Anderson County Review — July 19, 2016
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from July 19, 2016. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
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Contents Copyright 2016 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Chamber Players
group has theater
camp.
Library announces
photo contest results.
See page 6A.
July 19, 2016
SINCE 1865 150th Year, No. 50
(785) 448-3121
| review@garnett-ks.com
Colony Pigtails team
takes 3rd in tourney.
See page 6B.
See page 1B.
E-statements & Internet Banking
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
U.S. cop killings prompt local officer to leave force
Sheriffs deputy resigns;
law enforcement leaders
worried about safety, future
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – At least one local law
enforcement officer is leaving the profession after a spate of cop killings in
Baton Rouge, Dallas and other U.S.
cities.
An Anderson County Sheriffs
deputy gave his notice Saturday,
Sheriff Vernon Valentine said. The
officer, who has several years of
experience and previously worked
as a school resource officer, is leaving law enforcement because of concerns about violence against officers,
Valentine said. The officer was busy
on a call Monday morning and not
available to comment.
The recent attacks on law enforcement officers across the nation have
spooked officers and especially their
families, Valentine said. It makes an
already dangerous job even more difficult, he said.
My family worries a lot more
than they used to, but they know Im
not going to leave, Valentine said.
Theres really nothing you can do
except just continue doing the job.
In Baton Rouge, La., Sunday, three
officers were killed and another three
injured in what appeared to be an
ambush. The suspect, who was killed
in a shootout with officers, was identified as a former U.S. Marine from
Kansas City, Mo. The Louisiana city
Protect against
heat this week
had been the site of numerous protests over the killing of an African
American man, Alton Sterling, on
July 5, and Louisiana State Police
said last week they received threats
against the Baton Rouge police department.
And in Dallas on July 7, five officers
were killed and others injured during
a protest over the killings of Sterling
and another African American man
in Minnesota July 6. The Dallas killings were the deadliest attack on law
enforcement since Sept. 11, 2001.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Its going to be
one hot week, so people who
find themselves spending
time outdoors should stay
hydrated and take proper
precautions against the sun
and heat.
Local temperatures are
expected to remain in the
mid- to upper-90s this week,
prompting the National
Weather Service to issue a
heat advisory until at least
Friday evening.
This week could bring
the hottest temperatures so
far this summer. So far this
month, the hottest tempera-
GAPP 2016
recorded July 6. The month
started out warm, with a temperature of 94 degrees recorded July 1. Six days of the
month so far were 90 degrees
or warmer.
Its also been a very humid
month, further increasing
the discomfort brought by
high temperatures. At least
a trace of precipitation was
recorded 12 out of the first 18
days, for a total of 3.68 inches
of rain so far this month.
The weather service has
forecasted temperatures up
to around 94 degrees today,
gradually climbing by one
degree each day with a peak
at 97 on Friday. The next
SEE HEAT ON PAGE 3A
Review offers $100
prize in video contest
Include carnival, dates
for chance to go viral in
online youth contest
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Are you a Vine
virtuoso? An Instagram initiator? A Pinterest progenitor? If so, your viral video
skills can win you $100 in
a contest sponsored by The
Anderson County Review for
SEE OFFICERS ON PAGE 3A
Praise & Projects
recorded at the Garnett
Heat advisory issued ture
Industrial Airport, which is
until at least Friday as the official weather monitoring station for Anderson
temps reach upper 90s County, was 95 degrees,
BY VICKIE MOSS
Since 2016 began, 63 officers have
died in the line of duty across the
U.S.; 31 were firearms-related, according to the National Law Enforcement
Officers Memorial Fund. Compared
to the same time last year, a similar
number of officers died in the line
of duty – 62 – but only 18 were firearms-related. On average, one U.S.
law enforcement officer is killed in the
line of duty every 61 hours.
Law enforcement by nature is a
dangerous job, Sheriff Valentine
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Vickie Moss
Group Workcamps participants from across the
United States arrived in Garnett Sunday afternoon to begin a weeklong project, the Garnett
Area Paint Project, that combines mission work
with home repairs like painting houses, fixing
porches and building wheelchair ramps. The
camp brought 220 people to Garnett and will
provide between 8,000 to 10,000 in community
service hours. The event kicked off Sunday,
including this worship service Sunday evening
with music and prayers. The group will have
worship services each evening at 7:30 p.m. at
Anderson County Jr./Sr. High School, where
the campers are staying. The public is invited to
attend the services.
the upcoming county fair carnival.
We want kids ages 5-18 to
produce their best, funniest,
viral-y-ist video to advertise the Anderson County
Fairs upcoming midway
carnival August 2-6, circulate it among your social network, and tag or post it to
the Reviews Facebook page.
Well pick the best one and
award $100 to the winner.
SEE CONTEST ON PAGE 3A
Miami County club wants
to fill local car show void
Car show could return
courtesy of Paola-based
Classic Cruisers club
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Vickie Moss
Robbie LeFever starts his run aboard his tractor, High on Red, Saturday evening, July 16, during the
annual Anderson County Fair Tractor Pull.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A year after the
now-disbanded local car club
ran its last cruise night, a
Miami County car club is hoping to fill the void.
The Southland Classic
Cruisers, part of a car club
from Paola, recently asked
Anderson County and Garnett
city commissioners for permission to have a car show event
next summer, on June 3, 2017.
Like previous events organized by the former Lake
Garnett Cruisers car club, the
Miami County club plans to
stage the event in downtown
Garnett. Organizers asked
Anderson County commissioners for permission to use
the courthouse lawn, and last
week asked city commissioners
for permission to block part
of Oak Street between Fourth
and Fifth avenues. City commissioners said they would
approve the request as long
as affected business owners
agreed.
Commissioners Greg Gwin
and Gordon Blackie said they
were surprised by such an
early request – 11 months in
advance of the event – but the
club representative said the
group wants plenty of time to
advertise the show in order to
encourage good turnout. They
plan to target participants at
other popular area car shows,
like a fall show in Ottawa that
typically brings more than 200
vehicles.
The Lake Garnett Cruisers
car club organized car shows
and Cruise Nights for more
than 20 years until the group
disbanded in November 2015,
citing lack of membership. The
groups last official event was
in June 2015.
The disbanded car club is not
the same as the Lake Garnett
SEE CARS ON PAGE 3A
Glossy 4 color printing – brochures, flyers, booklets, magazines. Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
LOCAL
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
ECKAN is in need of monetary
and/or school supply donations
in order to provide all students
with the supplies necessary
to succeed this 2016-2017
school year. You may also
Adopt a Student and provide all the necessities for 1
Anderson County Child in need.
Please contact Brandi Lopez or
Jennifer Hartle for more information at 785-448-3670, 132 E.
5th, Garnett, KS 66032.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The next Anderson County
Historical Society potluck dinner
meeting will be on Thursday,
August 4, 2016 at 6:30 p.m. at
the Greeley Methodist Church
Berea Hall. Andrea Sobba,
Garnett Public Librarian, will
provide the program on the
history of the Garnett Public
Library.
SINGSPIRATION JULY 31
Fifth Sunday Singspiration,
sponsored by the Garnett Area
Ministerial Alliance will be held
Sunday, July 31. Gather at
6:30 p.m. at the First Baptist
Church at 417 S. Walnut to hear
local talent. An offering will be
received to help support the
ministries of the Alliance.
SENIOR CENTER DINNER
The Garnett Senior Center will
have a birthday dinner July
20.The entertainment will be
Ramblin Country.
SPECIAL CHURCH SPEAKER
Felix Vargas will speak at the
Nazarene Church, 258 W. Park
Road, Garnett, on Sunday,
July 31 at 6:30pm. In the early
90s, a war raged in Colombia
between two competing drug
cartels. Born of this violence,
Felix Vargas knows no emotion,
and is trained to be a killer.
When caught handling drugs,
he is sentenced to seven years
in a Miami prison, Felixs world
begins to change as one person
shows him Christs love. When
deported back to Columbia, he
embarks on a journey from dark
to light. You wont want to miss
this story of transformation.
Death
investigated;
suicide
suspected
GARNETT – The Anderson
County Sheriffs Department
was investigating an unattended death Monday morning,
July 18, in what appears to be a
possible suicide.
The name of the deceased
was not released as of press
time Monday, pending notification of family members,
Sheriff Vernon Valentine said.
Valentine said he expected to
send a press release to local
media at some point early this
week.
He could not release details
about the incident, but said it
appears to be a suicide.
Anderson County has seen
an average of about three suicides each year for the past few
years, according to statistics
from the Kansas Department of
Health and Environment and
Review news archives. While
that isnt a large amount, the
number of suicides in the county typically has been greater
than the number of deaths
from accidents, including vehicle accidents.
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS JULY 5
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order
at 9:00 AM on July 5, 2016 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance: Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
met with the commission. He
reported they are working on
the reservoir road and should be
done chip sealing it by the end
of the week. Greg Gwin, City
Commissioner questioned if the
county would like to hire Kellog
to work on Garnett City streets.
He feels the county should assist
the city in maintaining the streets.
He was informed the county chip
sealed the streets for the city in
the past until the city said they did
not want them chip sealed. Lester
is already scheduled this year to
chip seal several third class cities.
The county supplies the labor for
this and the cities pay for the
material. Greg feels the county
should give the city money to fix
the streets.
Zoning
Ed Wolken, Loren Sayers,
Dane Hicks, Burt Peterson, Mike
Burns, Doug Archer, and Larry
Penka met with the commission. Dane questioned if Calpine
would be required to get a zoning
permit to construct a new test
tower. Tom Young was present
and explained the procedure for
publication and hearing a zoning request. Discussion was held
on what happens if Calpine constructs the wind farm and sells the
farm to another company. Mike
stated that there are several very
nice homes out in the county
and they probably would not have
been built if they knew they would
have to look at windmills. Burt
informed the commission of the
issues Wabaunsee County had
with drafting regulations for windmills. He feels Anderson County
zoning regulations are not sufficient for windmills.
Courthouse Lawn
Charmaine Messick requested
use of the courthouse lawn for
a car show sponsored by the
Southland Classsic Cruisers on
June 3rd, 2017. Commission
approved but requested she
acquire event insurance and list
the county as a co-insured.
Executive Session
Commissioner
Highberger
moved to recess into executive
session for 5 minutes for the discussion of non-elected personnel with Tom Young and County
Counselor James Campbell in
attendance. Open meeting to
resume at 10:25. Commissioner
McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Commissioner Highberger moved
to rehire Tom Young as the zoning
director and Welda Sewer operator. Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Executive Session
Commissioner Highberger
moved to recess into executive
session for 5 minutes for the discussion of non-elected personnel with James Campbell, County
Counselor in attendance. Open
meeting to resume at 10:55.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30. No action after
executive session. Commissioner
Highberger moved to recess into
executive session for 10 minutes
with County Counselor James
Campbell, Kenton Ludolph, and
Emergency Management Director
JD Mersman in attendance. Open
meeting to resume at 11:05.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30. JD and Mick
Brinkmeyer,
Rural Fire Director met with
the commission. JD reported he is needing a new laptop.
Commissioner Highberger moved
to approve the purchase of a
laptop from Apple at the cost of
$1498.00 out of the Emergency
Management Fund. Commissioner
McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Commissioner McGhee moved
to purchase 18 radios from TFM
Comm at a price of 10,080 out
of the Emergency Management
Fund. Commissioner Highberger
seconded. Approved 30. Mick
reported he
talked to the insurance company
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about what they paid towards a
repair of a fire truck. The insurance adjuster stated he adjusted the price due to depreciation. Commission would like to
talk to the adjuster. Commissioner
Highberger moved to accept
Kenton Ludolphs resignation from
the Westphalia Fire Department.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Meal Reimbursement
Commissioner McGhee moved
to change the one day trip meal to
allow for reimbursement however
due to IRS regulations the meal
reimbursement will be added as
wages. Commissioner Highberger
seconded. Approved 30
Crediting Claims on Real
Property
Commissioner McGhee
moved to approve Resolution
2016,0705:1 authorizing the county treasurer to credit claims for
delinquent real property taxes.
Commissioner Highberger seconded. Approved 30.
Zone Change
Commissioner
Highberger
moved to approve Resolution
2016,0705:2 approving zone
change #ZC201602 (KeimAmish
Church of Garnett, KS) to rezone
4 acres from A1 to R3A .
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Abatement
Abatement B16281 and
Escaped Tax E16128 were presented and approved.
Meeting adjourned at 12: 20PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
July 6, Mary A. Pickert And
Keith J. Pickert To Keith J. Pickert
C0-Trustee, Mary A. Pickert
Co-Trustee And, Pickert Family
Trust Dated 3-12-2016 All Of
Undivided 1/3 Interest Of Mary
A. Pickert In And To The NE4,
Except 1.52 Acres In NEcor North
Of Pottawatomie River Of 3-20-19
And That Part Of SE4 34-1919 Lying South Of Pottawatomie
River And Described As Follows:
Beginning At SWcor Of SE4
Section 34, Thence North 23
Rods To Center Of River To South
Line Of Quarter Section, Thence
West To Pob; Containing In All
166.18 Acres, More Or Less.
July 7, Bernard Smith, Sarah
Elizabeth Keating Vogelsberg
Smith, And Sarah E. Vogelsberg
F/K/A To Richard Keaton Jr. And
Angela S. Keaton Lot 6 Blk 39
According To Original Plat Of City
Of Greeley, Being Also Described
As Lots 17 & 18 Blk 39 According
To Subdivision Plat To City Of
Greeley.
