Anderson County Review — March 7, 2017
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from March 7, 2017. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
The official newspaper of record for Anderson County, KS, and its communities.
www.garnett-ks.com |
March 7, 2017
SINCE 1865 151st Year, No. 29
(785) 448-3121
| review@garnett-ks.com
Contents Copyright 2017 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
Community theater
group opens
Rose and Walsh.
Daylight Saving
Time begins at 2 a.m.
Sunday, March 12
Area schools fall in
substate contests.
See pages 5A, 8A.
See page 1B.
E-statements & Internet Banking
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Dane Hicks
Law enforcement officials work the scene of a semi-trailer wreck on U.S. 169 between Garnett and Greeley Wednesday morning, March 1. The semi blocked both lanes of traffic, causing officials to reroute
vehicles most of the day until the roadway could be cleared. The driver did not appear to be injured and no other vehicles were involved. He was hauling heavy rolls of plastic sheeting.
City fires police chief
Few details offered
after chiefs departure
Friday afternoon
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Police Chief Kevin
Pekarek apparently was fired
Friday, March 3.
Few details were available
Monday, but Garnett City
Manager Joyce Martin confirmed Pekareks employment
was terminated Friday afternoon. She said it was a personnel matter and she could not
comment.
Martin expects to meet with
police officers Friday, March
10, and likely will appoint an
interim police chief. The senior
officer at the
department,
Kurt King,
currently
is
attending training
and
wont
be available
until then,
Martin said.
Pekarek
Pekarek
began working for the city as police chief
in May of 2011.
Pekareks departure leaves
the department with two
vacancies. A patrol position
has been vacant since around
September 2016, and the city
has been unable to attract qualified candidates. In the past,
both Martin and Pekarek have
bemoaned the difficulties of
finding qualified candidates for
local police vacancies.
Martin said she is not sure
why the city has such trouble
hiring police officers, but she
believes the current national
and political climate regarding law enforcement could be a
contributing factor.
A study by The National
SEE CHIEF ON PAGE 2B
City manager interviews to begin
Top 5 candidates will
have Skype interviews
with commissioners
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – City commissioners are expected to interview
city manager candidates this
week.
Commissioners expect to
conduct interviews Thursday,
March 9, with their top five
candidates using Skype, an
online program that allows
people to make voice and video
calls via computer.
But first, commissioners will
have a special meeting at 5 p.m.
Wednesday at City Hall to discuss interview questions. The
public is welcome to attend,
although the interviews will
be closed at the commissions
discretion, and the identities of
the candidates kept secret.
Theyll meet again at 6:30
p.m. Thursday, March 9, at the
USD 365 Board of Education
office because City Hall will be
in use. The Thursday meeting
will be conducted as a secret,
executive session to discuss
personnel. Commissioners will
conduct the Skype interviews
at that time.
Later, commissioners will
narrow their choices to two
or three candidates and will
schedule final, formal inter-
views at a later date.
A total of 35 candidates
applied for the city manager
position, Commissioner Jody
Cole said. Most have a bachelors and a masters degree
and experience in economic
development, she said. They
have between five to 20 years
in management experience.
Commissioners considered five
applicants highly qualified.
Overall, I am very excited
about the number of resumes
we received and the applicants qualifications, Cole
said. So far The League of
Municipalities has been true
to their word. They are great to
work with and they are workSEE CANDIDATES ON PAGE 2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Vickie Moss
Marty Holloran, left, and Dave Stanton cook fish outside the Knights Hall in Garnett Friday, March 3.
The Garnett Knights of Columbus will have more fish fry events on March 17 and March 31, during the
traditional Lenten season.
Principal to retire Banners removed after near-wreck
Kellstadt to retire
after 44 years in district
effective end of year
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Longtime educator and high school principal
Kenny Kellstadt has announced
his retirement at the end of the
school year.
Kellstadt has worked for
the district for 44 years. He
began conducting a work study
program that helped students
connect with local employers.
Later, he taught social science
classes. He continued teaching
and advising the work study
program until 1994, when he
moved into
administration. He
served
as
assistant
principal
from
1994
until
the
spring
of
Kellstadt 2007, and also
taught classes during that time. He became
principal at Anderson County
Junior/Senior High School in
2007.
Kellstadt said a variety of
factors contributed to his decision to retire this year. The
district is moving to a new
accreditation program, and he
thought it would be best if a
SEE PRINCIPAL ON PAGE 8A
Busy intersection cluttered
by signs, banners to promote
variety of community events
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – Signs and banners used to
publicize community events may have
nearly caused a wreck recently, city staff
reported. Such banners were removed,
and city officials are considering alternatives such as an electronic sign that can
be used for events.
Officials with the Kansas Department
of Transportation asked city staff for help
removing banners and signs from an
intersection at U.S. 59/Maple Street and
K-31/Park Road. Civic organizations and
other groups often displayed signs of various shapes and sizes on property near
Country Mart and AuBurn Pharmacy to
promote community events, such as dinners, barbecue contests and the annual
Cornstock music concert.
At times, the area becomes cluttered
with a variety of signs competing for
space near the intersection.
Garnett City Manager Joyce Martin
told commissioners during their regular meeting Tuesday, February 28, that
someone reported a near-miss of a wreck
because vision was obstructed by the
signs. As a result, All banners have now
been removed. Martin and commissioners discussed alternatives to notify passers-by of community events.
A suggestion was offered to allow banners along the median on Fourth Avenue
between U.S. 59 and downtown Garnett.
But commisioners and Martin said they
were reluctant to clutter the median,
which historically has been known as
The Great White Way for its street
lights and the stately old Victorian homes
that line both sides of the street.
I hate to see a dozen of those banners
go up and down that median, Martin
said.
Instead, city staff will research the
possibiity of adding an electronic billboard somewhere along the highway,
possibly near Fourth Avenue. The billboard could be used by civic organizations to let people know about various
events. Commissioner Greg Gwin suggested an electronic sign could be used as
community bulletin board.
Custom printed MAGNETIC SIGNS – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
PI(E) DAY
Pi Day is an unofficial holiday
commemorating the mathematical constant pi. Pi Day
is observed on March 14 (or
3/14 in month/day date format),
since 3, 1 and 4 are the most
significant digits of pi in the
decimal form. In 2009 the U.S.
House of Representatives supported the designation Pi Day.
Therefore, the Garnett Public
Library Friends of the Library
have decided to celebrate the
occasion by observing Pi(e)
Day at the library. Homemade
pie may be purchased by the
slice from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. All
proceeds benefit the Friends of
the Library.
VFW BREAKFAST
The Garnett VFW Post 6397
will have a breakfast from 7
a.m. to 9 a.m. Saturday, March
11. Menu includes biscuits and
gravy, Belgian waffles, bacon,
sausage and eggs.
SCAM PROTECTION
In Your Corner Kansas will
have a talk on Consumer
Protection Week at 2 p.m.
Thursday, March 9, at the
ACJSHS Auditorium in Garnett.
Kansas Attorney General
Derek Schmidt will talk about
how to protect yourself from
scams and identity theft. For
more information, go to www.
InYourCornerKansas.org.
FISH FRY EVENTS
Garnett Knights of Columbus
will have a fish fry from 5 p.m. to
7:30 p.m. at the Knights Hall on
Friday, March 17; and Friday,
March 31.
GO-KART RACES
Go Kart Races will be April
8-9 and June 10-11. Organizers
are looking for workers for both
weekends. Please call 4483826 for more information and
to sign up.
BBQ CONTEST
The G-Town Smokin Showdown
BBQ Contest will be April 28-29.
This is a KCBS Sanctioned
Contest. Enter your team today.
Call 448-3826 for more information and to register. Also selling
preordered ribs on Friday, April
28. Please contact a Garnett
Knight to place your order.
PRAYERS CONTINUE
Now that the election is behind
us, prayers will continue at the
Archer Room of the Garnett
Library for national healing and
reunification. Meetings are from
7 a.m. to 8 a.m. every Monday.
You may stay for the entire hour
but are free to come and go
whenever you are able.
TOPS GROUP
TOPS, Taking Off Pounds
Sensibly, is a national not-forprofit weight loss support group.
It offers weekly meetings with
private weigh-in, healthy eating
programs and information, eating plan with no food to buy,
online resources, group support,
contests and recognition. Cost
is $32. For more information, go
to www.tops.org. To learn more
about when and where the local
group meets, contact Beverly at
(316) 755-1055 or email bednasek@networksplus.net.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT
CELEBRATE RECOVERY
Celebrate Recovery, a Biblebased Christ-centered recovery
program for those who struggle with lifes hurts, habits and
hang-ups, meets each Monday
evening at the Garnett Church
of the Nazarene. It begins at
6 p.m. with meal and fellowship, followed by worship service
and small groups until 8:30 p.m.
Childcare is provided. Recovery
is for a variety of lifes hurts, not
just those with alcohol or drug
problems. Call (785) 304-1819
for information.
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 A.M. on February 21, 2017
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 Supervisor,
met with the commission. He
brought in the just compensation
for land acquisition for Sigg Farms
that the Appraiser presented at
the previous meeting. He will be
contacting the landowner to see if
they will accept the offer. The shop
received a quote from Hampel Oil,
Iola, Ks. to provide bulk Mobil oil
for all oil needs for the shop. The
commission approved for the shop
to purchase oil from Hampel Oil.
Road permit 2017,0221:1 for Paul
Stephens was presented to the
Commission. They will be crossing at 300 Road and Wyoming
Road. Chairman Howarter signed
and approved the permit. The letters for dust control to owners will
be mailed out soon. The Road
Department has a contract with
Bobcat that will expire this year.
Bobcat brings a new machine
every year and does maintenance
with a replacement option also.
Lester is going to consider renewing the contract when its presented.
Appraiser
Steve Markham, Appraiser, met
the Commission to discuss replacing their 2005 Ford Explorer. The
Sheriffs Department is retiring
two vehicles that are in decent
condition that would be suitable
for the Appraisers Office needs.
The Commissioners approved for
the Appraisers Office to use one
of the retired vehicles as a field
vehicle. A transfer for $2,800 will
be made from reappraisal fund to
Sheriff fund to purchase vehicle.
The 2005 Explorer will be sold at
an upcoming auction and will sit at
the County Barn until it is sold.
Sanitarian
Don Lile, Sanitarian, met with
the Commissioners to let them
know he would be off work for
approximately 6 weeks.
Bids
Bids were presented and
opened for the ceiling plaster repair in the Courthouse
and painting in the Annex. The
Commissioners received bids from
Mark Powls for $2,065 and Robert
Steele for $2,255. Commissioner
Pracht moved and Commissioner
Mcghee seconded to accept the
bid from Mark Powls for $2,065 for
repair and painting.
City Of Garnett
Joyce Martin, City Manager, met
with the Commission in regards to
the roads that need repair. She
had asked the Commission if the
Road Department would be able
to chip and seal 2 roads this sum-
mer. The City is trying to prepare
their budget and would like get an
estimate of how much rock and oil
would cost. The Commissioners
will let Lester know to send numbers to the City.
Public Comment
Mike Burns was present to discuss the Planning And Zoning
meeting and windmill setbacks.
He feels the Commissioners need
to listen to the Zoning boards and
their research that has been done.
Jack Hiner was present to discuss
windmill setbacks and also about
the Planning And Zoning meeting
notifications of when/where their
meetings are held.
The meeting adjourned at 12:00
P.M. due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
February 23, Jerry L. Bowen,
Mary M. Bowen, Matthew W.
Bowen, And Cara L. Bowen To
Shaylin D. Robb, Lot 1 Block 4
Pinegars First Addition To Town
Of Colony.
February 23, Denjim Livestock
LLC., To Kevin M. Keeling
Revocable Trust Dated 4-20-2007,
The North Half And Southeast
Quarter Of Section 33-21-20 And
The South Half Of Section 28-2120 And The Southeast Quarter Of
The Northeast Quarter Of Section
28-21-20 Except 4 Acres Off
The West Side; A Strip Of Land
Containing 4 1/2 Acres Described
As Follows: Beginning 40 Rods
East Of The Northwest Corner
Of The Southwest Quarter Of
the Northeast Quarter Of Section
28-21-20, Thence East 9 Rods,
Thence South 80 Rods, Thence
West 9 Rods, Thence North 80
Rods To Pob.
February 23, Lilly M. Giles
To Charles David Coover And
Rosemary J. Coover, The West
30 Feet Of Lot 7, All Lot 8 And
The East Half Of Lot 9 Block 77 In
The City Of Garnett;
February 23, Melvin Ray Yoder
And Becky Yoder To Lyle D. Yoder
And Rebecca E. Yoder, Lots 1,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12,
13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 And 19
Block 4 In The Town Of Oneida,
Commonly Called Mont Ida.
February 24, Thomas P.
McKale Trustee And Thomas P.
McKale Living Trust Dated 9-181990 To McKale Family Farms
LLC., And in a separate entry:
February 24, George E. McKale
And Victoria McKale To McKale
Family Farms LLC., And in a separate entry: February 24, Clara M.
Firestone And Peter Firestone To
McKale Family Farms LLC.,; and
in a separate entry: February 24,
Kathleen M. McKale To McKale
Family Farms LLC.,; and in a
separate entry: February 24,
Elizabeth Detloff And Daniel
Detoff To McKale Family Farms
LLC. and in a separate entry:
February 24, George A. McKale
And Edith McKale To McKale
Family Farms LLC.; and in a separate entry: February 24, Bruce
Lane Barfield Trustee, Nancy
Jane Barfield Trustee, And Bruce
Lane And Nancy Jane Barfield
Trust Dated 1-28-2014 To McKale
Family Farms LLC; and in a separate entry: February 24, Joseph
C. Welte And Linda Welte To
McKale Family Farms LLC.; and
in a separate entry: February
24, Thomas R. Welte And Nanci
Welte To McKale Family Farms
LLC,; February 24, Anne P. Henne
And Ed Henne To McKale Family
Farms LLC; all described as
property including The Southeast
Quarter of Section 6-20-20 Except
Right Of Way Of LL&G Railroad;
And Also 20 Acres Off West Side
Of The Southwest Quarter Of
Section 5-20-20; And Also part
of The Southwest Quarter Of
Section 6-20-20; And All Part Of
The Northwest Quarter Of Section
35-19-20; And Also Part Of The
Southwest Quarter Of Section
26-19-20; And All Of The North
half Of Section 29-19-19 And
The North Half Of The Southwest
Quarter Of Section 29-19-19 and
part of the Southeast Corner Of
The Northeast Quarter Of Section
29-19-19.
February 27, Sandra J. Depoe
To Randall S. Stinnett And Vicki
Stinnett, Lots 15 And 16 In Block
1 In The City Of Kincaid, And Lots
10, 11 And 12 In Block 17 In South
Addition To The City Of Kincaid.
