Anderson County Review — June 23, 2020
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from June 23, 2020. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
FINAL WEEK!
NEW HAMMERHEAD FOR 6-23
Se e d
e
on P t ails
ag e 6
B
Enter to win a 50-inch Smart TV! Register at our sponsor locations or with the sign-up slips on last weeks ads.
O N E M E A S I LY U . S . D O L L A R
June 23, 2020
Probitas, virtus,
integritas in summa.
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
KS,KS,
and
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,
and
communities.
E-statements & Internet Banking
www.garnett-ks.com |
SINCE 1865
(785) 448-3121
Member FDIC Since 1899
155th Year, No. 28
| review@garnett-ks.com
(785) 448-3111
Pipeline project enriches, stresses local landfill
More business means
more money, but staff is
struggling to keep up
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Dont expect a free dump
week at the Anderson County Landfill
this fall, because trash collection volumes have gone up so much due to the
local pipeline project and other business changeovers, county officials say
they cant spare the staff for the week-
long event.
The upside is, at $22 per ton, the
landfill is likely generating more revenue than it ever has at least temporarily.
County landfill manager Scott
Garrett said last week the sharp
increases in landfill volume in recent
months had been all the staff could
keep up with. It was disappointing
news for Garnett city staff and commissioners at the commission meeting earlier this month, when city
manager Chris Weiner told commissioners an increase of 30 percent in
residential trash and 50 percent in
commercial material had resulted in
the county cancelling its twice-annual
free dump promotions.
Garrett said the increase in volume
had not only bumped up the quantities of trash and materials that had
to be handled, but it also completely altered the landfills regular work
flow.
When I first started out here you
could just about set your watch by it,
Garrett said. Now its pretty much a
free-for-all.
Commercial disposals spiked due
to the handling of slurry produced
by the Southern Star project a water,
muck and chemical combined byproduct of channel boring procedures. The
material has to be dumped in a certified landfill. Garrett said 3-4 of the
30,000-40,000 pound loads arrive every
hour during the landfills operating
day.
In addition, Garrett said the purchase of Green Environmental
Services, a rural trash pickup company based in Erie, to competitor Ottawa
Sanitation had bumped up Anderson
Countys residential trash volumes
as well. Garrett said Green formerly
hauled its local customers trash back
to Erie, but Ottawa Sanitation brings
all its refuse to the local facility.
That company is one of about a
dozen commercial trash customers
that use the Anderson County Landfill
on a regular basis, Garrett said, in
addition to individual customers.
The facility took in 129 tons of
material the first of the week, he said,
in keeping with the facilitys average
of about 1 million pounds per month.
SEE LANDFILL ON PAGE 6A
Anderson County average
in residents census response
Local mostly pick hard
copy response over
online head count options
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WASHINGTON, D.C. Published
reports show Anderson County
residents are a little ahead of the
national average in responding to
the 2020 Federal Census, but a little behind Kansas as a whole.
The U.S. Census Bureau maintains the figures on an internet
website for every county in the
nation plus Puerto Rico to measure
the current responses from resi-
dents in those areas. The aggregate
numbers show the nations overall
embrace of the idea of the federal
census, which state and local officials reiterate is critical for those
jurisdictions to receive billions of
dollars in federal assistance payments over the decade-long period
between U.S. head counts.
Citizens had the opportunity
to respond to a hand-copy census
form mailed in mid March just
before the Covid-19 shutdown. The
form also provided an online completion option and census response
rates show both the total response
SEE RATES ON PAGE 6B
Community foundation seeks
donations for July 11 fireworks event
Earl and Becky Robinson of Cotuit, Mass., escaped injury
Wednesday when their single engine aircraft slid off the taxiway at Garnett Municipal Airport and was damaged. The two
County records new Covid-19 cases,
bringing percentage of infections to .00025
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Anderson County
notched two cases of Covid-19
last week, totalling three since
the pandemic began in March.
The countys first case finally came the second week of
May, nearly 60 days after the
pandemic began in mid-March.
That individual recovered. The
second two bring the county, with a population of 7,878
according to the U.S. Census
Bureau, to a 0.00025 infection
rate.
An update Friday from the
Kansas Department of Health
and Environment showed
12,091 cases reported in Kansas
with 254 deaths. Fourteen
counties in the state had zero
cases reported to date, and 43
had reported fewer than 10.
A press release from Rebecca
Johnson with the Southeast
SEE CASES ON PAGE 3A
City seeks info to discuss possible deal
with Chamber Players on new venue
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT City commissioners are entering talks with the
local community theater group
that might revive an indefinitely shelved plan for a new performing arts center in downtown Garnett.
City manager Chris Weiner
said talks with the Chamber
Players Community Theater
started in recent weeks, after
U.S. National Parks Service
officials told the city it would
have to replace public park
land that will be consumed
by a planned construction of
a new water treatment facility at Garnetts Chrystal
Lake Park. The U.S. National
Park Service maintains some
authority over Garnetts public
park land due to Depression
SEE LAND ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-23-2020 / PAM COX
were on a cross-country flight and were attempting to land in
Garnett for fuel. The incident was being investigated by federal
aviation officials.
GARNETT Organizers are planning a July 11 fireworks display
for the 2020 Garnett LibertyFest in
Lake Garnett Park, and are hoping
patriotic locals will ante up with
donations to help pay for the $5,000
show.
New this year will be a ceremony entitled Celebration Of
Service, honoring the 263 veterans that are part of the citys patriotic banner project.
Garnett
Community
Development Director Susan
Wettstein stressed the importance
of advance donations to the cause
in order to ensure the tradition
continues.
All donations are appreciated, Wettstein said. We will publicly recognize any organization
or business who donates through
announcements made at the event,
and by newspaper, website and
SEE FIREWORKS ON PAGE 2B
Dairy industry surviving Covid-19 effects
BY LACEY NEWLIN
THE HIGH PLAINS JOURNAL
DODGE CITY Restaurants
are starting to recover, many
grocery stores have stopped
limiting dairy product purchases and it appears most
states have reopened following the COVID-19 pandemic.
However, the dairy industry
has and will continue to recuperate from the impact of the
virus.
The industry celebrates
June as National Dairy Month
in the U.S., highlighting contributions and impacts of the
industry on food production,
health and the economy.
Farm Credit recently held
a webinar about COVID-19s
effects on the dairy industry,
which included financial professionals and dairy farmers
with their insights on the pandemic.
Amanda Durow, vice president and dairy specialist at
CoBank, said the coronavirus
caused a unique dilemma for
the dairy industry.
On the same day you saw
headlines that dairy farms
#OneLouder Mark Samsel
w e r e
dumping
tanker
loads
of
milk, grocery stores
w e r e
limiting
consumers with
how many
gallons
of
milk
they could
b u y ,
she said.
Dumping
milk
is
not a new
thing, and
its being
dumped
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-23-2020 / ARCHIVE PHOTO
at
some
level every Christy Ratliff of Ratliff Jerseys in Garnett poses with some of her stock for a 2018
month due feature article.Her career with dairy cattle started as a 4-H project.
to milks
seasonal
Ben Gingg is managing regions that was forced to
nature and the capacity of
processing plants. However, partner on a 4,000-cow and dump milk.
In our co-op, the first two
the amount of milk dumped in crop-farming operation called
Triple
G
Dairy
in
Buckeye,
weeks
of April, we dumped
April 2020 was unprecedentArizona. Unfortunately Triple
ed.
SEE EFFECTS ON PAGE 6A
G Dairy was in one of the
Paid for by Samsel for Kansas House, Nate Wiehl, TREASURER
State Representative #ForThePeople
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
RECORD
SENIOR CENTER BREAKFAST
Start Independence Day off with
a good breakfast. Join us at the
Senior Center, 128 W. 5th, for
our annual 4th of July Breakfast
at 8 a.m. Bring a breakfast item
and come join us.
FREE ATHLETIC PHYSICALS
The 2020-2021 athletic season will be here soon. Physical
Packets are now available at
the Board of Education (305 N.
Oak). All student-athletes planning to participate next school
year will need a new physical
dated May 1, 2020 or later prior
to being allowed to participate
in practice. FREE Physicals are
being offered by the Anderson
County Hospital – Family Care
Center on select dates. Call the
Family Care Center at 448-2674
and request a sports physical
only appointment.
TREASURERS OFFICE TO BE
CLOSED PART OF JUNE 25
The Anderson County Treasurers Office will be closed
from 9:45 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.
on Thursday, June 25, due to
a joint meeting with the State of
Kansas audit team.
ACHS GRADUATION JUNE 29
Due to changes in allowable
crowd size in the governors
Covid-19 recovery plan, high
school commencement in USD
365-Garnett has been moved
back to 8 p.m. on Monday, June
29, 2020, at the ACJSHS football
stadium, weather permitting.
CREST GRADUATION JUNE 27
A formal senior graduation ceremony will be held on June
27th @ 10:00 a.m. on the Crest
football field. The ceremony will
be conducted in compliance
with the standards of state and
local health departments, and
is subject to change based on
their guidelines.
SUICIDE AWARENESS
GROUP MEETINGS SET
SAM – Suicide Awareness
Members, a division of SASSMoKan – meets on the first
Tuesday of the month from
6:30-7:30 at the Anderson
County Hospital Conference
Room A&B located at 421 S.
Maple in Garnett. The facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols, who
may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Kansas VINE
is free and anonymous and
provides victims of crime and
the general public the ability to
search for an offender housed
in a county jail and receive
notifications.
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM
on June 15, 2020 at the County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Jerry Howarter, Present: David Pracht,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was recited.
Minutes from the previous meetings
were approved as presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission.
Discussion was held on making sure
the bus routes are maintained first in
inclement weather. Lester said they
are all done first but cannot get to
them all in the morning before school
begins. Its a 2 day process. Tom
Tush, Garnett, attended the meeting
to make the Commissioners aware of
roads and ditches that he feels need
to be maintained better.
Register of Deeds
Sandy Baugher, Register of Deeds,
met with the commission. She presented her 2021 budget which showed
no increase from the previous year.
Commissioner Howarter inquired
about e-filing of documents that the
Register of Deeds office records.
Sandy has done research and she
would have to purchase a stand-alone
machine (due to the Countys current
tax software) to input the information
which could cost up to $15,000. The
burden would be on the taxpayers and
she feels it is an unnecessary cost at
this time.
County Clerk
Julie Wettstein, County Clerk, met
with the commission. She gave a budget overview of the Clerk and Election
budgets. The only raise is in the Clerk
budget for a longevity raise. She presented other department and entity
budgets that have been submitted.
Solid Waste
Minnesota Limited, LLC, the company who is digging the pipeline for
Southern Star, requested to have the
Landfill to be open 24 hours to be able
to dump truckloads of slurry from their
drilling. The company will need to do
the 24 hour dumping 3 times. The
employee who works the 24 hours
shift will be paid straight time for
the week, overtime for extra hours
worked, and leave pay for the following day off. Commissioner McGhee
moved and Commissioner Pracht seconded to open 24 hours for Minnesota
Limited, LLC to dump slurry and pay
the Landfill employee straight time,
overtime, and leave pay. All voted yes.
LAND TRANSFERS
Randall S Kern and Kristina L Kern
to Clinton west Kern and Robin M
Kern: the s/2 of lot 23 and all of lot 24
in block 29 in the city of Greeley.
Woodland Springs LLC to John A
Ivey Trust Dated February 2, 2012:
the ne/4 of ne/4 of 33-20-19; and n/2
of the sw/4 of nw/4 and the nw/4 of the
nw/4 34-20-19, except a tract of land
in the ne/4 of 33-20-19 and in the nw/4
of 33-20-19, being more particularly
described as follows: commencing at
a 1/2 rebar at the ne corner of the
ne/4 of 33-20-19; thence s014746:
east for a distance of 401.15 feet along
the east line of said ne/4 to a 1/2
rebar at the pob; thence s761527
east for a distance of 252.10 feet to
a 1/2 rebar; thence s383639 east
for a distance of 225.12 feet to a 1/2
rebar; thence s512321 west for
a distance of 186.62 feet to a 1/2
rebar; thence n761527 west for a
distance of 237.04 feet to a 1/2 rebar
on the east line of the ne/4 of said
section 33; thence n761527 west
for a distance of 656.71 feet to a 1/2
rebar; thence n170625 east for a
distance of 285.76 feet to a 1/2 rebar;
thence s761527 east for a distance
of 560.62 feet to the pob. also except
a tract of land in the ne/4 of 33-2019and in the nw/4 of 34-20-19, being
more particularly described as follows:
commencing at the ne corner of the
Hair Color, Perms,
ANGIE
DEAN
certified
Shampoo & Style,
m
specializin anicurist & pedic
u
g in diab
Haircuts,
etic care, rist,
toenail b
ingrown
racing, g
eriatric
Deep Conditioning
shelac na
ils. (913) pedicure,
526-5184
Treatments, Facial Waxing.
