Anderson County Review — March 17, 2020
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from March 17, 2020. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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785-835-6100
6×2 QSI
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Richmond, KS
O N E M E A S I LY U . S . D O L L A R
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in summa.
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Several area highway jobs
underway this summer promise
delays, better and safer roads
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WELDA The first of a number of local
and regional highway maintenance projects began last week with delays for local
traffic but promising better, safer roadways for highway traffic.
Road work between the roundabout
junction of highways U.S. 59 and U.S. 169
south of Garnett and Welda last week,
began a project expected to last close to a
year.
The project began as planned with intermittent delays last week and pilot cars
both north and south along the 7 mile
stretch. Eventually, Kansas Department
of Transportation officials say the project
will require blocking the highway completely. Priscilla Peterson with KDOT said
the department didnt have a target date
yet for the highways closure, but once it
happens traffic will be rerouted from U.S.
169/54 at Iola east to the U.S. 59/54 junction
at Moran, then north and east on U.S. 59
to the 169/59 junction. Southbound traffic
will take the same route the opposite direction, she said.
The stretch of highway from the K-31
junction (five-mile junction) to the roundabout is the most heavily trafficked road
in Anderson County, according to KDOT
traffic counts, with an average of some
5,000 vehicles a day.
Complicating the project for highway
workers is additional traffic and activity from a gas line replacement and
extraction project underway concurrent-
(785) 448-3121
Member FDIC Since 1899
The wait is on
ly by Southern Star
Central Gas Pipeline.
That project requires
moving workers and
equipment all along
the line which generally runs west of U.S.
59. Numerous vehicles associated with
that project were seen
staying to gravel roads
along with routes last
week.
Peterson said part of
K-58 will also be resurfaced this year from
the Anderson/Coffey
county line east to
its junction with U.S.
169. That project will
consist of resurfacing
with a one-inch mill
and one-inch asphalt
overlay. She said traffic will be handled by
flaggers and a pilot car
with delays of 15 minutes or less. The project should take about
a month, but she said
KDOT does not have
a starting date for this
project.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-17-2020 / DANE HICKS
Another
project
with no defined start Highway work signs were erected south of Garnett last week as
date yet is a mill and construction on a segment of road repair began.
overlay of K-31 starting at the south junction of K-31 and U.S.
Peterson said most of the delays at these
59 (five mile junction) extending south to
construction
areas are expected to run 15
the junction of K-31 and K-65 in northern
minutes
or
less.
Bourbon County at Mapleton.
March 17, 2020
SINCE 1865
155th Year, No. 14
| review@garnett-ks.com
(785) 448-3111
Osler gets 9+
year sentence
GARNETT David Osler was
sentenced to 114 months in
state prison last week for the
September 2019 shooting of
his neighbor, Robin Durand,
in an incident in South
Garnett.
Anderson
County
Attorney Brandon Jones
said a plea agreement led
to Oslers guilty plea on a
count of attempted murder
in the second degree, amended down from previous first
degree murder, and a single
count of criminal threat. He
was sentenced to 71 months
on the first count and 43 on
the second, to be served consecutively.
These are sentencing
guideline charges, so the
judge is restricted to the numbers in the appropriate boxes
of the grid, Jones said. He
could run them concurrently,
but that was not our agreement and I dont anticipate
that happening.
Jones said the first degree
attempted murder charge
could have resulted in a sentence of up to 186 months
considering Oslers criminal
history. He said the victim
and his family were involved
in discussions regarding the
eventual plea and were a
major part of the decision.
Osler, 56, walked into
Robin Durands home on
September 22, 2019, and fired
a single shot from a .45 caliber
handgun which entered and
exited Durands body as the
67 year-old Durand was seated in his living room. Osler
then walked out of the house
and retreated to his
home in the
same block,
where he
readied a
number of
handguns
and ammuOsler n i t i o n ,
apparently
in anticipation of a shoot out with police.
Local officers eventually talked Osler into coming out of
his residence at which time
he was taken into custody.
Durand was treated and
survived his wound.
Osler was being held in the
Anderson County Jail and
was set to begin his sentence
with the Kansas Department
of Corrections last week.
A probable cause affidavit
filed in the case said Oslers
family members blamed
his behavior on alcoholism,
maintaining he was a different person when hed been
drinking.
Fears over virus shut down local public gatherings
Local governments,
group events put gigs
on hold over concerns
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Although only 11
cases of coronavirus have been
confirmed in Kansas with eight
of those in the
Kansas City
Area and a
single fatality, local officials, organizations and
businesses
have
followed state
and national
entities in
canceling,
postponing or closing various
events and activities in the face
of public reaction to the potential for the sickness.
The March 17 Prairie Spirit
Rail Trail Birthday Bash has
been postponed to April 15th.
The March 19 Spring Into
Fitness hosted by the Anderson
County Hospital for a kids
activity during spring break
has been postponed and the
date is yet to be determined.
The City has put the following notice concerning Parkside
I & II on our website:
Effective Monday March
16, 2020: Until further notice,
visitors will not be allowed
to enter the apartment build-
ings of Parkside Place I & II
in Garnett. This includes family. No scheduled gatherings or
activities will be held within
the Garnett Housing Authority
complex. This is a preventive measure by the Garnett
Housing Authority to help tenants avoid potential exposure
of COVID -19 (Coronavirus).
ness with the office to reduce
public circulation. Where other
means arent practical and if
customers want to avoid coming into the office, office staff
can come to their car in the
courthouse parking areas. Call
While tenants will be allowed
to leave their apartments, limiting access is one small safety
measure to protect the health
and well-being of all Parkside
Place residents. Persons with
questions can call the Garnett
Housing Authority Office at
785-448-6990.
The Garnett Recreation
Center will be closed and related classes and activities postponed effective yesterday, to be
re-evaluated March 23.
Anderson
County
Treasurer Dena McDaniel is
encouraging customers to use
email, phone and fax as much
as possible in transacting busi-
COVID-19 in Anderson County,
including the community of
Garnett. Information will be
released locally when available. Garnett has also posted an informational page to
provide updates. The link to
Embezzled church seeks buyer
BY DANE HICKS THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
FDA.Gov
(785) 448-5824.
The City of Garnett is in
contact with Anderson County
Emergency
Management,
which is working with state
and local agencies. At this
time, there is no known case of
GARNETT The local
church targeted last year in
a Garnett womans embezzlement scheme is still looking
for a buyer, as its remaining
members seek to start a satellite campus of an Ottawa
church at what they hope
will be a location in Garnett.
Kipp Wuellner, campus
pastor for Hope Anthem, said
the sale of the Life Assembly
of God Church in Garnett
was not tied to the scheme
that extended over several
weeks in late 2018 and early
last year, when then 19 yearold Jennifer McSwane used
her grandmothers connection as a bookkeeper with the
church to steal some $16,000
in church funds as well as
several thousand dollars
from her grandmothers personal bank accounts.
McSwane was initially
charged with 37 counts of
forgery, theft and non-resi-
dential burglary.
She was sentenced in
June of last year to
18 months probation
and some $23,000 in
fines and restitution
after pleading guilty
to two charges of
forgery and one of
felony theft.
Wuellner
said
the church had not
hosted services since
May of 2019 and was
listed for sale in
October of last year.
The Ottawa real
estate firm listing
the property shows
it with a price
reduced to $140,000
for the commercially zoned
parcel.
He said Hope Anthem had
not yet found a location for its
satellite ministry in Garnett,
but that a loose timeline for
the project was aiming for
an opening in September of
this year. He said the campus
would not reopen at the Life
Assembly of God facility.
Wuellner
said
Hope
Anthem had been involved
in a number of community
activities in Garnett since
last fall and that the organization hoped to build on its
local profile.
that page is: https://www.simplygarnett.com/coronavirus.
html.
Garnett City Commissioners were to meet in special
session Monday night to disSEE CHANGES ON PAGE 2A
Price-gouging
illegal on virus
products
TOPEKA – A Kansas price-gouging law that prohibits profiteering by raising prices on
items consumers find necessary because of the COVID-19
virus outbreak is now in effect
statewide, Kansas Attorney
General
Derek
Schmidt
announced today.
The Kansas anti-profiteering statute is rarely invoked
but is designed to prevent
opportunistic greed from overcoming the public need for necessary virus-response products
and services during this time
of emergency, Schmidt said.
We take the laws requirements seriously and will diligently investigate complaints
and vigorously prosecute any
violations.
The law generally prohibits
unjustifiably raising prices for
goods and services for which
SEE PRICE ON PAGE 2A
Will trade 4 rolls of toilet paper, 1/2 can of Lysol for 68 Camaro. Call the Review, (785) 448-3121
2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
RECORD
NEWS IN
BRIEF
TREASURERS OFFICE
The Treasurers Office will be
closed on March 18th from 1:20
p.m. until 2:30 p.m. so that all
employees can attend a call due
to the State of Kansas Audit.
KINDERGARTEN ROUNDUP
USD #365 will be hosting their
kindergarten roundups in
late March for area schools.
Children that are five years old
on or before August 31, 2020
are eligible to attend kindergarten next fall. Appointments
are now being taken. Call
for more information. Garnett
Elementary, March 25, (785)
448-3177. Greeley Elementary,
March 26, (785) 867-3460.
Westphalia School, March 24,
(785) 489-2511.
FISH FRY
The Garnett Knights of
Columbus Fish Fry will be March
27th at the Garnett Knights of
Columbus Hall from 5 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Adults are $12 and
kids (5-12) are $5. Kids 4 &
under are free. Immediate family maximum of $40. Carryouts
available.
BOOK DISCUSSION
Please join us for our next Book
Discussion, March 25th, 2020
at 7pm in the Archer Room.
This month, we will be discussing the novel, Eleanor Oliphant
is completely fine, by Gail
Honeyman. It is described as :
Smart, warm, uplifting, Eleanor
Oliphant is Completely Fine is
the story of an out-of-the-ordinary heroine whose deadpan
weirdness and unconscious wit
make for an irresistible journey
as she realizes the only way to
survive is to open your heart.
DEMOLITION DERBY
The Anderson County Fair
presents March Madness
Demolition Derby on Saturday,
March 28th at 5 p.m. at the
Anderson County Fairgrounds.
Admission at the gate is $10
for 12+, $5 for ages 6-12 and 5
and under are free.
THE WHOLE YEAR OF
THE REVIEW JUST $29.95
Compiled annual collections
of all editions of the Review
from 2019 and past years are
available on DVD for $29.95.
Contact us at (785) 448-3121
or admin@garnett-ks.com for
details.
SENIOR CENTER IN
SEARCH OF MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
The Garnett Senior Center is
seeking donations of used
medical equipment such as:
walkers, wheelchairs, scooters,
beds, shower chairs, etc. You
may drop off at the center from
9:30-1:30, Mon-Fri or call 4486996 for the item to be picked
up.
SUICIDE AWARENESS
GROUP 1ST TUESDAYS
SAM – Suicide Awareness
Members, a division of SASSMoKan – meets on the first
Tuesday of the month from
6:30-7:30 at the Anderson
County Hospital Conference
Room A&B located at 421 S.
Maple in Garnett. The facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols, who
may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Kansas VINE
is free and anonymous and
provides victims of crime and
the general public the ability to
search for an offender housed
in a county jail and receive
notifications.
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth
Announcements
Business News
Send it in…
ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click one of the forms
under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to
garnett-ks.com
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
MARCH 9, 2020
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM
on March 9, 2020 at the County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Jerry Howarter, Present: David Pracht,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was recited.
Minutes from the previous meeting
were approved as presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission.
He reported on the progress made on
the 1000 Rd bridge project.
Clean Up Week
Chris Weiner, City of Garnett
Manager, met with the commission. He
informed them that city wide garage
sale is April 18th this year. He would
like to move city wide clean up week
to April 20th-24th. The Commissioners
told him to confirm the dates with Scott
Garrett, Solid Waste Supervisor, so he
is prepared.
Sheriff
Vern Valentine, Sheriff, met with the
commission. Vern reported that he will
be purchasing a hot water mixing unit
for the jail. The system will regulate
the water temperature depending on
where it is dispersing too. Discussion
was held on the wages for law enforcement personnel. Vern is having a hard
time recruiting potential applicants
and retaining employees and feels
that wage is a factor because it is
lower than surrounding counties and
the City of Garnett. Commissioner
Pracht moved and Commissioner
McGhee seconded to increase
the starting wage $1.00 for all law
enforcement positions effective April
1, 2020. The positions include certified
and non-certified Deputy, Detective/
Sergeant, Detective, Undersheriff, and
Chief Deputy. All voted yes.
County Appraiser
Adam Wilson, County Appraiser,
met with the commission. The valuation notices went out to taxpayers on
March 6th. He informed the commission that the total assessed value for
the county went up 3 million and that
some taxpayers may be contacting
them in regards to land value corrections on Maple Street in Garnett.
Abatements & Escapes
Abatements B20-177 through B20178 and Escapes E20-115 through
E20-116 were approved as presented.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM due
to no further business.
Anderson County Court Docket
Judge Kevin Kimball
March 17, 2020
8 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. Janette I Avritt
Midland Credit Management Inc vs.
Amy D Titman
8:30 a.m.
Midland Credit Management Inc vs.
Samuel Ekstrom
Lyon-Coffey Electric Cooperative
Inc vs. Angela Betts
Midland Credit Management Inc vs.
Julie Vanfleet
Synchrony Bank vs. Heather
Thompson
Olathe Medical Center Inc vs.
Johnnie L Cook, et al.
