, ARC County, or
ARC Individual will be the best option for
your farm. Once a decision is made we can
generate a form for all producers with a
risk in the crop to sign and return by March
31, 2015. Please contact your local FSA for
more details.
2×3
maloans$11.99*
PRIME RIB Friday & Saturday Night
includes choice of side, salad and roll
*Price good for dine-in only, offer not valid on catering.
Prime rib offer good only with purchase of drink.
Price subject to change without notice.
DINNER: Upstairs Wed. – Thur. 5 p.m. – 8 p.m., Fri. – Sat. 5 p.m. – 9 p.m.
785-448-2616
Find us on facebook for more weekend specials!
On the Square – At the corner of 4th and Oak
Downtown Garnett
2×3
suffron glass
Mirrors Screens
2015 Ag Stewardship Conference set for Feb. 6
Do you know the laws that
apply to leasing land for cropping, hunting, or grazing? Have
you planned properly for the
future of your farm? Are you
aware of the tax implication
when passing your farm to the
next generation?
Farmers and ranchers in
east-central Kansas, especially
in Douglas, Franklin, Osage,
and Shawnee counties are
encouraged to attend the 2015
Ag Stewardship conference.
All producers in the area are
invited, but a special invitation
would include absentee landowners, new and beginning
farmers, and small or specialty
crops farmers.
The line-up of speakers is:
Matt Unruh with the Kansas
Water Office will present on the
Vision for the Future of Water
Supply in Kansas, Art Barnaby
with K-State University will
give an overview of the 2014
Farm Bill, Mike Irvin with
Kansas Farm Bureau will
present on Agricultural Law
updates, and Forrest Buhler
with the Kansas Agricultural
Mediation Service will present
on Estate Planning for farm
families.
The conference is free to
all attendees and lunch will
be provided. However, to
arrange for conference materials and the meal, pre-registration is required before
January 30, 2015, by contacting
the Conservation District in
Lyndon at 785-828-3458. SPACE
IS LIMITED.
The one day conference will
be held on Friday, February
6, 2015 at Grace Community
Church, 310 East 8th Street
(Highway 56), Overbrook,
Kansas. The conference will
start at 9:00 a.m., with registration at 8:30 a.m.
Persons with disabilities
who require accommodation to attend or participate
in this event shall contact
the Conservation District
in Lyndon by January 30th.
The following sponsors and
partners are making this
event possible: WIBW 580 AM
Radio, K-State Research and
Extension, USDA Farm Service
Agency and Natural Resources
Conservation
Service,
Farm Bureau, Conservation
Districts, KOFO 1220 AM,
Pomona WRAPS, Ag Choice,
Ottawa Coop, KAWS, and
New Indoor Range
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Frontier Farm Credit. The four
counties that planned this con-
ference are Douglas, Franklin,
Osage and Shawnee.
Visit Iola & Allen County!
These Iola and Allen County businesses appreciate your patronage
4×7
and encourage
you to visit your local merchants in Allen County!
iola allen co guide
Flynn Appliance & Hi-Def Center Iola Office Supplies
11 N. Jefferson IOLA (620) 365-5940
M-F 8-6 / Sat 8-1
Best selection of
Home Appliances.
Flat Panel Televisions
Plasma & LCD
4 S. Washington IOLA
(800) 598-2205 or (620) 365-7787
MON-FRI 8 to 5:30
324 N. State IOLA (620) 365-3401
1 S. Walnut IOLA
David Layman, Mgr.
Duanes Flowers
info@thegunguys.net
Visit our website at www.duanesflowers.com
to order flowers 24 hours a day!
TOLL
FREE
(800) 279-9237 (620) 365-5723
EAST SIDE OF SQUARE IN DOWNTOWN IOLA
To advertise your
business here,
call Stacey at
(785) 448-3121.
PSI INC.
5 N. Jefferson
(620) 365-2681
EAST SIDE OF SQUARE IN DOWNTOWN IOLA
Sell your stu on
Mon.-Sat. 8-5
785-418-0711
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
SINCE 1974
We are in Garnett every 2 weeks
and offer FREE DELIVERY!
DTI
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advertising works! Call
(785) 448-3121 to advertise
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On-Site Paint Mixing Systems Vehicle Body Work
Computerized
Wheel Alignment
Mechanical Repairs Drive-Train Repairs
Diesel & Turbo of Iola
(620) 365-5232
dlayman@dieselandturbo.com
Utleys Iola Auto Body Inc.
See us for all of your insurance needs.
MOUND CITY OFFICE
Terry Smethers
(913) 795-2344
IOLA PHARMACY
109 E. Madison IOLA
(620) 365-3176 or (800) 505-6055
Let the Review do all the work for you!
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6A
First quarter thwarts AC
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
IOLA The AC boys got off to a
cold start last week at Iola and
could never overcome a first
period point deficit to lose 70-64
to the Mustangs.
Chase Ratliffs three-pointer was the high point of the
Bulldog scoring in that sober
first period, when Jake Rundle
and Nick Levy went to the free
throw line and Derek Nelson
hit a bucket and that was it.
AC massed only 12 points while
Iola peppered the net for 21 in
the period.
The Bulldogs woke up and
LOCAL
it was 34-27 at the end of the
AC-owned second period and
even better at 46-48 after the
Bulldogs won the third quarter
of play. Ratliff, Trevor Johnston
and Rundle all smashed big
threes in the final period but
couldnt whittle away enough
points.
AC shot 55 percent to Iolas
67 percent from the free throw
line. Rundle hammered in 27
points on the night, Ratliff 13,
Zele Hermreck 8, Nelson 7,
Levy 5, Johnston 3 and Brady
Rockers added a free throw.
Ben Cooper led scoring for Iola
with 19 points.
Lancer boys fall to NE Arma
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
ARMA Northeast Arma shot
the ball more last week against
the Crest Lancers and hit the
target more often, handing
Crest a 78-52 defeat.
Odd as it may sound
I am pretty happy with our
game, said head coach Travis
Hermreck. We turned it over
too much and didnt shoot well
but we competed and played
very hard.
Similar to the girls matchup Armas boys squad showed
a penchant for three-point
shooting. Arma hit 13 threes in
the contest. Crest hit only 3 of
17 attempts. The Lancers were
down 40-25 at the half after a
more robust second quarter
on offense, but Arma held the
pedal down after the break and
never let Crest make a run at
the lead. Armas Troy Howard
and Drew Mills each drilled
four treys, Howard notching 25
points overall and Mills 18.
Crests Austin Green hit 15
on the night, Evan Godderz and
Kellen Ramsey 10 each, Hunter
Frazell had 9 and Brandon
Brallier 8.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-13-2015 / Photo Submitted
The Anderson County High School Cheerleaders attended their
first Elite Cheerleading Competition at Eudora High School on
November 15 Front row L to R: McKenzi Huettenmueller, Adriann
Garbarino, Bailey Whitcomb (co-captain), Tavia Wittman (co-captain), Kori Pitts, Ashley Kaufman, Madison Martin, Back row L to R:
Maci Modlin, Tiffany Mills, Darcie Maley, Samantha Nickell, Audrie
Goode, Lexee Feuerborn, Morgan Bachman. Small group performance at right: clockwise, Adriann Garbarino, Madison Martin,
Tavia Wittman and Lexee Feuerborn.
Shooting costs Vikings ACHS cheerleaders earn
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
RICHMOND Some nights the
shots just wont fall.
It was that kind of night for
the Central Heights Vikings
Friday when cold shooting
handed them a 72-60 loss in
a Pioneer League matchup
against Santa Fe Trail.
I thought our pace of play
was pretty good for the most
part tonight, said CHHS head
coach Doug North. We ran the
floor well and played extremely
hard but we had one of those
nights where we just didnt
knock down open shots.
The Vikes kept firing from
behind the arc to make up the
margin but just couldnt get the
shots to fall, hitting only 6 treys
out of 38 attempts with Matt
Percy and Merrick Brown drilling two each. The Vikings were
12/28 from the free throw line.
Our kids are disappointed
because they know they are
much better shooters than that,
and they know it isnt going to
get the job done, North said.
Jacob Pryor led CHHS with
14 points, Percy and Merrick
Brown had 12 apiece, Marcus
Watson 8, Chase Brown 5,
Zele Smith 3, Gavin Holler and
Wyatt Thompson 2 apiece.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
6×10.5
ach
awards at competition
The Anderson County High
School Cheerleaders attended
their first Elite Cheerleading
Competition at Eudora High
School on November 15th.
They came home with 3 trophies, several medals and ribbons, and received 1 & 2 ratings
overall plus there was a special trophy given, The Crowd
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
Appeal Award which the girls
received as well.
