Anderson County Review — March 15, 2022
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from March 15, 2022. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
KS,KS,
and
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,
and
communities.
E-statements & Internet Banking
www.garnett-ks.com |
March 15, 2022
SINCE 1865
(785) 448-3121
Member FDIC Since 1899
156th Year, No. 13
| review@garnett-ks.com
(785) 448-3111
Record gas prices whack local drivers
Prices cramp wallets
of commuters, farmers,
local governments
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT With gasoline
prices already climbing in the
U.S. over the past year, local
residents as well as national
analysts thought theyd see a
little slower climb to the $4 per
gallon mark until Russias
military invasion of Ukraine
turned crude oil markets frantic and brought international
tension straight to the pocketbooks of Anderson Countians.
The national online fuel
price tracker GasBuddy in
February estimated the slow
climb in oil prices might stave
off $4 per gallon gas generally
referred to as the benchmark
high for prices during the summer of 2008 pricing boom until
this Memorial Day. But national average prices slipped into
the $4.17 range Wednesday
and at that point set a U.S.
historic record average.
But that was just Wednesday.
Skyrocketing prices threaten to hike costs for virtually all
shipped goods, but land hardest
and fastest on local commuters
who fuel up every few days to
make it to work somewhere
outside the county.
U.S. Census Bureau data
from the 2020 census shows
some 45.5 percent of Anderson
Countys estimated over
16-aged workforce of 3,293
some 1,500 workers leave the
county each day for work, with
a median commute time of 26
minutes. The data showed 21
percent of county commuters
travel 45 minutes or more one
way.
By far most of those commuters 74 percent according
to the census data make their
work trip alone, meaning they
bear the full brunt of their fuel
costs themselves without splitting costs with a carpool. That
puts the longest commuters
in Anderson County spending
some $14 per day (estimating a
vehicle that gets 20 mpg) $70
for a five day work week and
some $25 per week more than a
year ago.
Polls show most Americans
blame President Joe Biden for
gas prices. Critics say Bidens
hard-on-fossil fuels move
toward green energy policies
ended up restricing domestic oil supplies and drove up
prices the past year, before the
Russian invasion of Ukraine
spiked prices higher.
Oil prices had already affected fertilizer and chemical costs
for local farmers, eating into
gains they made after commodity price increases. Jeff
McAdam at Goppert State
Service Bank in Garnett said
those costs have been on the
minds of some of his customers
for some time, even before the
Ukraine chapter.
Chemical is on short supply and has shot up, McAdam
said. Round Up
Source: Kansas AAA
for example has
increased multiple times in
price. Cattle guys
are all cutting
back on fertilizer because they
cant make these
high fertilizer
prices work.
Local governments are also
looking to the
impact higher gas
costs will have
on their transportation fleets.
Crest USD 479
Superintendent
Shane
Walter
said his district
fuel costs were up
about $6,000 this
year over last
year. Don Blome,
superintendent
at USD 365 in Garrnett, said the tion line item to cover costs if of their costs of patrolling. his department was shortdistrict budgeted $123,000 for prices outpace the budget year. Garnett Police Chief Kurt King staffed and put in less overall
Law enforcement in Garnett said he ran slightly over his patrol miles last year.
bus and other transportation
and Anderson County is also $16,500 fuel budget for 2021 due
costs for the year.
SEE GAS ON PAGE 5
To date we have encum- eyeing fuel prices in view to cost increases, even though
bered $73,625,
Blome said. It
would appear we
will be okay, but
if the cost continues to rise it
could be tight.
Blome said the
district
might
have to shift
some unencumTHE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-15-2022 / DANE HICKS
bered funds into
Customers crowded gas pumps in Garnett last week hoping to gas up before prices went higher.
the transporta-
Our own
Irish community and its
Cathedral On The Plains
survived decline, disaster
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
EMERALD During a week when
much of the world looks hard for the
slimmest connection to anything Irish
to justify green beer and St. Patricks
Day partying, Anderson Countys St.
Patricks Church in the former Irish
enclave of Emerald provides a direct
connection to the culture and a legacy
to old Ireland that still holds its name.
The community of Emerald is
tucked in the extreme northwest corner of Anderson County and got its
name from the beauty of the area surrounding the hillside atop which St.
Patricks Church would eventually be
constructed. County histories recount
the arrival to the mostly unsettled
area in 1857 of a handful of families
Thomas and Henry Collins and their
sisters Ellen and Mary, all in their 20s
at the time who settled with a
handful of others along the
banks of Iantha Creek
just east of what is
now Emerald Hill.
The lush countryside reminded
them of home the
celebrated Emerald
Isle and the name
stuck.
The late 1850s
period of Irish
immigration followed not far
behind the Great
Hunger in their
home country the
seven-year long
potato famine that
started in 1845 and
cost an estimated 1
million lives, sending some 2 million Irish into the
decade-long flotilla of often ramshackle vessels in the Atlantic Ocean crossing looking for a better life and food
in America. Starvation, pestilence,
disease and a greatly disinterested
government
in England
had set the
stage for
the great
I r i s h
m o v e m e n t
to
the
American
territories,
and
those
who eventually
landed in Emerald,
Kansas, built the countys first and at the time only Irish
Catholic community along the sweeping valleys overseen by Emerald Hill.
A published history of the
Schnact, a Carmelite priest from St.
Boniface Church at Scipio some 14
miles to the east, came to Emerald
on a regular basis to conduct mass
and helped Emerald organize the new
church. Henry Collins donated 40 acres
of land to include Emerald Hill the
highest spot in the area and the first
church was built of logs and placed
under the patronage of St. Patrick, the
Patron Saint of Ireland. The men of the
community donated, cut and hauled
the logs for construction, with some
coming from as far away as Garnett,
some 20 miles away. The structure was
crude but in keeping with those of the
locality, and the community finally
could boast of its own dedicated house
of worship.
Emerald soon outgrew the log
church, and in 1868, nine years after
the parish was organized, parish members opted to construct a building of
native stone, quarried from surrounding rock. There was little sand in the
area, so parish members pounded
sandstone into sand to mix mortar for
the structure. The new structure was
dedicated August 15, 1870.
Fr. Charles Avertanus, O.C.C.,
became the first resident pastor of
the parish a decade later. He built
a two-story frame parochial residence nearby. Fr. Luke Gierse took
over the church in 1881 but served
only a little more than a year before
he passed away at the age of 36.
By the mid 1890s the growth of
the community and its 90 families
again outpaced the facility,
Above, St. Patricks Church as and plans were set underway
it stands today, and lower left in its for- for the construction of a new
church with some $10,000
mer opulence.
Anderson County Historical Society some $335,000 in modern
funds pledged by members
of the parish. Volunteers,
expertise, tools and wagon teams were
community says the first
mobilized to set about the work, and
mass at Emerald was said
the cornerstone of the present-day
in a log house belonging
to Edward Reddington
SEE ST. PATRICKS ON PAGE 6
in May of 1859. Fr. Ivo
Linn County
man arrested
on terrorism
warrant
December 2021 row
led to temporary shut
down of courthouse
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
LINN COUNTY The Kansas
Bureau of Investigation (KBI)
and the Linn County Sheriffs
Office announced that a
Pleasanton man was arrested
Wednesday evening for terrorism and criminal threat.
At approxi m a t e l y
4:10 p.m. on
Wednesday,
March
9,
Albert
C.
Hinds, 67, of
Pleasanton,
was arrested
at the Food
Hinds
Fair Super
Market
in
Mound City, Kansas.
The charges allege that in
early December of 2021 Hinds
made threatening statements
toward banking personnel
and law enforcement officers prompting a temporary
shutdown of the Linn County
Courthouse.
The court issued a warrant
for Hinds arrest on December
30 last year with a $100,000
appearance bond.
SEE HINDS ON PAGE 7
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2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SOUP SUPPER
The Garnett VFW will hold a
Chili soup supper on March 24
from 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. and
5 p.m.- ?. They will be serving chili, vegetable beef soup,
chicken & noodles, cornbread
& cinnamon rolls. $8 donation.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 will host breakfast Sunday, March 20, from
9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Biscuits and
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage and eggs will be
served.
FIRST AID PROGRAM
Anderson County Farm Bureau,
the Anderson County EMS
and the Anderson County Fire
Department will be sponsoring a first aid program. This
will include Stop the Bleed,
choking for children as well
as adults, first aid and chest
compressions. The program
will be Wednesday, March 23,
2022 at the Anderson County
Community Building at the fairgrounds from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00
p.m. Please register by calling (785) 448-0099 or emailing
andersonfb@kfb.org
USD #365 KINDERGARTEN
ROUNDUP
Children that are 5 years old
on or before August 31, 2022
are eligible to attend kindergarten next fall. Appointments
are now being taken for
screening. Call 448-3177
for Garnett Elementary, 8673460 for Greeley Elementary
and 489-2511 for Westphalia
Elementary.
PAIR OF CITY COMMITTEES HAVE VACANCIES
The City of Garnett has vacancies on the Park & Rec Advisory
Committee and the Tourism
Advisory Committee. Interested
persons are encouraged to
complete a Statement of Interest
form available at City Hall or at
www.simplygarnett.com.
FARMERS MKT. MTNG
Garnett Farmers Market
Vendor Meeting will be this
Wednesday, March 16th, 6
p.m. at Town Hall Center. The
meeting was originally to be
held March 10th but cancelled
due to weather.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Kansas VINE
is free and anonymous and
provides victims of crime and
the general public the ability to
search for an offender housed
in a county jail and receive
notifications.
LAND TRANSFERS
Fred A Nolan and Nonnie J Nolan
to Terry Wood: South 40 lots 1 & 2
& all lot 3 & east 40 of north 100 lot
4 & north 40 lots 10, 11 & 12 along
with vacated alley all in blk 23 City of
Colony.
Thomas L Tush, Janice I Tush and
Julie L Wight to Marvin D Yoder, Larry
E Yoder and Steven J Yoder: All that
part of e2 sw4 & w2 se4 3-21-19
described as follows: beg at secor
said sw4; thence south 885443
west along south line of said sw4,
1112.96 feet to pt being 208.71 feet
east of swcor e2 said sw4; thence
north 000858 west parallel with
west line of e2 said sw4 208.71 feet;
thence south 885443 west parallel
with south line of said sw4, 208.71
feet to pt on west line of e2 said sw4;
thence north 000858 west along
west line of e2 said sw4, 1692.70 feet;
thence south 394631 east 805.69
feet; thence north 343658 east
329.01 feet; thence south 783405
east 636.73 feet; thenc north
234754 east 371.25 feet; thence
north 625624 west 1659.56 feet to
pt on west line of e2 said sw4; thence
north 000858 west 130.00 feet
to nwcor e2 said sw4; thence north
890257east 1330.84 feet to nwcor
siad se4; thence north 890257 east
1321.61 feet to necor w2 said se4;
thence south 000300 west 2644.72
feet to secor w2 said se4; thence
south 885443 west 1321.67 feet to
pob; said tract contains 139.03 acres
more or less and subject to existing
road r/w and encumbrances of record.