Olathe Medical Center Inc vs.
Sarah J Akes
8:55 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. Melissa M
Hiner
9:00 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. David A Myers
State of Kansas vs. Joseph A.
Mczegle
State of Kansas vs. Samuel
Thomas Carter
State of Kansas vs. Devyn K Scott
State of Kansas vs. Jamie M Olsen
State of Kansas vs. Joseph A
Mczegle
State of Kansas vs. Stewart Damon
Couch
9:30 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. Joshua Lee
Edward Skinner
State of Kansas vs. Richard G
Mooney Jr
State of Kansas vs. Jeffrey D
Tummons
State of Kansas vs. Jeffrey D
Tummons
State of Kansas vs. Jeffrey D
Tummons
State of Kansas vs. Blake A Geiler
State of Kansas vs. Jeffrey D
Tummons
State of Kansas vs. Jason Lee
Boothe
State of Kansas vs. Lane Awstyn
Palmer
State of Kansas vs. Tatum Renee
Pierce
State of Kansas vs. Dale Lee
Easley
State of Kansas vs. Mary M Chase
State of Kansas vs. Mary M Chase
10 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. Marie M Slife
State of Kansas vs. Steven C.
Slyter
State of Kansas vs. Alan M Young
State of Kansas vs. Jose Madrid
State of Kansas vs. Levi Clark
State of Kansas vs. Carlos
Humberto Marquez-Mejia
State of Kansas vs. Joshua L E
Skinner
State of Kansas vs. Jose Madrid
11 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. Julia A Hurlock
1:30 p.m.
State of Kansas vs. Benjamin M
Watson
March 23, 2020
Judge Eric W Godderz
9 a.m.
Anderson
County
Sheriff's
Office vs. 2012 Buick Verano VIN
#1G4PR5SK2C4187234 & $227.00
Default Judgment
Duane Ramsey, et al. vs. Daryl
Ramsey, et al.
Robin G Durand vs. David C Osler
State of Kansas vs. Janice L Prater
State of Kansas vs. Janice L Prater
State of Kansas vs. Kevin L Gatlin
9:30 a.m.
State of Kansas vs. Stacy L Dietrich
11 a.m.
Albert Eugene Thacker Jr, Petitioner
vs. Sarah Dawn Bettinger-Thacker,
Respondent
LAND TRANSFERS
Morris P Luedke and Mary Allene
Luedke to Jerry D Luedke and Susan
R Luedke: North 50 of lots 3, 4 & 5 of
block 45 in the City of Colony.
Lewis L Kennard and Rolena
Kennard to Jennifer L Row and Eric
J Row: Lots 1-7 inclusive, block 8
Bronston Heights Addition to the City
of Garnett.
Lewis L Kennard and Rolena
Kennard to Keela Velvick: South 50 of
lot 7, block 30 in the City of Garnett.
Nathan S Beckmon and Krissy J
Beckmon to B&B Farms and Stephen
Fred Beck: A tract of land located in
s2 of fractional 15-23-21 described
as follows: beg at swcor sw4 said
section; thence n005845e on west
line of said sw4 a distance of 1979.84
feet; thence s894152e to east line
of se4 a distance of 5303.99 feet;
thence s002213w to secor n2 se4
a distance of 646.99 feet; thence
n895436w on south line of n2
swcor of said n2 & west line of sw4
a distance of 2655.58 feet; thence
s204033w on west line of said
sw4 to secor said sw4 a distance of
1307.28 feet; thence s895757w on
south line of said sw4 to pob a distance of 2662.58 feet; contains 160.00
acres, more or less.
Michael W Barnes and Catherine
A Barnes to Kirby M Barnes and
Kimberly D Barnes: beg at secor sw4
33-19-20, thence north 58 rods to
center of creek, thence in northwesterly direction with channel of creek to
pt 31 2/3 rods east of west line of said
sw4 section 33, thence south to south
line of said quarter section, thence
east 128 1/3 rods to pob; less beg
at secor sw4 33-19-20, thence north
58 rods to center of creek, thence in
northwesterly direction with channel of
creek to pt 55.6 rods west of east line
of said sw4 section 33, thence south
approximately 76 rods to south line
of said quarter section, thence east
55.6 rods to pob; also com at swcor
se4 33-19-20, thence east 32 rods,
thence north 64 rods, thence west
(2052n) 32 rods, thence south 67
rods to pob; & n2 ne4 se4 & n2 se4
ne4 se4 & ne4 nw4 se4 33-19-20
except beg at necor said se4, thence
south 36 rods, thence west 9 rods to
center of pottawatomie creek, thence
in northwesterly direction to center
of said creek to pt where said creek
intersects north line of said quarter
section, thence east 31 rods to pob; &
also com at pt 31 2/3 rods east of sw4
33-19-20, thence running east 31 2/3
rods, thence south 45 rods to center
of creek, thence following channel
of said creek in westerly direction to
pt directly south of pob and 31 2/3
rods east of west line of said quarter
section, thence north to pob.
Larry D Bontrager to Larry
D Bontrager Trustee and Larry D
Bontrager Revocable Living Trust
dated 2-18-2020: All of block 9 town
of Oneida, commonly called Mont Ida;
& south half of 18-21-19 except commencing at swcor said section 18,
thence east 60.13 rods, thence north
80 rods, thence west 60.31 rods,
thence south 80 rods to pob; & also
commencing at secor n2 sw4 18-2119, thence running west 1580, thence
north 344.72 feet, thence east 1580,
thence south 344.72 feet to pob.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Jacob Bennett, Kincaid and
Wendee Converse, Garnett, have
filled out an application for a marriage
license.
Donald Millington, Garnett, and
Stephany Petersilie, Garnett, have
filled out an application for a marriage
license.
Joseph Falk, Gardner, and Autumn
Romig, Garnett, have filled out an
application for a marriage license.
Tracey Dillon, Lawrence, has filed
a Petition for Divorce against Douglas
Dillon, Lawrence.
Kyle Goodwin, Topeka, has filed
a Petition for Divorce against Tayler
Lyons, Mcfarland.
David Hill, Rayville, Missouri, has
filed a Petition for Divorce against
Florence Hill, Pleasanton.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
ANDERSON COUNTY
Harley Maley has been charged
with possession of methamphetamine
and possession of drug paraphernalia.
LIMITED ACTION CASES FILED
Bank of America has filed suit
against Johnathan Gordon for
$4,282.32 for unpaid goods.
TD Bank USA has filed suit against
Patricia Lamb for $11,105.59 for
unpaid goods.
Midland Credit Management has
filed suit against Kelsey Miller for
$1,541.61 for unpaid goods.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a state tax warrant
against Apex Pest Control LLC. in the
amound of $592.50 for withholding
taxes from 2018.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a state tax warrant
against Alissa Cowan in the amount of
$2,867.03 for September 2019 Sales
Tax.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
ACCIDENT REPORTS FILED
A vehicle driven by Allen Ashley
was traveling westbound on Utah
Road in the rain while talking on the
phone causing the driver to fail to
observe the T-intersection he was
approaching. The vehicle left the roadway, struck a ditch and then traveled
through a wood fence into a pasture.
The vehicle traveled in an arch like
path and exited the pasture by driving
through the fence at a different location, there was debris along the entire
path of travel.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
TRAFFIC CASES FILED
Ethan Villermin was charged with
speeding 75 mph in a 65 mph zone,
$153.
Chandler Howard was charged with
speeding 75 mph in a 65 mph zone,
$153.
Corbin Danner was charged with
speeding 75 mph in a 65 mph zone,
$153.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On March 4, Remington Grassi,
LaCycne, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Office as he was arrested for theft of
property/services.
On March 6, Carie Cagle, Emporia,
was arrested for driving while suspended or revoked.
On March 6, Zachary Handly,
Garnett, was arrested for a probation
violation.
On March 7, Kenneth Jones,
Prescott, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Department as he was arrested for
failure to appear.
On March 7, Jeffrey Love, Kearney,
Missouri, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Department as he was arrested for
criminal possession of firearms by a
felon.
On March 7, Veronica Roberts,
Pleasanton, was booked into jail as
a hold for the Linn County Sheriffs
Department as she was arrested for
failure to appear.
On March 7, April Lozano, Lacycne,
was booked into jail as a hold for the
Linn County Sheriffs Department as
she was arrested for failure to appear.
On March 8, Harley Maley, Garnett,
was arrested for possession of drugs
and possession of drug paraphernalia.
On March 9, Jamie Olsen, Garnett,
was arrested by a law enforcement
officer; on site arrest.
On March 10, Jon Clark was
booked into jail as a hold for the
Franklin County Sheriffs Department
as he was arrested for aggravated
domestic batery.
On March 10, Gary Henning, New
Century, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Johnson County Sheriffs
Department as he was arrested for an
outstanding warrant.
On March 11, Michael Burns,
Garnett, was arrested for driving
under the influence.
On March 11, Brandon Rothwell,
Lawrence, was arrested for failure to
appear.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Stephanie Knavel was booked into
jail on June 22, 2019.
David Osler was booked into jail on
September 22, 2019.
Russell Prater was booked into jail
on October 29, 2019.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL
FARM-INS ROSTER
Christopher Conner was booked
into jail on April 23, 2019.
Shawn Maxwell was booked into
jail on May 15, 2019.
Kevin Kimbrough was booked into
jail on August 28, 2019.
Charles Eslick was booked into jail
on September 24, 2019.
Jerome Provance was booked into
jail on September 25, 2019.
Vaughn Burns was booked into jail
on October 11, 2019.
Brooke Phillip was booked into jail
on January 14, 2020.
Montrel Drayton was booked into
jail on January 28, 2020.
John Buzzy was booked into jail on
February 14, 2020.
Larry Thorne was booked into jail
on February 18, 2020.
Franklin Walker was booked into jail
on February 18, 2020.
Seth Landie was booked into jail on
February 21, 2020.
Jason Long was booked into jail on
February 23, 2020.
Michael Ortego was booked into jail
on February 23, 2020.
Remington Grassi was booked into
jail on February 23, 2020.
Eric Waggoner was booked into jail
on February 25, 2020.
Kevin Jones was booked into jail on
March 7, 2020.
Jeffery Love was booked into jail on
March 7, 2020.
April Lozano was booked into jail on
March 7, 2020.
Jon Clark was booked into jail on
March 10, 2020.
Gregersen awarded PhD from KU
LeRoy High School Class
of 2001 Valedictorian, Sabrina
Gregersen, was recently
awarded her PhD. Sabrina
is the daughter of Rob and
Teresa Gregersen and granddaughter of Wilma and Viktor
Morrison and Dorothy and
Gene Gregersen.
On Monday, February
17, Gregersen successfully
defended her dissertation
titled, Integrating Attention
Network Theory and the Dual
Process Model of Avoidance,
thus completing her doctorate
studies. Her research studies
the difference in attention
and emotion, hemispheric differences of emotions, and the
cognitive and neural aspects of
adult attachment style.
After
completing
her
undergraduate studies at the
University of Kansas in 2010
by earning her Bachelors in
Psychology, Sabrina moved
to Colorado Springs where
she earned her Master of Arts
in Psychologoical Science in
2013 from the University of
Colorado, Colorado Springs.
She then returned to Lawrence
to complete her doctorate at
KU.
Doctor Gregersen is currently working as as Associate
Researcher for the University
of Kansas College of Liberal
Arts & Sciences in the
Department of Psychology. She
lives in Lawrence with her husband, Paul Szpyrka, and their
two youngs sons.
PRICE…
FROM PAGE 1
consumer demand is likely to
increase because of the virus
outbreak. A price increase
is presumed unjustified if it
exceeds by 25 percent or more
the price at which the goods
or services were available on
March 11 or the price for which
the same goods or services are
available from other sellers in
the trade area.
Examples of consumer goods
and services governed by the
anti-profiteering law include,
but are not limited to, food
items, sanitary and cleaning
supplies such as hand sanitizer
and disinfecting wipes, emergency supplies, medical supplies and services, lodging, and
any other property or service
for which consumer demand
may increase in response to the
virus outbreak. The law carries
a penalty of up to $10,000 per
violation.
The anti-profiteering law,
which is enforced by the
Attorney Generals Office and
county and district attorneys,
was triggered yesterday by
Governor Laura Kellys declaration of a state of emergency
related to the virus outbreak.
It will remain in effect through
April 11, or until the disaster
declaration is lifted, whichever
is later. The law was enacted
in response to the September
11, 2001, terrorist attacks and is
codified at K.S A. 50-6,106.
Anyone with information
about price-gouging in violation of the anti-profiteering law
should file a complaint with the
Attorney Generals Consumer
Protection Division online
atwww.InYourCornerKansas.
o r g < h t t p : / / w w w .
InYourCornerKansas.org> or
call (800) 432-2310 to request a
paper complaint form be sent
by mail.
CHANGES…
FROM PAGE 1
cuss policies and procedures
in view of coronavirus and city
codes.
The Kansas Department of
Labor yesterday said it discouraged layoffs among employers
due to the situation,
Public health officials have
noted the chance for infection
of coronavirus is statistically
small due to a comparatively
small number of U.S cases, but
have instituted special actions
to calm a public panic resulting from news coverage of the
virus. The sickness has simi-
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Kevin Frazier was booked into jail
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December 21, 2019.
Chadley Cruse was booked into jail
on February 5, 2020.
Barry Weber was booked into jail
on February 15, 2020.