Four of the girls entered a
small group stunt routine
which they choreographed
to a Frozen Remix. The girls
received a 2 overall rating.
The
cheerleaders
are
coached by Trish Wittman.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
CALENDAR
Tuesday, January 13
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
basketball at Osawatomie
4:30 p.m. – ACHS basketball at
home with Prairie View
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
Wednesday, January 14
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
ACHS Drama/International Club
dinner theater trip
ACHS FBLA CTSO Citizenship
Day at Topeka
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
4 p.m. – Pioneer League Scholar
Bowl at ACHS
6 p.m. – Central Heights Booster
Club meeting
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
Thursday, January 15
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Friday, January 16
4 p.m. – Crest basketball at
home with Altoona
Saturday, January 17
Sunday, January 18
Monday, January 19
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
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
Tuesday, January 20
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Wednesday, January 21
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. – Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, January 22
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
Friday, January 23
Saturday, January 24
Sunday, January 25
Monday, January 26
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade)
Den Cub Scouts and Wolves (second grade) Den Cub Scouts meeting
Tuesday, January 27
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
7 p.m. – Legion BIngo at VFW
Wednesday, January 28
Plaza Grill and Cinema
Located in Downtown Ottawa
Dinner, Bar and Movies
Call for our Dinner and Movie Specials
at (785) 242-5555 or Facebook us
@ The Plaza Grill and Cinema.
LOCAL
Project 17 offers free leadership training at Garnett Jan. 26
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT An organization
dedicated to improving the economic opportunities and quality of life in southeast Kansas
is offering free leadership
training in Garnett later this
month. The seminar is especially beneficial to government
and school district leaders, as
well as members of the Garnett
Area Chamber of Commerce,
a local economic development
leader said.
Project 17 and the Kansas
Leadership Center are offering the free, one-day training
session for anyone who lives
in one of the 17 southeastern
counties who is interested
in learning more about civic
leadership. The Garnett Public
Library will be the site of one
of three workshops in January.
Garnett will be host of the Jan.
26 seminar; other seminars are
planned for Jan. 27 in Parsons
and. Jan. 28 in Wilson County.
There is no charge, and lunch
is provided.
Project 17 is a relatively new
economic development initiative that includes 17 counties
in the region: Allen, Anderson,
Bourbon,
Chautauqua,
Cherokee, Coffey, Crawford,
Elk, Franklin, Greenwood,
Labette,
Linn,
Miami,
Montgomery, Neosho, Wilson
and Woodson. Anyone can join
at any time, and about 450 people have been involved with the
group since it began. An advisory board of 10 people and an
executive director oversee the
organization.
Dennis Arnold, economic
development director for the
City of Garnett and Anderson
County, has worked with
Project 17 in various economic
endeavors. He called the organization a partner in economic
development.
Its a way to combine
resources to address common
issues within the region, he
said.
The organization focuses on four areas: Economic
Health,
Development,
Leadership and Workforce/
Education. Project 17 officials
keep tabs on activities among
participating counties, and
provide support and networking opportunities when those
groups work on similar projects. It also can help them find
grants or help promote programs.
The organization also offers
workshops and seminars to
encourage citizens to develop
leadership skills. Some of the
topics to be covered at the coming Garnett seminar include
Diagnosis Situation, Intervene
Skillfully, Energize Others, and
Manage Self. Attendees also
will learn more about Project
17, and will have the opportunity to meet others from the
region.
The advantage of attending
this seminar is that it offers
a one-day workshop that will
hit the high points, rather than
demanding the commitment
of a full-blown leadership program, Arnold said.
It will be especially beneficial to government officials,
people with the school district
and the Chamber, Arnold said.
It helps you look at problems
in different ways.
To register, email hmorgan@
twsproject17.org and indicate
which community training you
wish to attend. Although there
is no cost to attend, anyone who
has preregistered and fails to
attend will be charged $10 to
cover the cost of lunch.
What message is your ACHS offers A Night Of Shorts,
business delivering?
student-directed one-act plays
One of my crusty mentors in
the newspaper business had a
great line when a client would
occasionally tell him that nobody
read his paper and that advertising in it didnt do any good.
Id tell them, Okay- tell you
what Ill run an ad for free
tomorrow that says youre having an affair with the secretary
at the Methodist Church, he
would say all you have to do
is sign it at the bottom and
since nobody reads the paper, it
shouldnt matter, right?
Yep, message is everything.
Whether your chosen medium
is print, radio, TV, social media,
smartphone apps whatever
regardless how expensive or how
cheap your form of marketing,
you wont motivate a customer
surge without an offer of value.
Obviously, sometimes it happens on its own. Hardware stores
face a run on snow shovels and
salt when theres a forecast of 6
inches of snow and ice. In that
case just the knowledge of where
hes likely to find a snow shovel is all a customer needs. The
motivation there is apparent,
and the message is yes, this
shovel can solve your problem.
But its not so easy when the
problem isnt as critical. Thats
why, as somebody who makes
his living in advertising and
working with other small businesses, Ive always cringed when
one of our clients wants to run an
ad that is going to discount 10%
off plastic forks Tuesday only
and expects a magically revenue
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
enhancing response. Its just not
going to happen. You can, after
all, sell three-legged chairs, but
they should be at least 25 percent
off.
Selling your product depends
on pitching value (either in price,
quality, service or all three) to a
group of customers when theyre
most likely to be in the market
to buy. You have to know your
product(s) and your customers
and the value you provide them.
You have to maintain your presence with existing customers
and introduce yourself to new
ones all the time. Message and
timing are powerful allies.
Put enough punch in your
message and youll sell so
much stuff the secretary of the
Methodist Church will be putty
in your hands!
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.
Anderson County High
School Drama Club is proud
to present its annual 2015
Student-Directed One Act
Plays featuring five short
one-act comedies, All-Star
Mom,
Anchorwoman,
Dorothy and Alice, A
Funny Thing Happened on
the Way to Fifth Period, and
Kiss of Death.
First up is All-Star Mom
by Susan Stepp. Have you
ever wondered what happens
when a teenage boy (Daniel
Dougherty) brings his mother
(Grace Urquhart) to her first
high school basketball game?
Plenty of awkwardness and
embarrassment. Thats what.
In Anchorwoman, by
Paul DiLella, newbie Sally
Shell (Anastasia Shriber)
must co-anchor the evening
news with veteran Shelly
Sommers (Melissa Kropf),
but Sally makes the mistake
of criticizing Shelly. In retaliation, Shelly challenges Sally
to a ratings duel in which
the winner will be crowned
Queen of KDST Channel 6
News, and the loser must
resign. During the broadcast,
as tensions rise, each newscaster hurls insults and silly
string, leaving the viewing
audience to wonder, Is this
news or a reality show?
In Dorothy and Alice, by
Itamar Moses, two seemingly
ordinary young girls (Eliza
Sibley, Karly Wheeler) meet
and have lunch on their elementary school playground.
The fourth play is A
Funny Thing Happened on
the Way to Fifth Period by
Jason Pizzarello. To win her
freedom from school bully
Bugs (Austin Wickwire),
smart aleck Tammy (Gwen
Sibley) offers to help him
get a date to the prom with
popular actress Stephanie
Mezaluna (Remi Hedges).
But the only way to get her
attention is to convince her
that Bugs is a famous actor in
hiding, and as one cover-up
leads to another, its not long
before a jock, Steve (Quentin
Sams), is parading as Bugs
slick New York agent, and
Tammy is stuck trying to get
Steves sister (Bel Sibley) a
date to the prom. Of course,
prom tickets are only on sale
until fifth period — so Tammy
has to act fast and try to control the chaos in this wild
high school hallway farce.
Finally, there is Kiss of
Death by Kelly Meadows.
Wanna kiss someones great
great-great-great (or something like that) grandma
(Samantha Nickell)? What if
shes already been dead for
400 years? Bratty 16-year-old
Lisa (Kinlee Jones) takes her
date Carson (Zane Phelps)
to the cemetery for a secret
kiss goodbye, and they inad-
vertently stumble upon a
reunion of all her dead relatives. Grandma (Payton
Feuerborn) and Grandpa
(Hunter Gilbreth) are still
fighting, plus there are the
coffee cousins: Mochalatte
(Ashley
Holloran),
Carmellatte (Janessa Peine),
Cappuccino (Ellie Lutz),
Cocoa (Mackenzie Lutz), and
the dreadful Aunt Marilyn
(Katie Lybarger)! She looks
so good, now that shes…dead!
Finally, delusional Uncle
Henry (Bel Sibley) thinks
hes the King of England and
is preoccupied with chopping
off whatever heads he can
find. A real scream!
