Anderson County Review — July 17, 2018
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from July 17, 2018. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
O N E M E A S I LY U . S . D O L L A R
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
The official newspaper of record for Anderson County, KS, and its communities.
www.garnett-ks.com |
July 17, 2018
SINCE 1865 152nd Year, No. 37
(785) 448-3121
| review@garnett-ks.com
Contents Copyright 2018 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
A look back at
some 1993 Fair
winners.
Richmond Free Fair
Parade photos
Anderson County
Photo Contest
See page1A.
See page 6B.
See page 6B.
E-statements & Internet Banking
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Wind farm test tower
approved in Linn County
Mound City area
would host turbines
if test proves positive
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
MOUND CITY Linn County
Commissioners have approved
a special use permit to place
a 180 foot tall test tower near
Blue Mound, aimed at determining whether the area gets
enough wind to justify construction of a wind farm there.
The project is underway by
E.ON, a Germany-based renewables power company.
According
to
The
Linn County News, Wind
Development Manager Garrett
Ketchen told Linn County
Commissioners he had met
with 15 local residents and others by phone who supported
the prospect of a wind farm in
the area. He said the company
would not move forward with
the project without public support.
Commissioners heard from
a number of opponents to the
project at their recent meeting, including Leavenworth
resident and local landowner
Pat Beltman, who said if the
county gave a green light to
an eventual wind project he
would sell his property.
The newspaper said commissioners agreed by consensus to approve the project for
the data gathering stage, and
that the final decision is a community choice.
The move for a wind project in Linn County follows one
approved by county commissioners in Allen County last
year under development by
Portugal-based Energias de
Portugal, doing business in
the U.S. as EDP Renewables in
Houston,Texas. That project is
slated for completion in June
2019.
Eastern Kansas has become
an increasingly popular target
for wind farm development
after a project near Waverly
in late 2014 which was later
purchased by EDP.
Opponents in Anderson
County successfully defeated an effort by Calpine
Corporation of Houston, Texas,
to construct a project east of
Garnett in 2017.
Wind energy projects continue to be developed by both
foreign and domestic companies, anxious to take advantage
of a complex system of federal and state tax credits which
have played a determining role
in the industrys development
since 2010. The companies are
the largest recipients of all fedSEE TEST ON PAGE 2A
Colony man seeks safer streets
Leonard says signs
would help slow down
traffic where kids play
BY MELISSA HOBBS THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-17-2018 / KEVIN GAINES
Destini Tetzlaff was part of Portraits of Proud Americans float, which was the Roeckers family float.
The float won first place in the Richmond Parade on Saturday.
COLONY Petitions to lower
the speed limit in parts
of Colony and designate
Children At Play areas with
signs have been circulating
around the town for a couple
weeks now thanks to a local
man whos personal loss leads
him to want to protect the next
generation.
Steve Leonard says he put
up petitions at the Hi Point
Caf & Convenience Store,
GSSB Bank in Colony, and
Ricks Halfway House as well
as going door to door for signatures.
Leonard
says we look
at our children as if
theyre the
closest thing
to heaven.
We
enjoy
their laughLeonard
ter, smiles,
and they way
they touch
our hearts. Because of this, he
is hoping to convince Colony
City Council members to alert
drivers to lower their speed in
areas where children live.
This concerned resident
says that there are four little
girls that live nearby him and
he watches them ride their
bicycles and play near the
street a lot. He would be devastated to see something happen
to them at the hands of people
that speed up and down his
street on a regular basis.
I lost my son and wife in
a car wreck, said Leonard.
Burying a child is the hardest
thing for a parent to do.
Several people around
Colony agree with Leonards
efforts. Laura Schmidt is the
mother of the four little girls
that Leonard referred to, and
although she does her best to
protect her daughters, shes
worried about how fast people
SEE SAFE ON PAGE 2B
Height of summer ANCO Fair coming; entries due July 30
brings tick sickness
BY DANE HICKS
Nasty viruses are
another good reason
to avoid tick bites
BY MELISSA HOBBS THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY Tick-borne illnesses are something that many
people are concerned with this
time of year, and Colony resident, Bill Goodell, can explain
firsthand why its a valid concern. He recently spent two
days in the hospital due to
an illness from a
tick bite.
Goodell says he
picked a tick off that had
been attached for less than
12 hours and a few days later
the symptoms came on very
sudden. He was fine one minute, and the next he was having
trouble walking and keeping
his balance, among many other
symptoms. He thought maybe
it was a new medication that he
had taken, but when the symptoms didnt go away, his family
decided he needed to see the
doctor.
He spent two days in the hospital getting fluids and antibiotics, and now doesnt remember
the night when his symptoms
began. He was so sick that he
has memory loss of that night.
He wrapped up his treatment
with antibiotics last week and
hopes thats the last of it.
I feel good now, said
Goodell. Ive been fortunate
not being any worse than I
w a s . He says the doctor
doesnt
think it is likely
that he
will have any
long-term complications, but
m a n y
people
do. Some
people
have
even
developed an allergy
to meat after getting
bitten by a tick, and thats
one allergy that Goodell
says hes not sure he could live
with.
Goodell says his doctor told
him that it can take up to ten
weeks after being bit by a tick
to start showing symptoms.
Some of the early symptoms of
tick-borne illness according to
the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention are fever and
chills, aches and pains, and
SEE YUCK ON PAGE 4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT The biggest change to the
Anderson County Fair coming up at the
end of this month is one all exhibitors
will need to know all fair entries are due
Monday, July 30.
Anderson County Fair Board President
Jess Rockers said the change probably
wouldnt confuse the 4-H exhibitors
because they get more exposure to fair
information, but open class exhibitors
might have a tougher time getting the
word this year.
Its a change from the past and its an
organizational thing, Rockers said. We
just want to make sure we get the word
to everybody whos planning to have an
entry of any kind.
All 4-H and open class exhibits can be
entered anytime that Monday afternoon
from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Other highlights of this years fair will
include the midway carnival beginning
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-17-2018 / Kansas Lions District 17 photo
The Kansas Lions Mobile Screening Unit will be at the Anderson County Fair to
perform various health and vision screenings at no charge. Local Lions from clubs in
Garnett, Colony, Kincaid and Westphalia will assist medical staff.
Tuesday evening and running through
Saturday, the Garnett Lions Club Health
Screening Unit July 31 and August 1, the
Tuesday parade at Garnett Stadium with
Bill and Rita Poovey as grand marshals,
tractor pull July 28, Dirty Bourbon Band
concert August 3 and the demolition derby
August 11.
County frugal with water, USGS report says
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WASHINGTON, D.C. A
recently released water study
from the United States Geologic
Service shows Anderson
County to be the most frugal
county in the region in terms
of water use, and Linn County
to be the largest user in the
eastern half of the state.
The annual USGS National
Water Census studies water
use patterns, sources of use and
replacement of ground water
resources across the nation in
order to provide data for public policy affecting water use.
The study outlines water use
county by county across the
nation by four categories: thermoelectric, irrigation, public
supply and industrial.
The study helps develop what planners refer
to as the nations Water
Budget,which includes inputs
and outgoes like base layers
of precipitation, stream flow,
evapostransipration, water
use and change in groundwater storage. The figures in the
June 2018 report reflect data
gathered in 2015.
SEE WATER ON PAGE 2B
Custom printed BUSINESS CARDS – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SENIOR CENTER
BIRTHDAYS
The Garnett Senior Center
will celebrate July birthdays on Wednesday, July 18.
Entertainment will be the Light
Seekers at 11 a.m. Anyone 60 or
older is invited to attend. If you
plan to eat please call the day
before (785) 448-6996. Cost of
meal is a $3.50 donation.
LIBRARY HOSTING
MUSICIAN
The Garnett Public Library will be
hosting musician Aaron Fowler
at the Garnett Fire Station on July
17th at 10:00 a.m. This event is
open to those of all ages.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
VBS
First Baptist Church, Garnett
will have VBS, Gone Fishing,
Saturday, JULY 21 from 9 am
until 2 pm. for kids grades 1-6
Lunch will be served. Pastor
Josh Ford and church family will
join with us for the day. Thank
you, Loretta Coltrane.
SUMMER LUNCH
PROGRAM MENU
The Summer Lunch program
serves kids up to and including age 18 free of charge, no
requirements. Lunch will be
served at Ray Meyer Gym, 305
N. Oak, Garnett through August
10th. Tuesday, July 17 – Chicken
Chili Flautes & peas. Wednesday
(Birthday Day!), July 18 Chicken nuggets & green beans.
Thursday, July 19 – Spaghetti w/
meat sauce, corn & breadstick.
Friday, July 20 – Hot dog/bun &
mixed veggies. Monday, July 23
– Sloppy Joe, hamburger bun &
peas. Each meal is served with
fruit and 2% milk.
COLOR CREATIONS
Garnett Public Library will host
Color Creations on Wednesday,
July 18th at 1:00 p.m. All ages
are invited to come enjoy a
relaxing afternoon chatting with
friends and coloring away your
stress. Coffee, iced tea, lemonade, coloring pages, colored
pencils and coloring crafts will
be provided.
SUICIDE AWARENESS
GROUP 1ST TUESDAYS
SAM – Suicide Awareness
Members, a division of SASSMoKan – meets on the first
Tuesday of the month from 6:307:30 at the Garnett Library located at 125 W 4th Ave in Garnett.
The facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols,
who may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
TEST…
FROM PAGE 1
eral subsidies. The U.S. Energy
Information Administration
says wind energy companies
accounted for 37 percent of all
federal subsidy payments in
2013.
Also key to the financial
incentive are income tax credits granted to developing companies. From 2016-2020, the
federal government expects
to lose some $23.7 billion in
tax revenues through the wind
production tax credit, according to a 2017 report from the
Congressional Joint Committee
on Taxation.
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
MEETING, JULY 9, 2018
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM
on July 9, 2018 at the County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Jerry Howarter, Present: David
Pracht, Present: Leslie McGhee,
Present. The pledge of allegiance
was recited. Minutes from the previous meeting were approved as presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor,
met with the commission. He let the
commission know that the striping on
1600 Rd will be completed this week.
Mick Brinkmeyer inquired about using
the road and bridge department to
help remove buildings in Welda for
the fire station. Lester would get with
Mick on what it might cost him to do
the work and see if they are available
to do it.
Executive Session
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner McGhee seconded
to into enter executive session for
1 hour and 10 minutes for attorney-client privilege concerning policy and procedure. All voted yes.
Commissioners; Julie Heck, County
Clerk; James Campbell, County
Counselor; Terelle Mock, Attorney.
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner McGhee seconded to
re-enter into open meeting. All voted
yes. No action was taken.
KDOT
Donna Schmidt, KDOT, met with
the commission. She presented information regarding funding for roadways in Kansas. The legislature is
requesting that counties write a letter
to the Secretary of Transportation
informing them of the importance
and priority project 169-2 KA-2380-01
(widening of
US169 from Welda to the roundabout south of Garnett, including the
construction of shoulders).
Emergency Management
J.D. Mersman, Emergency
Management Director, met with the
commission. He presented a Memo
of Understanding with the City of
Garnett for use of the water tower
for the radio system. Commission
Chair Howarter signed the Memo
of Understanding. J.D. will give the
memo to the City of Garnett for their
signature on the document.
Abatements
Abatements B18-205 through B18207 were approved as presented.
LAND TRANSFERS
Brett L. Hartman to Elizabeth K.
Jacoby: Lots 1, 2, and 3 in Block 2 in
Bronston Heights Addition to the City
of Garnett.
Travis E. Katzer and Lindy Katzer
to Ryan Schweer: A tract of land
in the southeast quarter of 21-20-21
described as follows: Beginning at the
south quarter corner of said Section
21. Thence north 003523 east a
distance of 656.17 feet. Thence north
895011 east a distance of 1,326.09
feet. Thence south 003748 west a
distance of 660.06 feet to the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of
the southeast quarter of said Section
21. Thence north 895944 west along
said south line a distance of 1,325.58
feet to the place of beginning. Said
tract contains 20.03 acres more or
less.
Kerry A. Akes fka Kerry A. Nickell
and James Akes to John C. Pomilia
and Kristie J. Clearwater: Lots 18 and
19 in the Centennial Addition to the
City of Garnett.
Clint M. Wilson and Janelle A.
Wilson to Kaley C. Nilges: Lots 13,
14, and the west half of Lot 15 in Block
19 in the City of Garnett.
Raylen E. Phelon Successor
Trustee and Edward C. Phelon Family
Trust dated April 11, 1991 to Gary
W. Heck and Jewel Heck: Beginning
908 south of the northwest corner of
30-20-20. Thence running south on
the section line 82. Thence east 330,
north 82. Thence west 330 to the
place of beginning less the highway.
Esh Rental III LLC to Devon O.
Miller and Lisa L. Miller: A tract of land
in the northwest quarter of 6-21-20
described as follows: Beginning at
the northwest corner of the northwest
quarter. Thence south 894748 east
2,407.72 feet along the north line of
the northwest quarter of said Section
6 to the west right of way line of
the abandoned Santa Fe Railroad.
Thence along the west right of way line
of the abandoned Santa Fe Railroad
the following two courses. Course 1:
Find out how you
can reach 29,000
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week in Anderson,
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(785) 448-3121
On a curve to the left with a radius
of 616.40 an arc distance of 954.13,
chord being south 183927 west
953.17. Course 2: South 153301
west 255.07. Thence north 640516
west 241.18. Thence north 085437
west 183.42. Thence north 894748
west 1,823.96 to the west line of the
northwest quarter of said Section 6.
Thence north 014539 east 909.18
to the place of beginning, containing
48.2 acres.