Joshua Evans was booked into jail
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Harley Maley was booked into jail
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Jamie Olsen was booked into jail on
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
BOYDSTON
ROCKERS
AUGUST 14, 1947 – MARCH 8, 2020
Bruce Alan Boydston, age
72, of Centerville, Kansas,
passed away on Sunday, March
8, 2020, surrounded by family
on his farm.
Bruce was born on August
14, 1947, in
Garnett,
K a n s a s ,
the son of
Allie Angus
Boydston,
Jr.,
and
June Nadine
(McCarty)
Boydston
Boydston.
He attended
Parker
Rural High School, graduating in 1965, and college at
Allen Community College and
Pittsburg State University.
He then served in the Kansas
National Guard from 1969
through 1975.
Bruce was united in marriage to Rita Eileen Drum on
December 6, 1969, at the First
Christian Church in Garnett,
Kansas. This union blessed them with three wonderful children: Amy, Kerry and
Brent. This winter, Bruce and
Rita celebrated 50 years of
marriage with all members of
their wedding party attending
a special dinner in Ottawa with
family and close friends.
In 2013, Bruce retired from a
thirty-year career with Kansas
Pipeline Operating Company,
Olathe. His true love, however, was farming. He spent his
entire life as an agriculturist
caring for the land, raising cattle and growing crops.
Bruce was a vital part of
his community serving as Past
Master of Parker Masonic
Lodge #341, Linn County Soil
Conservation Service (SCS),
Linn County Farm Service
Agency (FSA) county committee, Prairie View High School
Board of Education (12 years)
and a Flying-C 4-H Club parent leader. He was a man of
strong faith and loyally served
the Centerville Community
Church. His family bestowed
Honorary K-State Wildcat
status upon him after he paid
ten consecutive years of college tuition and lodging bills
for his three kids. He loved
his Wildcats and cherished the
times he and his family spent
tailgating, watching football
at Bill Snyder Family Stadium
and roadtripping to bowl games
cheering on Wildcat victories.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Allie Boydston, Jr.,
on March 14, 1989.
Bruce is survived by his
wife, Rita, of the home; and
children Amy (Paul) Taylor,
Overland Park; Kerry Wefald,
Manhattan; and Brent (Alison)
Boydston, OFallon, Mo. He
also leaves behind eight special grandchildren: Lauren,
Abigail, and Ella Kate Taylor;
Halle and Jonathan Wefald;
and Beau, Emery, and Lacey
Boydston. He is also survived by his mother, Nadine
Boydston, of Garnett, and his
sister, Marsha (Fred) Baker,
Overland Park.
A Memorial Service was
held Saturday, March 14, 2020,
at the Centerville Community
Church in Centerville, Kansas.
Memorial
contributions may be made to Good
Shepherd Hospice or Prairie
Paws Animal Shelter and left
in care of the funeral home.
Condolences may be sent to the
family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
Bruce was a true friend to
many. He loved American history, his many dogs and cats,
the game of basketball, playing
pitch, watching old movies and
drinking his Makers Mark.
He was a damn good man
who will be missed greatly.
OCTOBER 17, 1938 – MARCH 5, 2020
Dale C. Rockers, age 81, of
Garnett, Kansas, passed away
on Thursday, March 5, 2020, at
Olathe Medical Center, Olathe,
Kansas.
He
was
born October
17,
1938,
in
Scipio,
Kansas, the
son of John
and
Leona
(Bowman)
Rockers. Dale
Rockers
graduated
from Garnett
High School in 1957. He served
in the United States National
Guard before going to work for
General Motors as an assembly
line worker in Kansas City.
Dale eventually retired from
the parts division in St. Louis,
Missouri, after 31 years with
the company. After retiring,
Dale enjoyed spending time
rehabbing houses with his son
Jeff in Hawaii and restoring
cars with his son Rod.
Dale married Linda Miller
on September 4, 1964, in Miami,
Oklahoma. This union was
blessed with three sons, Jeff,
Rod and Jeri.
Dale enjoyed spending time
with his family, especially his
grandchildren. He thoroughly
enjoyed watching his Royals
in the summer, Chiefs in the
fall and a good game of dominos any time of the year. Dale
loved to work on his lawn and
was proud of his victories over
dandelions each summer.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, John and Leona
Rockers; one son, Jeri Rockers;
one brother, Clifford Rockers;
and one sister, Donna Miller.
Dale is survived by his wife,
Linda Rockers, of the home;
son, Jeff Rockers and husband
Charles Graham of Maui,
Hawaii; son Rodney Rockers
and wife Melanie Rockers of
Overland Park, Kansas; two
grandchildren, Cameron and
Abbie Rockers; three sisters,
Naomi Gregg of Princeton,
Kansas, Wanda Powls of
Garnett, Kansas, and Luella
Stiffler of Ottawa, Kansas;
numerous nephews and nieces.
Mass of Christian Burial
was March 10, 2020 at Holy
Angels Catholic Church,
Garnett. Inurnment followed
in the Holy Angels Cemetery.
Memorial contributions
may be made to the American
Cancer Society or St Jude
Childrens hospital
Obituary Charges/Policy
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the rate of 15 per word and include a photo at no charge.
Death notices are published free and include name, date
of birth and death, name of parents, spouse and service
information. A photo may be added to a death notice for a
$10 fee.
Obituaries, jpeg photos and death notices may be emailed
to review@garnett-ks.com with a phone number for
confirmation.
Payment may be arranged through your funeral home or
directly with The Review. We accept all major credit cards.
DECEMBER 15, 1963 – MARCH 9, 2020
In 2nd Corinthians 12:14 the apostle Paul describes
the location of heaven. Paul
says in a vision from God he
was, caught up to the third
heaven. In order to understand this we need to know
that the first heaven is located
in the clouds and earths atmosphere. The second heaven is
defined as the stars and constellations. The third heaven
is literally the abode of God.
Within the third heaven is
paradise.
So with that said we know
God is in the third heaven.
In Ephesians 1:19-20 we read.
That power is like the working of his mighty strength
which he exerted in Christ
when he raised him from the
dead and seated him at his
right hand in the heavenly
realms, far above all rule and
authority, power and dominion, and every title that he
can be given, not only in the
present age but also in the age
to come. So where is Christ?
He is seated at the right hand
of God in the third heaven.
So where is the believer,
the follower of Christ? In
Ephesians 2:6 Paul says, And
God raised us up with Christ
and seated us with him in the
heavenly realms in Christ
Jesus. If God raised us up
with Christ, we know that
because of Christs resurrection our bodies will be raised
from the dead. We know this
because if Christ is in us we
are in him and where is he at?
He is with God.
By virtue of Christ being
in us we are given the power
brother, Ed Mader in 2004;
brothers-in-law, Dale Milner
in 2017 and Dave Hermreck in
2017.
Greg is survived by his
mother, Juliana of Garnett;
sister-in-law, Donna Mader
of Westphalia; sister, Mary
Milner of Garnett; brothers,
Ray Mader and Dan Mader
of Garnett; sisters, Margie
Tastove and husband Robert,
Irene Tastove and husband
Frank of Westphalia; brother, Dave Mader and wife Julie
of Nevada, Missouri; sister,
Nancy Hermreck of Garnett,
sister, Ann Lutz and husband Rod of Ottawa; brother,
Bob Mader and wife Kristy
of Richmond; sisters, Carol
Lutz and husband Milton of
Richmond; Jan Grollmes and
husband Linus of Wetmore,
Kansas; Tina Mader of Iola;
Amy Mader of Garnett; 36 nieces and nephews, and many
great nieces and nephews.
Mass of Christian Burial
was March 16, 2020, at St.
Boniface Catholic Church,
Scipio. Burial followed in the
St. Boniface Cemetery.
Memorial contributions
may be made to the H.A.L.L.
Fund.
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110
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213 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Mon-Fri
8:00am.
Phone:
(785) 448-6125
Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
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(785) 448-3212
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Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
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toShoppe
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Hours:
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Stacey
at 785-448-3121.
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Anderson
County
News
Saturday March 21 11a.m.-6p.m.
at Secondhand Hardwares Swap Meet
2 hilltops south of the roundabout
BBQ sandwiches & rolled ice cream
of living a Christian life now.
So Christ is both seated at the
right hand of God and living
in us. In Ephesians 2:10 we
read, For we are Gods workmanship, created in Christ
Jesus to do good works, which
God prepared in advance for
us to do.
Our salvation is something
only God can do. It is a powerful and creative work. If we
are Gods workmanship our
lives will exhibit the good
works that God prepared for
us to do.
So if God is in heaven and
Christ is seated at his right
hand and Christ is in us and
we in him what Paul says in
2nd Cor. 5:8 takes the fear
out of death for Paul says,
Absent from the body present with the Lord. Death is
only the beginning of eternal
life. The question is do you
know where you are sitting
right now?
Ministry on the Holiness of God.
Author of the book,
On the Other Side of the Door
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Stacey at
785-448-3121.
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Do you know where
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ANDERSON
MADER
Gregory Eugene Mader,
age 56, of Richmond, Kansas,
died Monday,
March 9, 2020,
on the farm.
He was born
on December
15, 1963, the
ninth child
of Joe and
J u l i a n a
(Lickteig)
Mader
Mader. Greg
was a lifelong
resident of Anderson County.
Greg
graduated
from
Garnett High School in 1982, he
was a quiet, gentle man. He was
a lifelong farmer and enjoyed
passing his love of farming on
to his nephews. He co-owned
and operated Mader Dairy
with his brothers until 2008.
He loved playing with his nieces and nephews. He enjoyed
dancing and it was a joy to
watch him. Greg could often
be heard singing as he worked.
He shared his voice by singing
at many family weddings and
community funerals. Those
that loved him will remember
his contagious laughter and
sense of humor.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Joe Mader in 2017;
3A
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242 E. 5th, Garnett
(785) 248-9800
albrandes@alsdoorcompany.com
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
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Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
OPINION
Panic brings a bigger problem
Never let them see you sweat.
The old adage and Gillette antiperspirant ad
slogan from the 1980s had its roots somewhere
in the philosophy of keeping a stiff upper lip
under pressure dont let your enemies think
theyve gotten under your skin.
But the coronavirus panic has illustrated
to Americas enemies precisely where our soft
spot is, and how close we are to cancelling our
kids soccer games, shutting down the country
and jamming our cars with all the toilet paper
we can get our hands on from the nearest WalMart.
The panic has surged regardless of the facts
in the numbers of comparatively miniscule
coronavirus infections and the truth that for
most people the infection even in the extreme
chance you might contract it is completely
survivable. The standard threats for the elderly
or those with depressed immune systems or
respiratory illnesses applies of course same
as for the flu. But given the medias inadequate
context in reporting on the disease and the
news focus on the grassfire of the associated
panic, its no wonder otherwise logical, level-headed people are trying to make their own
hand sanitizer out of perfectly good vodka.
To call the situation a hoax is a gross misstatement of course. But theres no denying
this irrationality and reactionary response by
institutions and organizations in their zest to
protect the public and to avoid legal liability
and public shaming in the social media square
undermines what we otherwise thought was
a fabric of logic in an evolved society. During
World War I panic led to attacks and persecution of German immigrants; in the 1940s
it spawned the suspension of rights and the
outright incarceration of Japanese Americans.
Panic makes people do radical things.
Much of the blame for the panic falls on the
shoulders of the media, both because of what
it did and what it didnt do. What it did was
to go wall-to-wall coverage with a consistent
preoccupation on reaction to coronavirus
world wide, with scarce coverage of the actual
virus and its realistic impact. The numbers
bare it out in the way that only statistics can:
influenza, which we live with every year, is
hundreds of times more prevalent with similar
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
risks to the elderly and those with respiratory
or immune challenges. That is a fact, not conspiratorial yammering.
You can cut your chance of infection by
staying away from large numbers of the public
when the virus is prevalent whether youre
concerned about the flu or coronavirus. Thats
a fact and its been common knowledge for
years. You can also reduce the severity of an
infection by adopting a lifestyle of eating right,
exercising and getting adequate rest. Thats
common knowledge as well. Coronavirus, like
the flu, has a very limited lifespan outside a
host so you wont get it from the magazine you
got in the mail or the cereal box you opened at
breakfast this morning.
These are the facts which should have been a
core aspect of media reporting last week, instead
of breathless updates from media talking heads
on the latest closings and postponements of
everything from Boy Scout spaghetti suppers to
White House cabinet meetings.
The danger is that we have ceded to our
enemies the secret key to our weakness in our
lack of nerve and our tendency to fear the sky
is falling. If the Russians hoped to influence
our country by buying Facebook ads, what new
ammunition have we given them?
And besides scaring the hell out of our kids,
weve taught them that fear not logic, rationality and information is an acceptable and
actionable facet of a personal or public challenge. Thats a scar that could well outlive the
virus, and be far more infectious. ###
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.
To the person who called the Phone Forum
wondering if it was necessary to have bars and
liquor stores open on Sunday in Garnett, the
answer is no. Neither is necessary to have the
grocery story or the (name) store open, or for
that matter the police or the electric department. Its open. Deal with it. If you dont like it,
dont go or run for the city council. Thank you.
Looks to me like our local ethanol plant has a
real opportunity here if they would only take
it. Instead of burning that stuff in peoples cars
they ought to make it into hand sanitizer. That
would take care of all the people going berserk
over sanitizer right now. Its the same stuff.
Thank you.
The creepy surveillance of college students
Its creepy, really, the latest development in
taking roll on college campuses.
In small classes, where professors get to
know their students, many have always taken
roll, just as high-school teachers do.
Attendance may or may not have been part
of a students grade, but knowing who came to
class and who didnt helps a teacher know
what was going on.