Featuring products by:
F
LHOF
E
G
E
IKI
8629
N
48(785) 4 icures
ed
P
Nails,
Hair
785-448-2186
501 S. Oak, Garnett Lori Beckman – Owner
2×3
Agency West
205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
Our
Ottawa
Office:
Our Ottawa
office:
Sheri
Agent
HannahLickteig,
Morgan, Agent
427
Main
Ottawa
427 S S.Main
St. St.Ottawa
(785)
521-2030
785-521-2030
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker, Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
ne/4 of section 33; thence s882517
west 458.59 feet to a 1/2 rebar and
the true pob; thence s882517 west
858.37 feet to teh nw corner of the
ne/4 of the ne/4 of said section 33;
thence s014534 east 1329.58 feet
to the sw corner of said ne/4 of the
ne/4 of section 33; thence n883011
east 1318.82 feet to the se corner of
the ne/4 of the ne/4 of said section
33, thence entering section 34-2019 on a bearing of n200002 east
614.74 feet to an existing 1/2 iron bar;
thence n761533 west 894.17 feet
(893.73 deed); thence n170625
east 285.76 fee; thence n161226
east 265.55 feet to the pob. and the
e/2 of the sw/4 of the sw/4; the se/4
of the nw/4 of the sw/4; the w/2 of the
sw/4 of the ne/4 of the sw/4; and all
that part of the e/2 of the sw/4 of the
ne/4 of the sw/4 lying west of cedar
creek, in 27-20-19.
Scott Cooper and Terri B Cooper
to James F Mccourt and Laurel A
Mccourt: Beginning at the nw corner
of lot 23 in block 38 in the city of
Garnett, thence east 10 feet, thence
south 50 feet, thence east 30 feet,
thence south 90 feet, thence west 40
feet, thence north 140 feet to the pob,
being a part of lot 23 in said block 38
in the city of Garnett.
Larry W Heck Co Trustee and Gary
W Heck Co Trustee and Duane A
Heck Co Trustee and Raymond W
Heck Trust Dated October 12, 2007
to Duane A Heck and Ralene D Heck:
The w/2 of sw/4 of 4-21-18; the e/2
of se/4 of 5-21-18, except the w/2 of
se/4 of se/4 of se/4 of 5-21-18; and
the s/4 of sw/4 and the n/2 of se/4 of
sw/4 of 3-21-18; and the sw/4 of nw/4
of 10-21-18.
Larry W Heck Co Trustee and Gary
W Heck Co Trustee and Duane A
Heck Co Trustee and Raymond W
Heck Trust Dated October 12, 2007 to
Larry W Heck and Janell L Heck: S/2
of se/4 of 12-21-17 less cemetery in
sw cor thereof.
Larry W Heck Co Trustee and Gary
W Heck Co Trustee and Duane A
Heck Co Trustee and Raymond W
Heck Trust Dated October 12, 2007
to Larry W Heck and Janell L Heck:
7-21-18; Also a tract of land beginning
at the se corner of the sw/4 of the nw/4
of 7-21-18, running thence west 60
rods, thence north 18.67 rods, thence
east 60 rods, thence south 18.67 rods
to the pob; also beginning at the sw
corner of the nw/4 of 7-21-18, thence
north 80 rods, thence east 50 rods,
thence sw 68 rods on a straight line to
the corner stone, thence south 18.41
rods, thence west 20 rods to the pob,
except the e/2 of se/4 of the se/4 of
the sw/4 of7-21-18; beginning 61/33
rods south of the ne corner of the se/4
of the nw/4 of 7-21-18, running thence
west (var. 10 degrees, 5 minutes n)57
rods, thence north 17 degrees east
15 9/13 rods, thence east 49 rods
to the east line of said sw/4 of nw/4,
thence south 19.81 rods to the pob,
containing 6 acres; ne/4 of 12-2117,
containing 80 acres more or less;
beginning at the nw corner of the nw/4
SUBSCRIBE!
NEWS IN
BRIEF
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
JUNE 15, 2020
of 7-21-18, thence 29.5 rods east,
thence south 16 rods to creek, thence
east 20 rods, thence ne with creek 36
rods at var. 50 degrees east to section
line, thence east 11 rods to creek,
thence south 22 rods var.7 degrees
west with course of creek, thence
ne 16 rods with course of creek to
section line, thence east 9 rods to
creek, thence se with creek 20 rods,
thence east and north with creek 32
rods to section line, thence 17.5 rods
to east bank of creek, thence with
creek ne 24 rods to union of cherry
and pottawatomie creeks, thence sw
with cherry creek 11.5 rods, thence
west var. 8 degrees 20.72 ros, thence
south 9.84 rods, thence sw a var. 65
degrees 20 rods, thence south var. 8
degrees east 25.5 rods to south line of
n/2 of nw/4 of section 7, thence west
a var. 8 degrees 102 rods to section
line, thence north 80 rods to the pob,
containing 57 acres more or less;
beginning at a stone 18-40/100 rods
south of the ne corner of the sw/4
of the nw/4 of 7-21-18, thence south
var. 10 degrees 05 minutes 23.12
rods, thence west about 49 rods,
thence north 17 degrees e 18-4/13
rods; thence east 39.50 rods to the
pob, containing 7 acres more or less;
all that part of the following tract
which lies north and west of cherry
creek, towit: commencing at the ne
corner of the sw/4 of nw/4 of 7-21-18,
thence south 10 degrees 5 minutes,
18.90 rods to a stone, thence west
10 degrees 35 minutes, 39.50 rods
to a stone, thence north 17 degrees
east 21 rods to a stone, thence east
10 degrees 35 minutes, 30 rods to
pob; and commencing at a point on
the section line 17 rods west of teh se
corner of the sw/4 of 6-21-18, being
the true pob, thence running west
on section line 49 rods, thence north
16 rods, thence north 76 degrees 30
minutes east 21.5 rods, thence south
4 rods to the center of creek, thence
down creek, southeasterly to section
line, thence west on section line to
true pob.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
ACCIDENT REPORTS FILED
On May 28, Audrea Wheeler, was
traveling south on Highway 169 when
a deer jumped from the north ditch
striking the vehicle.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
INCIDENT REPORTS FILED
On June 12, Sandras Quick Stop
was the victim of theft of diesel fuel
valued at $92.45.
On June 14, Tamera Sanchez,
Bonnerdale, Arkansas, was the victim
of criminal damge to property, a single
pane window, $50.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On June 11, Jared Mccall, Ottawa,
was arrested for a DUI; 2nd conviction.
On June 11, Kenneth Burgoon,
Kincaid, was arrested for failure to
appear.
On June 12, Stacy Dietrich, Colony,
was arrested for interference with
a law enforcement officer; drivers
license; unknown circumstance, vehicle liability insurance required and
vehicle registration required.
On June 12, Richard Mooney,
Garnett, was arrested for criminal
damage to property, interference with
a law enforcement officer and criminal
trespass.
On June 12, Trent Robbins, Topeka,
was booked into jail as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriff Department
as he was arrested for criminal possession of a firearm by a felon.
On June 12, Brandon Burton,
Lawrence, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriff
Department as he was arrested for a
violation of offender registration act.
On June 12, Cager Spates,
Lawrence, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriff
Department as he was arrested for
battery.
On June 12, Darrell Hunter, Topeka,
was booked into jail as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriff Department
as he was arrested for burglary.
On June 12, Patrick Stoneking,
Lawrence, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriff
Department as he was arrested for a
probation violation.
On June 12, Dalton Bobek,
Lawrence, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriff
Department as he was arrested for
interference with a law enforcement
officer.
On June 12, Noah Falk, Lawrence,
was booked into jail as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriff Department
as he was arrested for possession
of opiates/opium/narcotic drug and
certain stimulant.
On June 12, Raju Tamang, was
booked into jail as a hold for the
Douglas County Sheriff Department
as he was arrested for aggravated
sexual battery.
On June 13, Francise Cardona,
Kansas City, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Linn County Sheriff
Department as he was arrested for an
outstanding warrant.
On June 13, Bruce Rockers,
Garnett, was arrested for driving
under the influence and transporting
an open container.
On June 14, Dale Easley, Colony,
was arrested for failure to appear.
On June 15, Tyson Adams,
Westphalia, was arrested for criminal damage to property, aggravated
domestic battery.
On June 16, Jeffery Stifter,
Richmond, was arrested to serve a
court ordered sentence.
On June 16, Dale Easley, Colony,
was arrested for failure to appear.
On June 16, Adam Sutton, Garnett,
was arrested for three counts of
aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer with a deadly weapon and
interference with a law enforcement
officer.
On June 17, Jeffery Tummons,
Garnett, was arrested on three counts
of failure to appear.
On June 17, Jason Hermreck,
Garnett, was arrested for driving while
suspended and failure to yield at a
stop or yield sign.
On June 17, Jamie Olsen, Garnett,
was arrested for possession of drug
paraphernalia and possession of certain hallucinogenics w/2 prior convictions.
On June 17, Chad Flinn, Garnett,
was arrested for possession of certain
hallucinogenics w/2 prior convictions
and possession of drug paraphernalia.
MIAMI COUNTY CIVIL
CASES FILED
Burke Rogers and Mary Reed filed
for a Marriage License.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Stephanie Knavel was booked into
jail on June 22, 2019.
Zachery Mitchell was booked into
jail on December 12, 2019.
Barry Weber was booked into jail
on February 15, 2020.
Jacob Joeckel was booked into jail
on April 23, 2020.
David McAfee was booked into jail
on May 16, 2020.
Mary Jennings was booked into jail
on June 10, 2020.
Maxwell Williams was booked into
jail on June 10, 2020.
Jeffery Stifter was booked into jail
on June 16, 2020.
Jeffery Tummons was booked into
jail on June 17, 2020.
Chad Flinn was booked into jail on
June 17, 2020.
Jamie Olsen was booked into jail
on June 17, 2020.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
ROSTER
Justin Jackson was booked into jail
on November 12, 2019.
Rodney Lindsey was booked into
jail on March 18, 2020.
Katie Cheek was booked into jail on
May 19, 2020.
Daniel Hernandez was booked into
jail on June 3, 2020.
Selena Singleterry was booked into
jail on June 3, 2020.
Erika Bond was booked into jail on
June 3, 2020.
Jennifer Cady was booked into jail
on June 3, 2020.
Patrick Stoneking was booked into
jail on June 12, 2020.
Brandon Burton was booked into
jail on June 12, 2020.
Trent Robbins was booked into jail
on June 12, 2020.
Cager Spates was booked into jail
on June 12, 2020.
Raju Tamang was booked into jail
on June 12, 2020.
Noah Falk was booked into jail on
June 12, 2020.
Dalton Bobek was booked into jail
on June 12, 2020.
Dale Easley was booked into jail on
June 14, 2020.
Get the Review in your mailbox every week
AND the email link sent to your phone, tablet or
desktop computer the morning of publication
NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE.
1) Fill out the form below and mail it with your
check or money order payment to:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, Ks. 66032
2) Call in your order during business hours :
(785) 448-3121
3) Complete the form and include your credit card
information, take a picture of it, and email to:
review@garnett-ks.com, or send to us via
Facebook Messenger (search up our Facebook
page under Anderson County Review).
PLEASE CHECK ONE
24 months at $70.47
($88.67 outside
adjoining counties and
out of state)
18 months at $59.68
($73.36 outside
adjoining counties and
out of state)
12 months at $48.66
($57.77 outside
adjoining counties and
out of state)
*Includes sales tax.
Name
PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY
Address
City
State
Zip
Day Phone #
Email
Type of Payment:
Check
Credit Card
Credit Card (V,M,D)
Card Number
Card Holder
Exp.:
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
THORPE
DECEMBER 6, 1924 – JULY 18, 2020
Pauline
W e r n e r
Thorpe, 95,
Garnett,
formerly
of Mission,
K a n s a s ,
passed away
July 18, 2020,
Thorpe
at Anderson
C o u n t y
Hospital in Garnett.
She is survived by her
daughter Charlene Sims
(Roger) of Parker, Kansas.
Her family would like to
thank the residents and staff at
Parkview Heights and Vintage
Park for being such an integral
part of her family over the last
few years.
For a full obituary, go to
www.amosfamily.com
in
Shawnee where her private
service will be held. The family
plans a life celebration later
this year.
Colony Christian Church
Archeology of the heart
Noah Gordon gave the
Communion Meditation this
week. Colossians 3:5-10 tells
us to put to death whatever
belongs to our earthly nature,
because the wrath of God is
coming. When we accept Jesus,
we need to rid ourselves of
anger, lust, greed, slander,
filthy language, etc. And each
time we take Communion (and
every single day), we should
examine ourselves, and get
right with God.
Guest speaker, John JP
Smith, from Ozark Christian
College gave the sermon today.
We need to all perform archeology of the heart We must
dig deep down to find the brokenness in ourselves, and in
others. This will also reveal
the buried treasures deep within all of us. When we devalue
someone, we do not see them
as Jesus sees them. We need to
especially show value to those
that no one else shows value
to. We do this because we are
now a slave to Christ. Jesus
made the perfect sacrifice, and
we now live in the Spirit. We
are not required to continue
making sacrifices. Jesus paid
it all. Because of this, we must
be intentional in our relationships with others. When we
choose to abide in Jesus, we
are transformed into the image
of Christ. (Ref: Romans 6:1617 & 23, 7:4-6 & 15-18, 8:1-13;
Colossians 3; 1 & 2 Corinthians;
1 Timothy 3; John 15; 1 John)
Mens
Bible
Study,
Tuesdays at 7:00 a.m. at the
church. Womens Bible Studay,
Tuesdays at 9:00 a.m. at the
Cross Roads. Adult Bible
Study, Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m.
at the Cross Roads. Garage Sale
Friday & Saturday.
