Anderson County Review — June 9, 2015
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from June 9, 2015. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
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June 9, 2015
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The Anderson County Review
th
1865 2015
(785) 448-3111
Pool expected to
Tractor accident mars
reopen soon after
Westphalias 135th celebration chemical explosion
Parade participant was
seriously injured while
loading tractor after event
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WESTPHALIA A 77-yearold Garnett man who
rode his antique tractor in
Westphalias 135th anniversary parade Sunday afternoon
was seriously injured while
loading the tractor after the
event.
Marvin LeRoy Teter took
part in the lengthy parade,
which began at 3 p.m. Sunday
in downtown Westphalia.
After participating, Teter
attempted to load the tractor
onto a trailer but apparently the brake was not fully
engaged, according to a report
from the Anderson County
Sheriffs Department. Teter
got off the tractor, but somehow the tractor fell off the
trailer onto him, the report
said.
The incident was reported at about 4 p.m., and some
emergency vehicles had to
navigate through entries for
the parade, which was still
underway, to get from the fire
station to the scene of the accident a few blocks away.
Teter was taken by air
ambulance to Overland Park
Regional Medical Center.
A family member reported
on Facebook that he was in
intensive care and suffered
multiple broken ribs, broken
vetebra in his lower back, a
broken pelvis and other injuries.
The event put a damper on
the 135th birthday celebration, but otherwise the events
of the day were well-attended
and successful, according to
Marilyn Brooks, one of the
events organizers. An annual
old timers reunion coincided with the celebration and
helped boost attendance, she
said. A highlight of the day
was a display of old wedding
pictures in the basement of the
St. Teresa Catholic Church.
Organizers at times worried
they would not be able to feed
a large dinner crowd, but they
made it through, Brooks said.
Fifty-one entries took part
in the parade, which lasted
more than an hour. The birthday celebration took the place
of Westphalia Days, a former
annual celebration that ended
a few years ago.
We had quite a crowd,
which is something we hadnt
had for so long, Brooks said.
Citys rec director
escapes serious injury
from PVC pipe shrapnel
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT The Garnett swimming pool was expected to
reopen this week after a chemical explosion closed the pool
since June 1.
Repairs to damaged pipes in
the pools chemical filtration
system began Monday and
the pool will reopen as soon
as those repairs are completed, Garnett City Manager Joyce
Martin said. A hazardous material team checked the pool and
surrounding area and found it
This photo shows some of the
damage left by exploding pipes.
will be safe for use once repairs
are completed.
City Recreation Director Phil
Bures entered a maintenance
building at the pool facility at
about 7 a.m. Monday, June 1,
SEE POOL ON PAGE 3A
County: Road damage
not severe after floods
Road Supervisor Lester Welsh
Mild winter meant
said the damage doesnt appear
to be any worse than other
county saved money,
years, and his department will
can absorb road repairs be able to absorb the cost of
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A mild winter
likely helped save Anderson
County roads from the costly
damages of a wet spring.
County road crews were
forced to spread several tons
of rock on rural roads to repair
damages caused by floods in
May. But Anderson County
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Vickie Moss
Alanda Mader and Virginia Mitchell greet the crowd aboard the 135th
Birthday Cake float submitted by the Donna Mader family for Westphalias
135th anniversary celebration parade Sunday, June 7.
repairs as part of his 2015 budget for general road maintenance. Damages still are being
assessed and repaired, so cost
estimates were not available.
Part of the reason the county
will be able to absorb the costs
as part of general maintenance
is because of a mild winter,
Welsh said.
SEE ROADS ON PAGE 3A
Verdict still pending
for crops after rain
Wheat does best, corn Wheat remains in the best
position of all area crops, as
its growing stage was fursuffers and soybeans
thest advanced when the rains
and thunderstorms hit, said
havent even started
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Mays onslaught of
wet weather didnt exactly signal a death knell to area crops,
but they may need additional
maintenance to recover.
Anderson Countys ag extension agent Shannon Blocker.
Farmers typically avoid planting wheat in low-lying areas, so
most wheat likely sits in dryer
upland fields. However, some
SEE CROPS ON PAGE 3A
Above, Becky (Highberger) Walden
was 1980s Miss Phalia and relived
her crowning moment aboard the
Highberger family float.
Above right, Brynlee Rockers and
Madison Ratliff drove the Mini Tin
Lizzie in the parade.
At right, members of the Wilford and
Dorothy Dieker family sing and dance
to BIg Green Tractor aboard their
float of the same name.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Vickie Moss
Jack Dykes accepts lunch while Dustin Reynolds and others wait
their turn during the Summer Feeding Program lunch sponsored by
ECKAN at the First United Methodist Church in Garnett Friday, June
5. Lunch is offered free to any child ages 1 to 18, from 11:30 a.m. to
noon, Monday through Friday.
Custom printed balloons, wall plaques, rubber stamps – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
VFW BREAKFAST
Breakfast at the Garnett VFW will
be offered 7 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.
Saturday, June 13. Menu includes
biscuits and gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage and eggs.
BAND CONCERT
Garnett Area Band concert will be
7 p.m. Thursday, June 11, at the
north side of the Anderson County
Courthouse Lawn. If rain, it will be
at the Methodist Church, Second
and Oak streets.
CHURCH DINNER
The Garnett First United Methodist
Church is having a BBQ dinner on
Saturday, June 13th. A delicious
meal of pulled pork, brats, sides
and dessert will be served from
5:00pm-7:30pm outside in the
front area of the church on 2nd
and Oak Streets. There will also
be a silent auction. Please come
and enjoy. Public is welcome!
HOUSING VOUCHER LIST
The ECKAN Housing Choice
Voucher waiting list is now open
as of June 1st. Applications can
be printed off the web site at www.
eckan.org, requested by phone
at 785-242-7453 or picked up
at the ECKAN Anderson County
Community Center, located at 132
E. 5th Street, Garnett, KS 66032,
785-448-3670. Applications can
be faxed to 785-229-3103, mailed
to ECKAN Housing, P. O. Box 40,
Ottawa, KS 66067 or dropped
off at the local ECKAN Anderson
county center.
Applications
will be placed on the waiting
list based on the date and time
received.
SUMMER FEEDING
The ECKAN summer feeding program in Anderson County starts
June 1-June 26th at the First
United Methodist Church, 2nd
and Oak Streets, Garnett from
11:30 a.m. to noon only. All kids
eat free up to 18 years of age. No
income requirements or restrictions.
VETERANS PHOTOS
If youre a U.S. military veteran
from Anderson County or the family of a veteran and would like to
submit your vets photo for the
Reviews upcoming hard-cover coffee table book Anderson
County Portraits of Honor,
you may do so until June 30.
Submissions will be accepted
from any vet who formerly or presently lives in Anderson County,
or any present member of the
military from our county. Photos
can be emailed to review@garnett-ks.com or dropped by our
office during business hours to
be scanned while you wait. See
the ad in this edition to save 25%
on pre-orders of the book before
June 30.
MEMORIAL BRICKS
Inscribed bricks are being sold
for the Anderson County Veterans
Memorial and will be used in creation of the walking area. Bricks
can be inscribed with whatever names the purchaser desires.
A minimum $100 donation is
requested. Forms for the bricks
are available in the office of the
Anderson County Clerk.
MEMORIAL NAMES
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS MAY 26
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on May 26, 2015 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
and Dan Harden, BG Consultants
met with the commission. Dan
presented a draft of the proposed
shop building. Discussion was
held on possible options for the
building.
Solid Waste
Garrett,
Landfill
Scott
Supervisor met with the commission. Commissioner Highberger
moved to pay the $4,900 dues
for the Lake Region Solid Waste
Authority. Commissioner McGhee
seconded. Approved 30. He
would like to purchase a 40 cubic
yard dumpster to hold glass. He
thinks it will take about three years
to fill it and then we can haul it to
the glass recycler. The current
vendor who takes our recycling
brings gaylords and pallets in for
us to fill however they are now
wanting to start charging rent for
them while they are being filled.
He questioned the commission
if they had thought anymore
about replacing the recycle trailer.
Commission request information
to review.
Space Needs
Dan Harden, BG Consultants
met with the commission. He
presented a revised space plan.
KCAMP
Jes Pfannenstiel, KCAMP met
with the commission concerning a
dump truck that rolled over a few
weeks ago. He would like to see
if the frame can be straightened
before totally giving up on the
truck. The bed will have to be
taken off first before they can see
if it can be fixed. If the frame cannot be straightened then he would
approve going for a new truck.
Commissioner Highberger moved
to proceed with trying to repair
the truck. Commissioner McGhee
seconded. Approved 30.
Planning and Zoning
Michelle Miller, Deputy Zoning
Director met with the commission.
She presented a zone change for
commission
approval.
Commissioner
Highberger
moved to approve Resolution
2015,0526:01 for ZC 201503
(Watson) to rezone 5 acres
from A2 Transitional Ag to RE
Residential.
Commissioner
McGhee seconded. Approved
30.
Abatements and Escaped Tax
Abatements B15269 and
B15270 and Escaped Tax
E15124 were presented and
approved.
Salary Committee
Phyllis Gettler, County Clerk
presented the recommendation of
the salary committee for the ranges of Rural Fire Coordinator and
Emergency Management Director.
It was recommended to put the
Rural Fire Coordinator in a range
16 and leave the Emergency
Management Director at a range
20. Commission approved the
recommendation.
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
May 27, Henry L Gatlin And
Carol M Gatlin To Randall Stinnett
And Vicki Stinnett, Lots 13, 14, 15
& 16 Blk 15 City Of Kincaid
June 1, Anita Kay Adams To
Michael Burnett, Amy Davis
Burnett, Lot 6 Blk 5 Original
Townsite Of Welda;
June 1, Michael Burnett, Amy
Davis Burnett To Myron Carey,
Lot 6 Blk 5 Original Townsite Of
Welda;
June 1, Stephen L Hickerson Sr
To Stephen L Hickerson Sr And
Stephen L Hickerson Jr, Lot 12 Blk
7 Baileys Orchard Park Addition
To City Of Garnett; (REVISED
1978)
The Anderson County Veterans
Memorial Committee is requesting the communitys assistance
in obtaining a precise and correct list of the veterans who have
served our country from Anderson
CIVIL CASES FILED
County. Lists from the different
William J. Stahl vs. Estate of
conflicts are available in the office Mary J. McGhee, petition to quiet
of the Anderson County Clerk for title.
review and revision.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
HELP FOR ANIMALS
Anyone willing to donate kitty litter, canned dog food or canned
cat food, dog and cat toys, paper
towels, laundry and cleaning supplies, or newspaper to help support Prairie Paws Animal Shelter
can contact Lisa at (785) 2042148.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month from 1-2
p.m. at the Garnett Recreation
Center. For more information, call
Phyllis at ECKAAA, (800) 6335621.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
RECORD
Albert Leroy Anderson Jr,
speeding 43 mph in 30 mph zone.
$150 fine.
Beckie L. Archer, expired tag.
$150 fine. $100 susp.
Beckie L. Archer, speeding 30
mph in 20 mph school zone. $200
fine.
Robert E. Bakken, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Chrisandrea Barnett, dog at
large. $100 fine.
Kevin Michael Barnett, speeding 30 mph in 20 mph zone. $200
fine.
Michael E. Blaufuss, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Sheila Kay Bowman, failure to
register dog, $100 fine.
Devan N. Boydston, speeding
36 mph in 20 mph school zone.
$280 fine.
Sarah Jean Bryant, dog at
large. $100 fine.
Scott D. Bures, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Gertie Burkholder, speeding 37
mph in 20 mph school zone. $310
fine.
Donald E. Carey, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Olivia Chase, failure to register
dog. $100 fine. $25 susp.
Mary M. Chase, failure to register dog. $100 fine. $25 susp.
Mary M. Chase, failure to register dog. $50 fine. $25 susp.
Dario B. Colin, speeding 43
mph in 30 mph zone. $150 fine.
James L. Diamond III, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Donna Jean Diaz, speeding
47mph in 30 mph zone. $180 fine.
Joshua A. Dick, speeding 46
mph in 30 mph zone. $180 fine.
Li Dongze, speeding 43 mph in
30 mph zone. $125 fine.
John W. Farley, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Marcus Z. Ferguson, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
George F. Feuerborn, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Chad W. Flinn, driving with suspended license. $1,050 fine, 5
days jail, 1 year probation.
Kelly R. Forbes-Jones, failure
to stop at stop sign. $125 fine.
Angelique M. Gidding, speeding 47 mph in 30 mph zone. $180
fine.
Robert Gooding, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Julie M. Hartman, speeding 43
mph in 30 mph zone. $150 fine.
David A. Hafner, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Angeli L. Henkle, inattentive
driving. $150 fine.
Bruce Lee Henry, no camping
permit. $75 fine.
Jacob Wayne Hermreck, failure
to register dog. $100 fine.
Tousha R. Hicks, seatbelts
required, 2 counts, $20 fine.
Bailey A. Hoffman, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Joshua Jereme Hoke, fishing
without permit. $75 fine.
Daniel L. Houston, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Ricki L. Jacobson, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Jeremy R. Jones, speeding 44
mph in 30 mph zone. $150 fine.
Leland J. Kueser, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Nicolas R. Lee, speeding 37
mph in 20 mph zone. $310 fine.
Ashlynn N. Lickteig, speeding
30 mph in 20 mph zone. $200
fine.
Lynetta S. Logan, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Betty A. Lytle, dog at large.
$100 fine.
Dakota J. Matney, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Francis C. McGee, furnish
tobacco to minor. $250 fine, 1
year probation.
Michael M. Mcswane, failure to
register dog. $50 fine, $25 susp.
Michael M. Mcswane, failure to
register dog. $100 fine, $25 susp.
Brayden L. Miller, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Daniel J. Miller, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Don Millington, failure to register dog. $100 fine.
Michael A. Mills, driving without
motorcycle license. $100 fine.
Andrew J. Modlin, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Donald E. Moyer, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Charles E . Nixon, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Sandra J. Noyes, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Lori Ann Pearson, speeding 50
mph in 30 mph zone. $180 fine.
Ray F. Peine, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Clark Platt, seat belts required.
$10 fine.
David Brian Pozzie, speeding
43 mph in 30 mph zone. $150
fine.
Garrett Anthony Redifer, seat
belts required. $10 fine.
Joseph M. Reid, failure to register dog. $100 fine.
Wayne E. Riffey, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Ip Pun Rochefort, inattentive
driving. $150 fine.
Robert Romig, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Kyleigh Danielle Rowe, speeding 43 mph in 30 mph zone. $150
fine.