February 28, Mid America
Mortgage Inc., To Casa Properties
LLC., Lots 9 And 10 Block 7
Chapmans Addition To City Of
Garnett.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
February 23, Jason Squires
vs. Sierra Balthrop, petition for
divorce.
DOMESTIC CASES RESOLVED
February 28, Cameron Wade
Mitchell vs. Kara K. Mitchell,
divorce granted with division of
property and financial obligations.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
March 1, D. W. And Joeann
Garrison Living Trust vs. Austin
A. Linblad and Roxanne M.
Mietchen, default judgment for
cancellation of residential real
estate sale contract plus costs
and fees.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
February 23, Sandi Otipoby,
DDS, vs. Juli R. Carriger, asking
$390 plus interests, costs and
fees. Hearing set for March 14.
February 27, Ottawa Family
Physicians Chartered vs. Kevin
Dane Calley and Tara N. Calley,
transfer of venue to Anderson
County, asking $542.84 plus interests, costs and fees. No hearing
date listed.
February 28, Maple LLC, vs.
John Cox and Danielle Cox, asking $1,560 plus interest, costs and
fees. Hearing set for March 14.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
February 28, Ralph Leroy
Hamilton and Sandra Hamilton
vs. Wayne Lambert and Stacy
Gilkey. Defendant failed to appear,
default judgement for eviction plus
costs and fees.
February 28, Saint Lukes
Health System, Inc. vs. Traci M.
Guernsey and William W. Hill.
Defendant failed to appear,
default judgement for $13,280.12
plus interest and costs.
February 28, Saint Lukes
Health System, Inc. vs. Timothy
J. Clark and Tamara J. Clark.
Defendant failed to appear, default
judgment for $4,309.94 plus interest and costs.
March 1, Capital One Bank
(USA), N.A. vs. Emily N. Hampton,
asking $1,065 plus costs and fees,
order of dismissal due to lack of
service.
March 1, Synchrony Bank vs.
Angel Betts, asking $990.23 plus
costs and fees, order of dismissal
due to lack of service.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
February 27, James Michael
Prater, two counts of aggravated
assault with deadly weapon, one
count of criminal threat and battery, hearing set for March 28.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding Violations:
John Duncan Macdonald III, 80
mph in a 65 mph zone. Guilty
plea, $180 fine.
Sarah E. Martinez, 86 mph in a
65 mph zone. Guilty plea, $222
fine.
Allen Chet Modlin, 68 mph in a
55 mph zone. Guilty plea, $171
fine.
Alissa j. Ouellette, 75 mph in a
55 mph zone. Guilty plea, $213
fine.
Barry W. Scalf, 85 mph in a 65
mph zone. Guilty plea, $213 fine.
Joseph A. Smith Jr, 87 mph in
a 65 mph zone. Guilty plea, $231
fine.
Danielle Sumrall, 70 mph in a
55 mph zone. Guilty plea, $183
fine.
Cynthia Marie Vannatta, 74
mph in a 65 mph zone. Diversion
filed, $253 fee.
Robert A. Wittgartner, 74 mph in
a 65 mph zone. Guilty plea, $153
fine.
Shylonda N. Wright, 78 mph in
a 55 mph zone. Guilty plea, $240
fine.
Conner T. Yates, 79 mph in a 65
mph zone. Guilty plea, $177 fine.
Zachary W. Archer, 74 mph in
65 mph zone. Guilty plea, $153
fine.
Stephen Matthew Arndt, 88
mph in a 65 mph zone. Guilty
plea, $240 fine.
Benjamin Steven Bielenberg,
75 mph in a 65 mph zone. Guilty
plea, $153 fine.
Eric Dewayne Black, 81 mph in
a 65 mph zone. Guilty plea, $189
fine.
Sylvia J. Comstock, 68 mph in
a 55 mph zone. Guilty plea, $171
fine.
Cami Jo Corwin, 80 mph in a 65
mph zone. Guilty plea, $183 fine.
Carrie Ann Courtemanche, 70
mph in a 55 mph zone. Guilty
plea, $183 fine.
Gary R. Danner, 80 mph in a 65
mph zone. Guilty plea, $183 fine.
Bridget M. Duhme, 86 mph in a
65 mph zone. Guilty plea, $222
fine.
Tiffany Dawn Graham, 74 mph
in a 65 mph zone. Guilty plea,
Possible mumps case CANDIDATES…
reported at school
FROM PAGE 1A
Illness not confirmed
but mumps cases were
reported across state
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – USD 365 school
officials last week warned parents of a possible mumps case
at Anderson County Junior
Senior High School.
The disease has not been
confirmed. The individual who
was suspected of possibly having mumps is an adult, not a
student, according to a news
release issued by the school
district.
Mumps is a viral infection.
Symptoms start with fever,
headache, muscle aches, tiredness, and loss of appetite,
followed by swollen salivary
glands. It generally can be
prevented with immunizations given between ages 12
months to 15 months, and again
between ages 4 and 6.
The recent incident is the
second recent report of a possible mumps case in Anderson
County, but the first report was
found to be negative, according to Samantha Mason, RN
at the Southeast Kansas MultiCounty Health Departments
– Anderson County Office in
Garnett. It generally takes
about five days for the state
to determine if the illness is
actually mumps, she said.
Typically, the state issues a
notice if mumps is confirmed.
The state has confirmed
at least 17 cases of mumps in
Kansas as of Feb. 22. KDHE said
at that time there were seven
cases in Crawford County, four
cases in Douglas County, three
in Riley County and three in
Thomas County.
Between January 1 to
January 28, 2017, the Center for
Disease Control (CDC) reported
mumps infection in 27 states in
495 people across the U.S. From
year to year, mumps cases can
range from roughly a couple
hundred to a couple thousand.
For example in 2016, there were
5,311 cases reported to CDC,
and in 2012, there were 229.
Before the U.S. mumps vaccination program started in
1967, about 186,000 cases were
reported each year, but the
actual number of cases was
likely much higher due to
underreporting, according to
a report from the CDC. Since
the pre-vaccine era, there has
been a more than 99% decrease
in mumps cases in the United
States.
A report from KDHE
shows that about 91 percent of
Anderson County kindergarteners were immunized for measles, mumps and rubella (MMR)
on the first day of school for the
2014-2015 school year. Thats
higher than the state average of
88 percent. Immunization rates
for other childhood diseases
ranged between 88 percent to
96 percent in Anderson County,
and between 82 percent to 97
percent statewide.
Mason encouraged anyone
who was not vaccinated for
mumps or other dieases to seek
such vaccinations.
If you are showing symptoms of mumps or other illnesses, keep yourself isolated
to avoid spreading the disease,
Mason said.
ing hard to help us find a qualified and experienced city manager.
Commissioners said during
a meeting last week they would
not identify applicants without
permission, in order to protect
the privacy of the candidates.
There is no law in Kansas which
requires those interviews to
be secret, though government
agencies often interpret the law
to extend to interviewees under
employee privacy provisions in
the Kansas Open Meetings Act.
The next city manager will
succeed Joyce Martin, who is
retiring after 50 years working
$243 fine.
Laura A. Hawkins, 68 mph in a
55 mph zone. Guilty plea, $171
fine.
Gary P. Hoops, 78 mph in a 65
mph zone. Guilty plea, $171 fine.
Ervin E. Kauffman, 85 mph in
a 65 mph zone. Diversion filed,
$388 fee.
John E. Leis, 71 mph in a 55
mph zone. Guilty plea, $189 fine.
Seat Belt Violations:
Michael A. Robbins, guilty plea,
$10 fine.
Jerry Kirk West III, guilty plea,
$10 fine.
Other:
Augustus Jason Luedke, fishing
licenses required. Guilty plea,
$158 fine.
Shannon Louis Palmer, driving
on left in no-passing zone. Guilty
plea, $183 fine.
Terrance L. Schillig, basic rule
governing speed of vehicles.
Guilty plea, $183 fine.
Keith Neville Smith, endangering a child, guilty plea, $253 fine,
confinement 12 months- suspended.
Amber Lee Young, vehicles;
unlawful Acts; e.g. registration and
vehicles; liability insurance coverage required. Diversion filed,
$358 fee.
Katelynn M. Cauthon, failure to
yield at stop or yield sign. Guilty
plea, $183 fine.
Chad William Flinn, possession of opiate, opium, narcotic
or certain stimulant, guilty plea,
no fine listed. Sentencing hearing
set for April 4. Possession of
hallucinogenic drug, dropped by
prosecutor. Use/possession with
intent to use drug paraphernalia,
dropped by prosecutor, no drug/
tax stamp payment for marijuana
or controlled substance, dropped
by prosecutor.
Cade M. Goodman, liquor;
purchase/consumption alcoholic
liquor /CMB by minor, diversion
filed, $632 fees.
Kimberly Hunziker, failure
to yield at stop or yield sign.
Diversion filed, $333 fee.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Arrests
Russell Young, Lawrence, was
arrested on February 24 on suspicion of driving under the influence
and on suspicion of transporting
an open container.
Ashley Doser, Garnett, was
arrested on February 25 on suspicion of vehicle liability insurance
required and on suspicion of vehicle unlawful acts; e.g. registration.
James Prater, Garnett, was
arrested on February 26, on suspicion of aggravated assault, on
suspicion of battery, on suspicion
of criminal threat, on suspicion of
criminal damage to property and
on suspicion of use/possession
drug paraphernalia.
Timothy Corn, Ottawa, was
arrested on February 26, on suspicion of failure to yield at stop or
yield sign, on suspicion of theft of
property/services, and on suspicion of vehicle; unlawful acts, e.g.
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 3A
for the City of Garnett. Most
of her career was spent as city
clerk, and she was hired as city
manager in 2007.
Including Martin, just two
people have led the city for the
past 40 years or so. Rick Doran
served as city manager from
1978 to 2007.
Save the dates
Anderson County
3×7
anco fair
Got A Good Thing Growing
July 24-29
Saturday, July 15 Tractor Pull
Monday, July 24 Pre-entry, Fun Time Show Carnival
Tuesday, July 25 Parade, Style Revue, Ranch Rodeo,
Fun Time Show Carnival
Wednesday, July 26 Swine Show, Anderson County Fair Tent,
Kids Cash Grab, Pie Baking Contest, Fun Time Show Carnival
Thursday, July 27 Horse Show, Shodeo, Steer/heifer Show, Fun Time Show Carnival
Friday, July 28 Livestock Premium Sale, Free Will Donation Dance, Fun Time Show Carnival
Saturday, July 29 Demolition Derby, Fun Time Show Carnival
Fun Time Show Carnival
Monday – Saturday,
July 24-29
For more information call 785-448-6826.
Find us on
and on the web at www.andersoncofair.com.
CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE CLIP & SAVE
Anderson County Caregiving
Support will meet the fourth
Monday of each month at Park
Plaza North Club House, 105
Park Plaza North, Garnett. For
more information, call Phyllis
at ECKAAA, (800) 633-5621 or
(785) 242-7200.
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS FEB. 21
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NEWS IN
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
RECORDS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
RECORDS…
FOSTER
MARCH 30, 1922-MARCH 1, 2017
Elvin Foster, age 94, of Lone
Elm, Kansas, passed away on
Wednesday, March 1, 2017 at
Windsor Place, Iola, Kansas.
Elvin was the second of two
children born to Harry and
Bertha (Jones) Foster. He was
born on the Foster family farm
near
Lone
Elm, Kansas
on March 30,
1922. Elvin
attended
a
country
grade school
and then one
year at the
Foster
Lone
Elm
High School.
Elvin was a veteran of the
US Army Air Corps. He served
stateside as an aircraft maintenance inspector during World
War II from 1942 to 1945.
On August 8, 1942 he married
Virginia Rose in Iola, Kansas.
This union was blessed with
two children.
Elvin was a farmer, in addition to owning and operating
Fosters Insurance Agency.
Elvin was a member of the
Kincaid Masonic Lodge #338,
Fort Scott Scottish Rite, and
the Mirza Shrine, Pittsburg,
Kansas. He was also a member
of the Order of Eastern Star,
Golden Rod Chapter #163.
Elvin was preceded in death
by his wife, Virginia, on April
26, 2009; his parents; and sister,
Nadine Reed.
He is survived by his son,
Robert Foster of Chesapeake,
Virginia; daughter, Linda
Harvey and Randy Keller, of
Olathe, Kansas; companion,
Delma Nutz of Iola; seven
grandchildren, and six great
grandchildren.
Funeral services were
Sunday, March 5, 2017, at
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service, Iola. Burial with
Military Honors followed in the
Lone Elm Cemetery, Lone Elm,
Kansas.
In lieu of flowers, memorials
are suggested to the American
Heart Association or the
American Cancer Society and
may be left with the funeral
home. Condolences may be left
at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
HUNT
AUGUST 13, 1931-FEBRUARY 28, 2017
Golda M. Hunt died Tuesday,
February 28, 2017.
She was born a twin in rural
Anderson County, on August
13, 1931.
She married Lawrence
Selanders on September 7, 1953.
He preceded her in death
She married Vernon Hunt
on August 8, 1980.
Survivors include her husband, Vernon; her son Jay
Selanders and her daughter
Dr. Jean Selanders Dydell,
and Vernons daughter Vickie
Montgomery; and six grandchildren.
Funeral services were
Friday, March 3, 2017, at
the First Christian Church.
Burial followed at the Garnett
Cemetery. Condolences may
be sent to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com
Contributions in Goldies
memory are welcome at the
Garnett Senior Center and the
First Christian Church.
HARRISON
Virginia
C.
Rudisill
Harrison, 98, of Greeneville,
TN, formerly of Bethany,
MO, passed away Monday,
February 27, 2017.
She was a homemaker and
a member of New Hope Baptist
Church, prior to moving to
Welda, KS.
Survivors include three children and their spouses: Richard
A. Rudisill and Shirley, John
B. Rudisill III and Pauline,
Carol D. Smith and Ted; six
grandchildren: Pamela Hopke,
Jeffrey Rudisill, Veronica
Brooks, John P. Rudisill,
Jacque Chriss, and Kimberly
Philbeck; 14 great-grandchildren; two stepsons and their
wives, Verle Harrison and wife
Suzanne and Neil Harrison and
wife, Ann; and four step-grandsons, Jeff Harrison, Kevin
Harrison, Doug Harrison and
Brian Harrison.
She was preceded in death
by her parents: Audra Andrew
Jack and Leigh Black; first
husband: John Benjamin
Rudisill, Jr.; second husband:
Virgil E. Harrison.
In lieu of flowers, the family
asks that donation be made to
New Hope Baptist Church.
Graveside services were
Saturday, March 4, at New
Hope Cemetery in McFall, MO.
Arrangements by DoughtyStevens
Funeral
Home,
Greeneville, TN, and Roberson
Funeral Home, Bethany, MO.
FROM PAGE 2A
registration.