July 8, Todd W. Barnes And
Terri Barnes To Senior Citizens
Association Of Garnett Inc.,
Beg 6 West Of NEcor Lot 7 Blk
54, Thence South Parallel With
East Line Of Lot 7, 140 To Alley,
Thence West 24, Thence North
140 To Fifth Avenue, Thence East
24 To Pob; Being A 24 Tract
Fronting Fifth Avenue 140 Deep
To Alley; & West 4 Lot 5, All Lot
6 & East 6 Lot 7 Blk 54 City Of
Garnett.
July 12, David L. Yoder And
Carol Yoder To Jimmy C. Lutz,
Trustee, Betty J. Lutz, Trustee,
And Jimmy C. & Betty J. Lutz
Living Trust Dated 3-3-2008, Beg
At SEcor Section 2 NE4 5-21-19,
Thence West Along South Line
Of Section 2 NE4 On A Record
Bearing Of South 893128 West
A Distance Of 2634.83 Feet To
SWcor Of NE4; Thence North
000013 West Along West Line
Of NE4 A Distance Of 1100.68
Feet; Thence South 900000
East A Distance Of 2637.32 Feet
To East Section Line; Thence
South 000800 West A Distance
Of 206.83 Feet; Thence South
900000 West A Distance
Of 436.08 Feet; Thence South
000800 West A Distance
Of 500.00 Feet; Thence North
900000 East A Distance Of
436.08 Feet To Section Line;
Thence South 000800 West A
Distance Of 371.98 Feet To Pob;
Contains 60.94 Acres.
July 12, Leland E. Walter, Leland
Walter A/K/A, And Janice L. Walter
To Leland E. Walter Co-Trustee,
Janice L. Walter Co-Trustee, And
Walter Family Trust Dated 6-132016, SE4 31-21-19 Less Beg At
SEcor Of Quarter Section, Thence
West 7 Rods 8, Thence North
3 Rods, Thence East 7 Rods 8,
Thence South To Pob; Also Less
Beg At SWcor Of Quarter Section,
Thence Running East 6 Rods,
Thence North 40 Rods, Thence
West 6 Rods, Thence South 40
Rods To Pob; & W2 NW4 14-2220 & W2 NW4 26-22-19.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
July 11, Douglas Downey
vs. Brenda Downey, Decree of
Divorce filed by Fax, July 12,
EWG, Divorce Granted.
July 11, State of Kansas DCF vs. Anthony T. Benjamin,
Journal entry of Paternity filed,
Responsible to pay $120 per
month child support beginning
8/1/2016. Judgement is granted
for arrearage to 7/31/2016 for
$920.00.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
July 12, Saint Lukes Hospital of
Garnett, Inc. vs Estelle L. Dupont,
et. al., Default judgement granted,
Defendant failed to file an answer
by June 28.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
July 8, Taylor Van-Hans Staap
and Jessica Lynn Holloran.
July 8, Kurtis Rick King and
Michelle Renee Laiter.
GARNETT MUNICIPAL COURT
CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Mildred C. Hamilton, Lenexa,
50 in a 30 mph zone, $180 fine.
Kyle Matthew Lamb, Garnet, 51
in a 30 mph zone, $225 fine.
Angela Michelle Stout, Derby,
43 in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Sara E. Collins, Iola, 41 in a 30
mph zone, $150 fine.
Ajay Tejwani, Olathe, 45 in a 30
mph zone, $150 fine.
Michael M. Bachman, Garnett,
speeding in a school zone and
driving left of center, $325 total
fine.
Jacob A. Croan, Iola, 48 in a 30
mph zone and no proof of liabiity
insurance, $480 total fine, 30 days
in jail suspended.
Jeffery M. Brueggemann,
Owasso, Okla., 46 in a 30 mph
zone, $180 fine.
Robert Alan Holcomb, Leawood,
43 in a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Levi Allen Snow, Garnett, 44 in
a 30 mph zone, $150 fine.
Krista J. Mustain, Tulsa, Okla.,
53 in a 30 mph zone, $225 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Adam Lloyd Willard, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Kristy Jean Hollon, Garnett, $10
fine.
Robert M. Hoover, Rutledge,
Mo.,, $10 fine.
Turner W. Anderson, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Jeffrey Andrew Stoltzfus,
Garnett, $10 fine.
Turner W. Anderson, Ottawa,
$10 fine.
Darci Ann White, Garnett, $10
fine.
Heath Joe Feuerborn, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Curtis D. Bettinger, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Jamie I. Hermreck, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Robin Michelle Farrar, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Amanda M. Weber, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Mary Bell, Garnett, $10 fine.
Travis L. McGhee, LaCygne,
$10 fine.
Caleb Daniel Feuerborn,
Garnett, $10 fine.
Tamara S. Wood, Garnett, $10
fine.
Timothy James Wittman,
Garnett, $10 fine.
Bernard Martin Garett III,
Kincaid, $10 fine.
Parker J. Griffin, Garnett, $10
fine.
Nancy K. Proctor, Garnett, $10
fine.
Matthew Scott Mortimore,
Garnett, $10 fine.
Scott Allen Rhode Jr., Garnett,
$10 fine.
Lee Michael Roberts, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Amy B. Roberts, Garnett, $10
fine.
Jerry E. Parks, Garnett, $10
fine.
Lannie R. Most, Gardner, $10
fine.
Madeline
Elizabeth
Witherspoon, Peculiar, Mo., $10
fine.
Zachary Ryan Bullard, Butler,
Mo., $10 fine.
Rosalie
Rommelfanger,
Garnett, $10 fine.
Norma C. Rockers, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Sarah E.G. Hollon, Garnett, $10
fine.
Kenton W. Hopkins, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Robert Michael Ireland, Garnett,
$10 fine.
Gerad L. Wight, Garnett, $10
fine.
Cody Ryan Davis, Kincaid, child
passenger safety restraint, $60
fine.
Charles
C.
Schoonover,
Garnett, $10 fine.
Sierra Nicole Gabrini, Kincaid,
child passenger safety restraint,
$60 fine.
Other:
Omer Rockers, Garnett, limitations on backing, $125 fine.
Chrisandrea Barnett, Garnett,
dog at large, $100 fine.
Angela L. Mikesell, Garnett,
rabies vaccination required, $100
fine.
Shelby Rayann Ramsey,
Kincaid, inattentive driving.
Jon B. Reed, Garnett, failure to
maintain a structure, $550 fine.
Michelle E. Chudzik, Ottawa,
failure to maintain a structure,
$550 fine.
Daniel Aaron Johnson Jr.,
Garnett, illegal tag, $50 court
costs, fine suspended.
Edwin L. Duncan, Garnett,
failure to maintain manufactured
housing, $550 fine.
Dorothy M. Spencer, Garnett,
failure to maintain manufactured
housing, $550 fine.
Susan Marie Durand, Garnett,
transporting alcohol, liquor or
cereal malt beverage, $200 fine.
Jack H. Matthew, Garnett, drivers license in possession, $200
fine.
Autumn R. Romig, Garnett, failure to stop at stop sign, $125 fine.
Kathryn Louise Soloman,
Oswego, inattentive driving, $150
fine.
Claude L. Cady, Moran, limitations on backing, $125 fine.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Glenda Rae Moeller, $327 fine.
Thane Leroy McDaniel, $153
fine.
Dennis Lee Nelson, $153 fine.
Alan Scheckel, $440.00 fine,
deferred adjudication.
Mona Blevins, $153 fine.
DeQuan Marquis Stevens,
$153 fine.
Dalen Olin Welsh, $123 fine.
Crystal Michelle Sams, $153
fine.
Katelin Ann Zlab, $153 fine.
Samuel David Powell, $153
fine.
Kari Beth Buetow, $153 fine.
Holly D. Norris, $153 fine.
Jessica Lynn Dickson, $153
fine.
Miranda Renee Taylor, $370.00
fine, deferred adjudication.
Kason D. Franks, $372 fine.
Madison Holland, $567 fine.
Casey Jo Walters, $153 fine.
Nicholas Anthony Breitenstein,
$183 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Kason D. Franks, $10 fine.
Other:
Jeffrey D. Gregg ,Violate offender registration act; 1st conviction,
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dismissed.
Wesley Carter, Battery on LEO;
Physical contact w/county or city
officer on duty, dismissed.
Michael A. Swonger, Giving a
worthless check; paid dismissal..
Larry D. Wright, Criminal possession of weapon by felon,
charge dropped by prosecutor.
Denise Smith, Giving a worthless check; Defendent to pay
$158 court costs, dismissed.
Brian Taylor Simpson, Official
traffic control devices required,
fine $183.00 listed.
Dalen Olin Welsh, Driving
under the influence of alcohol,
fine $1193.00, Refusal to submit
a preliminary breath or saliva, fine
$105.00 listed.
Kason D. Franks, Vehicles
Liability insurance coverage
required, dismissed, And Vehicles
operated in Kansas, registration,
dismissed.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On June1, a report of theft from
building in the 200 block of Park
Road. Reported missing was a
Powerlite W29 projector, valued at
$599.
On July 4, a report of criminal
damage to property; without consent at the west shelter house,
valued at $250.
On July 9, a report of theft of
property/services on East First.
Reported missing was a 1991
Ford ranger. Recovered July 9.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Accidents
On July 1, a vehicle driven
by Tavyn Ray Springston,Colony,
heading east bound at a high rate
of speed on 300 Road, crossed
the center line and left the roadway, passed into a ditch, and
through a fence, then rolled.
Driver was injured.
On July 8, a vehicle driven by
Daniel L. Palmer, Chanute, struck
a deer on US 169 by 300 Road.
On July 8, a vehicle driven
by Jerry E. Parks, Garnett, westbound on 1400 Road, lost control
after owl flew into drivers window,
and hit a fence.
JAIL LOG
On July 8, Ashley Moniac
Murphy, age 25, Lawrence, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of DWS
with a three day writ, non-bondable. Released July 11.
On July 8, Roy Allen Prevatte
Jr., age 25, Waverly, was booked
into jail by Douglas County Sheriff
Department on suspicion of forgery and theft by deception.
On July 8, Randy Duane
Berglund, age 32. Lawrence,
was booked into jail by Douglas
County Sheriff Department for
failure to appear, and suspicion
of criminal damage to property,
and Theft by deception, No bond.
Released July 12.
On July 8, Ryan Anthony
Branch, age 21, Arlington, Tx,
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3A
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
COLLINS
AUGUST 3, 1940-JULY 13, 2016
Barbara Ann Collins, age 75,
of Ottawa, Kansas, passed away
on Wednesday, July 13, 2016, at
Life Care Center, Osawatomie,
Kansas.
She was born August 3,
1940, in Pittsburg, Kansas, the
daughter of
Lawrence
Davidson and
Opal Nadine
(McKinney)
Davidson.
In 1957, she
graduated
from College
High School
Collins
in Pittsburg.
Barbara
married Charles Collins on
November 23, 1957. This union
was blessed with five children.
She worked at Lake Mary
in Paola, Kansas and ran a
daycare for many children
throughout the years.
She was a member of the
Trinity Methodist Church in
Ottawa for many years; and
V.F.W. Ladies Auxiliary
Post #5789 in Lees Summit,
Missouri. She was a Girl Scout
Leader, Webelos Leader, and
Youth sponsor for church with
her husband. Barbara wants to
be remembered most for her
crafts.
She was preceded in death
by her parents; and husband,
Charles Collins.
Barbara is survived by her
five children, John Collins
of Topeka, Kansas, Brenda
McCann and husband Robert of
Lees Summit, Missouri; Kevin
Collins and wife Reva of Paola,
Kansas; Brian Collins and wife
Peggy of Paola, Kansas; and
Robert Collins and wife Sheila
of Bend, Oregon; eleven grandchildren; six step grandchildren; ten great grandchildren;
seven step great grandchildren; three brothers, Ronald
Blackford and wife Joyce of
Pittsburg, Kansas; Randall
Blackford and wife Connie of
Derby, Kansas; Rick Blackford;
and one sister, Patricia Thomas
of Pittsburg, Kansas.
Memorial services were
Saturday, July 16, 2016, at
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett,
Kansas. You may send your
condolences to the family at
www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
NOBLES
Frankie Bowman Nobles,
age 76 of Cummings, died
Saturday, July 16, 2016.
He was a United States Navy
Veteran.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, B. J. and Elois
Nobles; brother, William (Bill)
Anderson.
Survivors include his
wife, Beverley Nobles; daughter Cynthia Nobles Berry of
Fairmont, NC; step children,
Tim Jones of Kansas, Sheldon
Jones of Kansas, Lori Jones
Johnson of Cumming, Sherry
Wittman of Kansas; sister Becky Shipman of North
Carolina; 13 grandchildren; 18
great grandchildren.
The family will greet friends
from 10 a.m. until the start of
the 11 a.m. service, Thursday,
July 21, 2016 at Feuerborn
Family Funeral, Garnett,
Kansas. Interment with military honors will follow in the
Garnett Cemetery.
HEAT…
FROM PAGE 1A
chance of rain isnt expected
until Saturday night, with just
a 20 percent chance of showers
and thunderstorms Saturday
night and Sunday day.
The warm temperatures are
especially difficult for people
who work outside or otherwise
spend a significant amount of
time outdoors.
This week brings special
considerations, as a group of
about 220 teenagers and adult
staff members have traveled to
Anderson County to take part
in a Christian mission camp to
paint houses, fix porches and
build wheelchair ramps each
day this week.