Garnett librarys reading
program kicks off strong
Just like the beanstalk in
the fairy tale, Imagine Your
Story Summer Reading
Program at the Garnett Public
Library is growing before our
eyes. This year summer reading kicked off June 8th and
there are already 79 readers,
pre-readers through 8th grade.
These readers have logged over
12,000 minutes of reading. The
goal is for everyone to read 100
minutes a week. Kids can collect brag tags and win prizes
by reading and logging minutes every week. There is still
plenty of time to join the fun.
Readers can sign up via the
Reader Zone App with codes:
0B821 for logging reading and
FD4A5 for logging activities.
Sign up is also available at
the Garnett Public Library. In
addition, the library also has
Take-N-Make activity bags
for kids to complete at home.
Each week brings a new activity that compliments the theme
of fairy tales and fables and
telling your story.
Contact Garnett Public
Library
at
448-3388,
GarnettLibraryYouth@yahoo.
com, or find us on Facebook,
Garnett Public Library for
more information about joining this summers Imagine
Your Story.
Obituary Charges/Policy
Full obituaries are published as submitted in the Review
at the rate of 15 per word and include a photo at no
charge. Death notices are published free and include
name, date of birth and death, name of parents, spouse
and service information. A photo may be added to a
death notice for a $10 fee.
Please call or email if you have questions.
(785) 448-3121 review@garnett-ks.com
Prayer is finding
the will of God
and getting in on it
In 1st John 5:14 we read.
This is the confidence we
have in approaching God: that
if we ask anything according to
his will he hears us. And if we
know that he hears us-whatever we ask- we know that we
have what we asked for.
The emphasis here is on
Gods will. Dr. Adrian Rogers
once said, Prayer is not bending Gods will to fit our will.
Prayer is finding the will of
God and getting in on it. If we
could bend Gods will to fit our
wants and desires he would
cease to be God. This would be
no different than a child dictating to a parent regardless of the
consequences that might exist.
I am fully convinced that the
reason God does not answer
some prayers is because of
the consequences that would
result.
Someone once said a prayer
that is sure to be answered
is one that originates with
God, is revealed to a believer and is sent back to God in
the form of a request. The
secret to answered prayer lies
in communication with God.
This communication most
often needs to be in prayer. In
Matthew 7:7 Jesus says, Ask
and it will be given to you; seek
and you will find; knock and
the door will be opened to you.
What better way to find the
will of God than to ask, seek
and knock. In this passage
Jesus tells us to persist in
pursuing God. If we are true
Iola Location:
202 S. State St.
Iola, KS 66749
620-363-5005
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
followers of God we will not
ask for things which are contrary to his nature or his will.
We must remember prayer is
not getting mans will done in
heaven, prayer is getting Gods
will done on earth. Each of us
has the opportunity at any time
to pray to God. Some choose
never to pray, some pray out of
obligation or guilt but I believe
the prayer that God answers is
the prayer that is according to
his will.
Ole H. Hallesby said, Prayer
is something deeper than
words. It is present in the soul
before it has been formulated
into words. And it abides in
the soul after the last words of
prayer have passed over our
lips. If we commune with
God he will put his will in our
heart. If we just give God a list
of wants and desires we are trying to impose our will on God
and that is contrary to Gods
nature.
Ministry on the
Holiness
of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback on FB
ANDERSON
Ask
how to advertise in this space
4×12.5
for only
biz
directory
HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS$16 perMIKE
week!
Sales & Service
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Contact us at
785-448-3121.
JOWOLKEN
TAX-TIME TAX SERVICE, INC.
785-448-3056 415 S. Oak, Garnett
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
Take the guessing out of investing!
2×3
Sho-More
Financial
The stock market
consistently goes up
and down. With our
investment strategy you
go up with the stock
market, lock in your
gain and it protects
you when the market
crashes.
You can have it for
your 401K, your IRA, or
even money in a bank.
Its high quality,
its simple and its easy.
Era agreements made with the
city in exchange for the Works
Progress Administrations construction of Lake Garnett and
its facilities in the 1930s.
Weiner said discussions
arose that the city might purchase a building lot on the
northeast side of the Garnett
square currently owned by
the Players in order to develop
some type of park facility to
satisfy the parks service.
That plan was abandoned,
Weiner said, due to availability
of other land closer to Crystal
Lake Park, but he said the theater organization still had an
interest in ridding itself of the
lot due to the cost of its property taxes.
The Chamber Players had
planned the site for a new
performing arts center as far
back as 2014 but the plan was
shelved and never pursued.
The organization owns its
facility, The Thelma Moore
Playhouse, at 140 W. Fifth in
Garnett, but expensive repairs
needed to that century-old
former Presbyterian Church
brought the theater group to
seek another venue.
Weiner said the conversation evolved into the possibility the city could enter into
a partnership with the community theater similar to its
arrangement with the Garnett
Country Club, which manages
and maintains a privately-run
facility on city land in Lake
Garnett Park. Since the local
theater group has value as a
community attraction, Weiner
said, city commissioners
might justify that partnership
in exchange for the lost taxes
on the now empty lot, as well
as the organizations present
home.
Commissioners asked for
more information before considering the proposal, such as
possible plans for the existing
building if it was replaced by
the new venue and tax amounts
presently paid on both locations.
COUNTY
(785) 448-5856
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Mon. 5 p.m. – 10 p.m.
Tues.
– Thur.
11 a.m.
11 p.m.
Mon.
5 p.m.
– 10 -p.m.
Tues.
Thur.
11 a.m. — 211a.m.
p.m.
Fri. –&Thur.
Sat. 11
Tues.
11 a.m.
a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat.
11
a.m.
2
a.m.
Daily
Specials
Fri. & Sat.
11
a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials – Lunch Delivery M-F
Lunch Delivery
M-F M-F
Daily Specials
– Lunch Delivery
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
Dont justWEEK
sit there… place
yourfor
ad nowyour
by phone!
EVERY
just
ads!
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
601 South
Oak
www.tradingpostdeals.com
(785)
842-6440
(800) 683-4505
Garnett,
Kansas
(785) 448-3212
ads@tradingpostdeals.com
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
SIPC. Investment advisory services offered through Avantax Advisory
Services. Insurance services offered through an Avantax Insurance affiliated
insurance agency. 6333 N. State Highway 161, Fourth Floor, Irving, TX 75038,
972-870-6000.
N. Hwy. 59 Garnett
(785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
E-Statements &
Ask
how
toShoppe
advertise
The
TV
Hecks
Moving
Ser
vice
Online Banking
in this space for only
Continuing to serve
you
years.
$8 after
per 31
week!
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
213 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett FurnitureAppliancesGarage
Colony Hepler
Please calletc.
785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
Ottawa Pomona
Ashton Heck
(785)
204-0369
leave Tony a message.
Ashton
Heck
St. Paul Walnut
(785) 204-0369
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Anderson
County
News
THE SMART CHOICE
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Hours:
Contact
Stacey
at 785-448-3121.
785-448-3056
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU
YOU PLAN
HELPING
PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
TODAY
TOMORROW
Securities
offered throughFOR
Avantax Investment
Services , Member FINRA,
PROFESSIONAL TAX PREPARATION
Liens & Levies
Innocent Spouse Relief
Audit Reconsiderations
Payroll Tax Problems
FROM PAGE 1
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Aaron Lizer
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Agent
IRS Collection Division
IRS Appeals Division
LAND…
Classied ads
only three dollars.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
2×2
Enrolled Agent
Unfiled Returns
Representing Clients Before: Offers in Compromise
TaxTime
IRS Exam Division
in massive economic losses and
a tax-funded government subsidy program aimed at funding the economy until it could
reopen. Most states have begun
reopening procedures, as new
case rates have decreased or
remained stable in most states.
Health officials say COVID19 Symptoms include fever
or chills, cough, shortness of
breath or difficulty breathing,
fatigue, muscle or body aches,
headache, new loss of taste or
smell, sore throat, congestion
or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, diarrhea.
They warn if youre sick,
stay home.
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
Ottawa Location:
233 W 23rd St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-229-0684
FROM PAGE 1
Kansas Multi-County Health
Department said the Anderson
County resident in last weeks
diagnosis showed no symptoms
of the virus.
The individual is asymptomatic, Johnson said. They
are in isolation in their home
& their family is in quarantine.
The Anderson County Public
Health Department is working
diligently to investigate, identify and contact individuals who
have been exposed.
Government response to
the virus forced an economic shutdown of many private
businesses and public gathering places and events, resulting
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Emporia Location:
1 S Commercial St.
Emporia, KS 66801
620-342-5573
CASES…
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
2×2
Reeble
3A
REMEMBRANCES
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
120 S. Maple
Garnett, KS
wiseautoks.com
785-448-2171
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
824 N. Chestnut Iola
(620) 365-6445
Millers Construction, Inc.
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
Since 1980
Cooper
Jetzon
Kumho
Delden Doors & Openers
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
Licensed Electricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
Quality Service For
Over 20 Years.
Serving Anderson
& Franklin Counties.
Garnett, KS
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
Providing quality
products and service
Scott Schulte & Cody Gettler
505 S. OAK
GARNETT
Call us at (785) 448-6191 and find out more!
Service Sales Installation Repairs
Garage Doors & Openers
242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
OPINION
The culprits of cancel culture
Activists sue to block a Trump rally, the
New York Times fires a non-compliant editor,
Twitter fact-checks conservative voices.
Ivanka Trump, Sid Rosenberg, Erik Prince,
Raymond Ibrahim, Jeh Johnson, Kevin
McAleenan and countless others disinvited
to speak on college campuses.
Wonder where todays cancel culture
comes from? It comes from college campuses,
fueled by young people and abetted by an older
generation that has not had the courage to say
no.
This is how the slide toward totalitarianism
begins.
Silencing the opposition is essential to creating legitimacy for despots like Vladimir
Putin or Kim Jong Un; if political opponents
have no voice, people will assume they dont
exist.
Were not there yet, but were on our way.
Over the past several decades, our schools
have become incubators for the progressive
Left. Liberal professors have taught millennials
and younger generations that our country was
founded on a lie and that our free enterprise
system is rigged; just as damaging, they have
ignored the great achievements of this nation
achievements like the liberation of Europe
from Nazism that we used to celebrate.
More destructive than the liberal curriculums of our schools has been the growing
intolerance on campuses, and the tendency to
put the kids in charge. As Robert Zimmer, the
president of the University of Chicago, wrote in
2016:
Invited speakers are disinvited because
a segment of a university community deems
them offensive. Demands are made to eliminate readings that might make some students
uncomfortable. Individuals are forced to apologize for expressing views that conflict with
prevailing perceptions.
Most disturbing, as he points out: In many
cases, these efforts have been supported by university administrators.
A poll in 2018 showed that a majority of
students (56 percent) supported freedom of
speech, but shockingly also said that promoting a diverse and inclusive society was more
important than the First Amendment. Imagine.
Not that long ago, schools acted in loco
parentis for kids living in dorms, on the theory
that young people are not yet mature enough
to make reliably good decisions. Have kids
changed? Become smarter or more sensible?
GUEST EDITORIAL
LIZ PEEK, FOX NEWS COMMENTATOR
Judging from the crowds of youngsters flaunting COVID-19 rules recently over spring break,
it would appear that no, they are still capable of
making stupid and dangerous decisions.
Why then do we allow them such power?
Why take them seriously?
Because we, the older generation, are scared
to challenge them. Their facility with technology and social media makes us think they are
smarter than we are. They are not.
College administrators and trustees have
cravenly accommodated even the most outrageous demands for fear of losing control or, on
occasion, their jobs.
Meanwhile, alumni of elite schools the
prestigious trend-setters who could be a
steadying influence, are frightened to take on
their alma maters, worried they might ruin
their kids chances of acceptance or be ostracized by their peers.
When two Yale professors with impeccable
liberal credentials are forced to step down as
heads of a residential college because they
doubt that a culturally insensitive Halloween
costume is a danger to students, schools everywhere take note.
When Harvard demotes its first black faculty
dean because students complain that his role as
defense lawyer for Harvey Weinstein is trauma inducing, a message is sent.
Commentators deride todays students as
snowflakes because they appear so fragile.
Young people demand safe spaces and trigger warnings to alert them that an incoming
opinion may jar their preconceptions and sensibilities.
But these are the same students who adore
SEE PEEK ON PAGE 1B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Dear Democrats, youre going to have to learn
to stop talking about race all the time. You dont
know anything about it and every time you talk
about it you alienate the biggest half of the voters in the country. Yes, youre going to have to
learn the same lesson the Republicans learned
when they couldnt stop talking about sex.
Does it seem funny to anybody else that we can
have protestors taking over cities and mayors
and city officials cow-towing to protestors and
Google and all these companies supporting
Black Lives Matter, but the only social distancing that seems to be important is at Trump
rallies?
Hey Dane once again I liked your comments.