Julie L Wight to Thomas L Tush
and Janice L Tush: E2 se4 3-21-19
described as: beg at secor siad se4;
thence south 885443 west 1321.67
feet to swcor e2 said se4; thence north
000300 east 2644.72 feet to nwcor
e2 said se4; thence north 890257
east 1321.61 feet to necor said se4;
thence south 000300 west 2641.56
feet to pob; said tract contains 80.18
acres more or less and subject to
existing road r/w and encumbrances
of record.
Catherine Krause, Catherine
Van Gilder F/K/A and Terry Krause
to Matthew Shane Ooten: W2 sw4
27-21-20.
Christina Sewell and William C
Sewell to Matthew Shane Ooten: W2
sw4 27-21-20.
Cheryl Mcmurdo, Cheryl Hermann
F/K/A and Robert S Mcmurdo to
Matthew Shane Ooten: W2 sw4
27-21-20.
Connie F Powls and David Powls
to Keegan K Barnes and Whitney E
Barnes: Beg at pt 74 2/7 rods south
of necor sw4 5-20-20, thence west
140 rods, thence south to south line
of quarter section; thence east 100
rods, thence north 32 rods, thence
east 40 rods, thence north to pob;
less & except a tract beg 14 rods west
of secor sw4 5-20-20, thence north
750, thence east 750, thence south
750, thence west 750 to pob; & less
the following tracts: beg 140 rods
west of secor sw4 5-20-20, thence
north 1414.30 feet to existing corner
post; thence east 230, thence south
1414.30 feet to south line of said quarter section, thence west 230 to pob;
& also less: all of following described
tract of land lying east of county road,
to wit: beg at pt 74 2/7 rods south of
necor sw4 5-20-20, thence west 140
rods, thence south to south line of
quarter section, thence east 100 rods,
thence north 32 rods, thence east 40
rods, thence north to pob.
Garnett 80 LLC to Jason Spencer
Family Farms LLC: S2 se4 27-19-18.
ANDERSON COUNTY
TRAFFIC CASES FILED
James A Lewis Jr has been charged
with driving while suspended; 2nd or
subsequent conviction and fleeing or
attempt to elude a law enforcement
officer; fail/refuse to stop.
William Paul Wiedemann Jr has
been charged with speeding.
Steven A Salazar has been charged
with driving under the influence – 2nd
offense, circumvention of an ignition
interlock device and for driving while
suspended.
Joe Don Richardson has been
charged with driving on the left side of
the roadway prohibited.
Clem Arden Filbrun has been
charged with speeding.
Cassandra Dawn Phillips has been
charged with speeding.
Annie J Tush has been charged
with driving under the influence – 2nd
offense.
ANDERSON COUNTY
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Troy W Duncan has been charged
with domestic battery.
Jacob L Lucas has been charged
with violating offender registration act;
1st conviction.
David Ashley was booked into jail on
August 12, 2021.
Nicholas Buchanan was booked into
jail on October 17, 2021.
Robert Sparks was booked into jail
on October 26, 2021.
Roy Teal was booked into jail on
November 11, 2021.
Sabre Suire was booked into jail on
November 12, 2021.
Mason Offutt was booked into jail on
November 28, 2021.
Teela Meineke-Sumner was booked
into jail on January 7, 2022.
Alicia Ellis was booked into jail on
January 31, 2022.
Amanda Enns was booked into jail on
February 14, 2022.
Troy Duncan was booked into jail on
March 5, 2022.
James Lewis was booked into jail on
March 6, 2022.
Jacob Lewis was booked into jail on
March 8, 2022.
Travis Leftwich was booked into jail
on March 9, 2022.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL
FARM-INS ROSTER
Zachery Whalen was booked into jail
on May 19, 2021.
Edwin Soto-Galarza was booked into
jail on May 19, 2021.
Chase Porter was booked into jail on
August 9, 2021.
Richard Page was booked into jail on
December 10, 2021.
Mehki McDaniel was booked into jail
on December 20, 2021.
Dusin Lane was booked into jail on
January 4, 2022.
Seth Bulmer was booked into jail on
January 26, 2022.
Heidi Skiles was booked into jail on
January 26, 2022.
Victoria Jenkins was booked into jail
on January 31, 2022.
ANDERSON COUNTY
LIMITED ACTION CASES FILED
St.
Pattys
Day Fun!
The City of Garnett has filed suit
against Jeffery Adams Garcia in the
amount of $1,293.50 for unpaid products/services.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Richard
L Manns in the amount of $957.61 for
unpaid 2016 Individual Income Taxes.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against David
J Dickies in the amount of $723.97 for
unpaid 2016 & 2017 Individual Income
Taxes.
The City of Garnett has filed suit
against Tyrone Black in the amount
of $2,775.50 for unpaid products/services.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed suit against Genes
Plumbing and Heating, et al in the
amount of $2,844.80 for unpaid 2021
sales tax from September 2021.
ANDERSON COUNTY
MARRIAGE LICENSE FILED
Trevor Thomas Kurtz and Kimberly
Fay Wagner filled out an application
for a Marriage License.
ANDERSON COUNTY
ARRESTS FILED
On March 2, Anthony Alan Tomblin,
Garnett, was arrested for a probation
violation.
On March 4, Vernon Anthony
Mckinney, Grandview, Missouri, was
booked as a hold for Douglas County
as he was arrested for failure to
appear.
On March 4, Derrick James
Davidson, Baldwin City, was booked
as a hold for Douglas County as he
was arrested for violation of a protection order.
On March 4, Shea Darnell Terry,
Lawrence, was booked as a hold for
Douglas County as he was arrested
for failure to appear.
On March 5, Troy William Duncan,
Garnett, was arrested for domestic
battery.
On March 6, James Anthony Lewis,
Garnett, was arrested for fleeing or
attempting to elude police and driving
while suspended.
On March 6, Steven Joseph
Degraeve, Osawatomie, was arrested
for domestic battery.
On March 8, Wesley Leon Gulick,
Independence, was arrested for failure to appear.
On March 8, Jacob Levi Lucas,
Gardner, was arrested for a violation
of offender registration act.
On March 9, Travis Wayne Leftwich,
Gas City, was arrested for a probation
violation.
On March 9, Kylie Ann Marrall,
Westphalia, was arrested for possession of drugs, possession of drug
paraphernalia and failure to yield at
yield or stop sign.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Giovanni Rodriguez was booked into
jail on March 3, 2021.
Daequan Rayton was booked into jail
on February 11, 2022.
Gage Wright was booked into jail on
February 11, 2022.
Antonio Esparza was booked into jail
on February 24, 2022.
Tyler McPhail was booked into jail on
February 24, 2022.
Vernon McKinney was booked into
jail on March 4, 2022.
Derrick Davidson was booked into jail
on March 4, 2022.
Shea Terry was booked into jail on
March 4, 2022.
Marcus Phillips was booked into jail
on March 4, 2022.
Corned Beef
& Cabbage
Come
out &
get
your
Corned Beef
Irish & Cabbage
on!
…and other
traditional Irish dishes!
Come see us!
110 W. 5th Garnett (785) 448-5856
Toddys St. Pats DJ Party…
Lucky charms jello shots
Green beer
Drink specials
…and other
traditional Irish dishes!
Come see us!
(785) 448-9800
26192 NE Neosho Rd
Garnett
110 W. 5th Garnett (785) 448-5856
Quality Care Is Minutes Away
Anderson County Hospital is part of Saint Lukes and
offers local access to advanced specialty providers.
Sara Clift, PA-C, WCC
Wound Care
Sara Clift, PA-C, WCC, specializes
in treating patients suffering
from hard-to-heal wounds,
including diabetic wounds,
venous and pressure ulcers,
and surgical wounds that have
not healed.
Call to
Subscribe
(785) 448-3121
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett
Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
See an expert at our Specialty Clinic:
Audiology
Ophthalmology
Cardiology
Orthopedics
Dermatology
Pain management
Ear, nose, & throat
Podiatry
Endocrinology
Psychiatry*
Gastroenterology
Pulmonology*
General surgery
Rheumatology
Nephrology
Urology
Neurology
Veterans clinic
OB/GYN
Wound care
*Services are offered through Telemedicine
Find a doctor
saintlukeskc.org/anderson
785-204-8000
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
SCOBEE
DECEMBER 8, 1950 – MARCH 9, 2022
Richard Eugene Scobee, age
71, of Welda, Kansas, passed
away on Wednesday, March 9,
2022, in Garnett, Kansas.
He was born December 8,
1950,
in
Garnett,
Kansas, the
son of Joseph
(Jack) and
Vera (Ward)
S c o b e e .
Richard graduated from
Scobee
Garnett High
School with
the
Class
of 1968. In Richards early
years he worked several different places prior to starting
his career with City Service
Gas Company. This company
changed names over the years
and he retired with Southern
Star in 2010.
Richard was united in marriage with Dixie Thompson
on August 4, 1973 in Welda,
Kansas. They were blessed
with five children in their marriage.
Throughout Richards lifetime he enjoyed many aspects
of the outdoors. He enjoyed his
coon dogs, hunting, trapping,
fishing, and camping. Taking
weekend trips to the lake.
When the kids were little, his
idea of a family vacation was
camping at the lakes to fish!
Richard always enjoyed
gardening and canning, even
though Dixie did most of the
work!
Toward the end of Richards
retirement, he and Dixie decided to try their hand at raising
cattle. Even after losing Dixie,
Richard still enjoyed fishing
and taking his best friend Taffy
with him. Taffy continued to be
his faithful companion, by his
side, until the day he passed.
Richard was loved and will
be missed by many.
He was preceded in death
by his parents; his wife, Dixie
Scobee; infant daughter,
Stephanie Machelle Scobee;
one granddaughter, Theresa
Ochweri; and two brothers,
J.R. Scobee and Roland Scobee.
Richard is survived by his
four children, Jim Scobee and
wife Candra of Lyons, Kansas,
Robin Bliss of Halstead,
Kansas, RDonna Riri of
Ottawa, Kansas, Jill Ochweri
and husband Hezron of
Wichita, Kansas; 13 grandchildren, Wendell, Wrikin, Kenton,
Kassidy, Oceana, Kieara,
Camron, Zakayo, Virginia,
Jasira, Jayden, Abigael, and
Sophia; three great grandchildren, Sandra, Xiomara,
and Calvin; one sister, Ruth
Kaufman; and several extended
family members.
Memorial services were
Monday, March 14, 2022, at
the Feuerborn Family Service
Chapel, Garnett.
Memorial contributions may
be made to Welda Community
Building or to the Welda Fire
Department.
ELLIOT
MAY 17, 1951 – MARCH 1 , 2022
Beverly J. Elliott, 70, of
Welda, KS, died March 1, 2022,
at St. Luke's Hospital of Kansas
City, KS.
A graveside funeral service
was
held
Saturday,
March 5, at
the Hickory
Grove
/
B l o c k e r
Cemetery,
northwest of
Morrowville,
Elliot
KS. Rev. Ron
Brown officiated.
The pallbearers were Robert
Miller, Brayden Miller, Brian
Rockers, Aaron Lindsten,
Justin Lindsten and Gale Cook.
Beverly was born on May
17, 1951, in St. Francis, KS, to
Klifton and Jeanette (Schlepp)
Cook. She grew up in St.