Angela Medlin, Garnett, was
arrested on February 27 on suspicion of use/possession drug
paraphernalia, and on an arrest
warrant.
Brianna Owen, Westphalia, was
arrested on February 27 on suspicion of operating a motor vehicle
without a valid license and on
suspicion of vehicle; unlawful acts;
e.g. registration.
Matthew Daly, Garnett, was
arrested on March 1, on suspicion
of purchase of liquor by a minor.
Jessica Figgins, Garnett, was
arrested on March 1, on suspicion
of purchase of liquor by a minor.
Incidents
February 10, a report of theft of
property/services in the 300 block
of East 2nd Avenue. Reported
Stolen was childs bicycle valued
at $60 and a 10 speed mountain
bike valued at $60.
February 21, a report of driving
while suspended and use/possession of drug paraphernalia in the
700 block of North Maple Street.
Reported seized was miscellaneous paraphernalia.
February 23, a report of theft
of property/services in the 100
block of Prairie Plaza Parkway.
Reported stolen was diesel fuel
valued at $750.
February 23, a report of theft of
property/services, vehicle; unlawful acts; e.g. registration, and failure to yield at stop or yield sign in
the 300 block of West 8th Avenue.
Reported stolen was a Kansas
tag. Recovered on February 25.
February 24, a report of driving
under the influence and transporting an open container in the
1400 block of South Maple Street.
Reported seized was an open container of peppermint schnapps.
February 25, a report of vehicle liability insurance required and
vehicle; unlawful acts; e.g. registration in the 400 block of West 1st
Avenue.
February 27, a report of use/
possession of drug paraphernalia
in the 400 block of South Maple
Street. Reported seized were
sharps container with 12 and a
white clutch containing drug.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Accidents
On February 21, a vehicle driven by Paul Allen Stephens, 47,
Kincaid, struck a deer that entered
the road while traveling Southeast
on Kansas Highway 31 by US
Highway 59. The front and right
of the car was damaged, but the
driver was not injured.
Incidents
FEBRUARY 22, 1925-MARCH 4, 2017
band, Phineas, Welda, KS;
Merle Yoder and wife, Esther,
Lincoln, Mo.; 31 grandchildren
and 38 great-grandchildren;
also surviving are two sisters, Cora Miller and Miriam
Jackson, and one brother,
Ervin Yoder.
In addition to her parents
and husband, she is preceded
in death by grandchildren,
Emily Borntrager and Randy
Geiser; three brothers, Ben,
Joe and Ira Yoder, and one sister, Fannie Yoder.
Funeral services will be held
at 9 a.m., Wednesday, March
8, at the residence of Jonas
Borntrager, 19916 NW 1600 Rd,
Garnett. Burial to follow in the
Amish Cemetery.
Visitation will also be held
at the residence of Jonas
Borntrager on Tuesday from 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m.
WOLKEN
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, February 28, 2017)
The Kansas Noxious Weed Law K.S.A.
2-1314 et seq requires all persons who own
or supervise land in Kansas to control and
eradicate all weeds declared noxious by legislative action. The weeds declared noxious are:
field bindweed, musk thistle, Johnson grass,
bur ragweed, Canada thistle, sericea lespedeza, leafy spurge, hoary cress, quack grass,
Russian knapweed, kudzu and pignut are
County Option Noxious Weed/Weeds declared
noxious by the Board of County commissioners
of Anderson County. Notice is hereby given
pursuant to the Kansas Noxious Weed Law to
every person who owns or supervises land in
Anderson County that noxious weeds growing
or found on such land shall be controlled and
eradicated. Control is defined Che
ad preventing
the production of viable seed and the vegetative
spread of the plant.
Failure to observe this notice may result in
the County:
1. Serving a legal notice requiring control
of the noxious weeds within a minimum of five
days. Failure to control the noxious weeds
within the time period allowed may result in
the county treating the noxious weeds at the
FEBRUARY 16, 1926-FEBRUARY 2, 2017
Herman F. Wolken died
Febraury 2, 2017.
He was born February 16,
1926, to Charley Wolken and
Josephine (List) Wolken in
Garnett.
He was drafted into the U.S.
Army in 1948 and served two
tours of duty on the Korean
Peninsula during hte Korean
War.
He married Clarabelle
Meyer in 1960 in Eagle Butte,
S.D.
He was preceded in death
by his parents; siblings Mary
Scheckel,
Greg
Wolken,
Elizabeth Rocker, Edward
Wolken, Leonard Wolken,
Arnold
Wolken,
Hubert
Wolken, Nicholas Wolken,
Martin Wolken, Hilda Wolken,
Luke Wolken, Gilbert Wolken,
Denis Wolken and Martha
Wolken.
Survivors include his
Las Vegas; daughters Marie
Puffpaff, Lori Kennedy, Dorene
Pickup and Beth Knotts; son
Timothy Wolken; nine grandchildren and other relatives.
Funeral services were
February 6, 2017, at Palm
Mortuary in Las Vegas. Burial
was in Southern Nevada
Veterans Memorial Cemetery,
Boulder City, Nev., on Feb. 9.
On January 8 a report of theft in
the 100 block of East 5th Street.
Reported stolen were two game
cameras valued at $278, and
a game camera valued at $79.
Reported recovered on February
11 were a game camera valued at
$179, a game camera valued at
$79 and three SD cards valued at
$36.
JAIL BOOKINGS
On February 23, Chadley
Michael Mueller, 33, Garnett,
was booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs Office for failure
to appear. Cash only bond set at
$1,000.
On February 24, Samantha
Emma Burgett, 32, Manhattan,
was booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs Office on suspicion of probation violation. Served
a two day writ, released February
26.
On February 24, Russell
William Young, 54, Garnett, was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of driving under the influence, bond set
at $2,500, and on suspicion of
transporting an open container, no
bond set. Released February 25.
On February 26, James Michael
Prater, 45, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriffs Office on suspicion of
aggravated assault, bond set at
$10,000, on suspicion of battery,
no bond set, on suspicion of criminal threat, no bond set, and on
suspicion of use/possession of
drug paraphernalia, no bond set.
Released March 1.
On February 25, Jamie Lee
Miner, 40, Mound City, was
booked into jail by Linn County
Sheriff Office for warrant for arrest.
No bond set. Released February
28.
On February 26, Timothy
Steven Corn, 34, Ottawa, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs Office on suspicion of vehicle; unlawful acts; e.g.
registration bond set at $1,000,
and on suspicion of theft by
deception, no bond set. Released
February 26.
On February 27, Angela Marie
Medlin, 35, Kansas City, MO., was
booked into jail by Garnett Police
Department on suspicion of use/
possession of drug paraphernalia.
Bond set at $500. Released on
own recognizance February 27.
On February 27, Cory James
Mann, 33, Paducah, KY, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs office, no charge
listed. No bond listed. Released
March 1.
On February 27, Angela Marie
Medlin, 35, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Kansas City Missouri
Police Department on suspicion of
being a fugitive from justice. No
bond set.
On February 28, Brianna
Rose Owen, 20, Westphalia,
was booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs office on suspicion of operating a motor vehicle
without a valid license, bond set
at $250, and on suspicion of vehicle: unlawful acts: e.g. registration, bond set at $250. Released
February 28.
On February 28, Maria Isabel
Guerrero, 52, Kansas City, was
booked into jail by Miami County
Sheriff Office for warrant for arrest.
Bond set at $5,000.
On February 28, Jonathan
Taylor Fraser, 30, Rantoul, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriffs Office for failure
to appear. Cash only bond set at
$418. Released March 1.
On March 1, Sara Elizabeth
Wise, 30, Garnett, was booked into
jail by Garnett Police Department
on suspicion of domestic battery,
bond set at $750, on suspicion
of disorderly conduct, bond set at
$500.
On March 1, Kathern Joann
Kratzberg, 34, Garnett, was
booked into jail by Garnett
Police Department on suspicion
of domestic battery, bond set at
$750, and on suspicion of disorderly conduct, bond set at $500.
JAIL ROSTER
Michael Jason Kinder was
booked into jail July 26 for
Anderson County to serve a sentence.
Colton Sobba was booked into
jail August 5 for Anderson County.
Court appearance.
Bradlee Pratt was booked into
jail September 10 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $25,000.
Has holds from Harvey County
and the City of Newton.
Phillip Proctor was booked into
jail September 19 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $50,000.
Serving 6 month sentence.
Roger Lindsey was booked into
jail December 16 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $100,000.
Steven Beals was booked
into jail January 23 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $50,000.
Jason Smith was booked into
jail February 1 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $15,000.
Jon Reed was booked into jail
February 8 for Garnett Police
Department. Bond set at $4,250.
Jason Hermreck was booked
into jail for Anderson County
February 15. No bond listed.
Justin Pate was booked into jail
for Garnett Police Department on
February 15. Cash only bond set
at $1,465.
Stephan Hyden was booked
into jail February 21 for Garnett
Police Department. Cash only
bond set at $4,121.
Karren Johnson was booked
into jail for Garnett Police
Department on February 21.
Bond set at $1,000.
Chadley Mueller was booked
into jail February 22 for Anderson
County. Cash only bond set at
$2,000.
John Miller was booked into jail
for Anderson County February 22
for Anderson County. Cash only
bond set at $500.
William Vandenberg was
booked into jail February 22 for
Anderson County. Bond set at
$50,000.
Kathern Kratzberg was booked
into jail March 1 for Garnett Police
Department. Bond set at $1,250.
Sarah Wise was booked into
jail March 1 for Garnett Police
Department with a hold from
Douglas County on an arrest warrant.
FARM-INS
Brad Gilchrist was booked into
jail June 30 for Miami County.
Rhonda Jackson was booked
into jail July 27 for Allen County.
Jaden Coats was booked into
jail December 15 for Linn County.
James Thornton was booked
into jail January 4 for Miami
County.
Joshua Knapp was booked into
jail January 6 for Allen County.
Robert Sparks was booked into
jail January 10 for Linn County.
Simone Smithey was booked
into jail January 20 for Linn
County.
Daniel Sumter was booked into
jail January 24 for Linn County.
Gary Keith was booked into jail
January 31 for Linn County.
Steven Clossen was booked
into jail February 1 for Douglas
County.
Cameron Heard was booked
into jail February 1 for Miami
County.
Jeremy Spurlock was booked
into jail February 2 for Miami
County.
Richard Martin was booked into
jail February 2 for Miami County.
Robert Farrier was booked
into jail February 20 for Douglas
County.
Dexter Carter was booked into
jail February 21 for Miami County.
Christopher Hargis was booked
into jail February 21 for Miami
County.
Elisah Pinkerton was booked
into jail February 22 for Miami
County.
Charles Milam was booked into
jail February 22 for S County.
Notice to control weeds
GENERAL NOTICE TO CONTROL NOXIOUS
WEEDS
YODER
Emma J. Yoder, 92, of
Garentt, died early Saturday
morning, March 4, 2017, at the
home of Phineas and Irene
Borntrager, following a period
of declining health.
She was born February 22,
1925, to Jerry and Amanda
(Mullett) Yoder in Thomas,
Okla., and was a member of the
Old Order Amish Church.
On March 27, 1947, she married Ora W. Yoder, who died on
September 8, 2003.
She is survived by four
sons and three daughters:
Jerry Yoder and wife, Konnie,
Garden City, Mo.;
Fern
Miller and husband, Wilmer,
Partridge, KS; Jay Yoder
and wife, Nettie, Mountain
View, Ark.; Perry Yoder and
wife, Nancy, Montezuma,
Ga.; Lorene Borntrager and
husband, Jonas, Garnett, KS;
Irene Borntrager and hus-
3A
REMEMBRANCES
1×2
AD
landowners expense and placing a lien of the
property if the bill is not paid within 30 days or,
2. Filing criminal charges for non-compliance. Conviction for non compliance may
result in a fine of $100 per day of non-compliance with a maximum fine of $1500.
The public is also hereby notified that it is
a violation of the Kansas Noxious Weed Law to
barter, sell or give away infested nursery stock
or livestock feed unless the feed is fed on the
farm where grown or sold to a commercial processor that will destroy the viability of the noxious weed seed. Custom harvesting machines
must be labeled with a label provided by the
Kansas Dept. of Agriculture and must be free of
all weed seed and litter when entering the State
and when leaving a field infested with noxious
weeds. Additional information may be obtained
from the Anderson County Weed Department or
by contacting the Kansas Dept. of Agriculture,
109 SW 9th, Topeka, KS 66612.
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4A
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
OPINION
Cops block farmers hemp bonanza
A curious spotlight is turning on the Kansas
Peace Officers Association and the Kansas Sheriffs
Association in their opposition to legalizing industrial hemp in Kansas.
What is being illuminated is an embarrassing
question: Why is it cops in a couple dozen states
and numerous other countries which have legalized hemp for agricultural use can tell it from its
cousin marijuana, but apparently Kansas law officers cant?
That seems to be the big rub in Kansas law
enforcements opposition to House Bill 2182, which
would legalize industrial hemp and allow it to be
cropped by Kansas farmers during a time when
farmers need all the help they can get due to low
commodity prices. Police and sheriffs associations
in Kansas seem resolute in their opposition: that
they cannot tell spindly-looking hemp from stouter
marijuana plants, and that they apparently cannot
learn the difference.
Backgrounder: Industrial hemp is defined by
having only 0.3 percent or less THC the drug in
pot that gets you stoned compared to marijuana
plants that contain concentrations of some 18%30% of the drug. You could smoke a bale of industrial hemp and never want a single Dorito.
Identifying hemp doesnt seem so complicated
to cops in non-Sunflower State jurisdictions. The
National Conference on State Legislatures notes
hemp is grown for its thinner, more fibrous stalk
and its seeds. The plant is cultivated to grow
taller, denser and with a single stalk. Marijuana,
grown for the budding flowers, tends to be grown
shorter, bushier and well-spaced.
But state law offers are resolute. Kansas farmers remain locked out of a market other states
are developing, aiming to feed an estimated $600
million to $2 billion annual U.S. market for hemp
products most of which is now being provided to
the American market by Canadian growers and
processors.
See, you can buy hemp-based snacks, clothes,
hemp oil dietary goods, beauty products, paper,
textiles and construction materials to your hearts
content in Kansas or anywhere else in the country and lots of people do theyre as legal as a
Snickers bar and a 7Up. But until 2014 it was illegal
to grow or process hemp in the U.S. For decades all
those U.S. purchases funded growers overseas.
The 2014 Farm Bill legalized research and commercial use in states that approved it. So far, 16
states have approved commercial growing and 20
have approved pilot and research programs aimed
at eventually giving their farmers the advantage
of a new cash crop. Kansas could have harvested
its first hemp crop ever this very year except
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
the same law officers organizations last year shot
down enabling legislation by spooking distracted
legislators with the hemp-ID worry.