Its a shame that the major news media are
afraid to print such facts, truths and statistics.
However, if a couple of big city newspapers
were to reprint your comments, holy riot. We
Uncle Sam: Lets stop losing money on pennies
Why on earth do we still make and use the
copper penny?
This tiny coin costs nearly twice as much
to make as its worth, but the mint keeps
cranking them out. It made 8.4 billion of them
in 2017 at a cost of 1.82 cents, and an estimated
150 billion of the little guys are in circulation
today.
That figures to
a cost of $152.9
million and
a
straightout cash loss
of about $84
million. Some
will say thats
just how the
government
does business.
If
General
Motors
did
business that
way,
theyd
go broke. Oh,
wait, they did go broke.
But while $84 million may be small change
to a government that counts deficits in trillions, its a lot of money to most of us. You
have to wonder why we put up with such
waste. You cant use a penny in a vending
machine anymore, not even to buy a gumball.
People dont respect a penny, either. We
give them away at the store counter rather
than pocket them, leaving those we get in a
little tray for others to use. After a certain age,
GUEST COMMENTARY
After a certain
age, say 10,
most of us wont
stoop over to
pick up a penny.
STEVE HAYNES, Haynes Publishing Co.
say 10, most of us wont stoop over to pick up
a penny. Something about the fact that it costs
more in fuel to propel the body upright than a
penny is worth today.
Even the Treasury has shown its disrespect
for pennies: The IRS requires people to round
off tax payments and calculations to the nearest dollar, eliminating cents from income-tax
forms.
A penny will buy something worth a penny
today, if you can find something priced for 1
cent. In 1973, todays penny would have bought
5 cents worth of candy. In 1947, a dimes worth.
And in 1913, a whole quarters worth of stuff
at 2017 prices.
Todays dollar stores sell stuff that stocked
a 1930s five and dime.
And while Benjamin Franklin said a
penny saved is a penny earned, remember, in
his day a penny was worth something.
And then there are the nickels. They cost
something like 8 cents each these days. Theres
a real bargain for the government.
Interesting coin facts: the copper penny is
mostly zinc today, and it was the rising cost of
zinc that put the penny in the loss column. The
shinny silver nickel is mostly copper today.
Go figure.
Even the bigger coins are expensive to
make: a dime costs 4 cents, and a quarter
about 8 cents, almost the same as a five-cent
piece. The quarter had cost up to 13 cents
before the Mint found ways to cut costs, however.
Paper currency, by comparison, is a bargain. The plain-jane dollar bill costs about 4.9
cents to print while larger bills, with more
intricate safety features, run around 10 cents.
So why do we keep making and using these
expensive tokens?
People hate change, first and foremost. If
someone proposes doing away with the penny,
someone else will start figuring how much he
might lose if stores round everything up to the
nearest nickel or dime. Someone out on the
fringe will claim the whole thing is a conspiracy dreamed up by the paper mills, and the
Mint workers will threaten to strike.
It makes no sense, but we keep using, making and losing money on pennies. We ought to
just get rid of them.
Steve Haynes is president of NorWest
Newspapers in Oberlin, Kansas.
Social distancing critical; except protests
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot had big news
last week — the city is opening up its iconic
Lakefront Trail after months of being closed
off as part of a COVID-19 lockdown.
That Lightfoot kept the trail closed even
after Chicago had experienced large-scale
Black Lives Matter marches — thousands
during the Drag March for Change — is one
small instance of the flagrant social distancing
hypocrisy across the country in recent weeks.
If its OK for throngs of people to pack the
streets, and shout and chant to protest the
death of George Floyd, it ought to be permissible for someone to ride a bike along the lakeside while keeping to him- or herself.
Yet, Mayor Lightfoot welcomed the protestors — We want people to come and express
their passion, she said — and still kept the
trail shuttered.
Many of the same officials who were most
zealous in locking down their states and cities
instantly made an exception for Black Lives
Matter protests. Their rigidity became laxity
in a blink of an eye. Their metric for reopening wasnt the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention guidelines or any other public
health measure, but the wokeness of the
activity in question.
Visiting the deathbed of a loved one with
COVID-19? Absolutely not. Having a proper
funeral? No way. Gathering more than about
10 people at a graveside? No one should be
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
allowed to put the public at risk in such a way.
Bringing thousands of strangers to march
together for hours in spontaneous, disorderly
groups? Thank you for your commitment to
positive change.
Attending a church service? Well, maybe in
a couple of months.
Holding a struggle session with religious
trappings where people confess their racism
and vow to work to defund the police? Please,
lets have more.
To believe the leaders of Blue America,
SARS-CoV-2 is the first virus in human history to have a social conscience — virulent
enough in the ordinary course of events to
justify the most restrictive social controls; not
such a big deal if it might get in the way of
marches for social justice.
The likes of New York City Mayor Bill de
Blasio have justified the different standards
by arguing that fighting racism is important.
Well, so is mourning your dead, keeping your
business from being ground to dust and worshiping your God. Its a sign of a ludicrously
blinkered worldview to believe that a protest march deserves more consideration than
these other elemental human needs.
Another argument is that the protesters are
willing to put their health on the line for their
cause. But, until recently, it was said that
anyone going outside wasnt just endangering
themselves, but the most vulnerable people in
our communities. Why wouldnt that be true
of the Black Lives Matter marches, too?
Dont expect consistency, or even a serious
attempt at it. More than 1,000 public health
experts signed a letter calling the protests
vital to the national public health, thus
immolating their credibility on a pyre of motivated reasoning. Its social distancing for people and activities they find uncongenial, and
different rules for their ideological allies.
What a contemptible betrayal of the public
trust.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
would have a mob of that ethnic group and other
protestors and morons descend on Garnett with
the intent to destroy our fair city. Hopefully
they would be greeted by 3,000 armed citizens.
Justine Damond was an unarmed white woman
shot in the gut and murdered for no reason by
a black police officer Mohamed Noor with that
same Minneapolis Police Department. No protests, no riots, no accusations of racism. Like
Jeremy Mardis, the 6 year white child shot dead
by two black police officers in Marksville, La.,
or Joseph Jennings, the unarmed white kid
shot dead by police officers in nearby Ottawa
Kansas. Fact: twice as many whites than blacks
are killed by police officers each year. It is
whites, not blacks, who are disproportionately
killed by police officers. But you wouldnt know
that because the Democrat run media cherry
picks what they report to fit their race baiting
demagoguery (edited for brevity).
That was a great column by Steven Haynes on
Kellys cell phone data test. I want to thank you
for putting that in. If folks in small counties like
Wallace, Anderson or Coffey want to remain relevant and help themselves, make sure you vote.
Dont vote for a milk toast, vote for somebody
whos going to fight for you.
Dane Hicks is pulling numbers and facts out
of his you-know-what again. Covid-19 on the
decrease? June 15, 2020, 25,300 new cases in
the Unites States. Two new cases in Anderson
County alone this week. Six new cases in
Douglas County this week. Theres no decrease.
I tell you, you guys got to get your heads out of
Trumps (deleted). Spouting lies. Ive just given
up on you people. Why do you have to lie?
Heres to the insensitive, ill mannered moron
that says he wont wear a face mask. They ought
to identify people like you and when you go get
sick you should be denied medical help. Not
spend a dime on your medical, not waste any
drugs or ventilators or anything. Please be one
of the dumb ones going to a Trump rally this
week. When you come back were not going to
take care of you. Thats the reason people get
sick, its just me, me, me, me.
If I go to the farmers market, do black olives
matter?
(Name), God bless him, was laid to rest on
Saturday morning. Thank you to our local state
trooper for your attendance. (Name) ran the
jail for many years and was well liked. Former
sheriff Dave Vaughn came from Hays, Kansas,
thank you Dave. And to all the other guests
that showed up, (name) would have appreciated
it. Now on a different vote, Anderson County
Sheriff Vern Valentine did not show or his
detectives. So much for their code Blue Shield.
This is what you can expect from the sheriffs
department. They dont even respect their own,
much less the rest of us.
If the civil rights crowd blaming everyone else
for their problems ever chooses substance over
symbolism, theres no limit to what they can
achieve. As for now, no statue of Robert E.
Lee ever prevented a black father from taking
responsibility for his kids, and no monument to
Stonewall Jackson even forced one black man
to kill another.
First Amendment, U.S. Constitution:
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2018.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
5A
LOCAL
June 1990 – Dealership to cease car sales Latest finds unearth Native American artifacts
June 2010
Four-legged visitors could
be banned from city ball
parks and childrens playgrounds as part of a new rule
to be discussed by Garnett
city commissioners. The current ordinance allows dogs
at all park facilities as long
as the animal is on a leash.
The city is considering the
changes to its dog ordinances because of concerns about
safety and maintenance at the
ball parks. Some players have
stepped in dog feces on the
ball field.
June 2000
Spring officials say the
countys Enhanced 911 emergency telephone system could
be in place and operational
by early September of this
year, if an address database
now under review is received
by August. A memo mailed
to Garnett City Police Chief
said the system could be cut
THAT WAS THEN
Melissa Hobbs
SEND LOCAL HISTORY PHOTOS, INFORMATION TO
REVIEW@GARNETT-KS.COM
over by September 11, 2000,
but only if the database was
received by the company
in order to be programmed
by August 21. The database
includes names, addresses,
and phone numbers of all
rural residents.
June 1990
The city council for
Westphalia is now faced with
the decision on whether to
2×4
Focus
Now Hiring
Focus Workforce Management is currently seeking pickers/packers/
warehouse associates for a large
Pay up to
distribution center in Ottawa, Ks!
14.00/
$
Shifts: Daylight/Evening/Weekend
hr
Job duties consist of: picking
orders, packing/stacking, general warehouse duties, walking,
climbing of stairs; OT available.
Apply today at www.focusjobs.com or call (785) 832-7000.
Office locaton 1529 N. Davis Rd, Ottawa, Ks.
Send a friend referral bonus available!
pursue another attempt to
gain grant money for a community center. The citys
bid for grant funding was
recently turned down by
the Kansas Department of
Commerce, thereby nixing
the citys effort to construct
a $120,000 community center.
The city had hoped to obtain
a grant of $80,000 through its
Small Cities and Community
Development Block Grant
fund.
June 1980
Stockebrand Motors will be
closing the doors to its automobile dealership soon. They
handle Chrysler, Plymouth,
and Dodge vehicles. Walter
Stockebrand said he has to
give 30 days notice to Chrysler
and then they have 90 days to
come in and take back any
automobiles and parts still in
stock. He said hes planning
on continuing in the tire sales
business. The cause for the
closing was listed as the high
interest rates charged and
that new car sales are down.
June 1920
The Garnett creamery is
one of the business places in
town. It is turning out a large
amount of butter each day
and has a demand for every
pound made. The company
has a contract with a firm
at Muskogee, Okla., to furnish it and its long string of
stores with butter. Within the
past two years, this firm has
purchased from the Garnett
Creamery Company $75,000
worth of butter per year. This
year, the amount will probably reach $85,000. The creamy
not only handles butter but it
also makes ice cream, and Mr.
Gallop, the manager, says that
he is installing new machinery for making ice cream that
will be able to fill all orders.
My last two trips to my latest archaeological site leaves
me completely baffled. Why you
ask? When you look closely at
the top row of my finds, what do
you see? Five Native American
artifacts. These discoveries are
what has me baffled. Was the site
where this house was built on an
original Native American site
or was someone that lived there
in the past a Native American
artifact hunter or collector?
Top row: Cobble stone, (Core
stone, Chert, Flint-like), Spear
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
point tip,worked arrowhead,
small arrowhead (made from
another type of flint), another
worked cobble stone.
2nd row: Spring, screwdriver,
clip.
3rd row: Comb, early toy car,
large medallion (Sharon) etched
on it.
4th Row: Fuse, unfired .22
cal. bullet, metal button still
attached to cord, boot or large
shoe brass eyelet.
Bottom row: 1944-S Wheat
penny, Kansas 2 Mil Tax Token
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers 16June2020
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP
Monday: taco platters, beef/chicken enchiladas Every Sunday
Tuesday: bbq & burgers, open-face roast
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
beef or 1/2 lb. cheeseburger
ALL AVAILABLE
Homemade
Wednesday: Fried chicken
FAMILY-STYLE!
Thursday: Meatloaf
PAN-FRIED
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
CHICKEN
fried chicken
Saturday: Wings
We have pizza!
Sunday: Homemade pan-fried chicken w/sides
2×2
Parker1Stop
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday Fellowship Time 9:30am
Sunday Service 10:30am
Wednesday 7pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
6×12 Church Directory
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Service 10:00am
Small Groups 6:30pm
Bible Studies Wednesday 7pm
258 W. Park Road, Garnett, Ks.
(785) 448-3208
Senior Pastor – Jonathan Hall
Childrens Pastor -Sarah Pridey
Jordan Dages – Teen Ministries
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
785-594-2603
morningstarcarehomes.com
Classied ads
only three dollars.
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
Dont justWEEK
sit there… place
yourfor
ad now
by phone!
EVERY
just
your
ads!