Francis. Beverlys first husband was in the military, and
they traveled to several bases
and was stationed in Japan for
several years where her son
Derran was born.
After being together for
twenty years, she married
Robert Elliott on May 8, 2017, on
the farm in Welda. She helped
Bob raise miniature Herford
cattle and showed them at the
Stock Show in Denver and
liked planting flowers around
the yard. Beverly enjoyed
watching sports and her grandsons activities.
She was preceded in death
by her parents; and brother-inlaw, Cecil Grover.
Survivors include husband,
Bob; stepfather, Keith Braclin,
St. Francis; son, Derran
(Colleen) Barrows, Highland
Ranch,
CO;
grandsons,
Cameron and Charlie; stepdaughters, Michelle (Robert)
Miller and Julie (Brian)
Rockers, both of Garnett; step
grandchildren, Alissa (Jason)
Williams, Brayden (Hannah)
Miller,
Jessica
Rockers,
Bailee (Seth) Hermreck, and
Ryelee Rockers; and two
great grandchildren, Deacon
and Makenna; sister, Debra
Lindsten, Wichita; step brother, Mel Bracelin, St. Francis;
step sister, Lori (Pat) Barr,
Owensboro, KY; sisters-in-law,
Alice (Richard) Percival, Jean
(Mike) Applegarth, and Peggy
(Lou) Iwert; and several nieces
and nephews.
A memorial fund is established and will be designated
later. Contributions may be
sent in care of Ward Funeral
Home, Washington.
BOOTS
OCTOBER 16, 1925 – MARCH 6, 2022
Dorothy
Alberta
Mae
(Evans) Boots, age 96, of
Bartlesville, Oklahoma, died
peacefully at home on March 6,
2022. Funeral Services for Mrs.
Boots were
Saturday,
M a r c h
12, at the
Feuerborn
F a m i l y
Service,
Garnett,
K a n s a s .
Boots
Graveside
services
followed at
the family plot in the Garnett
Cemetery. Chaplain Lloyd
Houk officiated.
Alberta was born in Eureka
Springs, Arkansas, to Keith,
Sr. and Frances (Lugenbeel)
Evans. The family moved to oil
leases near Garnett, Kansas,
where Alberta attended a
country school for her elementary education. She completed her high school education
in Garnett, where she met
her husband, Harold Leonard
Boots, Sr. The couple were
married in 1942. Harold passed
away in 2013, one month shy
of their 71st wedding anniversary. In 1943, she received her
training as a long distance telephone operator with A.T.&T.
in Kansas City, Missouri.
She was also associated with
the Bell Telephone Company
at Tomah, Wisconsin, Camp
McCoy, Wisconsin, and the
United Telephone Company,
Garnett, Kansas. Also during
World War II she worked
for Ray-O-Vac in Madison,
Wisconsin, making batteries
for military walkie-talkies
and bazooka guns for the war
effort. From 1946 to 1951, she
worked as a seed analyst for the
State Board of Agriculture in
Manhattan, Kansas, while her
husband attended Kansas State
University.
In 1951, she and Harold
moved to Texas, where Harold
was employed with Phillips
Petroleum Company at their
Cactus Plant, north of Dumas,
Texas. In 1955 they moved to
Bartlesville, Oklahoma, and
made their home there until
her death.
Alberta was a lifelong member of the Methodist Church. For
many years, she was a member
of the First United Methodist
Church in Bartlesville, where
she served several years as a
Sunday School teacher, nursery worker, a member of the
Womens Society of Christian
Service, and on the administration board. She was a Girl
Scout leader for five years, a
50-year member of the Order
of Eastern Star, Charter member of Amaranth Court 26,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, the Kansas Day
Womans Club, and Phillips
Petroleum Company Splash
Club parent for ten years.
Alberta is survived by
two daughters and their husbands, Deborah (Gale) Wilson
and Janet (Tony) Jasnowski;
one grandson and his wife,
Jozef (Megan) Jasnowski;
one great-grandson, Jozef, Jr.
Jasnowski; and one granddaughter, Clare Jasnowski.
She is also survived by a brother, Keith F. Evans, Jr., and by
several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Harold Boots;
infant son, Harold Leonard
Boots, Jr.; her sister and brother-in-law Kathryn Marilee
(Robert) Archer; her sister-inlaw Elaine Evans; and both
parents.
She loved her family very
much and enjoyed every minute spent with them. She had
a special way that warmed the
hearts of those who knew her.
The qualities that made her
such a wonderful person have
left us all with many cherished
memories.
In lieu of flowers, a memorial in remembrance of Mrs.
Boots has been established in
recognition of the many years
of patient and loving care she
received from the dedicated companions and staff of
Elder Care in Bartlesville, OK.
Friends and family who wish
to remember her in this way
may forward their gifts to the
following:
Elder Care
1223 Swan Drive
Bartlesville, OK 74006
ACKMANN
Ede Ackmann, age 82, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Saturday, March 12, 2022,
at Richmond Healthcare in
we print it.
Garnett
Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
2×2 Good
Shepherd
What do you possess?
Hope or wishful thinking?
Hope is defined as confident
expectancy. In the Bible the
word hope stands for both the
act of hoping, just as Abraham
believed God and became the
father of many nations and
the thing hoped for, God in his
great mercy has given us the
new birth into a living hope
through the resurrection of
Jesus Christ. Hope does not
arise from individuals desires
or wishes but from God who is
himself the believers hope.
In Psalm 39:7, the Psalmist
says, But now, Lord, who do
I look for? My hope is in you.
Genuine hope is not wishful
thinking. I remember as a
boy making a Christmas list.
We would receive the Sears or
Montgomery Ward catalog and
I would spend hours looking
over all the items that interested me. I would put together a
list of things I hoped for. This
was a type of wishful thinking on my part. Genuine hope
is not wishful thinking, but a
firm assurance about things
that are unseen and still in the
future.
Hope distinguishes the
Christian from the unbeliever,
who has no hope. The Apostle
Paul speaking to the Ephesians
reminds them when they
were, excluded from citizenship in Israel and foreigners
to the covenants of the promise, without hope and without
God in the world. (Ephesians
2:12) A Christian is one in
whom hope resides and our
hope is superior to the hope
they had in the Old Testament.
Richmond, Kansas.
Funeral services are pending.
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
We have seen the realization of
what was promised in the Old
Testament. The prophet Micah
prophesied 700 years prior to
the birth of Christ in Micah 5:2
concerning Bethlehem, out of
you will come for me (God) one
who will be ruler over Israel.
All of us at times get our
hope shaken but what we must
remember our hope is in God.
We are called by God, given the
grace through the sacrificial
death of Jesus on the cross and
given the Word of God to guide
us. The old familiar hymn My
Hope is Built, provides us
with great assurance and goes
as follows.
My hope is built on nothing less
than Jesus blood and righteousness.
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
but wholly lean on Jesus name.
Do you have this hope or are
you just a wishful thinker?
David Bilderback, Ministry on
the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback
on Facebook
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Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
OPINION
KC Star goes to bat for Kelly
using bogus school finance info
A guest column in todays Kansas City Star
by a retired teacher makes an outrageously
false claim about school funding to promote
Laura Kelly for governor over Derek Schmidt.
The teacher may only be repeating false information she was given by education officials,
but the Stars editorial page knows her claim to
be fabricated.
I know they have the facts because I gave
them the school funding data as published by
the Kansas Department of Education. But the
truth is irrelevant in the Stars Republicanbad, Democrat-good world.
The Star editorial page allowed Mary Sue
Wilson to claim that per-student funding fell
from $4,400 to $3,780. Total per-student funding was three times greater in her 2010 reference point, at $12,330. It was over $16,000 in USD
453 Leavenworth,
from which she
retired.
T
h
e
amount of per-student funding is
just one of several blatant falsehoods perpetrated
by Wilson and
the Star editorial
page.
Its
true
that that one
piece of state
aid was reduced
during the Great
Recession in 2010,
but
legislators
back-filled most
of it with extra
federal funding.
Total funding per
student increased
for Leavenworth
in 2010; statewide,
there was an average drop of just 2.6%.
The Star and Wilson fault Attorney General
Derek Schmidt and Governor Sam Brownback,
but it was Democrat Governor Mark Parkinson
who made the change.
School finance isnt the only subject that
Wilson and The Star failed; they also get an F
for civics.
They inaccurately criticize Schmidt for
spending millions defending the state against
school districts in Gannon v. Kansas, saying it
The Star and
Wilson defend
the system while
ignoring the
fact that there
are more high
school students
below grade
level in Kansas
than are on track
for college and
career.
KANSAS COMMENTARY
DAVE TRABERT, KANSAS POLICY INSTITUTE
was his responsibility to ensure those schools
were adequately funded. Thats not true.
Funding is the Legislatures duty. It is the
Attorney Generals responsibility to defend
the State, as did Democrat Attorney General
Steve Six when schools filed their suit in 2010.
But Six and Parkinson are given special dispensation for their sins by Wilson and the Star
because they are on the same political team.
Their most grievous offense, however, is not
against Schmidt, but the tens of thousands of
students that the public school system ignores.
The Star and Wilson defend the system while
ignoring the fact that there are more high
school students below grade level in Kansas
than are on track for college and career.
In math, for example, 62% of Leavenworth
high school kids are below grade level and
only 14% are on track for college and career.
Statewide, the results are 47% and 20%, respectively.
They dont seem to care that school districts refuse to follow state laws intended to
resolve race-based and income-based educational discrimination.
Who cares if the
State Department of Education tries to change
achievement standards to make outcomes look
better than reality. It is the system and the
adults who work in it that matter.
This deplorable situation will not be resolved
internally by the system. Students need leadership from the Legislature and the governors
office to give them a fighting chance to be successful in life.
Dave Trabert is director of the Kansas Policy
Institute, a conservative think tank based in
Wichita.
The Anderson County Reviews
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Being forced to wear a mask and get a vaccine
versus having my country bombed? Both are
tyrannical and unnecessary.
Do all you people who voted for Sleepy Joe and
Cackling Harris like the gas prices and inflation on everything? Dumb, dumb, dumb. Bet
you could handle some bad tweets now. Better
than paying out the (deleted) to fill your cars
and trucks up. Hope you Democrats are proud
of yourselves.
Its kind of crazy. When you and your friend are
talking about sutff and youre all drinking and
you end up with a black eye and your landlord
says to call the police and the police come out
here and the one who blacked your eye gets to
go to a motel room for the night. When he comes
back am I gonna live? Think about it.
Saturday night about 8 oclock I was out for my
walk like I usually am and I want to say what I
just seen. I seen somebody go down Fifth Street
there about Fifth and Vine about 50 miles per
Why is the worlds leadership so awful?
How can the worlds leadership be
so world-class hideous? And how many
more wars and jackbooted atrocities
before we toss the despots and incompetents out on their considerable stumps?
Judging from the clown show in
Washington, D.C., the bloody authoritarians in China, Iran and elsewhere, and the
Madman of Moscow, its not a stretch to
suggest that any number of small towns
in Missouri and Kansas have vastly superior leadership.