The group arrived Sunday,
July 17, and a local nurse gave
a presentation that evening
about the dangers of heat stroke
and heat exhaustion. Local
businesses and churches have
donated supplies, including
water and sunscreen, to help.
The Garnett Fire Department
is expected to bring out a tanker truck to cool the youths after
they finish working today,
and a local church is expected to provide water balloons
and other water-related games
Thursday afternoon.
For people who will be
spending time outside this
week, the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services
(HHS) reminds local residents
about steps they should take to
protect their health from the
extreme heat.
People may not often think
about it but extreme heat can
have devastating effects on
health, said Dr. Nicole Lurie,
HHS assistant secretary for
preparedness and response
(ASPR). Young children,
older adults, and people on certain medications can be particularly vulnerable to heat.
Recognizing the signs of heat
stress and knowing what to do
can save a life.
People suffering from heat
stress may experience heavy
sweating; weakness; cold, pale,
and clammy skin; fast, weak
pulse; and nausea or vomiting. Early signs include muscle cramps, heat rash, fainting
or near-fainting spells, and a
pulse or heart rate greater than
100.
People suffering from heat
stress should be moved to a
cooler location to lie down.
Apply cool, wet cloths to the
body especially to head, neck,
arm pits and upper legs near
the groin area where combined
70 percent of body heat can be
lost; and have the person sip
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
water. They should remain in
the cool location until recovered with a pulse heart rate
well under 100 beats per minute.
Signs of the most severe
heat-related illness, heat stroke,
include a body temperature
above 103 degrees Fahrenheit;
hot, red, dry or moist skin;
rapid and strong pulse; and
altered mental status which
can range from confusion and
agitation to unconsciousness.
Call 911 immediately and take
steps to cool the person.
While children are especially vulnerable to heat illnesses, they may be unable to
explain what is wrong but may
act differently than usual. In
extreme heat, consider changes
in a childs behavior to be heat
stress.
Similarly, people with communication-related disabilities
may have difficulty expressing a heat-related problem. In
extreme heat, look for a change
in behavior as a sign of heat
stress.
Older adults face additional risk of heat stress and heat
stroke, for a variety of reasons. The National Institute
on Agings fact sheet explains
more about how extreme heat
can affect seniors.
To help prevent heat-related
illness:
Spend time in locations
with air-conditioning when
possible.
Drink plenty of fluids. Good
choices are water and diluted
sport electrolyte drinks (1 part
sport drink to 2 parts water)
unless told otherwise by a doctor.
Choose
lightweight,
light-colored,
loose-fitting
clothing
Limit outdoor activity to
morning and evening hours
As air conditioning use
increases, electrical grids can
become overwhelmed causing
power outages. In power outages, people who rely on electricity-dependent medical devices,
like oxygen concentrators, may
need assistance so check on
family members, friends and
neighbors who use this type of
equipment.
For more information
about how to prevent heat-related illnesses visit the HHS
public health emergency preparedness website at http://
emergency.cdc.gov/disasters/
extremeheat/. For information
about how to better prepare for
disasters and other emergencies, visit www.ready.gov.
3A
LOCAL
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2A
was booked into jail by Douglas
County Sheriff Department for
arrest warrant, non-bond-able.
On July 8, Jason Lee Peterson,
age 37, Lawrence, was booked
into jail by Douglas County Sheriff
Department on suspicion of possession of opiates/opium/Narcotic
Drugs and certain stimulants. No
Bond.
On July 8, Carl Joseph
Feuerborn, age 67, Garnett, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs Office on suspicion of DUI, 4th or subsequent conviction. $25,000 bond.
Released July 9.
On July 11, Ashley Moniac
Murphy, age 25, Lawrence, was
booked into jail by Coffey County
Sheriff for failure to appear. $250
bond. Released July 11.
On July 11, Dwight Allen Lane,
age 26, Parker, was booked into
jail by the Miami County Sheriff
on suspicion of aggravated criminal sodomy, $500,000 bond,
and Unlawful sexual relations;
unknown circumstance, $25,000
bond.
On July 11, James Lee Aiken,
age 58, Kansas, was booked into
jail by Miami County Sheriff on
suspicion of probation violation,
no bond.
On July 11, Jon Baird Reed
was booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs Office for contempt of court; direct. No bond.
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Preston Kern was booked into
jail May 14 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $500,000.
Jeffrey Gregg was booked into
jail June 28 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $5,000 x 2.
Released July 12.
On July 11, Darin Duane
Rowden, age 48, Ottawa, was
booked into jail by Anderson county sheriffs office on suspicion of
probation violation, with a two day
writ. No bond. Released July 13.
On July 12, Jacob Dale Walker,
age 32, Kansas City, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriffs office on suspicion of possession of hallucinogenic drugs,
no bond, and Use/Possession of
drug paraphernalia/human body,
no bond, print and processing
only. Released July 12.
On July 12, Darci Ann White,
age 47, Garnett, was booked into
jail by Garnett Police Department
on suspicion of DUI, $1,500 bond,
And Duty of driver to report property/injury damage accident, no
bond. Released July 12.
On July 13, Billy Duane Dillard,
age 37, Paola, was booked into
jail by Miami County Sheriff on
suspicion of forgery, no bond, and
Theft of property/services. $2,500
Bond. Released July 13.
On July 13, Rich Allen Hayes,
age 30, Paola, was booked into
jail by Miami County Sheriff on
suspicion of possession of certain depressants, $2,500 bond,
and Criminal trespass;unknown
circumstance, no bond. Released
July 13.
On July 13, Garry Stanley
Jankovich, age 38, Ottawa, was
booked into jail on suspicion
of criminal trespassing, $1,500
bond, and Obstructing legal process, $1,200 bond.
On July 13, Cade Paul Shay,
age 26, Paola, was booked into
jail by Miami County Sheriff on
suspicion of criminal threat, no
bond, criminal damage to property, no bond, and disorderly conduct, no bond.
On July 13, Drew Allen Demeritt,
age 34, Chanute, was booked into
jail by Anderson County Sheriffs
office on suspicion of probation
violation, $2,500 bond. Released
July 13.
John Miller was booked into jail
March 11 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $2,500.
Racheal Westman was booked
into jail April 9 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Crystal Hall was booked into jail
April 26 for Anderson County to
serve a sentence.
Bruce Henry was booked into
jail June 14 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $10,000.
Charles Steele was booked into
jail June 22 for Anderson County .
Bond set at $1,500.
Jerred Conner was booked into
jail June 19 for Anderson County .
Bond set at $10,000.
Jeffrey Garcia was booked into
jail June 17 for Anderson County.
Robert Harris was booked into
jail June 1 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $5,000.
Kaylee Schuster was booked
into jail June 25 for Anderson
James Reisinger was booked
into jail June 24 for Douglas
County.
Joel Sanchez was booked into
jail June 29 for Miami County.
David Turner was booked into
jail June 29 for Miami County.
Larry McDaniel was booked into
jail June 29 for Douglas County.
Jeffery Winn was booked into
jail June 29 for Douglas County.
Brad Gilchrist was booked into
jail June 30 for Miami County.
William Gibson was booked into
jail July 1 for Douglas County.
Jason Peterson was booked
into jail July 8, for Miami County.
Ryan Branch was booked into
jail on July 8, for Douglas County.
Roy Prevatte Jr. was booked
into jail on July 8 for Douglas
County.
Dwight Lane was booked into
jail July 11, for Miami County.
James Akins was booked into
jail July 11, for Miami County.
Cade Shay was booked into jail
July 13 for Miami County.
Garry Janovich was booked
into jail July 13 for Miami County.
Pekarek echoed Valentines
sentiments: Its business as
usual for us.
Both the sheriff and police
chief said they worry about
the future of law enforcement.
Valentine recently has complained about the countys pay
scale, citing both lower starting pay for new deputies compared to other departments in
the region and minimal wage
increases for long-term employees; county commissioners are
considering changes to the pay
scale of all county employees
because of his concerns.
But the recent violence
against officers makes it even
more challenging to hire new
deputies, Valentine said. The
sheriffs department already
was down by one officer who
left for a better paying job and
Valentine has received only two
applications for the position
in the past four weeks. With
another officer leaving amid
safety concerns, Valentine said
he worries how the department
can attract quality employees
who are willing to brave the
hazards of the job and also
settle for lower pay than they
could receive at other departments in the region.
Pekarek said if he was starting out in law enforcement, one
of his primary considerations
would be joining a department
that used body cameras. Body
cameras are becoming more
commonplace in law enforcement agencies, as they offer
video proof of events that take
place during a traffic stop or
other incident.
Both the Anderson County
Sheriffs and the Garnett Police
departments use body cameras,
and also have cameras mounted on patrol cars. Pekarek
said the cameras have helped
resolve several complaints and
incidents, although none were
violent.
The cameras are worth the
investment, especially considering the potential for lawsuits
and settlements in disputed
incidents, Pekarek said. They
also may serve as a deterrent
to violence, if someone sees an
officer is wearing a camera, he
said.
But cameras provide little
protection in an ambush situation like the ones in Baton
Rouge or Dallas, Valentine
said.
All thats going to show is
who shot you, he said.
JAIL ROSTER
FARM-INS
OFFICERS…
FROM PAGE 1A
said. But recent events like the
attacks in Baton Rouge and
Dallas show a disturbing new
trend, he said: Were being
ambushed. Were being targeted.
Valentine and Garnett
Police Chief Kevin Pekarek
said they have not discussed
the recent attacks in department-wide meetings, but the
matter certainly comes up in
conversation between officers,
their family members and in
the community in general.
Theres not much a department
can do to prepare for such a
situation, they said.
Weve got to respond; we
just respond with extra care,
Valentine said. You cant not
respond to people who need
help. You cant not pull cars
over. Youve got to do the job.
CARS…
PROFESSIONAL TAX PREPARATION
FROM PAGE 1A
Grand Prix Revival group,
which organizes a variety of
automobile events at Lake
Garnett in October. Their event
typically includes a car show,
as well as motoring events like
an autocross and laps around
the lake road, but it focuses
more on sports and race cars
similar to those that participated in the Lake Garnett Grand
Prix races between the late
1950s through the early 1970s.
The next revival event is sched-
uled for October 8-9, 2016.
Garnett
commissioner
Blackie said he approved of the
Miami County car clubs plans
next summer, particularly
because it will serve as a complement to the Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival. Blackie in
the past has been a vocal advocate of capitalizing on the citys
car racing history to boost tourism.
I think this dovetails right
into the whole program of cars
and car races, he said.
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JOHNSON
CONTEST…
FROM PAGE 1A
Videos can be posted to any
platform Vine, Instagram,
Pinterest, Facebook, Youtube
as long as they are posted or tagged to the Reviews
Facebook page at www.facebook.com/acreview1865. All
videos must be posted by
August 1.
Videos should be family
friendly and will be judged on
the basis of number of shares
and/or views, humor, use of
local actors/people and creativity. To win the prize, videos
MUST mention the carnival
and the dates operation Aug.
2-6.
The contest is open to anyone age 5-18 regardless of
where you live, though entries
can certainly receive help from
moms & dads or friends or siblings. If you have questions
contact the Review at (785) 4483121 or admin@garnett-ks.com.
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Anderson County Clerk
Your vote in the Tuesday, Aug. 2 Republican Primary would be appreciated.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
LOCAL
Cops: Decent folks have your backs
With yet another ambush shooting of three
police officers in Baton Rouge on Sunday, its
important that law officers in the country get
the right message from the majority of the populace which still maintains its sanity: We are
with you, and there are way more of us than of
them.
The videos, the eventually disproven out-andout lies told by so-called witnesses to police/
thug shootings, the marching and the epithets
and the attack slogans aimed at law enforcement you need to know those sentiments are
not shared by the majority of our country.
The majority of our country knows why the
others hate you: They hate you because youre
doing your job. They hate you because youre
trying to curb criminality and maybe in the
process save the life of someone nearby, in the
crooks family or even the crook himself. They
hate you because you represent law, and for
whatever reason and by whatever path, they
have no respect for law whatsoever until they
need to hide behind it.
It hasnt been that long ago that everyone
seemed to understand. It hasnt been that long
ago that we watched you inhaling God-knowswhat kind of foul dust and airborne crud in
the aftermath of 9/11 on those hellish New
York streets, or risking putrid infections in the
draining bilge of disasters like Katrina or Sandy
or devastating tornadoes in the Midwest. You
were doing your job trying to get the rest of us
out of harms way and to safety. Weve seen you
doing CPR on those who are moments away
from death, straining your muscles and your
humanity trying to give them one last chance;
weve seen you in schools trying to teach kids
that drugs and booze are a path to trouble. Weve
seen you rendering the last service you can to
people killed in our neighborhoods and on our
streets and highways sometimes accidentally,
sometimes not. It hasnt been that long ago since
we recognized your service to us. It hasnt been
that long ago since we were proud of you.
For the majority of us nothing has changed.
You need to know that, for the rest of us we get
it.
Sure, theres a problem in our country
between cops and a certain subset of our culture. Your part of the problem is that you get
to deal with this subset day-in, day-out; not just
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
in the videos that go viral and rally sympathizers against you. You get to deal with the crime
within this subset; the shootings and killings
this subset foists more upon itself than anyone
else and the cancerous silence of witnesses that
could help bring justice. You get to deal with the
aftermath that we never see. You have learned
from your experience, like we all do, and it has
put you on your guard as a natural instinct.