Not only does growing the product hold promise
of more revenues for Kansas farmers, but processing facilities that turn the plant stems into fiber
and which extract oil from the seeds also offer
economic benefit through jobs and local tax base
development. They could be constructed and operated by local commercial developers or by farmers
cooperatives that would then direct those revenues
back into their own communities via sales and
dividends. Farmers fields as well as processing
facilities can be easily inspected by authorities and
fees charged to license them.
And if farmers and local businesses benefit,
so do cops. More jobs and legitimate money in a
market typically means less street crime; a richer
tax base means less resistance to funding public
services like police and sheriffs offices. Kansans
as a whole respect and honor the abilities and
duties performed by their law enforcement all
you have to do is look at various support efforts
and blue lights on peoples porches in the state. No
one wants to legalize hemp to give cops a harder
time.
What this spotlight on the cops shows is that
their opposition to hemp most likely isnt really based in some concern about identifying the
plants. Its most likely based in group-think fostered by a professional culture that has been
anti-marijuana since the 1930s. In cops minds,
hemp is pot, regardless of the science that proves
otherwise.
Thats unfortunate, because it places those we
trust to protect and serve in the position of hurting
Kansas farmers and thwarting jobs in the communities they call home.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Parents and visitors, beware of going to Crest School.
The Crest school has a big lice problem. High school,
middle school and elementary students have lice and
even teachers are getting it. The school administrators are not doing what they need to do to take care
of this lice problem. Parents, if you have students
going to this school, you need to speak up. Need to
spend more time fixing this health problem than on
starting baseball/softball. The Crest superintendent
and principal and the school board need to be held
accountable for letting this lice problem get out of
hand. The Crest School Board needs to get a backbone and get rid of this guy. A long time ago this
superintendent would not have been here long.
I have a pet peeve. Did you ever drive into another
town and see gravel driveways on the main drag
emptying into the streets and leave chalk and dust
all over the pavement? Not very often do you see
that, and when you do see it its always in less than
desirable small towns. Unfortunately, our own nice
Yes, deconstruct the Administrative State
Steve Bannon blew a dog whistle for constitutional conservatives when he spoke of
deconstructing the administrative state at
the Conservative Political Action Conference.
Although not everyone got the reference.
Trump haters interpreted the line as an incendiary call to decimate the federal government,
when the administrative state was a more
specific reference to a federal bureaucracy
that operates free of the normal checks of
democratic accountability.
The administrative state has been called
the fourth branch of government. It involves
an alphabet soup of executive agencies that
wield legislative, executive and judicial powers and thus run outside of and counter to
our constitutional system. The agencies write
rules that are laws in all but name, then
enforce them and adjudicate violations.
Boston University law professor Gary
Lawson describes how this works in the
case of, for instance, the Federal Trade
Commission:
The Commission promulgates substantive rules of conduct. The Commission then
considers whether to authorize investigations
into whether the Commissions rules have
been violated. If the Commission authorizes
an investigation, the investigation is conducted by the Commission, which reports its findings to the Commission. If the Commission
thinks that the Commissions findings warrant an enforcement action, the Commission
issues a complaint. The Commissions complaint that a Commission rule has been violat-
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
ed is then prosecuted by the Commission and
adjudicated by the Commission.
Welcome to government by commission.
James Madison called such an undifferentiated accumulation of powers, which the
Constitution is meant to avoid, the very definition of tyranny.
The administrative state is the friend
of anyone hoping to aggrandize government. President Barack Obama would
have been hobbled without it. He used the
Environmental Protection Agency and the
Federal Communications Commission to
institute sweeping new regulatory regimes
on carbon emissions and the internet. He
imposed his preferred social policies on
schools and universities through dear colleague letters issued by middling bureau-
crats. The administrative state was exactly
what he needed — a way to govern without
Congress.
A hostility to the administrative state isnt
necessarily a natural for Trump, who isnt a
limited-government conservative or a constitutional purist. Yet he campaigned against
regulation, he scorns the elite, and federal
bureaucrats have already made clear their
desire to frustrate his plans. Dethroning the
administrative state fits into a populist program to restore power to the people through
their elected representatives.
It is chiefly Congress that needs to reassert
itself. It has delegated its legislative powers
over the decades, and needs to pull them
back. As Adam White writes in an essay for
City Journal, it should pass the REINS Act to
require congressional approval for major new
regulations. It should revisit laws like the
Clean Air Act and the Communications Act of
1934 that give regulators too much leeway. It
should limit the deference that courts give to
administrative agencies.
None of this is the stuff of fire and brimstone, rather the mundane work of slowly
lurching the wheels of the federal government
back onto a constitutional track. Something
as entrenched as the administrative state
wont be deconstructed in one presidential
term, or two. If it can be dialed back, though,
it will be a significant victory for old-fashioned representative government.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Keep your eye on school funding mill levy
The Kansas Supreme Court has finally
issued its opinion on adequacy of financing
public schools, and while the justices didnt
put a pricetag on what it will cost, already the
low-ball estimates are about $535 million and
the big estimates are in the $700 million-andup range.
Now, thats got nothing to do with the state
budget deficit of about $270 million to finish
out this fiscal year on June 30 with at least a
couple bucks in the bank, which hasnt been
dealt with yet. Starting July 1, the state is
going to need another $500 million or so for
the Fiscal Year 2018 budget just to keep its
doors open.
It also has little to do with tax plansmostly income tax rate increases, or reimposing
taxes on non-wage income of LLCs and the
like just to keep government in business for
the next couple years.
Nope, its a whole different deal. Thats
where the decisionframed in terms of adequate spending on K-12 public schools to
enable all Kansas students to grow up with
good skills that will make them ready for further study or job training and eventually to
living somewhere beside their parents basementsdemands more spending of money
we dont have yet.
Thats where the remainder of this session
might get interesting, and were going to see
how well lawmakers frame their decisions.
Hmmm
There are two parts of this job handed to
the Legislature.
One job is to come up with a new school
finance formula to do what the Supreme
Court wants done and then to have someone
figure out what it would cost. Lots of room
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
for guessing there, and while legislators can
write a plan, somehow the court is going
to have to figure out whether that plan will
actually improve the outcome of schools in
the state.
Not sure how the court determines that
the plan is what it wants but the justices
will figure it out somehow. The next job for
lawmakers is to pay for that plan while struggling to finance the rest of state government.
The court decision apparently opens the
door to property taxes which generally are
used for local government and school fundingnot general state government expenditures.
The current statewide mill levy for K-12
education is 20 mills. Thats $20 per $1,000 of
valuation of property. And, that 20-mill levy
to the state for use for K-12 education started
back in 1998, so most folks are familiar with
it.
Now, thats just the K-12 levy for the state
which is returned to school districts. Local
school boards levy their own property taxes
within the districts, and those vary widely
depending on the valuation of property, of
local option budgets, bonds for new schools
and probably some other stuff.
But, that 20-mill levyweve nearly forgotten about it because it comes on the same bill
from the county with whatever taxes every
other local unit of government has authority
to levy. That 20-mill levy is usually a small
fraction of your total tax bill.
Well, nothing is certain yet, but you might
keep an eye on that little 20-mill levy because
its a relatively easy way to raise money for
schools and it just goes on that property tax
bill. Were relatively certain that lawmakers
can pass a law to make sure that any increase
in that tax isnt printed in red, or maybe larger type, or with arrows pointing to it.
Oh, and back when the 20-mill levy was
authorized in 1998? It was a tax cut, from 27
mills the year before, and a couple years of 35
mills. Anyone remember those property tax
cuts on behalf of public education?
Sowhile legislators try to fix the current
budget shortfall for this fiscal year and pile
on taxes to balance the budget for the next
couple years, lets remember that property
taxes are likely to be part of the mix for meeting increased spending to support public
schools.
Well see how that goes
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little town of Garnett has the same thing out on the
highway main street. It makes our town look junky
and cheap. Lets put in new curb and gutters on the
main drag and tell the businesses out there they have
five years to pave their parking lots and driveways,
and if they do it in the next two years the taxpayers
will pay half, the next two years a quarter and so on.
Id gladly pay a little more in taxes a couple of years to
clean this mess up and make it look like we care about
it. Thank you.
This (deleted) store, its a joke. Better do something
before it goes out of business.
Glad the county commissioners finally took a stand
and made tougher windmill laws. Hard to imagine
some of our neighbors weve known all our lives would
sell out us and our beautiful scenic county for the
almighty buck.
To the Trump haters: As I recall your hero Hillary
only got a couple hundred votes in Anderson County
compared to several thousand for Trump. Do you feel
lonely?
Wind farm
fight isnt over
To the editor,
I wanted to thank the Anderson County
Commissioners and the members of the planning and zoning board for acting responsibly to
protect landowners from the visual blight and
property devaluation of the Calpine wind farm
which has been under consideration in Anderson
County this past year.
However, just because the new zoning laws
will mean more restrictions on siting wind turbines and constructing them in Anderson County
does not mean we are
out of the woods.
Even as you read
this, Calpines people
are sitting down with their county map and
plotting out their strategy based on the new
restrictions and figuring out who they have in
their pocket and who they might still be able
to sway into leasing to them, and who will not.
Sadly as we have seen, most landowners have not
bothered to actually read those leases they signed
or to have their lawyer review it theyll never
know until its too late just how bad a deal they
signed if Calpine still gets this project up and
running. Just ask those in Waverly who are now
regretting what they allowed to happen.
I will say that I have been very disappointed
to see some people who have lived in Anderson
County all their lives, those who have grown
up here and who should appreciate the natural
beauty of our county more than anyone and want
to protect and defend it, how quick they have
been willing to throw it all away just for the sake
of a little more money. And then there are the
absentee landowners who never even see their
land here and dont care one way or the other
what happens to Anderson County. While I dont
want to see years of grudges between neighbors
and friends play out over this, I am proud to have
counted myself among those on the other side.
It is up to each of us who have opposed this
thing from the beginning and all the others
who have come on board as we got more and
more educated on the subject to stand firm and
continue to oppose any wind farm anyplace in
Anderson County. At the last meeting our voices
were joined by others from the southern and
southwestern reaches of our county who now
fear they might be next in line to have their
skylines destroyed and their property values
decimated by wind farms. We have to continue
to oppose these things wherever they are in
Anderson County.
Stay organized, stay informed and stay vigilant.
Loren Sayers,
Bush City
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2016.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Lancers fade at substate with loss to Waverly
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WAVERLY The second
seeded Colony Lancers (7-13) let
their substate matchup against
third seed Waverly (6-13) slip
away in the second half, losing
74-49.
Hartford eventually topped
Waverly 60-51 to take the substate championship and earn
their berth at the Kansas 1A
DII state tournament this weekend at Dodge City.
Both teams earned a first
round bye and in the second
round Waverly capitalized on
playing on their home court.
The Lancers held a slim 12-9
advantage following the first
quarter before Waverly erupted offensively in the second
tallying 23 points to take a one
point halftime lead. It was all
Waverly in the second half.
5A
SPORTS
They outscored Crest 42-18 to
end the Lancer season.
The only Crest player in
double figures was Hayden
Hermreck with 23 points.
Box Score
Waverly 9 23 19 23 – 74
Crest 12 19 10 8 – 49
Waverly Mitchell 36, Pyle 11,
Kratzberg 9, Patterson 5, Hively 4, Lee 3,
Miller 3, Patterson 3
Crest Hermreck 23, Berry 9, Stephens
8, Hendrix 5, Seabolt 4
2×3
yutzy
2×3.5
centerville
pump house
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Barb Hicks
Nick Vaughn tries to fire a pass around Waverlys Caleb Kratzberg
during the opening round of the 1A substate tournament at Waverly
Friday night. The Lancers got a bye in the first round of tournament
play but succumbed to Waverly in the followup 74-49.
Hartford frustrates
Lady Lancers offense
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Barb Hicks
Crests Callie McGhee slips a Hartford defender on a drive to
the basket in Thursdays 1A substate tournament opener. Crest
fell to Hartford in the opener 18-35.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WAVERLY After a promising
first quarter for the Crest Lady
Lancers (5-15), Hartford seized
control and pulled out an impressive 35-18 win in 1A DII substate
opener. Hosts Waverly later
mugged Hartford in the championship 61-30 to earn their spot at
this weekends state tournament
in Dodge City.
The Lancers and Hartford
played tight early on as Crest
held a slight 6-5 lead after the
first quarter. Hartford scored 17
points in the second to open up
a 10-point lead at halftime. It was
the Hartford defense that was
just too much for Crest to make
a second half run, limiting the
Lancers to just 6 points in the
entire second half.
Amanda Golden led the way
with 9 points on the night for
Crest.
Box Score
Crest 6 6 3 3 – 18
Hartford 5 17 6 7 – 35
Crest Golden 9, Godderz 3, McGhee 3,
Strickler 2, Armstrong 1
Hartford Darbyshire 20, Bolen 10,
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REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL AND NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Anderson County Commission requests proposals
for the installation of a Computerized Temperature
Control system for the Anderson County Sheriff s
Office and Detention Center.
2×5
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Specifications can be obtained from Mr. Fred Malicoat,
PE, Malicoat-Winslow Engineers, PC, 5649 North
Clearview Road, Columbia, Missouri 65202,
(573) 875-1300 ext 22. The bidder will have two weeks
from this publication to prepare their proposal. Strict
adherence to the specifications is required.
Small, minority, veterans, disabled veterans, and
womens business enterprises are encouraged to
participate and bid on this project.
A mandatory pre-bid will be held at 10:00 a.m., on
March 9, 2017, at the Anderson County Sheriff s
Office, located at 135 E 5th Ave, Garnett, KS 66032.
Sealed proposals will be accepted until 2:00 p.m.,
March 15, 2017, at the office of Ms Julie Heck,
County Clerk, 100 East 4th Ave, Garnett, KS 66032.
Sealed bid proposals will be opened at 2:00 p.m.,
March 15, 2017, in the office of Ms Julie Heck.
We see what you cant.
Call today!
Womens Fair Sat., March 18
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bpw
Grand prize $100. – Attend speaker sessions for chance
10am – 2pm ACJSHS Gym (1100 W. Hwy. 31, Garnett)
Event Sponsored by: Garnett BPW and Anderson Co. Farm Bureau
to win $10 coupons at Womens Fair booths!
Welda First United Methodist Women will sell sack lunches
Womens Fair 5K Run/Walk
The Anderson
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Registration 8:30 a.m. Event begins at 9 a.m. – ACJSHS Track
visit garnettbpw.com for more information
IN YOUR
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KANSAS
derek schmidt
Consumer Protection Week
Learn how to protect yourself
from scams and identity theft!
Kansas Attorney General
Derek Schmidt
Thursday, March 9 2:00 p.m.