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
ads@tradingpostdeals.com
www.tradingpostdeals.com
Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country Favorites
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
(620) 228-9324
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm
Wed. evening prayer time 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Reverend Redo Purnell
BEACON OF TRUTH
Sunday Worship Service 10:00am
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Chase Riebel
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 10am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Chris Goetz, Pastor
Ryan McDonald, Youth Pastor
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – David Hill
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15 a.m.
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 10:00 am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Pastor Fr. Daniel Stover
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 11am
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
TRUE HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Worship Gathering Sunday 6:30pm
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 1020 S. Westgate Rd.
Sunday School 9:30am
Garnett, KS
Church 10:40am
(785) 409-3595
(785) 448-3947
truehopecommunitychurch@gmail.com
1300 & Broomall Rd, Welda, KS 66091
Pastor – Tony Thornton
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Vernon Yoder
LIVING WATERS BIBLE TEMPLE
Sunday School 10am
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Service 11am
Mass Sunday 8am
305 E. 2nd
Greeley, KS
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3846
(785) 304-9032
Pastor Fr. Daniel Stover
Classied ads
only three dollars.
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
Dont justWEEK
sit there… place
yourfor
ad now
by phone!
EVERY
just
your
ads!
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
ads@tradingpostdeals.com
www.tradingpostdeals.com
Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country Favorites
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
6A
EFFECTS…
FROM PAGE 1
close to 20 million pounds of
milk and by-products, he said.
The big bottleneck in our
situation was our cheese customer decreased their production without the demand from
restaurants. We suddenly had
close to 2 million pounds on
our hands that we couldnt run
through our dryers.
According to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
dairy producers dumped over
200 million pounds of milk that
month. Although not all dairymen were forced to dump milk,
the impact of this wasted dairy
was felt across the industry.
John Knopf of Fa-Ba Farms
in western New York, who sells
15 million pounds of milk a
year from a 575-cow dairy and
also raises 800 acres of forage
crops, said although he was
never forced to dump milk, he
has felt the decrease in price.
Most dairy producers
had a COVID deduction in
their main milk check, with
some seeing a $2 per hundredweight decrease, Durow said.
Furthermore, many cooperatives and processors are asking their dairy producers to cut
milk production, which means
dairy producers are being
asked to voluntarily cut their
paycheck up to 15%.
Gingg, a member of a milk
cooperative, was asked to cut
back 10% in production in
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
LOCAL
April when the coronavirus
was in full swing.
Greg Sabolik, a fourth generation dairy farmer at Bred
and Butter Farms, a 500-cow
dairy and 1,600-acre crop-farming operation in west central
Minnesota, said although
his cooperative never gave a
direct order to their members
to reduce their milk production, he admits the future was
uncertain in the middle of the
pandemic.
In the heat of COVID-19,
I dont think any of us knew
what was going to happen
tomorrow morning, much less
a week from now, Sabolik
said. Weve came out of this
fairly unscathed economically,
but take that with a grain of salt
because May futures dropped
over $7 from their high preCOVID to where they closed.
Where do we go from here?
If the pandemic demonstrated one thing, it was that
the dairy industry has some
short-comings when it comes to
adapting and meeting unique
market demands in a pinch.
We shifted food consumption 50% at home and 50% at
restaurants to 75% or more at
home and 25% or less at restaurants in a very short period of
time, Durow explained. This
resulted in a vast number of
food dollars being purchased at
grocery stores. This had a dramatic effect on the dairy supply
chain.
According to Durow, grocery stores typically have a
three-day food supply, so they
were not prepared for panic
buying like we saw in March
and April, and the more consumers cleaned out the grocery
shelves, the farther the dairy
industry fell behind as processors scrambled to meet the
demand shift.
However, export markets
were a saving grace during
the pandemic. Durow said the
amount of milk the U.S. exports
is equivalent to one day a week
of a dairy cows milk production.
If we didnt have exports we
would dump seven times the
amount of milk we dumped in
April, she added.
Durow said she knew of only
one material dairy plant shut
down due to COVID-19 outbreak. She said this is because
milk is liquid and processed
through stainless steel and
human hands never touch it.
However, Durow acknowledged
the dairy industry did see many
plants reduce capacity and
output resulting in the milk
dumps.
National Milk has estimated the dairy industry is going
to lose $9 billion in 2020 due
to the coronavirus, and dairy
producers are also impacted by
the losses in the beef market as
they sell cull cows and young
stock.
This devastating prediction
is especially disheartening
considering the dairy industry
was bouncing back last year.
Knopf believes the damage will
amount to a lot more than losses this year.
In my personal opinion,
this has a three-year negative
impact, Knopf said. Thats
a wild guess, and its hard to
determine at this point because
about half the supply chain goes
through institutions and food
service and its hard to predict
how fast and at what level that
will recover. I think weve put
a tourniquet on whats happening right now, but I think its
going to have a lasting damage. The dairy industry is not
going to go away, but it certainly might look a lot different in
the future. Im predicting a lot
of retooling and innovation will
come to the dairy industry as a
result of the pandemic.
Sabolik hopes a more nimble, agile and streamlined food
system will emerge from the
pandemic to better deliver
food to consumers. No farmer wants to see food wasted,
regardless of whether we are
being paid for it or not, he
said. Theres a lot of passion,
labor and heart going into it
and we want to get it to the
people who need it. Hopefully
we can develop a system so that
this doesnt happen again.
Lacey Newlin can be reached
at 620-227-1871 or
lnewlin@hpj.com.
LANDFILL…
FROM PAGE 1
Garrett said the free dump
weeks themselves greatly
increased traffic at the landfill
because some area residents
store their trash for long periods of time waiting for the free
week to haul it all in. Cities
like Garnett have used the free
dump periods as a promotional
avenue to get residents to clean
up their properties, and typically offer special trash department pickup services during
that time to facilitate the effort.
The upside to the higher
volume of trash is that the
county makes $22 per ton for
its disposal, which meant the
accompanying revenue surge
had been substantial as well.
Garrett said he expected the
volume and work flow to level
out to a new normal eventually, but that a regular volume
level wouldnt be completed
until after the Southern Star
project was completed.
2×3.5
Mark Powels
GET IT DONE
For professional help on your
home or work project, look to
these quality local contractors
who are anxious to help.
GUTTERING
ELECTRICAL
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
CONSTRUCTION
GARAGES HOBBY SHOPS
AGRICULTURAL EQUESTRIAN
Specializing in
Complete Post Frame
Buildings
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
Licensed Electricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
(620) 363-4327
GLASS
Quality Service For
Over 20 Years.
Serving Anderson
& Franklin Counties.
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
Richmond, KS
Monday~Friday
8am~5pm
785-835-6100
QualityStructures.com
GAS PROPANE
BLDG. MATERIALS
Construction Supply
Contractors, Residential & Farm
Garnett Home Center
& Rental
410 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-7106
Post-frame
buildings
Hobby
Shops
Garages
Equestrian Commercial Homes
FLOORING
704 N Maple St. Garnett
785-448-5512 or 1-877-592-2743
www.mfaoil.com
www.yutzyconstruction.com
HEATING & AC
ROOFING
METAL ROOFING
Specializing in
Complete Post Frame
Buildings
SEPTIC, ETC.
Richmond, KS
D&S Sanitation LLC
DONT SEE
YOUR CATEGORY?
Have us designate it when
you place your ad
Place your ad here.
(785) 448-3121
Richmond, KS
Monday~Friday 8am~5pm
Brian Falk
Lumber Posts Metal
Windows Garage Doors
785-214-4647
GARAGE DOORS
LIME/LIMESTONE
SIDING & WINDOWS
Monday~Friday
8am~5pm
785-214-4647
QualityStructures.com
DONT SEE
YOUR CATEGORY?
Have us designate it when
you place your ad
Service Sales Installation Repairs
Garage Doors & Openers
242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
To advertise in this directory, call (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
Place your ad here.
(785) 448-3121
1B
B
Section
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-23-2020 / KDHE
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-23-2020 / KEVIN GAINES
Cindy McCullough and Tom Emerson, Jr. performed on Friday night as The Chamber Players
Community Theatre presented 2 Across. They performed Thursday-Sunday night to make up for a
previously postponed schedule due to COVID-19.
An update on Friday from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment shows the decline in
recent new diagnosis of COVID-19 compared to highs in late April and early May.
PEEK…
Kelly announces actions on Kansas
Unemployment Insurance debacle
FROM PAGE 4A
gory video games and profanity-laced music. They are
the same students who hurl
obscenities and insults at professors who cross them.
They are not fragile, they
are intolerant.
In recent years these young
people have moved out into
the world, carrying their
intolerance with them. They
now occupy newsrooms and
social media firms. They are
the ones who drove respected editor James Bennet from
the New York Times. It is
people like 30-year-old former
Gawker writer Caity Weaver
who tweeted that running
Sen. Tom Cottons op-ed about
quelling riots ..puts Black @
NYTimes staff in danger, a
refrain repeated by several of
her woke peers.
The Times Bennet is not
the only high-profile journal-
ist recently mugged by the
younger generation. A top
editor at The Philadelphia
Inquirer, Stan Wischnowski,
The most chilling
line in that letter
read: Were tired of
being told to show
both sides of issues
there are no two
sides of.
was tossed out too, because
he published an article by the
papers architecture critic entitled Buildings Matter, Too.
The staff was outraged, with 44
journalists of color, most of
them young, sending a letter to
the leadership proclaiming
their disgust with the paper.
The most chilling line in
that letter read: Were tired
of being told to show both sides
of issues there are no two sides
of.
Ignore the appalling sentence structure and consider
the even more appalling message: the author rejects balanced reporting. This is how
young people think: there is
only one right view and any
other should be suppressed.
This is not healthy. In The
Coddling of the American
Mind: How Good Intentions
and Bad Ideas are Setting up a
Generation for Failure, Greg
Lukianoff suggests that protecting youngsters from opposing views actually makes them
more fragile, not less. He is correct. It also perpetuates their
ignorance.
We need alumni to speak up
and, if they disagree with their
alma maters policies, withhold
their funding and explain why.
We need more university presidents standing their ground
and telling students the truth.
Peter Salovey, the president
of Yale, said to the incoming
Class of 2020, in times of
great stress, false narratives
may dominate the public mind
and public discourse, inflaming negative emotions and fanning discord As a result, we
sometimes find that anger, fear
or disgust can blind us to the
complexity of the world and
the responsibility to seek deeper understandings of important issues.
Thats where we are today.
Where is he?
Liz Peek is a Fox News contributor and former partner of
major bracket Wall Street firm
Wertheim & Company.
TOPEKA Governor Laura
Kelly today announced multiple actions she will be taking
to address the issues impacting the Kansas Department of
Labors (KDOL) ability to handle the volume of claims for
Unemployment Insurance (UI).
Governor Laura Kelly
accepted KDOL Secretary
Dela Garcas resignation and
the Governors Deputy Chief
of Staff Ryan Wright will serve
as acting Secretary of Labor
until a permanent candidate
is nominated for appointment.
Governor Kelly will also bring
in specialists to look for ways
to improve response times for
Kansans applying for UI, implement new processes to manage the caseload, and mitigate
future backlogs and errors that
have occurred while attempting to deliver payments.
As Governor, Im respon-
sible for KDOLs handling of
unemployment claims. I am
taking immediate action to
ensure Kansans who are out of
work, through no fault of their
own, are getting the assistance
they need, Governor Kelly
said.
On June 10th, duplicate payments were made to more than
4500 claimants of Pandemic
Unemployment Assistance
(PUA) and some Federal
Pandemic
Unemployment
Compensation (FPUC) claimants for a total of about $7
million. Without consulting Governor Kelly, on June
18th, KDOL began attempting
to reverse the duplicate payments in a process known as
a clawback. The clawback
caused some PUA and FPUC
recipients bank accounts to be
overdrawn.
2B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Cont – The Skinning Tree A novel by G. Dane Hicks
Due to social distancing directives in view of the present Covid19
emergency and the fact that many
Review readers are sequestering to varying degrees in their
homes and looking for reading
materials among ways to pass the
time, we are publishing segments
of Review publisher Dane Hicks
2003 novel The Skinning Tree
(Began March 24) over the course
of the next several weeks.
Chapter 7 Cont
*picking up from where left on from
June 16th edition
Ellie took a sip from what
looked like a whiskey sour and
glanced up to catch McKanes
eyes. She glanced back to the
television, and then the recognition kindled in her as well,
and her eyes drew back to him.
He stood there, embarrassed that
she knew he was staring at her,
and trying to find a sentence to
ease the clumsy scene.
Is that your bike outside?,
he finally managed, motioning
with his thumb over his shoulder
and toward the door.
Uh-huh, she responded
warily, her eyes wide and her
face questioning. If there was a
tough mystique she was going
after with the garb, the softness in her voice pretty much
blew the whole thing. McKane
grinned a little and nodded.
Nice bike.
Ellies eyes wrinkled with
a smile and softened as she
formed her mouth to make some
response, but the sound of sirens
outside cut her off before
she could speak.
Well, I wonder what
the hecks on fire?,
the brown shirted man
growled, looking away
from the television and
toward McKane, obviously recognizing the
newspaper man and half
expecting him to have the
answer. McKanes eyes
widened slightly with a
first hint of alarm, just as
the shrill metallic beep
of his cell phone split the
somber darkness.