That didnt work in large lecture classes,
where one professor might teach to 100, 200,
even 500 or more students at a time. There was
no way to track attendance. The assumption
was if you cared about your grade, youd come
to class. An occasional pop quiz might help
reenforce attendance.
Performance was measured by a students
test scores and by his or her work in labs
associated with the lecture. Because these
huge classes are efficient, they are common on
colleges, especially for entry-level courses that
a lot of students will take.
Upper-level classes are smaller, tougher
and its not a good thing to miss them. I
remember one large lecture, beginning sociology, I think, that bored me so. After sleeping
through several classes it started at 8:30 in
the morning I stopped going. It was easy
enough to get As and Bs if you just read the
book and went to the lab.
Ah, but now technology offers colleges
a chance to know who is at every lecture.
Sensors connect to an app on students smart
phones, taking roll as they enter and leave the
room. Administrators, whos jobs may depend
on such things as the schools pass/fail and
graduation rates, seem to like this.
That might almost be OK if they confined
the system to taking roll at large lectures.
GUEST COMMENTARY
STEVE HAYNES, Haynes Publishing Co.
They dont. The computers will do more, sensors can be almost anywhere and the temptation to know where students are during
class hours and even later seems too strong to
resist.
Syracuse is one of the larger schools using
this technology. It first appeared with athletic
departments, which wanted a way to keep student-athletes on the straight and narrow. The
head of one company is a former basketball
coach, The Washington Post reports.
Sensors are being placed across campuses, wherever students might congregate or
pass. Presumably, that might allow officials
to know who is going to class and who might
spend the day, say, hanging out at the student
union or some other place.
Perhaps this will produce information
on which students need extra help. Perhaps
theyre just spreading the sensors around
because they can. Oppression seems almost
inevitably to follow for the noncomformist.
And the wider the net gets, the more creepy
the whole story is.
How long, you have to wonder, before this
spreads to big companies that want to know
where their employees spend their time, especially those with jobs that require them to go
out and do things outside the office, like utility
workers or city inspectors.
And if the network can track workers, cant
it be adjusted to keep tabs on the rest of us?
The idea of a corporation keeping track of
workers, vehicles and other assets perhaps
can be justified. No one has a right to use
a company vehicle or a company computer
without accounting for it.
College students? Whatever happened to
the idea of personal responsibility? Shouldnt
we expect them to be adults and manage their
own time?
If someone is struggling, the dean might
offer help. But as with many things in life,
students have to learn to do whats expected
of them. That, after all, is one of the things
theyre supposed to learn in college, besides
physics, biology or literature.
The real threat may be the spread of tracking technology, billed as voluntary, to the
wider society. Wouldnt police, already busy
with their license-plate readers and surveillance video, just love to have sensors everywhere, tracking everyone, just in case someone commits a crime?
Or government officials, suspicious of opposition and of those who dont like to obey?
You can answer that one for yourselves.
Steve Haynes is president of Norwest
Newspapers in Oberlin, Kan.
Woke era shows sensitivity to virus naming
The coronavirus outbreak is the first pandemic of the woke era, and as such its not surprising that there is a fierce debate over how
to refer to it without offending against social
justice.
Republican Rep. Paul Gosar of Arizona lost
whatever sympathy he would have garnered
in certain quarters over his self-quarantine
when he referred to the Wuhan virus, a perfectly appropriate name that has been deemed
grotesque and unacceptable.
Wuhan is in China, a non-Western country,
and people of color live there, so Q.E.D., calling the virus by the name of that city must be
racist.
Luminaries across the left denounced Gosar.
They even accused him of bringing what
is technically the SARS-CoV-2 virus to our
shores by misnaming it. Democratic Rep. Ted
Lieu of California slammed the Republicans
reference to the Wuhan virus as an example
of the myopia that allowed it to spread in the
U.S. The virus is not constrained by country
or race.
Nonetheless, the virus first became known
in Wuhan, and the locked-down city has
remained the epicenter of the Chinese epidemic ever since. As of mid-February, the Wuhan
area accounted for 86% of all cases in China.
Naming a virus after the location of the outbreak that first brought it to attention is not
unusual.
The West Nile virus emerged in the West Nile
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
district of Northern Uganda in the 1930s. It
is similar to the St. Louis encephalitis virus,
which broke out around St. Louis, Missouri,
in 1933, and the Japanese encephalitis virus
that began in the 1870s.
Coxsackie in New York state, Marburg in
Germany and Hendra in Australia all have
viruses named after them. MERS, caused by
a virus first identified in 2012, stands for
Middle East respiratory syndrome, or even
more offensively, the camel flu.
No one had a fainting fit over any of this, but
we live in a more sensitive, and absurd, time.
The WHO issued guidelines a couple of years
ago warning against naming diseases after
geographic locations, or animals (swine flu,
bird flu, monkey pox) or membership organizations or occupations (Legionnaires disease). With regard to the latest outbreak, the
WHO has warned that certain words and language may have a negative meaning for people
and fuel stigmatizing attitudes.
There is no doubt that a raging virus that
got its start in China, has shut down all of
Italy, and caused disruption and fear around
the world may create negative associations
around China. This would happen, though,
regardless of the name.
Such international contention over the name
of a virus or disease isnt new. Syphilis was the
Neapolitan disease, the French disease or the
Polish disease, depending on who was naming
it. The 1918 influenza came to be known as
the Spanish flu, although Spaniards called
it the French flu.
There was no good reason for naming the
flu after the Spanish, though. The case of
China is different. Its government tried to
suppress warnings about the new coronavirus
and looked the other way, giving it the room
to become a national and then a global crisis.
It deserves to be connected to the virus it did
more than its share to loose on the world, no
matter what its foreign ministry or the sensitivity police say.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Was reading the article in the Garnett Review
about paying for other peoples student loans.
How come this was not voted on by the votes?
The money comes from the voters and we should
have been informed and voted on it. If we have
so much money to throw around, why dont you
put the money into our roads and infrastructure? Our Anderson County area roads are horrible. Keep our money here.
Send your Letters to the Editor to
review@garnett-ks.com and include a
phone number for verification.
Contact your elected leaders:
President Donald Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
@realDonaldTrump
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774,
pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
2nd Dist. Congressman
Steve Watkins
1205 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
Voters dont decide issues. They decide
who will decide issues.
George F. Will
First Amendment, U.S. Constitution:
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2018.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
5A
HISTORY
Brodmerkle & Dennis
A revisit of an article I wrote regarding H.D. Rogers win duplicate bridge
Some of you may recall
that a month ago I shared an
article about H.D. Rogers selling brooms and brushes in
Glenloch, Ks.
This past week I received
a very pleasant and exciting
phone call from Mrs. Verna
Keim.
Verna wanted to share that
recently shes been spending
time reading articles in an old
family scrapbook. (Forgive me
Verna, I cant remember if you
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
told me if it belonged to your
mother or grandmother)
This is what she shared with
me.
There was a newspaper
clipping that caught Vernas
eye and it read as follows:
Preacher Levi Yoder raised
broom cane and made brooms.
Glenloch, Ks.
Several questions remain
unanswered. What year was
this article written in?
What newspaper was it in?
Where and in which
direction did Levi live from
Glenloch?
Did Levi sell the brooms he
made?
Could it have been possible
that he made the brooms for
H.D. Rogers to sell?
It sure leaves a lot of
researching yet to do!
Thank you Verna for sharing this wonderful bit of early
Anderson County history.
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers
10March2020
Public
Notice
Your
RIGHT
to know.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Ordinance regarding loan to
finance public water supply project MidFirst Bank
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, March 17, 2020)
CITY ATTORNEYS
ORDINANCE #4209
SUMMARY
OF
authorizing and directing Garnett city officials
and legal counsel to execute any and all other
documents and take any other action needed
to carry out the purposes and ends of such
loan agreement.
On March 10, 2020, the governing body of
the City of Garnett Kansas, passed Ordinance
#4209 which (1) authorizes the execution of a
loan agreement between the City of Garnett,
Kansas, and the State of Kansas, acting
through the Kansas Department of Health and
Environment for the purpose of obtaining a
loan to finance a public water supply project;
(2) establishes a dedicated source of revenue
for the repayment of such loan; and (3) further
A complete copy of this ordinance is available
free of charge at www.garnettks.net (available
for at least one week following the publication
of this summary notice) or at City Hall, 131 W.
Fifth Avenue, during regular business hours.
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, March 17, 2020)
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.
This summary is certified by Terry J. Solander,
City Attorney, in compliance with K.S.A.
12-3007.
Mc17t1*
Local telephone information
Local Service Rates for Telephone Service
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
and a surcharge is assessed at governmental
rates.
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.
Plaintiff,
vs.
Jason Christian Brown and Rebecca L Brown,
et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 2019-CV-000001
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
Notice Of Sale
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued
to me by the Clerk of the District Court of
Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, on April 2, 2020, at 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
Commencing at a point 29 rods and 9 links
mc17t1*
Notice to creditors
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, March 17, 2020)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Ricky D. Ellis, Deceased.
Case No. 20PR10
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that on March
11, 2020, a Petition was filed in this Court by
Ronnie W. Ellis, the Executor named in the Last
Will and Testament of Ricky D. Ellis, deceased,
dated July 1, 2019, praying for admission of
said Will to probate, that he be appointed as
Executor without bond, and that he be granted
Letters Testamentary.
You are hereby required to file your written
defenses thereto on or before April 8, 2020 at
9:00 oclock a.m. of such day, in this Court, in
the city of Garnett in Anderson County, Kansas,
at which time and place the cause will be
heard. Should you fail, judgment and decree
will be entered upon due course upon the
Petition.
All creditors of the above-named decedent
are notified to exhibit their demands against the
Estate within four months from the date of the
first publication of this notice, as provided by
law, and if their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred.
Ronnie W. Ellis
Petitioner.
Bryan K. Joy, #10966
Joy Law office, P. A.
512 Neosho Street
P. O. Box 209
Burlington, Kansas 66839
Telephone (620) 364-8411
Attorney for the Estate.
Mc17t3*
The Anderson County Review is the official newspaper of record for Anderson
County, The City of Garnett, USD 365, and
the other incorporated cities in Anderson
County, and is the sole published source of
local legal publications and public notices.
Notices published here meet all required
statutory legal parameters. The Review is
the only newspaper published in Anderson
County which meets legal publication
requirements per state law.
Lynda Feuerborn and Faye
Leitch came in third. The
Garnett Duplicate Bridge Club
plays Wednesdays at 1:00 at the
Garnett Inn; all bridge players
are welcome.
Richmond Museum
postpones apron program
Richmond Museum has
postponed the apron program
set for March 22 until a later
date.
Notice of suit
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, March 3, 2020)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
Notice of sale
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, March 10, 2020)
Steve Brodmerkle of Neosho
Falls and Anita Dennis of
Garnett won the duplicate
bridge match March 11th. The
Ottawa team of Marilyn Grace
and Wanda Kirkland took
second. The Garnett team of
west and 131 feet south of the Northeast corner
of the Northwest Quarter (NW/4) of Section
Thirty (30), Township Twenty (20) South,
Range Twenty (20) East of the Sixth Principal
Meridian, in Anderson County, Kansas, thence
running South 90 feet, thence East to the rightof-way of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe
Railroad, thence Northwesterly along said rightof-way to a point 131 feet south of the north
line of said quarter section, thence West to the
place of beginning, commonly known as 424
N Oak St, Garnett, KS 66032 (the Property)
Farmers State Bank,
A Banking Corporation
Plaintiff,
vs.
Patricia Ann Cummings, a/k/a
Patricia A. Cummings, deceased and Tina M.
Cummings, deceased, Cody Allen Cummings,
Kevin Joseph
Cummings, their heirs, unknown executors,
administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors,
successors and assigns, Ford Motor Credit
Company LLC, Midland Funding LLC Assignee
Of Citibank, N.A., the Board of County
Commissioners, Anderson County, Kansas
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled Defendants.
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period Case No. 20CV05
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court. For more information, NOTICE OF SUIT
visit www.Southlaw.com.
Vernon L Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Prepared By:
Southlaw, P.C.
Mark Mellor (KS #10255)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS67202
(316) 684-7733, ext. 320
(316) 684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff (215316)
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO PATRICIA
ANN CUMMINGS, A/K/A PATRICIA A.
CUMMINGS, DECEASED, TINA M.
CUMMINGS, DECEASED, CODY ALLEN
CUMMINGS, KEVIN JOSEPH CUMMINGS,
THEIR HEIRS, UNKNOWN EXECUTORS,
ADMINISTRATORS, DEVISEES, TRUSTEES,
CREDITORS, SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS,
FORD MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY LLC,
MIDLAND FUNDING LLC ASSIGNEE OF
CITIBANK, N.A. AND THE BOARD OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, ANDERSON
mc10t3* COUNTY, KANSAS, AND ALL OTHER
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are notified that a Petition has been filed in
the District Court of Anderson County, Kansas,
by Farmers State Bank, A Banking Corporation,
praying for foreclosure on a mortgage on the
following described real estate in Anderson
County, Kansas, to-wit:
Beginning at a point 40 feet East of the
Southwest corner of the Northeast Quarter
(NE/4) of Section Fourteen (14), Township
Twenty (20) South, Range Eighteen (18) East
of the Sixth Principal Meridian, thence North
300 feet, thence East 726 feet, thence South
300 feet, thence West 726 feet, to the place of
beginning, Anderson County, Kansas.
and for the Plaintiff to be awarded the
above-described property free and clear of any
right, title, or interest of the Defendants.