Anderson County Jr/Sr High School
Auditorium
www.InYourCornerKansas.org
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Preventive Care
Root Canals
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Crowns
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6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
STATE
It was a week about flips, switches
The happenings of this week
are a good picture of why the
title of my newsletter is The
Playground. We have seen procedural flips, switches, pulls,
and faints. Conservatives in the
minority, liberals in the majority; there is no way to identify
either except with voting history. Representatives are being
overloaded and twisted up on
spur-of-the-moment questions
of rules, Medicaid expansion, ex
post facto tax increases, teacher tenure, and just who is in
charge at the Statehouse? At the
moment of this writing, we are
in our seats on final action to
override the Governors veto of
the retroactive tax plan. It just
passed 85-40. I voted no. It is
strange how our legislature will
allow itself to be manipulated by
our Judicial branchs opinion,
yet will so easily vote against the
opinion of our Executive branch.
Later the Kansas Senate upheld
the Governors veto by just 3
votes 24-16, after which one representative joked, Were gonna
be here until July.
This week is Turnaround
so we have been on the floor
this whole week. All committee action ceases at the end of
Thursday, and the bills passed
out of committees are either
ready for floor debate or destined
to be overlooked below the line.
The bills that receive a majority vote will be passed over to
the Senate and they will do the
same to the House. The legislature breaks until March 6th
at that point, and the only bills
that have any possibility to move
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
KEVIN JONES, 5th District House of Representatives
forward are those remaining in
blessed committees. This gives
the Revisors and Research time
to prepare the bills that will be
transferred from one chamber
to the other. Then the process
begins anew. House committees
will be assigned Senate bills for
hearings.
Through a manipulation of
the rules, the Medicaid expansion discussion was forced up
as an amendment to HB2044. It
is still extraordinarily expensive
to the state and unsustainable
even with huge tax increases, yet
it could possibly provide a good
number of jobs for the Kansas
economy. Hospitals closing will
still happen either way, and timing is an issue given that we have
no idea what is going to happen
at the Federal level. One representative asked the rhetorical
question, If you gave me $1, and
I gave you $9 in return wouldnt
you take that deal? The question
she should have been asking is,
If we promise 170,000 Kansans
free healthcare and then lose
the funds to support it, whos on
the hook for that promise? The
House overwhelmingly voted to
pass with a vote of 81-44. I voted
no. This is a poor excuse for a
stimulus and timing is very bad.
There is still no such thing as
free federal funds.
The statewide efficiency conducted by Alvarez and Marsal
recommended the State of
Kansas revise its budget process
to include performance based
budgeting (PBB). The budget
committees have worked hard
to reduce spending and PBB has
the potential to aid those budget
committees in further reducing
unnecessary spending.
Under PBB performance differs by focusing on results rather than money spent. The basic
principle of PBB is accountability, not merely on compliance
with law and previous funding
decisions. Performance based
budgeting encourages lawmakers to reconsider priorities and
grants agencies the flexibility to make decisions that are
not easily permissible under
traditional budgeting systems.
In 2016 the Kansas Legislature
passed HB 2739 which directs the
Secretary of Administration, in
consultation with the Division
of the Budget, the Office of
Revisor of Statutes, and the
Kansas Legislative Research
Department, to develop a revised
budget process and timeline. Our
budget committees will be reporting on agency updates on implementation of the A&M study
after the turnaround break.
Contact Rep. Jones at: kevin.
jones@house.ks.gov, (785)2966287, 416 E. 7th St., Wellsville,
KS. 60092, (316)259-9505, kevinicolejones@gmail.com.
Tyson responds to tax bill vote
The message some are sending out is we want a massive
tax increase now! when they
demanded support of Substitute
for House Bill (Sub HB) 2178.
The bill would have been the
largest tax increase ever, even
more than the sales tax increase
in 2015 (which I did not support).
This huge half-billion per year
tax increase would have been
retroactive, starting 1/1/2017.
You might not think that is a big
deal as we are only in the second month of the year; however,
it could take two to four months
to implement. You would have
to decide whether to increase
your withholding to handle the
increase for the entire year, or
owe a lump sum at the end of the
year. This tax increase passed
both chambers but was vetoed
by the governor. His veto was
upheld in the Senate.
Sub HB 2178 was bad policy.
I voted against this massive tax
increase and to sustain the veto.
Some legislators didnt know
the amount of tax increase or
that the bill was retroactive;
they just knew that it was a
tax increase and it would stop
Brownbacks 2012 tax policy.
As legislators, our job is to govern. Understanding the policy
KANSAS LEGISLATURE
CARYN TYSON, 12th District Senate
that we are voting on is critical.
It appears that too many people
are putting political soundbites
before sound policy.
The last week before the halfway point of session, both chambers raced to pass legislation to
the other chamber. This is not
a good way to conduct business.
To make it worse, Tuesday the
Majority Leader told senators
they would have six more bills
to debate on a day they had
already been working 17 bills.
This would give us less than
two hours to prepare for debate
and request any amendments.
I strongly requested that leadership reconsider this reckless
schedule so that we could be
more diligent in working the
bills. The expedited process is
not a good way to conduct the
States business.
One such example is Senate
Bill (SB) 154. The bill seemed
fine but after reading it, I
found that the only way to file
a complaint with the Kansas
Department of Aging and
Disability (KDADS) would be
via KDADS hotline. You could
not write a letter, email, or submit a complaint in any other
manner. Why should there be
a law requiring you complain
via a phone call to a hotline?
There were 38 Yes votes and 2
No votes. I voted No.
Another bill that needed
work but also passed the chamber is SB 144. It would prohibit
the use of hand-held wireless
devices in construction and
school zones. Distracted driving is already against the law.
If we try to list every type of distraction, we are bound to miss
something. I voted No. The bill
passed the Senate on a vote of 21
Yes and 17 No.
It is an honor and a privilege
to serve as your 12th District
State Senator. To contact me,
call my office at (785) 296-6838;
telephone: (913) 898-2366, or
email: Caryn.Tyson@senate.
ks.gov
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Perfect bachelor pad on the outskirts of town! 3 bedroom, 1 bath. All
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Agency.
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Perfect bachelor pad on the outskirts of town!!! 3 bedroom,
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Large all new bathroom with Jacuzzi tub and walk-in shower. 24×30
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Absolutely stunning home with so much in store for you. Really nice
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SOLD
Beautiful, well taken care of home with all kinds of storage.
2 beautiful brick fireplaces, one with granite hearth, 1 gas & 1 wood
burning, bar downstairs, 2 sump pumps. All appliances stay with home.
Nice deck outside dining room sliding doors. 2 car detached garage with
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Just bring your updating ideas! $127,500.
Bring the whole family! This is a wonderful, spacious, must see home
with a big eat-in kitchen, with bar & pantry, beautiful master bedroom
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is also really nice with a play room or extra living room, with egress
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with sink. Nice long covered front porch to relax on & covered back deck
off the kitchen. Nice 40×36 outbuilding on large treed lot. $275,000.
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2×5
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Bungalow Style Home built in 1910 has 930 sq.
ft. Inside has been partially gutted. $20,000.
1890 METICULOUSLY MAINTAINED & RESTORED
HOME offers Historical Charm with modern amenities
to include 3 bedrooms & 2 baths. The kitchen has
beautiful glass fronted, lighted cabinets. Large formal
dining room. Bright & airy living room has brick-tiled
fireplace, small sitting room. 3 bedrooms with original
transform windows above the doors. Original stained
glass entry door. The entrance foyer boasts a beautiful
original chandelier & wood-carved staircase. Enjoy the
screened in sun porch with tiled floor. Large back deck
for summertime fun. All hardwood has been refinished.
New plumbing, elec., new furnace & AC, new water
& sewer lines. Original crown molding & doors with
original glass knobs. New roof. Detached garage with
carport. MOVE-IN READY. $163,500.
Brick fronted ranch has 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths.
Native stone wood-burning fireplace. Large 2 car garage.
1 car detached garage with workshop. RV shed. Circle
drive. Large beautiful landscaped corner lot. Seller
offering Home Warranty. $155,750.
This Beautiful Brick Ranch built in 1995 has
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Large kitchen island, lots of counter space, cabinets
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Seller is giving a Home Warranty. $214,900.
Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
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On the edge of town! Beautiful ranch home with
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Family RM/brick fireplace. Basement rec. room & 2nd
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2 1/2 Story Home With Lots of Character! This
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living room & a large dining room. Laundry is on the
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913-884-4500
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On the edge of town – Large family home. CHEAP
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Basement could be finished, that would give additional
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Awesome Ranch Home! 2 Woodburning
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VIEWS-VIEWS – 10 acres, Big hillside, water meter included,
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LOCATION – 8.5 Acres, Corner on 59 Hwy., close to Princeton,
Central Heights Schools, Water Meter Included. $37,500.
BEST BUY – 7.5 Acres, just outside Ottawa, paved road,
area of nicer and newer homes. Bank Owned Bargain. Price
Reduced, Only $22,900 $21,900.
SOLD
Need to sell? Just call, well get it done!
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
SPORTS
Lancer girls cant keep pace in loss
BY KEVIN GAINES THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
COLONY The Crest girls
got off to a fast start but just
couldnt keep up with the
quicker Madison team as they
fell 56-42 last Tuesday.
The Lancers jumped out
to a 13-11 lead following the
first 8 minutes, but Madison
turned up the defensive pressure in the second and controlled the period to go up
22-17 at halftime.
We came out fired up and
running great, head coach
Elaine Tastove stated.
The all or nothing press of
Madison was tough to pen-
etrate, but did lead to many
fast break opportunities for
the Lancers as well.
Their press got to us,
Tastove added. We struggled to get the ball across but
every time we did we had a
wide open layup.
Following intermission,
the Lancers just didnt solve
the Madison press consistently enough. Madison continued to add to their lead gradually throughout the final two
quarters to finish out the victory.
Tastove was proud of the
aggressiveness on the boards
and feels despite the loss her
girls showed lots of great
moments.
I just felt we made mistakes at key moments and
it all happened in the back
court, Tastove said as the
Lancers gave up too many
easy baskets.
Miranda Golden led the
way with 19 points and Laurel
Godderz was also in double
figures with 11 on the night.
Other players scoring were
Callie McGhee with 6 points,
Jewel Armstrong and Cassie
Bowen each had 2 points and
Regan Godderz and Makayla
Jones each chipped in with
one point on the night.
Notice to settle Hiner estate Notice to
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, February 28, 2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Robert 0. Hiner
Case No. 17PRO7
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED You are hereby
notified a Petition has been filed in this Court
by Patricia C. Hiner, heir of Robert O. Hiner,
deceased, requesting: Descent to be determined of the following described real estate
situated in Anderson County, Kansas:
Beginning at a point 40 rods South of
Northwest corner (NW/c) of East Half (E/2) of
Northwest Quarter (NV 4) of Section Thirtyfive (35), thence running South 90 rods,
thence East 133 1/3 rods, thence South 30
rods, thence East 26 2/3 rods, thence North
120 rods, thence West 160 rods to place of
beginning; also, Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of
Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of Section Thirty-four
(34); and West Half (W/2) of Northwest Quarter
(NW/4) of Section Thirty-five (35)5 less Ten (10)
acres off the South end thereof; all in Township
Twenty (20) South, Range Twenty (20) East
of the Sixth Principal Meridian, except the
following described and which has heretofore
been conveyed, to-wit: Fifty (50) acres more or
less off the East side of the following described
real property, to-wit: Beginning at a point 40
rods South of the Northwest corner (NW/c) of
the East Half (E/2) of the Northwest Quarter
(NW/4) of Section Thirty-five (35) running South
90 rods; East 133 1/3 rods; South 30 rods,
East 26 2/3 rods, North 120 rods; thence West
160 rods to place of beginning, all in Township
Twenty (20) South, Range Twenty (20) East
of the Sixth Principal Meridian; all in Anderson
County, Kansas.
and all personal property and other Kansas
real estate owned by decedent at the time
of death. And that such property and all personal property and other Kansas real estate
owned by the decedent at the time of death
be assigned pursuant to the laws of intestate
succession.
You are required to file your written defenses to the Petition on or before March 27, 2017,
at 9:30 am., in said Court, in the city of Garnett
in Anderson County, Kansas, at which time and
place the cause will be heard. Should you fail to
file your written defenses, judgment and decree
will be entered in due course upon the Petition.
Patricia C. Hiner
Petitioner
JESSE T. RANDALL
No. 09231
512 Main P.O. Box 301
Mound City KS 66056
Telephone (913) 795-2514
Email:itranda1145@yahoo.com
Attorney for the Petitioner
fb28t3
settle estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, March 7, 2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
PROBATE DEPARTMENT
In the Matter of the Estate of
ELWYN PAUL SAYERS, Deceased.
(Published in The Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, March 7, 2017)
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
East Central Kansas Economic Opportunity
Corporation (ECKAN) is seeking bids for renovation on a building to be used as a childcare
facility at 126 Cedar St. in Ottawa, Kansas.
A walk-through will be conducted on March
14th and 16th, 8:30am till 11:30, at 126
Cedar St, Ottawa, Kansas, bid packets will be
available at this time. Sealed bids will be due
on March 28, 2017 by 5:00pm to the Attn: Clara
Cox, Head Start Director, ECKAN, 1320 S. Ash,
P. O. Box 40, Ottawa, Kansas 66067. Bids will
be opened on March 29, 2015, at 9AM.
All contractors are required to have workers compensation insurance and liability insurance on file or insurance company can send
the confirmation of insurance for the bidding
process.
This project may be subject to the requirements of the Davis-Bacon Act, as amended.
The Contractor will be required to comply with
wage and labor provisions and to pay minimum
wages in accordance with the schedule of
wage rates established by the United States
Department of Labor.
ECKAN is an Equal Opportunity Employer
and will not do business with any firm or individual that in any way, directly or indirectly, discriminates against any person because of age,
race, color, handicap, sex, national origin or
religious creed. An Offeror qualifies as a small
business if it meets the definition as established
by the Small Business Administration (13 CFR
121).
If selected, contractor would need to begin
renovation on April 15, 2017
mc7t1
LYNDON Lyndon (6-14)
really picked up the defensive
intensity after falling behind
early en route to an easy 35-25
win over the Central Heights
Viking girls (7-13) last Tuesday.
Things were looking good
early on for Central Heights.
They dominated on the defensive end taking advantage of a
struggling Lyndon offense, limiting them to just 2 points in the
first quarter, while tacking on
9 themselves. Lyndon turned
things around in the second
period erasing their early deficit to take a 13-10 lead at the
break. Both teams more than
doubled their first half output
in the third quarter. Lyndon
continued to pile it on with a
17-11 advantage for the period
to head into the final quarter up
30-21.
Shelbi Hettinger was the
only Viking in double figures
with 11 points, including 6-8
from the free throw line on the
night.