Catherine C. Sayers, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Michael A. Scheuerman, seat
belts required. $10 fine.
Joni S. Shriber, failure to register dog. $100 fine.
Hannah M. Silvara, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
David M. Sims, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Lonnie D. Sprague, seatbelts
required. $10 fine.
Julian Richard Sunkle-Thorpe,
speeding 43 mph in 30 mph zone.
$150 fine.
William Patrick Talbot, speeding 44 mph in 30 mph zone. $150
fine.
Asher E. Velvick, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Donald L. Wickham, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Loran W. Wilson, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Tony B. Wilson, failure to register dog, 3 counts. $200 fined $75
susp.
Tony B. Wilson, rabies vaccination required. $50 fined $25 susp.
Amber Lee Young, seat belts
required. $10 fine.
Amber Lee Young, use of wireless communication device. $125
fine.
Asa T. Young, Limit on passing
on left. $75 fine.
2×2
diy
Asa. T Young, speeding 37
mph in 30 mph zone. $125 fine.
Phillip Aaron Zeikle, speeding
42 mph in 30 mph zone. $150
fine.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
Dana C. Spencer vs. Michael R.
Spencer, petition for divorce.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Bobs Supersaver dba Country
Mart vs. Shannon Sandra Figgins,
asking for $860.36 plus costs and
interest.
Bobs Supersaver dba Country
Mart vs. Jennifer Jo Morrow, asking for $790.41 plus costs and
interest.
Bobs Supersaver dba Country
Mart vs. David D. Hoddy, asking
for $640 plus costs and interest.
Ronald Romig dba R&R
Lawnmower vs. John C.
Glukowsky, asking for $1,155.04
plus costs and interest.
Credit Management Services
Inc. vs. Jennifer L. Young, Gary
Young, asking for $2,848.50 plus
costs and interest.
Anderson County Hospital
vs. April L. Mynatt, Fred Loya
Insurance, asking for $9,257.80
plus costs and interest.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
Wolken Tire vs. Milburn F.
Kelley Jr, judgement for $1,319.77
plus costs and interest.
Esh Rentals vs. Ed Geer et al,
judgment for $2000 plus costs and
interest.
Galt Ventures vs. Eric Thomas,
judgement for $376.16 plus costs
and interest.
Wolken Goodyear Inc vs. John
Korman dba Korman Trucking, et
al, judgment for $1,507.86 plus
costs and interest.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Brandon S. Benedict, $183 fine.
Lonny D. Berry, $183 fine.
Colby Andrew Easum, $189
fine.
Natasha Lynn Faulkner, $276
fine.
Richard Ralph Geer, $81 fine.
Diversion granted.
Lawrence E. Hunt III, $153 fine.
Stephanie A. Katzer, $189 fine.
Stratton L. Lamle, $213 fine.
Sarah Jayne Landers, $201
fine.
Vanessa A. Marriott, $201 fine.
Derrick Scott Nelson, $213 fine.
Julie Ann Workman, $177 fine.
Seat belt violations:
Viola Beachy, $10 fine.
Jay D. Bodenhamer, $10 fine.
Paul D. Gomerdinger, $10 fine.
Robert Gooding, $10 fine.
Holly A. Kinder, $10 fine.
Danny L. Lefever, $10 fine.
Deann E. Norbury, $10 fine.
Amanda Lynn Patterson, $10
fine.
Jonathan Jacob Reusch, $10
fine.
Jarod Ray Rockers, $10 fine.
Johnny P. Steinman, $10 fine.
Kim L. Watt, $10 fine.
Michael J. Wawrzewski, $10
fine.
Other:
Ira Adam Borntreger Jr, domestic battery; knowing or reckless
bodily harm to family member.
$643 fine. Diversion granted.
Christina R. Finney, dismissed.
Richard Ralph Geer, possession of drugs. $893 fine. Diversion
granted.
Kenneth Lee Hermreck, intimidation of witness or victim, three
counts domestic battery. Found
guilty. No penalty listed.
Melinda Sue Holston, required
obedience to traffic control device.
$183 fine.
Bruce E. Wood, improper passing on right. $183 fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On May 14, a report of damage/
vandalism to property was made
in the 700 block of East Monroe
Street, Garnett. A trampoline was
damaged valued at $200.
Arrests
Jason Schwenk, Papillion, NE,
was arrested May 27 on a warrant.
Gabriel Padilla, Tulsa, OK, was
arrested June 1 on suspicion of
operating vehicle without valid
license or liability insurance.
Michael Spellmeier, Garnett,
was arrested May 21 on suspicion
of rape of child, criminal sodomy,
indecent liberties with child, sexual exploitation of a child.
Nathanael Talbert, Richmond,
was arrested May 25 on suspicion
of DWS, no vehicle liability insurance.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
On May 29, a report of burglary
and theft was made in the 20000
SW Block of Garnett. Cash was
stolen valued at $200.
Accidents
On May 27, a vehicle driven
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3A
ANDERSON COUNTY VETERANS MEMORIAL
The Anderson County Veterans Memorial Committee
requests the publics assistance in finalizing the list of
names to be placed on the veteran memorial wall.
2×3
ac vets memoAny United States military veteran who has lived in
Anderson
rial County, or is currently living in Anderson
County, is eligible to have their name included on the
list.
Any veteran of the Vietnam Conflict, or any
subsequent conflict, should contact the County
Clerks Office to verify the service. Veterans should
provide documentation of such service.
All names and information must be presented by July
15, 2015.
Second Saturdays
Sat., June 13
2×4 Hours: 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Extended
6th ave bouSale Rack Items
tiques
30% OFF
10% OFF
Any Shoe Purchase
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
Need Extra Help paying for
your prescription drugs?
2×4
Youeckaaa
may qualify for help from Medicare!
Extra Help is available if you meet income
guidelines. Our office has trained counselors
available to assist you.
To apply for Extra Help contact our office and
schedule an appoint with a counselor
near you!
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-2276
2×4
lakeCan yougarnett
Cruise Charity Cruise
Saturday, June 13, 2015 4:00-9:00 p.m.
cruisers
Courthouse Square Garnett, Kansas
CAN-U-CRUISE is a show n shine event that we hope will touch
lives and help many needy families. Can you cruise with us? We
hope So!
Entry: Open to all makes, models and years of classic, custom
and unique motor vehicles and motorcycles.
Fee: At registration we ask that you donate canned food, nonperishable items, paper products, soap, etc. or give a $10 donation
to the Garnett Area Ministerial Alliance Community Food Pantry
and Emergency Fund. Tax deductible receipts will be available.
Prizes and Giveaways
Register at the Can-U-Cruise and receive a goodie bag and
door prize tickets for our chance to win gift cards, products
from our car show sponsors and cash prizes.
Info: lakegarnettcruisers.com
Like us at www. facebook.com/lakegarnettcruisers
117 South Main Ottawa, Ks 66067
(785)242-7200 1(800) 633-5621
www.eckaaa.org
Senior Health Insurance
Counseling for Kansas
The SHICK program is funded by a grant from the Kansas Department of Aging and Disability Services.
2×4
midwest hearing
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
SMITHERAN
August 31, 1923-May 31, 2015
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published June 9, 2015
Rozena Mae Smitheran, age 91,
of Garnett, died May 31, 2015, at
Olathe Hospice House, Olathe.
She was born on August 31, 1923
at Centerville.
She married Paul Hill Smitheran
on May 5, 1945, in Garnett.
She was preceded in death by
her parents; her husband Paul
Smitheran; her brother, George
Campbell; and her sister, Eunice
Beasterfield.
Survivors include her two children, Carl Smitheran of Council
Grove, Claudia Smitheran of
Garnett; three grandchildren and
two great-grandsons; and one sister,
Ernestine Smitheran of Garnett.
Memorial
services
were
Saturday, June 6, 2015, at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral Service
Chapel, Garnett, Kansas.
A private family inurnment will
be held at a later date.
BROYLES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Published June 9, 2015
Karen Sue Broyles, 56, Waverly,
died June 3, 2015, at the Olathe
Medical Center.
Services were Saturday, June
6, 2015, at the Peniel Bible Church,
north of Waverly.
Burial was in the Waverly
Cemetery. Contributions may
be made to the Karen Broyles
Memorial Fund, and may be sent in
care of Jones Funeral Home, P.O.
Box 277, Burlington, KS 66839.
POOL…
FROM PAGE 1A
to make adjustments before the
pool opened for the day. But
seconds after he entered the
building, PVC pipes exploded and sent shards of jagged
plastic as far as the pool house
on the other side of the facility. Bures escaped with only a
minor scratch on the back of
his neck, but was quite shaken
up by the incident, Martin said.
Sharp, ragged pieces of pipe
were found throughout the
area, with several pieces stuck
in the fence surrounding the
pool. The pool has been partially drained and a vacuum will
remove any pieces of pipe that
fell into the water, Martin said.
Were so thankful no one else
was out there when the explosion occurred, Martin said.
As a precaution, city crews
shut down not only the pool but
also the tot lot playground
nearby until investigation of
the explosion was completed
and the area cleared by the hazmat team. It wasnt until Friday
morning they learned the blast
likely was caused by some sort
of chemical explosion, but the
exact cause was unknown.
Chemical explosions have
been known to occur around
both private and public pools
in which chlorination chemicals calcium hypochlorite and
trichloro-s-triazinetrione have
been combined, according to a
National Institutes of Health
website. More dangerous incidents have occurred when
larger amounts were mixed.
Injuries have included various
wounds, burns and respiratory
system damage from breathing
fumes produced by the combination of the chemicals.
The city pool uses a manual chemical filtration system,
which means a staff member
must open valves and watch
gauges to make sure the correct chemical mixture flows
through the pools filtration system. Martin said she planned
to ask city commissioners to
invest about $10,000 into an
automated system that could
prevent a similar incident from
happening in the future.
You cant put a price on
someones life, she said.
Martin estimated the incident will cost the city about
$5,000, including repairs and
the loss of revenue for the
week or so the pool was closed.
Because of frequent rain and
thunderstorms as well as cool
temperatures since the pool
opened May 23, attendance
and therefore, revenue – has
been low.
The force of the explosion
damaged an underground
water line west of the pool, and
city crews had to dig up the line
to repair it. The maintenance
building where the explosion
occurred was rebuilt in early
2000, Martin said.
ROADS…
FROM PAGE 1A
Very little snow and fewer
ice storms this past winter
meant the county did not need
to tap into its road salt supply
very often. A shedful of road
salt was enough to get through
the winter, compared to previous years when the county
spent thousands of dollars to
replace depleted salt supplies,
Welch said.
Roads near Harris likely will
need the most repairs, Welsh
estimated, because rain was
heavier in the western part of
the county and because large
creeks like Cedar Creek and
the Pottawatomie Creek run
through the area. Those creeks
reached flood stages at various
times in May but have since
receded.
Once the area dries out and
stays that way for a couple
of weeks, county road crews
will try to retrieve gravel that
washed into ditches, he said.
County officials likely will
not seek state or federal assistance to help pay for the damages, County Commissioner
Les McGhee said Friday. Gov.
Sam Brownback filed a disaster
proclamation May 29 that would
allow governments to recoup
some of the costs of damages
caused by flooding and storms.
But Welsh told Anderson
County Commissioners the
damage wasnt significant
enough to warrant the extra
time it would take to deal with
administrative documentation
for the assistance.
Little to no damage was
reported in the city limits at
Garnett, City Manager Joyce
Martin said Monday. However,
city road crews will need to
repair roads at Cedar Valley
Reservoir. She estimated it will
take about $2,000 worth of rock
to repair those roads, but the
work likely wont be done until
later this month. Roads should
be repaired before the Fourth of
July holiday, she said.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2A
by Barbara J. Cooper struck an
unknown animal, lost control, and
went through a fence on Highway
59 near 800 Road.
On May 29, a vehicle driven
by Hannah May Teter swerved
to the right leaving the roadway,
because a vehicle driven by Cody
Chambers was pulling out onto
the road. Teter ended up hitting
the rear of Chambers vehicle as
well as a stop sign. No injuries
were reported.
On May 29, a vehicle driven by
Leon Knight backed into a vehicle driven by Linda Hill on Main
Street in Greeley. No injuries were
reported.
On May 30, a vehicle driven by
Gary Young struck a deer on 1650
Road near Louisanna Road.
On May 30, a vehicle driven
by Gary Caylor struck a deer on
Vermont Road near 1300 Road.
On May 31, a vehicle driven by
Kristen Jones struck a deer on
Highway 169 near Iowa Road.
On June 1, a vehicle driven by
Susan Bond struck a deer on 1600
Road near Harper Road.
On June 1, a semi truck/trailer driven by Gayle Duane Griffin
struck a deer on Highway 31 near
Maryland Road.
JAIL LOG
Andrew Bettinger was booked
into jail April 7, for Anderson
County.
Jason Stifter was booked into
jail April 1, for Anderson County,
bond set at $20,000.
Stephen Hyden was booked
into jail January 23 for Anderson
County, bond set at $10,000.
Teddi McAfee was booked into
jail Feb. 4 for Anderson County,
bond set at $20,000.
George Voorhees was booked
into jail September 18, 2014 for
Anderson County, bond set at
$100,000.
John McLaughlin was booked
into jail March 4 for Anderson
County on a probation violation.
Benjamin Cockrell was booked
into jail May 11 for Anderson
County on a warrant.
Wayne Kirkland was booked
into jail May 18 for Garnett Police,
bond set at $500.
Bruce Henry was booked into
jail May 26 for Anderson County,
bond set at $5,000.
James Williams was booked
into jail June 1 for Anderson
County, bond set at $10,000.
William Travis was booked into
jail May 15 for Anderson County,
bond set at $20,000.
Michael Spellmeier was booked
into jail May 21 for Anderson
County, bond set at $250,000.
JAIL ROSTER
Kenneth Jay Burgoon, 24,
Kincaid, was booked into jail
May 28 by Anderson County
Sheriff for two counts of failure to
appear. Bond set at $5,000 each.
Released May 29.
Kenneth Jay Burgoon, 24,
Hoisington, was booked into jail
May 28 by Anderson County
Sheriff for failure to appear. Bond
set at $2,500. Released May 29.
Jason Michael Schwenk, 34,
Papillion, was booked into jail May
27 by Garnett Police on suspicion
of cruelty to animals. Bond set at
$500. Released May 27.
Christie Lynn Glover, 28,
Parsons, was booked into jail May
29 by Anderson County Sheriff
for failure to appear. Bond set at
$2,000. Released May 30.
Talisha Reneee Burchett, 22,
Lawrence, was booked into jail
May 29 by Douglas County Sheriff
on suspicion of distributing drugs.