Fern L. Becker to Fern L. Becker
Trust: The southwest quarter of 5-2218.
Gary L. Turner and Rose Mary
Turner to Aaron C. Tucker: Lots 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 in Block 18 in
the Mandovi Addition to the City of
Garnett.
Aaron C. Tucker and Courtney
Tucker to Aaron C. Tucker and
Courtney Tucker: Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6, and 7 in Block 18 in the Mandovi
Addition to the City of Garnett.
Charlotte A. Masters and Charlotte
E. Masters to Veronnica M. Cumplido
and Jorge C. Cumplido Jr.: An undivided interest in and to the northwest
quarter of 3-22-19.
Glenn H. Graham Jr. to Wesley E.
Yoder and Rosella Yoder: Beginning
at the southwest corner of the northwest quarter of 25-20-19. Thence
north 001207 west a distance of
382.28 feet along the west line of
said quarter section to the true place
of beginning. Thence north 001207
west for a distance of 346.03 feet
along the west line of said quarter section. Thence south 895512 east for a
distance of 1,263.71 feet parallel with
the south line of said quarter section.
Thence south 263509 west for a
distance of 120.40 feet. Thence south
265746 west for a distance of 63.32
feet. Thence south 154643 west
for a distance of 188.85 feet. Thence
north 895512 west for a distance of
1,128.54 feet parallel with the south
line of said quarter section to the place
of beginning.
Dennis H. Graham to Wesley E.
Yoder and Rosella Yoder: Beginning at
the southwest corner of the northwest
quarter of 25-20-19. Thence north
001207 west for a distance of 382.38
feet along the west line of said quarter
section. Thence south 895512 east
for a distance of 1,128.54 feet parallel
with the south line of said quarter section. Thence south 154643 west for
a distance of 397.19 feet to a point on
the south line of said quarter section,
said point being 1,610.57 feet west of
the southeast corner of said quarter
section. Thence north 895512 west
for a distance of 1,019.19 feet along
the south line of said quarter section
to the place of beginning.
Sharon F. Smith to Todd Strickler
and Sammye Strickler: The southwest
quarter of the northwest quarter and
the northwest quarter of the southwest
fractional quarter of 15-23-19.
Calvin R. Wells and Carol J.
Wells to Todd Strickler and Sammye
Strickler: The southwest quarter and
the northwest quarter of the southwest
fractional quarter of 15-23-19.
Dwayne C. Foltz and Barbara A.
Foltz to Esh Rentals IV LLC: Beginning
at a point 717.50 feet south of the
northeast quarter of 25-29-19. Thence
west 250 feet. Thence south 60 feet.
Thence west 126 feet. Thence north
229.50 feet. Thence east 376 feet to
the east line of said section at a point
548 feet south of the northeast corner
of said Section 25. Thence south on
the east line a distance of 169.50 feet
to the place of beginning, less the right
of way of the state highway on the
east end of said tract.
Richard R. Callahan and Mary J.
Callahan to Robert Louis Messenger
Trustee and Robert Louis Messenger
Revocable Living Trust dated
November 5, 2009: Lots 3 and 4 in
Block 2 in the Wohler Addition to the
City of Garnett commencing at a point
40 feet west and 160 feet north of
the southwest corner of Block 32 in
what was formerly the Orchard Park
Addition to the City of Garnett. Thence
east 128 feet. Thence north 30 feet.
Thence west 128 feet. Thence south
30 feet to the place of beginning. All
being located in the northeast quarter of 25-20-19. Beginning 1,615 feet
west and 210 feet north of the southeast corner of the northeast quarter
of 25-20-19. Thence running west 77
feet. Thence north 350 feet. Thence
east 188 feet. Thence south 350 feet.
Thence east 188 feet. Thence south
350 feet. Thence west 111 feet to
the place of beginning. Being Lots
301, 303, 305, 307, 309, 311, 313,
315, 317, 319, 321, and 323 in Block
33 in what was former the Orchard
Park Addition to the City of Garnett.
Together with the vacated streets and
alleys adjacent thereto. Less a tract of
land located in the northeast quarter
of 25-20-19 being all of Lots 301, 303,
305, 307, and the north 11.92 feet of
Lot 309 in Block 33 in what was formerly the Orchard Park Addition to the
City of Garnett, together with vacated
streets and alleys adjacent thereof,
being more particularly described as
follows: Beginning at the southeast
corner of the northeast quarter of
25-20-19. Thence north 895512
west a distance of 1,504 feet plat
1,500.71 feet measured along the
south line of said quarter section to
the center line of now vacated Garfield
Street. Thence north 001006 west
for a distance of 560 feet plat 562.16
feet measured along the center line
of said vacated Garfield Street to
the center line of now vacated Third
Street, said point being the true place
of beginning. Thence north 895429
west for a distance of 188 feet plat
187.56 feet measured along the center line of now vacated Third Street to
the center line of now vacated alley in
said Block 33. Thence south 000954
east for a distance of 152.48 feet
along the center line of the now vacated alley to a point of intersection with
the south line of west Third Street,
as platted in Wohlers Addition to the
City of Garnett, if produced westerly.
Thence south 895102 east for a distance of 187.57 feet along the south
line of west Third Street produced
west to a point on the center line of
now vacated Garfield Street. Thence
north 001006 west for a distance
of 152.67 feet along the centerline
of now vacated Garfield Street to the
true place of beginning. Beginning at
a point 1,504 feet west and 197 feet
north of the southeast corner of the
northeast quarter of 25-20-19 said
starting point being 40 feet west and
137 feet north of the southwest corner
of Block 32 in what was formerly the
Orchard Park Addition to the City of
Garnett. Thence running east 56 feet.
Thence north 23 feet. Thence west 56
feet. Thence south 23 feet to the place
of beginning all of the south half of the
vacated alley lying between Lot 323 in
Block 33 in what was formerly Orchard
Park Addition to the City of Garnett,
now vacated, and Lots 906, 908, and
910 all in Block 33 in what was formerly Orchard Park Addition to the City of
Garnett, now vacated, being located
in the northeast quarter of 25-20-19.
All of the south half of the vacated
alley lying between Lot 323 in Block
33 in what was formerly Orchard Park
Addition to the City of Garnett, not
vacated. And Lots 900, 902, and 904
all in Block 33 in what was formerly
the Orchard Park Addition to the City
of Garnett, now vacated, and that part
of vacated Garfield Street lying east
on a projection of the south line and
center line of the vacated alley to the
center line of the now vacated Garfield
Street, being located in the northeast
quarter of 25-20-19.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Marc David Miller, Wichita, has filed
a Petition for Divorce against Inga
Miller, Wichita. Divorce granted July 9.
Melissa Ann Danford, Osawatomie,
has filed a Petition for Divorce against
Edward J. Danford, Iola. Divorce
granted July 6.
Sarah M. Roe, Topeka, has filed a
Petition for Divorce against Ryan M.
Roe, Topeka. Divorce granted July 12.
Veronica Perez Reza, Dallas, Tex.,
has filed a Petition for Divorce against
Marcell Gonzalez Gaytan, Wichita.
Divorce granted July 12.
The State of Kansas, ex. Rel. DCF,
has filed a Petition for Child Support
against Cody W. Boles, Altoona.
Asking for $397 per month in child
support including back dated support.
The State of Kansas, ex. Rel. DCF,
has filed a Petition for Child Support
against Tabitha D. Sims, Pomona.
Asking for $1,560 for reimbursement
for back child support.
CIVIL CASES FILED
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. has filed
Petition for Mortgage Foreclosure
against Jessia L. Evans, Garnett.
Asking $27,100.30 plus interest and
costs.
LIMITED ACTION CASES FILED
Saint Lukes Health System, Inc.,
has filed suit against Trevor T. and
Dana Kurtz, Garnett. Asking $1,441.53
plus interest and costs for services
provided.
$9,900
$15,400
2015 Chevrolet
Equinox
FWD 2LT
76,300 Miles,
Leather Seats,
Heated Front Seats,
Power Front Seats,
Chrome Wheels,
Chrome Grill,
Bluetooth
Benjamin R. Guilfoyle, Greeley, and
Lexee Danielle Ramsey, Garnett, filed
for a marriage license on July 12.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Darlene Sumners, Centerville, has
been charged with giving a worthless
check. Hearing scheduled for July 31
at 9 a.m.
TRAFFIC CASES FILED
Staci L. Barker has been charged
with speeding 79 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $177.
Madison Marie Mask has been
charged with speeding 78 mph in a 65
mph zone, $177.
Melissa Dawn Wilson has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a 55
mph zone, $213.
Bryan J. Renyer has been charged
with speeding 77 mph in a 55 mph
zone, $231.
Walker B. Pedrow has been
charged with speeding 87 mph in a 55
mph zone, $333.
Abraham K. Borntrager has been
charged with failure to obey the basic
rule governing the speed of vehicles,
$183.
Margaret A. Baker has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a 65
mph zone, $153.
GARNETT MUNICIPAL COURT
Bailey M. Deforest, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Gary W. Hartman, Kincaid, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Sydney L. Amaya, Garnett, has
been charged with limitations on backing, $125.
Ronald N. Weatherbie, Princeton,
has been charged with failure to wear
a seatbelt, $30.
Brian J. Chisam, Spring Hill, has
been charged with speeding 44 mph
in a 30 mph zone, $150.
Elmer Beachy, Garnett, has been
charged with failure to wear a seatbelt,
$30; and speeding 43 mph in a 30
mph zone, $150.
Emily M. Springer, Kansas City,
Mo., has been charged with speeding
46 mph in a 30 mph zone, $180.
Johnny J. Folsom, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Alisha N. Kettler, Garnett, has been
charged with speeding 44 mph in a 30
mph zone, $150.
Charlotte A. Cox, Garnett, has been
charged with inattentive driving, $150.
Robert Lee Geiler, Jr., Garnett, has
been charged with speeding 53 mph
in a 30 mph zone, $225.
Ashley Nicole Miller, Garnett, has
been charged with having a dog at
large, $100.
Roger Montgomery, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Robert S. Garrett, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
James P. Guinn, Kansas City, Mo.,
has been charged with having an illegal tag, $200; and speeding 46 mph in
a 30 mph zone, $130.
Daniel T. Bayru, Mt. Juliet, Tenn.,
has been charged with failure to yield
to an emergency vehicle, $150; and
speeding 42 mph in a 30 mph zone,
$150.
Mikayla M. Williams, Independence,
Mo., has been charged with failure to
wear a seatbelt, $30.
Elizabeth M. Trumbly, Greeley, has
been charged with speeding 42 mph
in a 30 mph zone, $150.
Zachary C. Wilper, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Martha Beachy, Garnett, has been
charged with failure to wear a seatbelt,
$30.
Brenda Lee Castaldi, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to stop at a
stop sign, $125.
Vinay K. Kohli, Coffeyville, has
been charged with speeding 66 mph
in a 30 mph zone, $420.
Charles Delbert Foster, Richmond,
has been charged with inattentive
driving, $150.
Jason A. Harkins, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Tatum Joyce Schull, Parker, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Andrea Rachell Gooding, Garnett,
has been charged with failure to wear
a seatbelt, $30.
John R. Gooding, Garnett, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
Jamie L. Henderson, Kincaid, has
been charged with failure to wear a
seatbelt, $30.
GARNETT POLICE DEPARTMENT
2011 Buick
Lucerne CXL
Premium
5×5
94,200 Miles,
18 Inch Chrome
BeckmanPowerWheels,
Driver Seat,
Remote Start,
Bluetooth for Phone
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Tommy Albert Tucker, Garnett, and
Eileen Elizabeth Johns, Lone Elm,
filed for a marriage license on July 6.
2012 Chevrolet
Malibu LT
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
RECORD
$7,900
$15,400
123,000 Miles,
Leather Interior,
Rear Park Assist,
Remote Start, Blind
Zone Alert, Bluetooth for phone
2015 Ford
Fusion
FWD SE
26,400 Miles,
Keyless Entry,
Cruise Control,
Satellite Radio,
Bluetooth
ARRESTS
On July 6, Bonnie Marcinko,
Millington, Tenn., was arrested for
driving while license suspended.
On July 7, Rebecca Bickerstaff,
Garnett, was arrested for possession
of opiates, driving while license suspended, possession of drug paraphernalia, and driving while a habitual
violator.
On July 8, Tobias Wilkerson,
Topeka, was arrested for driving while
license suspended, failure to have
vehicle liability insurance, and failure
to register vehicle.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On July 5, John Stephen Kissell,
Overland Park, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Department for failure to appear.
On July 5, Zachariah Samuel
Winter Lake, Topeka, was booked into
jail as a hold for the Douglas County
Sheriffs Department for theft of property or services and interference with
a law enforcement officer.
On July 5, Francis Paul Dressler,
Eudora, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Department for driving while license
suspended.
On July 5, Price Alan Pollard,
Colorado Springs, Co., was booked
into jail as a hold for the Douglas
County Sheriffs Department for distributing hallucinogenic drugs.
On July 9, Patrick David Olsen,
Aliceville, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Franklin County Sheriffs
Department on a warrant.
On July 9, Donovan Aaron Farrell
Trusler, Baldin City, was booked into
jail as a hold for the Douglas County
Sheriffs Department for a probation
violation.
On July 9, Trampas William
Hutchinson, Lawrence, was booked
into jail as a hold for the Douglas
County Sheriffs Department for a
criminal threat.
On July 9, Johnathon Altamiano
Castelan was booked into jail as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriffs
Department on a warrant.
On July 9, Anthony Wayne
Williamson, Lawrence, was booked
into jail as a hold for the Douglas
County Sheriffs Department for disorderly conduct.