Box Score
Central Heights 9 1 11 4 – 25
Lyndon 2 11 17 5 – 35
Central Heights Hettinger 11, Brown
5, Burson 3, Cotter 2, Davis 2, Clancy 2
Lyndon Spurgeon 14, Harsch 6,
Criqui 5, Martin 4, Wells 3, Addleman 3
Case No. 2017-PR-8
Court No. 23
Chapter 59
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that on February
23, 2017, a Petition For Issuance Of Letters Of
Administration was filed in this Court by Dale
Mitchell Ashlock, a friend of Elwyn Paul Sayers,
deceased, and the nominee of the heirs at law
to be the administrator of the Estate.
All creditors of the decedent are notified to
exhibit their demands against the Estate within
the latter of four (4) months from the date of
the first publication of this notice under K.S.A.
59-2236 and amendments thereto, or if the
identity of the creditor is known or reasonably
ascertainable, 30 days after actual notice was
given as provided by law, and if their demands
are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever
barred.
/s/ Dale Mitchell Ashlock
Notice for bids to
renovate building
Lyndon
downs
Viking girls
SUBMITTED BY:
LOWE LAW FIRM LLP
/s/ Kristopher C. Kuckelman
KRISTOPHER C. KUCKELMAN
105 South Kansas Avenue
Olathe, Kansas 66061
Phone: (913) 782-0422
Fax: (913) 782-0532
Email: kriskuckelman@sbcglobal.net
ATTORNEYS FOR PETITIONER
DALE MITCHELL ASHLOCK
mc7t3
1×2
AD
ACHS Senior
Night ends
on sour note
GARNETT It wasnt the
Senior Night the Anderson
County Bulldog seniors were
hoping for as the struggles
offensively were too much to
overcome in a 39-21 defeat to
Burlington last Thursday night.
The Bulldogs mustered 6
points in the first half after just
two in the opening period.
Despite
the
struggles,
Anderson County was still
within striking distance entering the fourth quarter trailing
24-17.
It was all Burlington,
though, in the final period. The
Bulldogs managed just 4 points
as Burlington pulled away for
the victory.
Alexis Feuerborn scored 7
points to lead Anderson County.
Box Score
Burlington 4 9 11 15 – 39
Anderson County 2 4 11 4 – 21
Burlington Young 14, Gilman 11,
Roney 6, Doebele 6, Wagner 2
Anderson County Feuerborn 7, Ratliff
4, Lybarger 4, Fritz 2, Scheckel 2, Lickteig
2
PROM
2017
7A
Anderson County High School Prom – April 1
Central Heights High School Prom – April 1
Crest High School Prom – April 8
2017
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8A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
SPORTS
Bulldogs no match for Burlington
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
PARSONS The top-seeded
Burlington Wildcats (16-5) erased
any hope for the Anderson County
Bulldogs (6-15) early on, cruising to
a 73-41 victory in the opening round
of the 4A DII substate tournament
at Parsons Thursday.
Burlington topped Parsons 71-66
on Saturday to represent 4A DII at
the state tournament in Emporia
this weekend.
Anderson County dug themselves into an early 23-4 deficit fol-
lowing the first quarter and werent
ever able to recover.
Burlington added to their lead
the first three quarters giving them
a commanding 64-31 lead heading
into the fourth.
Trevor Johnston led Anderson
County with 19 points and Justin
Rockers added 12 points.
A trio of players hit double figures for the Burlington Wildcats.
Brogan Nordstedt led all scorers
with 20 and Togan (sp?) Hess and
Garrison Fielder both scored 17 on
the night.
Burlington knocked off Parsons
High School 70-66 in the ensuing
round to be crowned Sub-State
Champions and stamp their ticket
to the state tournament next week.
Box Score
Anderson County 4 16 11 10 – 41
Burlington 23 19 22 9 – 73
Anderson County Johnston 19, Rockers 12,
Rundle 4, Allnutt 4, Kueser 2
Burlington Brogan Nordstedt 20, Hess 17,
Fielder 17, Kohlmann 6, Jeffers 4, Watkins 3,
Trimble 2, Brannon Nordstedt 2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Dane Hicks
Bulldogs Alexy Lickteig, Jenna Schmit and Alexis Feuerborn gang up on Iolas Riley Murry
under the basket during Fridays 4A girls substate opener. AC fell to Iola 40-29.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Dane Hicks
Lady Bulldogs lose substate opener
ACs Justin Rockers and Trevor Johnston defend the basket against an assault by Burlingtons Joel Zimmerman and
Braden Plumlee.
BY KEVIN GAINES
PRINCIPAL…
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
PARSONS The Anderson County
Lady Bulldogs (7-14) season came to an
end at the hands of the Iola Fillies (13-8)
last Friday 40-29 in the 4A DII Sub-State
tournament.
The Burlington Wildcats would eventually topple the local competitors to emerge
as substate champions 44-39 over Iola, and
head to the state tournament in Emporia
this weekend.
It was a virtual replay of the Garnett/
Iola matcup a few weeks ago. The teams
battled back and forth throughout the
first half and went into intermission tied
6×10.5
ach
at 15 apiece. But the second half saw the
second-seeded Fillies impose their will
on both ends as they outscored Anderson
County 14-3 during the pivotal eight minutes third period. The Lady Bulldogs just
didnt have the firepower in the fourth to
mount a serious comeback. Both teams
netted 11 points in the period to close out
the contest.
Box Score
Anderson County 8 7 3 11 – 29
Iola 9 6 14 11 – 40
Anderson County Lickteig 11, Feuerborn 7,
Lybarger 4, Ratliff 3, Schmit 2, Fritz 2
Iola Wade 15, Macha 14, Holloway 6, Murry 3, Riley
2
FROM PAGE 1A
new principal was able to
work with the new program from start to finish.
I also started thinking maybe its time to do
something different, he
said. Ill probably still be
involved with the school
off and on.
He has been fortunate
to work with a lot of good
people, good boards and
good superintendents
through the years, he
said.
Its been a great experience, Kellstadt said.
I still say we have some
of the best kids in the
world.
The USD 365 Board
of Education accepted
Kellstadts retirement
notice during their regular meeting Thursday,
March 2.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, March 7
ACHS League Band at home
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Pioneer
Restaurant
7 p.m. – GES 1st/2nd grade
vocal concert
Wednesday, March 8
Friends of the Prairie Spirit Trail
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Central Heights
Booster Club
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
Thursday, March 9
2 p.m. – In Your Corner Kansas
talk on Consumer Protection
Week at ACJSHS Auditorium
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
7 p.m. – GES 5th/6th grade
vocal/band concert
Friday, March 10
7 p.m. – ACHS spring play
Saturday, March 11
7 p.m. – ACHS spring play
Monday, March 13
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
5:30 p.m. – AC Site Council
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
7:30 p.m. – Kincaid Masonic Lodge
No. 338
Tuesday, March 14
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
ACJH Scholar Bowl at
Santa Fe Trail
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Golden Heights
Wednesday, March 15
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
Noon – Birthday dinner at Garnett
Senior Center, with
entertainment. RSVP to
(785) 448-6996 the day before.
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
7 p.m. – ACHS Winter Sports
Awards
Thursday, March 16
4:30 p.m. – ACHS baseball,
softball at Jayhawk Linn
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
Center
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44
Friday, March 17
No school, USD 288
5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. – Garnett
Knights of Columbus fish fry
at the Knights Hall
Monday, March 20
No school, spring break begins
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
ACHS to present Mutually Assured Destruction play
Anderson County High School Drama
Department presents their spring play,
Mutually Assured Destruction, by Don
Zolidis, on Friday and Saturday, March
10 & 11.
A centurys worth of sibling squabbles is boiled down into ten vignettes
in this era-hopping tribute to family.
Each short play explores a distinct facet
of brother and sisterhood, from fights
over who caused mom and dad to split
(1985 – Im Pretty Sure This Is Your
Fault) to daring escape plots that only
two sisters could pull off (1922 – Very
Very Cold Feet). No matter the decade,
the audience is guaranteed to see themselves in these ten distinct shorts about
the undeniable bond between siblings
through the ages.
I had every intention of casting this
play with six people and doubling or tripling their parts. However, when auditions were over, I was overwhelmed
with the talent that I saw. In the end,
twenty five students received parts,
says Vicki Markham, ACHS drama
instructor. A few of the plays have
been double cast, so Friday nights performance will be cast differently than
Saturdays.
Students involved include Eddie
Gruver, Jasmine White, Owen Lutz,
Hayden Hermann, Grace Urquhart,
Katelyn Phelps, Adam Kropf, Becky
Kropf, Matt Dieker, Kate Dieker,
Jenna Schmit, Shylie Scheckel, Lexee
Feuerborn, Miranda Akes, Samantha
Nickell, Nate Gainer, Cameron Betts,
Austin Wickwire, Virgil Wight, Nick
Lybarger, Lilly Spring, Lizzy Comfort,
Adrianna Pedrow, Averi Wilson and
Sammy Jo Walter. The play is directed by Vicki Markham and Waltham
Farren.
Mutually Assured Destruction will
run Friday, March 10, and Saturday,
March 11, 7:00 pm at the AHS auditorium. The cost is $4 adults and $3
students. This is a guaranteed night of
laughs and some tender moments. Come
out for a night of family fun!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Vickie Moss
Penni Hansen of Topeka plays Rose Steiner and Gary Stapp of Garnett plays Walsh McLaren during a Sunday matinee performance of Neil Simons Rose and Walsh by the
Chamber Players March 5 at Garnetts Thelma Moore Community Playhouse. The play is directed by Tom Emerson Jr., who also is part of the cast along with Karen Katzer.
Additional performances are scheduled March 9-12.
Brownrigg, other young
stockmen meet in Topeka
(TOPEKA) Colby Brownrigg
of Welda was among a group of
20 young ranchers from across
the state who met in Topeka
February 13-14 for the first
installment of the 2017 Kansas
Livestock Association Young
Stockmens Academy (YSA).
Merck Animal Health is
again partnering with the association to host these members
for an in-depth look into KLA
and the beef industry. A series
of four seminars will be held
throughout the year in various
locations in Kansas.
During this session, attendees learned about the array of
member services provided by
KLA, heard about the importance of being an advocate for
the livestock industry, saw
KLA lobbyists in action at the
state Capitol and took part in
the KLA Legislative Meeting.
As part of an interactive training session led by KLA staff,
White City rancher and beef
advocate Debbie Lyons-Blythe
and WIBW-Topeka farm broad-
casters Kelly Lenz and Greg
Akagi, the group was given an
overview of various media outlets available to help tell the
beef production story. LyonsBlythe shared how she has
implemented advocacy into her
daily routine through the use
of her blog, Kids, Cows and
Grass. For hands-on training,
they participated in a social
media activity and mock radio
talk show. In addition, YSA
members attended a Senate
Agriculture and Natural
Resources Committee meeting
at the Capitol and participated
in a financial planning seminar
conducted by K-Coe Isom.
Members of the 2017 YSA
class are Kaid Baumann,
Kensington; Heath Bergkamp,
Arlington; Colby Brownrigg,
Welda; Joseph Hubbard,
Houston Lake, MO; Blake
Jones, Waverly; Kayla Josefiak,
Burdett; Cassie Kniebel, White
City; Luke Knight, Lyons;
Katelyn Meiwes, Moran; Dustin
Nattier, Newton; Klay OBrien,
Hepler; Garrett Ochs, Jetmore;
Derek Puthoff, Kinsley; Jake
Renner, Kingman; Russell
Rezac,
Emmett;
Kayla
Sandoval, Ashland; Kashly
Schweer, Ellsworth; Sarah
Struthers,
Milton;
Tony
Winkler, Ulysses; and Dustin
Wootten, Oskaloosa.
The second session for the
YSA class will be held in May.
Members will have the opportunity to learn more about the
agribusiness and retail beef
industries. More information
about YSA can be found at
www.kla.org.
KLA is a trade organization representing the business
interests of members at both
the state and federal levels.
Voluntary dues dollars paid
by producers are used for programs that benefit KLA members in the areas of legislative
representation, regulatory
assistance, legal troubleshooting, communications and the
advancement of youth.
Where does your allegiance lie?
There are two statements in
the Bible, one made by Satan
and the other one by God
that are in direct conflict. In
Genesis 3:1, Satan enters into
a conservation with Eve and
questions the command God
had given to Adam in the
Garden of Eden. The command
to Adam was as follows: You
are free to eat from any tree in
the garden; but you must not
eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when
you eat of it you will surely
die. (Genesis 2:16-17) Satan
then takes the command and
twists it just enough to cause
Eve to begin her own interpretation. He (Satan) effectively
changes the command when he
asks Eve, Did God really say,
You must not eat from any tree
in the garden? Satan changes
the focus from one tree in the
garden to all the trees. He loves
to make the situation more difficult than it really is. Satan
then gives Eve his own interpretation of why God made this
command. For God knows
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
that when you eat of it your
eyes will be opened, and you
will be like God, knowing good
and evil.
God as the creator put one
tree off limits to man yet he did
not limit the free will of man
to eat of this tree if he was prepared to suffer the consequences. Adam and Eve bought into
Satans lie. They exercised a
free will that was driven by
Satan and he drove them off the
road into a fatal accident.
I said there were two statements in the opening sentence
that were in conflict. The first
was a lie by Satan. The second is a promise from God.
In Hebrews 13:5b; God says,
Never will I leave you, never
will I forsake you. Gods
promises are not for private
application. Whatever he has
said to one saint he has said to
all. All may come and drink at
Gods well, all may come and
eat at his table. The light of God
is more than enough to drive
away the darkness of yesterday
and the gloom of tomorrow if
we rush to his light instead of
seeking darkness and the lies
of Satan. Only God can make
promises, his promises are free
for the taking.
There is a clear path to God.
In John 14:6, Jesus points the
way when he says; I am the
way and the truth and the life.
No one comes to the Father
except through me. You and
I can have a personal relationship with Jesus or with Satan,
our allegiance will be with one
or the other. If we choose Jesus
God will never leave us or
forsake us. If we choose Satan
God will have no choice but to
forsake us and we will suffer
eternal consequences.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Walk Kansas program
runs March 19-May 13
For many in Kansas, participating in Walk Kansas
a K-State Research and
Extension health challenge
signals spring. This year the
Walk Kansas program will
run from March 19th through
May 13th.
During the eight-week program, teams of four to six people, one serving as the captain, work toward a common
goal typically to walk at
least 150 minutes per person
per week, which collectively
is enough to walk 423 miles.
Though the team does not
actually walk across Kansas,
423 miles is the equivalent of
the distance across the state.
The program is geared
toward addressing crucial
issues in our state. Less than
half of Kansas adults meet
the minimum recommendations for physical activity
(150 minutes a week of moderate exercise) and only 19
percent eat enough fruits and
vegetables. According to the
Partnership to Fight Chronic
Disease, if Americans were to
stop smoking, exercise regularly and eat well, they could
prevent up to 80 percent of
heart disease and stroke, 80
percent of type 2 diabetes,
and 40 percent of cancers.