You are further notified that you are required
to plead to said petition, on or before the 15th
day of April, 2020, in said Court, at Garnett,
Kansas. Should you fail therein, judgment will
be entered upon said petition.
Farmers State Bank,
A Banking Corporation
Plaintiff
Jesse T. Randall
#09231
512 Main Street, P. O. Box 301
Mound City, Kansas 66056
Telephone: (913) 795-2514
Email: jtrandall45@yahoo.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
mc3t3*
RONALD & IRMINA LANZRATH
FARM
4X10
Marty Read
AUCTION
7800 West 2300 Rd. Parker, KS
SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 2020 10 a.m.
As we have retired from our farming operation, the
following items and equipment will be offered on the
farm located 2 miles east of Parker, KS on 2100 Rd. to
blacktop 1077 then 2 miles north to 2300 Rd., then
west mile OR from Junction 152 Hwy & 7 Hwy go 3
miles west to 1077 Rd. then north 2 miles to 2300 Rd.
then west mi. Watch for signs.
PICKUPS 1989 Ford Lariat T F-250 with 460 V8 automatic
104K miles, gooseneck ball, runs good; 1989 Chev 4.3 V6 fuel
injected S10 Tahoe extended cab automatic, bed liner (needs
seal in rear differential).
TRUCK 1966 Ford 50 Series Grain Truck with 15 hoist bed,
4 spd. with 2 speed axle; 300 cu. In. 6-cylinder needs brake
repair, 92K miles, has grain sides with extension.
4-WHEELER Honda Rancher ES (electrical shifter needs
work);12V ATV seeder and ATV 12V sprayer with booms &
wand.
TRACTORS 1978 2840 JD with dual hydraulics with 4 suitcase weights roll bar canopy 6 spd. With power shift Hi-Low
(Ser.#238442L); 1968 JD 4020 with 6 Allied Front Loader with
Roll Bar Canopy, syncro-range transmission (T213R164419R)
also dual spear for front loader.
GOOSENECK STOCK TRAILER Delta 20 ft.X6 ft. tandem axle
Gooseneck with brush guard fenders, center gate and side
escape and spare.
PICKUP BED TRAILERS 2 pickup bed trailers one with sideboards.
ROTARY MOWER JD 1008 10 ft. pull type Rotary Mower with
laminated wheels.
HAY EQUIPMENT New Holland Side Delivery rake; 8-wheel
Hay Rake on cart; 4 wheeled Big Bale Wagon with NH running
gears; Slide in Bale Spear with 12V hydraulic power unit.
TILLAGE EQUIPMENT 13 hole MoLine grain drill (rubber
tired); 4600 Case IH 22 ft. Vibra Shank; JD 16 ft. finishing disc;
JD 12 ft. scalloped plow disc (FHIHI); …also great offering
of poultry equipment, shop & tools, rural primitives &
antiques, woodworking & scrap iron.
See more items, photos &
sale bill at our website:
Marty Read, Auctioneer (620) 224-6495
www.martyreadauction.com
6A
SPORTS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
All high school spring practices
on hold due to Coronavirus
Effective Monday, March
16, all spring sports and activities are suspended through
Sunday, March 22.
This includes cancellation
of all practices and competitions for this week. This prohibition is consistent with KSDE
and governmental guidance
and may be extended, should
conditions warrant.
Please note spring sports
team members are prohibited
from club or outside team participation and practice during
this period. Not only would
such outside participation be
contrary to handbook rule, it
would be contrary to the very
reason activities are cancelled
during the time we seek to mitigate potential transfer of the
contagion.
Consumer Alert: Watch out for coronavirus scams
Kansas Attorney General
Derek Schmidt is urging consumers to use caution against
scams involving COVID-19.
In any unsettled times,
whether it be the aftermath of
a devastating storm or in this
case the spread of a new virus,
there are those who choose to
take advantage of the publics
apprehension and uncertainty, Schmidt said. With all the
discussion and disruption in
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-17-20 / SUBMITTED reaction to COVID-19, Kansans
should be particularly vigilant
Last week Central Heights Lady Viking Abby Brown signed with Bethany College to play basketball.
for scammers and should know
that our office is here to help if
needed.
Kansans should be on alert
for scams related to the COVID19 virus, more commonly
known as the coronavirus,
which originated in the Wuhan
province of China and has now
spread to the United States.
These scams could include
bogus products advertised as
coronavirus prevention measures or treatments as well as
bogus charities purporting to
The 52nd Annual Banquet
of the Anderson County
Historical society will be held
Tuesday, March 31, 2020, at
6:30PM in the Anderson County
Jr/Sr High School Commons
Area, 1100 W Hwy 31, Garnett,
Kansas.
This years program will
feature a presentation by local
resident Patrick Schettler on
the topic Early Aviators of
Anderson County.
Tickets are $15.00 per person and can be purchased
from Historical Society Board
raise money for coronavirus
research or to support coronavirus patients. Schmidt said
his office has received reports
of these sorts of scams circulating in Kansas.
Any Kansans who have
problems with scams may
file a complaint with the
attorney generals Consumer
Protection Division at www.
InYourCornerKansas.org or
call (800) 432-2310 for more
information.
Pictured in back, from left: Keith Furguson, Bethany head coach, and Doug North, Vikings head coach.
In the front, from left: Sara Brown, Abby Brown, Jason Brown. Brown was just voted All-League 2nd
team for the Flint Hills League.
Anderson County Historical Society
Annual
Banquet
March
31st
ECKAN Weatherization Assistance
Program accepting applications
ECKAN
Weatherization
Assistance Program saves families money by reducing consumption of energy enabling
money for other budgeting
needs.
As the winter season has
arrived in Kansas, hundreds
of homes have been put to
the test. Some of those same
homes are much more energy
efficient thanks to the ECKAN
Weatherization Assistance
Program.
The ECKAN Weatherization
Program provides repairs and
upgrades that improve the
comfort, health, and safety of
the home. Weatherization services can cut a homes energy consumption by as much
as one-third. These savings
can help people make their
lives better, and keep a little
money in their pockets so they
can afford to pay their utility bills, buy food, and other
household necessities, by lowering their utility bills, says
Jeremy Graham, ECKAN
Weatherization
Program
Director. We also keep them
safe by installing CO alarms,
smoke detectors, and repairing
or replacing unsafe furnaces.
And, while we are weatherizing a home, we look for other
hazards in the home that could
pose health and safety issues.
The
Weatherization
Assistance Program is the
nations largest residential
energy efficiency program.
ECKAN feels fortunate to
provide this program in our
service area to not only help
households save money on
utilities, but to also improve
the health and safety of their
homes, said Crystal Anderson,
ECKAN CEO.
At no charge to the client,
income-eligible families receive
a comprehensive home energy
audit, which is an assessment
of the entire home. Our certified energy auditor will search
the entire home, inside and out,
looking for inefficiencies and
safety concerns using advance
equipment and techniques.
The energy audit will identify a
customized account of areas for
cost-effective improvements.
The improvements will be provided free of charge by our network of professional crews and
contractors.
Eligibility is based on
household income relative
Greeley Elementary
releases honor roll
The following Greeley
Elementary students are on the
Honor Roll for the 3rd quarter
of the 2019-2020 school year:
All As Honor Roll
Sixth Grade
Brooklyn Strobel
A/B Honor Roll
Sixth Grade
Isaac Richards, Mitchell
to federal low-income guidelines. If a household contains a member who receives
Supplemental Security Income
(SSI), Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families (TANF)
benefits or utility assistance
from the Low Income Energy
Assistance Program (LIEAP),
the household is automatically considered eligible for
Weatherization services.
To
qualify
for
the
Weatherization Assistance
Program, Kansans can go to
www.eckan.org to view the
Federal Poverty Guidelines for
the program, and apply or contact the ECKAN Weatherization
office at 78-242-6413 or toll free
888-833-0832.
ECKAN Weatherization services a 16-county service area
including: Allen, Anderson,
Bourbon, Chase, Coffey,
Douglas, Franklin, Greenwood,
Johnson, Linn, Lyon, Miami,
Morris, Osage, Woodson, and
Wyandotte Counties.
ECKAN, one of eight community action agencies in Kansas,
has been in existence since 1966
serving low-income persons in
East Central Kansas. ECKANs
mission is to identify and focus
available resources that enable
eligible families and individuals to attain critical skills,
knowledge and attitudes necessary to achieve self-sufficiency.
Members Kenny Kellstadt,
Richard
Miller,
Terry
Solander, Monica Hill, Gayla
Corley, Kristie Kinney, Ivan
Mader, Paul Phares, or Zella
Teter, or call 785-448-7562 for
reservations.
PSRT Birthday Bash rescheduled
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail met
March 11, 2020 at the Garnett
Public Library. Thirty members were present.
The original plans were for a
March 17, 2020 Birthday Bash,
but due to the Coronavirus has
been postponed until April 15th.
It will be held at the Anderson
County Jr-Sr High School at
6:00 p.m. A delicious meal will
be served along with a silent
auction and speakers. You can
get tickets from any trail member ahead of time for $10.00 a
piece or you can purchase your
ticket at the door that night for
$12.00 a piece.
Denise Weber and Pat
Otto had attended a Rhythm
and Ride meeting in Ottawa,
Kansas that morning. The
Rhythm & Ride Event will be
in Garnett Sunday, April 26,
2020 at the depot from 11:00 am
to 2:00 pm. Music will be provided and food will be available
to purchase from the Chinese
Restaurant, Lions Club and
Glenn Platt BBQ.
Once again the Prairie Spirit
Rail Trail members will be hav-
ing the Golf Cart Trail Rides.
This will be on June 4, 2020
along the trail.
The next regular meeting
will be April 8, 2020 at the
Garnett Public Library.
2×4
Yutzy
Richards
Fifth Grade
Chloe Moore, Lincoln
Schaffer
Fourth Grade
Wyatt
Bryan,
Haven
McCurdy
Third Grade
Bentlee Grogan, Noelle
Stinnett
Business Cards Car Magnets
Project Bid Forms More!
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Gates
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we print it.
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785 448 3121
112 W. Sixth Ave. Garnett, KS 66032
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, March 17
5:30 a.m. – Spin Class
10:00 a.m. – Storytime for Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International Club
Meeting
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
– Dominoes, cards and pool table
5:00 p.m. – Spin Class
5:00 p.m. – Anderson County Economic
Development Meeting
5:00 p.m. BPW Meeting
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
6:00 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Planning Commission
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, March 18
8:30 a.m. – Marketing and Finance Free Workshops @ Library
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Learn to make a quilt block,
County Fair Challenge @ Annex
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
Thursday, March 19
5:30 a.m. – Spin Class
9:00 a.m. – TOPS Meeting
10:00 a.m. – Far Out Fairy Tales @ Library
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior Center
– Dominoes, cards and pool table
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committe Meeting
5:00 p.m. – Spin Class
5:30 p.m. – Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
6:00 p.m. – Destination Creation Course
6:00 p.m. – Steering Committee Meeting
6:30 p.m. – Chamber Players Present 2 Across
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, March 20
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Fun with Breakfast Class @
3rd-5th grade @ Annex
6:30 p.m. – Chamber Players Present 2 Across
Saturday, March 21
6:30 p.m. – Chamber Players Present 2 Across
Sunday, March 22
6:30 p.m. – Chamber Players Present 2 Across
Monday, March 17
8:45 a.m. – Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
1:00 p.m. – Anderson County Caregiver
Support Group
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
1×2
Sterl6
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Four
Color
Printing
Now available at
Garnett
Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
The Morning Mingle group presented a check for $750 to WINGS
from proceeds of the Chocolate Walk visiting 11 businesses.
Seventy-five (75) people participated on Saturday, March 7th.
Pictured from left is: Kris Hix, Chamber Director/City Admin;
Kim Wittman, Wittman NAPA; Michelle Hermreck, WINGS; Deb
Jennifer Sibley of Garnett:
Anderson County Jr-Sr High
School Library and Reva
Pracht of Garnett Elementary
School attended the Database
Researching for Librarians
workshop at the Southeast
Kansas Library System headquarters, Iola, Kansas on
March 12, 2020.
Kate
Wise,
System
Consultant for Southeast
Kansas Library System, presented information, approaches and activities about the
research cycle, demonstrated databases appropriate for
both students and adults, and
covered some of the many
resources available online
through the Kansas State
Library. Attendees were provided a packet of information
and resources to further assist
their students or patrons with
research projects.
Pieces & Patches Quilt Guild Minutes Look! Its a sign!
The Pieces & Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order
by President Mary Parrott
on February 23, 2020 at 9:33
a.m. at the Anderson County
Extension office. Roll call was
answered by 21 members. The
minutes for January were
approved as printed in the
newsletter. Lynda Feuerborn
gave the treasurers report.
Committee Reports
May Quilt Show: Bonnie
Deiter logged our May Quilt
Show in at the Garnett Senior
Center for Saturday, May
9. The show will be open to
the public from 10-3. Terrie
Gifford and Lynda Feuerborn
will take the 2020 Opportunity
Quilt to Goppert State Service
Bank following todays meeting.
Programs
Jackie Gardner reminded us that Theresa Ward will
be presenting a program on
String Quilting at our March
26 meeting. Jackie presented
the idea of taking a trip to the
International Quilt Museum in
Lincoln, Nebraska. She and
Vickie Hurt had already contacted the museum to learn
about their visitor program.
The dates available to us are
June 17 or 18. We would be
carpooling leaving at 7 A.M.
arriving in Lincoln where we
will have lunch at the museum
followed by a one-hour tour on
preservation at 12:30, a onehour tour of the museum with
a docent, followed by time to
explore on our own. The next
morning, we will begin a Shop
Hop on the way home.