On July 11, Cameron Michael
Garst, DeSoto, was booked into jail
as a hold for the Douglas County
Sheriffs Department for distributing
depressants.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ACCIDENT REPORTS
On June 18, a vehicle driven by
Kurston Hutchcraft, Garnett, was
traveling on Highway 169 when she
fell asleep, veered off the road, over
corrected, crossed the highway, and
rolled.
On July 6, a vehicle driven by
Charles Nixon, Garnett, struck a deer
while northbound on Wabaunsee
Road.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Zachary Kirkland was booked into
jail on April 30, 2018.
Curtis Dean was booked into jail
May 10, 2018.
Troy Duncan was booked into jail
on April 4, 2018.
Phillip Proctor was booked into jail
on May 26, 2018.
Carl Damron Jr. was booked into
jail on June 2, 2018.
Clancy Roeder was booked into jail
on June 24, 2018.
Francis Trumbly was booked into
jail on June 25, 2018.
Nicholas Levy was booked into jail
on June 26, 2018.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
ROSTER
Joshua Knapp was booked into jail
on December 9, 2016.
Rhonda Jackson was booked into
jail on July 27, 2016.
Wayne Benedick was booked into
jail on December 7, 2017.
Jimmy Miller was booked into jail on
January 5, 2018.
Jesse Hogan was booked into jail
on March 7, 2018.
Colton Dunnagan was booked into
jail on March 21, 2018.
Christian Seagren was booked into
jail on May 1, 2018.
Virginia Seagren was booked into
jail on May 1, 2018.
Jacab Reafleng was booked into
jail on April 30, 2018.
Gary Wade was booked into May 4,
2018.
Corey Chapman was booked into
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3A
2012 Chevrolet
Traverse
FWD 2LT
$17,400
$11,900
55,000 Miles,
Leather Seats,
Heated Front Seats,
Dual Skyscape
Sunroof,
Bluetooth for Phone
2017 Chevrolet
Sonic LT
44,700 Miles,
Remote Start,
7 Touch Screen
Radio, Rearview
Camera, Bluetooth,
WiFi Hotspot
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Johnson,
Beulah
Mae
(Jarrett), 77,
went to be
with the Lord
on July 12,
2018, at her
Westphalia,
Kansas home
with her family by her
side.
Johnson
A
celebration
of
Beulahs life will be held at
10:00 am on Saturday, July 21st
2018 at Scott Valley Church
located at the intersection of
Underwood Lane and 15th Rd
in Westphalia, Kansas. After
the service a luncheon will
be held at the home of Adron
and Beulahs daughter, Nelda
Hutcheson.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made in Beulahs name
to the Scott Valley Church. For
the full obituary, and to leave
condolences, please visit www.
midwestcremationsociety.com.
JULY 12, 2018
Mable Othick, age 93, of
Lawrence,
K a n s a s ,
formerly
of
Colony,
K a n s a s ,
passed away
on Thursday,
July
12,
2018, at The
Windsor of
Othick
Lawrence in
Lawrence, Kansas.
Funeral services will be held
at 10:00 a.m., Saturday, July 21,
2018, at the Feuerborn Family
MINCKLEY
in Colony, Kansas. Burial followed in the Colony Cemetery.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to ACARF
(Allen County Animal Rescue
Facility) and left in care of the
funeral home.
You may send your condolences to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com.
Funeral
Service
Chapel,
Garnett, with burial to follow
in the Mont Ida Cemetery,
Mont Ida, Kansas. The family
will greet friends at the funeral
home at 9:30 a.m., until service
time.
Memorial contributions may
be made to Mont Ida Cemetery
Fund, and left in care of the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, PO Box 408,
Garnett, Kansas, 66032.
Condolences may be left for
the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com
RIFFEY
DECEMBER 4, 1939 – JULY 9, 2018
Lowana Minckley, age 78, of
Colony, Kansas, passed away
on July 9, 2018 at her home.
Lowana Elvena Minckley
was born on December 4, 1939
at Ransom Memorial Hospital
in Ottawa, Kansas to Olin and
Lowana (Sherer) Minckley.
Funeral services were
Friday, July 13, 2018, at the
High Point Cowboy Church
How far from God are we?
OTHICK
JOHNSON
JULY 12, 2018
JULY 10, 2018
Alva Charles Riffey, 107,
Garnett, died at his home on
July 10, 2018.
Services were held 10:00
Saturday, July 14, 2018, at the
Old German Baptist Brethren
Church. Burial was at the
Bethel Cemetery.
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2
Obituary charges, policy
Full obituaries are published as submitted in the Review at the rate of
15 per word and include a photo at no charge.
Death notices are published free and include name, date of birth and death,
name of parents, spouse and service information. A photo may be added to a
death notice for a $10 fee.
Obituaries, jpeg photos and death notices may be emailed to
review@garnett-ks.com with a phone number for confirmation.
Payment may be arranged through your funeral home or
directly with the Review. We accept all major credit cards.
Questions? Call (785) 448-3121.
3A
REMEMBRANCES
jail on July 2, 2018.
Cody Tull was booked into jail on
May 18, 2018.
Jacci Hayes was booked into jail on
June 1, 2018.
Kevin Lee Davis was booked into
jail on June 18, 2018.
Charles Patrick Fitzgerald was
booked into jail on June 18, 2018.
Craig Aaron Jester was booked into
jail on June 19, 2018.
Devin Westley Sharp was booked
into jail on June 15, 2018.
Caleb Wood was booked into jail on
June 26, 2018.
John Whittemore was booked into
jail on June 26, 2018.
Donovan Trusler was booked into
jail on June 27, 2018.
Ronald Derr was booked into jail on
June 26, 2018.
Francis Dressler was booked into
jail on July 5, 2018.
6:36:
John Kissel was booked into jail on
July 6, 2018.
Johnathon Castelan was booked
into jail on July 9, 2018
Zachariah Lake was booked into jail
on July 5, 2018.
Gage Wright was booked into jail on
July 11, 2018.
Price Pollard was booked into jail on
July 5, 2018.
Travis Sharon was booked into jail
on July 11, 2018.
Cameron Garst was booked into jail
on July 11, 2018.
Trampas Hutchinson was booked
into jail on July 9, 2018.
Anthony Perry was booked into jail
on July 11, 2018.
James Sullivan was booked into jail
on July 5, 2018.
Anthony Williamson was booked
into jail on July 9, 2018.
The other morning as I set
on the deck and drank my coffee I noticed how clear and blue
the sky was. So I just peered
upward as far as I could and
then I began to wonder. How
far to God? In 2nd Corinthians
12:2 the Apostle Paul says, I
know a man in Christ who
fourteen years ago was caught
up to the third heaven. He
goes on to say he was caught
up to paradise. The term third
heaven is generally considered
synonymous with paradise.
It is a place where believers
who have died are even now
at home with the Lord. 2nd
Corinthians 5:8.
Paul speaks of the third
heaven and paradise as distinct
places. The Greek text says
up to the third heaven and
into paradise. Perhaps paradise is a specific location in the
third heaven. The first heaven
which I was peering into is
where the birds fly and where
we live. The second heaven
would be the sun, moon and
stars. Beyond that is the third
heaven which contains the
throne room of God. In Isaiah
6 we read of the commission of
the prophet by God and Isaiah
says, In the year King Uzziah
died I saw the LORD seated on
the throne, high and exalted,
and the train of his robe filled
the temple. In Revelation 21
the Apostle John in a vision
from God is given a glimpse
of the New Jerusalem by God.
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
What he sees is God seated on
the throne. So how far to heaven? Not so far for the believer.
Paul says in 1st Corinthians
13:12, Now we see but a poor
reflection as in a mirror; then
we shall see face to face.
Because of our sinful nature
we stand at a distance and wait.
But we wait with certainty,
with purpose knowing God has
a place prepared for us. I have
always taken great comfort in
Pauls text in 2nd Corinthians
5:8, We are confident I say,
and would prefer to be absent
from the body and present with
the Lord. When a believer
passes from this life into the
next life they are immediately
in the presence of God. How
far from God are we? Quicker
than the blink of an eye. From
this life to eternal life.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback
on Facebook
2×2
Reeble
Iola Location:
202 S. State St.
Iola, KS 66749
620-363-5005
Emporia Location:
1 S Commercial St.
Emporia, KS 66801
620-342-5573
Ottawa Location:
233 W 23rd St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-229-0684
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
Sunday Service 10:00am
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
email review@garnett-ks.com
Small Groups 6:30pm
Bible Studies Wednesday 7pm
258 W. Park Road, Garnett, Ks.
(785) 448-3208
Senior Pastor – Jonathan Hall
Childrens Pastor -Sarah Pridey
Jordan Dages – Teen Ministries
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 248-8806
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
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 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
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
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10 a.m.
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
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 10:00 am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
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
(620) 228-2844
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm
Thursday Bible Study 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Interim Pastor – Melinda
BEACON OF TRUTH
Sunday Worship Service 10:00am
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Chase Riebel
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) 448-3947
1300 & Broomall Rd, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Vernon Yoder
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Adam Wilczak
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. Adam Wilczak
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Saturday 5:00pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(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 6:30pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
TRUE HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Worship Gathering Sunday 6:30pm
1020 S. Westgate Rd.
Garnett, KS
(785) 409-3595
truehopecommunitychurch@gmail.com
Pastor – Tony Thornton
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
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News
Mon – Fri
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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!
LIVING WATERS BIBLE TEMPLE
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Service 11am
305 E. 2nd
Garnett, KS
(785) 304-9032
Pastor – Michael Lobdell
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
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
OPINION
KU flag desecration debacle
resolved by ghost of Mizzou
The resolution of KUs flag desecration incident last week is being bantered this way and
that between conservative flag lovers and liberals who cry censorship of artistic freedom. But
make no mistake the reason that flag came
down is rooted at the University of Missouri.
How so? Three words that now strike terror in the hearts of even the most socially self
righteous of university academes freshman
enrollment decline. Yes, the dreaded legacy of
Concerned Student 1950 at Mizzou lives on in
the consciousness of university officials who
have come to understand true fear.
It was that predicament of racial protest at
the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2015
that brought a 35 percent decline in freshman
and transfer student enrollment at the university. Blacks didnt want to attend Mizzou because
the over-blown protests convinced them the
campus was racist; whites didnt want to attend
for fear of being branded as racists.
The effect was easy to gauge in real numbers:
millions of dollars in lost tuition and closed
resident halls and millions more that had to
be spent in marketing dollars to try to change
peoples minds. After two years of multi-million
dollar losses that torpedoed the schools reputation and rim-wrecked its educational offerings,
those enrollments had improved last winter by
about 16 percent. It will be a long road back.
To KU officials and no doubt the regents and
even Governor Coyler, the flag was a similar
disaster brewing and brewing quickly. Even
the liberal battlements of Lawrence and KU
couldnt protect it from millions of Kansans,
KU alumni, veterans and others from across
the country who love their flag and have no
patience for such blatant desecration and who
might be influential in a future students choice
of colleges.
Of course to German-born artist Josephine
Meckseper, it all made sense.
I divided the shape of the country in two for
the flag design to reflect a deeply polarized country in which a president has openly bragged
about harassing women and is withdrawing
from the Kyoto protocol and UN Human Rights
Council, Meckseper told an arts organization.
A sock drawn on the flag was supposed to represent illegal immigrant children separated from
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
their parents at the U.S./Mexico border.
Yeah. Whatever.
If Meckseper had included a bullet hole or
two to represent the killing of Kate Steinle, who
died in her fathers arms on a San Francisco
pier in 2015 after a five times deported illegal
immigrant felon bobbled a handgun that discharged, her message might have had more
balance.
Content debate aside, the incident doesnt
improve the relationship between KU and the
Kansas Legislature, which ultimately holds its
purse strings and which is full of flag-loving,
elected conservatives yet more PR damage to a
critical audience.
These are, in the end, the issues that matter.
The effect on KUs ability to fund itself and
educate and maintain reputation is more determined by financial prejudice than by philosophical debates on art and free expression.
Did the artist and the university have a right
to produce and display controversial art? Of
course. But flying a desecrated flag in place of a
real one over a campus building was an improper display of the exhibit, and one most likely contrived by university staff for maximum
affront to the conservatives it was designed to
offend. Saralyn Reece Hardy, director of KUs
Spencer Museum of Art, should have resigned
or been fired for it.
KU gets credit for ending the fiasco quickly
and removing the flag. In the contest between
avant garde and the dollar, the dollar wins.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
I want to commend the city staff or trying to
enforce the city laws against the business on
59 Highway through the most travelled part of
our town, that looks like a junkyard. Now commissioners Gwin and Brecheisen-Huss need to
stand behind the city staff and enforce the laws
that are on the books. The person admits this
has been over 20 years, and he still hasnt complied with the law. He should be given a ticket
every day until his junkyard is cleaned up. Is
that the kind of business Gwin and BrechehisenHuss want in our town? Its time to find new
commissioners who have the best interests of
our town at heart.
As I think of all the freedoms we have in this
Past the money, how schools teach next debate
Weve heard years of whining about public
school funding in Kansas.
Legislators have griped that the state isnt
adequately supporting public schools, other
legislators have complained that the state is
spending too much on public schools or local
school boards are spending it wrong?
Well, thats nearly all over. The Kansas
Supreme Court in its decision last month
decided that if the Legislature will just appropriate enough money to make up for several
years of low-ball spending, the states school
finance not only will meet equity standards
but that dollar-sign punctuated the adequacy
threshold.
Now, folks in the Statehouse are still doing
the long division and such to come up with a
flat number for an increase in state funding
the high court says is necessary. Early estimates are that somewhere between $80 million
and $120 million in additional spending in
each of the next four years would meet the
courts order. Few are doubting that there will
be enough money to make that increase in
state aid.