The plays are directed by
Ashley Holloran, Bel Sibley,
Jami Sutton, Tana Benton,
Bobbi Jo Rockers, Melissa
Kropf, Payton Feuerborn,
Vicki Markham, Eliza Sibley
and Remi Hedges.
The cost to attend is $5.
Performances will take place
at 7 p.m. Saturday, January
17 at the Anderson County
High School Auditorium.
Come out for a night filled
with laughs and support the
ACHS Theatre Program!
Winter Ranch Management seminar offered in Overbrook
Record high calf prices and projected
cow-calf profitability have many producers considering expansion. Selecting,
feeding and breeding the right replacement heifers could have a large impact
on future profits.
With that in mind, the 2015 K-State
Winter Ranch Management series of
meetings will focus on best management practices for developing replacement heifers. The meetings will also
feature the popular town-hall stylea
two-way verbal exchangebetween
Kansas cattle producers and extension
specialists. The series is set to kick off
in January.
The Winter Ranch Management
series has a history of being a successful stretch of meetings, which are
hosted throughout the state of Kansas,
said Bob Weaber, beef breeding, genetics and cow-calf specialist for K-State
Research and Extension. Weaber, along
with other state, district and local exten-
sion staff, will take part in the series
to help answer producers questions
about replacement heifer development
and a wide range of beef cattle issues
surrounding animal health, nutrition,
management, genetics and reproduction.
Over the past few months weve
received quite a few questions from
producers regarding heifer development, Weaber said. The Winter Ranch
Management series provides a great
opportunity for us as state specialists
to take our expertise out in the country
for face-to-face meetings. We plan to
provide educational content on a wide
range of issues related to heifer development including a market outlook, heifer
selection, nutrition, target development
weights, breeding and estrus synchronization, and some background on the
Sunflower Supreme Replacement Heifer
Program.
Weaber said producers should come
to the meetings prepared with questions. Some of the hot topics he foresees
discussing in addition to heifer development include drought management
and recovery, winter feeding and cow
management, preparation for calving
season, and, as the bull buying season approaches, selection and genetics
issues.
January is always a great time for
producers, when the weather is bad and
after they get chores done, to sit back,
think and plan for the year, including
the calves that will be born in the spring
and how they might manage those,
he said. Certainly it is a good time of
year to think about business strategy
opportunities moving forward in terms
of expansion.
A seminar is set for Thursday, Jan. 29,
at Grace Community Church, 310 E 8th
Street, Overbrook, hosted by Frontier
Extension District and Shawnee County
Extension. For more information, con-
tact Rod Schaub, Frontier Extension
District, 785-828-4438. RSVP by Jan. 23.
Registration begins at 5:30 p.m. followed by dinner at 6 p.m. The program
begins at 6:30 p.m. with Building Better
Replacements program. At 8:00 p.m.
will be the Town Hall style meeting
Q&A with specialists.
KSRE SPECIALISTS and
PRESENTERS:
Dr. Dale BlasiStocker Cattle
Extension Specialist
Dr. Jaymelynn FarneySE Area
Beef System Specialist
Dr. Sandy JohnsonNW Area
Livestock Specialist
Dr. Chris ReinhardtFeedlot
Nutrition and Mgmt. Specialist
Dr. Glynn TonsorLivestock and
Meat Marketing Specialist
Dr. Justin WaggonerSW Area
Beef Systems Specialist
Dr. Bob Weaber Cow/Calf
Extension Specialist
Arma shooters rule Lancers Iola holds lead to top AC
BY DANE HICKS
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
1B
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
ARMA Crest girls were
unable to stop NE Armas flurry of three point shooting last
week and brought home a 78-31
loss.
They had girls that like to
shoot threes, said coach Elaine
Holloway, and they were all
on. We lost because of not
stopping the shooters and not
rebounding.
Still, Holloway said the team
showed some marked improvements on offense when contrasted against such a solid team.
I felt our team has improved
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
tremendously on running our
offenses, Holloway said. I can
see the improvements weve
been working on. Now we just
have to keep getting better from
game to game and not go back
to our comfortable ways of playing.
Arma pulled ahead in the
first period 21-9 and the Lancers
never got close enough to make
a run to tie it up.
Miranda Golden had 11
points Karlee Hammond 10,
Madison Covey 4, Laurel
Godderz and Taryn Covey both
3.
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
IOLA The AC girls stayed
within striking distance of the
Iola Fillies all night in their
matchup last week but couldnt
put up enough points to avoid a
41-33 loss.
Iola was up 20-13 at the half
and AC won a 12-8 third period
to make it 32-21 headed into the
final quarter, but Iola defended
their lead and picked up the
win.
Paige Scheckel led AC with
17 points, Lexi Lickteig had 6,
Emily Fritz 4, Maci Rockers,
Maycee Ratliff and Samantha
McCullough 2 each.
1×3
AD
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
LOCAL
1995: John Deere dealership sold
Jan. 11, 2005
When weather forecasters
were predicting an ice storm
for much of Kansas Tuesday
night, many Anderson County
residents had flashbacks to 2002
when a winter storm coated the
county with several inches of
ice and caused havoc for weeks.
Danny Berry will spend a
year in the Anderson County
Jail the maximum penalty
allowed by Kansas law after
pleading no contest to killing
four of his dogs and injuring
others to keep state authorities
from confiscating them. Berry
killed the animals in the presence of Kansas health department officials who were at his
home to confiscate the animals
after Berry failed to meet state
animal health mandates at his
kennel.
Jan. 9, 1995
After 52 years of ownership under the Hodgson name,
Garnetts Hodgson-Umbarger
John Deere dealership has
been sold to a Burlington John
Deere dealer to be operated as
its own branch. The sale was
official Jan. 5. Tom Caldwell
of Caldwell Implement Inc.,
Burlington, said their personnel would be on site Tuesday.
The Umbargers said a directive
from John Deere was that after
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
they retired, the dealership
would be closed unless it could
be sold to an adjoining dealer
beforehand.
Baseball and softball programs for Anderson County
High School students looked
more attractive to USD 365
board members after a presentation by Activities Director
Tom Tucker. Tucker previously estimated the two new sports
programs would cost about
$40,000 to implement and run
the first year. He said now he
thinks the programs could cost
as little as $23,431 to implement.
Some of the savings were realized after he did some more
research into what types of
schedules could be set for varsity and junior varsity ball teams
in the area, and by cutting back
on the cost of uniform expenses.
Jan. 14, 1985
The snow began on Tuesday
and by evening turned to rain
and sometimes sleet. Garnetts
street superintendent was
apparently watching and waiting for the snow to end so he
could give the go ahead to
his crew and certain personnel from the Garnett Water and
Electric Departments to begin
snow removal and clean up
they did! Snow removal started
at midnight Tuesday. Garnett
citizens praised the efforts of
the street removal crew when
they discovered they could
drive cautiously to work the
morning following the storm.
Police
Chief
Garnett
Lawrence Kellerman said
Friday he was pleased and
somewhat surprised there
were not more than three minor
accidents during the time we
have had ice on the streets.
People are driving cautiously
and defensively and safer, he
said. Out in the west part of
the county is somewhat a different story, Anderson County
Sheriff Tom Hermreck said.
There have been numerous
incidents and a few accidents
which mostly involved drivers
losing control of vehicles and
sliding into ditches.
PorkBridge distance education offered
MANHATTAN The distance
education series, PorkBridge
2015 begins Feb. 5 with several sessions planned throughout
the year. This years programs
include procedures for cleaning up after swine diseases,
starting pigs after arrival, controlling pests, and others presented by university and industry experts.
Produced through a collaboration of 11 land grant universities including Kansas
State University, PorkBridge
is designed to reach producers and industry professionals
particularly those involved
with grow-to-finish swine
operations across the country and around the world.
Presentations are delivered
electronically through six sessions on an every-other-month
basis.
Swine producers and other
industry professionals can get
up-to-date information without
traveling or giving up a day
to attend a meeting, said Joel
DeRouchey, livestock specialist with K-State Research and
Extension.
Participants can take part
where it works best for them
at home, in an office or in the
swine unit, DeRouchey said.
Audio files from each session
also can be downloaded for
later use.
PorkBridge combines electronic information viewed on
a computer with live presentations by topic experts via tele-
phone, so no internet access
is necessary at the time of the
presentation. About a week
before each session, subscribers receive a web link (depending on their location) with specific presentation and additional information provided by the
presenter. Participants call in
for the audio portion of each
session and follow along with
the presentation on their computer. Each 90-minute session
starts at noon Central time and
includes time for questions of
the presenter.