How perverse is that? How is it that the
mayor of Wamego, Kansas or Kimmswick,
Missouri can run rings around those on
the world stage for sheer competence and
humanity? In every other endeavor in
life, as you rise from the local level up to
national and international planes think
sports, spelling bees and entertainment
the talent usually gets better and better.
The one exception seems to be politics.
The world is following the absolute
dumbest lemmings of the lot over the
cliff.
Things are bad enough in the United
States, where Congress approval rating
is at 18%, albeit a full 10-point improve-
COMMENTARY
MICHAEL RYAN, THE HEARTLANDER
ment from 2013 when Public Policy
Polling said Congress was less popular
than such things as root canals, head
lice, colonoscopies, traffic jams and cockroaches. (Arnold Schwarzenegger was
wrong when he claimed the list included
herpes; the poll actually asked about
gonorrhea, which, for the record, did
indeed beat Congress in popularity.)
Then theres President Joe Biden, whose
approval rating in a new Washington
Post and ABC News poll is an alarming
37%. Just 29% feel America is on the
right track.
With polls such as these, can it truly be
said this government has the consent of
the governed? Can President Biden genuinely say the state of the Union is strong?
Yet despite all that, America is an evaporating oasis of promise compared to the
rest of the world. Most of the planet is
under the foot of tyranny, or in danger
of being visited by it like our friends in
Ukraine. Just look at the United Nations,
which is little more than an urbane collection of Barbary Coast sensibilities.
Why do leaders in small-town America
seem so much more decent and capable?
A number of reasons, beginning with our
form of government, which starts with
the U.S. Constitution. (It should be our
No. 1 export.) For another thing, smalltown leaders have much less strife to deal
with. Its also much easier for lousy leaders to abuse people they dont know, and
in small towns you know about everyone.
In addition, sharply elevated amounts
of power and authority feed humanitys
darkest ambitions and urges.
Justin Dyer, political science professor
SEE RYAN ON PAGE 5
Oils value: No one ever fought a war for wind
There are forgivable intellectual and policy
errors, and then theres the self-delusion that
has driven the West into its dependence on
Vladimir Putins oil and gas.
Russia has long been a major supplier of
energy to Europe. The depletion of European
natural gas reserves has played a role in
Russias increased significance. Moscow
has also benefited, though, from a deliberate
choice by Europe to attempt a great leap forward into a green-energy future, especially
in a Germany that turned its back on both
nuclear and coal.
In taking this route, Europe made a holiday-from-history decision to forget the incredible power of oil, gas and coal — the most reliable and efficient sources of energy the world
has ever known — and ignore the inevitable
centrality of energy to geopolitics.
Greta Thunberg, the teenage climate activist who has been elevated into an oracle of all
that is good and true, demanded nothing less.
No matter what youve heard, the world
hasnt embraced fossil fuels out of hatred of
the planet, rather because they are so incredibly useful. If they didnt already exist — thanks
to sunlight and plants that lived millions of
years ago — we would have to invent them and
wouldnt be able to.
Oil is a miracle fuel. Alex Epstein of the
Center for Industrial Progress writes that it is
almost eerily engineered by natural processes, not just for cheapness, not just for reliability, not just for scalability, but also for another
characteristic crucial to a functional civiliza-
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
tion: portability. It powers cars, trucks and
jets, without which the modern world as we
know it wouldnt exist.
Coal, too, Epstein notes, is affordable, abundant and easy to extract and transport. There
is a reason that developing nations invariably
use it to power their economic advancement.
So, its not surprising that fossil fuels are
still the leading source of global electricity,
with coal accounting for 36.7% and gas 23.5%.
The total fossil fuel contribution, at 63.3%, is
down only slightly from two decades ago.
In terms of overall energy, fossil fuels are an
even larger proportion, 84.3%.
For its part, green energy — wind, solar and
other renewables — account for around 10% of
global electricity, and even less of total energy.
Vladimir Putin knew this and understood
the power it gave him, even if European policymakers couldnt be bothered to think a tiny
bit strategically.
Did they not notice that coal was the mainstay of Britains rise to global power in the
19th century?
Did they forget the role of oil in World
War I and World War II, let alone subsequent
20th-century history?
Petroleum wasnt particularly useful prior
to World War I and, by the end of it, had
become a pillar of national power. It fueled the
motorized vehicles and airplanes that transformed warfare. British foreign minister Lord
Curzon famously said at the wars conclusion
that the Allies had floated to victory upon a
wave of oil.
In World War II, the Japanese attacked
the United States in part for fear that the
American de facto oil embargo would starve
its war machine, and one reason the Nazis
were defeated was that they ran out of fuel.
Of course, the strategic significance of the
Middle East owed almost entirely to its vast
oil reserves. The phrase war for oil is a
cliche and usually a smear, but it is certainly
true that no one has ever fought a war for
wind.
In light of all of this, Europe still choose to
subjugate itself to an anti-Western authoritarian and, even as Russian opera stars are
getting canceled, it hasnt ceased purchases of
Russian oil and gas.
Some perspective is necessary. While cliSEE LOWRY ON PAGE 5
hour. But the cops dont want to go them, theyd
rather go get the people who are feeding and
watering stray dogs and cats. Thats messed
up. That vehicle could have hit somebody and
killed them. Are those stray cats and dogs going
to run over someone? No.
Today, I will lean on Jesus to guide me, navigate the world, do battle with the enemy, shine
His light of truth, increase His presence while
I decrease mine and do my imperfect best to do
His will. I pray you will join me.
Some places still requiring masks or else you
cant come in. Really? Youre so last year.
Dave Ramsey had these tips: properly inflate
your tires; dont leave your car idling; carpool if
you can; organize and combine your trips; use
cruise control on the highway.
Now theyre talking about secret chemical
weapons plants in Ukraine funded by the U.S.
The tinfoil hat people just never give up. Where
were you when China was letting loose a virus
that killed millions of people all over the world?
Russia invades a country and we do sanctions
on them but China kills millions of people and
were still buying all their junk? None of this
makes any sense to me.
Contact your elected leaders:
President Joseph Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(202) 224-6521
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Senator Roger Marshall
Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
2nd Dist. Congressman
Jake LaTurner
1630 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-6601
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
5th Dist. Rep. Mark Samsel
300 SW 10th St. Rm 168-W
Topeka, Ks. 66612
(785) 296-6287
Mark.Samsel@house.ks.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
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(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
More finds from one of my latest sites
GAS…
FROM PAGE 1
DIGGING UP THE PAST
With the department
being fully staffed with eight
officers and keeping up with
the departments normal fuel
usage, I project we will spend
close to $27,000.00 this year in
fuel cost, King said. He said
the overage is something the
city commission will have to
address, possibly with a budget
amendment. The alternative is
a cutback in patrolling, he said.
He said he hoped to keep the
vehicle take home policy for
city officers as a benefit for
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
Since I started excavations
at two different sites, Ive had
several people ask me, How
do you keep track of the things
you find?. There are several
different ways. One thing is I
keep a daily calendar and log of
what I find. Another thing I have
each site designated by letters
or numbers. Example; My two
sites now CW-No.1 and TR-No.2
and one last thing is when I get
thru cleaning and identifying
items found they are bagged in
different sized bags and placed
in marked flats. Remember Ive
been doing this for 61 years.
This photo is the latest finds
from TR-2 site:
The two iron artifacts are
unidentified at this time, four
crockery shards, but from two
different old crocks, three shards
of glass with either writing or
5
HISTORY
fear of being less competitive
in retaining and recruiting officers.
Anderson County Sheriff
Vern Valentine said patrol and
prisoner transport costs were
highly variable in his departments, and he would continue
to use mileage restrictions to
manage costs where possible.
I have had a restriction
on mileage for over four years
the way it is and so far this is
working out, Valentine said.
I am hoping for a quiet year
with fewer jail transports and
medical costs. I have already
asked the patrol officers to run
more stationary radar, so you
might slow down and buckle
up.
As of Friday Anderson
County gas retailers ranked
in the lowest tier of pricing
as reported by Kansas AAA.
Local prices were in AAAs
$3.59-$3.78 range. Kansas average price per gallon was $3.82
compared to the national average Friday of $4.33.
LOWRY…
FROM PAGE 4
decorations on them, three white
dishware shards, three colored
glassware shards, what appears
to be a wire chain type bracelet, a beautiful fresh water clam
Pearl button, white glass button,
blue button with thread still in
it and last is a little domed, toad
stool or mushroom shaped button.
Today I will be cleaning my latest finds at the CW-1 site..
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers 7March2022
mate change may indeed prove a serious
long-term challenge, it is not reducing
parts of European cities to rubble or a
threat to use a tactical nuclear weapon.
If this horrifying episode hasnt scared
the West straight on energy, nothing will.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
RYAN…
FROM PAGE 4
at the University of Missouri,
says office-seekers motivations differ greatly as well; you
tend to get more civic-mindedness at the local level. And, as
opposed to more merit-based
pursuits such as sports and
singing, politicians arent necessarily promoted for their
governing skills. The primary
talent that gets rewarded at the
ballot box? Beating up on ones
opponent.
I think you have that kind
of a personality type some-
body who has an insatiable
thirst for power and domination, Dyer tells me. Politics
becomes their outlet for that.
And they are not satisfied with
being the mayor of a small
town in Kansas. Its the hard
reality of human nature.
Still, although there are orientation sessions for a lot of local
and state leaders, its a good
bet most world leaders never
went to one hours worth of
world leadership training. You
get more training to run a forklift than a nation.
As Dyer notes, even after
whats recognized as the bloodiest century in history, wed
like to think were past this
kind of medieval leadership in
the 21st century, as though
somehow human natures
changed from what its always
been.
Certainly there are tin-pot dictators in the smallest of burgs,
big fish with serrated teeth
in the smallest of ponds who,
Dyer says, just dont have the
opportunity to do it on a grander scale. But for some reason,
the cream rises to the top there
more than it appears to on the
world stage, where its needed
the most.
Whatever the reasons, historically awful leadership has been
the biggest blight on humanity
since the dawn of civilization.
Well into the 21st century, it
seems little improved.
Oh, for small-town goodness.
Mike Ryan is a former Kansas
City Star editorialist and current executive editor of The
Heartlander, an online news
service focusing on Kansas and
Missouri stories and issues.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
LOCAL
ST. PATRICKS…
FROM PAGE 1
church was laid October 30,
1895.
Static broke out among the
parishioners regarding the
new project however, and the
priest at the time was replaced
by Fr. John Hurley whom parish history accounts credit
with settling the strife and setting about repayment of $830 in
debt the parish had run up in
the process of construction and
arguments over its construction. Garnett industries headed up by J.Q. McAfee as the
construction contractor and
his Garnett Church Furniture
Factory had the lead on the
project. The DeWolf Furniture
Factory, also in Garnett, etched
and constructed the ornate
woodwork for the churchs
interior.
The work went slowly, but
the building was completed as
a regional showpiece replete
with beautiful interior woodwork and stately arching
domes on its front turrets and
a main dome modeled after the
statehouse in Topeka. It was
formally dedicated November
15, 1899.
The main alter was donated
by Thomas Collins in memory
of his wife Bridget, and was
designed after the churchs
exterior with a central dome
surmounted by a Celtic cross.