Not bondable.
Joseph theodore Daulton, 19,
Garnett, was booked into jail May
29 by Anderson County Sheriff on
suspicion of probation violation.
CROPS…
FROM PAGE 1A
wheat is starting to show signs
of moisture damage.
Some fields still have standing water, which can be critical
to plants that need moisture
but also need time to dry and
allow roots to breathe.
Corn may need another
nitrogen application and its
future will hinge on balanced
weather conditions throughout the rest of the growing season. Corn is the No. 1 crop in
Anderson County, followed by
soybeans and wheat, respectively.
Soybeans on the other hand
mostly have not been planted
yet and time may be running
out to get them in the ground.
Soybeans typically are planted in this area the last week
of May or first week of June.
Continued rain and thunderstorms have left the ground too
wet for planting. By the third
week of June, it may be too late
to plant soybeans for a sufficient growing season.
Even now, planting soybeans will likely be similar
to planting beans as part of
a double crop, when a second crop is planted just after
the first has been harvested.
Double-crop soybeans typically
yield about 15 bushels an acre,
compared to about 40 per acre
for a full season, Blocker said.
If it were dry right now,
it would be a perfect time to
plant, Blocker said.
The heavy rains also have
caused problems washing away
chemical applications like
nitrogen and weed killer. Corn,
especially, may need another
application of nitrogen but that
brings special considerations
at this point. Because the crop
already has emerged, farmers who need to apply nitrogen will be limited in the type
they can apply. Some nitrogen
cannot withstand hot temperatures that likely will follow the
current wet, cool conditions.
Nitrogen that can withstand
hot temperatures is more difficult to find and more expensive.
A lot of our producers put
on more nitrogen than they
need anyway, and they may be
in good shape. But if the plants
start to turn yellow, they may
need to consider it, Blocker
said.
Some producers also may
need to reapply weed killing
chemicals, she said. Fields that
previously were more or less
weed free have been invaded
by weeds thanks to the heavy
rains.
But just like any year of
farming in Kansas, things can
change quite quickly. Blocker
said the fate of corn and soybeans, especially, will rest on
weather conditions throughout
the rest of the summer.
It would be silly to give up
hope now, but it is getting troublesome, she said.
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On the Square – At the corner of 4th and Oak
Downtown Garnett
Bryan Mitchell Troxel, 29,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
June 3 by Miami County Sheriff on
a warrant and domestic battery.
Not bondable.
Michael Warren Brough, 51,
Bonner Springs, was booked into
jail June 3 by Miami County Sheriff
on suspicion of probation violation.
Not bondable.
FARM-INS
Terry Ballou was booked into jail
on March 27, for Miami County.
Lauren Courtney was booked
into jail march 19, for Douglas
County.
Earl Johnson was booked into
jail April 22, for Miami County.
Troy Duncan was booked into
jail April 22 for Miami County.
David Saunders was booked
into jail May 13, for Linn County.
Michael Arthur was booked into
jail May 13, for Linn County.
William Buttry was booked into
jail May 6,for Miami County.
Mark Taylor was booked into jail
May 15, for Miami County.
Stetson Jackson was booked
into jail May 15, for Miami County.
Noah Atteberry was booked into
jail May 20, for Miami County.
James Aiken was booked into
jail May 5, for Miami County.
Michael Brough was booked
into jail June 3 for Miami County.
Matthew Petrie was booked into
jail May 30 for Miami County.
Roy Teal was booked into jail
May 30 for Miami County.
Bryan Troxel was booked into
jail June 3 for Miami County.
Jolene Harrell was booked into
jail May 22 for Douglas County.
Talisha Burchett was booked
into jail May 29 for Douglas
County.
Robert Brewer was booked into
jail may 30 for Miami County.
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No bond. Released May 31.
Kenneth Jay Burgoon, 24,
Richmond, was booked into jail
May 29 by Ottawa Police on suspicion of no vehicle liability insurance. Bond set at $550. Released
May 29.
Matthew Taylor Petrie, 20,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
May 30 by Miami County Sheriff
on suspicion of DWS, reckless
driving, damage to property,
obstructing legal process, fleeing
or eluding an officer, use/possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia. Bond set at $25,000.
Roy Alvin Teal, 34, Osawatomie,
was booked into jail May 30 by
Miami County Sheriff on suspicion
of three counts of battery, physical
contact in rude manner. Bond set
at $25,000.
Robert Wayne Brewer, 50,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
May 30 by Miami County Sheriff
on a warrant. Bond set at $250.
Thomas Aaron Bappe, 39,
Garnett, was booked into jail May
30 by Johnson County Sheriff.
Bond set at $3,000. Released May
30.
Gabriel Marin Padilla, 31, Tulsa
OK, was booked into jail June 1 by
Garnett Police on suspicion of no
vehicle liability insurance and no
drivers license. Bond set at $650.
Released June 1.
Gabriel Marin Padilla, 31, Tulsa
OK, was booked into jail May 1 by
Anderson County Sheriff to hold
for immigration control. Not bondable. Released June 2.
James Edward Williams, 33,
Buckner MO, was booked into
jail June 1 by Anderson County
Sheriff on failure to appear. Bond
set at $10,000.
Vincent Lee Walker, 30,
Lawrence, was booked into jail
June 2 by Anderson County
Sheriff on failure to appear. Bond
set at $2,500. Released June 2.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
EDITORIAL
Come to Missouri and eat some carp
When I was growing up in southern
Missouri we used to joke about eating
carp the same way some people joke
about eating cats.
Now theres a push on to promote
carp eating to help control the Asian
Carp species, which is now considered
invasive in Missouris lakes and streams
and threatening the habitat for other
more respectable fish. Its called Eat Mo
Carp.
Yep. The campaign was kicked off
recently by the University of Missouris
School of Natural Resources with the aim
of getting restaurants and grocery stores
to start serving up the now notorious
bottom feeder. In Columbia they even got
one of the local micro breweries to jump
on the band wagon and host a carp eating
festival.
Cmon, I mean everybody wants to
do whats best for lakes and streams
in Missouri if we dont take care of
Missouris rivers, where else are we
going to collect Mardi Gras beads on
summer float trips? But trying to convince folks to eat carp?
I grew up believing carp were the
lowest form of fish which ate the lowest
form of scum at the bottom of the river,
and were only eaten by the lowest form
of people like, people who maybe hadnt
completely finished evolving of which
there were quite a number where I grew
up.
Of course in China they eat a lot of
carp. Horse, dog, whale why is it foreigners eat so much gross stuff?
If youre not familiar with them, carp
are vegetarian fish which haunt the
bottom of waterways and lakes rooting
around in the mud for plankton and
decayed morsels. The idea that we grew
up with that they ate sewage and dead
animals off the bottom sort of like an
aquatic vulture well, apparently theres
no truth to that. Mizzou scientists say
carp primarily Asian Carp which have
become such a pest in Missouri and
other Midwest states are low in mercury because they dont eat other fish.
Low-fat, high protein, and they taste like
a mixture of cod and crabmeat. Lots of
bones though, so you only want to eat a
big one.
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
What am I saying?
I remember hearing the tale of a meat
processing plant in Colorado during the
low-fat craze of the 1980s which tried
to market rabbit to be sold in grocery
stores. You know, were used to what a
chicken carcass looks like in the grocery
store; but those rabbits, skinned and
cleaned and tucked into their box with
the cellophane window, according to my
friend looked like cats.
The project was scrapped, and you
still are hard pressed to find rabbit in
any commercial grocery in these parts.
But leave it to the stalwart Missouri
micro brew industry to seize a leadership role in the Eat Mo Carp campaign.
Columbias Broadway Brewery hosted the Concert Against Rogue Picines
(CARP) in which local bands played and
the business sold beer (of course) and
served up free samples of carp prepared
a variety of ways.
I have to admit, I ate carp once at one
of my annual college chums weekend
gatherings at Lake of the Ozarks. There
were two qualifers: 1) beer (did you
notice the presence of beer seems to be a
recurring theme when it comes to carp
eating?) and 2) it was deep fried. Im pretty sure you could eat a roll of pennies if
it was properly battered and deep fried.
As I recall, it wasnt bad.
Enough to make me plan a bus trip
for locals to head to Missouri for a big
carp feed as part of the Eat Mo Carp campaign? Im not sure.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
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your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
After reading the paper I had to make a comment about the city commissioner who wants
to stop the road work in town and pave the lake
road, which I think is stupid. I drove around it
theres no potholes. The kart racers they dont
use the road but once a year, thats nothing. The
boat races, theres not enough there to even call
it anything. Yet he wants to do that and stop
work on the streets where people live in this
town year round and depend on those roads?
Theres many, many potholes in roads around
town. Wake up. This aint the car club. Lets take
care of the roads where people live. Thank you.
All right all you Garnett High School kids. Do
you want to be part of a losing football town
forever? A losing football team means your
town is a loser. Thats how its seen by the rest
of the world. Do you want to change it? Do you
have the guts? This is the time to get your butts
off the couch in front of the TV and get into the
weight room or the Garnett Rec Center and get
on the weights. Do agility exercises. Quit eating
(name deleted) and start a decent diet. Do cardio.
Obama declares war on climate change
President Barack Obama is less than stalwart in the fight against ISIS and doesnt seem
overly concerned about Vladimir Putins predation in Ukraine or Chinas aggression in
the South China Sea. It is the fight against
climate change, an allegedly dire threat to the
nations security, that brings out his inner
Churchill.
In remarks to the Coast Guard Academy
commencement, Obama pledged his undying
hostility to climate change and his determination to fight it on the beaches and in the
fields. He called it one of the most severe
threats we face and an immediate risk to
our national security.
He hailed the Coast Guard for building
more fuel-efficient cutters, and the Marines
for deploying with portable solar panels. It
was one of the most insipid calls to arms ever
made by an American commander in chief,
and there is unlikely to be much competition
until President Elizabeth Warren rallies the
U.S. Navy against income inequality.
From the presidents urgency, you
would think that climate change is beheading American hostages and taking over
large swathes of Middle Eastern countries,
toward the end of establishing a hostile climate-change empire. The reality is that, even
accepting his premises about the state of the
science, he can only point to laughably tenuous connections between climate change and
national security.
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
The president cited drought as one of the
causes of the Syrian civil war. Yet an article in the journal Middle Eastern Studies
notes that Israel, Jordan and Lebanon experienced drought in 2007-2008. None of them
collapsed into a genocidal hellhole. Nor is
drought unusual in Syria. Quite reasonably,
the article counsels focusing on the corrupt
and dysfunctional Syria government as the
fundamental cause of the uprising. Not to
mention the fact that countries all over the
Middle East and North Africa experienced
revolts at the same time.
The president warned of how climate
change could create mass migrations, the
kind of disruption that a White House doc-
ument says will disproportionately affect
Africa and Asia. Even if this is true, how
will it implicate our national security? The
United States was content to stand by while
800,000 people died in the Rwandan genocide
and more than 5 million in Congos civil war.
If that mass slaughter didnt move us, we
arent going to mobilize the troops to manage
climate-driven mass migrations.
Another climate-change hot spot is the
Arctic, with President Obama predicting
that summers could be ice-free there by
around 2050. Man the battle stations? Well,
no. A Brookings Institution article notes that
what were seeing in the Arctic is that receding ice is triggering commercial competition
and governance cooperation; not conflict.
Typically, the president implied clear
and present dangers from climate change,
although the consensus science he purports to champion projects effects on extreme
weather roughly 80 years from now. By then
todays cadets will have long ago passed the
baton of the fearsome battle against climate
change to subsequent generations.
Of course, if climate change were a true
enemy of the United States, President Obama
would extend a hand of peace, or declare victory and go home.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Publicity comes to rescue after furlough threat
Now, lets thinkyou are in front of a
burning house with a child inside…
Do you rush in to save the child, or do
you wait until the local TV crew shows up,
unloads the cameras, positions them for the
best view, and then, once youve gotten the
OK that film is rolling, storm into the house
to rescue the child?
Probably depends on whether you are a
politician.
What?
Well, thats about how the furlough threat
for some 24,000 Kansas employees played out
over the weekend.
Kansas Budget Director Shawn Sullivan
a couple weeks ago warned lawmakers that
they need to pass a budget relatively quickly
and nothing happened. That may have been
the spark in the house that fell onto the carpet.
Yes, lawmakers often are told that they
need to be expeditious in dealing with the
states financial problems, taxes and budgets
and such. But they hear that a lot.
So, it was early last week that Sullivan
who works for Gov. Sam Brownbacksaid
that without a budget in place and signed
into law, there was no formally appropriated
money in agency accounts ranging from the
Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism
to the Regent universities to pay wages starting on Sunday.
Its a deal where the start of this weeks
pay period is actually paid after July 1, which
is a new fiscal year that until a budget passes
gives no direction on how or whether state
agencies can spend money on salaries of
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
workers.
So those agencies and universities dutifully started notifying employees they rather
distastefully refer to as non-essential that
because there was no specifically authorized
appropriation for their salaries, they would
be furloughed, without pay.
As the realization of the size of the furloughs circulatedwe didnt know until
Friday just how many jobs were affected
the politics heated up. And, the politics
got sharper because there wasnt a budget
approved for the upcoming fiscal year, and
legislators started trying to figure out how to
save their state employee constituentsand
presumably their registered voter friends
and familyfrom those layoffs.
At about this time, the administration was
saying it had no choice but to start furloughs,
as another spur to quick budget action. It
didnt work.
So, by Friday and Saturday, everyone was
ready for the furloughs; thousands of notices
had been printed and sent to workers who
bore that unfortunate non-essential title.
And then, lawmakers worked to pull that
child from the burning building, passing a
bill that puts the crown essential on every
state employees head. Thats literally pulling
the child from the burning house. All were
saved, and not a single legislator in the House
and Senate voted against that rescue.
Gov. Sam Brownback drove to the office
to read the bill, signed it into law and the
Secretary of States office published an
extra, extra, read all about it online edition
of the official state publication, the Kansas
Register.
So, we had the Legislature rushing into the
house to save the child, we had the governor
speeding to work to pronounce the child officially savedand it was only winners. Oh,
and of course, those state employees stayed
on the job and didnt have to worry about
their early July car payments.
Oh, but just a day later, the Legislature
approved the budget that fixed the payroll
accounting problem. Would furloughs have
happened if that high-publicity rescue hadnt
occurred?
Probably, but just for some who work on
Sundaysbut wheres the headline in that?
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC
of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of
Hawvers Capitol Reportto learn more about
this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com
Get together with other players on your own and
get stronger and tougher. Are you a cream puff
who never played? Get busy these next couple of
months and make a difference for the team. What
have you got to lose? Are you afraid? Suck it up.