Butthenthe whole issue of public education changes.
Once the money meets constitutional standards for adequacyand if the Legislature
doesnt short-change that standard in the outyears as it has in past court-watched deals
what happens to public education?
There will be a sizable percentage of the
Legislature that figures if the money is OK, its
over. And there will be a sizable percentage
which decides that constitutional doesnt
really speak to just what the students learn
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
and how it helps them live a prosperous life,
take care of their kids and their parents when
needed, and make the state more prosperous.
The difference? Maybe thats where
Kansans find outand tell their legislators
just what they want from schools. After years
of fighting over the money, its likely the
debate will switch to just how schools teach,
how well the students do on standardized
tests, and which districts produce the highest
number of graduates ready to proceed with
their lives, get technical education, go on to
college or whatever.
Some of that debate will undoubtedly splash
back on locally elected boards of education.
Because the constitutional money issue can be
off the table, its looking at individual districts
to see which of the 278 districts uses that constitutionally adequate state aid to produce
the smartest students with the best futures
ahead of them.
New football helmets and cheerleader uniforms or additional classes to make sure students with disabilities get the best education
they can? Or whether every student gets a
computer to carry around and the schoolbooks
(they still have them?) are the latest, best-written volumes in print?
Were down to a court-blessed adequate
funding plan and unless the State Board of
Education radically changes its measurement
of student performance, lawmakers will be
able to see where money is being spent well
and where it apparently isnt being spent in
the best interests of the studentsand their
families.
Thats a dramatic change in the school
finance debate. Its not just about money,
though lawmakers could of course put more
in, but its about just what the state is getting
for its adequate spending of taxpayers money.
Now, of course, there is still battling to be
doneranging from the courts adequate
being too high or low to the authority of the
court to decide cases in which the Legislature
is held to a standard for funding of schools.
But there may be a dramatic change in
K-12 education policy, and you can bet that
there will be splash-back on individual school
districts and their locally elected members if
they cant make adequate funding produce
smarter and smarter students.
This might be interesting to watch
Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawvers
Capitol Reportto learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit
the website at www.hawvernews.com
Das German escape from defense spending
Angela Merkel is, her supporters like to
gloat, the leader of the free world.
Just dont ask her to spend as if she is.
Donald Trump has made the German chancellor one of his favorite rhetorical targets,
especially over Germanys anemic defense
expenditures. This has led to worries about
the future of the trans-Atlantic alliance,
and reflexive support for Merkel among the
American political elite.
Trump shouldnt openly mock Merkel, or
suggest that there have been annual dues to
NATO that Germany has failed to pay. Trump
tends to view foreign countries like contractors trying to scam him in a development
deal. This scants history, geo-strategy and the
national pride of other countries — as usual,
Trump would benefit from at least a gesture
toward statesmanship.
Yet Germanys defense spending, or lack
thereof, is a disgrace. One would think the
country would have been embarrassed onto
a different trajectory after German troops
— Panzergrenadierbataillon 371, to be exact
— had to use broomsticks instead of guns in a
NATO exercise in 2014. But Germany evidently doesnt embarrass easily.
NATO countries, after a long vacation from
history after the end of the Cold War, agreed at
a summit in Wales in 2014 to spend 2 percent of
their gross domestic product on defense annu-
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
ally within 10 years.
It is the biggest economy in Europe and
fourth largest in the world that is the serious
laggard. Germany spends all of 1.2 percent of
GDP on defense. As Elisabeth Braw points
out in Foreign Policy magazine, its military is
short on tents and winter clothes, most of its
tanks arent battle-ready and it has a shortfall
of about 20,000 officers and NCOs. It is promising to get to 1.5 percent GDP … by 2025 (when a
Trump second term would be ending).
Merkel is happy to browbeat other EU
countries over their fiscal and migrant commitments, but please dont bother her to spend
on her own defense.
The old saw is that NATO exists to keep
the Soviet Union out, the Americans in, and
the Germans down. But the last item, given
the deep streak of pacifism in postwar German
politics, is no longer apt. The EU, not military
conquest, is now Germanys tool for European
influence.
Germany still has a gauzy view of what
matters. Its foreign minister has argued that
its development aid should count against its
goal for military spending, fundamentally confusing soft and hard power.
Needless to say, if Vladimir Putin is tempted to challenge NATO somewhere on its
periphery, hes not going to be dissuaded by
Germanys foreign-aid budget or its openness
to Middle Eastern migrants.
Its not clear how seriously Germany takes
the Russian threat (although it sent some
troops to Lithuania last year). Germany has
been supportive of the proposed Russian pipeline, Nord Stream 2, that would make Europe
more dependent on Russian natural gas and
bypass Ukraine. Its Trump, the alleged tool
of Putin, who has been complaining bitterly
about the project.
With Putin looming to the East, NATO
remains a vital tool of Western power. Its not
an imposition to ask that Germany act like it.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
country, yet we have nothing but hate and
malice toward anyone with a different opinon
than we have. I love this country, but Im embarrassed by how we protest everything and anything, showing hate toward other Americans.
Maybe if we put down our cell phones, lap tops
and lattes we could start getting to know our
neighbors, visiting nursing homes, playing with
children. What the news shows is a divided
country. All the other countries want to see us
divided. It makes them happy and strong to see
us so weak. Just food for thought.
Quotables:
When anything is going to
happen in this country, it
happens first in Kansas.
William Allen White
Contact your elected officials:
President Donald Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
@realDonaldTrump
Governor Jeff Coyler
Kansas Statehouse
300 SW 10th Street
Topeka, KS 66612
(785) 368-8500
@DrJeffColyer
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774,
pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
5th Dist. Rep. Lynn
Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 225-6601
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
5th Dist. Rep Kevin Jones
300 SW 10th St. Rm 151-S
Topeka, Ks. 66612
(785) 296-6287
kevin.jones@house.ks.gov
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
5A
HISTORY
40 years ago: Two hundred people
show up as the newly renovated
city pool opens for the summer
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-5-2018 / Archive Photo
Circa August 1993 Above: BEEF EXHIBITORS – Leslie Peine of Dynamite was named the pee
wee winner of the beef showmanship contest. Marilyn Peine from Dynamite took the top junior
honors. Stephanie Chandler of Lucky 13 4-H took the senior award.
Below: EXCELLENCE AWARDS – Blake Thompson of Seekers Not Slackers won the trophy for the
shep rate-of-grain competition. Jacob Strobel from Lucky 13 4-H took top honors in the beef rateof-grain contest. James Cubit from Lucky 13 had the market hog which gained the most pounds
per day.
Miami County Fair & Rodeo 2018
Paola, Kansas July 21-28, 2018
2x4Saturday, July 21 – 5:00 p.m. Barnyard Olympics
Sunday, July 22 – 1:00 p.m. 4-H Dog Show followed by Open Show
Monday,Co
July 23 -Fair
Check In of Exhibits Begin
Miami
4:00 p.m. Kiddie Tractor Pull 3:00 p.m. check in
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
To advertise your business
here
contact Stacey at (785)
448-3121.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
of-pearl button, 1917-S Silver
Dime and several shards of
decorated dishware. It sprinkled several times today, then
turned very hot.
The evening program was
a talk: The Santa Fe Trail and
Last Chance Store by Mark
Brooks. Very interesting.
8 June 2018
68 degrees, wonderful
sleeping last night. The metal
detecting is completed and Im
now in charge of the Screening
Team. Finds today during
excavations and screening:
4-hole rather large Poreclain
button, slate pencil, Crystal
tear drop pendant, several
Crockery shards, bottle glass,
dishware shards (lots of different patterns), narrow gauge
railroad spike, 2-brass buttons,
bra or corset brass hook and
eye, broken whet stone and lots
of square nails.
Cook out this evening at Bob
Blasings cabin on the Council
Grove Lake.
9 June 2018
Another cool night. A front
passed through about 11:00
am, but once again only a
few sprinkles. I found a tiny
tick on the back of my upper
right arm. I had to have Nancy
Arendt a registered nurse on
site remove it. Im to keep an
eye on it, to see if a red bullseye appears. 0nly a small brass
buckle and a few iron artifacts
(unidentified) were found
today. A free evening.
To be contd…..
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers 9July2018
2×3
Coffey Co Fair
Health Services
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These Miami County businesses appreciate your
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merchants in Miami County!
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ufacturing methamphetamine
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30 years ago…
A challenge awaited the
congregation of St. Boniface
Catholic Church here recently on how to repair damage
done to the churchs steeple. The challenge was how
to gain access to the steeple
which towers over the countryside some 110 feet above the
ground. Ben Rockers volunteered to research the project
and find the best way to reshingle the structure at the most
savings to the congregation.
Delivery Available. Financing Available W.A.C.
2701 North State St. Iola, KS
620-365-2187 800-367-2187
3×5.5 Miami Co Guide
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Melissa Hobbs
SEND LOCAL HISTORY PHOTOS, INFORMATION TO
REVIEW@GARNETT-KS.COM
The final crew consisted of
Rockers, Frank Wittman, Steve
Hoffman, Rick Hoffman, and
John Harvey. The men began
on the bottom of the steeple and
slowly worked their way up.
40 years ago…
Two hundred people flocked
to the newly renovated city
pool during the first hour it was
open for the season. Because of
the late opening and resulting
shorter season, the city is not
raising admission prices this
year. Single admission prices
are 50 cents for children and 75
cents for adults.
100 years ago…
June, the month of brides
and roses, is generally the most
beautiful month of the year,
but not so this year. June just
passed and was probably the
hottest June in history. With
the thermometer registering
around the 100 mark during
the greater part of the month,
sometimes passing the 104
mark, we have been really hot.
2×2 OMalley
Spartan
Visit Miami County!
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THAT WAS THEN
2018 KATP chronicled – continued
6June2018
A cool morning, ground fog
and heavy dew.
Finds today during excavations and metal detecting: a
very fancy brass buckle, brass
buttons, mule shoe, horseshoe and mule shoe nails, 1871
Indian Head Penny, little brass
bell, 30 Native American seed
beads on a string, and several
beautiful dish and glassware
shards.
This evening 32 of us
gathered at the Hays House
Restaurant for the fried chicken buffet. It was GREAT!
7 June 2018.
Cool and crisp with thunder showers to our west. We
were really down in number
of workers today. The find of
the day was a sterling silver
spoon, with the initials AGH
on the handle (the daughter
of the original mission owners). HELENA, MONTANA,
was written in the bowl. In
the late 1800s-very early 1900s
the family had gone to Helena,
Montana to attend a wedding.
Most likely this souvenir spoon
was purchased for their daughter while there. Other artifacts
found today were: a little ring,
old coffee grinder handle, some
type of pretty stone, mother-
http://www.maraisdescygnes.k-state.edu/fair/miami-county-fair/index.html
7:30 p.m. 4-H Fashion Revue
Tuesday, July 24 Check in and judging of Exhibits continue
7:00 p.m. Free Entertainment (Frontier Twirlers)
Wednesday, July 25 7:00 p.m. Rotary Fair Parade http://www.paolarotaryclub.org/parade.html
6:00 – 10:00 p.m. Carnival (Evenings July 25 through July 29)
Thursday, July 26 – 7:00 p.m. Sweetheart Crowning
followed by Mutton Busting (Arena)
Friday, July 27 – 10:00 a.m. Livestock Judging Contests
4:00 p.m. 4-H Project Auction 5:45 p.m. Livestock Awards and Auction
7:00 p.m. Crowning of Fair Queen & Princess
7:30 p.m. Miami County Fair Rodeo (Grand River Rodeo Co.)
http://www.unitedrodeoassociation.com/schedule
9:00 p.m. Release of Open Class Exhibits
Saturday, July 28 – 8:00 – 10:00 a.m. All 4-H Exhibits and Livestock leave Fairgrounds
6:00 – 10:00 p.m. Carnival in Wallace Park
7:30 p.m. Miami County Fair Rodeo (Grand River Rodeo Co.)
10 years ago…
The Kansas Court of
Appeals last month upheld a
May 2006 conviction against a
Garnett man sentenced to 27
years in prison for criminal
sodomy and aggravated indecent liberties with a child.
John Rutherford was sentenced to 324 months with the
Department of Corrections
as well as 60 months of post
release probation for multiple
counts and subsequently filed a
request with the appeals court
to review the sentencing.
20 years ago…
A jury returned guilty verdicts on three separate drug
related charges faced by a
Garnett man at the conclusion of his trial. The trial for
Anthony E. Tony Lohff began
on Wednesday and was scheduled for three days, but prosecution rested on Wednesday
afternoon and the jury brought
back a verdict after deliberating for an hour and a half on
Thursday. Lohff was arrested
and charged last June for man-
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
Rehabilitation
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To advertise in this
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County Review
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
M-T-W-F
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After Hours By Appt.
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
LOCAL
Early settlers of Colony struggled to develop the natural
gas resources they hoped for, discovered coal by accident
Calendar
18-Crest
Education
Foundation,
City
Hall
Community Room, 6 p.m.;
19-County bus to Iola, phone 24
hrs. before you need a ride 785448-4410 any weekday
Meal Site
18-Birthday
Meal-fried
chicken breast, mashed potatoes, green beans, roll, cake;
20-hot dog, hot dog bun, coleslaw, chuck wagon corn, spiced
applies; 23-Sloppy Joe, scalloped
potatoes, peas, hamburger bun,
apricots. Phone 620-852-3457 for
meal reservations.
Christian Church
July 8 Howard Reiter gave
the Communion Meditation
on memory loss, referencing
Exodus 16:2-3. He explained
how the Israelites were given
plenty of provisions from the
Egyptians, and yet still complained about what they felt
they didnt have. We should
always be thankful for what
God has provided for us. Pastor
Chase gave the sermon titled
Up-Set the World for Jesus.