Built of butternut, it was hand
carved and overlaid with gold.
The middle entry doors to the
structure were 12 feet high and
led to a six-foot wide, fifty-foot
long vestibule area that had six
doors leading to the main sanc-
tuary. The center dome was
the base for a five-foot high
lantern.
The old stone church was
subsequently torn down and
the altars given to St. Josephs
Parish in Waverly. The stone
was used to build Emerald
School. A brick rectory was
constructed nearby in 1906
that included nine rooms and
a bath at a cost of some $5,000.
The early teens saw the
beginning of a depopulation of
the Emerald community and
other rural areas of Anderson
County, whose population hit
its peak of some 14,000 residents in 1890. Still, St. Patricks
crowned Emerald Hill for 40
years as a wonderfully ornate
testimony to the faith and
industriousness of a community of strong and successful
Irish Catholics.
Hard farming years of the
1920s and the Dust Bowl and
Depression eras of the 1930s
took their toll on Anderson
County. Some local farmers
sold out and took their families
to other states or cities to forge
a new start. The depopulation
meant a loss of resources for
the local parish and for the
church that stood as its centerpiece.
Disaster
struck
on
September 29, 1939. A lightning
strike around 3 a.m. spawned a
fire that gutted the church and
crumbled its stately domes. Fr.
J.B. Karnowski ran from the
nearby rectory and managed
to save the sacrificial vessels
and a few other items, but the
bulk of the structure and its
contents were lost as fire bri-
Notice of forfeiture of oil and gas leases
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, March 1, 2022.)
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE OF
OIL AND GAS LEASES
Pursuant to K.S.A. 55-201
TO: Christian L. Martin, dba Martin Oil
Properties; Lavery Oil, LLC; Athenaeum
Partners, LLC; David James; and Stuart L.
M. Martin
The undersigned owners of the following-described land situated in Anderson County,
Kansas subject to the Oil and Gas Leases
indicated:
North Kempnich Lease
Oil and Gas Lease dated November 7, 2007
from Robert S. Kempnich II and Clara Ann
Kempnich, Trustees, et al., as lessors, to Martin
Oil Properties, as lessee, having a primary term
of two (2) years, covering the following-described land in Anderson County, Kansas:
The Northwest Quarter (NW/4) of Section
22, Township 20 South, Range 20 East
recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds,
Anderson County, Kansas in O&G Book 21 at
Page 13
Owners: Robert S. Kempnich II and Clara
Ann Kempnich, Co-Trustees of the Robert S.
and Clara Ann Kempnich Living Trust UTA July
6, 2006
South Kempnich Lease
Oil and Gas Lease dated September 11, 2008,
from Robert S. Kempnich II and Clara Ann
Kempnich, Trustees, as lessors, to Martin Oil
Properties, as lessee, having a primary term of
two (2) years, covering the following-described
land in Anderson County, Kansas:
The North Half of the Southwest Quarter
(N/2 SW/4) of Section 22, Township 20 South,
Range 20 East except: commencing at the
Southeast corner of said North Half of the
Southwest Quarter (SEc N/2 SW/4), thence
West 730 feet, thence North 330 feet, thence
East 730 feet, thence South 330 feet to beginning, said exception containing 5.5 acres, more
or less; containing 74.5 acres, more or less
recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds,
Anderson County, Kansas in O&G Book 21 at
Page 20
Owners: Robert S. Kempnich II and Clara
Ann Kempnich, Co-Trustees of the Robert S.
and Clara Ann Kempnich Living Trust UTA July
6, 2006
East Wittman Lease
Oil and Gas Lease dated November 5, 2010
from Raymond E. Wittman and Irene M.
Wittman, husband and wife, as lessors, to
Martin Oil Properties, as lessee, having a
primary term of one (1) year, covering the
following-described land in Anderson County,
Kansas:
A tract in the Southwest Quarter (SW/4) of
Section 15, Township 20 South, Range 20 East
described as follows: Beginning at a point
50 rods West of the Southeast corner of the
Southwest Quarter (SEc SW/4); thence North
160 rods; thence West 50 rods; thence South
160 rods; thence East 50 rods to the point of
beginning; and
The Southeast Quarter of the Southeast
Quarter (SE/4 SE/4) of Section 16, Township 20
South, Range 20 East except Missouri Pacific
Railroad right-of- way
recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds,
Anderson County, Kansas in O&G Book 21 at
Page 80
Owners: Rodney Francis Wittman and
Kimberly Jo Wittman, husband and wife
West Wittman Lease
Oil and Gas Lease dated June 24, 2010 from
Henry E. Wittman and Hildred M. Wittman,
husband and wife, as lessors, to Martin Oil
Properties, as lessee, having a primary term of
one (1) year, covering the following-described
land in Anderson County, Kansas:
The West 60 acres of the Southwest
Quarter (W 60 ac. SW/4) of Section 15,
Township 20 South, Range 20 East, except
Missouri Pacific Railroad right-of-way and Hwy.
169 right-of-way; containing 60 acres, more or
less
recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds,
Anderson County, Kansas in O&G Book 21 at
Page 70
Owners: Mark Vincent Blevins and Alaina
Kay Blevins, husband and wife
Whiteside Lease
Oil and Gas Lease dated February 9, 2012 from
Darrel E. Whiteside and Shirley A. Whiteside,
husband and wife, as lessors, to Martin Oil
Properties, as lessee, having a primary term
of eighteen (18) months, covering the following-described land in Anderson County,
Kansas:
The East Half of the South Half of the
Southwest Quarter (E/2 S/2 SW/4), and the
East Half of the West Half of the South Half of
Notice of hearing – Welsh Estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, March 8, 2022)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
DONALD RAY WELSH, Deceased
Case #AN-2022-PR-000003
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition has been
filed in this court by Michael Welsh, one of
the heirs at law of Donald Ray Welsh, praying
he be appointed administrator and that he be
granted Letters of Administration under the
Kansas Simplified Estates Act.
You are further notified that under the
provisions of the Kansas Simplified Estates Act
the court need not supervise the administration
of the estate, and no notice of any action of
the administrator or other proceedings in the
administration will be given, except for notice of
final settlement. Further, if written objections to
simplified administration are filed with the court,
the court may order that supervised administration ensue.
You are required to file your written defenses to said petition on or before March 30th,
2022, at 9:00 a.m. in the district court in
Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas, at which
time and place the cause will be heard. Should
you fail therein, judgment and decree will be
entered in due course upon the said petition.
MICHAEL WELSH
Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
Call to subscribe
785-448-3121
the Southwest Quarter (E/2 W/2 S/2 SW/4) of
Section 22, Township 20 South, Range 20 East
recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds,
Anderson County, Kansas in O&G Book 21 at
Page 95
Owners: Darrel E. Whiteside and Shirley A.
Whiteside, husband and wife
West Whiteside Lease
Oil and Gas Lease dated May 3, 2013 from
Shirley A. Whiteside and Darrel E. Whiteside,
et al., as lessors, to Martin Oil Properties, as
lessee, having a primary term of eighteen (18)
months, covering the following-described land
in Anderson County, Kansas:
Beginning at the Southwest corner of the
East Half of the Southwest Quarter (SWc
E/2 SW/4) of Section 21, Township 20 South,
Range 20 East; thence North 89 53' 23" East
183.38 feet along the South line of said quarter
section to a point on the West rightofway line of
the Missouri Pacific Railroad; thence North 42
42' 08" East 2153.60 feet along said Railroad
rightofway; thence leaving said rightofway
North 53 03' 00" West 94.11 feet; thence North
40 22' 51" West 313.19 feet; thence North 23
11' 58" West 162.19 feet; thence North 02 29'
43" West 617.45 feet to the Northeast corner
of the Southwest Quarter (NEc SW/4) of
said section; thence South 89 36' 14" West
1314.85 feet to the Northwest corner of the
East Half of said Southwest Quarter (NWc E/2
SW/4); thence South 00 51' 54" East 2635.31
feet to the point of beginning; containing 67.20
acres, more or less, including road rightofway
as recorded, and being located in the East Half
of the Southwest Quarter (E/2 SW/4) and the
West Half of the Southeast Quarter (W/2 SE/4)
Section 21, Township 20 South, Range Twenty
20 East
recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds,
Anderson County, Kansas in O&G Book 21 at
Page 142
Owners: Darrel E. Whiteside and Shirley A.
Whiteside, husband and wife
Bethine Wiederholt and James J.
Wiederholt, wife and husband
Gloria Jean Ray and Jimmie Blaine Ray,
wife and husband
gades lacked the equipment
and manpower to fight the ravaging blaze.
Parish history data shows
the building was insured for
only about $14,000, but replacement estimates were estimated
at as much as $50,000 dollars
a little more than a million
dollars in todays money.
Parish members were
resolved to resonstruct the
church as originally built, but
by this time the parish population had declined to some
40 families and funds were far
tighter. J.Q. McAfee in Garnett
was again contracted for the
rebuild, but many of the ornate
accoutrements and decorative
woodwork even the exterior
domes that formerly crowned
the structure and gave its nickname The Cathedral of the
You name it, we print it.
the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter
(NW/4 NE/4 NE/4); and the Northeast Quarter
of the Southeast Quarter (NE/4 SE/4); all in
Section 16, Township 20 South, Range 20 East
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds,
Anderson County, Kansas in O&G Book 21
at Page 52
Owners: Michael A. Teter and Connie
Teter, husband and wife
do hereby notify you that the terms of said
leases have been broken by the owner(s)
thereof, that the undersigned owners hereby
elect to declare said Oil and Gas Leases
forfeited and void, and that, unless you do,
within twenty (20) days from this date, notify the
Register of Deeds of Anderson County, Kansas
as provided by law that said leases have not
been forfeited, the undersigned owners will file
with the said Register of Deed an affidavit of
forfeiture as provided by law. And the owners
of land subject to the above-described Oil and
Gas Leases hereby demand that you execute
or have executed a proper surrender of each of
said leases and put the same of record in the
office of the Anderson County, Kansas Register
of Deeds within twenty (20) days from this date.
The Anderson County Review
(785) 448-3121
review@garnett-ks.com
Dated this 24th day of February, 2022.
Owners
Robert S. Kempnich II and Clara Ann
Kempnich, Co-Trustees of the Robert S. and
Clara Ann Kempnich Living Trust UTA July 6,
2006
Rodney Francis Wittman and Kimberly Jo
Wittman, husband and wife
2×4 kpa bethany college
Mark Vincent Blevins and Alaina Kay
Blevins, husband and wife
Darrel E. Whiteside and Shirley A.
Whiteside, husband and wife
Bethine Wiederholt and James J.
Wiederholt, wife and husband
Gloria Jean Ray and Jimmie Blaine Ray,
wife and husband
Michael A. Teter and Connie Teter, husband
and wife
Teter Lease
Submitted By:
Thomas M. Rhoads
Attorney at Law
200 E. 1st Street, Suite 301
Wichita, KS 67202-2114
tmrhoads@sbcglobal.net
(316) 260-4440
Attorney for Owners
Oil and Gas Lease dated November 30,
2008 from Michael A. Teter and Connie Teter,
husband and wife, as lessors, to Martin Oil
Properties, as lessee, having a primary term
of three (3) years, covering the following-described land in Anderson County, Kansas:
The East Half of the Northeast Quarter
(E/2 NE/4) except the Northwest Quarter of
Ben Yoder, Your Kansas Realtor/Auctioneer
The Kansas Property Place, LLC
Cell/Text (785) 448-4419
Office (785) 448-3999
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Ben@KsPropertyPlace.com
501 E. 4th Ave., Garnett, KS
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Plains in Catholic circles, this
time were deleted due to cost.