Presidents Block
President Mary Parrott is in
her second year as President,
therefore Vice President Jackie
Gardner introduced Marys
preference for a Signature
Block. The blocks will be presented to Mary at the August
meeting.
Charity Quilts
Sandra Moffatt requests we
keep making lap quilts, wheelchair bags and fidget quilts.
Bonnie
Deiter
proposed
we change the name of our
Project HALOS to be Quilting
Angels.
Opportunity Quilt 2021
The pattern for the quilt
is called Scrappy Triangles
as printed in the November/
December 20111 Fons &
Porters Love of Quilting.
2020 Block of the Month
Our January Block of the
2×2 Did You Know:
For every $100 you spend at a locally
LoveWhatsLoc
owned bricks-and-mortar store, $65.40
benefits your community. Think twice about
feeding the big corporations online.
Facebook @ LoveWhatsLocalGarnett
lovewhatslocalgarnett@gmail.com
Daily Specials
Every Sunday
Monday: $1 tacos
Tuesday: bbq & burgers, house-smoked
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
meat sandwiches or 1/2 lb. cheeseburger
Homemade
Wednesday: Fried chicken
Thursday: Meatloaf
PAN-FRIED
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
CHICKEN
fried chicken
Saturday: Different special every week
We have pizza!
Sunday: Homemade pan-fried chicken w/sides
2×2
Parker1Stop
1×3
AD
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-17-2020 / SUBMITTED
McMahan, WINGS; Jody Harmon, Garnett Home Center, Kristie
Clearwater; Erin Miller, Garnett Flowers & Gifts; Val Katzer Foltz,
Monroe 816; Julie Turnipseed, ACDA Director and Becky Solander,
Josephines.
Sibley &
Pracht attend
librarian
workshop
New Indoor Range
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FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Month is due in March, but
Joyce Buckley asked if there
were any to show. Five members showed scrappy potholders, hot pads, quilt blocks and
quilts.
2020 Challenge
Bonnie was asked how she
would characterize a Modern
Quilt. Fabrics should read as
solids, have negative space
(meaning background) and be
densely quilted.
Old Business
Guild members will give a
sewing class for youth during
Spring Fling to make a County
Fair Challenge Block.
New Business
Mary Parrott introduced
a Grant program from the
Heartland Quilt Network
(HQN) for which our guild
would qualify.
After discussion, members agreed we
should apply and, if we get it,
use the money for a Program
and Workshop that we could
hold in a larger venue and open
to the public.
Secret Sister Gifts
Judy Stukey received a
Secret Sister gift.
Show & Tell
Twelve members showed 23
quilted items.
The meeting was adjourned.
Minutes recorded by Terrie
Gifford
3×10
One of my hobbies as I travel
the country either for business or
pleasure is to assess various business
signage. Yeah, youre right I really
do need to get cable TV.
I love signage because its fun to
see just how bad a job some people
do at it. My classic example was a
protester I saw on the sidewalk along
Gage Blvd. years ago in Topeka, Ks.,
with traffic running at least 30 mph,
carrying a sign that had type on it
about the size of the ingredients on a
Pop Tart box. I still have no clue what
his point was.
Ive seen some doosies. The downer of it is that in business, bad signage costs you sales.
If youre lucky enough to be a
franchise affiliate, signage is usually
taken care of for you. If youre not,
all you need to do is drive around
your neighborhood some Saturday
and look at the Garage Sale signs to
see how NOT to put together signage.
Here are some tips.
1) Make it BIG: There are various formulas for sign readability
and they all consider three things:
readable distance, speed of the audience and the size of the type you
use. Obviously if traffic is running
70 mph on a highway, you want the
letters as big as possible and you
need to deliver your message in as
few words as possible. You want the
audience to have time to make a
maneuver, change lanes or move to
the exit which youre pointing out. If
your audience is strolling through an
airport or an indoor mall, obviously
you have a little more latitude in size
of type and number of words, though
you still cant go overboard. Rule
of thumb: Faster/ farther, bigger/
fewer.
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Publisher
THEPublisher
TRADING POST
Review
HOW TO SELL STUFF
2) Color combinations: Yellow
letters on green, or black letters on
yellow, are the most recognizable
combinations. Keep in mind the
negative space or the space around
the letters, is what defines their
readability thats why you want
as few words as possible as speed of
audience increases. For more on the
technique of signage, see the United
States Sign Council website at www.
usscfoundation.org.
3) Lose the All Caps: Upper and
lower case letters in your signage
increase readability from every distance and at every speed by several
points over all caps, because they
increase the definition of the characters against the negative space. If
you feel compelled, use all-caps for
only one word in any series. Forget
thinking all caps means urgency or
importance it really means harder
to read.
Good signage can be huge for
impulse sales and developing a hook
that may lead to foot traffic or later
sales. Bad signage? Well, it may as
well not be there at all.
Dane Hicks, President
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
The Anderson County Review
2B
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Creative Kids – Part 2
2×2
AD
Josie Walter Sixth Grade GES Mrs. Graham
2×5
state farm
Owen Thompson Sixth Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
acc
Avery Cable Sixth Grade Central Heights Ms. Dunn
2×5
acr
Rhoda Yoder Sixth Grade Central Plains Mrs. Miller
2×5
farmers state
bank
Abby Logan Sixth Grade GES Mrs. Young
2×5
gssb
Emmet H Sixth Grade GES Mrs. Graham
2×5
trustpoint
Rose Katzer Sixth Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
2×5
EKAE
Tyler Christian Sixth Grade Westphalia Ms. Walker
2×5
hale
Kacey Stottlemire Fourth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Cutburth
2×5
pizza hut
Rhoda Yoder Sixth Grade Central Plains Mrs. Miller
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
3B
LOCAL
Creative Kids – Part 2
James
Learns
A
Lesson
Kids Khronicles
This is a continuation of creative writing stories submitted by area 4th, 5th and 6th graders that
are published annually in our Creative Kids Advertising Design and Creative Writing Contest.
Dreams
by Alexis Wiser
Mrs. Cutburths Class
4th Grade Central Heights
It is dark out.
It is a silent night.
As sleep claims my body.
Dreams flow through my mind.
It is a starry night.
All is calm all is quiet.
As I dream the night away.
Dreams are a mystery on their way.
You can dream about the planets and stars.
Dreams take you somewhere at night.
Dreams are magical.
They are a sight.
Rascal & His Mother
by Demi Miller
Mrs. Millers Class
5th Grade Central Plains
One stormy night, the lightning flashed and the thunder
roared outside Rascal and his
mothers hole in a pine tree in
the middle of the thick woods.
Rascal was year old and
his father had gotten shot so
he and his mother lived alone
except there were a lot of other
animals and coons in the thick
forest of Montana. Rascal and
his mother huddled together,
keeping each other warm in
spite of the cold, damp air.
They soon fell asleep. When
they woke the next morning,
everything looked green and
fresh. There were still drops of
water on the leaves and grass,
but the storm was gone and the
bright morning sun was just
about to peak over the horizon.
Soon Rascals mother woke
up and they went out on their
morning hunt. They went down
to the river bank. Suddenly
Rascal smelled something. He
started digging and he soon
came to six white turtle eggs.
He and his mother ate all six
of them then lay in the sun and
took a small nap. When they
woke up, the hot afternoon sun
was shining on them and they
were pretty hot. So they dived
into the water and each caught
a crayfish for their lunch.
After they had eaten they went
for a swim. Then they went and
dug up their store of honey and
each ate a piece of honeycomb.
Soon it was getting late so
they went to their tree and
slept until 11:00 pm. Then,
they went for their nighttime
hunt. They crept into town and
stole two cans of strawberry
pop. Just as they were ready
to go, there was loud footsteps
coming across the floor. They
quickly ran out the door and
into the trees. There they waited, and soon a man came to
the door and shouted. WHO
EVER STOLE MY POP WILL
WISH THEY HADNT. Rascal
and his mother quickly ran to
their tree and climbed in. Soon
they were fast asleep.
The next night they went to
get more pop. As they neared
the edge of the wood, Rascal
yelped with pain for he had
stepped into a trap. Then there
was a loud shout CAUGHT
YOU! Rascals mother quickly
ran behind a bush to watch
the huge man come over and
loosened the trap. He was just
about to grab Rascal, when
the trap broke and Rascal ran
away.
Soon he found his mother
and they went down to the store
and stole two bottles of orange
pop. Then they ran back to
their tree and they lived happily ever after.
The End.
Welcome to the second part of The Reviews
annual Creative Kids advertising design
section.
Each year we tap the resources of local
school students
creativity in the 4th, 5th and 6th grades.
Thanks to our advertising clients, participating teachers and our students for making our annual contest possible.
2×5
Wittman
Lydia Foltz Fifth Grade St. Rose Mrs. Rockers
Philip Jean Needs Milk
by Wyatt Witham
Mrs. Rockers Class
5th Grade St. Rose
Philip Jean lived in Olathe
and drank water but wanted
milk. So he went to the fridge
and found milk. He tasted it
and it was the worst milk he
had ever tasted in his life.
So he went to the store to get
milk but on his way he got
hit by a Subaru, so he was
sent to the hospital, before
he got his milk. The nurse
asked him what refreshment
he wanted and she said they
had everything but ICE COLD
REFRESHING MILK! Philip
Jean said NOOOOO!!! The doctor was confused. Philip Jean
asked for cheese and the doctor
said we dont have any dairy
besides ice cream. Philip Jean
said Im allergic to ice cream.
The doctor said Oh sorry.
Soon he was out of the hospital
to get his milk guess what happened next? He was hit by the
same person and was sent to
the hospital. Soon the next day
he was out but almost got hit
by another car but it was a new
smart car.
Philip Jean was scared now
but he needed that MILK! So
of course he went and got his
milk and got home and drank
that 2% milk like nobodys
business. So of course he got
some more. But yet he got hit
by another car and was sent to
the hospital this got annoying
he thought. This is the third
time youve been placed in this
hospital and youre not dead
yet. Pretty impressive. The
Doctor said. Yeah I agree.
Said Philip. He was sent out
again and got his milk so he
went home and PLAYED WITH
HIS MILK!!? You know he had a
good time with that milk so he
drank that milk but he forgot to
read it and he ended up drinking SILK MILK!! Silk milk was
bad, he hated it, HE WAS
THROUGH!
THE END.
Stars
by Caitlynn Detwiler
Mrs. Cutburth
4th Grade Central Heights
Little bright lights at night.
Shining like Christmas lights tonight.
Tonight is a bright night.
Tonight is a magical night.
by Rhoda Yoder
Mrs. Millers Class
6th grade Central Plains
Aww. Dad. Why cant I
have a sparrow egg? There
are 4. Im sure the momma
wouldnt mind. Seven year
old James pleaded. NO
James. Leave the eggs alone.
His father replied. Shucks,
James muttered on the way to
the barn. I had great plans for
that egg.
James, please come into
the house and set the table,
his mother called from the
house. After setting the table
and doing his chores, James
settled down on the couch
with a book. But all he could
make out of the words were
get those eggs, eggs, eggs
Slamming the book shut,
James went to his brother who
was playing
with blocks.
Alright,
boys. Pick
up
your
toys. Its bed
time. Mother
announced.
Crawling into
bed, James fell
asleep. The next
morning dawned
bright and early.
After eating breakfast, James hurried to get his
chore coat on. Please come
back inside and bake a cake
after youve chored. Mother
requested. Ugh! I hate baking! James grumbled. Why,
I can recite the recipe without
thinking. Cocoa, milk, flour,
sugar, salt, baking powder,
eggs Eggs! James had forgotten all about the sparrow
eggs. Dad is not here and
neither is mom. Maybe I can
just get an egg and not bother them, James thought.
Looking around and seeing
nobody, he hurried over to the
tree.
James was good at climbing
because he had a lot of experience, There it was, nestled
in the split of two branches.
Gently James fingered the
eggs. 4 eggs, still warm. The
momma must have been sitting on them not too long ago.
James thought.
Suddenly, James heard
a truck. There came Dads
truck up the lane! Ive got to
get down fast! James cried,
desperately looking around.
Then James heard the truck
motor stopping. James quickly
put the egg in his mouth and
started to descend. Halfway
down, James stopped suddenly. Slowly, he raised his hand
towards his
mouth.
W a r m ,
slimy liquid
welcomed it.
James
started
to cry. Not only
had his egg broken, he felt sick.
Sick of the egg
and sick of the
thought of being
caught disobeying.
Just then Dad rounded the corner of the
house. Whats wrong
James? He asked as he helped
James from the tree.
James told the story and
when he was finished, his
dad said Since Im sure you
learned your lesson, I wont
punish you. His father
reached into his pocket and
pulled out a sucker.
Thanks, Dad. James
exclaimed, dashing away to
bake his cake.
This is a true story. James
is my brother.
The End
Nights are beautiful with stars.
Too many stars to count.
They glow in the night sky.
2×5
Benjamin
Realty
Addy Kueser Sixth Grade GES Mrs. Smart
2×5
sonic
Emma Hird Fourth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Heppler
2×5
auburn
pharmacy
Caleb Detwiler Fourth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Cutburth
2×5
Health
Partnership
Austin Reyes Fourth Grade Central Heights Mrs. Cutburth
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Spring lawn equipment: Keep
safety in mind with these 8 tips
Spring is on its way and
homeowners are eager to get
outside and spruce up their
yards. The Outdoor Power
Equipment Institute (OPEI), an
international trade association
representing outdoor power
equipment, small engine, utility vehicle, golf car and personal transport vehicle manufacturers and suppliers, reminds
homeowners to keep safety in
mind when working in their
outdoor living spaces.