Make your team a winner and you make your
town a winner. Do you have what it takes?
The school administrator states that an increase
in the mill levy will be necessary for next years
budget. There has been a lot of publicity about the
shortage of school funds. Lets ask if the money
that is available is really being spent on the right
items. We are building a new football stadium at
the track field. I recall the citizens voted against
building a track there several years ago. The
school board then built the track anyway and
now the football stadium. Does that remind us of
the way the county jail was constructed? Do we
need a large white Bulldog bus that is similar in
size to those at many small colleges? Lets put our
so-called limited funds into the classrooms with
adequate support for the teachers. That approach
will probably come closer to lasting the students
for a very successful adult life.
Hey Phone Forum people, if youre coming up
north on 59, that parking lot right at Longfellow
School, that dumpster, that speed traps been
there for years. I used to live there in the house
right south. Yep, its been there for years.
I read about the tax windfall coming next year
from the ethanol plant. I hope the city and county commissioners give considerable thought on
how they spend that money. Wouldnt it be nice
if they used at least half of it to give the property
owers a reduction in their real estate taxes? This
group deserves a break for a change. Reasonable
property taxes have a very positive compounding
effect on the future of our community.
This so-called president of ours, Obama, is not
just a joke but hes a disgrace to America and
our foreign allies. What it took 230-some years to
build hes trying to destroy in just six years. He
is an outright failure as a human being and as
a president. Whoever voted for him cant be too
much of an American citizen.
Last weeks article about the residential streets
in Garnett down on First Street which was just
blacktopped maybe 2-3 years ago, theres potholes
at the corner of Spruce big enough Im surprised
theres not fish in it. If the water was cleaner
the neighborhood kids could probably swim in
it. I know it sure plays hell with the front end of
peoples vehicles.
Hey, instead of fixing up the road around the lake
so they can race around it, why not just let them
race up and down Park Road. They speed up and
down there anyway and the cops dont do anything about it. Itd save some money.
The properties at the intersection of 169 and
Sixth Street over on the east side of the highway
are a disgrace to our community. There are three
or four houses or small buildings over on that
east side of the road. The grass and weeds are
knee high. The homes are in disrepair and look
like they probably should be torn down. I dont
know that theyre even still livable for human
beings. They give our community a horrible first
impression for people driving down 169 highway.
The gentleman who owns those properties needs
to get off his rear and start thinking about the
community instead of keeping that mess out
there.
Attention city manager and city commissioners: Many streets in Garnett need major repair.
Please consider this to be able to retain our residents, plus consider when the last person moved
to Garnett and built a new home. New homes create sales tax plus property taxes on a permanent
basis. Events at the North Lake are great but do
not create every day sales. Please consider future
population growth for our town.
I think all the businesses should publish a list
of people that dont pay their bills so businesses
trying to stay afloat arent caught by these deadbeats.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodiacls class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Cobbs 50th anniversary
Prather 60th anniversary
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-99-2015 / Photo Submitted
Eyman Cobbs and Phyllis
Louk were married June 13,
1965, at the First Christian
Church in Garnett.
They will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary in July in
Colorado with their children:
Jodi and Doug Erhart, Wichita;
Justin and April Cobbs, Olathe;
and grandson, Caden.
Their celebration will continue with a trip to Eastern
Europe in the fall.
Crest releases honor rolls
Crest schools have released
honor rolls for the second
semester.
Elementary School
All As
Second Grade: Denton
Ramsey
Third Grade: Liliana
Blaufuss,
Andie
Burnett
Brenton Edgerton, Brody
Hobbs
Fourth Grade: Avery
Blaufuss, Trevor Church,
Kamryn Luedke
Fifth Grade: Hailie Fuller,
Lindsey
Godderz,
Anna
Hermreck Marissa Lansdown,
Khloe Utley, Tucker Yocham
All As and Bs
Second Grade: Ruthie
Dietrich, Gunner Ellington,
Emmylou Preston, Clayton
Scott, Brianna Summers, Elijah
Taylor, Ivy Tilton.
Third Grade: Kaylee Allen,
Jaci Coberley, Ryan Golden,
Brayden Goodell, Jenelle
Hartman Kayla Hermreck,
Brooklynn Jones, Andrew
Modlin, Cadence Nolan, Jerry
Rodriguez, Brock Weatherman
Fourth Grade: Ty Chambers,
Ethan Godderz, McKenna
Hammond, Karter Miller, Cody
Nolan, Sydney Stephens Shayda
Womelsdorf, David Wood
Fifth Grade: Keaton Davis,
Ethan Prasko, June Redman
Middle School
All As
Sixth Grade: Gabe Berry,
Tyson Hermreck, Kobey Miller,
Dallas Modlin, Ben Prasko
Seventh Grade: Greg
Hardwick, Kim Lansdown,
Summer Starr
Eighth Grade: Jewel
Armstrong, Regan Godderz,
Camryn Strickler
All As and Bs
Sixth Grade: Ashton Bain,
Andrew McAdam, Carl Moyer,
Solomon Taylor
Seventh Grade, Evan Bain,
Ridley Black, Annamarie
Culler, Jasper Davis, Allen
Geary, Jamison Hendrix,
Jerrick Jones, Brianna Trester
Eighth Grade: Breyanna
Benjamin, Hayden Hermreck,
Vicky Rodriguez
High School
All As Superintendents
Honor Roll
Ninth Grade: Makayla
Jones
10th Grade: Laurel Godderz,
Karlee Hammond
11th Grade: Evan Godderz,
Colton
Strickler,
Kaden
Strickler
12th Grade: Krystal Cooper,
Madison
Covey,
Tiffany
Jackman, Regan Morrison.
Principals Honor Roll
(All As and Bs)
Ninth Grade: Anthony
Dunlap, Austin Hendrix, Chris
Wilhite, Morgan Wyant
10th Grade: Nate Berry,
Miranda Golden, Johnathan
Hartman, Jordan Hendrix,
Shelby Ramsey
11th Grade: Hunter Frazell,
Emily Webber
12th Grade: Kyler Bowen,
Austin Green, Rene Rodriguez.
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
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& mikesShop
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Free Estimates
We Accept All Insurance Bids
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5A
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-99-2015 / Photo Submitted
Richard Prather, Kincaid,
and Dolores Weirich, Bush
City, were married on June 12,
1955, at First Baptist Church,
Kincaid. They were blessed
with three children: Norman,
Melvin and Sherry.
The extended family will be
gathering to celebrate this special event on Saturday, June 13,
at the couples home in Garnett.
Hosting the luncheon are their
children: Norman and Cindi
Prather, Ida Grove, Iowa; Sherry
and Terry Lust, Bellevue, Neb.;
grandchildren, Matt and Josie
Lust, Mankato, Minn.; Adam
and Katelyn Lust, High Point,
N.C.; Amy Lust, Falls Church,
Va.; Phillip Prather, Sioux City,
Iowa; and Lane Prather, Iowa
City, Iowa; and great-grandchildren, Savannah Lust, Felicity
Lust and Aurora Lust.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
We are responsible to
God to make disciples
In 2nd Peter 3:8-9 the Bible
says concerning God, But do
not forget this one thing, dear
friends: With the Lord a day
is like a thousand years and a
thousand years are like a day.
The Lord is not slow in keeping his promises, as some
understand slowness. He is
patient with you, not wanting
anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.
Two things come into view
in this text. First God does
not measure time as we do.
From this text we are unable
to discern how God measures
time only that he does have
some method. Second there
appears to be some point in
the future on Gods calendar
where he has appointed a
time for an accounting of all
things commonly referred to
as the Day of the Lord, at
the end of time when Gods
will and purpose for mankind
and his world will be fulfilled.
The Bible does not specify the
duration of this Day of the
Lord, whether it is one day
or a longer period of time, but
God has clearly set a time of
reckoning.
So what is the responsibility of the church to God
concerning the Day of the
Lord? The church came
into existence at Pentecost
after the ascension of Jesus
into heaven. It was then as
it is now a local assembly
of all ages who follow Jesus
Christ as Savior and Lord.
Because the church gener-
Portraits
of
Honor
al will not become a reality
until after Christs return, the
greatest emphasis in the New
Testament is placed upon the
idea of the local church.
The church has a key
role to play in redemption.
Speaking to his followers
after his resurrection Jesus
commissioned the church
to make disciples and teach
them what he had taught.
(Matthew 28:19-20) God has
accomplished this in many
ways by sending Stephen to
the Ethiopian and on a much
larger scale by sending Paul
to the Gentiles.
As a believer, one who
takes God at his word and
trusts in him for salvation,
you and I have a role to play
as well. That role is to live our
life emphasizing the object of
our belief Jesus Christ. We
as individuals are called by
God just as Jesus called the
Apostles in Matthew 28 to
go and make disciples of all
nations. I believe the emphasis will always be on the
responsibility of the individuals within the church to make
disciples. If we ignore such a
call we are in violation of two
commandments. Love the
Lord your God with all your
heart and your neighbor as
yourself. By this omission we
will have little or no impact
for the church of Jesus Christ.
David
Bilderback:
A
Ministry on the Holiness of
God.
it
Submotos
h
your pday!
to
A hard-cover pictorial roster
of local veterans, available Nov. 11.
T
hey are the pride of our nation the sons
and daughters of Anderson County.
They answered the call to serve our country.
To them, we owe our solemn gratitude.
Join The Anderson County Review during our
150th Anniversary celebration in commemorating Anderson Countys present and former
military personnel as we publish Anderson
County Portraits of Honor, a pictorial roster of
our countys military veterans.
You can take part in this special commemoration of local veterans by submitting a service
portrait of yourself or a family member to be
included in this glossy, archival quality hardcover book, set for release Veterans Day 2015.
Photos may be submitted for military personnel who presently live or previously lived in
Anderson County, including those in memoriam for a deceased veteran from the modern era
or generations prior.
Photos may be emailed to review@garnett-ks.
com. Hard copy photos can be dropped by our
office at 112 W. 6th and electronically scanned
while you wait.
Photos must be submitted by June 30, 2015.
Book release: Veterans Day, Nov. 11, 2015.
Save
25%
When you pre-order your copy of
Portraits of Honor by June 30, 2015.
Mail this order with your check or credit card info to
Garnett Publishing, Inc. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, Ks., 66032
Submit your photos for this
commerative history book by emailing them to
review@garnett-ks.com or dropping them by
our office at 112 W. 6th in Garnett.
Questions?
Contact us at (785) 448-3121
or (800) 683-4505.
Reg. $39.95
Pre-sale price:
$
29.95
+ $2.44 sales tax
Yes!- Id like to save 25% at the pre-order price.
Name___________________________________________
Phone __________________________________________
Number of copies_________x $32.39 = _______________
Amount enclosed_________
Check
Credit card
Credit card #, exp., code ____________________________
________________________________________________
Will pick up at your office
Please ship to: __________________________________
(Add $5.00 per book shipping) _____________________________
6A
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
FFA Students Recognized at State Convention
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
Central Heights FFA member
wins state proficiency award Crest member recognized as state finalist
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
Pictured from left, Brett Brownback, advisor, Braden McGhee, Crest FFA, Christy and Kendall McGhee.
Sponsored by ICM, Inc., United Bank and Trust and Kansas Farm Bureau.
MANHATTAN A member
of the Central Heights FFA
Chapter was recognized May
28 for having one of the best
career development programs
in the state at the 87th Kansas
FFA Convention.
Cade Hibdon received a
State FFA Proficiency Award
in Sheep Production during
the convention for outstanding
accomplishments he has made
in developing programs that
will prepare him for a career
in agriculture. This award
is sponsored by Harris Show
Lambs.
The proficiency award program recognizes students for
exceptional accomplishments
and excellence in a Supervised
Agricultural Experience (SAE)
program. This program allows
students to set goals and gain
real-world experience in a
chosen area of the agriculture
industry.
In Cades SAE, his herd is
comprised of 27 commercial
ewes and a ram. His love of
sheep was engrained at a young
age as he grew up caring for his
parents herd. Cade currently
manages his own herd and is
in charge of daily labor, feeding and management decisions
Cade has been able to expand
his herd through breeding and
purchasing, and hopes to have
a 150% lamb crop. He plans
on studying either agronomy
or agricultural economics at
K-State.
Cades parents are Darren
and Julie Hibdon. His advisors
are Aaron Cubit and Trent
Page.
FFA members earn Ford scholarships
MANHATTAN Local FFA
members were among the 71
Kansas students awarded
$1,000 Ford Trucks/Built Ford
Tough Scholarships during
the third session of the 87th
Kansas FFA State Convention
on Thursday, May 28.
The Built Ford Tough FFA
Scholarship Program recognizes FFA members talents
and accomplishments while
encouraging their future academic achievements.
Were proud to recognize
these student leaders for their
passion for FFA and the leadership they display in their communities and chapters, said
Chantelle Simon, Kansas FFA
Association treasurer. We
thank Ford Trucks/Built Ford
Tough for providing financial
support for our students educational goals.
This years recipients are,
from:
Anderson County: Melissa
Kropf, Alexis Pedrow;
Central Heights: J.R.
Kimball.
Local FFA
members
receive
scholarships
MANHATTAN Crest FFA
member Braden McGhee competed as a finalist against three
other district stars for the
states top honor of State Star in
Ag Placement May 27-29 at the
87th Kansas FFA Convention
on the Kansas State University
campus.
Each year, the Kansas FFA
Association recognizes three
FFA members who have the
top Supervised Agricultural
ing fence and marketing cattle are all tasks McGhee helps
manage on the family farm.
Learning about silage production was one goal of McGhees
SAE, which he met and exceeded. Currently, he is working
toward his CDL to benefit his
work at McGhee and Milner
Harvesting.
McGhee is the son of Kendell
and Christy McGhee. His advisor is Brett Brownback.
FFA members receive State FFA Degree
MANHATTAN A total of 63
students from the East Central
District FFA were awarded
their State FFA Degree May 29
at the 87th Kansas FFA State
Convention.
The State Degree is the
highest honor the Kansas
FFA Association can bestow
upon its members. In order
to achieve this award, members must meet the following
requirements: have received
their Chapter FFA Degree, been
an FFA member and agricultural education student for at
least two years, earned at least
$2,000 or worked 600 hours in
their Supervised Agricultural
Experience program, given a
six minute speech about agriculture or FFA, participated in
eight different leadership activities, received a C average
or better in high school and
shown a record of outstanding leadership and community
involvement.
The members who met these
qualifications and their respective FFA Chapters from the
East Central District are: from
Anderson County: Syerra
Emperley, Melissa Kropf,
Derrick S. Nelson, Alexis
Dianne Pedrow, Mason Skiles,
Seth Wolken;
Central Heights: James W.