But the community pulled
together to finish the project, and on November 3, 1940,
Bishop of Leavenworth Paul
Schulte rededicated the church.
Father Karnowski even prevailed upon Holloywood entertainer Bing Crosby for help,
and Crosby presented the
church with the Sacred Heart
statue.
Later the church members
would rally volunteers once
again to dig a basement parish hall underneath the church
big enough to hold 400 people
complete with a kitchen, large
furnace and utility room.
St. Patricks celebrated its
150 anniversary with festivities in 2009.
You just proved
advertising works! Call
(785) 448-3121 to advertise
your business today!
Senior & Member
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PSI, Inc.
See us for all your insurance needs.
MOUND CITY OFFICE
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To advertise your
business here,
call Stacey at
(785) 448-3121.
community
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Local librarians attend
various workshops
CALENDAR
Chapter
Y PEO
met in
February
Love Whats Local information
and
invitations
were shared with members
of Chapter Y P.E.O. at their
meeting on February 7, 2022
in the Garnett Library. Julie
Turnipseed and Val Foltz presented stats on benefits of using
local businesses, introduced
the Morning Mingle group
available for small businesses and presented options for
sponsorship of Love Whats
Local. Invitations to Anderson
County Sweetest Couple contest, February 1-25th and
International Womens Day
Chocolate Tour on March 5th
were given to members.
Linda Brandes and Pat Otto
shared a video for Founders
Day. Our seven founding sisters would be pleased to know
that what they started in 1969
is now a group of over 200,000
active members.
Bonnie Deiter, president,
conducted the meeting. I
Corinthans 13:1-8 was read by
Sandra Moffatt for devotions.
Spring Fling will be April 9th
in Chanute. Possible amendments presented for the State
Convention were voted on.
Refreshments were served
by Angie Sears and Connie
Fagg.
Charlotte Lutz of Garnett
Public Library, Jennifer GumFowler of Kincaid Community
Library attended the Kansas
Regional Library System
(SEKLS) Workshop Summer
Library Program Family Idea
Swap via Zoom on Thursday,
February 10, 2022. The workshop was co-sponsored by
the Public Library Section of
Kansas Library Association
and several Regional Library
Systems. The program presented ideas for Summer Reading
programs for families or
adults. This was a workshop
where librarians could share
their ideas and brainstorm
together ideas for adult and
all-ages for their own Summer
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-15-2022 / SUBMITTED
The Garnett Lions Club last week posthumously awarded Richard Singer the Melvin Jones Fellowship
for his 59 years of local club service. The award was accepted by members of the Singer Family during
the clubs annual Farmers Night Dinner at the Garnett Senior Center. The MJF is the highest honor
bestowed among Lions International. The $1,000 donation made to Lions International Foundation by
the club on Singers behalf helps fund the Lions vision, youth, disaster and humanitarian relief projects
worldwide. Pictured above, front row from left: Brendon Dennison, Elizabeth Oliver (Garnett Lions Club
president), Sherri Scott, Mariah Dennison, Alex Dennison, Back row: Doug Singer, Randy Singer, Lynn
Miller, Terry Singer, Teresa Young, Stacey Dennison and Dave Branton (Lions Club Treasurer).
Princeton to host Eastern Kansas Grazing School
Rotation grazing is recognized as a way to utilize pastures and forages more efficiently. A collaboration of
experts from K-State Research
and Extension and the Natural
Resource Conservation Service
are joining together to offer a
two-day event. 2022 marks the
9th Eastern Kansas Grazing
School. This years school will
be held April 27th and 28th at
the Community Building in
Princeton, at 1449 US Highway
59. The event will highlight
information presented both in
the classroom and in nearby
pastures.
Bruno Pedreira, KSU
Forage Agronomist, will be
on the program to help producers better understand how
forages and grasses grow. He
will discuss: plant needs and
the importance of rest to a
plant: interseeding legumes to
improve pasture performance,
and practices to maintain a
productive pasture.
Jaymelynn Farney, Kansas
State University Beef Systems
Specialist, will highlight the
use of cover crops or alternative forages to fill production
gaps of your primary forage.
She will also be on hand to discuss the importance of matching animal needs to forages
that are available.
Doug Spencer, Kansas
NRCS Range Specialist, will
present the Art and Science of
Grazing, lead a pasture allocation exercise at the farm,
and will discuss Resource
Inventory and Stocking Rates.
This year, the Grazing
School will have a featured speaker, A. J. Tarpoff,
Kansas State University Beef
Extension Veterinarian. Dr.
Tarpoff will talk about the
importance of Low Stress
Cattle Handling and what to
HINDS…
FROM PAGE 1
The Linn County Rural
Fire Department also assisted
during the arrest. Following
his arrest Hinds was booked
into the Linn County Jail. He
was then transferred to the
Bourbon County Jail.
Hinds had his first appearance in court on Friday.
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
FAMILY-STYLE!
Every Sunday
Friday: Chicken fried steak
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
or chicken fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
Homemade
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
PAN-FRIED
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
CHICKEN
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
2×3
1-Stop
Sunday: Homemade
pan-fried chicken w/sides
We have
pizza!
look for when designing a facility. A demonstration utilizing
a bud-box, designed by Kansas
State University Ag Engineer,
Dr. Joe Harner, will highlight
low stress cattle handling.
Other topics to be presented
during the school are watering systems, fencing systems,
and brush control options. The
watering systems presentation
will be on farm and various
pumps using solar power will
be shown and discussed.
The Grazing School is
designed for adult learners and
is limited to a maximum of 35
farms. Registration is $50 for
SUBSCRIBE!
Tuesday, March 15
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preshchoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
5:00 p.m. – Anderson County Economic
Development Meeting
5:30 p.m. – BPW Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – Planning Commission Mtg
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, March 16
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, March 17
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committee Mtg
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch at the Senior
Center – Bring a Snack
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, March 18
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Saturday, March 19
6:00 p.m. – Gospel Music on the Square
Sunday, March 20
9:00 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
Monday, March 21
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club Meeting
Tuesday, March 22
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preshchoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, March 23
9:00 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, March 24
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
2:00 p.m. – Emergency Food Assistance
Program (Harvesters)
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch at the Senior
Center – Bring a Snack
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, March 25
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
4:00 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board Mtg
Saturday, March 26
Prairie Spirit 100 Ultra Race 100m/100k,
50m/50k
5:00 p.m. – March Madness demo derby
hosted by the Anderson County
Fair Association
the first person from the farm
or ranch, additional persons
from the same farm is $25 each.
Registration includes snacks,
lunch both days, and proceedings. Registration is on a first
come first serve basis.
To register and pay online
please go to: http://www.
frontierdistrict.k-state.edu or
send your registration form
and check to Frontier District
Extension, PO Box 400, Lyndon,
Kansas 66451. Questions may
be directed to Rod Schaub,
Frontier District Agent by calling 785.828.4438 or by email:
rschaub@ksu.edu .
Reading Program.
Also, Jennifer Gum-Fowler
of
Kincaid
Community
Library attended the Kansas
Regional Library System
(SEKLS) Summer Reading
Teen Addition a Palooza
of Ideas! Workshop via
Zoom on February 16, 2022.
Marisa Hicking, the featured
Connecticut Teen Librarian
speaker, presented inspiration
and how to on programming
ideas for a teen summer reading program. Marisa Hicking
focused on how to bring life
size games to their library,
ways to engage teens as volunteers, and about implementing
COVID-19 safety modifications
that make teen programs safer.
Student from Garnett
receives scholarship
Topeka
N a t h a n
Gwin,
of
Garnett, has
been awarded the Joint
Economic
Development
Gwin
Organization/GO
Topeka
Scholarship.
Gwin is a student in the automotive service technician program at Washburn University
Institute of Technology.
Selection for a scholarship
is based on academic performance, attendance and instructor recommendations.
PSRT met March 9
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail
members met March 9, 2022 at
Town Hall Center at 7:00 p.m.
There were 19 members present.
President Skip Landis
announced that the 100 Mile
Trail Ride would be March
26th & 27th. There will be no
2022 Rhythm and Ride in 2022
as it has been cancelled.
Birthday Bash items were
recycled for the 2023 Birthday
Bash.
The Kays Organization
from the high school had volunteered to help PSRT spruce
up the depot.
The next meeting of the
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail will
be April 13, 2022 at the depot
weather permitting or at Town
Hall Center .
Anyone interested in joining the Prairie Spirit Trail
group is welcome.
Get the Review in your mailbox every week
AND the email link sent to your phone, tablet or
desktop computer the morning of publication
NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE.
1) Fill out the form below and mail it with your
check or money order payment to:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, Ks. 66032
2) Call in your order during business hours :
(785) 448-3121
3) Complete the form and include your credit card
information, take a picture of it, and email to:
review@garnett-ks.com, or send to us via
Facebook Messenger (search up our Facebook
page under Anderson County Review).
PLEASE CHECK ONE
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adjoining counties and
out of state)
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8
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Creative Kids – Part 2
Lyndsay Hughes 6th Grade GES Mrs. Graham
2×5
Lillian Morgan 6th Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
Ashton Rouse 4th Grade GES Mrs. Owenby
2×5
Maura Rockers 6th Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
Lori Chupp 6th Grade Central Plains Ms. Miller
2×5
Marilyn Yoder 6th Grade Central Plains Ms. Miller
2×5
Lillian Morgan 6th Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
Marilyn Yoder 6th Grade Central Plains Ms. Miller
2×5
Lyndsay Hughes 6th Grade GES Mrs. Graham
2×5
Andrew Wuertz 4th Grade Central Heights Mrs. Cutburth
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
9
LOCAL
Creative Kids Part 2
Family
By Aubrey Ellington
4th Grade, Crest
Mrs. Hermreck
Honorable Mention
In a family you have good
times and bad times, but you
mainly have good times. I have
a large family and it is hard
sometimes. But we love each
other very much. We go shopping a lot. Every Sunday we go
to church and after church we
get together and talk and play.
Through the week we dont
see each other, but some of my
cousins go to my school. I have
a lot of cousins. I have 14 cousins, but Im about to have a new
cousin. My aunt and uncle are
having a baby in April. Then
I will have 15 cousins. My
grandma and grandpa spoil us
a lot, maybe too much. But I
love my family a lot.
2×5
Trenton Provence 6th Grade GES Mrs. Scott
2×5
Koiy Miller 6th Grade Crest Mr. Zimmerman
2×5
Lyndsay Hughes 6th Grade GES Mrs. Graham
Sprinkles the Cat
Rainbow Colors
By Quinn Shilling
4th Grade, Westphalia
Mrs. Madden
Honorable Mention
By Lisa Yoder
4th Grade, Central Plains
Ms. Miller
Honorable Mention
We were going to the vet,
one of our friends was there.