The little thermometer
on Bernie Beckers e-mail
program chugged with
message deliveries as he
sat staring, eyes intent
through his glasses and
his mouth bent into its
natural frown. The monitor lit
his face with a blue gray hue,
painted against the darkness
and the quiet of his living room
in the mid-afternoon with only
the sound of the television and
the occasional call on the police
scanner in the background. The
quiet and the darkness helped
him concentrate, away from the
sunlight and the distractions of
the outside world, and hed been
reading all day and watching the
news shows on WNN. He pushed
aside a stack of newspaper articles and put some paper in the
computer printer to get it ready.
Bernard, thanks for the
FIREWORKS…
FROM PAGE 1
social media.
Donations can be dropped
off or mailed to Garnett City
Hall, with checks made pay-
able to Garnett Community
Foundation LibertyFest, 11
W. 5th Avenue, P.O. Box H,
Garnett, Ks., 66032.
update, Seebers e-mail led off, a
long cc list of additional addressees and mailing list names
crowding the top of the message
showing who else had received
it. The list included conservative legislators, the publishers of
several larger newspapers and
regional television stations as
well as senators congressmen,
and other conservative organizations, some of which Bernie
didnt even recognize. Hed been
disappointed in the days since he
sent the news of the killing that
he hadnt had a reply, and he
felt a swell of pride when he saw
his name not only acknowledged
by Seeber but also broadcast as
a player to such a list of the
important. He felt included and a
part of the brotherhood, and his
allegiance was stronger than it
had ever been.
Unfortunately, it sounds as
though you are experiencing the
ever-present encroachment of
social collapse which we see con-
tinuing indicators of throughout
our once great nation, Seebers
message continued. Such
crimes arent just the things of
the urban cesspools any longer.
Theyre corrupting small towns
like yours as well and in so many
other places throughout the
country which were once safe
from crime under the protection
of neighbors, armed, ready and
willing to enforce order in their
own communities. And thats
what makes it so important for
us to remain vigilant and strong
in these threatening days of collapse.
The ill-legal system has
been bastardized to work for the
criminals, not us. Law enforcement is gelded by the corrupted
judges, gutless prosecutors and
politicians into some ridiculous
politically correct scheme where
criminals rights become more
important than we who abide by
the laws, and nabob idiots in the
corporate-controlled media do
nothing but fan the putrid flame
with their pro-Jew and anti-justice propaganda. It is a sickening, cancerous illusion of what
our venerated Founding Fathers
intended two centuries ago.
Sad to say, Bernard, if and
when this filth that has scourged
your community is caught, hell
probably get no more than some
cushy sentence to a mental hospital, after the state has spent
hundreds of thousands of dollars on his prosecution which is
really just the building of walls
around his worthless carcass to
protect him from justice. I pray
for you and for the might of those
who will join with us and stand
for this no more.
Please keep me posted, and
God be with you. Yours in service, Grant Seeber.
Bernies eyes narrowed as
he nodded slightly in prideful
A big THANK YOU to our
local dairymen!
2×3.5
brummel
the traffic which now thickened
as the town lookie-loos began
their endless parade around the
emergency vehicles now nearly clogging the thoroughfare of
the narrow city street. It was a
longstanding joke that most of
Henrysville had a police scanner
at home so they could keep up
with their neighbors and correct
the newspaper when it published
something in error, so it was
no surprise to McKane to see
the typical parade forming. He
checked his watch. Three eighteen. They should be wrapping
the paper and getting ready for
their press slot at nine oclock
tomorrow morning by now. Late
again. This better be worth it. He
nudged the truck along slowly
down the back alley, his mind
pumping as the truck crawled
along. The old fire escape ladder
on the back of the Sharon County
State Bank building seemed to
scream at him.
The ladder was retracted
short of the ground by a good
eight feet, made to be released
from above to give access to the
ground instead of vice versa.
McKane pulled the truck straight
up to the side of the building
underneath the ladder, and slung
his camera bag over his neck and
shoulder to rest it comfortably
on his back. With a couple of
strained grunts and not really
minding if his full weight would
dent the roof of the pickup where
he now stood, McKane pulled the
ladder twice to test it, and started
climbing.
Rust from the old iron came
away and stained his hands, but
the century-old structure was
sound and McKane cleared the
parapet of the vintage two-story bank building in less than a
SEE SKINNING ON PAGE 3B
2×4
TrustPoint
That whole
ice cream thing…
Yeah. That pretty much rocks.
Thank you for all you do.
2x2Thank you
toGSSB
our area dairymen.
2×2
leroy coop
agreement. Behind him, the low
volume of the police scanners
emergency alert tone caught his
attention.
Did they say anything else?,
McKanes voice was calm but
intent into the cell phone as he
pulled the white pickup past the
intersection of Main and Second,
and peered down the street at
the growing congestion of police
and onlookers at the scene. On
the other end of the line, a flustered Sandy tried to come up
with answers.
One of them said something
about calling an ambulance,
and then one of the deputies I
dont know which one, called and
said not to worry about it but to
get the coroner, she said. The
scanner comes in and out, but
Im sure he said the coroner.
Okay. Wheres Wendell?
I think he headed down
there. We werent sure where
you were.
It only took a few seconds to get
across town, get his camera from
the Sentinel office and get back
to the scene. McKane groaned
to himself. Wendell would blow
it. He wouldnt get into position
because he wouldnt push his
luck with the cops at the scene.
Hed bobble around and get
pushed back beyond the action,
and thered end up being either
no photo at all or some lame shot
of cops standing around a patrol
car. The urgency stiffened his
spine, and he shook his head in
amazement. Two bodies pop up
in Henrysville in a week. An
underground meth war making
ash piles out of the countys cook
shacks. Things were getting nuts
around here.
McKane turned and drove
down the opposite block, peering down the open streets and
alleys without getting tied up in
To our valuable Dairy Farmers;
2x2thank
And.
youCo.
for all you do.
FarmAnderson
BureauCounty
Farm Bureau Association
2×2
EKAE
Proud to support
our area dairy farmers.
2×2
beachner
120 S. Maple
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-0099
2×2
valley r
We are proud to salute our area dairy producers.
2×2
mfa oil
2×2
leonard
davi-
Lynn Davison
785-448-5512 704 N. Maple St., Garnett www.mfaoil.com
(785) 448-4068 OR (785) 448-7643
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
SKINNING…
FROM PAGE 2B
minute. Stretched out in front of
him was the landscape of rooftops, a mixed mosaic of black
tar, deteriorating gray shingles,
aging stainless steel sheeting
and even newer white vinyl in
some places. The uneven plane
was cross-cut at intervals by parapets of brick and painted roofing materials. McKane moved
to the edge of the building and
peered down the street to the
gathering crowd from his vantage point high above. As fearful
as he was on a bridge only a
few feet above water, the product
of the mysterious phobia which
tracked him since childhood, he
had little hesitation about looking over the edge of the structure
to the ground below. Judging
the distance on the ground to
the surface in front of him, he
began quick stepping across the
rooftops, vaulting parapets as
he approached them, his shoes
scratching against the granulated brick and old mortar and
other debris that covered the
surface.
The back section of roof on the
Bakers Clothing Building had
been burned out two years ago,
and the renovation now underway was gutting the interior
and pulling down the old roofing
beams which survived the fire in
order to replace them. McKane
looked down from the adjoining
building into the inside of the
open structure, punctuated in
places by sections of floor far
below which were still in place,
plaster and lath exposed on the
walls, and piles of lumber and
other debris here and there on
the ground. To the side of one
of the board piles, toward the
back of the building and far from
the street entrance, Undersheriff
Bookman and two deputies stood
beside a white plastic sheet as
two paramedics approached from
the ambulance which had just
arrived outside, snapping their
cream-colored rubber gloves into
a better fit as they navigated the
piles of junk and debris. There
Public
Notice
Your
RIGHT
to know.
Notice
of filing
application
for saltwater
injection
(Published in the Anderson County Review on
June 23, 2020)
Before the Kansas Corporation Commission
Notice of Filing Application
RE: RJ Energy, LLC – Application for a permit
to authorize the injection of saltwater for the
enhanced recovery of oil on the Roselle 11,
T-38, RE-35, D-39, located in Anderson Co.,
KS.
TO: All Oil & Gas Producers, Unleased Mineral
Interest Owners, Landowners, and all persons
whomever concerned.
You, and each of you, are hereby notified
that RJ Energy, LLC, has filed an application
to commence the injection of saltwater in the
Squirrel formation for the enhanced recovery of
oil at the Roselle 11 located [2825 FSL 38 FEL]
T-38 located [2810 FSL 790 FEL] SEC5 T21
R21E; RE-35 located [2300 FSL 4548 FEL]
D-39 located [2970 FSL 4900 FEL] SEC4 T21
R21E Anderson Co., Kansas, with a maximum
operating pressure of 400 psi and a maximum
injection rate of 50 bbls per day.
Any persons who object to or protest this application shall be required to filed their objections
or protest with the Conservation Division of
the Kansas Corporation Commission within 30
days from the date of this publication. These
protests shall be filed pursuant to Commission
regulations and must state specific reasons
why granting the application may cause waste,
violate correlative rights, or pollute the natural
resources of the State of Kansas.
All persons interested or concerned shall take
notice of the foregoing and shall govern themselves accordingly.
RJ Energy, LLC
22082 NE Neosho Rd
Garnett, KS 66032
785-448-6995
jn23t1*
was no hurry in their step as
they neared the covered body,
and McKane quickly retrieved
his camera from the bag. The
illuminated viewfinder automatically adjusted to the subdued
afternoon light in the bottom of
the building as McKane began
snapping shots, zooming in with
the telephoto lens for a full frame
of the paramedics as they knelt
toward the plastic sheet. He sat
his camera gently back into the
bag and dialed Wendell on his
cell phone.
Where are you? Wendells
voice was clear and strong over
the phone. Below in the street, he
stood toward the back of a crowd
of people trying to look past the
police barricade as cars passed
one after the other behind him.
Im about 40 feet over your
head and toward the back of the
Bakers building.
What? How did?
You gotta think 3D, Wendell,
McKanes eyes traveled up and
across the view of the town from
the rooftop as he spoke. Listen,
you got something to write on?
Uh, well, yeah, the younger
man fumbled in his camera bag
with his right hand, pulling out
a crinkled white note pad and
searched his shirt pocket for a
pen.
***To be continued next week
beginning where Chapter 7 left
off this week.
3B
LOCAL
Notice of public sale of real estate
(First published in the Anderson County Review
on June 16, 2020)
James R. Campbell
Anderson County Counselor
Coffman & Campbell, LLC
511 Neosho St.
Burlington, KS 66839
620 364-3094 (T)620 364-2840 (F)
j.campbell@thecoffinanfirm.com
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
OF THE COUNTY OF ANDERSON, KANSAS
Plaintiff,
vs.
MAURICE LINDBERG, et fil.
Defendants.
Case No. 2019 CV 000021
PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 60 AND 79 OF
KANSAS STATUTES ANNOTATED
NOTICE OF SALE
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that under
and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me
out of the Dish'ict Court of Anderson County,
Kansas, in the above-entitled action, I will on
Thursday, July 23, 2020, at 1:30 p.m. on said
day, in the County Extension Office of Anderson
County, Kansas, offer at public sale, and sell to
the highest and best bidder for cash in hand, all
of the following described real estate situated in
Anderson County, Kansas, to-wit:
Page#9
1-00203360 EL CONCEPT LLC
Complete Description:
Lot Nineteen (19) and the West Half (W/2) of Lot
Twenty (20) in Block One (1) in Smith's Addition
to the City of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas.
Per Diem: 1.43
Tax: 2433.04
Specials: 3116.00
Interest and Fees to
1/12/2018: 695.03
Total Due: $6244.07
Page#17 1-00210580 KELLY FORBESJONES & GEORGE BURTON WADDLE
Complete Description:
West 3 feet of the East100 feet of Lot Thirteen
(13) in Block Two (2) in Whiteford Addition to the
City of Garnett, Kansas.
Per Diem: 0.00
Tax: 36.57
Specials: 0.00
Interest and Fees to
1/12/2018: 51.97
Total Due: $88.54
Page#26 1-00214460 DENISE G LAW
Complete Description:
Commencing at the northeast corner of Lot Two
(2) in Block Fifty-five (55) in the City of Garnett,
Anderson County, Kansas, thence South 140
feet, thence Vest 37 feet 3 inches, thence North
40 feet, thence East 9 inches, thence North 100
feet, thence East 36 feet 6 inches to the place
of beginning.
Per Diem: 3.77
Tax: 14336.72
Specials: 0.00
Interest and Fees to
l/12/2018: 3959.82
Total Due: $18296.54
Page#37 1-00500260 LOUIS NUNEZ JR
Complete Description:
Lots Thirteen (13) and Fourteen (14) and Fifteen
(15), in Block Nineteen (19), in the City of
Kincaid, Anderson County, Kansas.