That may not conform to the lofty principles we
set for you and your conduct, but it is a natural
outgrowth of your existence.
True some of you go overboard or crack
under the pressure. Those who do have to be
accountable. But you need to know that we
know the bad eggs in your ranks are a thin
number.
What seems different now is the environment
that has emboldened those who know theyre
doing wrong but do it anyway; those who dont
care about the law you are sworn to uphold and
serve. Maybe its the Internet and the perception of stardom that comes from everyone being
his/her own TV station these days; maybe its
the hunger among web users to always see the
latest, goriest entertainment; maybe its rebellion against authority in general; maybe its a
President who makes sure you get your dose of
blame while refusing to be louder in demanding
accountability from the criminals you have to
protect us from.
We dont know any better than you where its
going or where it ends. But were on your side
because we know youre on ours.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Is there a way to get the city to take
care of weeds on and in the drainage
ditch, also along the road on the corner
of southeast corner of 7th and Cedar
Avenue? My husband cuts the city property on the west side of the ditch to help
keep the rats, snakes and mosquitoes
down. With him being in leg braces he
cannot weed eat. We talked to the city
manager last year but nothing was done,
so is there a way to get the city to act on
this corner of the city? Thank you.
I feel certain that every citizen in our
county paying property taxes would
agree that we need additional signif-
The failure in Obamas police distortions
President Barack Obama is a lawyer, not a
statistician, and it shows.
After the controversial officer-involved
shootings in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and
Falcon Heights, Minnesota, Obama unloosed
a series of statistics in his remarks in Warsaw,
Poland, to show racial disparities that exist
in our criminal justice system — in other
words, racial bias by police, prosecutors and
judges.
Obama related numbers about disparate
rates of police shootings, arrests and searches, among other things, without mentioning
the single most important factor to put such
figures in context, which is that blacks commit criminal offenses at higher rates than
whites.
No one likes to point this out, even though
it is highly relevant information. It opens up
whoever says it to charges of racism, or at
least callousness in the aftermath of questionable police shootings.
If anyone should be free to speak the truth,
though, it should be President Obama, who
imagines himself a coolly analytical figure on
a historic mission to bind the nations racial
wounds. Instead, he routinely gives a fundamentally distorted picture of the American
criminal justice system — and police shootings
— by eliding truths apparently too uncomfortable for him to say and his supporters to hear.
African-Americans, Obama said in
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
Warsaw, are arrested at twice the rate of
whites. But African-Americans commit
about 24 percent of violent crimes, even
though they are 13 percent of the population.
Of course they are going to be arrested at disproportionate rates. About half of murderers
are black, and over 40 percent of killings of
police officers are committed by blacks.
This doesnt mean that there arent bad
cops or that there isnt bias in policing, but
the picture painted by Black Lives Matter of
pervasive police predation, and an open season on blacks, is a politicized lie.
A new study published by the National
Bureau of Economic Research found racial
disparities in lower-level use of police force
— e.g., police placing hands on civilians or
pushing them into walls. But it concluded
that on the most extreme use of force — officer-involved shootings — we are unable to
detect any racial differences.
If President Obama really wanted to try to
cool passions on this issue, he would go even
further in saying common-sensical things
unwelcome to an inflamed Left.
He might mention that the best way to try
to avoid a police confrontation that might
go tragically wrong is to comply with police
orders and pursue a complaint or lawsuit
later, outside the heat of the moment. He
might note that just because an incident looks
bad on an initial video, it doesnt mean the
police did anything wrong, and no one should
assume as much. He might remind Black
Lives Matter that its initial understanding
of what happened in the shooting of Michael
Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, was entirely
erroneous.
He could do all of this and still speak to his
belief, and that of so many other blacks, that
they have been targeted and treated unfairly
by police. That he wont is an indictment of
his political courage and intellectual honesty
on an issue where he should be uniquely suited to lead.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Kobach rule will cut votes in small elections
Yes, there was griping and angst last week
when Secretary of State Kris Kobach, from
hundreds of miles away, managed to pull at
least 17,000 Kansans votes off state primary
election and maybe even general election
ballots.
The issue: State law requiring proof of
citizenship to vote in Kansas elections. Thats
a birth certificate or passport, or something
similar to make sure you are a genuine citizen if youre going to vote for a state representative or mayor or water district board
member.
Sounds logical, of course. Probably, ought
to be citizens who are electing government
leaders, not foreigners or even just tourists.
A major source of those questionable registrationsof folks who want to register to
vote but dont automatically pass the proof
of citizenship requirementis registering to
vote by checking a box on the forms used to
get new drivers licenses. Its called motor
voter registration, and the idea is that when
you go in to get a drivers license, you can
conveniently register to vote. A two-fer.
Well, judges have decided that proof of
citizenship required by state law for voting is
a dab more than is needed for just voting in
federal elections. So, pretty much uniformly,
judges have said, though maybe not written
out in must-follow orders yet, that the motor
voter registration is good enough for voting in
federal elections.
Kobach, who essentially wants everyone
who votes anywhere on anything to prove by
birth certificate or some other document that
they are genuine Americans, came up with
a fix for the problem he perceived, and managed to get the Legislature to pass.
That solution: Sure, Kansas election office
workers will go ahead and count those votes
by drivers for federal offices. But, if you havent proved to the satisfaction of state law that
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
youre an American, well, you are just wasting your time at the bottom of the ballot. For
1st congressional district Republican voters,
the U.S. Rep. Tim Huelskamp/Roger Marshall
race will be worth the trip indoors. And thats
about it for high-profile primaries.
Real effect of the Kobach rule will be to cut
votes in small-number elections. Those where
a hundred votes might decide a primary election, and that primary win probably means a
general election win.
Take four years ago, when conservative
Republicans were trying to oust moderate
Republicans who didnt care for the massive
tax cuts of that year. Just 160 primary votes
saved a moderate who went on to win; and it
was less than 500 votes that bumped then-Senate President Steven Morris, R-Hugoton, out
of the Senate.
That 17,000 votes, scattered across the
state, may well determine who is running the
Legislature next session.
Its called following state law by Kobach,
who proposed and saw passed his proposal
which is now, well, state law. Those who
didnt like that proof of citizenship hurdle call
it voter suppression, and it sure was, but they
didnt have the votes to stop it, so we can just
call it state law now.
Its just law.
Practically, though, Kobach, who was represented by top-level employees in Topeka
while he was helping write the party platform
at the Republican National Convention in
Cleveland, Ohio, last week played the game
to prevent counting those dont-have-the-citizenship-paperwork voters votes in August or
November.
Kobach rewrote the rules and regulations
for dealing with ballots cast by those who
cant prove citizenship to state standards.
Well, they get handed a ballot, and they, having been forewarned that they are provisional, can vote for federal officers, and if they
have time to spare, the rest of the state and
local candidates on the ballot. Those non-federal votes just wont be counted.
Practically, if you want to make sure that
those Ill register if its easy enough voters dont shift state and local races, Kobach
has found exactly how to accomplish that.
Probably isnt a good idea, but if thats your
goal, Kobach has done a great job getting it
done.
Thats why the angst. Not counting at
least 17,000 votes will change some primary
election results, and everyone can analyze
whether it helps moderate or conservative
Republicans, or which Democrat can count
on obsessive citizenship provers as their supporters.
Angst, computation, the only thing sure is
that the new ballot counting rule for the state
is going to change things. Were just not sure
what, and by how much…
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC
of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of
Hawvers Capitol Reportto learn more about
this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com
icant economic development. It would
be nice if the individuals fighting the
potential wind farm would put a similar
amount of effort into bringing industry
and jobs to our community.
Thank you to the person for article last
week about the shooter of the Dallas cops
does not represent all blacks, but he does
represent all gun owners. How the logic of
a lot of people, or the lack thereof, works.
You definitely hit the nail on the head.
Very well put. Thank you.
I thought it was very interesting the article you had in the paper last week about
the mayor getting shunned at the county commission meeting about the road
funds for the city. Long ago your paper
had a story that showed how much overall county taxes are paid by home owners and business owners in the city of
Garnett and I dont recall how much it
was but it was substantial, but still the
city gets no clout in county business. Just
the other day I stopped in the highway
behind another semi truck turning from
the highway onto Park Road and waiting
for a train. Cars lined up in the highway
just asking for an accident, and theres
not supposed to be big truck traffic on
that road at all. County wont enforce it
and it tears up the city streets there on
Park Road. I think the city ought to start
being treated like it pays the freight.
Thank you.
No matter your political party, your personal beliefs or your religious beliefs, you
dont have the right to complain if you
dont at least vote. So go vote on Aug. 2, or
you can even go vote early at the clerks
office.
If, as president, Hillary does to gender
issues what Obama has done to race
issues, in four years there wont be an
obstetrician left in business in the whole
country.
Over 40 percent of the Anderson
County population lives in Garnett.
Approximately 50 percent of the property taxes collected in Garnett go to the
county. Your news item about the lack of
cooperation at the county level in spending some county road repair funds in the
Garnett city limits caught my attention.
It appears Garnett residents dont have a
county commissioner looking after their
needs. Possibly the voters of Garnett
should elect a commissioner in the future
who actually lives in the city limits of
Garnett.
Contact Your
Legislator
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2016.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
5A
LOCAL
Gods economic plan
Economics is the science
pertaining to the management
of public affairs in connection
with the accumulation, distribution, and use of goods and
money. Basically it is how
individuals and businesses go
about the daily task of doing
business. From the individual
who goes to the grocery store
to purchase items, to the store
owners stocking and markup
arrangements, to the trucker
who hauled the product to the
store, to the wholesaler who
provided the products, to the
individual who produced the
product. Much of this is handled on credit and the cost of
the product increases the further up the chain it moves.
Credit has become a way of life
with business as well as individuals. Rising debt has necessitated the use of higher credit
limits. This works as long as
we are in a cycle of rising markets but when the market takes
a downturn we are faced with
a shortfall. During times of
rising markets inefficient producers enter the market which
accelerates the downturn.
God has an economic system as well. It is not nearly
as complicated and can never
be oversupplied. In Jeremiah
29:11 God says, For I know the
plans I have for you, declares
the LORD, plans to prosper
you not to harm you, plans to
give you a hope and a future.
Man can never achieve this
kind of economy on earth. Our
current economy requires multiple people to get a dozen eggs
to a grocery store in a large
city. Gods economy is one on
one. Just us with God. Gods
economy is all about how we
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
go about our daily task of doing
business with God.
A good Biblical example
of Gods economy occurs in
Deuteronomy 11:26-27. Gods
states to the Hebrew people
as follows. See I am setting
before you today a blessing
and a curse: the blessing if you
obey the commandments of
the LORD your God, which I
command you today, and the
curse, if you do not obey the
commandments of the LORD
your God, but turn aside from
the way that I am commanding
you today to go after other gods
that you have known.
The Old Testament is filled
with instances of obedience
followed by prosperity and
instances of disobedience followed by famine, war and exile
into foreign lands. It is kind
of like the law of supply and
demand except with blessings
and curses instead of goods
and services. Sometimes we
demand the curse instead of
receiving the blessing God
offers. The temptation to have
our way is great. What we
fail to understand is we reap
what we sow more than we
sow and later than we sow.
Disobedience is very expensive
and we can have all we want
on credit but someday we will
have to pay up. That is a law of
God.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Business Cards Car Magnets
Project Bid Forms More!
You name it,
we print it.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Photo Submitted
Winners of the Garnett Optimist Club scholarships are Cassidy Lutz, left, shown next to Stacey Hedges, Optimist Club member, Colby
Wittman, and Vicki Markham, Optimist Club member.
Optimist Club scholarships awarded
The Optimist Club has announced its
scholarship winners for 2016.
Wayne Penn Memorial Optimist
Vocational Scholarship
Colby Wittman is the recipient of the
2016 Wayne Penn Memorial Optimist
Vocational Scholarship. He plans to attend
Salina Area Technical School.
The Wayne Penn Memorial Optimist
Vocational Scholarship was established
in honor of Wayne Penn, a longstanding member of the Garnett Optimist Club.
Wayne was always a proponent of the
projects undertaken by the Optimist Club
that helped advance the youth in Anderson
County thru educational trips, scholarships, leadership activities and volunteer
opportunities. To be eligible for the Wayne
Penn Memorial Vocational Scholarship
es of G
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Channel Catfish
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785-418-0711
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
thegunguys@yahoo.com
CONTRACTORS
Guide
6×10.5
contractors guide
GUTTERING
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
BUILDING CONTRACTORS
GLASS
Beachner Grain Inc. in Greeley, KS
Wednesday, July 27 8-9am
To Pre-Order Call:
Arkansas Pondstockers 1-870-578-9773
Walk-Ups Welcome
Get the job done right!
Check this handy directory
of contracting companies
before you take on that
home or business project.
AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING
NOW
FEATURING
CARRIER
SYSTEMS!
Lawrence (785) 749-0600 Ottawa (785) 242-3714
Baldwin City (785) 594-3357
(620) 363-4327
was established in honor of Bud White
a longstanding member of the Garnett
Optimist Club. Bud was instrumental in
overseeing many of the projects conducted
by the club for Anderson County youth
programs. Bud helped organize and manage the Optimist Clubs beef raffle in conjunction with the Anderson County Fair
to help raise funds for the scholarship
fund. After Buds death the beef raffle was
renamed and the raffle proceeds will be
used to help fund the $500 scholarship in
addition to the other scholarships that the
Optimist Club issues each year. Students
awarded this scholarship are representative of the citizenship traits that Bud White
exhibited through his years of work and
dedication with the Garnett Optimist Club.