Earlier she had gone on a walk,
she heard little meows. It was
coming from a barn. She went
in and in a box she found kit-
tens!
The barn was about to get
burned down! She took the kittens to her car and she drove to
the vet. She was there because
she wanted to know if they
were girls or boys. We were
there too. She let us hold some!
We really wanted one! Guess
what, she let us have one!
2×5
Maura Rockers 6th Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
Brailey Valentine 5th Grade Crest Mr. Zimmerman
2×5
Lori Chupp 6th Grade Central Plains Ms. Miller
One day in fall Blue Too said
to Yellow Mellow, Im going to
eat you, Im going to eat you.
This scared Yellow Mellow so
he kicked Blue too out the window and said No you arent
going to eat me!
Then one day as Yellow
Mellow went for a walk along
came Red Ted and he said Im
going to eat you. But Yellow
Mellow didnt even flinch he
just knocked Red Ted out of he
way and went on with his walk.
Just as he came to his home
out popped Green Seen and he
said Yellow Mellow Im going
to eat you! But Yellow Mellow
pushed Green Seen into a pool
of water nearby. Then he went
into his house and slept soundly everlasting.
The end
2×5
Joshua Yoder 4th Grade Home School Miriam Yoder
2×5
Nora Thompson 6th Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
Andrew Donovan 5th Grade GES Mrs. Modlin
10
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
LOCAL
Creative Kids – Part 2
The Wizard and the Farmer
By Ashton Rouse
4th Grade, GES
Mrs. Owenby
Honorable Mention
Once upon a time there was
a wizard named Peter. He lived
in a rural part of the country. Peter had a knack when
it came to making potions.
Every day he would come up
with a dozen potions and sell
them at many different places,
especially at the plaza in the
town square. He had potions
that cured sickness, made hair
grow, made people fly and even
potions that made people tell
the truth. Underneath Peters
table he had a secret compartment where he hid a secret
potion that he would only share
with his dear friend.
Peters dear friend was a
jockey named James and he
always rode a wild mustang
named Spencer. James also
had a farm with lots of agriculture. He would harvest tons of
crops every month thanks to
the secret speed potions that
Peter game him so his crops
would grow faster than other
farmers crops. In exchange
for the speed potions James
always gave Peter an abundance of food and a percentage
of the profits.
Peter and James had an
incredibly good business
arrangement and made so
much money from their crops
being widespread across the
land that they had to hire a
bookkeeper to manage all
of their finances. Peter and
James would always share
their good fortunes with those
in need.
One of the beavers bit him on
his leg and he got knocked out
by another beaver!
Then he woke up an hour
later. After that, he could hear
the beavers language like the
human voice. He realized he
was now a beaver boy!
Once he got to school, he ate
his breakfast like a beaver. He
tried to hide his superpower
from his friends.
A Boy Who Becomes Something Else
By Camden Bettinger
5th Grade, GES
Mrs. Modlin
Once upon a time there
was this boy. He was a normal
kid. He went to school, but felt
sick. He told his mom and she
took his temperature. It was 95
degrees so she brought him to
school.
He felt worse throughout the
day, so he asked his teacher
if he could use the restroom.
Right when he got to the
restroom, he threw up. It was
red and steaming.
He went to the principal and
told him. The principal called
his mom and she picked him up
and he felt fine.
When they got home something was different. His breath
was super hot. His mom took
his temperature and it was 120
degrees!!! His mom took him
to the doctors and they said
to take this medicine and he
would be fine.
The next day comes around
the the boy feels fine but something is wrong. His skin is
now red! He tried to hide it but
thats like trying to hide a present from a kid. Its not going to
work.
His mom gives him some
medicine but it doesnt work.
He tries to take a shower but
it doesnt work either. Then,
before he knows it, his body
turns into a little dragon like
the size of a baby! He flies to
his mom! At first she tries to
whack him, but then she realizes its her boy.
The Kid
By Kyle Beaudry
5th Grade, GES
Mrs. Modlin
One day the kid was going
to school. The way he took was
flooded with water and beavers.
2×5
The story of Little Attikus
By Kenna Kimball
5th Grade, Central Heights
Mrs. Riemer
Attikus is with his family
and they cant find anything
to eat and drink. So Attikus
goes off and tries to find something to eat. Little Attikus goes
into the woods and this lady
comes out from nowhere and
scares him. The lady asks what
are you doing? Little Attikus
says I am looking for food but
little does he know that she
is a witch. The witch says, I
have some food so everyday
they meet in the woods and the
witch gives him food except for
one day, it is going to change.
They have been doing this for
awhile. It was November 11,
2011 on a chilly morning when
they met again. That day when
the witch gave him his food the
lady asked if his family wanted
to come live with her. He said
let me go ask them.
Little Attikus comes back
with his family. They go to her
house and it is a small little cottage. She had a bunch of fields
by her house. They all get settled in and little Attikus mom
goes out to help her pick up
2×5
Allie Thompson 5th Grade GES Mrs. Modlin
2×5
Lori Chupp 6th Grade Central Plains Ms. Miller
crops. When she goes out there
the witch is saying I am going
to kill his family tomorrow.
She goes inside and tells
her family about it but nobody
believs her. So Attikus mom
left that night. The next day
there wasnt a spot of light and
bang bang bang. Little Attikus
was bleeding so bad his arm
came off and his head came
off and blood drained from his
head and his arm and he was
stabbed many many times.
His whole family was losing a body part and stabbed.
Kale Schafer 5th Grade Westphalia Mrs. Hicks
2×5
Alli Rockers 5th Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
Mackenzie Hermreck 4th Grade Crest Mrs. Hermreck
2×5
Ezekiel Traczyk 5th Grade Greeley Mrs. Secrest
2×5
Gus Carver 6th Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022
How much junk…
…is in your trunk?
Place your ad to sell your items today!
LOCAL
11
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
HELP WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
LAWN & GARDEN
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Tina ext. 301 or Lori ext. 303
1-800-926-6869.
B a t h r o o m
Renovations. Easy, one day
updates! We specialize in safe
bathing. Grab bars, no slip
flooring & seated showers. Call
for a free in-home consultation: 855-382-1221
Medical Billing & Coding
Training.
New
Students
Only. Call & Press 1. 100%
online courses. Financial Aid
Available for those who qualify. Call 888-918-9985
New Authors Wanted! Page
Publishing will help you
self-publish your own book.
Free
author
submission
kit!
Limited offer!Why
wait? Call now: 855-939-2090
DirecTV Satellite TV Service
Starting at $74.99/month! Free
Installation! 160+ channels
available. Call Now to Get the
Most Sports & Entertainment
on TV! 888-721-1550
Never clean your gutters
again! Affordable, professionally installed gutter guards
protect your gutters and home
from debris and leaves forever!
For a free Quote call: 844-6071363
Top ca$h paid for old guitars! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin,
Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone,
Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker,
Prairie State, DAngelico,
Stromberg.
And
Gibson
Mandolins / Banjos. 855-4546658
Paying top ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Discount Air Travel. Call
Flight Services for best pricing on domestic & international flights inside and from
the US. Serving United, Delta,
American & Southwest and
many more airlines. Call for
free quote now! Have travel
dates ready! 833-381-1348
Countryside
Greenhouse.
Chemical Free. Vegetables,
flowers, baskets & potting
soil. Open Mon-Sat., 28639 NW
Kiowa Rd., Garnett. (785) 4331651.
mc15t1*
SERVICES
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
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
9.54
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
WANTED:
WATER/WASTEWATER
NON-CERTIFIED
OPERATOR:
1×3
city of
burlington
City of Burlington, Ks., requesting applications: Water/Wastewater Non-Certified Operator.
Position open until filled. Citys
Ap available at City Hall, 1013
N. 4th, P.O. Box 207, Burlington,
Ks., 66839; online: burlingtonkansas.gov, phone (620) 3645334. HS diploma/GED; Kansas
CDL within 30 days; be able
to operate dept. equipment.
Competitive wages based on
skill & experience. EOE
MISCELLANEOUS
2 Nice Lighted – curio cabinets. Unique collection colored
glass bluebirds. Several carousel horses. Call (785) 204-0730.
mc8t2*
One Sectional Couch, one
fold-over conversion couch/
GOLD KEY REALTY queen bed. Both nice, clean,
good condition. Call (785) 2040730.
mc8t2*
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
Place your 25-word classified
785-448-7658 (cell)
in the Kansas Press Association
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
and 135 more for only $300/
week. Find employees, sell
your home or your car. Call
the Kansas Press Association
913-884-4500 @ 785-271-5304 today!
Dont miss the 25th anniYOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS! versary EquiFest of Kansas,
LAND-FARMS
March 18-19-20, at the Saline
Chris Cygan Investment Property
County Expo Center, Salina,
RESIDENTIAL
785-418-5435
Kansas. Everything for Horse
People. www.equifestofks.com
and Facebook.
Long Distance Moving:
Call today for a free quote
from Americas Most Trusted
Interstate Movers. Let us take
the stress out of moving! Speak
to a Relocation Specialist, call
888-788-0471
Never Pay For Covered Home
View all local properties for sale at our website:
Repairs Again! Complete Care
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Home Warranty covers all
Now offering
major systems and appliances.
Auction
30 day risk free. $200.00 off + 2
Services!
free Months! 844-237-1432
Call
Update your home with
(785) 448-3999
Beautiful New Blinds & Shades.
FREE in-home estimates make
it convenient to shop from
home. Professional installaREALTOR
tion. Top quality – Made in the
USA. Call for free consulta(785)
tion: 844-740-0117. Ask about
448-8345
our specials!
mikehermreck@crownrealty.com
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
Sandras Quick Shop/Simple details. 844-268-9386
Simons is hiring part-time
positions. Apply within. (785)
448-6602.
dc21tf
REAL ESTATE
gold ke
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
1×3
ksprop
Mike
Hermreck
1×1
MAKE MONEY.
USE THE
1×1
rytter
(913) 594-2495
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Monthly Specials
LAWN & GARDEN
Gravely ZTHD 48 zero turn.
3 bag bagger, mulching kit, 4
new tires, Kohler engine w/200
hours. (785) 304-0251
fb1t8*
Tylers Lawncare Service Serving commercial and residential clients in Garnett,
Greeley and surrounding
areas. Fully insured. (785) 3049354.
mc15t10*
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Closed and Open Cell Insulation
2×2
Attic Blown Fiberglass Insulation
Batt Insulation
precision foam
Licensed and Insured
Foam Insulation
JD Yutzy
785-448-8727
Call today for all your insulation needs
Quality and customer satisfaction is #1
2×4 kpa qsi
2×2 JB Construction
jb const
(785) 448-8803 joe.borntreger@yahoo.com
Warehouse Attendant Westphalia
Qualifications are to be Self-Motivated, be able to lift 50+
pounds, and be detail oriented.
Duties include loading feed, chemical, grain & fertilizer.
Full time position, excellent benefits include clothing allowance, vacation & sick paid time off, retirement & Leroy Coop
pays 100% employee and family health insurance.
Call Nathan at 785-489-2521 or stop by the Westphalia office.