Kice, William James Thole;
Crest: Kyler Bowen,
Preston Henson, Braden
McGhee, Travis Vermilion.
Quilt guild recaps May show
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
Melissa Kropf, left, and Alexis Pedrow of Anderson County High
School received a $1,000 Ford Trucks/Built Ford Tough Scholarship
at the 87th Kansas FFA Convention May 28.
MANHATTAN The National
FFA Foundation awarded
scholarships to members
across the state of Kansas. FFA
members were recognized for
scholarship awards during the
third session of the 87th Kansas
FFA Convention on May 28.
The National Foundation
offers approximately $2 million, generously donated by
numerous sponsors, to FFA
member across the nation
every year. The awards range
from $1,000 to $5,000 to assist
with their education at a twoyear or four-year institution.
This years recipients
include James Kice from
Central Heights.
The Pieces & Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
President Charlotte Lutz, on
May 28, 2015, at 9:30am at the
Anderson County Extension
meeting room. Roll call was
answered by 22 members
and 2 guests, Sandy Miller &
Thyra David.
The minutes of the April
meeting were approved as
printed in the newsletter.
Terrie Gifford gave the treasurers report.
Committee Reports:
Program Bonnie Deiter
reported that Charlotte
has requested that her
Presidents block be a Wonky
Star 9 inch block of orange
and turquoise with a white
background with the signature being placed next to a
star point on the white background. Patricia Knoechel
will be here September 16 for
her program from 1 to 3pm
at the Community building.
Bonnie distributed information to those going on the
bus trip to the Missouri Star
Quilt company in Hamilton,
Missouri, June 16.
May Quilt Show
Terrie Gifford reported that
there were 96 visitors at
the May quilt show and we
had 34 entries in the show
with Connie Hatch winning
Peoples Choice.
Sharon
Rich sold the most raffle tickets as well as the winning
ticket. The boutique was
a success.
Members were
J.R. Kimball of Central Heights received a $1,000 Ford Trucks/Built
Ford Tough Scholarship at the 87th Kansas FFA Convention May
28. Not pictured is Central Heights FFA member James Kice, who
received a National FFA Foundation scholarship at the convention.
encouraged to pick up any
of their boutique items that
were not sold if they want.
Terrie thanked all those who
helped with the show and to
Samantha Fletcher for the
wonderful boutique sign.
Scholarship Ruth
Theis reported that the recipient of the guild scholarship
was Seth Wolken. She also
read a Thank You from the
Anderson County Jr-Sr High
school for our scholarship
support.
Anderson County fair
will begin August 3 with
entries due that day. Jeannie
Poore will judge the quilts at
the fair. A work schedule
signup sheet will be available
at the July meeting. There
was group consensus that
with everyones busy schedule this summer we would
not plan a class for individuals wanting to do a challenge
block for the fair.
Challenge Judy
McArdle still has fat quarters
available to anyone who is
interested in the challenge.
Block of the Month
Several members showed
their blocks from the April
pattern.
Bonnie Deiter
showed the May Block, May
basket, distributed the pattern and demonstrated its
assembly. Joleata Kent has
the June block and will present it in July.
Nominating Terrie
Gifford reported that she &
Judy Stukey are still working
on the slate of new officers.
Judy Stukey will work on the
installation ceremony.
Old Business Bonnie
Deiter will check into ordering new quilt racks with the
funds collected. The guild
agreed to allow Ruth Theis
to arrange with her husband and another person to
remove the hinged top from
the wooden quilt racks since
we no longer need the racks
that high.
New Business Judy
Stukey moved and it was seconded by Lynda Feuerborn
that we donate $100 to the
Senior Citizen Center for
the use of their facility for
the May quilt show. Motion
carried. There will be no
June guild meeting since we
are taking the bus trip. The
July 23 meeting will be in the
Archer room at the Garnett
Library.
Secret Sister gift was
received by Margery Hunt.
Show & Tell The following items were shown: Ruth
Theis a quilt; Phyllis Gordon
a tube pillowcase; Violet Holt
an oven mitt; Bonnie Deiter a
table runner, Christmas wall
hanging and a quilt; Sandy
Miller 2 quilts.
Meeting was adjourned by
Charlotte Lutz.
Bonnie Deiter demonstrated the correct use of a seam
ripper.
Beautiful Weddings Begin With Beautiful Flowers
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
1×3
AD
Experience (SAE) programs
with the Star Farmer, Star in
Agribusiness and Star in Ag
Placement awards. The Star
competitions are sponsored
by ICM, Inc., United Bank
and Trust and Kansas Farm
Bureau.
McGhees SAE is in
Diversified
Agriculture
Production Placement. Baling
hay, feeding and processing
cattle, grinding feed, build-
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The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
4th & Maple Garnett (785) 448-5531 Toll Free 888-458-6353
Monday – Friday 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
A special thank you to all our brides and grooms for allowing us to be a part of your big day!
CLIP HERE
CLIP HERE
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
Available
At
Ethanol – Fueling A New Generation
CLIP HERE
In honor of Flag Day, June 14,
we encourage you to always fly
your flag proudly and with respect.
The whole inspiration of our life as
a nation flows out from the waving
folds of this banner.
Author Unknown
601 South Oak Garnett (785) 448-3212
Tire Repair Farm Tires (front & rear)
Pickup Tires Car Tires Alignments
Brake Work Automotive Care
Call us up
when youre
down on the farm.
CLIP HERE
CLIP HERE
VFW
Post 6397
Proudly Sponsors
Community Breakfast
Youth Essay Programs
Aaron Lizer
120 S. Maple Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6125
Insurance Investments
www.fbfs.com
American Legion
Post 48
Proudly Sponsors
Bingo
Legion Baseball
CLIP HERE
CLIP HERE
In case of pipeline emergency please call
1-800-324-9696.
Welda District
(785) 448-4800
425 N. Maple
Garnett
(785) 448-2121
CLIP HERE
LOCAL
Flag Day June 14. This flag brought to you by these sponsors and
Discounts on all case purchases of wine and liquor!
(On the west side of 59 Highway just north of 4th Street)
313 S. Maple
Garnett
(785) 448-3815
Mike & Cathy Barnes
Open Monday – Friday 9am -9pm
Saturday – 9am – 10pm
Sunday – Noon – 8pm
Stop and see our ever expanding selection
of liquor & wine, now with over 200 wines!
The Little
Liquor Store That
Has It All!
Hwy 59 in Garnett
785-448-6393 or 785-448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
Open Until
Midnight
1/2 Price Shakes
After 8 p.m.
CLIP HERE
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
7A
8A
LOCAL
6×21
flag
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, June 9
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
Wednesday, June 10
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett Riding Arena
Thursday, June 11
4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. – Farmers
Market, downtown Garnett
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
Monday, June 15
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
6:30 p.m. – Bear (third grade)
Den Cub Scouts meeting
Tuesday, June 16
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Wednesday, June 17
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
3×7
chs
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
County Dems plan Richmond Gets Pretty
cookout June 14
The Anderson County
Democrats will host a cookout
7 p.m. Sunday, June 14, at the
community building at North
Lake Park in Garnett.
Anderson County-grown
beef hamburgers will be provided by the Democrats. Those
attending are asked to bring a
side dish or dessert.
Well
feed
all
area
Democrats or anyone whos fed
up with the chaos in Topeka
and Washington, said Dennis
Richards, Anderson County
Democratic chairman.
Garnett native Sherri Long
Grogan, who is chairman
of the Leavenworth County
Democratic party, is scheduled
to be among those attending.
Community band offers
first concert June 11
The
Garnett
Area
Community Band under the
direction of John Bechen will
present its first concert of the
Summer Season on Thursday,
June 11 at 7:00 p.m. on the
Anderson County Courthouse
lawn, Northside. The Band will
perform Patriotic, Broadway
and Movie Favorites plus some
stirring marches. Bring your
lawn chairs to enjoy the music,
our lovely downtown, and to
visit with friends and neighbors.
John Bechen, Lawrence, KS,
has been an active member
of the Band for several years.
John Bechen has a Bachelor
of Music Degree from Loras
College in Dubuque, Iowa,
and is employed at The Reuter
Organ Company in Lawrence.
In case of inclement weather
for an outdoor concert this summer, the First United Methodist
Church, 205 S. Oak Street,
Garnett, will be the alternate
site for the scheduled concert.
If it is raining or the Band is
not on the Square, please come
to the Church. The Band appreciates the availability of this
location. It is good to know that
even if it rains, the Band will
play on.
For more information, please
call Beth McCord (785) 448-3795.
New members are always welcome.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
The MWA Tiny Tots 499-1l group has planted two flower boxes in front of the Richmond Public
Library. The kids have been planting our flower boxes for us for a few years now. They make the
front of the library look much better. Many thanks to MWA for providing the funds for the kids to
plant the flowers.
Mole control workshop
offered June 11 in Ottawa
Are moles invading your
lawn and landscape? Have
you tried the easy options
with no benefit? The Frontier
Extension District will be hosting an on-site Mole Control
workshop on Thursday, June
11, 2015, beginning at 6 pm at
1502 E Logan Street, Ottawa,
KS. Charlie Lee, K-State
Research
and
Extension
Wildlife Specialist, will share
information about mole behavior, habitat, damage prevention
and control methods including
habitat modification, repellents, toxicants, fumigants and
trapping. Trapping is the most
successful and practical method
of getting rid of moles. Charlie
will demonstrate setting mole
traps as well as share some
tips which will increase success. Site is located at the intersection of K-68 highway and
Davis Avenue in Ottawa, KS.
Participants are encouraged
to park at Kansas Gas Service
located at 1300 E Logan Street
and use the sidewalk in front of
Mt Calvary Cemetery to get to
the site. For more information,
see http://www.frontierdistrict.k-state.edu/lawn-garden/.
K-State Research & Extension
is committed to making its services, activities and programs
accessible to all participants. If
you have special requirements
due to a physical, vision or
hearing disability, please contact Shannon Blocker, Frontier
District Extension Agent at
(785) 448-6826, by June 9, 2015.
K-State Research & Extension
is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Duplicate bridge played
Steve Brodmerkle and Anita
Dennis won the duplicate bridge
match June 3 in Garnett. Tom
Peavler and Mary Margaret
Thomas came in second.
Anderson County
news DAILY at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
The next duplicate match
will be June 10 at 1 p.m. at the
Garnett Inn. All bridge players
are welcome.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
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2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
BUSINESS
BUSINESS BEAT
Farm Bureau has Day
on the Farm event
The Anderson County
Farm Bureau Association
held its annual Day on the
Farm event May 8th, 2015
at the Anderson County
Fairgrounds.
Presentations for the day
were as follows:
Jean Johns showed how
to shear a sheep and milked a
goat.
Jake Strobel brought bottle calves and talked about the
care of them. He had several
children experience hands on
feeding of these bottle calves.
Amanda Allison, DVM for
Countryside
Veterinary
Clinic talked about how farmers & ranchers take care of
their animals and how they
should take care of their own
pets.
Anderson County Farm
Bureau President, Jake
Strobel introduced the presenters.
Anita Sobba, nutrition
assistant from the Anderson
County Extension office
showed the kids how to properly wash their hands.
The Garnett Optimists pro-
vided and grilled hamburgers
and hotdogs for lunch and the
Garnett Sonic provided ice
cream for an afternoon snack.
The Anderson County FFA
along with sponsor Jeff
Gillespie had a farm animals
zoo, farm machinery, a four
wheeler and a lawn mower
and talked on the safety of
being around this equipment
along with showing several farm animals and talked
about the care and feeding of
them.
Finishing up the day was
Will Channon (aka Grampa
Pokey) from Williamsburg
who made balloon characters for each child and talked
about his profession.
Jerry Howarter, Anderson
County Commissioner had
lunch with us and Kansas
Farm Bureau 2nd District
Administrator
Charlie
Sargent and John Schlageck,
Kansas Farm Bureau Senior
writer and Editor both from
Manhattan were there and
took pictures and interviewed
some of the presenters & students.
Helping with the day
were the following Anderson
County Farm Bureau board
members: Jake Strobel,
President & YF&R Chairman;
John Pracht, board member; Randy Bunnel, board
member; Larry Cox, board
member,
Debbie Kueser,
Vice-President & Womens
chairman; Gail Kueser,
Policy Chairman; Charlie
Foltz, Secretary/Treasurer;
Butch Fox, member and
Cindy Ecclefield, County
Coordinator not only helped
but planned and organized
the event.
Helping sponsor the event
were the following businesses:
Anderson County Cornfest,
Beckman Motors/Ford, GSSB,
Greeley Farm Implement,
Aaron Lizer/Farm Bureau
Financial Services, Bank of
Greeley, East Kansas AgriEnergy, Farmers State Bank,
Lybarger Oil, Patriots Bank,
Valley R Agri Service, Inc.,
AuBurn Pharmacy, Brummel
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
Farm Service and The
Medicine Shoppe.
Jake Strobel, Anderson County Farm Bureau President, shows his bottle calves to area third graders
There were about 100 third during the Day on the Farm event May 8
grade students, teachers, presenters, helpers; family and
friends that attended the
days event. Without everyones help it would not have
been possible.
Sandras Quick Stop wins BPW Business of the Year
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
Sandra and Terry Zook won Business of the Year at the Kansas BPW Convention held in Topeka, on
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
Saturday, May 30, for Sandras Quick Stop and Simple Simons. The award was presented by President
The Farm Bureau board serves lunch during the Day on the Farm event. From left, Debbie Helen Norman and Issues Mgmt Chair Cindy Simons. Pictured from left: Sandra Zook, Helen Norman,
Kueser, Gail Kueser, Larry Cox, John Pracht, Cindy Ecclefield (County Coordinator), Randy Bunnel Terry Zook, Justin Zook, Erin Zook, Assistant Manager Deb Malone and Dallas Zook.
and Jake Strobel. Not pictured but helping that day was Butch Fox, volunteer member.
ANDERSON COUNTY
Googling up sales
for your business BUSINESS DIRECTORY
So there are millions if not
billions of potential customers for your small business on
the Internet, right? So why are
customers still treating your
Facebook page, your website
and your cash register like they
all have simple chronic halitosis?
Two reasons:
1) You dont have a marketing plan that assesses who your
potential customers are, where
they come from, and how to
adequately communicate with
them; and
2) You havent tried Google
AdWords.
While its easy for customers to miss your website or
Facebook page, Googles targeting system is pretty slick,
defined by keywords and
locaters used when people do
searches, and depending on
who your market is it can work
whether youre aiming for local
sales or customers far outside
your local area.