Even though individuals
report their weekly activity
as part of a team, it doesnt
mean they must walk together as a team, although some
teams do. Teammates, however, are encouraged to connect and support each other.
Individuals report their
activity online or to their
team captain each week. It
is common for a family, a
group of friends, or co-workers to register as a team.
Additionally, with the help of
technology, some teams are
made up of people in different
communities or from different parts of the country.
The cost to participate is
$8.00 per person, which helps
to cover program materials,
including a weekly newsletter with nutrition and
health tips and recipes. Walk
Kansas t-shirts can also be
purchased for an additional
cost.
Information about the
program and how to register a team online is available on the Walk Kansas
website at www.walkkansas.
org. Teams can also sign up
for the program by contacting the Frontier Extension
District office in Garnett
(785.448.6826),
Ottawa
(785.229.3520), or Lyndon
(785.828.4438) to complete a
paper registration packet.
Zwiener 95th birthday
Gladys Zwiener of Garnett
will celebrate her 95th birthday on March 13, 2017. A
card shower is planned for
her. Please send your well
wishes to: 22440 NW 1700 Rd,
Garnett, KS 66032.
Zwiener
2B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
BUSINESS
Surprise them: Be a
BUSINESS BEAT
disruptive influence Rockers honored with photography award
Occasionally you should do
something in your business to
make people say, hey, did you
see.
This is one of the prime precepts of Guerilla Marketing
the idea of doing effective,
attention-getting advertising
without paying much or anything for it. And the mindset
you develop by doing it is the
prime driver of how to sell
stuff.
Three simple, cheap ideas
that I stole from creativeguerillamarketing.com:
Have a fake protest: People
become alerted and respond
to things that are out of the
ordinary. If you saw a bunch
of people marching, chanting
and carrying placards outside
a local business it would get
your attention, right? Get some
of your employees (or family
members if youre a mom &
pop operation) to stage a protest outside your office for an
hour or so some morning just
make sure it stretches over
the lunch hour when theres
generally a little more traffic.
What do you protest? Lets say
you own a flower shop your
protest might be against bad
lilies. You can show anybody
that stops by what good lilies
are and what they smell like.
Protest the problems that your
business solves!
2) String coupons on your
trees or frontage: Again
going for the visual disruption
caused by the out-of-the ordinary you can use the tree
branches or tie a piece of fishing line between the nearest
utility pole and your business
and string coupons on it (just
make sure its above headhigh, so you dont clothesline
anyone). Theyll flutter in the
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
breeze and create an attention
getter, and people can tear one
off and keep it to use. Youll
make the sale prompted by the
coupon, and youll stick out in
your customers minds.
3) Poster-ize the place:
With todays desktop publishing software on just about
everybodys computer, you can
create cool posters (or better
yet, find an art student at your
local high school, university
or community college) in 11×17
size. Just take the PDF file of
the art to a local print shop
that has a color copier, and
theyll print them usually for
$1 or less- youll probably need
no more than 20. Stick them en
masse to your building, your
neighbors building (with permission) or vacant structures.
Dont leave them up more than
a week, however, because they
lose their visual spice after people are exposed to them a few
times.
The net of it is: Think visual
disruption, and youll get attention.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to
him at review@garnett-ks.com
or (785) 448-3121.
Notice to settle estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, February 28, 2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
Robert P. Weatherman
Case No. 17PR06
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified a Petition has been
filed in this Court by Linda Louise Hess, heir of
Robert P. Weatherman, deceased, requesting:
Descent to be determined of the following
described real estate situated in Anderson
County, Kansas:
An undivided one-half interest in:
The Northeast Quarter (NE/4) and the
Southeast Quarter (SE/4) of Northwest Quarter
(NW/4), less a tract beginning at the Southwest
corner of the said Southeast Quarter (SE/4) of
said Northwest Quarter (NW/4), thence East
40 rods, thence North 33 rods, thence West 40
rods, thence South 33 rods to the beginning; all
in Section Sixteen (16), Township Twenty-three
(23), Range Nineteen (19), Anderson County,
Kansas.
AND:
An undivided one-sixth interest of the following described real estate:
160 feet off the South side of the following tract: Beginning at the Southeast corner
(SE/c) of Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of Section
Seventeen (17), Township Twenty-three (23),
Range Nineteen (19), thence 30 rods North
and South by 24 rods East and West, containing 4 acres, more or less, Anderson County
Kansas;
Beginning 10 rods North of the Northwest
corner (NW/c) of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4)
of Northwest Quarter (NW/4) of Section Sixteen
(16), Township Twenty-three (23), Range
Nineteen (19), thence East to Deer Creek,
thence South and East along the Creek to the
East line of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4) of
the Northwest Quarter (NW/4) of said Section,
thence South to the Southeast corner (SE/c) of
said Forty, thence East 20 rods, thence South
80 rods, thence West 80 rods, thence North 32
rods, thence West 20 rods, thence North 138
rods to the place of beginning, except an ease-
ment across the land West of Deer Creek as
shown in Deed of record. Also 4 acres, more
or less in Southeast corner (SE/c) of Northeast
Quarter (NE/4) of Section Seventeen (17),
Township Twenty-three (23), Range Nineteen
(19), being a tract 30 rods North and South by
20 rods East and West, less 1 acres therefrom heretofore conveyed to L.P. Weatherman,
Anderson County, Kansas.
Southwest Quarter (SW/4) of Southwest
Quarter (SW/4) of Section Sixteen (16),
Township Twenty-three (23), Range Nineteen
(19), also a tract of land commencing at the
Northwest corner (NW/c) of the Southwest
Quarter (SW/4) of Southwest Quarter (SW/4)
of Section Sixteen (16), Township Twenty-three
(23), Range Nineteen (19), thence North 32
rods, thence East 20 rods, thence South 32
rods, thence West 20 rods to the place of
beginning; also Southeast Quarter (SE/4) of
Section Seventeen (17), Township Twentythree (23), Range Nineteen (19); also the West
One-half (W/2) of the West One-half (W/2) of
the Southeast Quarter (SE/4) of the Southwest
Quarter (SW/4) of Section Sixteen (16),
Township Twenty-three (23), Range Nineteen
(19), Anderson County, Kansas.
and all personal property and other Kansas
real estate owned by decedent at the time of
death. And that such property and all personal property and other Kansas real estate
owned by the decedent at the time of death
be assigned pursuant to the laws of intestate
succession.
You are required to file your written defenses to the Petition on or before March 27, 2017,
at 9:30 a.m., in said Court, in the city of Garnett
in Anderson County, Kansas, at which time
and place the cause will be heard. Should you
fail to file your written defenses, judgment and
decree will be entered in due course upon the
Petition.
Linda Louise Hess
Petitioner
JESSE T. RANDALL No. 09231
512 Main P.O. Box 301
Mound City KS 66056
Telephone (913) 795-2514
Email: jtrandall45@yahoo.com
Attorney for the Petitioner
fb28t3
Katie Rockers of Rockers Photography
in Scipio, Ks was the award recipient of the Professional Photographers
of America National Award. This was
awarded at the 2017 Annual Kansas
Professional Photographers Association
Banquet in February at Manhattan, Ks.
This award was designed to recognize
and celebrate individuals who have made
significant, outstanding service contributions to their photography association
and the industry as a whole. Professional
Photographers of America awarded Katie with a PPA pin and engraved
plaque to give her special recognition
for her extraordinary volunteerism. The
PPA created the award in 1958 recognizing those whose support for photography goes far above and beyond regular
expectations or contributions. The simple inscription on this plaque reads for
meritorious contributions to professional photography. Katie said: I will never
forget how each of you made me feel. My
heart melted as I was standing there with
my family and friends knowing that I had
been nominated and chosen to receive
this award tonight from my peers.
Along with the National Award Katie
also received and earned the Kansas
Distinguished Fellowship Medallion, the
Associations highest award for service to
the Kansas Professional Photographers
Association. Katie Rockers had
served 8 years on the Kansas
Professional
Photographers
Association Board and is currently serving on the Kansas
Professional
Photographers
School Board of Trustees. She
has been a Trustee for 12 years
and at the present time she is
serving as the Administrator of
the school.
Rockers Photography is a
full time, family owned portrait
studio located in Scipio. For
over 35 years they have served
Anderson County and surrounding areas for numerous generations. Rockers Photography is
located in the historic Old Rock
Schoolhouse in Scipio. Rockers
Photography has remained a
leading Senior Portrait studio in southeast Kansas, their
Storybook Weddings create
priceless keepsakes for couples THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Photo Submitted
and their family and childrens Katie Rockers is shown receiving the Professional
portraiture has enhanced their Photographers of America National award from
clients personalities and uniquePast President, mentor and friend Steve Attig.
ness. You can see the Rockers
Team throughout the local area
photographing sports, dance, prom, cov- er in support of WINGS. They are truly
ering special events like Cornstalk, and grateful for this community and love
at their Annual Girls Night Out fundrais- their clients.
Centerville Community Church
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ANDERSON
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×12.5
biz directory
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
Sales & Service
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Law Enforcement Officers
Memorial Fund found that
64 officers were killed in firearms-related incidents in 2016
compared to 41 in 2015 – a 56
percent increase. Of the 64 firearm-related deaths last year,
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery M-F
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
E-Statements &
Online Banking
The TV Shoppe
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
213 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Anderson
County
News
THE SMART CHOICE
Mon – Fri
8:00am
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
120 S. Maple
Garnett, KS
wiseautoks.com
785-448-2171
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
Send your Wedding,
Engagement,
Anniversary &
Birth Announcements
or Business News
ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click the appropriate
form under Submit News
Millers Construction, Inc.
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
You name it, we print it.
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Since 1980
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Delden Doors & Openers
Garnett, KS
21 were ambush-style attacks.
Firearm-related officer deaths
last year were the highest
recorded since 2011, when the
number was 73.
I think everybody can
agree its a pretty scary situation right now, Martin said.
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
Country
Favorites
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Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
CHIEF…
FROM PAGE 1A
COUNTY
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Custom Shelving Available
24/7 Access
Pest Control
516 E. 5th Ave. Garnett
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
To advertise in this
directory contact Stacey at
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
3B
LOCAL
2007: Skaters raise money for new park
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Photo Submited
This metallic Wire Tower button is unique. Little is known about
the button, which was manufactured in Boston between the 1880s
and 1920s.
Check out this
Wire Tower button
By now most of you readers
of my columns, know my love
of finding Old Buttons. Just
recently I dug yet another rather unique one. It is a metallic
Wire Tower button.
I researched this button for
several hours, and I was only
able to discover a very small
amount of historical information about it. I did find out it
was manufactured by the A.J.
Tower Company of Boston,
Massachusetts in the 1880s
through the 1920s. It was made
for and primarily used on early
Rain Slickers.
In 1895 buckles for Artic
overshoes, heavy grade shoes,
belt fasteners for lacing belts
onto pulleys were manufactured by A.J. Tower Boston
Rubber Shoe Company.
In 1915 A.J. Tower Company
manufactured Rain Slickers
themselves at the United Shirt
Duplicate
bridge
played
Only 5 points separated the six pairs in the duplicate bridge match March 1
in Garnett. Mary Margaret
Thomas and Tom Peavler came
in first. Steve Brodmerkle and
Anita Dennis were in second
place and Wanda Kirkland and
Phyllis Cobbs in third.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all
bridge players Wednesdays at
1:00 at the Garnett Inn.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
February 27, 2007
Once scoffed at by some
members of the community as a rag-tag bunch of kids
lurking city streets and sidewalks on their skateboards, the
Garnett Skate Park Committee
has surprised city commissioners by raising some $1,100
toward their total goal of $5,000
to develop a local skateboard
facility.
March 3, 1997
Both supporters and opponents of the Prairie Spirit
Trail came away from Kansas
Senate committee meetings
last week with a little bit of
what they wanted, after a compromise was reached regarding
recent rail legislation. The bills
passed the Senate. Amended
legislation makes portion of
the Prairie Spirit a state park
and sets up a watchdog task
force to help ensure the rights
of adjacent property owners.
County commissioner and
members of the Anderson
County Hospitals Board of
Trustees reached an agreement
Monday to the spirit of the
latest ambulance service contract, and expect an actual signing of the contract in coming
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
weeks. The two sides agreed to
provisions which would lower
the annual ambulance service
fee to $108,000 and place the
responsibility of purchase of
ambulance vehicles on the
shoulders of the county.
February 26, 1987
Approximately 25 to 30 concerned citizens armed with petition signatures and questions
met with the Anderson County
Commissioners on Monday to
discuss the rumored sale of the
Anderson County Ambulance
Service to a Linn Count-based
private firm. The commissioners told residents that the selling of the ambulance service
had been discussed, but there
had been no negotiations with
the Linn County service.
2×4
rockers
City officials discussed
Tuesday night the upcoming
expiration of the citys natural gas contract with Williams
Natural Gas Company, and the
possible options available concerning city gas service.
February 28, 1977
A bill sponsored by Rep.
James Cubit, R-Garnett, that
would allow municipalities,
counties, rural water district
and other units to form joint
entities for the purpose of regulating water projects resoundingly passed its first test Friday
in the Kansas House. The bill is
of vital interest to Garnett and
Anderson County as it would
allow the bodies involved in the
construction of a new reservoir
to be built near Garnett to form
management body that would
free any one group of liability
in the project.
Storage Unit 6 Month Special
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109 Prairie Plaza Parkway
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Call (785) 448-6244 for
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Isnt it neat what researching one little ole buttons history will tell you?
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785-448-6191 or 1-800-530-5971
4B
LOCAL
Crest FFA celebrates with busy week
March Calendar
Important dates for March
are: March 1-Friendship Day
and Ash Wednesday; March
12-Daylight Saving Time
Begins, set clocks ahead one
hour; 17-St. Patricks Day;
March 20-First day of spring
Calendar
March
4-Annual
Lions
Pancake, soup and chili Day, 7
a.m.-7 p.m.; 6-Cemetery Board
meeting, City Hall Community
Room, 7 p.m.; Rural Water
District No. 5 board meeting,
board office, 7:30 p.m.; Fire
Dept. meeting, Fire Station,
7 p.m.; 15-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement, 7
p.m.
School Calendar
March 10-No School, Teacher
Work
and
Professional
Development Day; 13-Dental
screenings- all day
Meal Site
March 3-fish, macaroni and
tomatoes, peas, wheat bread,
jello with fruit; 6-Salisbury
steak, mashed potatoes, lima
beans, bread, pears; 8-baked
chicken, creamed peas and
potatoes, roll, mandarin cookie delight; 10-meatloaf or fish,
baked potato, Brussel sprouts,
roll, pineapple; 143-scalloped
chicken, raw veggie salad, corn,
bread, apricots. Phone 620-8523457 for meal reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented at Feb.