The fee to participate is $125
for the full year. Additional
subscriptions from the same
business are available at half
the cost.
To ensure receipt of program
materials by the first session,
participants are asked to complete the subscription form
and make payment by Jan. 16.
An informational brochure
with subscription information is available on the K-State
Research and Extension website at Swine Research and
Extension under Upcoming
Events. Kansas residents who
want more information can
contact DeRouchey at (785) 5322280 or jderouch@ksu.edu.
Session dates, topics, and
speakers are:
Feb. 5 Preparing for
Third-Party Audits Matt
Jones, Validus.
April 2 Controlling Pests
Insects and Rodents John
Beller, Beller Biosecurity
Strategies and Roger Moon,
University of Minnesota.
June 4 Effective
Procedures for Cleaning Up
after PED, PRRS and more
Rebecca Robbins, Seaboard
Foods Corporation.
Aug. 6 Proper Pig Handling
Sherrie Webb, National Pork
Board.
Oct. 1 Pit Foaming and
Avoiding Manure Pumping
Hazards Larry Jacobson,
University of Minnesota.
Dec. 3 Starting Pigs After
Arrival (nursery, weaning,
grow/finish) William Hollis,
Carthage Veterinary Services,
Ltd.
Information for producers
outside Kansas is available by
contacting Sherry Hoyer at
shoyer@iastate.edu or 515-2944496.
In Review: Elected Officials in 2005
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-13-2015 / File Photo
Anderson County elected officials in 2005 took the oath of office at the Anderson County Courthouse.
They included, front row, from left: Phyllis Gettler, county clerk; Sandra Baugher, register of deeds; back
row: Dudley Feuerborn, county commissioner; Fred Campbell, county attorney; Scot Brownrigg, county
sheriff; Gene Highberger, county commissioner; and James Smith, district court judge.
Have you ever tried Baklava?
Baklava!!
What in the
world is Baklava? I sure didnt
have any idea until this past
Christmas, when I enjoyed it
while visiting our daughter
Lori over the holidays in Round
Rock, Texas.
Lori had received a special
Christmas basket from a friend
and shared the goodies with us
it contained. One of the goodies
was Baklava, which is a rich,
sweet pastry made of phyllo
filled with chopped nuts and
sweetened and held together
with syrup or honey.
The word Baklava is first
attested in English in 1650, a
borrowing from Ottoman
Turkish. The name Baklava is
used in many languages,with
minor phonetic and spelling
variations.
Baklava is normally prepared in large pans. Many
layers of thin phyllo dough,
separated with melted butter,
are laid in the pan. A layer of
chopped nuts-typically walnuts
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
or pistachios, but hazel nuts are
sometimes used-is placed on
top,then more layers of phyllo.
Most recipes have multiple layers of phyllo and nuts, though
some have only top and bottom
pastry.
In Greece,Baklava is supposed to be made with 33 dough
layers, referring to the years of
Christs life.
Before baking, the dough
is cut into regular pieces,
often parallelograms (lozenge-shaped),t riangles,or rectangles. A syrup, which may
include honey, rose water, or
orange flower water is poured
over the cooked Baklava and
allowed to soak in.
Baklava is usually served at
room temperature, often garnished with ground nuts.
In the United States
Christians normally serve
Baklava at Christmas and
Easter.
I can truly attest to the fact,Baklava is delicious!
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
Dont Turn Your Back On Pain
2×2
diy
If you want to feel your absolute best,
2×2
Let the healing hands of gentle chiropractic care
help
you avoid injuries,
prevent spinal degeneration
balanced
health
and maintain a healthy balance in your life.
No Popping No Cracking No Twisting
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
519 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F: 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. T/Th: 9 a.m. – Noon
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×8.5
biz directory
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
MIKE HERMRECK
Sales & Service
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN
MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
2×5
adamson bros
111 E. 4th
Garnett
Cooper
Jetzon
Ave.
Kumho
Current Rebate
(785) 448-2284
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
(785) 448-5441
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Patriots Bank Bldg. Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Patriots Bank Bldg. Richmond
(785) 835-6161
DC Solutions LLC
Foundation &
Drainage Repair
Licensed & Insured
785-448-3056
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
305 N. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
(913) 256-9163
www.facebook.com/DC Solutions LLC
www.dcsolutions@osawatomie.com
Millers Construction, Inc.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
3B
LOCAL
Meet and accept the great mediator
in bondage for other reasons.
God alone, however, is able
to redeem from the slavery
of sin and death. This is
what the prophetess Anna
was referring to. It had been
revealed to her by the Holy
Spirit that this child would be
the Messiah, the consolation
of Israel spoken of by Simeon
in Luke 2:25.
Anna was well aware of
the Old Testament teaching of
Isaiah who prophesied of the
coming of the child. For to
us a child is born, to us a son
is given, and the government
will be on his shoulders. And
he will be called Wonderful
Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of
Peace. (Isaiah 9:6)
In the New Testament
redemption refers to salva-
In Luke 2 we read of
Joseph and Mary taking the
baby Jesus to the temple, for
it is written, Every firstborn
male is to be consecrated to
the Lord. (Luke 2:23) When
they went into the temple
they met a prophetess named
Anna. She was very old and
had been widowed for many
years. Coming up to them at
that very moment, she gave
thanks to God and spoke
about the child to all who
were looking forward to the
redemption of Jerusalem.
In the Old Testament
redemption was applied to
property, animals, persons
and the nation Israel as a
whole. Men were able to
redeem property, animals
and individuals who were
legally obligated to God or
tion from sin, death and the
wrath of God by Christs sacrifice. We are estranged from
God because of our sin. God
is estranged from us because
of his holiness and wrath.
Pastor Alistair Begg asked
this question. How can God
love sinners without compromising his holiness and how
can he exercise his wrath
without diminishing his love.
Dr. Begg points to 1st John
2:2, He, (Jesus) is the propitiation for our sins and not
for ours only, but also for the
whole world. Propitiation
is the atoning death of Jesus
on the cross, through which
he paid the penalty demanded by God because of mans
sin, thus setting mankind
free from sin and death. In
order to reconcile God and
man there had to be a mediator. The saving ministry of
Jesus Christ is summed up
in the statement given in 1st
Timothy 2:5, For there is one
God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the
man Christ Jesus, who gave
himself as a ransom for all
which is the testimony given
at the proper time.
The Mediators present
work, which he carries forward through human messengers, is to persuade those
for whom he achieved reconciliation to actually to
receive it. If you do not know
Jesus Christ as your personal
Savior accept him today.
David Bilderback: A
Ministry on the Holiness of
God.
Crest schools announce first semester honor rolls
Crest schools have released
honor rolls for the first semester 2014-15.
Crest Elementary School
All As
Second grade: Denton
Ramsey
Third grade: Liliana
Blaufuss, Andie Burnett, Jaci
Coberley, Brenton Edgerton,
Ryan Golden, Kayla Hermreck,
Brody Hobbs, Cadence Nolan
Fourth
grade:
Avery
Blaufuss, Trevor Church,
Kamryn Luedke, Sydney
Stephens
Fifth grade: Anna
Hermreck, Marissa Lansdown,
Khloe Utley, Tucker Yocham
As and Bs
Second grade: Gunner
Ellington
Third grade: Kaylee
Allen,
Brayden
Goodell,
Jenelle Hartman, Brooklynn
Jones, Andrew Modlin, Jerry
Rodriguez, Hannah Smith,
Brock Weatherman
Fourth
grade:
Ty
Chambers, Ethan Godderz,
McKenna Hammond, Colby
McAdam, Karter Miller, Cody
Nolan, Shayda Womelsdorf
Fifth grade: Keaton Davis,
Hailie Fuller, Lindsey Godderz,
Ethan Prasko.
Crest Middle School
All As
6th Grade: Gabe Berry,
Tyson Hermreck, Dallas
Modlin, Benjamin Prasko
7th Grade: Gregory
Hardwick,
Kimberleigh
Lansdown, Summer Starr
8th
Grade:
Jewel
Armstrong, Regan Godderz,
Camryn Strickler
As and Bs
6th Grade: Ashton Bain,
Andrew McAdam, Kobey
Miller
7th Grade: Evan Bain,
Ridley Black, Jamison Hendrix,
Jerrick Jones, Kimberly
Madrid, Brianna Trester
8th Grade: Breyanna
Benjamin, Cassie Bowen,
Hayden Hermreck, Vicky
Rodriguez.