Per Diem: 0.03
Tax: 140.99
Specials: 0.00
Interest and Fees to
1/12/2018: 98.06
Total Due: $239.05
Page#49 1-00701560 GILES BOUSE
(DECEASED)
Complete Description:
A parcel of land 20 feet by 50 feel in Lot Four
(4), Block Eleven (11), in the town of Westphalia
described as follows: Beginning 77 feet -7est
of the Northeast corner of Lot Four (4), thence
South 50 feet, thence Vest 20 feet, thence
North 50 feet, thence East 20 feet to the place
of beginning. The North 10 feet of said land
be dedicated to public use as a public alley.
Per Diem: 0.03
Tax: 87.22
Specials: 0.00
Interest and Fees to
l/12/2018: 187.61
Total Due: $274.83
Page#56
1-08000720
NANCY
AG
KEMPNICH
Complete Description:
Lots Seven (7), Eight (8) and Nine (9) in Block
Twenty-five (25) in Railroad Addition to the Town
of Welda, Anderson County, Kansas.
Per Diem: 0.08
Tax: 359.54
Specials: 0.00
Interest and Fees to
l/12/2018: 97.28
Total Due: $456.82
*Abstracting, publishing, postage and costs
as well as interest on the principal from and after
January 12, 2018 will be added to the Total Due.
The above described real estate is taken as
property of the respective defendants designated herein as the owner thereof and is to be sold
and will be sold without appraisement to satisfy
said Order of Sale and the respective adjudged
liens thereon.
WITNESS my hand at Garnett, Kansas, this
12th day of June, 2020.
/s/Vernon L. Valentine,
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas
ATTEST:
/s/Julie Heck Wettstein,
Clerk of Anderson County, Kansas
/s/JAMES R. CAMPBELL – S.C. # 14631
Anderson County Counsel, Anderson County,
Kansas
jn16t3*
2020 Primary Election Certificate of Candidacy
(First Published in Anderson County Review, June 23, 2020)
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
LOCAL
KDOT reminds the use of right of
way limited to highway purposes
The Kansas Department
of Transportation wants to
remind the public that according to state law, all rights of
way on state highways are to
be used exclusively for highway purposes. KDOT has
jurisdiction over all interstate,
Kansas and U.S. routes on the
states 9,500-mile system.
The violation that occurs
frequently is the placement of
various signs that are removed
and taken to local KDOT offices. However, it is also unlawful
for any persons to display on
highway right of way outside
the city limits any goods, wares
or merchandise for sale.
One exception to this is the
sale of farm or garden products,
but these sales must be made
exclusively at the entrance to
the farm or garden where they
were produced as long as the
sales are conducted a safe distance from the traveled way.
Any other location of these
sales violates state law and will
be removed by KDOT and/or
law enforcement.
1×3
propso
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
Chris
Chris Cygan
Cygan
785-418-5435
785-418-5435
Anderson County
news DAILY
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
at 8 a.m.
Now offering
Auction
Services!
10.37 FM 1220 AM
Call
(785) 448-3999
Health Services
3×6.5 D I R E C T O R Y
Health Directory
Eye Care
Family Care
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
Pharmacy
To advertise in this
guide, contact
The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121
or email
review@garnett-ks.com
REAL ESTATE
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
M-T-W-F
8-5
SAT 8-10
After Hours By Appt.
Visit Miami County!
3×5.5
These Miami County businesses appreciate your
Miami Co.
patronage
and Guide
encourage you to visit your local
merchants in Miami County!
Classied ads
only three dollars.
545 Main, OSAWATOMIE
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
913-755-2514
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
www.tradingpostdeals.com
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
MISCELLANEOUS
Attention
Mediacre
Recipients! Save your money
on your Medicare supplement
plan. Free quotes from top providers. Excellent coverage. Call
for a no obligation quote to see
how much you can save! 855587-1299
Best Satellite TV with 2 Year
Price Guarantee! $59.99/mo
with 190 channels and 3 months
free premium movie channels!
Free next day installation! Call
316-223-4415
Get
A-Rated
Dental
Insurance
starting
at
around $1 per day! Save 25% on
Enrollment Now! No Waiting
Periods. 200k+ Providers
Nationwide. Everyone is
Accepted! Call 785-329-9747 (M-F
9-5 ET)
B a t h r o o m
Renovations. Easy, one day
updates! We specialize in safe
bathing. Grab bars, no slip
flooring & seated showers. Call
for a free in-home consultation: 855-382-1221
Medical Billing & Coding
Training.
New
Students
Only. Call & Press 1. 100%
online courses. Financial Aid
Available for those who qualify. Call 888-918-9985
Recently diagnosed with
llung cancer and 60+ years old?
Call now! You and your family
may be entitled to a significant
cash award. Call 866-327-2721
today. Free Consultation. No
Risk.
New Authors Wanted! Page
Publishing will help you
self-publish your own book.
Free
author
submission
kit!
Limited offer!Why
wait? Call now: 855-939-2090
MAKE MONEY.
USE THE
MISCELLANEOUS
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Steel
Cargo/Storage
Containers available In
Kansas City & Solomon Ks. 20s
40s 45s 48s & 53s Call 785 655
9430 or go online to chuckhenry.com for pricing, availability
& Freight. Bridge Decks. 40×8
48×86 90 x 86 785 655 9430
chuckhenry.com
Are you behind $10k or more
on your taxes? Stop wage &
bank levies, liens & audits,
unfiled tax returns, payroll
issues, & resolve tax debt fast.
Call 855-462-2769
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
Lowest Prices on Health
Insurance. We have the best
rates from top companies! Call
Now! 855-656-6792.
HELP WANTED
Wolken Tire Inc – position
availabe for full-time employee.
Experience with tire repairs,
alignments, brake repairs etc.
a plus. Please appy within at 601
S. Oak, Garnett, Ks.
jn16t2
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.
Part time Van driver to pack and deliver senior
meals to nutrition sites in Franklin and Anderson
counties. Must be able to lift 50 lbs and have a
valid drivers license. No weekends, nights, or holidays. Paid sick time, vacation and holidays.
2×3 ECKAAA
Full time cook to prepare side dishes for one meal
a day for the elderly nutrition program. Hours are
6AM- 1PM Monday – Friday. NO weekends, nights
or holidays. Paid time off.
Please apply in person at
the ECKAAA Nutrition
Program Kitchen at 1538 Industrial Ave, Ottawa, KS. EOE
Anderson County news
DAILY at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
Quality Hometown Sales & Service!
2013 Chevrolet
3×8 beckman motors
Silverado 1500 LT
TIRE PRICE MATCH GUARANTEE
Provide us with a better
price at the time of puchase
and well match it.
98,600 miles, 5.3L V8 engine,
4-Wheel Drive, Trailering
Package, Power Driver Seat,
Aluminum Wheels
Coupon Code: 201
Expires: 12-31-2020
Find a better price within 30 days of the purchase and well
refund the difference. *Eligible Tire Brands: BFGoodrich,
Bridgestone, Continental, Dunlop, Firestone, General,
Goodyear, Hankook, Kelly, Michelin, Pirelli and Uniroyal.
$19,400
2014 Buick Encore
FWD
57,000 Miles, Blind Zone Alert,
Bose Audio System, Power
Drivers Seat.
$11,900
Our wine
selection is
unsurpassed!
Dont justWEEK
sit there… place
yourfor
ad now
by phone!
EVERY
just
your
ads!
(785)
842-6440
(800)
683-4505
LADIES
FASHIONS
GIFTS
W-TH-F ads@tradingpostdeals.com
10-5 / SAT. 10-3/CLOSED MON. & TUES.
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
MISCELLANEOUS
1403 Baptiste Dr.
M-Sat 9am-11pm
PAOLA 913-557-5600 Sun Noon-8pm
CONSIGNMENT MACHINERY SALE
Anderson County Sales Company
Garnett, Kansas
To advertise your business
here
contact Stacey at (785)
448-3121.
Located Hwy 59 & Hwy 31 Intersection
MIDWEST COLLISION INC.
31570 Old KC Rd. PAOLA (913) 294-4016
Dean & Barbara Duncan Auction
4519 W. 1600 Road Centerville, Ks. 10 a.m. Sat., June 27, 2020
3×5 marty reed
North of Centerville, Ks., 4 miles on 1077; or south of Parker, Ks., 5 miles on
1077 to 1600 Rd, then west 1 1/4 miles. Watch for signs. Prepare for 2 rings.
See full sale bill & photos at www.martyreadauction.com
DODGE DUALLY POLARIS RANGER ZERO TURN MOWER LE150
RAM CHARGER STOCK TRAILER TILT TRAILER HEAVY DUTY HAULING TRAILER CLASSIC VINTAGE BICYCLE GENERATORS POWER
WASHER INDUSTRIAL SHELVING SHOP & TOOLS APPLIANCES
LAWN & GARDEN PROPANE SMOKER CONCRETE FLATWORK BOAT MARTY READ AUCTION SERVICE
620-224-6495
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE
Charley Johnson & Marvin Swickhammer,
assistant auctioneers
HOUSEHOLD ANTIQUES
Real Estate, Farm, Livestock & Commercial
FISHING & CAMPING…
www.martyreadauction.com
much more…see the website!
3×8 and co sales
Saturday, June 27 9:00 a.m.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS: Not responsible for accidents. Verbal
statements made day of sale take precedence over written material.
TRACTORS
Case IH 5140 Tractor, Cab, AC
Case IH 2290 Tractor
Case 730 Tractor, WF, Diesel w/
Loader
Case 430 Tractor, WF, Gas
JD 322 Skid Loader Track
Case IHC JX55, 3400 hours
68 AC 180D tractor
VEHICLES
94 Ford F250, 4×4, AT, 139K, Bradford Flatbed
93 Chevy 2500, 2WD, AT, Utility Bed
88 Ford F350, 2WD, AT, Utility Bed
85 IH Eagle 10 Wheeler Truck, 20
Bed, 64 Sides
99 Chevy S-10, 4-cyl, AT, 89K
12 Freightliner Cascadia DD13, 10spd, 750K
07 Freightliner Columbia C13, Autoshift, 10-spd, 900K
TRAILERS
99 Wilson Cattle Pot, 50×102, Air
Ride, 40% Floor, Center Gates, Gooseneck, 6×14 Pipe Livestock Trailer, New
Tarp-Tires-Floor-Lights
Titan 20 Stock Trailer
93 Titan GN Flatbed Trailer 24
92 Starlite GN Flatbed Trailer 24
Flatbed Trailer 6 1/2×12
EQUIPMENT
Vermeer XL Baler Net Wrap Kicker
JD 467 Mega Wide Baler
JD 1525 Twine Knife Swather w/300
Auger Platform
Kuhn 700 Disc Mower, 9
Hesston 1090 Swather
NH 469 Swather
NH 499 Discbine
Hay Sickle Mower, Self-Propelled, 12
Vermeer WR22A 10 Wheel Rake
Hesston 5200 Bale Mover
IH 1150 Feed Grinder, Knives Never
Turned
Gehl 100 Grinder Mixer
Farmhand 880 Hay Grinder
JD #68 Grain Cart, 125 Bu., Auger,
New Paint
Case IHC 3600 Disc, 24
JD 730 Field Cultivator, 30
JD Cultivator, 12 Row
JD 700 Planter, 6 Row, 30 Rows, All
Plates Shedded
JD 8300 Grain Drill, 21 Hole,
Shedded
JD 400 Rotary Hoe
NH 520 Manure Spreader
NH 331 Manure Spreader
JD 1046 Running Gear Flatbed
Wagon
Meyers Boomless sprayer 3pt, 100 gal
MISCELLANEOUS
1989 Nymph 16 Boat, 28 HP Evinrude, w/Trailer
Lowe 1667 TBoat w/9.9 4 Cycle
Outboard, electric start
JD Z850A, 72 Zero Turn, Hydlift,
510 HRS
Husqvarna Pro 27, 60 Zero Turn,
Kohler Engine
Antique Road Grader, Pull Type
JD 1 Row Mounted Corn Picker
Superior Grain Drill, Steel Wheels
2 Bulk Bins, 2 Ton & 3 Ton
Cement Mixer – Box Blade, 4, 3 pt.
Ridgid Job Box – Rotary Mower, 4,
3 pt.
Honda EG3500 Generator
JD VT Twin 18 HP Spin Steer Mower
Finish Mower, 6, 3 pt.
Power House Generator, 4000 Watt
Generac Generator, 3250 Watt
2-Wheel Car Trailer
Power House Generator, 9000 Watt
Buggy, Single Seated, Open
Garden Tillers
Push Mowers
2 Metal Storage Buildings, 9×12,
10×15
Hay Wagon, Spoke Wheeled
Finish Mower, 6 3 pt.,
Automatic Chicken Water System
1500 HD, lots of new parts
Priefert Squeeze Chute w/Dolly
Bushhog SQ720 Rotary Mower, 3 pt.
Bushhog Post Hole Digger, 3 pt.
w/14 & 16 Bits
Fertilizer Spreader, 500 lbs, 3 pt.
Several Poly Tanks & Fuel Tanks
Several 4 Portable Augers
Bushhog Mower, 5, 3 pt.
Blade, 3 pt.