FISH DAY
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys uns
Ladies Day
Every Tuesday!
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
applicants are required to be residents of
Anderson County, enrolled in college to
pursue a degree in a vocational field, be of
good academic standing and be representative of the citizenship traits that Wayne
exhibited through his years of work and
dedication with the Garnett Optimist Club.
Colby is the son of Kim and Rod
Wittman, Garnett
Bud White Memorial Scholarship
Cassidy Lutz was named the winner of
the 2016 Bud White Memorial Scholarship
sponsored by the Garnett Optimist
Club. Cassidy will attend Butler County
Community College majoring in Food
Science and Safety. She is the daughter
of Teena Lutz and Gerald Lutz, both of
Garnett.
The Bud White Memorial Scholarship
BUILDING MATERIALS
SEPTIC TANKS / SYSTEMS
D&S Sanitation LLC
Brian Falk
SIDING & WINDOWS
Construction Supply
Contractors Residential & Farm
410 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-7106
LIME & LIMESTONE
FLOORING
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
Page Enterprise, LLC
We build on quality.
Commercial Residential Agriculture
Track Hoe Backhoe Dump Truck Trenching Rock Removal
Track Loader Black Dirt Electrical (Block Master)
GAS – PROPANE
913-898-4722 Mike Page – Parker, Kansas
Visit The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com.
If you would like to advertise your business in this directory
call Stacey at 785-448-3121, or email review@garnett-ks.com.
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
LOCAL
Day in the Life contest winners
The Day in the Life of Anderson County photo contest winners have been announced by the
Garnett Public Library. The pictures will be on display at the library through Friday, July 29.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Photo Courtesy Garnett Public Library
1st place Adult Photographers Choice was awarded to Rosanna Bauman.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Photo Courtesy Garnett Public Library
1st place Adult Portrait was awarded to Rosanna Bauman.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Photo
Courtesy Garnett Public Library
Above, 1st place Juvenile Photographers
Choice Award was given to Jenna Schmit.
At left, Peoples Choice Award was given to
Kari Miller.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Photo Courtesy Garnett Public Library
1st place Juvenile Portrait was awarded to Joanna Bauman.
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
Anderson County
3×7
anco fair
Realtors
FSBOs:
FULL $
1YEAR 50
3×9
review
Advertise your real estate properties
Timeless Traditions
August 1- 6
Fun Time Show
Carnival Rides
will be at the
2016 Anderson County Fair 5 nights!
Tuesday – Saturday
August 2nd – 6th
6:00 p.m. – 10:30 p.m.
Classified liner up to 48 words
Published in The Trading Post
and
The Anderson County
Rides for children, teens and adults!
Advanced ticket sales wrist bands for $15
Wrist bands sold during county fair for $20
Wrist bands good for one night
different color wrist band per night
Monday, August 1 Draft Horse Pull
Tuesday, August 2 Parade, Style Revue,
Ranch Rodeo, Two Girls and a Zoo
Wednesday, August 3 Childrens Cash Grab,
Anderson County Fair Tent, 13th Annual Pie Baking Contest
Thursday, August 4 Shodeo and Steer/heifer show
Friday, August 5 Livestock Premium Sale,
Concert – Just Passin Through
Saturday, August 6 Demolition Derby
Review, 29,000 readers
each week PLUS online traffic
runs until your property
Ad
sells or for 1 full year,
Concert
Friday, Aug. 5 9 p.m.
whichever comes first
Non-refundable $50 prepayment required at time of
placement
Free Will Donation
No glass bottles
For more information call 785-448-6826.
Find us on
&
and on the web at www.andersoncofair.com.
(785) 448-3121
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, July 19
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Wednesday, July 20
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.
Ramblin Country to perform.
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 21
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
Center
7 p.m. – Garnett Area Community
Band to perform at Courthouse
Square north side (in case of
rain, event moved to First United
Methodist Church, 205 S. Oak,
Garnett)
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44
Friday, July 22
2 p.m. to 3 p.m. -Kincaid
Community Library Summer
Reading Program, 1st-6th grade
Monday, July 25
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
1-2 p.m. – Anderson County
Caregiver Support Group,
Garnett Recreation Center
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 26
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
7 p.m. – Legion BIngo at VFW
Wednesday, July 27
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
Thursday, July 28
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
Friday, July 29
2 p.m. to 3 p.m. -Kincaid
Community Library Summer
Reading Program, 1st-6th grade
7 p.m. – Rocker and Shelton
families perform at First Christian
Church, Garnett
Monday, August 1
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
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / Photo Courtesy Monica Walter
Blake Hess, from left, Anna Hermreck, Rayleigh Wittman, Abbie Wiesner and Spencer Hermann act out a scene during a performance Friday, July 15. The performance
capped a weeklong theater camp sponsored by the Garnett Chamber Players. Local youth learned the ins-and-outs of theater during the annual camp.
Christmas in July: Start saving for holidays now
WICHITA Its summer the
season for cookouts, gardening,
going to the pool and a time
to begin setting aside money
for the holidays, said Kansas
State Universitys Elizabeth
Brunscheen-Cartagena.
As with many things in life,
preparing and planning before
you begin makes things easier
it is no different with financially preparing for the holidays.
The holidays are a time to gather with family and friends and
many oftentimes find ourselves
getting caught up in the excitement and spending more than
anticipated. Planning ahead of
time can save you financial and
emotional strain.
Budgeting
for
parties
and gift giving in advance is
vital, Brunscheen-Cartagena,
a K-State Research and
Extension Sedgwick County
family life and resource management agent, said. We want
to help Kansans control their
money rather than the money
or the season controlling them.
Summer time is the best time to
start planning.
Gift giving
We all expect a little present, especially our children,
she said of holiday expectations. Begin creating a budget
specifically for gifts by making a list of all of the people
who you want to give a present.
Assign a sum of money and
slowly start saving by putting
money in an envelope that says
the name of that person.
Observe what your children
and others like. Or ask them
now, if someone gave you $30,
what would you buy with it?
By asking months ahead of
time, the surprise effect could
still work since the holidays
are so far away, said BrucheenCartagena. Shop throughout
the year and take advantage of
sales in stores or online.
Remember that not all
gifts have to be purchased,
Bruncheen-Cartagena said.
One of the benefits of starting now is that you can create
some of your gifts. Some gift
suggestions she shares are:
For a child who likes to
cook, gradually buy a cook
book with simple recipes and
the dry ingredients for one rec-
ipe, put them in a mixing bowl
and wrap it with cellophane;
For budding artists, gradually buy brushes, paint, and
a canvas, and put them into a
decorative bag;
A good gift for grandparents
or a neighbor is for children
to create coupons of volunteer
time: shoveling snow twice,
wash the car three times, yard
cleanup twice or a plate of
something you can cook twice
are some examples;
If you or your kids like photography, grandparents often
appreciate receiving framed
photos; or
Use a clear jar and put the
mixture of dry ingredients of
a soup recipe in a decorative
way. Dont forget to include the
recipe and any other necessary
instructions.
Another idea to save money
on gifts is to only purchase gifts
for your children or partner
and have a gift exchange with
other family and friends. This
way, price limits can be set for
gifts and removes the stress
of having to find the perfect
gift for multiple people. When
suggesting this to your family and friends now, explain
that youre proposing exchanging names in July so everyone
has time to shop or make gifts
ahead of the holiday rush.
Holiday food shopping
The holidays are also characterized by a lot of spending
on food. Brunscheen-Cartagena
suggests starting to plan in
July to ask family members to
bring different items to holiday
dinners rather than any one
person assuming all the work
and cost.
If there are five siblings,
perhaps for Christmas two siblings will be responsible for
the meat, one is responsible
for sodas, another is responsible for dessert and another is
responsible for the salad, she
said. The load is distributed
and a more relaxed atmosphere
is created.
In short, do not buy at the
last minute, she said. Avoid
impulse purchases. Start shopping early enough to avoid feeling pressured to buy whatever
shows first. This allows you
to compare similar items and
July is
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take advantage of sales.
Planning for the festivities
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bring peace of mind, good relations and happiness to you and
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
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$729
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2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
BUSINESS
BUSINESS BEAT
Give the client gift
Stewart graduates as family physician
that keeps on giving
Until he retired, my accountant used to give me a mixed
popcorn tin every Christmas.
I remember, because my staff
and I would devour the caramel corn first, then the cheesy
corn, then something else. I forget which was left for last, but
I found the selection dynamic
fascinating. Yes, I need to get
out more.
Did the popcorn keep my
business with him for almost
30 years? Probably not, but it
was a nice gesture in a client relationship that we both
saw as mutually beneficial for
decades.
Thats the role of business
gift giving its a gesture that
notes an existing relationship
and just an additional way of
saying thanks or congratulations. But there are some rules,
so your gift doesnt become
clumsy or inappropriate.
First, dont give gifts to
prospects. Showing up with
a gift to an initial proposal
meeting or sales call looks des-
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
perate. Like Geoffrey James,
writing on the topic of gifts for
Inc. Magazine, says: Its like
a guy on a blind date showing
up with a dozen roses. It just
doesnt play.
Dont give expensive client gifts. Unless youre selling
yachts or airplanes, the more
expensive the gift, the more
your client is likely to feel
youre pressing for some sense
of obligation on his part. Keep
it light.
Typically government officials, law enforcement officers
and the like are prohibited
from receiving gifts because of
Chad Stewart graduated June 25, 2016, from
Wichita Family Medicine
Residency Program at
Wesley in Wichita. He
graduated from Crest High
School in 2004. His hometown is Kincaid.
Chad is a family physician.
He received Bachelor of
the appearance of impropriety.
Keep that in mind before giving.
Do some homework. A gift
that has some meaning is better received and more memorable than, say, a block of cheese.
If your client is a golfter
maybe a box of balls, etc.? For
company anniversaries among
our clients, we sometimes gift
wall clocks with a plaque and a
congratulations message from
our company to theirs. Plants
are good as well. Refrain from
gifting promotional materials.
A ball cap with your logo on it
says advertise for me, not I
want to keep the sun off your
head.
A simple rule of thumb on
client gift giving do it, but
dont overdo it.
Farmers: Cover up against sun damage
I recently read a public-service ad circulating by
the American Academy of
Dermatology that lists five
ways to die on a golf course.
The five ways include hit by a
golf ball, run over by a golf cart,
whacked by a golf club, struck
by lightning and forgot your
hat.
While none of these possibilities is pleasant to contemplate,
the threat of skin cancer is real
and should be considered carefully. This is especially true
of farmers, ranchers and construction workers who are in
the sun much of the time.
Every year one million new
cases of skin cancer are detected, according to the American
Academy of Dermatology.
One out of five people in this
country develops skin cancer
during his/her lifetime.
All across America, folks
are gearing up for vacations
with their families many of
these trips include stops at the
beach, national parks, state
lakes or outdoor amusement
parks. Many others work for
long hours in the sun during
the summer months farmers,
ranchers, construction workers, amusement park attendants, etc.
If you spend several hours
in the sun, protect yourself.
Avoid the midday sun if at all
possible. Cover up. Always
wear a hat. Work in the shade
whenever possible. And dont
forget to wear sunscreen.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and publisher of The Anderson County
Review. Comments or questions
may be directed to him at review@
garnett-ks.com or (785) 448-3121.
Some senior citizens eligible for
checks to buy at Farmers Markets
OTTAWA — Low-income
Kansas seniors may be eligible for a program that provides
checks to purchase an array of
healthy foods at farmers markets throughout the state.
The Kansas Senior Farmers
Market Nutrition Program
(KSFMNP) is providing low-income seniors who meet age and
income requirements with $30
in checks to purchase fresh
fruits, vegetables, herbs and
honey from authorized farmers
at local participating farmers
markets June 1 through Nov.
1. Checks are available in $5
increments.
To be eligible to receive
KSFMNP checks, the following
criteria must be met:
1. Age: A senior must be 60
years old or older on the day
the money is issued.
2. Income level: A seniors
annual
gross
household
income (before taxes are withheld) must be at or below 185%
of the federal poverty level.
For example, a household of
one must have an annual gross
income at or below $21,978 or
a monthly gross income at or
below $1,832.
Applications for the Kansas
Senior
Farmers
Market
Nutrition Program will be
available starting on June 1,
2016 at the following locations:
Anderson: Frontier Extension
District #11, K-State Research
& Extension Office, Garnett,
KS; Franklin: East Central
KS Area Agency on Aging;
Osage: Frontier Extension
District #11, K-State Research
& Extension Office, Lyndon,
KS, and at the Osage Co. Senior
Center in Osage City, KS, and
at the Burlingame Senior
Nutrition Site.
Funds are limited and bene-
fits will be provided on a firstcome, first-served basis. For
more information about the
Kansas Senior Farmers Market
Nutrition Program, call 785242-7200 or 1-800-633-5621.
Eligible foods to purchase
with the KSFMNP checks from
authorized farmers at participating farmers markets are
defined as fresh, nutritious,
unprepared, locally grown
fruits, vegetables, locally produced honey and herbs for
human consumption that are
produced in Kansas under normal growing conditions.
The Senior Farmers Market
Program is a project of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
(USDA) Food and Nutrition
Service (FNS). The program
is coordinated by the Kansas
Department of Health and
Environment (KDHE), which
is collaborating with local partners to identify and distribute
checks to eligible seniors.