His main reference was from
Acts 17:1-14. We have come to
see that what has become normal for the world, is upside
down for Christians (or should
be!). We need to have a movement in the world to turn it
upside down, so it will once
again be right side up! There
will always be people stirring
up trouble wherever the word
of God is preached. We must
not get discouraged, but continue the good fight. And just
like the Bereans, we need to
search the scriptures for ourselves to make sure what is
being preached is Gods truth.
Mens Bible study Tuesday
morning at 7 a.m. Wednesday
at 4:30 youth group, followed by
a meal and prayer at 5:30, adult
Bible study at 7 p.m. Current
study is on Evangelism.
Everyone is welcome! Creative
Blessing womens life group
will be crocheting headbands
at the parsonage Tuesday from
9-11:30 a.m. Please bring the
yarn color of your choice. They
will also be making headbands
for a Trail ride for breast cancer being held in October, if
you have some pink yarn you
would like to donate, please
bring that as well. Kids craft
day will be Thursday 2-4 p.m. at
the parsonage. This is open to
kids of all ages.
Cowboy Church
The July 8 morning service
at High Point Cowboy Church
was equal to the glorious day
God provided; from the praise
and worship, to the message
and the time of fellowship.
Apostle Jon Pettys mes-
COLONY NEWS
Mary A. Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
sage, continued with the
theme of Hope and staying/
abiding/focusing, as it says in
Corinthians 13:13. What kind of
fruit does our actions produce?
Jesus fruit was life and we are
to produce the same, John 15:15.
After hearing a testimony of
answered prayer, everyone
enjoyed donuts and coffee following the service.
Northcott Church
July 8 was fellowship and
board meeting. July 11 and
25-mid-week service at 7:30
p.m.; 26-Women of Faith at 6:30
p.m., dinner menu is potato
bar; Sept. 2-3rd quarter 4 Hs
offering, Haiti. June birthdays3-Marilyn Andreas, 6-Lora
Crouch, 27-Bill Otto. Prayer
Focus: President Trump and VP
Pence, Liberal Media, Mid-term
Elections, Atchison County
Education.
Service time: 9 a.m.-Sunday
School; 10 a.m.- Worship Service
Contact: Leon LaGalle, 620228-2644. www.facebook.com/
Northcott Church
UMC
July 8 United Methodist
Church scripture was 2 Samuel
5: 1-5, 9-10, 2 Corinthians 12: 2-10
and Mark 6:1-3, Pastor Dorothy
Welch presented the sermon,
Unlikely Messengers. The
United Methodist Womens
challenge for July is school supplies.
Story Hour
Fourteen children and four
youth helpers were present at
the July 3 Story Hour. Debbie
Wools read four books: Hats
Off For The Fourth of July,
Henrys Fourth of July,
My Lucky Day, and Bark,
George. Craft was a Patriotic
Window decoration. Snacks
were fireworks cookies and red,
white and blue stained glass
jello.
Colony History
Continued from last weeks
Colony News. This article was
found in an August 31, 1900
newspaper: It continues: We
are in the natural gas belt of
Eastern Kansas. An effort was
made some months ago to develop natural gas resources near
our city, and while that effort
did not bring the result looked
for, enough has been done to
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firm the belief that we have gas.
We also have a vein of good coal
at a depth to 400 feet, which is 3
and 4 foot thick. The discovery
of this coal was accidental.
Businesses in town include
Shockey & Son carry a very
large stock of dry goods,
notions, clothing, hats, caps,
groceries, cigars and tobacco.
They handle country produce
extensively. The firm is composed of A.C.G. Shockey and
his son Ed.
The bank of Colony is solid
and recognized as a substantial banking house of eastern
Kansas. It was organized in
1884. C. Kramer is in charge,
assisted by J.W. Schuessler,
Frank Kramer and John
Holzapfel as directors. Capital
is $10,000. The business of this
bank has always been large. F.
A. Quiggle has been connected
with the harness business for
twenty years and in Colony for
six years. R. C. Harrington has
a line of goods he handles, clothing, hats, caps, boots, shoes and
millinery. His stock is large.
M. Shummard established his
business here six years ago of
the Racket Store, selling dry
goods, notions, hardware, tinware, glassware, chinaware,
Queensware, lamps, stoves
and a thousand other articles.
The Cottage is a hotel run by
the Jones Bros., C.W. and A.S.,
which opened in the early part
of August. The Jones Bros. also
do sign writing, painting, paper
hanging and decorating. OO.
McDown has been connected
with the mercantile business
here for over ten years, selling groceries, canned and bottled goods, candies, cigars and
tobacco, and all kinds of soft
drinks, also a bakery.
J.B. Rhodes & Son. This man
has been a resident of this section for more than a quarter
of a century and has occupied
a position which made his
life a public record. In 1879 he
engaged in general merchandise, then took the office of
country treasurer, being elected in 1883. He then returned
to Colony and engaged in the
lumber business, to which
three years ago he added agricultural implements. In 1890, he
organized and started Peoples
Bank of Colony, which has continued until the present, when
the bank liquidated. Fred H.
Rhodes, junior member of the
firm, has been associated with
his father since early boyhood.
John Post assists in the management of the implement business and dates his connection
about fifteen years back. N.E.
Swickard was bookkeeper of
the bank until its liquidation,
and has charge of the books
for the lumber business. Colony
Hardware Co. began business
in Colony about 10 years ago.
Their store is the largest of its
kind in this part of the state.
They handle hardware, stoves,
wall paper, tinware, roofing, guttering and repairing.
Undertaking is a specialty with
a line of caskets and goods more
complete than any place within
miles of Colony. Their hearse is
one of the finest and furnished
free to all patrons. E.E. Varner
is manager and embalmer. (To
be continued)
Around Town
Evelyn Wedeman will be
102 on July 11. A card shower
has been requested for her. Her
address is: Parkview Heights,
101 N. Pine, Garnett, KS 66032.
Craig Luedke, Hot Springs,
AR was a July 4 visitor of his
mother, Phyllis Luedke. He
visited at the home of Mark
Luedke and his mother Mary
Luedke that evening.
Dale Luedke, Dodge City, visited Mary Luedke and Jerry
Luedke on the 9th. He also
visited Gene and Claudette
Monday: $1 tacos, beans, rice, Natural Light
Tuesday: bbq & burgers, house-smoked meat
We have
sandwiches, brisket, ham, turkey, or try our
new 1/2 pound cheeseburger Wednesday:
Fried chicken Thursday: Meatloaf
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
fried chicken Saturday: Different special every week every 1st Sat.
ribeye steak, 3rd Sat. boiled shrimp Sunday: Homemade pan-fried
chicken with sides- mashed potatoes, chicken
gravy, corn, potato salad, macaroni salad, slaw.
2×2
Parker 1 Stop
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×12.5
biz directory
MIKE HERMRECK
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Sales & Service
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Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
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On-the-Farm Service Alignments
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directory contact
111
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ads@tradingpostdeals.com
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
N. Hwy. 59 Garnett
(785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Anderson E-Statements &
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Aaron Lizer News Online Banking
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412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
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pizza!
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Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Anderson.
Sympathy is expressed to
John Fursman, Jr. at the loss
of his daughter Susan Hiser
Fursman Diebolt, 70. She passed
away July 7 at KU Medical
Center. She was a 1966 graduate of Colony High School.
Funeral service was July 12 at
the Feuerborn Family Funeral
Chapel, Iola. Burial followed at
Highland Cemetery, Iola.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Agent
Mon – Fri
8:00am
785-448-3056
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601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Contact Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Anderson
Ask how to advertise
County in this space
News
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
THE SMART CHOICE
120 S. Maple
Garnett, KS
wiseautoks.com
785-448-2171
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Dirty
Deeds
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Done dirt cheap.
(785) 448-3121
Millers Construction, Inc.
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
Since 1980
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Delden Doors & Openers
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
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Quality Service For
Over 20 Years.
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We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
Providing quality
products and service
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, July 17
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo at
VFW Hall
Wednesday, July 18
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
Noon – Birthday dinner at Garnett
Senior Center, with entertainment.
RSVP to (785) 448-6996 the day
before.
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, July 19
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
6 p.m. – Pitch @ Senior Center bring snacks
Monday, July 23
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
1-2 p.m. – Anderson County
Caregiver Support Group, Park Place
Plaza North Club House
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade) Den
Cub Scouts and Wolves (second grade)
Den Cub Scouts meeting
Tuesday, July 24
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior
Center Dominoes, cards and pool table
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo at
VFW Hall
Wednesday, July 25
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate Bridge at
the Garnett Inn
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist Club at
Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Public Library Book
Discussion
Thursday, July 26
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
6 p.m. – Pitch @ Senior Center bring snacks
Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
Monday, July 30
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
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lodge
No. 338
Tuesday, July 31
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – American Legion Bingo at
VFW Hall
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
Wednesday, August 1
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – USD 365 Booster
Club
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, August 2
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
1:30 p.m. – Colony United
Methodist Women at Colony
United Methodist Church
6 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
plazacinemaottawa.com
community
2018 Richmond Fair
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-17-2018 / Photo
The Richmond Free Fairs Grand Parade took place Saturday, July 14. The theme for this years
parade was Proud to be an American.
Above – The Color Guard leading off the parade.
Right – Mary riding her horse in the parade with the Garnett Saddle Club.
Bottom right – Parade onlookers were sprayed with water guns
to help beat the heat.
Below – From left: Brandon
Church, Larry Brockus, Ryan
Reed, Shelby Reed, Addie Reed
& Lindsay Ellis.
Right – Safetypup for Kids made
an appearance. He is often seen
on milk cartons in schools.
5×10.5 And. Co Hosp.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
2B
Four State Farm Show
July 20-22 in Pittsburg
For 44 years, the Four State
Farm Show has brought the
cream of the crop in agricultural technology and equipment to
southeast Kansas.
This years event is set for
Friday, Saturday and Sunday,
July 20, 21 and 22. The Four
State Farm Show will provide
the agricultural community the
opportunity to get a hands-on
look at agricultural goods and
services offered throughout the
region.
The Four State Farm Show
continues to be the areas go-to
event for farmers and ranchers to view the latest in agricultural equipment, technology and services, said Lance
Markley, Four State Farm
Show coordinator and Farm
Talk Newspaper publisher.
In addition to the displays
offered by hundreds of agricultural businesses, visitors
can check out the latest in hay
equipment at the live action
demonstrations held each day
at 1 p.m. on the south end of the
show.
Area lawn mower dealers
also have equipment available
at the lawn mower test-driving
range.
The popular Shopping Sprees
will return again this year with
$1,000 given away each day at
the Farm Talk booth and $500
daily at the conclusion of the
hay demonstrations, Markley
said.
Visitors can enter to win
the $1,000 Shopping Spree at
the Farm Talk Newspaper tent
near the center of the show
grounds. Shopping Sprees must
be used for purchases with
Four State Farm Show exhibitors. Visitors can enter the hay
demonstration giveaway at the
daily demon- stration.
Over its 44-year history,
the Four State Farm Show has
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
LOCAL
become a Mall of Agriculture
and has grown to nearly 700
booths covering 25 acres.
Businesses interested in
exhibiting at the show should
contact Farm Talk Newspaper.
Booth space is limited and
expected to sell out.
Parking and admission are
always free.
Show hours are 7:30 a.m. to
3 p.m. on Friday and Saturday
and 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday.
The Four State Farm Show
grounds are located south of
Pittsburg, Kansas, to the junction of Highways 400, 69 and
K-171, then one-half mile east.
The Four State Farm Show
is sponsored by Farm Talk
Newspaper. For more information, call 1-800-356-8255.
SAFE…
grandkids. She believes that 30
mph on residential streets is
too high, but shes worried that
there wont be enough patrol
to enforce signs even if theyre
put in place.
Considering that we dont
have stop signs on most of the
intersections of Broad Street,
30 mph is too fast, said Oswald.
Colony City Council member A.J. Silvey says that he
thinks the signs are a nice idea
too, especially considering the
problem several areas have
had with speeding traffic.
The signs could cost as much
as $100 to $125 each, depending
on what signs the city council
decides on if they agree to put
them up around town. Leonard
says he hopes that if the city
cant afford to put up signs all
over, they will at least consider
putting up a few signs to help
protect the kids.
Leonard plans to approach
the Colony City Council members with his request at their
July meeting at the end of this
month.
That data shows Anderson
County to have minimal water
use patterns, at least in comparison to neighboring counties and the region as a whole,
reflecting comparatively low
population and lack of irrigation and major industrial
water users.
The study shows Anderson
County as a whole averaged
1.85 million gallons of water
use by all sources per day. That
compares to 3.45 million per
day in Franklin County, 2.39
million in Allen County.
But all those users are
dwarfed by Linn County, whos
LaCygne Generating Station
turns 610 millions of gallons of
water per day to steam to run
its turbines and generators.
Capture systems at the plant
return about 99 percent of the
water used to the source lake.
Linn Countys total use figures
rank at 611 million gallons per
day.
Coffey County, with its Wolf
Creek Generating Station, also
ranks higher because of thermoelectric use. Wolf Creek
uses about 18.9 million gallons
of Coffey Countys overall 20.1
million gallon daily use, again
with most of the plants water
being returned to Wolf Creek
Lake.
Anderson County registered
640,000 gallons per day in irrigation use, 600,000 gallons per
day in public use and 20,000
gallons per day in industrial
use.
Located at 23668 NW Indiana RD, Welda,
Kansas, Section 7, Township 21, Range 19 in
Anderson County, Kansas.