Several Hay Rings
Panels
Gates
Lg Portable Smoker
30 Cedar Posts, 6x6x10
Lots of Cedar Lumber
We will have Lots of Small Hand
Tools, Tillers, Lawn Mowers, Fence
Chargers, Elec Tools
Lots & Lots of Small Items
CONSIGNED BY
ANDERSON COUNTY
3 – 2012 Dodge Chargers w160K to
190K miles
1 – 2005 Ford Explorer
RATLIFF AUCTIONS
Ron Ratliff (785) 448-8200
Mark Hamilton (785) 214-0560
Ross Daniels (620) 431-8536
Clerks: Deanna Wolken, Ruth Pracht & Rhonda Frank
Accepting Consignments Until Friday Night, June 26th Nothing Removed Until Settled For
Cash or Check – Not Responsible For Theft or Accidents Restaurant & Restrooms
Need a place
to hang your hat?
Check out our
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
LOCAL
5B
Real Estate Classifieds!
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
9.54
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
SERVICES
FARM & AG
Rates
Custom round baling – net
wrap. Contact Garen (785) 4482974.
jn9t8*
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
mc10tfn
1×2
edg
HAPPY ADS
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Happiness is… buying elk meat
at Garnett Farmers Market
every Thursday, 4:30pm-7pm.
Downtown Garnett.
jn16t4*
1×3
AD
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
WANTED
Credit to established accounts
Wanted – large and small straw
bales. Nichols Dairy, (620) 3440790.
jn23t2
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
SERVICES
Mundell Outdoors, LLC
mundel
Driveway Repair Custom Hauling
Pasture Clearing Excavation
Gradework Gravel Top Soil
(785) 448-8186
Call for a quote.
ryter
(913) 594-2495
GARAGE SALES
Open For
Business!
50% OFF
overnight stays
til end of July 2020
29167 NE Wilson Road
GREELEY, KS
(OFF 2000 ROAD)
785-521-5858
Open 24/7, or by appointment
Parts/Service Departments
2×2
prairie land part
Multiple Opportunities PrairieLand Partners, John Deere,
currently has multiple opportunities in our parts and
service departments for motivated individuals at its Iola
and Independence locations. Parts Sales Iola and Service
Foreman Independence. Come join a leading-edge team
that offers a competitive salary
and benefits package. To apply,
go to: www.prairielandpartners.
com/careers.
Spray Foam Insulation and more
Closed and Open Cell Insulation
2×2
Attic Blown Fiberglass Insulation
Insulation
precision Batt
Licensed and Insured
Foam Insulation
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tfn
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.*
*
Photos
Its quick & easy!
need
to
be
emailed
separately
to
JD Yutzy
785-448-8727
Call today for all your insulation needs
Quality and customer satisfaction is #1
is looking for full-time CMAs, shift varies, who are
wanting to work with our team.
We offer Health Insurance and Competitive Wages.
If you are interested in this position,
please contact Sandra Johnson
at 785-448-6884
or come by our home
at 806 West 4th, Garnett.
We are excited to meet with you.
2×2 JB Construction
JB
Decks Siding
Pole Buildings Garages
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joe.borntreger@yahoo.com
Full time Maintenance
The Garnett Housing Authority is now taking
applications for a full-time maintenance position. Position includes paid vacation, sick leave,
9 holidays and KPERs. Hours of position are
Monday through Friday 8-5pm. Applications can
be picked up at the Housing Authority office at
116 Park Plaza North 8-noon and 1-5 M-F,
785-448-6990. Deadline is July 15,
2020. The Housing Authority is
an equal opportunity employer.
CONSTRUCTION CREW MEMBERS
Post Frame Buildings
UTILITY PLANT OPERATOR
2×4
city of garnett
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for the
position of Utility Plant Operator. Duties include the day to day
operations of the water and power plant as well as occasionally
assisting in the operations of the wastewater treatment facility.
This position works a rotational day/evening shift of ten-hour
days in a forty-hour workweek. The ideal candidate will have
a high school diploma or GED and a Class III Kansas Water
License. Candidate must have the ability to obtain a Class III
Water Operator Certification through the State of Kansas within
three (3) years if they dont already have a certification.
For a complete job description and application, stop by City Hall,
131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or visit www.simplygarnett.com. Competitive salary based upon qualifications and excellent benefits
package with a starting wage of
$15.00. The position will remain
open until filled, with the first
review of application occurring on
June 30th. EOE
www.simplygarnett.
2×4.5 qso
Quality Structures, Inc. is seeking Construction
Crew Members to join the QSI team. Job duties
that are involved, but not limited to are: On-site
physical labor; Use of power tools; Climbing
ladders; Clean-up work. Successful Candidate(s)
will be: Hard working; Dedicated to the job and
reliable; Able to work at heights exceeding 20; 18
years of age or older. Company Crew Members
receive: Competitive wage; Benefit package after
90 days of employment, which includes: Paid
holidays; Vacation time; Company paid health
insurance; Dental; 401K plan.
Interested candidates may call or stop by Quality
Structures, Inc. and ask for: Racheal Bachman,
Production Supervisor.
Quality Structures, Inc.
167 Highway 59
Richmond, Kansas 66080
785-835-6100
www.qualitystructures.com
Card of Thanks
Happiness is… All Anderson
County Republicans invited to
meet and hear their candidates
for local, state and national
office at Stumps & Serenades,
Thursday, July 16, at the Kirk
House at 145 W. 4th in Garnett.
Social with piano/vocals
begins at 5:30 p.m., candidate
presentations begin 7pm. This
is an indoor/outdoor event to
allow social distancing. Contact
county chairman Dane Hicks
at ancogop@garnett-ks.com for
more info or to volunteer to
help with this event.
jn23tf
I cannot find the words to tell everyone how special you have made me
feel. Each card brought a memory of
you and there were many over the
years. I became close to so many of
you & will never forget you.
Thank you for remembering me.
1×2
gibson
Shirley Gibson
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
garnett-ks.com
2×2
guest homes
June 26 & 27
11 Homes (35+ Families)
matching couch, rocker & coffee
table, lift chair, recliner, glider w/
ottoman, rockers, antiques, washer
& dryers, small appliances, kids
picnic table, miniature pitchers,
31, Longaberger, Tupper., Corelle,
dolls, baby walker, infant to kids
clothing, annuals at greenhouse
75% off, honey, baked goods.
Hamburgers & Hot Dogs
on 1400 Rd.
10-14 miles west of Garnett,
mostly between 1400 & Harris
Xeric Lane & Geary
NOTICES
Guest Home Estates
Neighborhood Country
Garage Sales
1×2
rife
Dining room table, chairs,
Happiness is… Having the
Reviews EagleEye News
Drone do aerial photography
or videography for your wedding, special event, property
survey, promotional video,
high-altitude equipment or
building inspection, etc. Realtime view from up to 400 feet
elevation, up to nearly 1 mile
range. Contact the Anderson
County Review at (785) 448-3121
for more info.
oc11tfn
Happiness is… celebrating
your wedding anniversary
with a FREE announcement
and photo in the Review. Go
to www.garnett-ks.com and
click the form under Submit
News. Available FREE 24
hours/day! mc1tf
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2×2 Garden Gate Greenhouse
CLOSING FOR SEASON JUNE 30
garden green
Clearance:
50% off remaining inventory
10003 NW 1600 Rd Westphalia
(from 7th St. in Garnett west 15 miles.
(785) 489 -2483 Hrs: Tues-Fri 9-6 Sat 9-4
Two Custodial Positions
USD #365 is seeking applicants for two custodial positions. If interested please complete an
application on-line at USD #365 job openings
or pickup an application at 305 N. Oak (District
Office). USD #365 provides a BC/BS single
health insurance plan for full-time employees,
which includes dental. EEQ
COUNTY
VEHICLE AUCTION
2×5
And co sheriff
The Anderson County Sheriffs Office has 3 Dodge
Chargers that were former patrol vehicles for sale
at public auction at
12 noon Saturday, June 27, 2020,
at Anderson County Sales Company located at
K31 and 59 HWY Garnett, Ks.
Vehicles are sold as is, no warranty, guarantee
or promises made. Vehicles were used up to the
day they were decommissioned for high mileage.
White 2012 Dodge Charge mileage 170,078; Grey
2012 Dodge Charger mileage 166,032; Grey 2012
Dodge Charger mileage 189,994.
2005 Ford Explorer: 1FMZU73K15ZA20516
(Anderson County Courthouse vehicle,
mileage 83,556)
2012 Dodge Charger: 2C3CDXAT6CH205264
2012 Dodge Charger: 2C3CDXAT1CH145152
2012 Dodge Charger: 2C3CDXAT5CH145137
Display Advertising
Network
SHARING information
at an ECONOMICAL rate
ACROSS the state!
785-448-3121
Contact us TODAY for more information!
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 23, 2020
LOCAL
Hokes 50th anniversary
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-23-2020 / SUBMITTED
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-23-2020 / SUBMITTED
As area schools have been allowed to resume conditioning and weight training as well as various camps, local schools have taken advantage of the opportunity of returning to some sense of normalcy after schools were shut down early last year. Here Bob Risch is teaching
about proper lifting technique, utilizing low weight with this big group of young athletes.
RATES…
FROM PAGE 1
and the internet-completed
percentages for each jurisdiction.
Anderson County ranked at
64.2 percent overall responses
as of last week with 21 percent of those completed online.
Thats a little behind Kansas
65.4 overall completion rate
but lags far behind the 51.3 percent of state residents whove
responded via the Internet.
In fact with the exception
of Linn County at 19 percent,
Anderson had the lowest figure
in the region for data submitted online. Linn County also
trailed all other counties in
the region in overall response
rates with 50 percent. Miami
County was the highest among
contiguous counties with 73
percent overall and 63 percent online; Coffey was 62/50,
Franklin 68/49 and Allen 64/46.
Census information can also
be submitted by phone as well
as online and by hard copy. For
more information go to www.
my2020census.gov, or call (800)
923-8282.
2×2 Did You Know:
Doing
business local supports small
LoveWhtsLocal
businesses who give back to our youth,
civic organizations, churches and
schools!
Facebook @ LoveWhatsLocalGarnett
Countys Republican
Party to host meet & greet
The Anderson County
Republican Party will host a
meet & greet event for members of the GOP to get to know
Republican candidates running in the upcoming August 4
primary.
The event, titled "Stumps
& Serenades," will be held
July 16 at the Kirk House in
Garnett with live music and
a social beginning at 5:30 p.m.
Candidate stump speeches will
begin at 7 p.m. with a question
and answer session following.
Anderson County has two
determinant primary elec-
tions in August, both on the
Republican side of the ticket. Four Republicans filed
in the race for Anderson
County Attorney with no
Democrats in the race. Two
other Republicans, incumbent Julie Wettstein Garnett
and challenger Sarah Mader
of Westphalia, were the sole
candidates to file for Anderson
County Clerk.
The event is free to
Republicans and Republican
candidates. Donations to the
local party organization will be
accepted.
2×4
Yutzy
See website for
various sizes, styles
Finkenbinder 100th
birthday celebration
Please join friends and family as they are having a 100th
birthday celebration for Mary
lovewhatslocalgarnett@gmail.com
Gary & Cathy Hoke,
Garnett, will be celebrating
their 50th anniversary on
June 27th by renewing their
vows at 2 p.m. in the Family
Life Center at First Christian
Church.
A reception will follow until
4 p.m. All friends and family
are welcome to join them!
They were married June
27, 1970 at the First Christian
Church in Garnett.
Finkenbinder on June 27th
from 2-4 p.m. at the Garnett
Senior Center.
Call (785) 448-5711 text (785) 204-1382
Dutch Country Cafe
Restaurant Coffee Shop Bakery Banquets
309 N. Maple Garnett Mon-Sat 6AM-2:30 PM
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
Daily Lunch Specials:
Monday:
Taco Salad
Tuesday:
Dutch Country Cheese Steak
Wednesday:
Hot Beef Sandwich
Thursday:
Fried Chicken
Friday:
Meatloaf
Saturday:
Chicken Fried Steak
Weekly Baked Goods Special:
Breads &
Dinner Rolls
Men
tio
ad f n this
10% or
off!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY CLERKS OFFICE NEEDS YOUR HELP!
POLL
WORKERS
NEEDED
Have you ever considered being an election worker?
*Become civically engaged
*Every worker is trained thoroughly
*Paid an hourly wage for the day
Contact the County Clerks office
at 785-448-6841 if you are interested.
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS WHO WORK
CAN GET COMMUNITY SERVICE HOURS
(must be 16 or older)
3×10.5
GPI
How To Win
Enter to win
a 50-inch
smart TV!
Register this week at these sponsor locations…
6th Avenue Boutique & Bronze
Askins-Beller Retail Liquor
AuBurn Pharmacy Garnett
Farmers State Bank
Garnett Farmers Market
(at Garnett City Hall)
Garnett Home Center
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Maple Street Liquor
Miller Ace Hardware
Quality Structures
Sandras/CENEX
Scipio Supper Club
State Farm Insurance
Trade Winds Bar & Grill
Wolken Tire
(Garnett Pizza Hut- no on-site)
Use the sponsor registration slip from select merchant ads in the June 16
Review, or register at their store this week! Must be 16 years of age to win.
Entries can be mailed or dropped off at any sponsor or at the Review.
Entry deadline
5 p.m. Thursday, June 25, 2020.
Winner will be announced
in the June 30 Review!