Applications can be picked up at any branch location or printed off at www.leroycoop.coop under
the forms tab.
Applications will be taken until the
position has been filled.
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tf
Happiness is… Breakfast at
the VFW 9am-1pm, Sunday,
March 20. Biscuits and gravy,
Belgian waffles, bacon, sausage
and eggs.
mc15t1
Happiness is… Saturday,
March 5, 2022, I celebrated 20
years of writing my column for
the Anderson County Review.
Millions of thanks to Dane and
his wonderful staff over these
many years. Henry Roeckers.
mr15t1*
Happiness is… subscribing to
the Anderson County Review.
Call (785) 448-3121.
my19tf
Guest Home Estates
2×2
guest home
is looking for full-time CMAs, shift varies, who are
wanting to work with our team.
We offer Health Insurance and Competitive Wages.
If you are interested in this position,
please contact Sandra Johnson
at 785-448-6884
or come by our home
at 806 West 4th, Garnett.
We are excited to meet with you.
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2×2
YODER
BORING
yoder boring
We save your yard by boring under it!
Call us for all your underground
boring needs. Horizontal drilling for:
Power Lines Water lines
Phone lines Drain lines, etc.
(660) 723-5165
Anderson County is taking applications for
a Sign Crew Worker position until position
is2x3
filled. Driver must already have a Class
B and
CDL. Position
co is subject
dustto drug testing.
Applications and job description are availcontrol
able
at the County Road Department, 823
W. 7th Ave., Garnett KS. Anderson County
is an Equal Opportunity
Employer and position
is Veterans Preference
Eligible (VPE), State Law
K.S.A. 73-201.
HELP WANTED
Joe Borntreger
NOTICES
HAPPY ADS
Spray Foam Insulation and more
hermreck
Decks Siding
Pole Buildings Garages
FARM & AG
CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
Saturday, APRIL 2, 2022 10 a.m.
1935 HIGHWAY 75
7.5 miles north of Yates Center on 75 Highway.
2×4
eboone
PICKUPS AND TRUCKS;
TRACTORS; TRAILERS;
EQUIPMENT; HAYING EQUIPMENT;
COMBINE and HEADS; LIVESTOCK;
ATV; LAWN MOWER;
BOAT and CAMPER; MISC.
For complete sale bill and pictures check
web site, kansasauctions.net/boone.
NOTES: Sales tax will be charged on some items. There will be more
items the day of sale that are not listed.
E. Boone Auctions: Eric Boone
620-496-6312 or 620-625-3246
E-Mail: eboone60@hotmail.com
Pulling Unit Helper
$20/hr – Colt Energy, Inc. is currently looking for a full-time
pulling unit crew member in the Iola, KS area. The company
offers a starting wage rate of $20/hr plus benefits and a 45
hour M-F work week. This is an entry-level position which provides training in the oilfield and opportunity for advancement.
Estimated annual gross compensation of $50-55,000 from
wages, bonus, and profit sharing. Additional benefits include
medical and long term disability insurance, paid vacation and
sick leave, transportation, uniforms, and 401-K retirement plan
with 4% company match. A valid drivers license, pre-employment drug screen, and physical are required. Applicant may
download an application at www.coltenergy.com or pick one
up at 1112 Rhode Island Rd., Iola, KS. Please call (620) 3653111 or email info@coltenergy.com with questions. EOE.
2×4
colt energy
12
LOCAL
Time change can be a road hazard
Springing forward can mean
falling back into a bad driving
habit drowsy driving. The
arrival of Daylight Saving Time
this weekend means one less
hour of sleep, a darker morning commute and the potential for more sleepy drivers on
the road. AAA is reminding
drivers to adjust their sleeping
habits along with their clocks,
to stay alert behind the wheel
and to look out for pedestrians,
especially children who will be
on their way to school and may
be hard to see.
Drivers however should not
rely on their bodies to provide
warning signs for drowsiness
and should instead prioritize
getting at least seven hours of
sleep before hitting the road.
To avoid drowsy driving,
AAA recommends that drivers:
Travel at times of the day
when they are normally awake
Prioritize sleep, getting at
least seven hours a night
Avoid medications that
cause drowsiness or other
impairment
For longer trips, drivers
should:
Schedule a break every two
hours or every 100 miles
Travel with an alert passenger and take turns driving
Do not underestimate the
power of a quick nap. Pulling
into a rest stop and taking a
quick catnapat least 20 minutes and no more than 30 minutes of sleepcan help to keep
you alert on the roads
School Safety
Losing an hour over the
weekend may make drivers feel
foggy for the Monday morning commute. The morning
commute for several weeks
to come, will be much darker
than what drivers have been
used to in the last few weeks.
Its important for drivers to be
alert and remember that children will be on their way to
school and may be hard to see.
Seventy-five percent of pedestrian fatalities happen when
its dark, according to findings
from the Governors Highway
Safety Association (GHSA)
released in 2021.
AAA recommends the following:
Slow Down. Speed limits in
school zones are reduced for a
reason. A pedestrian struck by
a vehicle traveling at 25 mph
is nearly two-thirds less likely
to be killed than a pedestrian
struck by a vehicle traveling
just 10 mph faster.
Stay Alert. Drivers should
always avoid distractions
while driving, but its particularly important in school zones
and residential neighborhoods.
Headlights. Turn on the
vehicles daytime running
lights or headlightseven
during the dayso children
and other drivers can see you
more easily. But, dont forget to
turn them off when you reach
your destination to maintain
your battery life.
Slow Down Move Over
Tired drivers are not as
focused and while there is
more daylight, they are still at
risk of being distracted. First
responders, construction workers and people stranded with a
breakdown on the side of the
road are vulnerable to drivers
who are not paying attention
and are at a greater risk of
being hit.
It's not just tow providers
and other emergency responders being killed on the side of
the road. Since 2015, over 1,600
people have been struck and
killed while outside of a disabled vehicle.
To protect roadside workers,
drivers stranded with a breakdown, and others, AAA offers
these tips:
Remain alert, avoid distractions and focus on the task of
driving.
Keep an eye out for situations where emergency vehicles, tow trucks, utility service
vehicles or disabled vehicles
are stopped on the side of the
road.
When you see these situations, slow down and if possible
move one lane over and away
from the people and vehicles
stopped at the side of the road.
Headlights
Since Daylight Saving brings
more hours of light, drivers
may not use their headlights as
often. But when they do, a lack
of visibility at night can make
for unsafe driving conditions.
Changing the clocks is a good
reminder to check the conditions of your headlights.
With 50% of crashes occurring at night, drivers should
check their headlights for signs
of deterioration and invest in
new headlights or, at a minimum, a low-cost headlight
cleaning and restoration to
boost the safety of driving after
dark.
Headlights can show signs
of deterioration after 3 years
but most commonly by year 5.
AAA suggests drivers check
their headlights for changes in
appearance such as yellowing
or clouding. If the bulb is difficult to see, it is time to have
the lens replaced or restored as
soon as possible.
Replacement and restoration services are available
at most repair shops, including
AAA Approved Auto Repair
facilities.
Do-it-yourself restoration
offers some savings for consumers, is relatively simple, and provides a sufficient
improvement in light output.
Make sure headlights are
correctly re-aimed to maximize
forward lighting performance
and minimize glare to oncoming and preceding drivers.
Notice of Craw-Kan telephone services
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, March 15, 2022)
and a surcharge is assessed at governmental
rates.
Local Service Rates for Telephone Service
If you have any questions regarding the
Companys services you can visit the business
office located at: 200 N. Ozark St., Girard, KS
66743 or by calling 800-362-0316.
Craw-Kan Telephone Cooperative, Inc. is a
telecommunications provider who provides
basic and enhanced services within its service
territory. Basic services are offered at various
rates depending on the state and location
where you receive service.
Customers have access to long distance, directory assistance, and operator service providers
of their choice, at rates established by those
carriers. Emergency 911 services are provided
Lifeline Program
You may be eligible to receive a discount on
your monthly local telephone bill through the
Lifeline Program. You are eligible if you receive
any of the following: Food Stamps, General
Assistance, Supplemental Security Income
(SSI), Temporary Assistance to Families,
Medicaid, United Tribes Food Distribution
Program, Bureau of Indian Affairs General
Assistance, Tribally Administered Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families, Head Start
(only those meeting this income qualifying
standard), Free School Lunch Program, 150%
of the Federal Poverty Level. A customer must
provide three consecutive months of statements as documentation of income, or provide
a copy of their tax return for the previous
year. For more information about the Lifeline
Program, call your local telephone service
provider. Craw-Kan Telephone Cooperative,
Inc. customers may call 800-362-0316.
mc15t1*
Notice regarding noxious weeds
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, March 15, 2022)
GENERAL NOTICE TO CONTROL NOXIOUS
WEEDS
The Kansas Noxious Weed Law K.S.A. 2-1314
et seq requires all persons who own or supervise land in Kansas to control and eradicate all
weeds declared noxious by legislative action.
The weeds declared noxious are: field bindweed, musk thistle, Johnson grass, bur ragweed, Canada thistle, sericea lespedeza, leafy
spurge, hoary cress, quack grass, Russian
knapweed, kudzu and pignut are County Option
Noxious Weed/Weeds declared noxious by the
Board of County commissioners of Anderson
County. Notice is hereby given pursuant to the
Kansas Noxious Weed Law to every person
who owns or supervises land in Anderson
County that noxious weeds growing or found
on such land shall be controlled and eradicated.
Control is defined ad preventing the production
of viable seed and the vegetative spread of
the plant.
Failure to observe this notice may result in
the County:
1. Serving a legal notice requiring control of the
noxious weeds within a minimum of five days.
Failure to control the noxious weeds within the
time period allowed may result in the county
treating the noxious weeds at the landowners
expense and placing a lien of the property if the
bill is not paid within 30 days or,
2. Filing criminal charges for non-compliance.
Conviction for non compliance may result in a
fine of $100 per day of non-compliance with a
maximum fine of $1500.
The public is also hereby notified that it is a
violation of the Kansas Noxious Weed Law to
barter, sell or give away infested nursery stock
or livestock feed unless the feed is fed on the
farm where grown or sold to a commercial processor that will destroy the viability of the noxious weed seed. Custom harvesting machines
must be labeled with a label provided by the
Kansas Dept. of Agriculture and must be free of
all weed seed and litter when entering the State
and when leaving a field infested with noxious
weeds. Additional information may be obtained
from the Anderson County Weed Department or
by contacting the Kansas Dept. of Agriculture,
109 SW 9th, Topeka, KS 66612.
mc15t3*
Call (785) 448-5711 text (785) 204-1382
Dutch Country Cafe
Restaurant Coffee Shop Bakery Catering
309 N. Maple Garnett Mon-Sat 6AM-2:30 PM
Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking
Daily Lunch Specials:
Monday:
Taco Salad
Tuesday:
Dutch Country Cheese Steak
Wednesday:
Hot Beef Sandwich
Thursday:
Fried Chicken
Friday:
Meat Loaf
Saturday:
Chicken Fried Steak
Weekly Baked Goods Special:
Four-pack
of our cinnys!
Saturday Breakfast Buffet 7:30-11:30
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 15, 2022