Crest High School
All As Superintendents
Honor Roll
9th Grade: Austin Hendrix
10th Grade: Laurel Godderz,
Karlee Hammond
11th Grade: Evan Godderz,
Colton
Strickler,
Kaden
Strickler
12th Grade: Krystal Cooper,
Tiffany Jackman, Regan
Morrison
Principals Honor Roll
(All As and Bs)
9th Grade: Anthony Dunlap,
Brendon Hammer, Makayla
Jones, Dylan McCutchen,
Hayden Seabolt
11th Grade: Caleb Stephens,
Ga
Kadyn Utley, CJ Ward, Seth
Whitcomb, Morgan Wyant
10th Grade: Nate Berry,
Taryn Covey, Johnathan
Hartman, Shelby Ramsey
11th Grade: Hunter Frazell,
Ashley Geary, Kellen Ramsey,
Lupita Rodriguez, Emily
Webber
12th Grade: Kyler Bowen,
Madison
Covey,
Trevor
Freelove, Austin Green, Rene
Rodriguez, Brianna Scovill,
Codi Vermillion, Emily Wyant.
Greeley Grade School
announces honor rolls
Greeley Grade School has
released the names of students
who earned academic honors
during the second quarter and
first semester.
The following students are
on the second quarter Honor
Roll for the 2014-15 school year:
All As
Sixth Grade: Alex Driever
and Mya Miller
Fourth Grade:
Emma
Schaffer and Evelan Steele
Third Grade:
Preston
Kueser and Alex Schaffer
A/B Honor Roll
Sixth Grade: Orvel Broce,
Alison Brown, Remi Kennard
Fifth Grade:
Briannah
Lickteig, Kyden Teal
Fourth Grade: Reggi
Lickteig, Bryce McCurdy, and
Lane Richards
Third Grade:
Tyler
Stinnett, Brendan Teal, and
The Garnett team of David
Leitch and Patty Barr won the
duplicate bridge match January
7 in Garnett. Phyllis Cobbs of
Bush City and Carole Gibb of
Paola came in second. There
was a tie for third and fourth
between Steve Brodmerkle of
Neosho Falls and Anita Dennis
of Garnett and the Garnett team
of Lynda Feuerborn and Faye
Leitch.
The Garnett Duplicate Bridge
Club invites all bridge players
to join us on Wednesdays at 1:00
at the Garnett Inn.
QUALITY Service You DESERVE
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
The following students are
on the first semester Honor Roll
for the 2014-15 school year:
All As
Sixth Grade: Alex Driever,
Mya Miller
Fifth Grade: Kyden Teal
Fourth Grade:
Emma
Schaffer and Evelan Steele
Third Grade:
Preston
Kueser and Alex Schaffer
A/B Honor Roll:
Sixth Grade: Orvel Broce,
Alison Brown, Remi Kennard
Fifth Grade: Briannah
Lickteig
Fourth Grade:
Reggi
Lickteig, Bryce McCurdy, and
Lane Richards
Third Grade: Tyler Stinnett,
Brendan Teal, and Cadence
Wilper
Duplicate Bridge played
You name it,
we print it.
Cadence Wilper
2×2
FIVE STAR FACILITY
lifecare Short Term Rehab Outpatient Rehab
Inhouse Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapy
Wound Care IV Therapy Respite Care 24 Hr. Nursing Care
Specialized Alzheimers/Dementia Unit
601 Cross Street
620-364-2117
Burlington
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday 9am
Wednesday 7:30pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
6×12
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School 9am
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
church directory
Morning Worship 10:00am
Evening Worship 6:30pm
Wednesday Service 7pm
(785) 448-3208 258 Park, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Phil Rhoades
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Elder Planning Specialists
Annuities
Medicare Supplement
Long Term Care
Scott D. Schulte CSA
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th Garnett
340 E. South St.
Richmond, Kansas 66080
(785) 835-6135
Hwy 59 at Hwy 31 GARNETT
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3558
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
LWML 2nd Sunday 11:30am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ervin A. Daugherty Jr.
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9 am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9:28 am
Sunday Worship 10:28 am
Childrens Church 10:30 am
Wed. Evening Bible Study 6:28 pm
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Mike Farran
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm, Youth Mtg. 7pm
Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ron Jones
BEACON OF TRUTH
Saturday Sabbath Worship 9:30am
Saturday Evening Service 6pm
(except 4th Saturday)
Wednesday Evening Prayer Svc. 7:00pm
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
email review@garnett-ks.com
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Mark McCoy
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 10am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Pastor Darrel Herde
Youth & Childrens Pastor – Chris Goetz
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – David Hill
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15am
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am/Thurs 7pm
Chancel Bells Wed 6pm
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
Jr. & Sr. UMYF Sundays
U.M. Women 1st Wednesday
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
Reverend – Bill Driver
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:45am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
Pastor – Butch Ritter
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
GREELEY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship 9am
Bible Study (Teens, Adults) 10am
Sunday School (Children) 10am
204 N. Main, PO Box 37, Greeley, KS 66033
(913) 755-2225
Pastor – Bill Driver
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 489-2440
RR 1, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Kenneth Davidson
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 8:30am
Fr. Marianand Mendem
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Marianand Mendem
(620) 364-2416
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
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Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country Favorites
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Heating &
Air Conditioning
(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Sunday School 9:30am
Worship Service 10:30am
2nd & Pine, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Cody Knapik
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 10:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Minister – Rev. John G. Sheehan
For additions, subtractions or changes to your
church information, a church official may
contact the Review at (785) 448-3121.
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
4B
HOSPITAL…
ELECTION…
FROM PAGE 1A
FROM PAGE 1A
Attendees are invited to
stay for a reception and tour
the 70,000 square foot hospital
building. Hachenberg said previously the tour likely is the
only opportunity for most people to see all parts of the hospital. After patients move in,
some areas will be restricted.
The new facility offers 12
acute beds as well as an expanded long term care center, which
has been renamed Residential
Living Center. The hospital also
will offer a newly certified Level
IV trauma center, MRI, digital mammography, ultrasound,
cardioscans, bone density tests
and more.
ANIMALS…
FROM PAGE 1A
a consistent temperature, even
if that temperature is cold, she
said. Their winter coats dont
change quickly enough to handle extreme variations, and
they also are more susceptible
to illness when weather changes drastically.
Livestock producers can help
by providing adequate food and
water. Livestock should eat
more hay and grain during
cold weather. Windbreaks also
can help, although establishing
an effective windbreak takes
time. She encourages producers to contact their local forestry service to learn more about
the types of trees available for
windbreaks.
When it comes to protecting
pets from cold weather, Allison
said its OK to keep pets like
dogs outside as long as they
have adequate shelter, food
and water. The shelter should
allow the animal to get out of
the wind, and should provide
some type of bedding like hay,
straw or dry blankets. If an ani-
LOCAL
The event is hosted by the
Anderson County Hospital ers, he said in a press release
Board of Trustees and St. Lukes Monday. Weve hired a sucHealth System.
cessful superintendent and
Anderson County owns the administrative staff, hired and
building and leases it to St. retained competent teachers,
Lukes, which provides staff and boosted vocational and career
healthcare services. In order to programs, and have supported
make building a new hospital those programs, technology and
more appealing to voters, St. classes that have helped our
Lukes agreed to increase its students succeed academically
annual lease payments from and in life.
$440,000 to about $1 million.
In the Crest school disThose payments will reduce trict, USD 479, Richard Weber
the amount of money taxpay- filed for Position 3. That posiers must pay for the building; tion currently is held by David
if maintained throughout the Milner, who has not yet filed to
course of the 30-year bonds, retain the post.
the lease payments will pay for
Darlene Stewart filed for a
about 70 percent of the facilitys council member position in the
cost.
City of Kincaid.
Several positions are up for
election this spring. USDs 365
and 479 each will elect four
board members in districts 1, 2,
mal is kept outside, you should 3 and 7.
Currently, those positions
increase its food; animals left
outdoors need more food to in USD 479 are held by Tadd
maintain weight and ensure Goodell, Dist. 2; David Milner,
proper body heat. Water should Dist. 3; Terry Ellis, Dist. 7.
be closely monitored, because District 1 is vacant.
its easy for water bowls to
quickly freeze.
Young animals and elderly
animals dont tolerate the cold
as well, so you may consider
bringing them inside, Allison
FROM PAGE 1A
said.