The program is current-
Stewart
Science in Biology, minor in Chemistry from
Pittsburg State University in December 2008.
He attended medical school and earned a
medical degree (MD) from The University
of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City,
Kan., in May 2013.
His residency was with The University of
Kansas School of Medicine at Wichita Family
Medicine Residency Program at Wesley,
completed in June 2016.
ly available in the following
counties: Allen, Anderson,
Atchison,
Barton, Bourbon, Brown,
Butler, Clay, Cloud, Cowley,
Cherokee,
Crawford,
Dickinson, Douglas, Finney,
Franklin, Geary, Greenwood,
Harvey, Jackson, Jefferson,
Johnson,
Labette, Leavenworth, Lyon,
Marion, Marshall, McPherson,
Miami, Mitchell, Montgomery,
Neosho, Osage, Pottawatomie,
Reno, Republic, Rice, Riley,
Saline, Sedgwick, Shawnee,
Washington and Wyandotte.
This institution is an equal
opportunity provider.
ANDERSON
INSIGHT
JOHN SCHLAGECK, Kansas Farm Bureau
Melanoma is the deadliest
form of skin cancer. One person dies every hour from this
disease in the United States,
according to the American
Academy of Dermatology.
Fortunately, melanoma can
be cured if its caught early
enough. Dermatologists advise
us to examine our skin regularly.
If you find a blemish larger
than a pencil eraser, multi-colored, asymmetrical or irregular at the edges, you may have
melanoma and should see a
dermatologist.
While we should protect
ourselves from potential skin
cancer, we must be every bit
as aware of this danger for
our children. Overexposure to
sunlight during childhood will
affect children for the rest of
their lives.
Studies show that damage
from the sun to a childs skin
can actually increase the odds
that he/she will develop skin
cancer as an adult.
American Academy of
Dermatology estimates indi-
cate 80 percent of a persons
total lifetime sun exposure
occurs in the first 18 years.
Protect your children. Cover
them up. Teach them to wear
long-sleeved cotton shirts that
breathe. Make sure they wear
head protection at all times.
Make wearing sunscreen part
of the ritual for gearing up for
the sun.
While skin cancer can kill
you, its much more likely to
disfigure you. Each year, thousands of Americans lose chunks
of their skin to this disease,
according to the American
Academy of Dermatology.
Some people lose their nose;
others may lose their ears,
while others may escape with
only the loss of an eyebrow.
Examine your skin regularly, at least once a week. Look
for warning signs. If you find
anything bleeding, crusting or
not healing, see your dermatologist immediately.
Remember, you can enjoy
the sun and spend time outside,
and dont forget these common-sense suggestions: have
fun, and like everything else in
life enjoy the sun in moderation.
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.
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
1×7
coffey
health
system
Wedding,
Engagement,
Anniversary &
Birth Announcements
Business News
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
Youve Got A Lot of Nerve(s)!
2×2
balanced healt
An inflamed or tense spine will influence the
functioning of your nervous system, causing pain,
illness or disease. Chiropractic care can help you
maintain your health and wellness.
Dont wait for pain to tell you theres a problem.
Come see what we can do for you.
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
805 N. Maple (Inside Baumans) Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Sales & Service
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery M-F
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Millers Construction, Inc.
Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
3B
LOCAL
Seminar continues
5 June 2016
Back to metal detecting at
the KAW Indian Mission. Here
are my finds for the day: Old
Padlock, Horse drawn mower
section blade, Large iron Nut,
Square headed iron Stake, an
old Nickel and four Pennies
(dates not readable), Hand
made Door Hinge, three old
Wagon Bolts, large Iron Buckle
and lots of other artifacts that
we could not identify. Tonight
there was a Certification
Meeting chaired by Al Petz.
6 June 2016
We spent the morning metal
detecting at the Mission. My
finds were: Three tine iron
Table Fork, .36 Caliber Round
Ball with sprule, Harness Snap
Hook and six un-identified
items.
At noon the metal detecting
crew was recalled back to the
Last Chance Store to continue detecting there. We mainly
detected for metal targets and
flagged them within the grids
that were being excavated.
Today was my Special Visitor
day, as I had eight friends stop
by to see me and take tours of
our site and the Lab. Kays
brother Howard Roberts and
his son Terry from Manhattan,
Ks stopped by about mid-morning. About 11:00 am Mr.Evert
Burns from Garnett dropped
by for a few minutes. Evert
was in town to celebrate his
90th Birthday to be held near
Council Grove. Then at lunch
time the Five Yos paid me
a visit. The Yos On The Go
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
are a group of classmates that
do lots of things together and
were in town to help Evert celebrate his Birthday. Who are
the Yos? Penny Hulett (Everts
daughter) from Montana,
Peggy Pergrine from Missouri,
Debbie Wilper, Betts Abraham
and Clarann Kempnich all
from Garnett.
This evening several of us
went to dinner at the Nationally
known Hays House. (Very
nice)
7 June 2016
Today our project was to
metal detect a three foot strip
up next to the Last Chance
store on all sides. Several
nice artifacts were found: .56
Caliber Round Ball, 3-Ring
Mini Ball, very old fashioned
Coat Hook, Large iron Staple,
Oil Lamp Wick Holder (Brass),
Large Iron Hinge and a very old
Iron Key in fine condition.
Tonight I attended a Talk:
1861 Rawlinson-Terwilliger
Home on the Santa Fe Trail by
Ken McClintock.
To be Contd
Rail trail group
hosts GAPP reps
President Ruth Theis welcomed twenty-four members
and five guests to the July 13,
2016 Prairie Spirit Rail Trail
meeting held at the country
farm home of Dave and Ruth
Theis. Scott Rogers introduced
the five GAPP representatives
to the membership.
It was announced that the
two new picnic tables that
the trail group had purchased
for the depot had been placed
there.
Ruth Lee Hastert, Dave
Theis and Rick Doran had
cleaned out the railroad cage
at the depot when they placed
the new luggage cart. They are
now working on signage to be
placed there. They also would
like to work on the history of
the railroad and depot to be
displayed there.
Members will be taking
cookies to the high school on
Sunday, July 17th for the GAPP
kids.
All enjoyed a delicious pot
luck supper and visiting.
The next regular trail meeting will be August 10, 2016 at
the depot at 7:00 p.m.
1/2 point decides
bridge match
At the July 13 duplicate
bridge match in Garnett Tom
Peavler and Mary Margaret
Thomas edged Charles and
Peggy Carlson by half a
point for first place. Steve
Brodmerkle and Anita Dennis
edged Lynda Feuerborn and
Faye Leitch by half a point for
third.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all
bridge players Wednesdays at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary & Birth Announcements Business News
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-19-2016 / File Photo
In 1986, Garnett High School FFA officers were, front row from left, Phil Scheckel, Laura Reed and Wes Rocker; back row: State President
Mary Wilson of Oberlin, Byron Cahoon and Mark Rickabaugh, advisor. The group was attending the 27th Annual State FFA Leadership
Camp.
2006: PBC recommends county build new jail
July 18, 2006
Anderson Countys Public
Building Commission formally
proposed the construction of
new jail facilities in Garnett,
and recommended to county
commissioners that financing
be approached half on the basis
of sales tax and half on property
taxes. The former jail research
committee met Monday to elect
officers and formally initiate itself as a Public Building
Commission after a county resolution last week. The recommendation also directed that
the facility entail jail, 911 dispatch and sheriffs department
services under one roof.
City, county and school district leaders gave fresh approval in recent weeks to a special
state program that grants tax
rebates to people who build or
renovate business structures
or homes in certain areas of
the county, but the program
has had no interest from developers through the first half of
2006.
Though leases with area
landowners for a possible wind
farm were renewed in March
for the third consecutive year,
the prospects of developing
fields of giant windmills to generate electricity in southeast
Anderson County dont appear
any closer now than they did
two years ago. Company officials with TradeWind Energy
of Lenexa say a local wind farm
depends on the likelihood that
Kansas City Power and Light
will purchase power once available. That assurance has yet to
come.
Theyre just looking for a
place to skateboard, but nobody
with a smooth grade of concrete
wants them around. Thats the
plight a group of teenage skateboarders in Garnett is facing
this summer as they go about
trying to convince city leaders to build a skateboard park
somewhere on city property.
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
July 15, 1996
Anderson
County
Commissioners may decide
today whether to contract a
Topeka company to provide
the countys ambulance service, separating it from the
Anderson County Hospital for
the first time since the service
began. After July 26, the hospital no longer will manage the
ambulance as a contractor to
the county unless a new contract is negotiated before then.
That ultimatum prompted commissioners to seek out a potential ambulance contractor a
few weeks ago.
The City of Garnett and local
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail supporters are hoping a reward
will bring to light information
as to who destroyed $800-$900 in
lighting on the trail early last
week. Officers caught one vandal, who admitted shooting out
one of the lights with a slingshot, supposedly by accident.
The youth, in his early teens, is
not believed to be responsible
for the remainder of the damage.
July 21, 1986
Anderson County Hospital
recently has been put on the
route of a MEDIQ van carrying
a computerized tomography
scanner. The scanner is more
commonly called a CAT scan
and is a special kind of X-ray
machine that produces a two-dimensional picture of a specific
part of the body. The MEDIQ
van is based in Emporia and
is there for three days of the
week. The other towns on the
route are Eureka, Garnett and
Kansas City. It started coming
to Garnett in May 1986.
Anderson
County
Commissioners are currently considering discontinuing
the countys $3,261 per year
membership in Mid-America
Inc., a southeast Kansas economic development organiza-
Suttons Jewelry
207 S. Main Downtown Ottawa
(785) 242-3723
www.suttonsjewelryinc.com
2×3
woodson
coop
Food
Games
Prizes
Backpacks
& Supplies
Church of the Nazarene 258 W. Park Road Garnett
If you need more info. or need a ride, call 785-448-3208
co
100% PREPAY, Book Now for this winter delivery
(Oct. – Mar.) at only $1.19/gallon.
Fill up this summer at our
Summer Fill Blowout price of $.99/gallon.
Call us at Woodson County COOP
620-625-3151
Pharmacy
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
Join us July 25-29
5:30 – 6:00 p.m. (meal)
& 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. VBS
like no other!
Woodson County COOP
620-625-3151
Health Services
3×6.5 D I R E C T O R Y
Eye Care
Come help us kick off VBS with our Back-2-School Bash
Sunday, July 24th 6-8 p.m.
tion. Commissioners were concerned that the countys money
was being paid to the organization but that the county has
of yet gained few benefits from
the payment.
July 20, 1916
Uncle Sam Patton and
Uncle Dan Doolin of Reeder
Township, the former 91
years of age and the latter a
mere youth of 83, were two of
Anderson Countys pioneers.
They came to Kansas 58 years
ago and are hale and hearty in
mind and body.
We will be closed on July 23rd
2×2 for our annual closing
for some renovations.
suttons
We will reopen on August 2nd.
health direction
2×2
diy
3×3
July
church of nazarene 25-29
THAT WAS THEN
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
Rehabilitation
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
To advertise in this
guide, contact Stacey
at The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
M-T-W-F
8-5
SAT 8-10
After Hours By Appt.
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
LOCAL
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
Newly listed: Nice 3 BR
home on 3/4 acre—-EDGE of
Lecompton! Do you like to sit
on a big porch and listen to
birds instead of neighbors?
Do you like to grow your own
food? If so, this home could be
for you. Located on the edge
of lecompton on 3/4 acre, this
home features 3 BR, 2 bath,
big front porch, many vegetable gardens, flower gardens,
fruit trees, etc. Home also has
a wood stove in addition to
Central heat/air. Live the Self
Sustained Lifestyle you have
been dreaming about!! $132,000
Contact Darrell Mooney at Pia
Friend Realty. 785-393-3957.
More pictures at www.piafriend.com
**ap26**
2 Oil Leases – for sale, located
in Sec. 15 & 16 Twp. 20S-Range
20E Anderson County, KS.
Approximately 7BBLs/Day,
developmental locations. Call
Martin Oil Properties (405) 8404700.
jy19t4
Built in 1901 – by the town
Banker, this 3-4 bedroom,
3 bath Victorian is located at 906 Liberty in charming Oskaloosa. Wrap around
porch, new kitchen, new baths,
new siding, pcket dors, stained
glass windows, original woodwork, auxiliary wood furnace,
full dry basement, fireplace,
garage and much more. Home
has been renovated from top
to bottom in the last 8 years.
30 minutes to Lawrence and
Topeka. Dont miss this chance
of a lifetime to own this timeless beauty! See pictures at
www.piafriend.com. Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty,
(785) 393-3957.
**ap12**
schulte
1×3
1×3
1×2
goodell
Truck Driver / Operator Class A CDL required. Need to
be able to do both. Tom Adams
Construction, apply at 23867
NW 2000 Road, Garnett. jn21tf
HELP WANTED
A leader in the healthcare
1×2
industry, Genesis HealthCare
is now hiring at Richmond
Healthcare and Rehabilitation
ADlocated in Richmond, KS
Center
Concrete work – steps, patios and drvexs. Foundation
repairs. Rock and block. Room
additions. (785) 304-3766. jy19t3*
Printing: Business cards, custom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
CNAs – All shifts
Dietary Aides part time evenings
Day Cook – full time
We offer competitive
compensation, medical, dental,
vision benefits, 401K, vacation
time, growth opportunity
and more.