Small businesses with tight
budgets can still use Google,
primarily Google Search. Its
whats called a pay per click
model, meaning you give
Google money, define your
parameters and write your ad,
and you only pay when someone searching Google clicks on
your ad. You can start a Google
account with as little as $5, but
if youre going to test it for
your business you should plan
to spend at least $100 a month.
Look to the advertising sections
of Google for details.
Within Google Search you
will set up keywords for your
business so that your ad is
pinged when searchers hit your
keywords and other parameters
of your search. If youre a tire
shop, you cant just put in tire
shop because its too generic
there are thousands of tire
shops out there, and nobodys
going to drive from Seattle to
buy tires in Hoxie, Arkansas.
So you flesh out your Google
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
Search ad with various qualifiers: tire shop, along with in
Hoxie, Arkansas and maybe
open til 9 p.m., along with
brands you handle, other services, etc.
Another feature to Google
Search is Geo-Targeting, which
allows your ad only to be seen by
searchers from a specific location. You can target by city, zip
code and also a radius around
your business location. You can
target computers, tablets and
mobile devices separately, with
the obvious advantage being
that if your business targets
traveling or mobile customers,
theyre most likely to use a
smartphone or maybe a tablet
to try to do instant searches.
Other parameters allow you to
set the time of day or dates that
your ad will appear if youre
not open at 10 p.m. you may not
want your ad appearing, or you
may want it only to appear at
peak or non-peak hours.
Thats important, because
the down side to Google Search
is that you pay for searchers
who clicks your ad but who
may never buy from you those
dry click eat up your Google
budget, so you want to qualify
the clicker as much as possible
to have the best chance at the
sale.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to him
at review@garnett-ks.com or
(785) 448-3121.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Sales & Service
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN MOTORS
111 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
North Hwy. 59
in Garnett, KS Jetzon
Cooper
Kumho
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
785-448-3056
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg. Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Patriots Bank Bldg. Richmond
(785) 835-6161
DC Solutions LLC
Foundation &
Drainage Repair
Licensed & Insured
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
(913) 256-9163
www.facebook.com/DC Solutions LLC
www.dcsolutions@osawatomie.com
Millers Construction, Inc.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Has Your Foundation Let You Down?
Serving your area since 1969
Waterproofing Epoxy Injection
Straighten & Stabilize Walls
Solid Piering & Leveling
TAYLOR BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION
Foundation Repair Residential and Commercial
785-242-7477
Ralph Taylor Ottawa, KS
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
And
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Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
3B
LOCAL
What
did
this
tin
box
once
hold?
2005: Kincaid graduates last class
May 31, 2005
The last ever graduation ceremonies held in the
Kincaid school last week could
have been a time of resentment and anger from a community losing its school tradition. Instead it was a celebration for the 20 eighth graders
who will be going on to high
school. Most, if not all, of the
20 will be freshmen at Crest
High School in Colony, where
Kincaids lower elementary
grades will also move in the
05-06 school year due to cost
issues that closed the Kincaid
school.
City
commissioners
approved the issuance of up to
$50 million in industrial revenue bonds for the East Kansas
Agri-Energy ethanol plant,
a move that will effectively
shield the plant from property
taxes for a period of 10 years.
June 12, 1995
Farmers looking skyward
in the past month hoping for
some wet weather relief have
usually been rewarded with
a big raindrop in their eye.
The latest spell of rains last
week have pushed back any
fieldwork for at least another week. Anderson County
Agriculture Extension Agent
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
Matt Teagarden is concerned
now not only about corn, any
more of which he said probably shouldnt be planted this
year, but also about other
crops.
The First United Methodist
Church will celebrate 50 years
of support for the local Boy
Scout and Cub Scout troops
in a ceremony June 25. Boy
Scout Troop 126 has had a long
tradition in Garnett that dates
back before the Methodist
church started sponsoring the
troop back in 1935.
June 3, 1985
Safety at the Garnett Cedar
Valley Reservoir was a matter of concern and discussion during a meeting of the
Garnett City Commission.
Mayor Claron Cole spoke on
safety for swimmers and boaters at the lake. The applica-
tion of regulations pertaining
to the parks in Garnett are
legal; however, this would
prevent swimming in the reservoir because it is against
the law to swim in the lakes.
The commission did not want
to prevent swimming.
June 8, 1915
The heavy downpour of
rain late yesterday afternoon
was of short duration, but it
was about the heaviest rain
weve had this season so
far. Some hail accompanied
the rain but did no damage.
The heft of the storm seems
to have fallen in and about
town, though in some places
considerable water fell. Judge
Stein was in the country
and he says scarcely enough
rain fell to wet his shirt.
Lightning struck the home of
L.D. Walrad, on west Fourth
Avenue, and ran riot through
the kitchen. It knocked a
board from the ceiling, hurled
it through the window shade
and window pane, and into
the yard. The lightning forced
out a part of the siding, tore a
big hole in the ceiling and put
the telephone out of commission.
Isnt this a precious little
round tin box! Many years ago
my father gave me an old peanut butter jar that my mother
had kept a number of small
items in out on our farm. This
little tin box was one of those
items.
Unfortunately I no longer
have the peanut butter jar, as
it was broken when a large portion of my bottle collection was
broken when my shelves fell
almost 6 years ago. It was quite
old as it was carried by a wire
bail type handle.
Now, what did this little tin
box have inside of it (in fact it
still contains a small amount)
Mentholatum Lip Care for
chapped lips. Where did my
mother get it from? More
than likely she bought it or it
was given as a sample by the
Raleigh man,who was a farm
door to door salesman,selling
all kinds of products in the
1920s thru the 1950s.
The beginning of the
Mentholatum Company started
when Albert Alexander Hyde
left the real estate market in
1889. With the collapse of the
market, Hyde established a new
partnership called the Yucca
Company, located in Wichita,
Kansas, which focused on
manufacturing and marketing shaving creams, laundry
and toilet soaps. The Yucca
Garnett Library to discuss The Boston Girl
The Garnett Public Library
will hold a book discussion
on Wednesday, June 24th at
7 p.m. This months book is
The Boston Girl by Anita
Diamant. She has written an
unforgettable novel about
family, friendship, and feminism told through the eyes of a
young Jewish woman growing
up in the North End of Boston
in the early twentieth century.
Leading our discussion will be
Paulabeth Henderson.
Addie Baum is the Boston
Girl, born in 1900 to immigrant
parents who were unprepared
for and suspicious of America
and its effect on their three
daughters. Addies intelligence
and curiosity take her to a
world her parents cant imaginea world of short skirts,
movies, celebrity culture, and
new opportunities for women;
a world where women finish
high school, go to college, have
a career, and find true love on
their own.
Written with the same attention to historical detail and
emotional resonance that made
Anita Diamants previous
novels bestsellers, The Boston
Girl is a moving portrait of
one womans complicated life
Ga
in twentieth-century America
and a fascinating look at a generation of women finding their
places in a changing world.
The books are available for
checkout at the library. The
discussions are held the fourth
Wednesday of each month at 7
p.m. in the Archer Room at the
library. Notification is posted
in case of cancellation.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
Company was the beginning of
the Mentholatum Company.
It was bought out by Rohto
Pharmaceutical Company, a
Japanese health care company in 1988. The Mentholatum
Company is widely associated
with its top three products,
the Mentholatum Ointment,
Mentholatum Deep Heating
Rub and Mentholatum Lip
Care.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
This is an old tin box that once held a small amount (and still does)
of mentholatum lip care for chapped lips.
Youve Got A Lot of Nerve(s)!
2×2
balanced health
An inflamed or tense spine will influence the
functioning of your nervous system, causing pain,
illness or disease. Chiropractic care can help you
maintain your health and wellness.
Dont wait for pain to tell you theres a problem.
Come see what we can do for you.
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
519 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F: 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. T/Th: 9 a.m. – Noon
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
6×12
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
church
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Elder Planning Specialists
Annuities
Medicare Supplement
Long Term Care
Scott D. Schulte CSA
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th Garnett
340 E. South St.
Richmond, Kansas 66080
(785) 835-6135
Hwy 59 at Hwy 31 GARNETT
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday 9am
Wednesday 7:30pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Mark McCoy
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School 9am
Morning Worship 10:00am
Evening Worship 6:30pm
Wednesday Service 7pm
(785) 448-3208 258 Park, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Phil Rhoades
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
Interim Senior Pastor Gary Benjamin
Youth & Childrens Pastor – Chris Goetz
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3558
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
LWML 2nd Sunday 11:30am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ervin A. Daugherty Jr.
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9 am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9:28 am
Sunday Worship 10:28 am
Childrens Church 10:30 am
Wed. Evening Bible Study 6:28 pm
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Mike Farran
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm, Youth Mtg. 7pm
Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ron Jones
BEACON OF TRUTH
Saturday Sabbath Worship 9:30am
Saturday Evening Service 6pm
(except 4th Saturday)
Wednesday Evening Prayer Svc. 7:00pm
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
email review@garnett-ks.com
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – David Hill
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15am
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am/Thurs 7pm
Chancel Bells Wed 6pm
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
Jr. & Sr. UMYF Sundays
U.M. Women 1st Wednesday
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
Reverend – Bill Driver
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:45am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
Pastor – Butch Ritter
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
GREELEY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship 9am
Bible Study (Teens, Adults) 10am
Sunday School (Children) 10am
204 N. Main, PO Box 37, Greeley, KS 66033
(913) 755-2225
Pastor – Bill Driver
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 489-2440
RR 1, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Kenneth Davidson
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 8:30am
Fr. Marianand Mendem
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Marianand Mendem
(620) 364-2416
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
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Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country Favorites
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Heating &
Air Conditioning
(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Sunday School 9:30am
Worship Service 10:30am
2nd & Pine, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Cody Knapik
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
For additions, subtractions or changes to your
church information, a church official may
contact the Review at (785) 448-3121.
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
LOCAL
Oldest class member at Colony/Crest Alumni meeting graduated in 1933
Calendar
June 14-Flag Day; 15-19-Vacation
Bible School, all three churches, meet at Community ChurchTheme-Exploring Mt. Everest.
; 15-Seekers Not Slackers 4-H
Club, Lone Elm Community
building, 7 p.m.; Jolly Dozen
members dine-out; 16-Library
board meeting, City Hall, 5:30
p.m.; 17-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement, 7
p.m.
Summer Ball
Girls: June 15-Bronson at
Colony; 18-Colony at Kincaid
Boys: 12-Colony1 at Blue
Mound 2; 16-Colony at Redfield
Meal Site
12-beef lasagna, Italian veggies, bread, pineapple mango;
15-Salisbury steak, mashed
potatoes, spinach salad, wheat
bread, pears; 17-birthday day
meal-fried chicken breast,
mashed potatoes, gravy, green
beans, roll, cake and ice cream.
Phone 620-852-3450 for reservations.
Christian Church
Sundays scripture presented was Ephesians 4:17-32.
Pastor Mark McCoys sermon
Gods Kind Will For You.
June 13-church potluck dinner
at the City Hall community
room following morning services.
UMC
Scripture presented at the
United Methodist Church
Sunday service was Psalm 29:111, Isaiah 6:1-8, Romans 8:12-17
and John 3:1-17. Pastor Dorothy
Welchs sermon Pick Me.
UMW
The United Methodist
Women will hold their Seeds of
Faith Tea Party June 4 at 6:30
p.m. at the United Methodist
Church Fellowship Hall. Julie
Martin is guest speaker.
VBS
Vacation Bible School
will be held June 15-19. This
years theme is Exploring Mt.
Everest.
All
three
churches
Christian, Community and
United Methodist present this
for children. The Community
Church is in charge this year
with Linda Ludlum serving as
director. Each morning they
will gather at the Community
Church for opening. Then
will be escorted to the church
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
where their group will meet.
55th Anniversary
Four members of the 1960
class attended their 55th anniversary. They met at the New
Greenery in Iola May 23. They
were Jack Ellis and wife,
Marilyn, Humboldt; Sandy
McGhee Spillman and husband, Decker; Sharon Wells
Smith and Betty Jones Ramsey
and husband Duane, Colony.
There were 17 graduates, two
are deceased. Members attending the Alumni were Jack and
Marilyn Ellis, Sharon Smith
and Betty and Duane Ramsey.
Alumni
The Colony/Crest alumni
held their 108th meeting May
23 at the Colony/Crest gym.
Chicken Marys, Pittsburg
catered the meal to 67 alumni members and 28 guests.
Linda Hess, alumni president
announced Earl Clemans Crest
scholarship winners for 2015,
Tiffany Jackman, daughter of
Gregg and Terri Jackman and
Austin Green, son of Gilbert
and Kathy Green. Tiffany
and her parents attended.
Entertainment for the evening
was provided by His Way
Praise Team of Iola.
Linda Hess read the names
in memory of alumni who
passed away since the last
meeting. New officers for 2017
elected were President, Arvin
Clemans, vice president,
Katherine Weldin, secretary,
Linda Ellis and treasurer, Ron
Luedke. The next meeting was
voted for May 28 at the Colony/
Crest gym along with a banquet. The 50/50 jar was won by
Terry Weldin who donated the
monies to the scholarship fund.
Arvin Clemans gave recognition of the classes and also the
ones who were celebrating 50
years-Dennis Goodwin, Susan
Ensley Mills, Candi Veteto
Shanahan, Barbara Sherwood,
Warren Neal, Janet Hill
Sexton, Ron Luedke and Ann
Bunnel Hornstra; 55 years-Sharon Wells Smith, Jack Ellis and
Betty Jones Ramsey, 60 yearsGrayden Tressler, Cecil Miller,
James C. Buckle, Marilyn
Neuenswander, Betty Lybarger
and Bill Neuenswander; 75
years-Ralph Bunnel. Ruby
Davis was the oldest class
member present-graduating
in 1933. Door prizes and coins
were given.