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review July 17, 2018; last published July 31,
2018)
FROM PAGE 1
drive up and down the residential streets. She hopes that
putting up signs would get
peoples attention and make
people think before they speed.
I also think they need to be
enforced, said Schmidt. I
see too many people speeding
around Colony.
Debbie Oswald agrees. She
says she has wanted signs
up for years where kids are
playing, even before she had
WATER…
FROM PAGE 1
of Public Hearing Notice of hearing to
Public Notice Notice
for special use permit
creditors for Grant Estate
Your RIGHT
to know.
Notice of hearing for
child in need of care
(First Published in The Anderson County
Review July 17, 2018)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
IN THE INTEREST OF
J. J.W.
Year of Birth: 2012 a male
Case No. 2018-JC-4
NOTICE OF HEARING-Publication
Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2237
TO: Roy Prevatte Sr.
and all other persons who are or may be
concerned
You are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in this court alleging that the child
named above is a Child in Need of Care. The
Court may find that the parents are unfit by
reason or conduct or condition which renders
the parents unable to care properly for a child,
the conduct or condition is unlikely to change in
the foreseeable future, the parental rights of the
parent should be terminated, and a permanent
custodian should be appointed for the child.
A hearing on the petition is scheduled for
the 24th day of July, 2018, at 11:00 oclock a.m.
At the hearing the Court may issue orders relat-
ing to the care, custody and control of the child.
The hearing will determine if the parents should
be deprived of their parental rights and the right
to custody of the child.
The parent(s), and any other person having
legal custody are required to appear before this
Court on the date and time shown, or to file your
written response to the petition with the Clerk
of the District Court prior to that time. Failure
to respond or to appear before the Court at
the time shown will not prevent the Court from
entering judgment as requested in the petition,
finding that the child is a Child in Need of Care,
removing the child from the custody of parent,
parents or any other present legal custodian
until further order of the Court, or finding the parents unfit, and entering an order permanently
terminating the parents parental rights.
(Published in the Anderson County Review,
July 17, 2018)
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the Anderson Count
Planning Commission will hold a Public Hearing
on August 20, 2018 at 7:00 P.M. in the Anderson
County Annex, 409 South Oak, Garnett, Kansas
to consider:
Special Use Permit application #SUP201803(Yoder) to operate agriculture repair business. Said property is described as follows:
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before August 8, 2018, at 9:00
a.m., of said day, at the Courthouse, 100 E.
4th Street, Garnett, Kansas, at which time and
Any person concerned with this request may IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
attend the public hearing or submit written com- COUNTY, KANSAS
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
ments, opposed or in support, to the Planning due course upon the Petition.
Commission. The Planning Commission may In the Matter of the Estate of
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
continue this hearing date to a future date, if EVERETT J. GRANT, deceased
demands against the estate within four (4)
necessary, without further notice.
months of the date of first publication of this
Case No. 2018-PR-000014
Notice, as provided by law, and if their demands
/s/
are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever
Thomas R. Young
NOTICE OF HEARING AND NOTICE TO barred.
Planning & Zoning Director
CREDITORS
Jy17t1*
Benjamin D. Sherber, Petitioner
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
Brian Duncan, #22474
CONCERNED:
BRAKE & DUNCAN, LLC
You are hereby notified that on July 10,
PO Box 667
2018, a Petition was filed in this Court by
Chanute, KS 66720
Benjamin D. Sherber, Attorney for the Kansas
Tel. (620) 431-2600 / Fax (620) 431-2603
Estate Recovery Program, an authorized
Email: hpblaw@terraworld.net
agent of the Kansas Department of Health &
Attorneys for Petitioner
Environment, Division of Health Care Finance,
Jy17t3*
property and any other Kansas real estate praying for the appointment of an administrator.
owned by the decedent at the time of death
be assigned pursuant to the terms of the Valid
Settlement Agreement dated May 5, 2018.
Notice of hearing to
creditors for Miller Estate
(First Published in the Anderson County Review
on July 17, 2018.)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
PROBATE DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF
WESLEY A. MILLER, Deceased.
Case No. 2018-PR-000012
NOTICE OF HEARING
An attorney has been appointed as guardTHE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
ian ad litem for the child: (Give name and conCONCERNED:
tact information.) Elizabeth Oliver. You have the
right to appear before the Court and be heard
You are hereby notified that on Petition
personally, either with or without an attorney.
was filed in this Court by Barbara Miller-Burns,
surviving spouse and one of the heirs of Wesley
Date and time of hearing: July 24, 2018, at
A. Miller, deceased, praying: Descent be deter11:00 oclock a.m.
mined of the decedents interest in certain real
Place of hearing: Anderson County Court
estate situated in Anderson County, Kansas,
House, 100 E. 4th Ave., Garnett, Kansas
particularly described in said Petition, and all
66032.
personal property and any other Kansas real
Jy17t2*
estate owned by the decedent at the time of
death, and that such property and all personal
Notice of Deer Creek
Watershed budget hearing
(Published in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, July 17. 2018)
You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before August 13, 2018, at
9:00 oclock a.m. in the District Court, Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the Petition.
BARBARA MILLER-BURNS
Petitioner
LAW FIRM OF JEANIE L. SCHAINOST, LLC
Jeanie L. Schainost (15749)
134 E 5th Avenue
P.O. Box 393
Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-1646
jeanieschainost@hotmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
Jy17t3*
Notice of SE Kansas
Library budget hearing
(Published in The Anderson County Review, Tuesday, July 10. 2018)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
3B
LOCAL
Emergency haying and grazing Utilizing cover crops as a forage
of CRP provisions announced
The Kansas Farm Service
Agency has approved emergency haying or grazing of eligible
Conservation Reserve Program
(CRP) practices in Anderson
County due to the dry conditions reflected on the U.S.
drought monitor. Eligible CRP
practices include CP-1, CP-2,
CP-4, CP-10, and CP-38E.
CRP participants MUST
contact the local Farm Service
Agency (FSA) county office
to request emergency haying
or grazing on an individual
contract basis prior to haying
or grazing. Participants will
work with FSA to determine
if the CRP practice is eligible
for emergency haying or grazing. If determined eligible by
FSA, participants will work
with the Natural Resources
Conservation Service to develop a forage management plan.
If the CRP cover is destroyed,
the practice must be re-established at their own expense to
remain in compliance with the
CRP contract.
Emergency grazing can
begin after the request is
approved by FSA and the authorized period ends September
30, 2018. Participants shall
leave at least 25 percent of each
field or contiguous CRP fields
ungrazed for wildlife, or graze
not more than 75 percent of the
normal stocking rate. All livestock must be removed by the
end of this grazing period.
Emergency haying can begin
after the request is approved
by FSA and the authorized
period ends August 15, 2018.
Participants must leave at
least 50 percent of each field or
contiguous fields unhayed for
wildlife. Hay must be removed
from the field by August 31,
2018.
Please contact the Anderson
County FSA Office at 111 N.
Maple, Garnett, KS or call 785448-3128 for additional information concerning emergency
haying or grazing of CRP. All
requests MUST be on file AND
approved BEFORE the land is
hayed or grazed.
Does the drought have you
wondering how you will feed
your livestock this fall and
winter? Cover crops can provide additional forage for livestock and improve soil health
in your crop fields. Pomona
Lake Watershed Restoration
and Protection Strategy
(WRAPS), K-State Research &
Extension and Osage County
Conservation District will host
a meeting on utilizing cover
crops as a forage. Other topics
covered include: electric fence
components and installation,
USDA programs to help with
water supply, and financial
assistance. The meeting will
be held July 24 at 7pm at the
Masonic Lodge, 106 E Fremont
Ave in Burlingame.
Dr Jaymelynn Farney is
an assistant professor in the
Animal Sciences and Industry
Department at Kansas State
University. She will talk about
grazing cover crops. She is
part of the K-State team on the
Great Plains Grazing Project.
She studies cover crops and
forage production as part of
her research.
In order to utilize cover
crops for forage fencing may be
needed. Rod Schaub, District
Extension Agent, livestock
production, will talk about
electric fence components and
installation. He will have different components on hand
and point out some differences so landowners can make
informed decisions.
Pat Penturf, district conservationist for Natural
Resources and Conservation
Service, will have information
on the Environmental Quality
Incentive Program (EQIP)
that is available to help with
water development. EQIP can
also help with other practices including cover crops and
grazing management.
An FSA representative will
talk about federal forage and
livestock programs that are
available due to the drought.
In certain areas the Watershed
Restoration and Protection
Strategy (WRAPS) can help
with the cost of cover crops.
A Pomona Lake WRAPS representative will be present to
answer any questions you may
have.
Please plan to join us July
24 at 7pm at the Masonic Lodge
in Burlingame. If you have any
questions please call Lori at
785-828-3458.
Study looks at cows adaptability to drought, heat stress
Kansas State University
researchers say they are making steady progress on a study
that will help define how water
intake relates to a cows ability to adapt to drought or heat
stress.
Megan Rolf, an assistant professor of animal breeding and
genetics, says the cattle industry has sparse information on
how much water individual
cattle drink each day. Most
research to date has estimated
an animals water intake based
on an average for an entire pen
of cattle, she said.
But knowing individual differences in water intake could
eventually help producers
select cattle for genetic traits
that make those animals more
resilient to drought and heat
stress.
If youre in an area that
has 50 inches of rainfall per
year and you have tons of surface water, its probably not
a big deal and not something
you have to think about, Rolf
said. But if youre pumping
groundwater to animals or if
youre in an area where there
is a drought that particular
year and your surface water is
being depleted or of poor quality, this becomes more of an
attractive trait to think about
from a selection perspective.
Its possible, she added,
that we could select animals to
drink less water which would
be valuable in those types of
conditions.
One of the most important
accomplishments that Rolf
and colleagues at Kansas State
University and Oklahoma State
University have made is that
they have determined testing
guidelines for measuring water
intake efficiency in cows.
The Beef Improvement
Federation has test guidelines
for such measures as feed
intake, but no such guideline
exists for water intake, Rolf
said. The guidelines set the
number of days that are needed to collect reliable data on
intake so that it can be included in genetic evaluation of the
animal.
For example, the BIF has
determined that a producer
should have 35-42 days of feed
intake data to get accurate
information on feed efficiency
for a given animal or set of animals.
No such guideline exists for
water intake, Rolf said, so one
of the first things we needed to
do for water intake was to come
up with preliminary data.
We wanted to establish how
many days we actually need to
collect data on these animals
because water intake seems to
be a bit more variable than feed
intake on a daily basis, she
said. We hypothesized that
this might result in a need to
collect more days of data to
accurately describe that phenotype, which is a set of observable traits in the animal, such
as average daily weight gain
and other performance-based
measures.
As it turns out, K-States
work has determined that the
same 35- to 42-day period is
appropriate for collecting
water intake data.
For regions of the country
or to producers who are interested in this type of data, it can
be collected in the same time
period as dry matter intake
data as part of a standard feed
intake test, Rolf said. We can
collect an additional phenotype
if a facility has that ability, and
I think that is great news.
The finding does come with
some caution, however.
The thing we have to be
careful of is what is the relationship between water intake
and other economically-important production traits?
Rolf said. If we were to select
for (drought or heat stress tolerance), what would be the
downstream implications in
terms of the performance of
those animals. Thats what
were working on now.
K-States work is funded
by the Agriculture and Food
Research Initiative, a program of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. The project is
in the fourth of five years of
funding.
Research fields and experiment stations play the long game
Back in 1971, Idi Amin seized
control of the African nation of
Uganda. The 26th amendment
to the U.S. Constitution lowered
the voting age to 18. Norman
Lears All in the Family
debuted on CBS. And in a crop
field near Topeka, Kansas State
University researchers established a soybean fertility study
that is still going strong today.
Longterm experiments and
studies are common in the field
of agricultural research (no
pun intended). Even a human
that lives to 100 years of age is
barely noticeable to a crop field
that has been growing and nurturing food for one species or
another, for perhaps thousands
of years.
Eric Adee is the agronomist in charge for two of the
experiment fields operated
by K-States Department of
Agronomy: the Kansas River
Valley experiment fields near
Topeka, and the East Central
experiment fields near Ottawa.
He has been in charge of these
fields for about 7 years, and
that fertility study was estab-
lished by the predecessor of
his predecessor, about 48 years
ago.
A lot of this was about
answering farmers questions,
he said That was what got
this started. We secured funding from a few different sources, but the large part we just
kind of kept it going because
we thought it was valuable for
the farmers in our area.
Granted, 48 years is a long
time, but the University of
Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
established their Morrow
Plots in 1876 they are the
oldest agricultural experiment fields in America. The
world record belongs to the
Broadbalk Wheat Experiment
at Rothamsted Research in the
United Kingdom, established in
1843.
The research supervised by
Adee focuses on three key fertilizers: nitrogen, potassium
and potash. Corn and soybeans
are rotated annually, with lots
of soil measurements taken at
regular intervals.
Were looking at various
combinations, trying to find
the proper balance of these
fertilizers over time, he said.
Some of thats been changing as our yields have been
increasing over time. A longterm study like this allows us
to look at changes, and their
progression.
For example, do we need to
add more fertilizer just to keep
up, or are the hybrids were
planting today more efficient
than what we were planting 30
and 40 years ago?
About 200 miles to the
west, at K-State Research
and Extensions Agricultural
Research Center in Hays, director Bob Gillen says they, too,
have some long-term research
fields.
We have some trials that
were started in the 1970s and
have been going continuously ever since, he said. They
relate to tillage management
and the use of no-till crop
production. Out in Tribune
we have some plots that are
at least 45 years old, studying
nitrogen fertilizer.