Apply online:
www.genesishcc.com
Email:
chasidee.stark@genesishcc.com
EEO/AA, M/F, Vet, Disabled
SERVICES
Piano Lessons – Experienced
teacher. (913) 755-2350. jy12t7
2×2
patteron truck-
Saturday, July 30, 2016 9 a.m.
800-981-6179
Their Price
Our Price
Celebrex
$
Celecoxib*
$
Typical US Brand Price for
200mg x 100
Generic equivalent of CelebrexTM
Generic price for 200mg x 100
TM
910.20
SERVICES
1×3
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
MAKE MONEY
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!!
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Looking for work?
2x4focus
Focus Workforces is currently seeking Order
Selectors for a Gardner KS Distribution Center.
1st Shift Available:
Sunday-Wednesday
7am-5:30pm
2nd Shift Available:
Wednesday-Saturday
7am-5:30pm
Pay up to
10.50/hr
$
1876 1400 Street, Iola, KS 66749
Seller: Allen Community College
We are seeking to interview and hire motivated candidates who
possess the desire to work, the motivation to show up to work
on time and work their entire shift. We are seeking individuals
who can commit to work. We are seeking candidates who value
commitment, candidates who will give 100% day in and day out!
Both homes were built in the mid to late 90s.
Farm items & equipment will also be auctioned.
www.workatfocus.com
(913) 230-9479
2×2
240 acresallen
more or lessco
with 2 homes, 2 large
kpa
wood frame metal buildings & storm shelter.
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
Allen County Auction Service
See our website for more details www.allencountyauction.com or www.kansasauctions.net.
Apply online:
Allen County Realty, Inc.
Phone – (620) 365-3178
Finding Senior Housing can be complex,
but it doesnt have to be.
Call A Place for Mom. Our Advisors are trusted, local experts
who can help you understand your options. Since 2000, weve
helped over one million families find senior living solutions that
meet their unique needs.
76.67
Get An Extra $15 Off & Free Shipping On Your 1st Order!
(800) 735-9914
Call the number below and save an additional $15 plus get free shipping on your first prescription order with Canada Drug Center. Expires
September 30, 2016. Offer is valid for prescription orders only and can not be used in conjunction with any other offers. Valid for new
customers only. One time use per household. Use code 15FREE to receive this special offer.
Call Now! 800-981-6179
LPNs & RNs – All Shifts
Now Hiring Class A CDL Drivers
Joe Borntreger
You can save up to 93% when you fill
your prescriptions with our Canadian and
International prescription service.
Lenders Offering $0 Down
for Landowners Roll your New
Home and Land Improvements
into One Package. Discount
National Pricing on Breeze
II Doublewide and our 60th
Anniversary
Singlewide.
Trade-ins Welcome!! 866-8586862
Team/Solo – Terminal to Terminal Drop and Hook
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Are You Still Paying
Too Much For Your
Medications?
SERVICES
Part-time – maintenance/
remodeler needed in Garnett.
(913) 669-9599.
jy19t2
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Tina ext. 301 or Lori ext. 303
1-800-926-6869.
Driver Trainees Needed!
Become a driver for Stevens
Transport! Earn $800 Per Week
paid CDL training! Stevens covers all costs! 1-888-749-2303 drive4stevens.com
Part-time cook and waitress
needed. Call (785) 448-5856.
jy12t4*
Needed – Direct Support
Worker to work for an individual with a developmental disability in the Garnett KS area.
Must be at least 18 years of age.
Call Susan at 620-421-5502 to
receive a DSW DD application
in the mail.
jn28t4
JB Construction
2×2
jb const
HELP WANTED
PUBLIC AUCTION
2 bedroom – very clean, central heat and AC, garage, $525/
month. (785) 418-5435.
jy19tf
MOBILE HOMES
2×4
edgecomb
A Place for Mom is the nations largest senior living referral information service. We do not own, operate,
endorse or recommend any senior living community. We are paid by partner communities, so our services
are completely free to families.
Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid prescription is
required for all prescription medication orders.
Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.
Looking for work?
2×4
focus
Focus Workforces is currently seeking
Warehouse Associates that can perform
a variety of job duties and functions at
an Ottawa KS Distribution Center.
2×4
qsi
Shifts: Days/Evenings/Weekends
We are looking for candidates who
possess the desire and the ability
to work in a fast-paced
environment.
If you are driven and ready for
a new challenge, we want to
interview you!
Pay up to
10.50/hr
$
LEONARD & ANNOR LEMMON ESTATE AUCTION
Saturday, July 23 9 a.m. 903 S. Wilson St. Ft. Scott, KS
Apply at:
www.workatfocus.com
or in person at
1301 N. Davis Rd., Ottawa KS
Call (785) 832-7000
The following antique engines, tractors, farm related equipment and antiques plus shop and tools will be offered
at Public Auction located at 903 South Wilson, St., Fort Scott, KS. Go east at 12th Street and 69 Highway, curve
north at station then cross RR tracks then north or left at Vet clinic. Follow signs.
BEST SALE OF THE YEAR!
HUGE AUCTION OF SINGLE CYLINDER ENGINES, ANTIQUES,
TRACTORS, SALVAGE IRON & PRIMITIVES
INTERNATIONAL SAW RIG – SINGLE CYLINDER ENGINES – MAYTAG ENGINE MAGNETOS – GAS ENGINE PARTS – VINTAGE TRUCKS – 3 OUTBOARD MOTORS
– COLLECTIBLE TRACTORS – Restored 1939 JD D with new rubber; 1942 M war
tractor Farmall restored; Restored 1950 model C Allis-Chalmers; 8 N Ford; B JD
with round spoke wheels on rubber (11 splined wheels) styled front end; WD 45
Allis Chalmers with narrow front, need assembled (being restored); F20 Farmall on
rubber; 1937 A John Deere unstyled; Farmall regular; JD B (parts only); C Farmall
restorable; Massey Harris no rubber; F-12 IH with original cultivator; H Farmall.
TRACTOR PARTS – 2 VINTAGE GARDEN TRACTORS – MANURE SPREADER FARM EQUIPMENT- VINTAGE RADIATORS- WINCHELL MOWER – VINTAGE BOX
WAGON – CORN PLANTERS – ANTIQUES – WOODWORKING TOOLS – SHOP &
TOOLS – TIRES – TRANSIT – ELECTRIC MOTORS – TRAILERS – CARPORT & METAL
BUILDING – GENERATOR – MISCELLANEOUS
June 10th through July 31st
2x4ALL JONSERED RIDERS!
42 – 54 Tractor Mowers $100 OFF!
42 – 61 Zero Turns $200 – $400 OFF!
hecks
Our Best Pricing on Jonsered Tillers, Push Mowers,
High-Wheeled String Trimmers
Check out our stock of pre-owned mowers!
OUR BEST DEAL – Country Clippers Top ZTR
Boss XL 27 hp. – 60 Reg. $10,200 SALE $9,500
0% Financing Available!
Mon. – Fri. 8 a.m. – 6 p.m.
Sat. By Appt.
785-893-1620
Hecks Small Engine Repair
25952 NW Barton Rd.
Westphalia
2×6 marty reed
2×4
kpa insurance
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This is a lifetime collection of the Lemmons. Mr. Lemmon was
the Fire Chief of Ft. Scott for many years and his knowledge and collection of tractors
and engines were well known in the vintage engine community.
Terms: Not responsible for accidents. Verbal statements made day of sale take precedence over written material.
For full listing and pictures visit: www.kansasauctions.net
Sale conducted by:
Marty and Beverly Read
Charley Johnson & Marvin Swickhammer,
Assistant Auctioneers
Mound City, KS 66056 913-795-2508
Real Estate, Antique, Farm, Livestock & Commercial
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
LOCAL
How much junk…
…is in your trunk?
Place your ad to sell your items today!
5B
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EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
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P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
AUTOS
2007 Chevy Impala – excellent
condition, 75,000 miles, $7,500,
(785) 304-1168.
jy12t3*
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
BOATS
FARM & AG
ADOPTION
16 ft. Starcraft – 75 Evinrude
engine and trailer. (785) 4486219.
jy19t1*
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or mor trees. Call (916) 232-6781
in St. Joseph for details. dc8tf
We are praying for a newborn to love. Open hearted, loving couple wishing you would
call… Authorized Medical &
legal expenses paid. Call Lisa &
Frank 1-855-236-7812
MISCELLANEOUS
Ultimate
Bundle
from
DirectTv & AT&T. 2-Year Price
Guarantee -Just $89.99/month
(TV/fast internet/phone) Free
Whole-Home Genie HD-DVR
Upgrade. New Customers Only.
Call Today 1-800-261-7086
Life Alert. 24/7. One press
of a button sends help FAST!
Medical, Fire, Burglar. Even
if you cant reach a phone!
FreeBrochure. Call 800-605-3619
Sawmills from only $4397.00make & Save Money with your
own bandmill- Cut lumber any
dimension. In stock ready to
ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.
NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800578-1363 Ext.300N
FOR SALE:
1x2Brand 3-Wheeler
Drive
for older adults. New
coons
batteries. Can cost
$700 to $1000 new.
Bought in April 2015.
Asking $500 O.B.O.
Little John Sherwood
Farm
1×2& Greenhouse
785-835-7057
You name it,
Call for Availability.
we print it.
Happiness is… Having your
pet groomed by Sandy. (620)
852-3068.
jy5t3*
Extended Hours: Tues – Sat: 7am – 7pm
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Happiness is… Garnett Area
Community Band Concert Courthouse Square, Northside,
Thursday, July 21, 7:00 pm. In
case of rain, concert, Methodist
Church.
jy12t12
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
2×3
frontier exten
EXTENSION AGENT, Nutrition, Food Safety and
Health opportunity in Frontier Extension District.
Primary office in Garnett. Other offices in Ottawa and
Lyndon. See www.ksre.k-state.edu/jobs/ for
responsibilities, qualifications and application procedure.
Application Deadline: 8/8/2016.
K-State Research and Extension is an EOE of
individuals with disabilities and protected veterans.
Background check required.
ESTATE & REAL ESTATE
PETS
ESTATE OF: ROBERT H. MOORE, SR.
FARM & AG
1×4
STILES
AUCTION
Tues., July 26, 2016 | STARTS @ 9:17 A.M.
Location: Osage County Fairgrounds | Pawhuska, OK
TRUCKS, STORAGE BLDGS., MOWER &
WOODWORKING TOOLS, GUNS & COINS,
FURNITURE, ANTIQUES & HOUSEHOLD,
GAS PUMP & 400+ Porcelain signs
Running 2-3 Auction Rings! Auction Inside A/C Building
1×3
AD
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
Directions: From Kum & Go in Pawhuska, Ok take Hwy 11/99 south 2 miles to Skyline Dr. Take Skyline
Dr west mile, auction on right in AG Building.
Auctioneers Note: Dont miss this once in a lifetime auction! Lots and lots of nice porcelain signs you
dont want to miss! Dont overlook the nice woodworking tools ready to go to work. Real Estate will be
sold at noon followed by storage bldgs, vehicles, guns then coins. Come out and enjoy this indoor/air
conditioned auction! For pics visit www.chuppsauction.
TERMS: Cash Credit Cards Check with Proper ID OK Sales Tax Applies unless exemption is shown.
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS. ANY ANNOUNCEMENTS DAY OF SALE SUPERSEDES
PREVIOUS ADVERTISING.
LIVING ESTATE AUCTION
Saturday, July 23, 2016 10:00 a.m.
1937 Old 50 Hwy. Ottawa, KS
WATCH FOR SIGNS.
2×5
The McCurdys are offering 3 large items w/reserves & selling
everything else-absolute auction. Running 2 rings.
Brandon
Otto
KUBOTA RTV, KUBOTA Z-TURN MOWER, HONDA TRIKE
All 3 – 1 owner, well-maintained, w/reserves–Kubota RTV 900XT, PS, 4×4, D, VHT, hydr
dump bed w/wood extenders, canopy, grill guard, hitch, 170 hrs; Kubota ZD326S ZT Pro 60
comm grade, 26hp, 60 deck, D, 244 hrs; 04 Honda Goldwing 1800GL trike w/2-whl trailer,
cover, 42k mi.
TRAILERS, OUTDOOR & LAWN/YARD MISC.
6×10 single axle trailer w/2dt & 3 fold-up ramp, newer & nice; 2 whl trailers; 4 wh PT
wagon; Craftsman 26 snow blower; 2-whl PT lawn/dump cart; Stihl MS180C chainsaw;
20gal PT sprayer; nice yard art incl implements & statuary; Brinkmann BBQ.
SHOP EQUIPMENT, TOOLS
Generator 5000w; Lincoln AC-225-S welder; PowerMate 4hp, 20gal air comp; Craftsman
10 table saw & radial arm saw; drill press; cut-off mach on stand; OH elec hoist; fans; vises;
ladders; many clamps; 2pt Craftsman tool box; hand & power tools; many organizers.
COLLECTIBLES
Large Coca Cola collection; large Barbie collection; many Hallmark ornaments; fireman
lamp; trains & track sets; John Wayne; remote-control vehicles; R,W &B dcor; glassware
incl depression; oil lamps; pool table lights; primitives incl NIRA #50 CI stove.
FURNITURE & HOUSEHOLD
Black leather elec recliner; sm roll top desk; Lane cedar chest; elec lift chair; kitchen table
& chairs; piano stool; 2 sm combo safes; kitchenware; china sets; sm appliances; Singer
treadle machine; rugs; lamps; bedding; Nordic Track TRL 625 bike & ProForm Trainer XP 580
treadmill; shelves & totes; much Christmas; more items & pictures on website.