Attending were: KansasRalph
Bunnel,
Evelyn
Neuenswander Bunnel, Weldon
and Wilma Smith Goodell,
Marie Martin Goodspeed,
Bill Ulrich, Morris Luedke,
Mark Luedke, Twila Kelley
Luedke, Greg and Terri Hamm
Jackman, Tiffany Jackman,
Wallace Strickler, Katherine
Gilliland Weldin, Thelma New
Culler, Christine Hoffman
Schainost, Sharon Wells
Smith, Betty Jones Ramsey,
all of Colony; Norman Luedke,
Atwood; Rick Bunnel, Welda;
Ivy Buckle Lankton, Kingman;
Beverly Shreck Ashcraft,
Pleasanton; Shirley Shreck
Oswald, Pat Hoffman Comstock,
Lula Threlkeld Paris, Randy
Myers, Kansas City; Janet
Hill Sexton, Gardner; Linda
Barnett Ellis, Ottawa; Marie
Goodell Plinsky, Topeka; Candi
Veneto Shanahan, Paola; Linda
Weatherman Hess, Marion;
Carolyn Goodell Schwab,
Newton;
Terry
Weldin,
Burlington; Susan Ensley
Mills, Arkansas City; Shirley
Ulrich Robertson, Gas City;
Marcia Luedke Harrington,
Bonner Springs; Jody Henkle
Holston, Leavenworth; Ruby
Rogers Davis, Mary Ulrich
LaCrone, Debbie Barnett
Troxel, Arvin Clemans, Thelma
Sherwood Hisel, Barbara
Sherwood, Iola; Grayden and
Willena Simpson Tressler,
Yates Center; Cecil Miller, Fort
Scott; James Buckle, Melvern;
Marilyn Myers Neuenswander,
Lawrence, George Hoffman;
Betty
Turner
Lybarger,
Ron Luedke, Garnett,; Bill
Neuenswander, Baldwin City;
Evelyn Kelly Tait, Chanute;
Gary Roush, Wichita; Charles
Jones, Potwin; Jack Ellis,
Humboldt; Missouri- Lloyd
and Lovera Barron Stevers,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted by Arvin Clemans
Entertainment provided at the annual Colony/Crest Alumni Association meeting May 23 held at the Crest
USD#479 auditorium was His Way Praise Team from Iola. Left is Tammy Drury, playing keyboard Lois
Drury and playing guitar, Brady Drury. Tammy is daughter of Lois and Brady is Loiss nephew.
Kingsville; Howard Osborn,
Lake Ozark; Calvin Wells, Cape
Giradeau; Sherry Veteto, Lees
Summit; Ohio-Donald Craven,
West Chester; OklahomaEddie Myers, Sapulpa; Peggy
Hoffman Axtell, Oklahoma
City; Warren Neal, Yukon;
Texas-Beth Bunnel Benware,
Keller;
Georgia-Dennis
Goodwin, Snellville; OregonAnn Bunnel Hornstra, Coburg.Linda Barnett Ellis, secretary
June Celebrations
Anniversaries:
June
2-Gerald and Shirley McGhee;
28-Duane and Betty Ramsey.
Birthdays: 1-Maxine Ensley,
Mark Wiley; 2-Sharon Buckle,
Virginia Weatherman; 3-Denise
King; 5-Amy Ray, Tom Buckle;
7-Kamryn Luedke; Jaycee and
Hanna Schmidt; 18-Marla Bain;
20-Shelly Strickler; 24-Anthony
Ellis; 27-Nathan Schmidt
Around Town
Former
resident
Bob
Wilmoth writes he went on the
freedom flight to Washington,
D.C. last November. Recently
he went to Ft. Leavenworth
where it was beautiful with
all the flags and the grounds
are kept nicely. They added 600
acres five or six years ago.
The annual Ensley reunion
was held May 23 at the City Hall
community room. Relatives
from Texas, Oklahoma, several from western Kansas cities,
Lawrence and Kansas City,
Garnett, and surrounding
Colony communities. They will
meet again in 2016 Memorial
weekend in Colony.
The Gillaspie family gathered at the City Hall community room Sunday for a visit
with Connie Gordon Gillaspie,
daughter Cameron and grandson Clyde, Indianapolis, Ind.
Attending were Rosemary
Gillaspie, son Dan, Colony; son
Mike, Leawood; David and fam-
Garnett Fire Department receives grant
The Garnett Fire Department
was recently awarded a $1,000
grant from Enbridge Energy
Company, INC. These funds
were provided to the department via Enbridges Safe
Community Program that
provides grants to emergency
response agencies throughout
the region where Enbridge
pipelines are located. Garnett
Fire Department is using the
funds to assist with the purchase of upgraded radio equipment that will allow for interoperable communications with
other responders.
Enbridge has been extremely generous to not only the fire
departments in our County but
also assisted with equipment
purchases for law enforcement
as well as the 911 communications center over the past few
years. Emergency responders
receive training from numerous pipeline facilities annually through pipeline awareness
meetings. Not only do responders walk away with knowledge
from these meetings but also
gives them a chance to build
relationships with the pipeline
operators. Having solid working relationships with these
operators leads to funding
opportunities such as this,
said JD Mersman, Director,
Anderson County Emergency
Management.
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys
ns
es of Gu
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
785-418-0711
Ladies Day
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Every Tuesday!
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
www.thegunguys.net
info@thegunguys.net
Health Services
3×6.5 D I R E C T O R Y
health
Eye Care
Pharmacy
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
Rehabilitation
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
To advertise in this
guide, contact Stacey
at The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
M-T-W-F
8-5
SAT 8-10
After Hours By Appt.
3×10.5
schlitterbahn
ily, Ottawa; Dennis, wife Mary
Jo and daughter Jackie and
daughters, Topeka; Kevin and
Angel, Lawrence; Mary, Ian
and Megan, Lawrence; Scott,
Tina, Brenden and Sarah,
Lenexa.
Due to damp weather conditions, yard sales didnt bring a
big crowd. Plan on a Fall Yard
Sale to be announced.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
A Look Back at 2005
LOCAL
5B
Eighth grade graduates at Crest
Middle School at Kincaid posed
shortly before the final ceremonies ever in the building. Front
row: Shaylin Whitcomb, Tana
Schooler, Kendra Catt, Jessica
Swift,
Sadie
Davis-Jones,
Kenny Burgoon; second row:
Tanner Strickler, Kaylie Gilliland,
Kerry Stoneking, Becca Honn,
Dallyn Beecher, Susan Loving,
Alexis Olds; back row: Travis
Buck, Brandon Newton,, Todd
Johnston, Cory Davis, John
Denton, John Miller. Not pictured:
Jacob Edgerton.
Above left, Sami McCullough,
left, and Payton Feuerborn give
the heave ho during the tug of
war competition at the USD 365
Play Day.
At right, Alisha Gettler, Alexis
Shaffer (front), Kaley Nilges,
Payton Feuerborn and Joshua
Hermreck strike the final pose in
their performance at the Donnas
Dancing Dolls Dance Recital.
At left, Central Heights co-valedictorian Angela Chrisjohn gives
her commencement address
while
co-valedictorian
J.T.
Horstick looks on.
Garnett Rotary Club members Doug Archer and Terry Solander and radio personality Brad
Howard were hard at work at the Rotary Radio Auction. The two night annual broadcast
celebrated is 16th anniversary last week and is a fundraiser for the Rotarys $1,200 scholarship awarded each year to an ACHS graduating senior.
Nathan Buck hands off to Blake Boone during the
boys 4×800 meter relay at the Crest Invitational track
meet at Burlington.
Walker Pedrow was just one of the many
people who partook of the fried fish and
all the trimmings at the Greeley Knights
of Columbus Fish Fry.
The Anderson County Review celebrated its 140th birthday with cake and ice cream. Pictured from left, front row: George Pasley, Jerry
Webb, Dane Hicks, Barb Hicks, Jessie Wycoff, Jessie Wycoff, Callie Hicks; back row: Becky Long, Melissa Hobbs, Juli Good, Stacey
Dennison, Teresa Young. Not pictured: Heather Nilges, Charlene Bennett.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
LOCAL
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
2 bedroom duplex – very
clean, carport. Lawn care provided, $450 month. (785) 4185435.
my19tf
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
182 Acres, in Anderson
County, can be broken into 40
acres or bigger. South of 1200
road and east of Tennessee
Road. Fenced, several spring
ponds, timber and wildlife. (913)
669-1873. Gene Owen.
jn9t4*
1011 High St, Baldwin City
$190,000. 5 bedrooms, 4 baths,
2 car garage. New paint inside!
Hardwood floors on main level.
Tall ceilings in entry way and
living room. Patty Wiseman,
ReeceNichols Preferred Realty
913-709-0963
**ap21*
364
E
1750
Rd,
Baldwin
City
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 6-9-2015 / Photo Submitted
$330,000. 3 bedrooms and 3 bathWinners of the two Anderson County Farm Bureau scholarships are Tana Benton, left, daughter of Tim rooms on 5 acres in the country
and Patty Benton, Garnett, and Bobbi Jo Rockers, right, daughter of Ben and Katie Rockers, Greeley, but close to town. The outbuildshown with Jake Strobel ( President of the Anderson County Farm Bureau Association). Tana gradu- ing has 3 parking areas and
ated from Anderson County High School. She has been active in Drama Club/Theatre, Science Club, a studio area upstairs with a
Internationals Club and National Society of High School Scholars. Tana is undecided of where she will furnace and shop downstairs.
attend college. Bobbi Jo graduated from Anderson County High School. She has been active in softball, Patty Wiseman, ReeceNichols
cheerleading, drama club, school sponsored plays and National Honor Society. She plans to attend Preferred Realty 913-709-0963
Emporia State University.
**ap21**
514 Flame Way, Baldwin City
$285,000. 6 bedroom home with
custom cabinets, designer double-oven, high-end granite and
(First published in The Anderson County
and Twenty-four (24), in Block Twenty-nine (29), wine frig, this home is perfect
for a family that likes to cook
Review Tuesday, June 2, 2015)
to the City of Harris, Kansas
and entertain. Patty Wiseman,
ALSO DESCRIBED AS:
GARNETT – The Lake Garnett IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
Lots Nineteen (19), Twenty (20), Twenty- ReeceNichols Preferred Realty
**ap21**
Cruisers invite you to Garnetts
COUNTY, KANSAS
one (21), Twenty-two (22), Twenty-three (23) 913-709-0963
1017 Kathys Ct, Baldwin City
town square on Saturday night,
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
and Twenty-four (24), in Block Twenty-nine (29),
$165,000. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
June 13th for the Can-U-Cruise
to the City of Harris, Anderson County, Kansas 3 car garage. Immaculate
charity Cruise Night. From 4:00
, commonly known as 29046 Northwest Spruce move-in ready home with
to 9:00 p.m., this event welcomes JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.
Plaintiff,
Street, Garnett, KS 66032 (the Property)
classic and custom cars, trucks
new wood flooring and carpet!
to satisfy the judgment in the above-enti- Patty Wiseman, ReeceNichols
and motorcycles to participate vs.
in a show n shine to benefit Tanya R. Miller, et al.
tled case. The sale is to be made without Preferred Realty, (913) 709-0963.
the Garnett Area Ministerial Defendants.
**my5**
appraisement and subject to the redemption
Alliance Emergency Fund and
period as provided by law, and further subfood pantry (ECKAN).
The Case No. 15CV6
ject to the approval of the Court. For more
public is encouraged to attend.
information, visit HREF=http://www.southlaw.
Donations of canned food and Court Number:
Pursuant
to
K.S.A.
Chapter
60
com MACROBUTTON HtmlResAnchor www.
non-perishable items or moneSouthlaw.com
tary donations will be accepted
during this event to help those
Notice Of Sale
Vernon Valentine, Sheriff
in need within the local area.
Anderson County, Kansas
Deejay Everett Cox will be
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
playing tunes in the courthouse issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
Prepared By:
bandstand.
Everyone who
SouthLaw,
P.C.
of
Anderson
County,
Kansas,
the
undersigned
brings a classic or custom ride
Sheriff
of
Anderson
County,
Kansas,
will
offer
Blair
T.
Gisi
(KS
#
24096)
will receive a goodie bag and be
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
eligible for door prizes. There for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
Wichita, KS 67202
will be kids games on the court- bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
house lawn. In addition to area the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
(316) 684-7733
dining and shopping, the First Kansas, on June 25, 2015, at 10:00 AM, the
(316) 684-7766 (Fax)
United Methodist Church will be following real estate:
Attorneys for Plaintiff
hosting an outdoor Cook-Out
Lots
(178660)
Nineteen
(19),
Twenty
(20),
Twentywith pulled pork, curly fries,
jn2t3
one
(21),
Twenty-two
(22),
Twenty-three
(23)
baked beans, dessert and drink.
Cruise Night Notice to sell Miller property
set for June 13
1×3
1×3
The Lake Garnett Cruisers
will be selling cruise night
t-shirts while supplies last.
Again, proceeds from this event
will benefit the local ministerial
alliance and food pantry.
For more information please
visit www.lakegarnettcruisers.
com.
Notice
of unsafe
property
Notice to sell Honn property
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, May 26, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS
TRUSTEE FOR CITIGROUP MORTGAGE
LOAN TRUST 2007-WFHE2, ASSET-BACKED
PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES
2007-WFHE2
PLAINTIFF
-vsGAREN HONN, et. al.;
DEFENDANTS
(First published in The Anderson County Review No. 14CV38
Div. No.
Tuesday, June 9, 2015)
K.S.A. 60
Mortgage
In the Matter of the Complaint of
Foreclosure
JOYCE E. MARTIN, City Manager
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
Re: The south 40 feet of Lots 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and
10 in Block 20 together with all that portion of
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
vacated street between Block 20 and Block
21, Chapmans Addition to the City of Garnett, issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and
Anderson County, Kansas, commonly known as for the said County of Anderson, in a certain
cause in said Court Numbered 14CV38, where1103 S. Main Street
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING ON
COMPLAINT
The CITY OF GARNETT, KANSAS to Joseph
L. Olson and all other persons who are or may be
concerned:
You are hereby notified that I have filed a
complaint alleging that the above described property is unsafe in a number of particulars and is
unfit for human habitation and constitutes a blight
on other adjoining properties, and requesting that
the structure(s) thereupon situated be repaired
and made safe if it can be done reasonably; or in
the alternative, that the structure(s) be removed,
all as more particularly alleged in said complaint.
A copy of said complaint may be obtained or
examined at City Hall, 131 West Fifth Avenue;
Garnett, Kansas during regular business hours.
You are hereby notified that I will conduct
a hearing, as City Manager, at City Hall in the
Commission Room at 10:00 a.m. on the 24th
day of June, 2015. You may appear at that time
and place, either in person or by an attorney to
file a written answer to the complaint and to give
testimony to present evidence you may have on
such issues.
CITY OF GARNETT, KANSAS
Joyce E. Martin, City Manager
131 West Fifth Avenue PO Box H
Garnett, Kansas 66032
in the parties above named were respectively
plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand at the West door of the
courthouse in the City of Garnett in said County, MOBILE HOMES
on June 17, 2015, at 10:00 a.m., of said day the
following described real estate located in the Clayton Homes – National
Open House Your 1st year
County of Anderson, State of Kansas, to wit:
LOT SIX (6) IN BLOCK TWO (2) IN KIM Utilities are on us up to $3,000.