Many of us probably had
that grade school experience of
sprouting a bean in a Styrofoam
coffee cup filled with soil. As an
adult you may sprout your own
tomato and pepper seedlings
down in the basement every
spring. What grows in the soil
happens in the blink of an eye,
compared to how soil itself
changes, over time. Gillen says
with soils, particularly, it may
take decades before changes
really reveal themselves.
If we only did the research
for two or three years and
said Well nothings happening well switch to something
else, we would miss a lot of
long-term trends, Gillen said.
And those long-term trends
are really more common than
the short-term trends.
More common, but also
more expensive. Researchers
like Adee and Gillen would
like to have more long-term
research, but the benefits
come with a bigger price tag.
When grant money from one
source runs out, there can be a
scramble to secure additional
funding from somewhere else.
These long-term studies are
very valuable, but they cost a
lot to keep going, Adee said.
Thats why a lot of them arent
continuing.
Gillen points out that what
he and his colleagues do is
different from other kinds of
research.
You look at some of the
basic research done at K-State,
in the laboratories the very
detailed genetic or very detailed
chemistry that not only takes
a while, Gillen said, but once
we learn those things, it still
takes time to work them into
the production system.
What were doing whether its better rates of fertilizer
or a more efficient method of
irrigation those things can be
picked up almost immediately
and put into practice by the
producers.
If these improvements are
put into practice by producers, and followed consistently,
real long-term benefits can be
realized. Financial consultants
frequently tout the benefits of
consistent saving or investing
over the long haul. In much the
same way, good soil and fertility practices today can pay dividends to the next generation of
farmers. Adee says long-term
research results bear this out.
Looking at yield following
a harvest, thats pretty easy to
look at, but when were monitoring the nutrient levels in
the soil, some of those dont
change real fast, Adee said.
It takes a long-term history
to know what youve put into
the soil, what the crop is taking
out or what youve lost through
denitrification. You can begin
to see trends over time that you
might not see in just a short
two- or three-year study. When
you look at multiple years of
data, you might be able to say,
Yeah that did pay off, I do have
this reserve built up that will
get me through tough times.
Thats a benefit thats hard
to see in two or three years of
data.
Dont miss it!
Franklin County Fair
in Ottawa, KS
July 19-22
2×2
ekae
2×3
adamson bros
2×2
ottawa vet
Have fun at the fair!
2×2
Penka
Auto Repair
Air Conditioning, Tire & Complete Auto Service
penka
auto
NOW DOING ALIGNMENTS
171 U.S. HWY 59
Richmond, KS 66080
M-F 8am – 5:30pm
(785) 835-6699
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4B
LOCAL
Researchers find a sweet
spot for preserving bacon
Kansas State University
researchers are sweet on a
recent study in which they
found that naturally smoked
sugar helps to extend the shelf
life of frozen bacon.
They tested bacon that had
been frozen for up to 120 days
to find out whether adding
an antioxidant in this case,
smoked sugar could slow
down the rate of oxidation, a
natural process that leads to
discoloring and an off-flavor to
the meat.
The answer is clearly yes.
Theres no doubt in my
mind that if were going to
have cured and cooked products that are frozen, such as
ham or bacon or any of those
types of products, we do need
to have an antioxidant to help
combat oxidation, said K-State
Research and Extension meat
specialist Terry Houser.
Many consumers are familiar with meat that develops
a grayish color and off-flavor
when stored for too long in the
freezer. This same thing happens to frozen bacon and other
pork products after about 20-40
days, Houser said.
Thats a challenge for hotels,
restaurants and other food service businesses, which often
dont receive bacon, in particular, until its already been
packaged for 30-40 days.
This also has implications
for our small processors who
freeze their bacon and sell it
frozen, Houser said. It does
not seem, unless we use a vacuum package, that we can get
flavor shelf life much longer
than 40 days on frozen bacon.
But, he added, when we
added an antioxidant to these
bacon formulations, it really
extended our shelf life over the
frozen storage period. In this
case, we tested these products
out to 120 days of frozen storage.
Smoking meat done by
exposing it to smoke from
burning sawdust, chips or
other hardwood has been
known to help preserve many
types of meat and give a certain flavor that is often sought
by consumers.
What the smoking process
does, says Houser, is deter
the oxidation process, so the
researchers looked to encourage that same process by using
a commercially available
smoked sugar and then adding
it to bacon during the curing
process.
K-State researchers injected smoked sugar into raw bellies during the curing process,
packaged and froze them for a
period of up to 120 days, and
then used scientific methods
and trained taste panels to verify the quality of the meat.
All three of those tests
gave us the same answer, and
thats always good in science,
Houser said. We dont usually like to rely on one testing
method. When we can get all
three of them to tell us the
same answer, then were pretty
confident in those results.
Houser added that one benefit of adding an antioxidant
such as smoked sugar to the
formulation is that it penetrates deeper than smoking the
product itself.
When we smoke the entire
belly, we only get a surface
treatment on those products,
he said. So whenever we can
add an ingredient into that
particular product such as the
belly, we can get a lot more uniformity in terms of our ingredient contact with most of the
fats in that product.
Ultimately, it means better
bacon more of the time for consumers, Houser said.
When the quality of our
products is better, everyone
wins, and we definitely want
consumers to have good eating
experiences so that they are
going to come back and buy
more of that product, he said.
Houser said smoked sugar
adds another flavor profile that
he suspects also will be pleasing to consumers. He noted
that many compounds can
be used as antioxidants, but
K-States study was specific to
smoked sugar.
YUCK…
FROM PAGE 1
may include neck stiffness,
headache, nausea, weakness,
and swollen lymph nodes.
The best way to prevent tickborne illness is to avoid tick
bites to begin with. The CDC
recommends trying to avoid
grassy, brushy, or wooded
areas where ticks are prevalent. They also recommend
treating your body and clothing with a good insect repellent. After coming indoors they
recommend checking your
clothing for ticks, showering
soon after coming indoors and
then checking your body for
ticks.
If you find a tick, the CDC
recommends using tweezers
to grasp the tick as close to
your skin as possible and pull
up with steady, even pressure
until the tick comes out. After
removing the tick clean the bite
area and your hands with rubbing alcohol or soap and water.
To dispose of the tick, place it
in a sealed bag or container or
flush it down the toilet.
Goodell says he used to just
pick ticks off and go on, but
thats probably not going to
happen anymore.
Ive learned that tick bites
are a lot more serious than Id
thought in the past, he said.
Ill probably be taking them
somewhere now to be tested.
2×2 OMalley
John Deere
Delivery Available. Financing Available W.A.C.
2701 North State St. Iola, KS 620-365-2187 800-367-2187
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Better than expected
Better than expected, but
not what wed hoped for.
This is what I heard when
I asked Kansas farmers about
this years wheat harvest.
Still, with the little moisture
received during the growing
season, the 2018 wheat crop
panned out better than most
Kansas farmers thought it
would.
Steve Boor, Lincoln County
farmer wrapped up harvest
June 30, two weeks after he
began. The 2018 wheat harvest
dragged on longer than usual
because of the pesky showers
that dropped a few hundredths
of rain then disappeared. The
rain resulted in harvest delays
as Boor and other farmers waited for the crop to dry out.
In addition to the holdups,
the veteran Lincoln County
wheat producer says the quality varied, the yields varied
everything varied. The wheat
looked much better going into
the (combine) header than it
did going into the bin.
Just spots, spots and more
spots, Boor says. Wed be cutting along and go through a thin
spot and ask, what happened
here? It obviously wasnt the
drill, it wasnt the sprayer it
just amazed me that a field of
wheat could go from little, if
any wheat to good, thick wheat
so quickly.
One of the challenges harvesters face in thin wheat is
traveling fast enough to keep
a steady mat of crop flowing
through the combine. This
is necessary to utilize the
machines large threshing
capacity.
Traveling at faster speeds
to ensure efficient threshing
sometimes presents its own
inconveniences.
Hitting a good-sized bad-
1×2
AD
INSIGHT
JOHN SCHLAGECK, Kansas Farm Bureau
ger hole at those speeds can
certainly jar your teeth, Boor
says.
Another sign of a stressed
crop this harvest included a
small percentage of stalks
lodged too close to the ground
to recover. Some instances
of broken stalks showed up
throughout this years harvest.
Wheat protein levels on the
Lincoln County crop will likely range from the upper 12s
to the lower 13s. Yields varied
from approximately 50 bushelsper-acre on the river bottom
ground in widely isolated small
patches to the mid-30s on much
of the 2018 crop.
Im sure the wheat lightened up a bit the longer we
cut, Boor says. Still, Im hoping the test weight hung tough
at least about 59 pounds-perbushel.
Amazingly enough, this
years wheat crop demonstrated its ever-enduring properties.
It proved once again, wheat
needs timely moisture to produce an abundant crop.
During the early period of
the growing season after the
first of the year, Boor wouldnt
have bet a plug nickel on
even harvesting this years
crop considering the lack of
snow and rain.
You cannot fault the wheat
for not yielding more, he says.
The crop just played the hand
it was dealt and did the best it
could.
After talking with neighbors
and other producers across
Kansas, Boor believes the crop
he harvested is like many others across the state.
I didnt see anyone tearing
up the roads with trucks hauling wheat to the elevators, he
says. I have yet to hear anyone
pounding their chest and saying, Look what we cut.
Needless to say, there probably will not be much double
cropping beans behind this
harvested wheat crop. With the
lack of moisture in most places of the state, farmers arent
ready to gamble on a second
crop.
The Lincoln County farmer remains optimistic the fall
crops will benefit from some
timely rains. This would move
the milo and beans a long way
down the road to a better fall
harvest.
When youre cutting a
tough wheat crop, its nice to
look across the field and see
milo that looks really good,
Boor says. Were not home
yet, but with a few good rains, I
think we could harvest a decent
fall crop.
And for those few farmers
still cutting wheat in the far
northwestern region of Kansas?
Say a prayer for those still
trying to finish harvest, he
says. Wish them luck.
John Schlageck is a leading
commentator on agriculture
and rural Kansas. Born and
raised on a diversified farm in
northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
5B
Need a place
to hang your hat?
Check out our
CLASSIFIED
CLASSIFIEDS
Real Estate Classifieds!
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
REAL ESTATE
There is money to be made
on this one! With a shortage of
Rental Units in the area , now
is your chance to cash in! 3
existing units in this historic
brick building, with plenty of
room to ad more apartments
and have retail space ! Or live in
the gorgeous 2400 sq ft open loft
on the second floor, and rent
the 2 studio apartments and
retail space on the first floor
to make the payments. Located
in McLouth Ks, which is 30
min North of Lawrence , and
30 min West Of Leavenworth.
Building is on major Hiway,
and the possibilities are endless ! Hurry, $89,900 Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty 785393-3957
mc20*yr*
1×3
1×3
schulte
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
Ranch – excellent location (401
N. Pine, Garnett) 3 bedroom, 1
1/2 bath, beautiful hardwood
floors in 2 bedrooms, newer
roof, CH & AC, carpet, bathroom tile, new vinyl siding
and guttering, 1 car attached
garage, large lot (785) 448-0742.
*ap3yr*
Secluded – 5 acre building site
(beautiful view) with installed,
paid for, water meter. 1/8 mile
S. of Hwy. 40 on E. 400 Rd. in
Douglas County. Easy access to
Topeka, Lawrence or KC. 70K.
Call (785) 841-3881 (offered for
sale out of an estate). *my22yr*
Stately 3 story Mansion in
Holton Ks! Features 9 bedrooms, 2 baths, Home features
original wood trim and floors,
radiator steam heat, large lot
and stone carriage house. Has
two staircases, one of which
leads to the third floor which
was the maids quarters. This
house also served as the town
hospital in the 1940s. This home
is in remarkable condition for
its age, but does need cosmetics. It just awaits your imagination! With Prairie band Casino
just a few miles away from
this property, it offers excellent bed and breakfast potential. Or make it your family
estate for generations to come.
Unbelievable price of $139,000!
Listed by Darrell Mooney,
Senior agent Pia Friend Realty.
For a private showing, call Pia
at 913 370 0431
mc20*yr*
LiveHuntFish in rural
Anderson County, Ks Three
bedroom, two bath ranch style
house on 40 acres with great
outbuildings, pond and free
Internet, sandwiched between
two other parcels totalling
238.8 acres with 197 tillable,
additional in brush and woods
and full of game. Another 207
with 50-70 tillable, rest in hilly
woods, brush, prime for hunting with deer feeders in place
for years, metal building with
electric and well water. All an
hour from KC, Lawrence area.
To be sold in part or together. Contact Moshiri Realty
Company, Overland Park, Ks.,
(913) 239-8888.
*ja9t1*
Meriden – 50 ac m/l, W side
Lake Perry on asphalt road,
close to marina & highway,
approximately 3.5 acres
trees, primarily native grass,
unimproved, rural waterline.
Very appealing homesite,
lots of game, adjoins Corp
of Engineers land. Call for
details. Sedlak Agency-Realtor,
Winchester, KS (913) 774-4444
or (913) 683-5034.
*jn12y*
Land for sale – 62 acres, 34
acres tillable, great building
site, good hunting. 7 miles East
of Burlington, Kansas. $2,400/
acre or best offer. (574) 326-1724.
jy3*yr*
Send it in…
ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click one of the forms
under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to
garnett-ks.com
HELP WANTED
Part Time – Flexible Schedule.
Local Sales Representative
needed to call on school libraries representing major publishing companies. Commission
and bonus. For details call
Chuck at 303-257-2320
Cleaners Wanted – $600/weekly. Working days: Monday
– Friday. Time schedule:
11am-1pm. Email: john2819@
outlook.com
SERVICES
Printing: Business cards, cus
tom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
Black top soil – fill dirt. Stump
grinding. (620) 365-9437. jy3t3
ryter
(913) 594-2495
MISCELLANEOUS
10 cases – of decorative glass
jars with stoppered tops, 15 oz
and 22 oz. Used in a former
customer candy operation.