Marvin & Sheila McCurdy, owners
Branden Otto, auctioneer 913-710-7111
www.ottoauctioneering.com
2×4
kpa morton
HORSE BARN | RIDING ARENA | HAY STORAGE
A Commitment to Quality
Morton Buildings understands that safety & quality are the most
important factors when constructing a horse facility. Thats why
we manufacture many of our own components, including stalls.
Eight offices serving Kansas
800-447-7436
mortonbuildings.com
Saturday, July 23, 2016 9:30 a.m.
Paul and Diane Brazil
1407 South Lincoln St. LaHarpe, KS
2×4
From Highway 54 & 2200 Rd., turn south, go to Nebraska Rd.,
e east,
boones
turn
go to Lincoln St., go south to sale site, or from
As we are moving and will be offering the following items at auction:
OPEN HOUSE
Tuesday, July 26
11 a.m. – 1 p.m.
2×4
105 N. Oak Garnett
Refres
hm
Serve ents
d
schulte Beautiful Historic Victorian home –
located in the heart of the small historic
town. Totally renovated throughout
with top of the line finishes. Welcoming
wrap-around porch. The awesome foyer
is just a glimpse of warm welcome you
will feel in each & every room of the
house. Stunning staircase. Lv rm/fireplace.
Formal dining rm. Magnificent kitchen
with granite counter tops, lots
of cabinets with easy slide pull-outs.
Also with a butlers pantry. Breakfast rm
w/lots of windows. 24×48 2 story coach
house garage/shop. Fabulous finished
basement/fireplace, w/bar. Lots of
storage. $249,900.
Carla Walter, Broker
(785) 448-7658
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th, Garnett
Visit our informative website at:
www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all
MLS listings & more.
2012 Morton Buildings, Inc. Morton Buildings is a
registered trademark of Morton Buildings, Inc. All
rights reserved. A listing of GC licenses available at
mortonbuildings.com/licenses.aspx. REF CODE 043.
800-447-7436 mortonbuildings.com
PUBLIC AUCTION
TRAILERS: 1998 Shasta LLT 20 ft. travel trailer; GOLF
CARTS: SAFES: LOADER: Pasquali loader; STORAGE
SHEDS: BUILDING MATERIAL: TOOLS AND
EQUIPMENT: SPORTING: LAWN & GARDEN:
FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES: HOUSEHOLD:
MISC: NOTE: A lot of items have not been seen to
be listed, surprises the day of sale.
For complete sale bill and pictures, check websites:
kansasauctions.net/boone or kansasauctioneers.com
E. Boone Auctions
Eric Boone
620-625-3246 cell: 620-496-6312
E-Mail: eboone60@hotmail.com
KOFO
1220 AM
An Understanding of Horses
Stan Chupp | (918) 638-1157
Dale Chupp, Realtor | Century 21, NEOKLA (918) 630-0495
E. J. Chupp | (918) 639-8555
DAILY
at 8 a.m.
1×2
AD
785-448-3121
CHUPPS AUCTION CO.
Highway 54, & Main St. in LaHarpe, turn south on Main St.,
go to 15 St., turn west, go to Lincoln St. Parking will be limited
on Lincoln St., parking will be available at the cemetery and a
shuttle will run from the cemetery to sale site. Watch for signs.
Happiness is… Winning $100
in the Reviews video contest to
promote the Anderson County
Fair Carnival Aug. 2-6. See
story in July 19 paper or our
Facebook page for details.
jy19t3
Happiness is… Having a great
91st birthday at Tradewinds.
The service was wonderful.
The Anderson
Thank you friends and family,
Review
Jo Maley.
jy19t1* 9:21 County
new.ads.multiple_Layout
1 10/10/12
AM Page 4
For full item list, more info & pictures visit
www.ChuppsAuction.com
Anderson
County
news
HAPPY ADS
LITTLE
U-Pick Blackberries
785-433-1328
Shih Tzu Puppies – shots and
wormed, males, $300, females,
$350. (785) 733-2699.
jy12t3*
Happiness is… Lazer Tag
Tournament!
August
6,
6pm-10pm.
Garnett
Rec
Center. All ages. Sponsored by
Anderson County Republican
Central Committee.
jy19t3
2×4
AD
6B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, July 19, 2016
Colony UMW to serve refreshments to GAPP
Calendar
July 18-Seekers Not Slackers
4-H Club, Lone Elm Community
building, 7 p.m.; 19-Story Hour,
City Hall Community Room,
20-11 a.m.; Library board meeting, City Hall, 5:30 p.m. 20-Lions
Club, United Methodist Church
basement, 7 p.m.; 21-County
bus to Iola, phone 24 hrs. before
you need a ride. 785-448-4410
any weekday.
Meal Site
15-taco salad, black bean
and corn salad, lettuce, tortilla chips, jello with cranberry sauce; 18-Salisbury steak,
mashed potatoes, spinach
salad, wheat bread, pears;
20-Birthday meal-fried chicken
breast; mashed potatoes, gravy,
green beans, roll, cake and ice
cream. Phone 620-852-3457 for
meal reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented July 10
church service was John 11:4512:11. Pastor Andrew Zolls sermon A Prediction, A Feast, A
Gift. Cross Training Classes at
9:30 a.m. each Sunday. Mens
Bible Study Tuesday Morning,
7 a.m.; Hidden Haven Camp
started June 5. Aug. 7-breakfast
at 9:30 a.m. in the church basement.
UMW
The monthly meeting was
held July 7 in fellowship hall of
the United Methodist Church.
Six members attended. Sue
Colgin opened with prayer and
The Purpose was read. Their
June and July challenge they
are working on is school supplies for Crest Middle School.
They are in need of business
rulers, glue, 2 in. binders,
3-hole note paper, individual
note books, compasses, highlighters, etc.
The group have offered to
serve refreshments to GAPP, a
gospel ministry, who will be in
Colony the week of July 17-23.
They are a group of over 13
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
teenagers and will camp out at
Crest School yard. They will
be repairing houses, caulking
windows, painting, building
ramps, etc. for the elderly and
handicapped. August challenge
is Undy Sunday which is collecting socks, t-shirts, etc. for
young school kids, both girls
and boys. A thank you was
received from Camp Chippewa
for the donation they had sent.
Debbie Wools presented
the lesson on mutuality.
Rely on God, Give and You
Shall Receive. She also served
refreshments. They will have
a block party August 13 at
which time the community
will be invited. Games will be
played, group singing held, and
hot dogs served in the United
Methodist church yard.
Upcoming Date
Labor Day is creeping up
on us all. Sept. 3 is an important date to get on your calendar as this is Colony Day!
The committee has chosen the
theme Cherished Memories
for this year. Much more will
be planned as the committee
works to give all another funfilled day of celebrating!
Weather Alert
Colony residents who
wish to get National Weather
Service severe weather warnings by phone via the countys
Code Red system should register online at www.andersoncountyks.org, click Public safety/emergency management,
or pick up registration forms
at the Colony City Office. You
must be registered to receive
the severe weather warnings
by landline or cell phone. For
more information contact AC
Emergency Management at
785-448-6797.
Huge Yard Sale
The yard sale held July 8
and 9 in Iola for our Crest student, Gregory Hardwick went
very well.
He now will be able to attend
the Inauguration Leadership
Summit Jan. 18-22, 2017 in
Washington, D.C. for which he
has worked so hard. He not
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-12-2016 / Photo courtesy Angie Black
Seth Black and his daughter, Ridley, Colony Pigtails pitcher, are
shown during a tournament at Blue Mound July 8 and 9. Coach
Seth Black said: I know there isnt a coach out there that is more
proud of his girls team than I am. Colony Pigtail Girls, you rocked
this year. We went into tournament with a .500 record, played our
first game with seven players and played four of the best softball
games you could ask for and came away with 3rd place. Also a big
thank you to the parents for being so supportive of our team.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 7-12-2016 / Allene Luedke
A father/son team from Ottawa entertained the Story Hour group July 5 at the Colony City Hall
Community Room. They asked the group of 18 children and two high school helpers to join them in
some percussion magic. The children participated well and enjoyed it very much. Charlene Tinsley
served brownies and juice at the close of the meeting.
only reached his goal but after
he met it, the sale opened up
with the message HE MET
HIS GOAL EVERYTHING IS
NOW FREE. Not only did
Gregory benefit, as the community did also.
Gregory is so appreciative of
his uncles, Colony Community
Church, Billie Thompson and
her family and everyone who
donated their time, items, monetary donations and shoppers.
Around Town
Leonard and Debbie Wools
spent a two-night weekend
stay (a vacation she won at
last years Colony Day celebration) on July 9 and 10. They
also invited their children and
grandchildren for the weekend.
Fourth of July guests of
Dennis and Cathy Allen were
Denny and Kerry Allen, Kaylee,
Aubrey, Grady, Lynnex and
Jorden, Denise and Kenton
King, Blaine and Easton, all
of Colony; Phyllis Shetlar, Iola
and Leroy Chadwick, Seattle,
Washington.
Notice to settle Galey estate Notice of adoption petition Notice of SEK Library
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, July 12, 2016
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
THOMAS F. GALEY, Deceased.
Case No. 16-PR 20
NOTICE OF HEARING AND NOTICE TO
CREDITORS THE STATE OF KANSAS TO
ALL PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that:
1. A petition has been filed in this court
by Michelle Cunningham, one of the heirs
at law of the decedent, praying that she be
appointed administrator of this estate under
the Kansas Simplified Estates Act, the amount
of administrators bond be fixed and Letters of
Administration issue to her.
2. Under the provisions of the Kansas
Simplified Estates Act, the court need not
supervise administration of this estate, and no
notice of any action of the administrator will be
given, except for the sale of real estate and final
settlement of the estate.
3. If written objections to simplified admin-
istration are filed with the court, the court may
order that supervised administration ensue.
4. You are required to file your written
defenses thereto on or before August 8 2016,
at 9:00 a.m. in the district court in Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail
therein, judgment and decree will be entered in
due course upon the said petition.
5. All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i) four months from
the date of the first publication of this notice as
provided by law or (ii) thirty days after actual
notice was given as provided by law to those
creditors whose identity is known or reasonably
ascertainable; and if their demands are not thus
exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
MICHELLE CUNNINGHAM Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St. – P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
jy12t3
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
(First Published in the Anderson County
Review, July 19, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION
OF Heath A. Shaw and Margaret O. Shaw
to adoption of Baby Boy, (05/31/2016) ,
A Minor Child.
Case No. 2016 AD 300
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a
Petition has been filed in the Anderson County
District Court praying for an Order and Decree
of said Court that the petitioners be permitted
and authorized to adopt Baby Boy (05/31/2016)
as their own child; that an Order and Decree of
Adoption of the said child by the petitioners be
made and entered by said Court; that the name
of the child upon adoption by these petitioners
be changed; and that petitioners have all other
proper relief; and you are hereby required to file
your written defenses thereto on or before the
22nd day of August, 2016,2016 at 9:00 oclock
a.m., of said day, in said Court, in the Anderson
County Courthouse in the City of Gardner,
Kansas, at which time and place said cause
will be heard before Judge Godderz. Should
you fail thereof, judgment and decree will be
entered in due course upon said Petition.
System 2017 budget
(Published in the Anderson County Review, July 19, 2016)
Heath A. Shaw and Margaret O. Shaw
NICHOLSON, DASENBROCK & HARTLEY,
LC
By: Geri L. Hartley
Supreme Court No. 24182
26 W. Peoria, P. O. Box 407
Paola, Kansas 66071
Telephone: (913) 294-4512
Facsimile: (913) 294-2540
geri@kslegalcounsel.com
Attorneys for petitioners
jy19t3
jy19t1
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary & Birth Announcements Business News
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B
R
Benjamin Realty
Sherry Benjamin,Broker
REALTOR
Office: (785) 448-2550
Home: (785) 241-0532
Cell: (785) 304-2029
DOWNTOWN LOCATION
114 W. 4th, Garnett
(785) 448-6191
(800) 530-5971
downtown@garnettrealestate.com
Scott Schulte, Broker
(785) 448-5351
Delton Hodgson (785) 448-6118
Ron Ratliff
(785) 448-8200
Bob
Umbarger (785) 448-5905
Beth Mersman (785) 448-7500
Alberta Bishop (785) 448-7534
Carol Barnes
(785) 448-5300
Mary
Lizer
(785) 448-3238
Donna Morris
(913) 731-2456
SERVING OUR COMMUNITY
Michelle Ware
(785) 214-8489
Cris Anderson
(785) 304-1591
FOR 50 YEARS
Pam Ahring
(785) 204-2405
Marlo Kimzey
(913) 980-3267
Visit our informative website at www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all MLS listings & more.
GLOSSY 4-COLOR PRINTING
BROCHURES, FLYERS, BOOKLETS,
MAGAZINES + MORE
Land Homes Commercial
201 N. Maple
Garnett, Ks 66032
benjaminrealty@earthlink.net
HIGHWAY LOCATION
213 S. Maple, Garnett
(785) 448-6200
(866) 448-6258
hwy@garnettrealestate.com
AFFORDABLE HOME LOANS
To be added to this
once-a-month real estate guide
Call Stacey at (785) 448-3121.
Carla (Schulte) Walter, Broker
(785)
448-7658
GARNETT PUBLISHING INC:
ADMIN@GARNETT-KS.COM | PHONE: (785) 448-3121 | (800) 683-4505