Even animals that live deputies interviewing suspects
indoors face special consider- for a local burglary learned that
ations. When an animal like a Stifter and another man had
dog is taken outside for bath- stolen items from a farmhouse
room breaks, its important to near Aliceville. They alerted
wash his paws and underbelly the Coffey County Sheriffs
upon returning indoors. Thats Department, which took over
because the paws and belly can the case and solved two burpick up salt or antifreeze while glary reports from their county.
walking outside. Antifreeze Stifter and his accomplice
tastes appealing to animals, but stole items from a farmhouse,
even a small amount can be shop and other outbuildings
deadly when ingested. Salt can at the Robert Salavais farmcause vomiting and diarrhea if stead, about four miles from
a small animal licks too much Westphalia, on Nov. 1, 2013
of it from his paw. Salt also can and Jan. 1, 2014, Coffey County
damage the sensitive pads on investigators learned. The men
the animals feet.
then sold the items to Wes
Notice to foreclose mortgage
(First published in the Anderson County Review
on Tuesday, January 6, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
Wells Fargo Financial Kansas, Inc.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Richard Picek, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 14CV37
K.S.A. 60
Mortgage Foreclosure
(Title to Real Estate Involved)
NOTICE OF SUIT
THE STATE OF KANSAS to: Richard
Picek and Unknown Spouse of Richard Picek,
Defendants, and all other persons who are or
may be concerned:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED: That a
Petition has been filed in the District Court of
Anderson County, Kansas, Case No. 14CV37
by Wells Fargo Financial Kansas, Inc. , praying for foreclosure of a mortgage executed by
Richard Picek on 05/14/2007 and recorded in
Book 226 Page 62 in the real estate records of
Anderson County, Kansas, related to the following property:
BEGINNING AT A POINT 100 FEET
SOUTH OF WHERE THE SOUTH LINE OF
BONDI AVENUE INTERSECTS WITH THE
EAST LINE OF MARY STREET IN THE
CITY OF GREELEY, ANDERSON COUNTY,
FOR RENT
Those positions in USD 365 are
held by Gaylene Comfort, Dist. Small 2 bedroom – very clean,
1; Gary Teel, Dist. 2; Dwight garage, $400/month. (785) 418Nelson, Dist. 3; and Rickel, 5435.
nv18tf
At-Large (Dist. 7).
2 bedroom – 1 bath ranch, nice
The City of Garnett will pick location, 4 references a must.
a commissioner for a seat cur- (785) 448-5893.
dc9tf
rently held by Preston Peine. House for rent – 3 bedroom,
No one has yet filed for the 2 bath, full basement, 2 car
position.
garage. $750/month. (913) 208Anyone interested in run- 4418.
ja13tt2
ning for commissioner for the
City of Garnett should file with
the City Clerk at City Hall, 131
W. Fifth Ave., Garnett, by noon REAL ESTATE
Jan. 27. For more information,
call Kristie Kinney at (785) 448- Garnett – East 2nd Avenue, 3
5496.
bedroom, 2 bath, single family,
Council member and mayor 1316 sq. ft., detached garage,
positions in each of the countys lease program. Call for details.
third-class cities also will be 855-671-5658.
ja3t4*
up for election. That includes
the cities of Colony, Kincaid,
Westphalia and Greeley.
Anyone interested in filing
for those council, mayor or
school board positions should
file at the county clerks office
at the courthouse in downtown
Garnett by noon Jan. 27. For
more information, call (785) 4486841.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
U.S. Bank National Association
Plaintiff,
vs.
William L. Mead and Connie B. Mead, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 12CV43
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
Notice Of Sale
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
of Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, on January 22, 2015, at 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
Lot Five ( 5 ) and the East 30 feet Lot Six ( 6
) in Block Thirty-six ( 36 ) to the City of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, commonly known
as 226 East 3rd Avenue, Garnett, KS 66032
(the Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled
Lenders offering special
government programs for
Manufactured Homes. $0
Down for Land Owners. FHA
for first time Buyers. VA – $0
Down for Veterans. Section 184
for Federal Tribe members.
Lenders accepting less than
perfect credit. 866-858-6862
CARS & TRUCKS
REAL ESTATE
AUTOS
Wanted – unwanted cars,
wrecked, running or damaged. Cash for your car today.
Fast, friendly service. Cash 4
Cars. (913) 594-0992. www.cashforcars-junk.net
nv11t12*
1×3
1×3
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2005 Pontiac Montana Minivan
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maroon metallic, leather, all the power options
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2004 Chevrolet Impala LS
In the market for a good car thats very affordable?
Silver metallic, matching cloth, auto, A/C, pw, p
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1×3
graphs and video surveillance
that matched the stolen items.
Both men had printed and
signed their names on the scale
ticket receipts from both recycling centers.
Coffey County Attorney
Christopher Phelan prosecuted
the case and commended the
investigation.
I want to thank the sheriffs
office and the involved businesses for their efforts in solving this case, Phelan said. The
thorough investigation and
public assistance helped ensure
the county attorneys office had
the evidence to hold Mr. Stifter
accountable for this burglary.
It is also a great reminder as
to the impact individuals can
have in bringing suspicious
activity to the attention of law
enforcement and helping an
ongoing investigation.
Notice to sell Mead property
(First published in the Anderson County Review
on December 30, 2014)
MOBILE HOMES
MOBILE HOMES
FOR RENT
CRIME…
Recycling in Centerville and
Recycling Services at Parker.
Both businesses confirmed the
men had been selling scrap
KANSAS, THENCE EAST 180 FEET, THENCE metal for some time. Officers
obtained sales receipts, photoSOUTH 100 FEET, THENCE WEST 180 FEET,
THENCE NORTH 100 FEET TO THE PLACE OF
BEGINNING, ACCORDING TO THE ORIGINAL
PLAT OF THE TOWN OF GREELEY, BEING
PART OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE
1/4) OF SECTION THIRTY (30); TOWNSHIP
NINETEEN (19) SOUTH, RANGE TWENTYONE (21) EAST OF THE SIXTH PRINCIPAL
MERIDIAN, ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS.
You are hereby required to plead to the
Petition on or before February 17, 2015 in the
court at Anderson County, Kansas. If you fail to
plead, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the petition.
NOTICE TO BORROWER: If you wish to
dispute the validity of all or any portion of this
debt, or would like the name and address of the
original creditor, you must advise us in writing
within thirty (30) days of the first notice you
receive from us. Otherwise, we will assume
the entire debt to be valid. This is an attempt to
collect a debt, and any information obtained will
be used for that purpose.
Signed:
Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542
Eric M. Lemp, KS # 26178
Kelli N. Breer, KS # 17851
Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office)
12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555
St. Louis, MO 63141
(314) 991-0255
(314) 567-8006
Email: elemp@km-law.com
Send Court Returns to: Kansas@km-law.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
ja6t3
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court. For more information,
visit www.southlaw.com
Vernon Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
1×3
Wellsville, KS (785) 883-2913
www.breeautosales.com
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2012 Morton Buildings, Inc. Morton Buildings is a
registered trademark of Morton Buildings, Inc. All
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Prepared By:
South & Associates, P.C.
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6363 College Blvd., Suite 100
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dc30t3
Would You Give Your
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You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Department for Aging
and Disability Services
PROTECT
This project was supported, in part by grant number 90MP0087, from the U. S.
Administration for Community Living, Department of Health and Human Services,
Washington, D.C. 20201. Grantees undertaking projects under government
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YLHZRURSLQLRQVGRQRWWKHUHIRUHUHSUHVHQWRIFLDO$GPLQLVWUDWLRQIRU
Community Living policy.
Medical Numbers
PREVENT
Scams DQG Errors
REPORT
Your Concerns
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
LOCAL
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Garnett, KS 66032
SERVICES
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week. Pay will be based
on experience. Contact
Pat at 785-448-3422.
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services to victims of domestic
violence and sexual abuse. call
(620) 365-7566 or Kansas Hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
Garnett
Family
JOIN OUR TEAM!
CNAs & CMAs
1×3
LPN and/or RN
AD
Dietary Aide
Apply in person at:
Richmond Healthcare &
Rehabilitation Center, LLC
340 South St.
Richmond, KS
HELP WANTED
Your Needs, Our Passions…Every Day!
Administrator – position open
at SEK Multi County Health
Department in Iola, Kansas.
Daytime position 7:00 a.m. 5:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday.
Excellent health and retirement benefits. Qualifications:
BSN and public health and
management
experience
required, Kansas licensure.
Submit resumes to Traci@sekmchd.com. Applications available at: 411 N. Washington, Iola,
KS or online at ww.sekmchd.
com. (620) 365-2191. eoe ja13t1
Great Plains Trucking of
Salina, KS is looking for experienced OTR Tractor Trailer
Flatbed Drivers or recent
Driving School graduates. Our
Drivers travel 48 U.S. states
as well as the lower Canadian
provinces. We offer excellent
compensation, benefits, home
time and equipment. Please
contact Brett or Randy at 785823-2261 or brettw@gptrucking.
com, randyl@gptrucking.com
MISC. FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
SERVICES
SERVICES
Garrison Concrete Inc
1×3
Work Done Right
Replacement Repair Brand New
Dave Garrison Jr. Dave Garrison Sr.