Before you use a mower,
trimmer, blower, power washer, chainsaw, pruner, portable generator or other piece
of outdoor power equipment
this season, its important to
refresh yourself on handling
and safety procedures, said
Kris Kiser, President and CEO
of OPEI. Were all eager to get
outside and enjoy the living
landscape after a long winter,
but you should take the time to
do basic maintenance to ensure
your equipment operates safely
for the season and is ready to
get the job done.
Here are tips to help
1. Read your owners manual. Follow all guidelines for
your outdoor power equipment
and familiarize yourself with
the controls. If you have lost
your manual, look it up online
(and save a copy on your computer for easy reference in the
future).
2. Inspect equipment. Check
the air filter, oil level and the
gasoline tank. Also check loose
belts and missing or damaged
parts. Replace any parts needed or take your equipment to
a qualified service representative for servicing.
3. If you have gasoline-powered equipment and didnt
empty the tank before winter
storage, drain the fuel now.
You should never leave fuel
sitting in the gas tank of your
equipment for more than 30
days. Untreated gasoline (without a fuel stabilizer) left in the
system will deteriorate, which
may cause starting or running
problems or damage the fuel
system.
4. Protect your power by
only using E10 or less fuel in
gasoline-powered
outdoor
power equipment. With todays
higher ethanol content fuels,
most manufacturers are recommending a fuel stabilizer
be used, especially if you dont
use up all the gas purchased
right away. Some gas stations
may offer 15 percent ethanol
(E15) gas or higher ethanol fuel
blends, but any fuel containing
more than 10 percent ethanol
can damage–and is illegal to
use in– small engine equipment not designed for it.
5. Store fuel safely. Label
your fuel can with the date of
purchase and ethanol content
of the fuel. Never put old gas
in your outdoor power equipment. If you dont know the
date of purchase, dispose safely
of the fuel in the can and buy
fresh fuel. Always store fuel
out of the reach of children or
pets and in approved containers.
6. For battery-powered
equipment, recharge only
with the charger specified by
the manufacturer. A charger
that is suitable for one type
of battery pack may create a
risk of fire when used with
another battery pack. Follow
all charging instructions and
do not charge the battery pack
or tool outside the temperature
range specified in the instructions.
7. Store batteries safely.
When the battery pack is not
in use, keep it away from other
metal objects, like paper clips,
coins, keys, nails, screws or
other small metal objects,
that can make a connection
from one terminal to another.
Shorting the battery terminals
together may cause burns or a
fire.
8. Clean your equipment and
store it in a dry place. Remove
any dirt, oil or grass. Clean
equipment will run more efficiently and last longer. Never
store your equipment in a place
that is damp or wet.
Small business owners advocated for tax
fairness at last weeks Small Business Day
Last week, small business
owners from across Kansas
gathered in Topeka for NFIBs
Small Business Day on March
11. One of the biggest issues
small business face in Kansas
is a major tax disadvantage.
Small Business Day began
with Senate Tax Committee
Chair Senator Caryn Tyson.
Tyson briefed small business
owners on whats happening
with small business legislation. Senate President Susan
Wagle then gave her update
before small business owners
headed to the House floor and
heard from Majority Leader
Dan Hawkins. Afterward,
members shared their small
business stories with local lawmakers.
In 2017, President Donald
Trump signed the Tax Cut
Jobs Act into law, which has
been a boon to many small
business owners across the
country. Section 199A of the
law, the small business deduction, allows small business
owners that are organized as
pass-throughs to deduct 20%
of their qualified business
income from an S-Corp, LLC,
sole proprietorship, or partnership. Most small business owners say its critical for their
companies, with 42% saying it
is very important and 30%
saying its somewhat important. You can lean more about
the deduction and how its benefiting small business here. A
new NFIB poll found that 65%
of small business owners say
the Tax Cut Jobs Act positively affected their personal tax
liability and 54% saying it had
a positive effect on their business. You can find that new
poll here.
However, small business
owners in Kansas have NOT
seen these benefits. Thats
because Kansans cannot itemize income dedications on
state returns and take a higher
standard deduction on federal
returns. That has resulted in
many small business owners
in Kansas not only left out on
tax breaks, but getting slapped
with a higher tax bill. Kathy
Peterson of Heartland Seating
paid $5,000 more for tax year
2018. The Shawnee small business owner had planned on hiring a salesperson in January
of 2019, but she had to put that
hiring off. Kathys small business, which sells bleachers,
employs 15 Kansans right now.
Kathy wants to hire at least
two more workers but she
cant because she owes the government so much more money.
Kansas bad tax policy is prohibiting Kathy from growing
her business and employing
more Kansans. Last year, lawmakers passed legislation that
would decouple the state from
federal tax code, however, Gov.
Laura Kelley vetoed that bill.
On Small Business Day, Kathy
will be asking her lawmakers
to again bring up legislation
that would decouple Kansas
from the federal changes made
in the Tax Cut Jobs Act. Kathy
will be at Small Business Day
and is available to talk with the
media.
Kansas legislative session
started January 13th and lawmakers have been busy as
they work their way through
legislation that could have a
big impact on small business.
NFIBs top legislative issues
this year include property tax
reform, protecting small business from bogus litigation,
and opposing employer mandates such as a minimum wage
increase and paid leave. You
can read more about the issues
here.
Kansas needs to get with
the program and allow hard
working, job creating Kansas
business owners to benefit the
way many other small business owners across the country are benefiting under the
Tax Cut Jobs Act. Many small
business owners in Kansas are
being stifled by high tax bills
and denied the opportunity
to grow, hire more workers,
and keep the Kansas economy
strong. Small Business Day is
the perfect opportunity for our
small business owners to share
their stories with lawmakers
and explain how this bad policy is holding our state back,
said NFIB State Director in
Kansas, Dan Murray. Murray
will also be available to talk
with media.
Colony Christian Church Church – The Body of Christ
Darren McGhee gave the
Communion
Meditation,
"Folding the Laundry" from
becomingcloser.org. So, how is
folding the laundry like communion? Like the laundry,
communion is done with ordinary things: wine and bread.
It's the presence of Christ that
transforms them. They are
both a time of setting things in
order. With the laundry, you
fold and stack the clothes into
neat piles. During communion,
if there is some part of your life
that is not right, bring it to God
and ask him to set it in order.
Also, no one usually disturbs
you when you're folding the
laundry, just like during communion. This gives you time to
listen to God and reflect on his
voice. They are both a time of
cleansing, your laundry with
soap… your soul with the body
and blood of Jesus Christ.
Pastor Chase Riebel gave
the sermon on "Church – The
Body of Christ". Christ is the
head of the church, the first of
everything, and God's embassy
is the church here on Earth.
God uses the church to display
his wisdom to all unseen rulers
and principalities. Each of us
has an important function in
the church, and God equips
us to do his work and to build
up the church. We must all
learn, teach, grow and train
together. We need training
from mature Christians to be
productive and we must guard
ourselves from the evil one.
The elders of the church are
God's managers, called to care
for those who God has entrusted to them. Just as the body has
many parts, the church members have many parts and functions, but are one together. All
the different parts are needed.
If everyone provided the same
4B
LOCAL
function, there would be a lot
that goes undone inside the
church. Just like all the parts
of your body have different
"jobs" to do, but are best when
working as one. Hear this sermon in its entirety at www.colonychristianchurch.org. (Ref:
Colossians 1:18; Acts 2:17-18 &
21, 20:28; Ephesians 3:10, 4:12
& 16; Titus 1:7-9; 1 Peter 5:2-5;
Judges 7; 1 Corinthians 12:1227)
Mens Bible study Tuesday
mornings at 7:00. Womens
Bible study Tuesday mornings
at 8:00. Adult Bible Study and
Youth Group Wednesday evenings at 7:00.
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
REAL ESTATE
propso
1×3
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
1 x 3
weber
505 Garrison, Westphalia
FOR SALE BY OWNER
3BD, 2 bath, detached
garage & carport, new roof,
large backyard, $90,000
(620) 364-9087
(785) 204-0685
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
Steel
Cargo/Storage
Containers available In Kansas
City & Solomon Ks. 20s 40s
45s 48s & 53s Call 785 655
9430 or go online to chuckhenry.com for pricing, availability
& Freight. Bridge Decks. 40×8
48×86 90 x 86 785 655 9430
chuckhenry.com
Are you behind $10k or more
on your taxes? Stop wage &
bank levies, liens & audits,
unfiled tax returns, payroll
issues, & resolve tax debt FAST.
Call 855-462-2769
A Place for Mom has helped
over a million families find
senior living. Our trusted, local
advisors help find solutions to
your unique needs at no cost to
you. Call 1-785-329-0755 or 1-620387-8785.
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
Lowest Prices on Health
Insurance. We have the best
rates from top companies! Call
Now! 855-656-6792.
Attention
Medicare
Recipients! Save you money
on your Medicare supplement
plan. Free quotes from top
providers. Excellent coverage.
Call for a no obligation quote
to see how much you can save!
855-587-1299
Viagra and Cialis Users!
Theres a cheaper alternative
than high drugstore prices!
50 Pills Special $99.00 Free
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call Now! 855-850-3904
Best Satellite TV with 2 Year
Price Guarantee! $59.99/mo
with 190 channels and 3 months
free premium movie channels!
Free next day installation! Call
316-223-4415
Get
A-Rated
Dental
Insurance starting at around $1
PER DAY! Save 25% on
Enrollment Now! No Waiting
Periods. 200k+ Providers
Nationwide. Everyone is
Accepted! Call 785-329-9747 (M-F
9-5 ET)
Orlando + Daytona Beach
Florida Vacation! Enjoy 7
Days and 6 Nights with Hertz,
Enterprise or Alamo Car
Rental Included – Only $298.00.
12 months to use 866-934-5186.
(Mon-Sat 9-9 EST)
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
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
HELP WANTED
Gestal – is currently seeking a
motivated, organized individual for Office Administrator at
our Garnett location. Part-time
position with some benefits.
Contact (419) 308-9053 or Hyatt.
frobose@jygatech.com mc17t3*
MISCELLANEOUS
Hot Water Pressure Washers
– New or reconditioned. Parts or
service most makes. Soaps and
chemicals. Wholesale Washer
Company, (620) 583-2421. fb25t4*
Louisville Slugger – Xeno X19
fastpitch softball bat. 33/23.
Bought new and used last
month of 2019 high schoo season. $175. Boombah bat bag,
like new, black and red, $30.
Call after 6pm or text (785) 2292000.
mc10tf
Spring Cleaning Piano Sale
thru March 28th! Over 100
pianos priced to sell now.
Steinway, Yamaha, Baldwin
and more from $688! MidAmerica Piano, Manhattan,
www.piano4u.com,800-950-3774
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
In addition to the government, residents,
city planners and businesses all use
census data to improve your community.
Find out how communities use census
data at kansascounts.org.
2×4
kpa census
Make Kansas Count in 2020
by completing your census form.
Quality Hometown Sales & Service!
3×3 beckmans
TIRE PRICE MATCH GUARANTEE
Provide us with a better
price at the time of puchase
and well match it.
Coupon Code: 201
Expires: 12-31-2020
Find a better price within 30 days of the purchase and well
refund the difference. *Eligible Tire Brands: BFGoodrich,
Bridgestone, Continental, Dunlop, Firestone, General,
Goodyear, Hankook, Kelly, Michelin, Pirelli and Uniroyal.
2017 Chevrolet Cruze
LT Hatchback
19,000 Miles, RS Package, Rear
Spoiler, Sport Body Kit, Heated
Front Seats, Remote Start,
Power Driver Seat
$15,400
19,000 Miles, All-Wheel Drive,
Power Driver Seat, Heated
Front Seats, Remote Start,
Power Sunroof
$17,400
2016 Chevrolet
Equinox LT
Director of Public Works
Cityofofgarnett
Garnett, Kansas
3×5 city
Streets are always cracking, water pipes break, and we need help maintaining it
all! If you love working with your hands and equipment to fix things, this could be just the
position for you and the perfect place to grow your career. In this role youll oversee a great
group of employees in the public works department which handles streets and stormwater, wastewater, water and gas distribution, and refuse services.
One of your first priorities will be to learn about the full services provided by the
City of Garnett. Experience in Municipal Government and the above mentioned areas are
big positives for the individual interested in this position. This position is ideal for someone
who thrives off a fast-paced, problem-solving career. If this sounds like a good fit for you,
stop in and visit with our HR Director, or fill out an application from our website.
The ideal candidate will have experience in operating heavy equipment and a
working knowledge of plumbing and construction techniques. Positives would include
having a Commercial Drivers License (CDL), Class III Water License, Class II Wastewater License, and either a High School Diploma or GED. We will train the right candidate however.
The hired candidate is required to have obtained their CDL or be Operator Qualified in the
gas distribution system within six months of hire.
For a complete job description and application, stop
by City Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or apply online at www.
simplygarnett.com. Salary based on qualifications, $55,000$72,000. The position will remain open until filled, with the first
review of applications occurring on March 31st . EOE
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
5B
Need a place
to hang your hat?
Check out our
LOCAL
Real Estate Classifieds!
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
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
MISCELLANEOUS
Recently diagnosed with lung
cancer and 60+ years old? Call
now! You and your family may
be entitled to a significant cash
award. Call 866-327-2721 today.
Free Consultation. No Risk.