For sale by the dozen, mix and
match if you want,. $10 per
case of 12. Photos on Lawrence
Craigslist. Call or text (785) 4483870.
jn2tf
Diesel Generator – HP
13123023, $3,750. (785) 448-6191.
nv14tf
Pharmacy Technician Online Training Available!
Take the first step into a new
career! Call now: 877-649-8426
DISH TV Best Deal Ever! Free
Voice Remote & DVR Included!
www.dish.com Referral Code
VCD0019117934
A Place for Mom has helped
over a million families find
senior living. Our trusted local
advisors help solutions to your
unique needs at No cost to you!
Call 855-973-9062
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
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Check out our
Monthly Specials
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WANTED
Oxygen – Anytime. Anywhere.
No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One
G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA
approved! Free info kit: 844359-3973
Were you an Industrial or
Construction Tradesman and
recently diagnosed with lung
cancer? You and your family
may be entitled to a significant
cash award. Call 866-409-2142
for your risk free consultation.
Save on your Medicare
Supplement! Free quotes from
top providers. Excellent coverage. Call for a no obligation
quote to see how much you can
save! 855-587-1299
Bathroom renovations. Easy,
one day updates! We specialize
in safe bathing. Grab bars, no
slip flooring & seated showers.
Call for a free in-home consultation: 844-283-0888
Viagra and Cialis Users!
Theres a cheaper alternative
than high drugstore prices!
50 Pills Special $99.00 Free
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call Now! 855-850-3904
40 Grade A Steel Cargo
Containers $2000.00 in Solomon
Ks. 20s 45s 48s & 53s also
available Call 785 655 9430 or go
online to Chuckhenry.com for
pricing, availability & Freight
estimates.
Wanted – I need simple alterations done to make clothes
smaller. (785) 304-2623.
jy17t1
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
oc17tf
Got Land? Our Hunters will
Pay Top $$$ To hunt your land.
Call for a FREE info packet
& Quote. 1-866-309-1507 www.
BaseCampLeasing.com
NOTICES
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tfn
Gun Show – July 21-22 Sat.
9-5 & Sun. 9-3 Overland Park
Convention Center (6000
College St.) Info: (563) 927-8176
www.rkshows.com
2×2
jb
GOLD KEY REALTY
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth
Announcements
Business News
1999 Ford Ranger XLT Green, 6 cyl., standard, 130k
miles, (785) 304-0903. $4,000.
1×3
MISCELLANEOUS
gold ke
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
CARS & TRUCKS
SERVICES
3×3 orv
HELP
2×3
An co treasWANTED
A full-time position is available in the Anderson
County Treasurers Office. Applications are available
in the county treasurers office. Applicants will be
required to have accurate keyboarding and ten-key
skills and be able to pass a background check.
Overtime is to be expected and a good work ethic is a
requirement. Anderson County is an equal
opportunity employer. Applications will be taken until
the position is filled.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
2×4
kpa qsi
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Benjamin
Family Reunion on August
5th at 12 noon located at the
Garnett Community Building.
Jy17t3*
Happiness is . . . submitting
your FREE wedding announcement ONLINE for publication in The Anderson County
Review. Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click the form
under Submit News. Fill in
the form and click SUBMIT.
Available FREE 24 hours/day
!
mc1tf
Card of Thanks
Holy Cow!! What a party at the
Kirk
House!!! A special thank you
1×2
toHERIFORD
everyone who came to help us
celebrate our 60 years together,
to those that sent cards, candy
and flowers. And to our children,
daughter-in-law and
grandchildren – you are the Best!
Thanks for a Beautiful Day!
Bob and Nola Heriford
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 17, 2018
LOCAL
A week in the life of Anderson
County – Photo Contest
Be a part of photographing the people, the events, the
places, in Anderson County,
Kansas from Sunday, July
29th-Saturday August 4th,
2018. Help create a visual memory, an impression of life in
Anderson County. All photographs must be taken within
the 7 day period, beginning
at 12:01 a.m. on Sunday, July
29th and ending at midnight
on Saturday, August 4th, 2018.
Entries will be categorized
according to the age of the photographer as follows:
Portrait
Youth: ages 10-17
Adult: ages 18 and over
Photographers Choice
Youth: ages 10-17
Adult: ages 18 and over
The photographs will be
judged by a panel of judges and
the top two photographs in each
category will receive a prize. A
special award will be given to
the photo that best showcases
Anderson County. Additional
prizes may be awarded at the
judges discretion.
The photographs will be
exhibited in the Community
Display Gallery at the Garnett
Public Library. Voting for a
Peoples Choice award will
take place August 20th-Sept.5th.
An additional prize will be
awarded to the winner.
Participants must be residents of Anderson County.
Each participant may enter up
to two 8×10 photographs in each
category. All photos must be
printed on photo paper as an 8
x 10 photograph and brought to
the Garnett Public Library by
5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, August
13th. A digital copy needs to be
brought to the library or sent
to garnettlibrary@yahoo.com.
Each photo should also have a
caption.
Participants must sign a
release form and give the time
and location their photograph
was taken. If a participant is
under the age of 18, a parental
signature will be required on
the release form. A reception
will be held on Sunday, Sept.
9thth at 2:00 p.m. Sponsored
by the Friends of the Garnett
Public Library and the Garnett
Public Library.
Peavler and Be your own event
Thomas win
duplicate
bridge
Tom Peavler and Mary
Margaret Thomas won the
duplicate bridge match July
11 in Garnett.
Faye Leitch and Lynda
Feuerborn took second place.
Steve Brodmerkle and Anita
Dennis came in third. Patty
Barr and Phyllis Cobbs were
in fourth place.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club meets each
Wednesday at 1:00 at the
Garnett Inn.
All bridge players are welcome.
K-State study looks at the economic
impact of using antimicrobials
Kansas State University
agricultural economists and
veterinary medicine faculty members have completed
an analysis of the economic
impact of treating groups of
high health-risk animals with
antimicrobials, and they think
their findings will help to
inform public debate on the
topic.
Their work focused on the
practice of metaphylaxis, or
the mass treatment of a pen of
high health-risk cattle to eliminate or minimize the onset of
disease. According to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
metaphylaxis is used selectively by 59 percent of U.S.
feedlots on 20.5 percent of all
cattle placed on feed.
The use of antimicrobials in
livestock production is under
intense public scrutiny, with
many major restaurants, food
service companies, supermarkets and others pressuring
producers to use fewer antibiotics.
Theres a general sentiment and public policy concern about the use of antibiotics in animal production,
said Ted Schroeder, a livestock economist with K-State
Research and Extension and
University
Distinguished
Professor of agricultural economics. Our study assessed
the economic impacts on the
beef cattle industry and on
consumers of using metaphylaxis in the beef cattle industry.
Their major finding: if
metaphylaxis were eliminated in the U.S. cattle industry
without suitable health management alternatives, it could
SUTTONS JEWELRY
Sidewalk Sale
2×3
Saturday, July 21st 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Suttons
Downtown Ottawa
We will be closed
from July 23 – 31.
Suttons Jewelry
213 South Main
Downtown Ottawa
(785) 242-3723
www.suttonsjewelryinc.com
2018 ANNUAL MEETING
MFA Oil
704 N. Maple St. Garnett, KS
Thursday, August 9 11 a.m. – 1 p.m.
Activities at the meeting include a business report
for the 2017 fiscal year, election of delegates
for the year to come, free meal and door prizes.
2×3
MFA Oil
All families are welcome, whether or not
they are members of MFA Oil Company.
www.mfaoil.com
(785) 448-5512 or Toll Free 1-877-592-2743
cost that industry as much as
$1.8 billion annually.
We know that if metaphylaxis were not available, a
reduction in revenue would
result from reduced average
daily gains, increased feed
conversions, higher health
costs from treating more sick
animals, more deaths primarily for those high health-risk
animals, among other factors, said Elliott Dennis, a
K-State doctoral student who
worked on the study.
That reduction in profitability would then be passed
up and down the beef supply
chain, ultimately resulting in
higher prices for consumers to
pay for beef at the supermarket. Consumers, when facing
higher beef prices at the supermarket would then (choose)
other meat products besides
beef.
The economists findings
are based on data from 10 large
Midwest feedlots in which
they analyzed production and
health management data from
cattle that were classified as
high health-risk and adminis-
Sobba attends We Need More
Technology! workshop in Iola
Andrea Sobba of Garnett
Public Library attended the
Southeast Kansas Library
System (SEKLS) workshop on
We Need More Technology! at
Iola Public Library on July 10,
2018.
Melissa
Geist,
SEKLS
Technology Coordinator, presented the morning session on
how to write a technology plan.
Using worksheets and an
interactive model, the group
determined who in their community needed the library and
what types of technology could
satisfy those needs.
Kim Rutter, SEKLS Library
Consultant, and Roger Carswell,
SEKLS Director, reviewed the
components of successful competitive grants for SEKLS.
Using the grant application
questions, participants formed
mock grant review committees to evaluate previous grant
applications.
By comparing successful
125 Annual
3×5
County
Allen CoAllen
Fair
th
FA I R
ALL-AMERICAN FAIR
C e l e b r at i n g
125 years
of Memories
2 Nights URA-MRCA Rodeo Mud Run
Draft Horse Pull Baby Barnyard
Concert with Country Music Artist Phil Vandel
Car Show & BBQ Inflatable Rides
Kids Pedal Pull Free Stage Entertainment
Worship in the Park FREE Watermelon Feed
Much, Much More!!
Allen County Fair – Iola, Kansas
tered an antimicrobial upon
entering the feedlot.
They classified animals
into three weight categories to
determine differences between
treating high health-risk animals compared with those not
treated.
They found that for 550pound animals, producers
would lose on average $104
per head by not treating those
high health-risk cattle. For
700-pound animals, they would
be expected to lose about $99,
and for 850-pound animals, the
losses would be $64 per head.
We found that if metaphylaxis was not available for
high health-risk cattle, it
would reduce industry gross
revenue by about 1 percent,
Dennis said. Thats a sizable
amount if metaphylaxis was
not allowed to be used in feedlots on high health-risk cattle.
Schroeder noted that
removing metaphylaxis or any
animal health management
technology from feedlots has a
snowball effect.
July 26
through
July 30,
2018
requests with unsuccessful
requests and experiencing the
grant review process from start
to finish, participants gained
insight into how to produce a
more successful grant application themselves.
Having your own business
event is a lot like having your
own birthday party for a few
hours and in front of some of
your favorite people, you get to
be the star of the show!
Its a great way to market
yourself and your company,
but you have to keep in mind
that even though its all about
you, you have to convince your
prospective attendees that its
all about them. No one wants
to give up their time to show
up to an event to be relentlessly
hammered with sales pitches,
so you have to be pretty meticulous in planning out your offering and your soft-sell approach
to focus on the customers benefit.
Focus: Through the entire
process, keep in mind the problem that your company solves
for your customers and the
value you provide for them.
Whether youre the cheapest,
fastest, best, most convenient,
etc., that primary selling point
or group of selling points will
be paramount to developing
your event. Know what you
want to say and who you want
to say it to.
Extra Value: Consider
bringing in additional talent
and expertise to your event that
adds dimension to its content
if youre an auto mechanic presenting on basic auto maintenance to a group of college-age
drivers, it might be a great idea
to bring in one of your vendors
from an auto parts store, or
maybe a paint and body guy.
You can even consider splitting
costs and sharing the spotlight
with these complimentary businesses in a cross promotion if
you dont want all the cost and
responsibility yourself.
Plan & budget: The specifics of your event will determine
your plan and budget. Will you
entertain your guests on your
own property? Do you need
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
a meeting room at a hotel or
restaurant? Are you providing
munchies and refreshments
or something more substantial? How long will your event
last (keep in mind the longer
the time commitment, the less
likely people are to attend)? If
youre planning a major event
you need weeks or months to
plan; if your event is spur of
the moment your budget and
plan will likely be simpler.
Promote, dang it! If you
dont tell people about your
event, no one will show. Use
your email list; use flyers in
your mailed billing statements;
use your social media options,
use flyers and posters in places
frequented by your target audience; put a signature line at
the bottom of all your outgoing
emails the month prior; run an
add in your local newspaper
or shopper; buy radio commercials; shoot a DIY promotional
video with your smartphone
and post to social media and
dont forget to ask your friends
to share it.
Properly executed, your
event can give you a captive
audience that will give weight
and staying power to your message, and that will help you sell
stuff!
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., publishers of The Anderson County
Review and The Trading Post.
Highway U.S. 59
guardrail survey planned
Starting the week of July
16 and continuing for two
weeks, the Kansas Department
of Transportation (KDOT)
will conduct a field survey for
guard rail improvements on
U.S. 59 in Anderson County.
The 6.7-mile survey area is
within KDOT right-of-way and
covers eight sites between the
north city limits of Garnett and
the Anderson-Franklin county
line.
Activities include the use
of survey instruments on the
ground to determine locations
of existing features within the
corridor. Field Survey Project
Manager Joseph Bowen will
manage this survey for KDOT.
Persons with questions may
contact KDOT Public Affairs
Manager Priscilla Petersen at
(620) 902-6433.
MAKE MONEY
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!!
29,00
Total R 0
eaders
!
MORE
REACH,
1/2 PRICE
Run any display ad
in The Review, get
additional readers
in Lawrence/Douglas
County with
The Trading Post
at 1/2 price.
Contact us for details.
(785) 448-3121
review@garnett-ks.com