Estimator/Supervisor
Owner
785-393-0806
785-393-2833
www.garrisonconcreteinc.com
Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express
MISC
CALL US FOR A WINTER SERVICE!
MOST ALL MAKES!
Chain Sharpening Chain Repair
Hecks
Storage Buildings
1×3
448-0319
or
204-0369
(913) 594-2495
Delivery Available
1×3
FARM & AG
FARM AND AG
1×3
COMPUTER
AD
WORK
Big – round bales, brome. (785)
448-6793.
ja13t2*
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (816) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
mc25tf
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
Full-time Day CMA
2×2
CNAs all shifts
Nurses
time, full time,
life- part care
ptevenings & nights
Apply online at www.lifecarecenterofosawatomie.com
of Osawatomie
2×3
beckmans
Eight
delp
Happiness . . . Thanking my
three children and my daughter-in-law Terri Cooper for a
wonderful birthday party.
They did a bang up job! The
Kirk House looked beautiful
and it was so great seeing old
friends. Thank you again. June
Cooper
ja13t1
Card of Thanks
We are very grateful.
WANTED
WANTED
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Wanted – unwanted cars,
wrecked, running or damaged. Cash for your car today.
Fast, friendly service. Cash
4 Cars. (913) 594-0992. www.
cashforcars-lawrence-kansas-junk-car-removal nv11t12*
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
2×2 Part-time Dietary Aide
PRN Housekeeping & Laundry
life care ft day
Apply online at www.lifecarecenterofosawatomie.com
of Osawatomie
Full-Time Transportation Coordinator/Driver
2x2CDL required or the ability to obtain
CDL within 30 days. CNA preferred.
lifecare
trans
Apply online at www.lifecarecenterofosawatomie.com
Hopper bottom company with regional, dedicated
runs, home on weekends. Benefits include, paid
vacation, health insurance and safety incentive bonus.
Call Dan @ 620-437-6616, Johnnie @ 620-437-6323
or send request for application by email to
dredding@rctruckinginc.com
$2,000
Better
Business
Bureau Foundation Student of
Integrity Award Scholarships.
Application Deadline 3-06-15.
http://bbb.org/h/mqf or 316263-3146/800-856-2417 #4208
Gun Show – January 17-18,
Saturday 9-5 & Sunday 9-3,
Topeka Kansas Expocentre
(19th and Topeka Blvd.) BuySell-Trade Info: (563) 927-8176
Happiness . . . Being married
to Marilyn 31 years January
14th, 2015. When I hold you in
my arms and look into your
sparkling green eyes. I cant
believe how lucky I am to have
such a beautiful and caring lady
to be my loving wife. Love you
bunches, George.
ja13t1*
The Cramer family
1×3
AD
2×2
WELL
rcQUALIFIED
truckingCDL DRIVERS WANTED!!!
NOTICES
NOTICES
HAPPY ADS
Thank you all for the cards,
cramer
donations & kindnesses.
Hecks Small Engine Repair
OPEN MON. – FRI. 8 A.M. – 6 P.M.
Sat. By Appt. Closed Sunday
A childless, married couple
seeks to adopt. Will be handson mom/devoted dad. Love,
laughter, learning. Financial
Security. Expenses paid.
Jeanne and Damian 1-855-5638901
filler
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
Outdoor Power Equipment
THIS IS THE SEASON
1×3
FOR A NEW JONSERED SAW
Available from $199.95 & Up
AD
Jonsered Full Line Servicing Dealer
For Sale – pool table, rack,
cues, balls, $900. 211 N. Lincoln,
448-5486.
nc18tf
Healthy, young – butcher steer,
lame. $1.25 per lb – live weight.
(785) 489-2403.
ja6t2
ADOPTION
ADOPTION
JB Construction
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
of Osawatomie
4-H Program Assistant
2×3
frontier
The Frontier Extension District is accepting
applications for a full-time 4-H Program Assistant.
A Bachelors degree in education, youth development,
or related field OR significant experience in a youth
development organization is required. Applicants
must also have the ability to communicate effectively,
both verbally and in writing, have access to a
personal vehicle and maintain a valid Kansas Drivers
License. Some overnight travel and evening and
weekend work may be required. For information on
how to apply and a position description, go to
http://www.frontierdistrict.ksu.edu
or call 785-828-4438.
Applications must be received by January 23, 2015.
Multi-Media Advertising Sales Opportunity
2×3
miami cty new
The Miami County Newspapers and Read It Free Shopper
are looking for an outgoing, self-motivated, salesperson
with time management skills to take over an established
sales territory. Duties include prospecting new accounts,
providing existing accounts with marketing strategies beneficial to their businesses and designing advertising for
clients to be placed into the Miami County Republic, the
Louisburg Herald, Osawatomie Graphic newspapers and
The Read It Free Shopper, plus their websites. These
newspapers have a combined paid readership of 15,000
and Shopper distribution of 5,000. Join an experienced
team of advertising sales executives to help businesses
market their services and products. Sales experience or
aptitude essential, but will train the right person.
Send resume to:
Miami County Republic
c/o Teresa Morrow, Advertising Manager
P.O. Box 389, Paola, KS 66071
or email: teresa.morrow@miconews.com
Now
Hiring
gates
Gates Corporation is a worldwide leader in the production of
hydraulic hose. We are a growing company and are looking
for only the finest employees for our manufacturing operation.
Full-Time & Part-Time
Positions Available On 2 nd & 3 rd Shift.
Please apply in person. Applications will be taken Weekdays 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Applications must be completed in the facility.
GED or high school diploma required.
Pre-employment background checks & drug screen required.
Gates Corporation
1450 Montana Road
Iola, Kansas
Equal Opportunity Employer
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, January 13, 2015
LOCAL
Colony council, Crest school
positions up for election April 7
Calendar
Jan. 15-County bus to Iola,
phone 24 hrs. before you need
a ride 785-448-4410 any weekday; 16-Persian Gulf War began
(1919); Martin Luther King, Jr.
Day, no mail, business offices
closed; Seekers Not Slackers
4-H Club, Lone Elm Community
building, 7 p.m.; Jolly Dozen
Club, 7 p.m.; 20-Library board
meeting, City Hall, 5:30 p.m.
School Calendar
15-middle school basketball
ball at Uniontown, 5:30 p.m.;
Scholars Bowl at Pittsburg;
16-high school basketball at
Crest vs. Altoona, 4 p.m.; 21-No
School (snow day), Scholars
Bowl at Southern Coffey
County; 19-24-high school basketball Tony Dubray Classic at
Liberal High School.
Meal Site
14-Birthday
meal-chicken
fried breast, mashed potatoes,
gravy, green beans, roll, cake
and ice cream; 16-taco salad,
lettuce, black beans, tortilla
chips, sunshine fruit; 19-Swiss
steak, augratin Potatoes,
Mediterranean veggies, wheat
bread, apricots. Phone 620-8523450 for reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented at the
morning service Sunday was
Acts 1-2. Pastor Mark McCoy
presented the sermon Fire
From Heaven!. At the evening
Celebrate Recovery service
they shared Why it is important to have a mentor and/or
accountability partner. Jan.
14-Working Wonders Christian
Womens Council, 7 p.m. at the
church; all women welcome.
Seminar
Colony Christian Church
is hosting a powerful personality seminar featuring Van
and Tammy Benson, professional trainers with Motive
Matters. In this fun, inspirational, and well-researched
seminar, you will learn more
about your own personality
and about other people in your
life. Feb. 27 (Friday evening)
and Feb. 28 (Saturday day), Van
and Tammy will introduce you
to key motives and help you
see why you do what you do!
Email Mark McCoy at mark@
colonychristianchurch.org for
the link.
Northcott Church
All Sundays-Bible Study
9:28 a.m.; Worship 10:28 a.m.;
Thursdays-Bible Study 6:28 p.m.
Pastor Mike Farran (cell-620383-4929)-A New Years party
was held at Riverside Park Gym
in Iola; Jan. 17-CGMA Sing at
Fire Escape Coffee House, Iola;
18-Fellowship luncheon followed by board meeting.
UMC
Scripture presented at
United Methodist Church
Sunday service was Psalm
72:1-7, 10-14, Isaiah 60: 1-6,
Ephesians 3:1-12 and Matthew
2:2-12. Pastor Dorothy Welch
presented the sermon, When
3×7.5
rmh
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
The World Shifts.
City-School Election
2015 is the year for the city/
school election. Anyone interested in filing for a position
may do so at the county clerks
office at the courthouse in
Garnett by noon Jan. 27.