New Authors Wanted! Page
Publishing will help you
self-publish your own book.
Free
author
submission
kit!
Limited offer!Why
wait? Call now: 855-939-2090
LAWN & GARDEN
Countryside Greenhouse
– 28639 NW Kiowa Road, 5 miles
West of Garnett off Hwy. 31.
baskets, flowers, planters and
vegetables, plants.
mc17t2*
LAWN & GARDEN
Lawncare Services – Tyler
Stifter. Mowing, trimming,
light tree removal. (785) 3049354.
mc17t6*
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. must have 25
or moe trees. Call (916) 232-6781
in St. Joseph for details.
mc10tfn
Got Land? Our Hunters will
Pay Top $$$ To hunt your land.
Call for a free info packet &
Quote. 1-866-309-1507 www.
BaseCampLeasing.com
WANTED
Farm Land Wanted
Wanted: Farm land to lease:
We need 10-15 acres with barn
and/or sheds for animals. We
are searching for land close to
Garnett/Greeley/Welda/Harris/
Richmond/Westphalia areas.
We have sheep and goats so
pasture land can be overgrown
as the goats will eat it down.
We would like to have it
fenced, but if not we will consider if suitable in other ways.
Please call (913) 285-1705 or
(620) 204-0252. We are moving
to Garnett in April and would
like to bring
farm animals closer.
1 x 3
dubois
SERVICES
1×2
edg
Check out our
Monthly Specials
NOTICES
SERVICES
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tfn
ryter
(913) 594-2495
Happiness is…using your local
merchants coupons from the
Anderson County Reviews
Spring Sweepstakes.
Shop
local and save! mc17t3
Mundell Outdoors, LLC
mundel
Driveway Repair Custom Hauling
Pasture Clearing Excavation
Gradework Gravel Top Soil
(785) 448-8186
Call for a quote.
HAPPY ADS
WANTED
Vendors – local artisians
and collectors for newly
opened Prairie Home Market
at 600 North Maple. Vintage,
hand-crafted, antiques, repurposed.
fb18t7*
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Happiness is . . . returning
your Anderson County Review
Spring Sweepstakes entry
for your chance to win! Just
stop by our office at 112 W.
6th or mail your entry to us.
Remember the deadline is
March 31 at 5 p.m. –so act now!
mc 17t3
Happiness is . . . A Crest scholarship fundraiser! Chicken
& Noodles & Bingo – Friday,
March 27, 5:30pm, Bingo starts
at 7pm at Crest High School.
Sponsored by Colony-Crest
Alumni.
mc17t1*
Opening April 7!
2×2 Garden Gate Greenhouse
garden(formerly
gateKeims new location & owners)
Annuals Bedding Plants Hanging Baskets
Vegetable Plants. Early vegetable plants
ready (onion plants, broccoli, etc.) Stop in now!
10003 NW 1600 Rd Westphalia
(from 7th St. in Garnett west 15 miles.
(785) 489 -2483 Hrs: Tues-Fri 9-6 Sat 9-4
2×3
Positions available:
parkview
CNA day and night shift, full time
CMA evening shift, part time
Dietary Aide, part time
Life Enrichment Coordinator
2018, 2019 designated Great Place to Work!
Apply at www.parkviewheights.com
101 N. Pine St. Garnett, KS.
(785) 448-2434
You name it,
Card of Thanks
Thank you to all our
friends who remembered us with prayers,
cards, memorial donations, food & visits. Your
support at the time of
Melvins passing was
comforting and very
much appreciated.
1 x 3
prather
Thank you
Richard and Dolores
Norman and Cindi
Sherry and Terry
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Spray Foam Insulation and more
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
Guest Home Estates
2×2
guest homes
is looking for full-time CMAs, shift varies, who is
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.
Land Auction
320 acres Coffey County diversified farm property
New Strawn, KS
2×5
Agent Notes: This is a productive diversified land use agricultural
property
which has
well managed and adjoins the Wolf Creek
swift
nbeensure
Nuclear Power Plant property. Paved rd. Good hunting possibilities
March 31, 7 pm New Strawn Community Center
Property Location: 1 mile east of intersection of 17th Road & Hwy 75
2×2
jb
2×4
gates rubber
1450 Montana Road Iola, KS
Nutrition Site
2×3
Coordinator
eckaaa
East Central Kansas Area Agency on Aging Nutrition program is looking for a full time enthusiastic, detail oriented person to coordinate the
elderly meal program in 6 counties. Bachelor
Degree and experience with the elderly preferred. Apply in person at ECKAAA 117 S Main
St, Ottawa, Ks. or call 785-242-7200 or email
eckaaa@eckaaa.org, to
request an application and
job description. EOE
Anderson County Sheriffs Office
Is taking applications for
2×3
Deputy
Sheriff
And.
Co.
The Anderson County Sheriffs Office has two Deputy Sheriff
Sheriff
openings.
Must be 21 years old, high school diploma or its
equivalent, and a valid drivers license. No experience starting pay $16.88, certified officer $17.41 and up to a 25%
increase based on experience.
Call (785) 448-5678 for application
or stop by 135 E. 5th Avenue in Garnett.
ANCOSO is an equal opportunity employer and complies
with veterans preference laws. 03-2020
Machine Operators Needed
You may apply at the kiosk in the facility from 7am
to 3pm or online at Gates.com
Pre-employment background checks, drug screen
and a physical ability testing required.
Benefits available within 30 days
Equal Opportunity Employer
CUSTOM APPLICATOR
OTTAWA, KS
2×4
ottawa coop
Description: Full-time position. Responsibilities include operating
spray and spreading equipment in a safe, efficient manner during
field application of agricultural products. This position would also
be trained in other areas throughout the cooperative to help when
needed. One must be available to work 40 hours a week and
available to work overtime during busy times which include
evenings and weekends as needed.
Qualifications: A class A CDL with hazmat endorsements (required or
willing to obtain within 90 days)
Chemical application experience (preferred)
An agricultural background (preferred)
Ability to maneuver equipment 50- 100 pounds
Pass a DOT drug test and be qualified to driver per DOT regulations
Benefits: 401K
Cooperative Retirement Plan
Health Insurance including dental and vision
Competitive wages
Apply online @
www.ottawacoop.com
or stop by one of our
branches to get an
employment application.
with substantial wildlife populations on the Wolf Creek property.
Legal: NW/4 & W/2 NE/4 & E/2 SW/4 of Sect. 26-20-15, CF Cy KS
Seller: Clara R. Williams Trust
See website for photos, bidder pre-registration & terms
320 acres – A diversified half section with 25 acres of upland
terraced farm ground, 9 acres of CRP and the balance in
pasture, meadow, waterways and road
Adjoins Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant property. Abundance
of wildlife; good hunting possibilities.
The final payment on CRP contract occurs this year
Pasture: Good stand of native grasses well managed; mostly
open with wooded draw; several ponds & average fence.
Paved 17th Road on south. Gravel Rd frontage on W & N sides.
Terms: $50,000 earnest money deposit at the conclusion of the
auction. Possession as early as April 7. Closing on or before
April 30, 2020. See website for complete terms.
6B
LOCAL
KDOT partners with tech companies
to grow Kansas Aviation across state
TOPEKA – The Kansas
Department of Transportation
will announce the addition of
UPS Flight Forward (UPSFF),
Vigilent and Lemasters Group
Consulting Services as the
newest members of the Kansas
Unmanned Aerial Systems
(UAS)
Integration
Pilot
Program (IPP) during Aviation
Day at the Capitol on March 12.
UPS Flight Forward has
a very positive relationship
with KDOT Aviation, and we
look forward to contributing
decades of flight risk management expertise toward achieving their strategic objectives.
We also believe Kansas culture
of innovation is fertile ground
for fresh growth in the aviation industry that will advance
our vision for future UAS delivery solutions, said Myron
Wright, President of UPS Flight
Forward.
More than 1,000 participants
were expected during Aviation
Day activities at the Capitol last
Thursday, March 12, from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. in the rotunda
area.
UPSFF,
Vigilent
and
Lemasters Groups new ventures in Kansas will join a
population of over 700 Kansas
companies that produce $20.6
billion state economic impact
from aviation.
We are thrilled to have
KDOTs Aviation program
work together with these
industry-leading organizations
and consider these new part-
nerships key to unlocking the
potential of UAS in way that
ensures flight safety and protects personal privacy, said
Kansas Secretary Julie Lorenz.
The Kansas UAS IPP team
has achieved a number of firsts
in aviation – the first UAS
inspection of an international airport, the first statewide
unmanned traffic management
system and the first UAS flight
beyond-line-of-sight without
ground radar, among others.
KDOT Aviation leads this effort
and represents 34 industry,
university and state agency
partners working together to
advance economic development
through transportation technologies that either make money,
save money or save lives.
By Frank J. Buchman
Horses can almost make a
deaf person hear.
Certainly horses add to lifes
pleasures for those lacking or
deficient in the sense of hearing.
Fact became most obvious
at a recent horse seminar in
Garnett where a deaf couple
and friends were all smiles listening to the program.
Gayla Staats, daughter of
Mike and Sharon McGlynn of
Paola, served as sign language
interpreter for the obvious
horse lovers.
My parents have had horse
for more than 25 years. Mom
is 80 years old and still loves
riding horses, Staats said.
Deaf people are perhaps
more knowledgeable about
horses than many horseback
riders and enthusiasts.
When they cant hear, a deaf
person is more vision sensitive to the horse. They become
alert to changes in body tension and how a horse reacts
to variations in environment,
Staats clarified.
Mrs. McGlynn has been deaf
since she was two-years-old
after being stricken with chicken pox causing high fever. It
started in the whites of her eyes
and ended up causing a loss of
hearing, Staats explained.
Raised on a farm, Mrs.
McGlynn always had a strong
affection for livestock especially horses liking to ride at an
early age. Mom went to the
deaf school at Olathe where she
met my dad. They started dating when she was 12 and he was
13, Staats said.
After high school graduation, Mom had an opportunity
to attend college for the deaf,
but decided shed rather marry
my dad. Theyve been married
more than 58 years.
Both of the McGlynn couples daughters have normal
hearing and speech. We communicated by sign language.
It was what seemed a normal
childhood for us growing up
with deaf parents, Staats said.
People dont realize it, but
children learn to communicate
by sign language before they
can speak, she verified. Our
grandparents had normal hearing so we learned to talk with
them and other family members.
Today both Staats and her
sister continue as sign language interpreters serving deaf
people in a variety of ways.
While deafness can be genetic, that is not always the case.
Five of 13 children in my dads
family were deaf. But my sister
and I have normal hearing and
so do my daughters and others
in our family, Staats said.
Being deaf seems only to
enhance interests, knowledge
and abilities with horses. The
McGlynns and their friends
enjoyment and understanding
the horse program at Garnett
was obvious as Staats interpreted the speakers in sign language.
Mom found out about the
program and really wanted to
go. She asked me to take them
and their friends to sign language interpret the meeting,
Staats said. They wanted to
learn more about caring for
older horses because Moms
horse Moonshine is 30-yearsold.
They all really enjoyed Dr.
Fred Gardner as the speaker
who has been their horse veterinarian for many years, she
added.
Despite her age and deafness, Mrs. McGlynn stills loves
to ride and does every chance
she gets. My daughter Carra
Mader and I go on horseback
trail rides with her and we all
have such a good time,
Although Mike McGlynn
doesnt ride, he and the family friends enjoy owning and
caring for horses. Hes supportive of Mom riding because
she enjoys it so much. Mom is
fortunate to have such a good
horse that she can ride completely on her own, Staats
said. Mom and Moonshine
have an understanding relationship with each other.
Actually, the McGlynns
have had a handful of horses
that have worked well for them
riding despite their inability to
hear.
Gayla and her husband
Doug Staats have four horses
of their own which get called
into use regularly as well.
When Mrs. McGlynn was
seriously injured in a car accident, being incapacitated for
several months, her biggest
fear was not being able to ride
again. A year later Mom finally got back up on her horse and
just cried and cried she was so
happy to be horseback again,
Staats said.
With a masters certificate
in sign language interpretation, Staats has worked with
deaf people in various capacities. Im now assisting with
video phone calls for a number
of the deaf, she said.
The old saying, The outside
of a horse is good for the inside
of a man, becomes even more
true when the person is deaf.
There is a seemingly natural
communication of love, relaxation and understanding.
Deafness becomes far less
sense issue thanks to horses
DAILY BREAKFAST SPECIALS 6 AM – 11 AM
2×2
Dutch Country
Monday: Cinnamon Swirl French Toast $5.25
Tuesday: Country Fried Steak & Eggs $6.95
Wednesday: Biscuits & Gravy $475
Thursday: 2 Maple Pecan Pancakes $5.25
Friday: The Haystack $5.75
Saturday: Fried Cornmeal Mush $5.75
You can still win part
of $1,000 in
CASH prizes in
the Reviews
309 N. Maple Garnett (785) 448-5711 www.dutchcountrycafe.com
Pharmacy
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
115 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6879
Lottery
leave you
wishing?
Traditional PA Dutch Cooking Bakery 100% Organic Coffee
Health Services
IR
ECTORY
3×6.5 D
Health
Directory
Eye Care
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 17, 2020
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
To advertise in this guide,
contact Stacey at
The Anderson
County Review
(785) 448-3121
or email
review@garnett-ks.com
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
SPRING
SWEEPSTAKES
Fill out and return the entry
from the March 3 Review!
(785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 review@garnett-ks.com
M-T-W-F
8-5
SAT 8-10
After Hours By Appt.