Down Payments reduced for
ADDITION TO THE CITY OF GARNETT,
limited time. Lenders offerKANSAS; Commonly known as 709 West 7th, ing $0 Down for Land Owners.
Garnett, Kansas 66032
Special Govt Programs for
This is an attempt to collect a debt and Modular Homes. 866-858-6862
any information obtained will be used for that
purpose.
MOBILE HOMES
Vernon Valentine
SHERIFF OF ANDERSON AUTOS
COUNTY, KANSAS
SHAPIRO & KREISMAN, LLC
Attorneys for Plaintiff 1994 Corvette – red, 82,000 original miles. AM/FM, CD, DVD,
4220 Shawnee Mission Parkway – Suite 418B
bluetooth, Sirius radio, too
Fairway, KS 66205 many extras to list. Bree Auto
(913)831-3000 Sales, (785) 883-2913.
ap14tf
Fax No. (913)831-3320
Our File No. 14-007670/jm
my26t3
CARS & TRUCKS
Notice to recover water
(Published in The Anderson County Review
Tuesday, June 9, 2015)
BEFORE THE STATE CORPORATION
COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
NOTICE OF FILING APPLICATION
RE: Tailwater, Inc. – – Application for a permit to
authorize the enhanced recovery of rural water
into the Pedrow Lease, N2, NE4, Sec. 28-20S20E, 4-IW, 5-IW, 6-IW, 7-IW, 11-IW, 13-IW,
14-IW, 15-IW, located in Anderson County,
Kansas.
TO: All Oil & Gas Producers, Unleased Mineral
Interest Owners, Landowners, and all persons
whoever concerned.
You, and each of you, are hereby notified
that Tailwater, Inc. has filed an application to
commence the injection of rural water into the
Squirrel formation at the Pedrow Lease, Sec.
28-20S-20E, wells 4-IW located 330 from North
line 1320 from East line, 5-IW located 330 from
the North Line, 990 from the East line, 6-IW
located 330 from the North line, 660 from the
East line, 7-IW located 330 from the North line,
jn9t2 330 from the East line, 11-IW located 660 from
1×3
the North line, 1320 from the East line, 13-IW
located 660 from the North line, 660 from the
East line, 14-IW located 660 from the North line,
330 from the East line, 15-IW located 990 from
the North line, 330 from the East line, Anderson
County, Kansas, with a maximum operating
pressure of 500 lbs. and a maximum injection
rate of 50 bbls per day.
Any persons who object to or protest this
application shall be required to file their objections or protest with the Conservation Division of
the State Corporation Commission of the State
of Kansas within fifteen (15) days from the date
of this publication. These protests shall be filed
pursuant to Commission regulations and must
state specific reasons why the grant of 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.
Tailwater, Inc.
6421 Avondale Dr. Ste 212
Oklahoma City, OK 73116
405-810-0900
jn9t1
CARS & TRUCKS
NEED A CAR, HERE WE ARE!
1×3
bree
BREES BUY OF THE WEEK!
2005 Hyundai Accent
4 Dr., Light Blue metallic, matching cloth, auto,
ice cold AC, PS, P brakes, AM/FM stereo. The best
part, its a One Owner with Low Miles! Sale priced
at $4988.00!
2006 Ford Taurus SEL
Great family car! Sage green, matching leather, full
power including 6 way drivers seat, keyless entry,
elec. sunroof, AM/FM stereo w/CD, fuel efficient 6
cyl & 5 spoke alum. wheels. Looking for an affordable car with good mileage? Come take a look!
1997 Honda CRV
Looking for an inexpensive 4wd SUV? Your search
is over! Nicely equipped w/auto, AC, cruise, AM/FM
stereo, tow package! Ready to sell, make an offer!
WE TAKE TRADE INS, WE HAVE SEVERAL DIFFERENT
FINANCE OPTIONS AVAILABLE TO FIT YOUR NEEDS &
EVERY VEHICLE COMES WITH THE TITLE HISTORY!
102 W. 6th St. Wellsville, KS
(785) 883-2913
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Butler
Transport Your
Partner In Excellence. CDL
Class A Drivers Needed. Sign
on Bonus. All miles paid. 1-800528-7825 or www.butlertransport.com
Drivers – No experience?
Some or LOTS of experience?
Lets Talk! We support every
driver, every day, every mile!
Call Central Refrigerated
Home (888) 670-0392 www
CentralTruckDrivingJobs.com
SERVICES
SERVICES
Alcoholics
Anonymous
-6Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services to victims of domestic
violence and sexual abuse. call
(620) 365-7566 or Kansas Hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
2×2
WELL
rcQUALIFIED
truckingCDL DRIVERS WANTED!!!
Hopper bottom company with regional, dedicated
runs, home on weekends. Benefits include, paid
vacation, health insurance and safety incentive bonus.
Call Dan @ 620-437-6616, Johnnie @ 620-437-6323
or send request for application by email to
dredding@rctruckinginc.com
JB Construction
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
2×3
Charge Nurse:
RN or LPN
brandon
woods
CNAs
We are seeking caring, dedicated licensed nurses and assistants to join
our resident directed team of professionals in our Health Center and
Assisted Living neighborhoods. Must be responsible, organized & able
to work independently. Full & Part Time Openings.
Competitive pay & benefits including direct deposit, paid time off,
tuition reimbursement, 401(k) & more!
Human Resources
1501 Inverness Drive
Lawrence, KS 66047
TProchaska@5ssl.com
EOE
Drug Free Workplace
MANUFACTURING/PLATING
– METAL FINISHING
2×3
heartland fast
Small Aircraft Fastener Manufacturer Company in Gardner, KS
looking for a skilled individual to join our team.
Great benefits and 401K plan available.
5 Paid holidays, 2 weeks paid vacation
and 3 paid PTO days per year.
Multiple positions available on 1st and 2nd shifts.
Need to be able to multitask and problem solve.
Need to know your way around a set of tools.
Must be able to lift 50 pounds on a continual basis.
Looking for dependable, motivated
people who want to work.
Salary starts at $12.00 to $16.00 per
hour depending on experience.
Call Marty Vail at 913-526-5862 for more information.
BE CAREAGEOUS
3×5
Lifecare
Director of Nursing – RN – Full-time position available for
a Kansas-licensed RN with 3 years of supervisory experience.
Assistant Director of Nursing – RN – Full-time position
available for a Kansas-licensed RN with one year of
supervisory experience.
RN | LPN – Full-time position available for a
Kansas-licensed nurse.
Certified Nursing Assistant – Full-time positions available
for Kansas-certified nursing assistants.
Life Care Center of Osawatomie
DON/ADON: Jaimie_Corradini@LCCA.com
Bobbie_Miller@LCCA.com | LifeCareCareers.com
59019 | EOE/M/F/V/D
6B
Want a new BOSS?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
7B
LOCAL
Check our classied job listings!
More LOCAL customers read Review classieds than any other newspaper!
SERVICES
MISC. FOR SALE
$ CASH $
1×2
For Scrap
Hecks
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Cars-Trucks-Farm Machinery – etc.
Will pick up
Call Richard (785) 418-1706
1×3
Terms
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
1×3
(913) 594-2495
Come See Why Country Clipper
Stands Out
1×2
Heck
Joystick or Twin Stick Steering
All Steel and Cast Iron Construction
Patented Stand-Up Deck For Easy Maintenance
5 Year Limited Warranty
NEW! Jonsered Lawn & Garden
Equipment Available
Hecks Small Engine Repair
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN Mon. – Fri. Sat. by Appointment
SERVICES
Concrete work – steps, patios,
floors, basement repair – rock
and block. (785) 304-3766.
my19t8*
Honest – local couple will house
sit and/or do light chores.
Enjoy your vacation with peace
of mind. (785) 448-5578. jn9t1*
1×3
COMPUTER
AD
WORK
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
448-0319
or
204-0369
Delivery Available
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Storage Buildings
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
MISC. FOR SALE
MISC
For Sale – washers/dryers $150
OBO; tires P225 60R17 $35 each;
87 Oldsmobile, runs, $300; golf
bag/clubs, $50. Serious inquiries, (785) 418-7963.
jn9t1*
CARE
FARMFARM
AND AG & AG
Grain storage – available, 12,000 bushel. Kenneth
Lankard, (417) 630-1006. my26t5*
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (816) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
jn9tf
FARM & AG
BAUMAN
ROS FAR
B
1 x 4 M
Custom
Services
baum-
D
rilling
bros
No-Till
Wheat
Cover Crops
Planting
No-Till
Liquid Starter
Liquid Nitrogen
Harvesting
Corn-Soybeans
Wheat
Hauling
Princeton, KS
785-448-4503
Wanted: Math tutor
Seeking summer math tutor for junior high level.
Must be familiar with common core and traditional
math. Email reply with background, qualifications,
contact information to:
blindbox@garnett-ks.com
Anderson County Hospital, Saint Lukes Health System has
the following positions open:
Registered Nurse, full time night shift in Med/Surg or ED
Patient Access Rep, full time evening shift in Patient Access
Patient Access Rep, full time day shift in Patient Access
Registered Nurse, part time as needed (PRN) in Med/Surg
Nurse Practitioner or Physician Assistant, full time at the
Family Care Center
Medical Assistant, full time at FCC
Radiology Technologist, part time as needed in Radiology
department
Occupational Therapy Assistant, part time as needed
in Rehab
2×3
and co hosp
Anderson County Solid Waste
Director of Nursing
Tracy_Bartley@LCCA.com
LifeCareCareers.com
Applicant will run all heavy equipment on site, required to
obtain 36 hrs. of initial training to be in charge of
Hazardous Waste building and refresher course of 8 hrs.
annually, training is provided. Applicant will be required
to climb, balance, reach, crawl & move up to 50 lbs.
Applicant will be exposed to moving mechanical parts,
high precarious places, fumes or airborne particles, toxic
or caustic chemicals. A full job description and application
are available at the County Road Dept. Office, 409 S. Oak
Street, Garnett, KS and also at the Landfill. Questions please
call Scott @ 785-448-3109. Anderson County is an Equal
Opportunity Employer and position is Veterans Preference
Eligible (VPE), State Law – K.S.A., 73-201.
LAND FOR SALE
Anderson County ECKAN Head Start is now
enrolling for the 2015-16 School Year.
Full-time position available for a
Kansas-licensed RN with three years
of supervisory experience.
160 Acres Anderson County, Kansas
2×4
fnc farmers
Property is located within one mile of Highway 169
Excellent pasture land with good fences and water
Offers 68 acres of tillable cropland that is currently used as pasture
Includes home and outbuildings with electricity and rural water
For additional information, contact:
Bill Gaughan, Agent
Brad Gaughan, Agent
Phone: (913) 837-0760
Phone: (913) 449-5433
Louisburg, Kansas
WGaughan@FarmersNational.com
www.FarmersNational.com/
WilliamGaughan
BGaughan@FarmersNational.com
www.FarmersNational.com/BradGaughan
L-1500465
www.FarmersNational.com
Real Estate Sales Auctions Farm and Ranch Management Appraisal
Insurance Consultation Oil and Gas Management Forest Resource Management
National Hunting Leases Lake Management FNC Ag Stock
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . Summer
squash, potatoes, tomatoes,
kale, cabbage, beets, turnips,
green beans, baked goods, local
meats and grilled elk burgers at The Farmers Market,
Thursday, 4:30-7:00pm, downtown Garnett.
jn9t1
Happiness is . . . Enjoying a
BBQ dinner & Silent Auction.
Pulled pork, brats, sides and
dessert! Saturday, June 13,
5:00pm-7:30pm, First United
Methodist Church, 2nd & Oak,
Garnett.
jn9t1
Card of Thanks
We would like to thank everyone
that helped us celebrate our 60th
anniversary. The many cards and
attendance at our celebrations were
great. We have a lot of life-long
friends and families. A special thank
you for our children and families,
they did a great job making it a
special day to remember.
1×2
thomp-
Happiness is . . . Breakfast at
the Garnett VFW, 7am-9:30am,
Saturday, June 13. Biscuits and
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage & eggs.
jn9t1
2×4
and co engineer
2×4
eckan
Head Start is a comprehensive preschool for Low-Income
Families. Head Start provides services for all areas of
child and family development including:
Health/Special Needs Screenings
Education/School Readiness Nutrition
Family Service Parent Involvement
Support to meet transportation needs
Serving children with special needs
Contact: Kirstin Brown or Amanda Kueser
785-448-2815
Howard & Leila
Thompson
2×2
kpa gambling
800-522-4700
Kansas Responsible Gambling Alliance
2×2
kpa walnut
Apply online at www.saintlukeshealthsystem.org/jobs.
See online posting for more information on each open
position. We Hire Only Non-Tobacco Users. EOE.
Anderson County Landfill is taking applications for a
full-time truck driver position until July 6, 2015.
Applicant must have at least 6 months verifiable class A
CDL experience to apply. Applicant will be required to
work every third Saturday (8-12:00) plus Monday
through Friday 7:00 -3:30 p.m. Position has full county
benefits, insurance, vacation and sick leave.
2×4
lifecare
to Take the Lead?
Happiness is . . . Garnett
Area Band Community Band
Concert, Thursday, June 11,
7:00 pm. Anderson County
Courthouse lawn (north side).
If rain, at Methodist Church.
jn9t1*
2×4
kpa qsi
2×4.5
yoder auction
8B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Leave your legacy
at Anderson County Hospital
Foundation Memorial sponsorships
available to help fund gardens construction
The Anderson County Hospital
Foundation invites you to leave your
lasting legacy or remember a loved
one with a contribution toward the
funding of the memorial garden and
walking trail on the grounds of the
new hospital.
This opportunity provides for families, organizations or individuals to
make a major and lasting contribution to this project, with benefits to be
enjoyed both now and by generations
to come.
Heavy-coated steel memorial benches
designated with a donors engraved
plaque are available and will provide
seating in various locations throughout the landscaping project. Only 7
of these original 14 bench locations
remain at a contribution of $5,000.
In addition, the placement of various
ornamental, evergreen and shade
trees will accent the garden space
throughout, and are available for
sponsorship at $500 each. Locaters
denoting tree sponsors will be part
of the gardens directional map and
brochure.
The foundations goal is to cover the
complete cost of the $135,000 development, so your help or that of your
family, company or organization is
paramount.
Contact ACH Foundation Chairman
Mike Burns at (785) 448-3600 to reserve your sponsor opportunity today,
and become a part of the legacy of
pride and commitment to excellence
at Anderson County Hospital.
For more information contact the ACH Foundation today at (785) 448-3600.