Positions up for city election
April 7 are three council members for two-year terms and
a mayor for a two-year term.
Currently serving are Melissa
Hobbs, Debbie Oswald, Donna
Westerman, whose terms
expire in April. Remaining
councilmen are Richard Buckle
and Roger Culler whose terms
expire in 2017.
Positions up for the school
election in April are districts
1, 2, 3 and 7. Currently holding positions are Tadd Goodell,
Dist. 2; David Milner, Dist. 3,
Terry Ellis, Dist. 7 and Dist. 1 is
vacant.
City Council
At the Nov. 26 meeting the
Street and Alley committee
reported the citys alleys are
being torn up to put rock on
them. Other business included purchasing of meat for city
employees and council members for their Christmas; purchase of diesel fuel was made;
fax and copy machine charges
are now: faxes – $1 for first page
and 25 cents for each additional page and copies – 25 cents
per page; unpaid water bills to
be shut off as usual procedure;
community room cleaning for
two people who expressed interest in the job of cleaning the
room and restrooms are to be
paid $30-$40 (room rental is now
$50 to cover the hiring rate and
expenses for supplies). Council
member Debbie Oswald agreed
to send property members a
letter; petty cash amount total
was agreed upon; December
meeting change was made due
to Christmas holiday.
Oldest Residents
We recently listed Al
Richardson as the oldest man
in Colony city limits. He was
94 last month. Next in line is
Maynard Belvoir who will be 94
in April and Ralph Bunnel follows third as he will be reaching his 93rd birthday in March.
For the women Evelyn
Wedeman was 98 in July last
year. It was Colony Day 2009
when Evelyn Wedeman and
the late Pearl Wells served as
marshals as oldest women in
the Colony Day parade. Today
Mary Decker is second oldest.
She was 95 in October. Third
oldest, we believe, is Evelyn
Bunnel who will be 92 this
month. If we are incorrect,
please let us know, phone 620852-3379.
Around Town
Gareld and Shirley McGhee
hosted their family to a brunch
on Christmas Eve. Those in
attendance were Darren and
Cindy McGhee, Westphalia;
Derick McGhee, Wellsville;
Rochelle and Dustin Smart,
Iola; Joe and Vicki Atwood and
Chad Atwood, LaCygne; and
Tyler Atwood, Lawrence.
Christmas Eve guests of
Sheldon and Ruth Caudell
were Nancy and Ed Ellington,
Colony; Justin and Sarah,
Jaylee and Layla Ellington,
Tulsa, OK; Jeremy and Holly
Ellington, Gunner Gracie,
Aubrey, Lizzy Ellington, Jamey
and J.D. Wilson, Tucker and
Layne Yocham, Iola; Kathy and
Gary Holloway, Westin and
Elaine and Nash, Lone Elm;
Ben Holloway, Kansas City;
Derrick and Lindsay Caudell
and Kaylie, Iola; Kelcey and
Erick Jesse, Columbus; Justin
and Sarah, Jaylee and Layla
Ellington, Tulsa, OK; Vicky
and Dennis Hermreck, Paige
and Judd Hermreck, Modesto,
CA; Nicole and Mike Landau,
Denver, CO. Christmas Day
guests were John, Karen and
Kortney Wools, Justin, Heather
and Hadley Wools, Gas; Teresa
and Jeff and Dalton Smith,
Yates Center; Alex and Natalie
Ballard, Lawrence; Tim and
Virginia and Karley Wools,
Iola; Kayla, Matt Westerman,
Karter, Anna and Gracie,
Piqua; Kelcie and John Sigg,
Iola; Dale Sandlin, Gas.
Charlene Tinsley spent
Christmas in Ottawa with
Jessica and Jim Stalford,
Avery, Jessy James and
Aerin. Chris and June Tinsley,
Neodsha were also Christmas
Day guests.
Dorothy Fillmore enjoyed
two of her granddaughters
for a few days, Alexandra
Luedke, Kansas City and Emily
Renyer, Tulsa, Ok. Christmas
Eve guests were Freddie and
Kim Blevins, Hope and Jack,
Overland Park and Michael
Blevins, near Ottawa.
Christmas guests of Bonnie
Rook were Connie and Rick
Thompson, Blake and Hannah
Owen, Nora and Molly and
Ruby Thompson, Kincaid;
Justin and Erin Zook, Brylee,
Breckyn, Britni, Garnett;
Nick Thompson, Manhattan;
Mary Decker, Colony; Garry
and Paula Decker, Welda;
Luke Decker, Bentonville, AR
(Colony on weekends); Jenna
and Jon Pretz, Brookings, S D,
Caitlin Weaver and Thomas,
Pittsburg.
Sharon
Smith
spent
Christmas Eve and Day with
her daughter Lori Bowen at
Wellsville.
Introducing a new Minimally
Invasive Treatment Option for
Painful Spinal Compression
Fractures
Vertebral compression fractures (VCFs)
continue to affect our aging patient
population at an alarming rate. VCFs are the
most common fracture in patients with
osteoporosis, affecting about 750,000
people annually. Achieve rapid and lasting
pain relief from VCFs.
StabiliT Vertebral Augmentation
System
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 1-13-2015 / Photo Submitted by Phyllis Luedke
Kacie Nilges, owner/operator of Platinum K opened her business Jan. 6 located on South Pine Street
one block south of Broad Street. She is an experienced hairdresser of seven years and also does nails.
Her shop hours are 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesday through Fridays and will take appointments on Saturday
when asked in advance. Her phone no. is 620-852-3488. Kacie is the youngest daughter of Kendal and
Christy McGhee. Her husband, Kevin, is the son of Roy and Linda Nilges. Kacie and Kevin are both
Crest High School graduates. They have three children, Kade, 7, Kaelin, 6 and Klaire, age 2.
KDHE helps people quit tobacco
TOPEKA – The Kansas
Department of Health and
Environment (KDHE) can
help those who are ready to
quit tobacco in 2015 keep their
resolutions. KDHE offers free
cessation support and information online at www.ksquit.org
or toll-free at 1-800-QUIT-NOW
(784-8669).
With the convenience of
their cell phone, Kansans can
now use a new Quitline service,
Text2Quit, to help quit tobacco.
The new Text2Quit service and the Kansas Tobacco
Quitline are great tools to help
Kansans with their New Years
resolutions to quit smoking,
said Susan Mosier, M.D., KDHE
Interim Secretary and State
Health Officer. This free support and advice can help you
achieve your goal to quit smoking or using smokeless tobacco
and improve your health.
Text2Quit
supplements
phone and online Quitline
services allowing individuals to connect with their Quit
date, creating a plan to fight
cravings or helping with any
other challenges along the way.
KDHEs
Tobacco
Use
Prevention Program manages
the Kansas Tobacco Quitline and
provides resources and technical
assistance to community coalitions for development, enhancement and evaluation of state and
local tobacco prevention initiatives. For additional information on the Kansas Tobacco Use
Prevention Program visit www.
kdheks.gov/tobacco.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
Savings Event
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Dinner served at 5:30p, presentation by Dr. Dale Dalenberg, to follow.
Location: Ransom Memorial Hospital Conference Rooms
1301 S. Main St. Ottawa, KS
RSVP by Monday, January 19th to 785-229-8458
Coaches and keep on track with
their quit plan from their cell
phones. The texting option is
made available during phone or
online enrollment.
The Kansas Tobacco Quitline
provides one-on-one, confidential support in a variety of
ways. A Quit Coach who specializes in counseling people
to quit tobacco is available 24
hours a day, seven days a week
(except on major holidays)
through the Quitline. Kansans
can also sign up for additional
Quit Coach support using live
chat and email. Online users
gain membership to a private,
online community where they
can watch videos, complete
activities and join discussions
with others in the program. The
online services include trackers
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Whether by phone, web or
text, a Quit Coach is always
available to work with Kansans
through the entire process,
including preparing for a quit
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TRANSMISSION, FINISHED IN RED …..$14,995
2009 COOPER S HARDTOP #76645A, EQUIPPED WITH A 1.6 LITER
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FINISHED IN COPPER ……………………….$11,995
2005 CHRYSLER PACIFICA 4DR WGN TOURING AWD! EQUIPPED
WITH A 3.5L 6 CYL POWERTRAIN, 4 SPEED AUTOMATIC
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2014 CHEVROLET CAPTIVA LTZ, EQUIPPED WITH 2.4L 4 CYL
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#49184H, MILES 13,532, WHITE ……….$29,995
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With all available discounts and rebates. On select vehicles to qualified buyers. Not all buyers will qualify for rebates GM retains the right to amend or modify
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