26 service was Revelation 3:1-6.
Pastor Andrew Kolls sermon
was Jesus Says: Awaken!
Cross training Classes, 9:30 a.m.
each Sunday. Worship Service,
10:45 a.m.; Mens Bible StudyTuesday, 7 a.m.; Mar. 5-Church
potluck lunch, City Hall
Community Room following
church service. Small Group
Dare to Discipline- Thursday
nights, 7 p.m. at Chase and
Jessica Riebels.; babysitting
provided.
Cowboy Church
Pastor Jon Petty challenged
worshippers Feb. 6 asking
What do you believe? Reading
scripture from Mark 11:22-24,
he reminded everyone not to
doubt the word of God and take
responsibility for what you
believe; simply take God at His
word.
Next Sunday Emily Mohr,
missionary, evangelist and
prophet from Australia, will
talk about her experiences of
sharing God in Africa. Service
begins at 9 a.m. With an adult
class following reviewing the
book God is Good.
Northcott Church
Events: March 12-Fellowship
lunch and board meeting; 23-Northcott Women of
Faith, 6:30 p.m.; menu-salads.
Birthdays-March 2-Jon Moon;
28-Janet Strawder; 23-Piper
Moon.
All Sundays: Bible Study, 9:28
a.m.; Worship-10:28 a.m.; Bible
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
Study cancelled Wednesday evenings through winter months.
Prayer Focus: President Trump
and Vice-President Pence;
Pastor Search, Lynn County
Dept. of Education; March
3-4-Extraordinary Womens
Conference at Tulsa, Okla.
Happy Helping Hands
4-Him Projects; Love a Child
in Haiti, 2nd and 3rd quarters; Samaritans Purse- 4th
quarter. website: www.facebook.com/NorthcottChurch.
Address: PO Box 86, 12425, SW
Barton Road, Colony, KS 660159223. Contact person: Leon
LaGalle, 620-228-2844
UMC
Scripture presented at
United Methodist Church Feb.
26 service was Psalm 99:1-9,
Exodus 24: 11-18, 2, Peter 1:1621 and Matthew 17:1-9. Pastor
Welch presented the sermon,
Weve Been to the Mountain
Top; We Can Face the Valley.
Colony
How Colony Came To Be:
An eminence known as High
Divide, dividing the waters of
the Arkansas and Missouri rivers, stood a rail station on the
highest point in elevation on
the railroad between Kansas
City and the Gulf of Mexico. It
was named Divide and a town
was platted with the probate
judge of Anderson County on
August 2, 1870. Owing to the
difficulty in securing water,
few improvements were made
at this town site for nearly two
years. A store was built in 1871,
a corner building on the south
of Broad Street, but was of short
duration as little was heard of it
the next year when the colony
arrived.
It was back in Ohio and
Indiana four men were making
plans to organize a colony to
bring to the Kansas territory
where they expected to found
a town. In March 1872 the new
settlers began to arrive and by
the middle of May about one
hundred people had come to
the vicinity of Divide. After the
arrival of the colonists a town
company was formed and an
election held. The name of the
station and site was changed to
Colony after this settlement of
colonists.
Colony in 2000 and 2010
Colony is a city in Anderson
County, Kansas. As of the 2010
census, the city population was
408. According to the United
States Census Bureau, the city
has a total area of 0.5 square
miles, all of it land. As of the
census of 2000, there were 397
people, 160 households, and 120
families residing in the city.
The population density was
794.7 people per square mile.
There were 186 housing units at
an average density of 372.3 per
square mile. The racial makeup
of the city was 94.96 percent
White, 0.25 percent African
American, 0.76 percent Native
American, 0.25 percent Asian,
and 3.78 percent from two or
more races. Hispanic or Latino
of any race were 2.02 percent of
the population.
It will be interesting to learn
more in 2020.
Crest FFA
FFA Week Feb. 20-24 was a
busy one at Crest. Tuesday they
served breakfast at Kincaid
High School at 6:30 a.m. with
biscuits, gravy, sausage patties,
juice and coffee and that evening during Crest vs. Madison
basketball game served a cake
raffle and at half time of the
Boys Varsity game they held
an Ag Relay game. Thursday
they served the biscuits, gravy,
sausage patties, juice and coffee at the Colony City Hall
Community Room. Friday officers did an Ag in the Classroom
for the 3rd and 4th graders that
morning.
FFA members are Makayla
Jones, Shelby Ramsey, Caleb
Stephens, Miranda Golden,
Breyanna Benjamin, Nate
Berry, Nick Vaughn, Austin
Louk, Hayden Seabolt, Evan
Bain, Billy Lyda, Ridley Black
and Annie Culler.
Officers are Shelby Ramsey,
president, Caleb Stephens, vice
president; Miranda Golden, secretary, Breyanna Benjamin,
treasurer, Makayla Jones,
reporter; and Nate Berry,
Sentinel
RWD
The original planning board
of the Anderson County Rural
Water District No. 5. was organized in March 1964. Yes, 53
years ago! Construction began
on the water lines the fall of
1974 and completed in spring
1976. The first office was held
at the first district secretarys
house in Kincaid. She was
Delores Prather. In 1984 the
office was moved to Colony.
Today Paul Stephens serves as
Field Manager of the district
and Tammy Bowen as Office
Manager. Board officers meet
the 2nd Wednesday of each
month at the District Office in
Colony on Broad Street with
Cherry Street on the west.
Board members are David
Regehr, president, Randy
Bunnel, vice-president, Kendall
McGhee, Eugene Anderson,
Randy West, Vance Beebe, Steve
Weatherman , Randy West and
Lance Ramsey. Office hours are
8 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Monday-Friday,
closed for lunch from 11:30 a.m.
to 12 noon. Office phone 620852-3475, email: rwd5@ckt.net.
Emergency after hours number: 620-363-0055.
Library
The Colony Library Board
met on Feb. 21 at the City Hall
Community Room. Two boxes
of books have been donated
to Union Rescue Mission in
Wichita. Kloma Buckle will be
attending a webpage training
in Iola. A few books are being
weeded from the childrens section. They will be given away.
Kloma
and
Donna
Westerman are putting holiday
stickers on the spines of childrens holiday books so they
will be easier to find.
Jolly Dozen
All 12 members were present
for the Feb. 20 meeting at the
City Hall Community Room.
Delores Strickler was hostess. Roll call was answered
with a memorable Valentine
they once received. Members
decided to clean the half barrels of Christmas decorations
located in the business area
of our town the following day
which they did. A game was
played with Dixie Ward as winner. Charlene Tinsley won the
hostess gift. Delores Strickler
served refreshments using the
Valentine theme. Charlene
Tinsley will host the March
21 meeting at the City Hall
Community Room.
Around Town
The children of the late
Robert and Ruth Luedke were
in Kansas City Feb. 27 to visit
their youngest sibling, Glen
Luedke, Mandeville, LA. Glen
was visiting his daughter,
Alexandra, there. Going were
Jerry Luedke, Colony; Ronald
Luedke, Garnett; Joyce and
Terry Collins, Wathena, Ks.
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ComfortCare Homes
Business Person
Of The Month
Jack owner,
Rundle
Wolken Tire
Questions about nursing
homes or long term care?
Contact us today…
ComfortCare Homes
www.comfortcareks.com
Ottawa (785) 242-1809 Baldwin City (785) 594-2603
March
Mania!
2×4
20% Off
maple st liquor
All
Wine & Spirits
(Does not include case discount)
313 S. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-3815
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Magee, Johnson engaged
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Photo Submitted
Holley Delores Ann Magee
of Garnett and Andrew Wesley
Johnson of Garnett have
announced their engagement.
She is the daughter of
Rhonda and Daniel Dick of
Garnett and Lyle F. Magee of
Kansas City, Kan. She attended school at Anderson County
High School and currently is
attending school to be a veteri-
narian assistant.
He is the son of Michelle
Johnson of Garnett and Vincent
Johnson of Greeley. He attended school at Anderson County
High School and works at the
automotive center at Walmart.
The wedding is scheduled to
take place at 4 p.m. Saturday,
Sept. 2, 2017, at the Quonset Hut
at Lake Garnett.
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary & Birth Announcements Business News
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
2×4.5
wise auto
THE BEST SELECTION OF USED CARS
TO CHOOSE FROM AT THE LOWEST PRICES
We are Right on the Corner
and Always Right on the Price.
THE SMART CHOICE
120 S. Maple Garnett, KS
wiseautoks.com
4
785-448-2171
WIN
Four winners will
4×8
gpi schlitterbahn
Four winners will win 4 tickets to Schlitterbahn for the 2017 season!
Just complete and clip out this registration and return it with your completed
2017 Spring Sweepstakes entry from the
March 7 Review. Four winners will win 4
tickets each to be used anytime during the
2017 season at Schlitterbahn Waterpark
in Kansas City. Blackout dates apply.
ONLY forms received with your official
2017 Anderson County Review Spring
Sweepstakes entry will qualify so be
sure to fill out and return your sweepstakes entry! Contact the Review at
(785) 448-3121 with questions.
Registration good ONLY with your completed 2017 Spring Sweepstakes Entry.
All entries must reach the Reviews office by 5 p.m. March 31, 2017.
See your sweepstakes entry or ads in todays paper for details.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
5B
SCHOOL
Top Scholars
real estate sales
weddings
2×2
sporting events
fotodrone facility inspections
aerial survey &
mapping
fotodrone
aerial video & still photography
(785) 304-3870 flyfotodrone@gmail.com
Racers Lounge is Celebrating
2×2 the Coming of Spring!
Please join us
racersMarch 24th 8 p.m.
for our Spring Fest!
Food & Drink Specials
Entertainment by Big Rick
Located at the Garnett Inn & Suites
109 Prairie Plaza Parkway
(785) 448-6800
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Photo Submitted
The Anderson County Scholar Bowl team competed at the 4A State Scholars Bowl Feb. 11 in Winfield. From left: Eddie Gruver, Owen Lutz,
Will Mechnig, Nate Gainer, Hayden Hermann, Isaac Kubacka and advisor Mr. Dennis Richards. Not pictured, Jennifer Sibley, assistant
advisor. The ACHS team lost to El Dorado and didnt make finals.This was ACHSs first appearance at state in 10 years. They did a great
job. Im really proud of them. Its a different level of competiton, Richards said.
St. Patricks Day Dinner
St. Patrick Church – Emerald, Kansas
2×2
Sunday, March 12, 2017 11am – 2pm
Corned Beef, Cabbage
st patricks
dinn
(alternate meat available),
Irish Soda Bread
and delicious homemade pies.
Suggested donation $10 per person
Excellent live music by Tullamore!
Raffle tickets with prizes including Handmade Quilt & (3) $100 Cash Prizes!
6.5 miles south of Williamsburg on Colorado Rd. or 8 miles east of
Waverly on Hwy 31 or 18 miles northwest of Garnett on Hwy. 31
Wedding, Engagement, Anniversary & Birth Announcements Business News
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
Are You Turning 65
And Have Questions
About Medicare?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Photo Submitted
The Anderson County Junior High School 8th grade Scholar Bowl team won second place at the Prairie View Middle School Scholar Bowl
Tournament Thursday, March 2. Pictured from left, front row: Kegan Katzer, Lanie Walter; back row: Leo Sheahan, Jenna Alexander,
Avery Sumner, Carly Hicks.
2×6
Enrollment Benefits
eck
Medicare & Work Insurance
New to Medicare Seminars
Hosted by Senior Health Insurance
Counseling for Kansas (SHICK)
April 12, 2017
July 12, 2017
October 11, 2017
January 10, 2018
10 a.m. – Noon
Location: ECKAAA Office
(117 S. Main – Ottawa, KS 66067)
Please call
(785) 242-7200 to register.
Be sure to have us run a comparison of your
Medicare part D Drug plan during 2017 Open Enrollment
(October 15, 2017 – December 7, 2017)
The SHICK program is funded by a grant from the
Kansas Department of Aging and Disability Services.
117 S. Main Ottawa, KS 66067
(800) 633-5621 (785) 242-7200
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 3-7-2017 / Photo Submitted
The Anderson County Junior High School 7th grade Scholar Bowl team won first place at the Prairie
View Middle School Scholar Bowl Tournament Thursday, March 2. Pictured from left, front row: Zia
Holloway, Jenna Rycheck; back row: Beau Dykes, Lilly Teter, Clarissa Sheahan, Zack Mead.
Advanced Excavating
& Trucking LLC
3×6
advanced excavating
219 N. Short Street – Parker, Ks 66072
913-898-2727
H Specializing in Commercial
H Agriculture and
H Residential Excavation
H Complete Demolition Services
TRUCKING SERVICES
H Rock & Dirt Hauling H Equipment Hauling
H Heavy Hauling available
advanced2727@embarqmail.com
www.excavate-haul.com
3×6.5
qsi
6B
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
Available March 1, 3 bedroom,
1 bath, large yard, CH/CA. $575.
(785) 304-3766.
fb28t2*
3 bedroom, 2 bath house. 410
S. Elm. $475/month, $300 deposit. Ozrents.com. (316) 609-6799.
fb28t5*
Mini Farm on almost 2 secluded acres just West of Meriden.
Totally renovated 3 Br farmhouse and some small outbuildings. New roof, siding, plumbing, electrical, foundation, carpet, paint, …move in Ready!
Outside features fruit trees,
garden area, flower beds and
an old smoke house that would
make a great studio, guest
quarters or shop. Located
on a paved Rd, just 15 min
from Topeka, and 30 min from
Lawrence. $130,000. pictures
at www.piafriend.com Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty 785393-3957
*ja3*
Linwood, Kansas, 2 residential building lots. 60 x 120
downtown cul-de-sac with specials paid. Walkout lots back
up to city park $6,000 each or
both lots for $10,000. 785 8437007 or morley702@gmail.com
*sp27*
REAL ESTATE
Owner will finance – 50
acres 3 miles west of Waverly,
fenced, pond, trees and wildlife.
(913) 669-1873.
*oc25*
New on the Market! 3 bedroom
1 bath ranch home in established quiet area of Mclouth.
Gorgeous hardwood floors,
new kitchen, new bath, and
paint. 3rd bedroom has its
own entrance and could make
a wonderful at home office or
studio. Outside features an
oversized garage, and a covered patio. Perfect for older
couple, first time buyers or a
rental! Hurry $97,500. Pictures
at www.piafriend.com. Darrell
Mooney, Pia Friend Realty
785-393-3957
*ja3*
Coal Creek Estates last 2-acre
building site for sale by owner.
Includes water meter ($6,000
value). On paved road 3 miles
north of Baldwin City, approximately 10 miles from Lawrence.
Requires septic system. No
owner financing. $51,500. Ralph
Earles. (785) 594-3529, (785) 5507332.
**nv24yr**
1×3
schulte
1×3
MOBILE HOMES
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
TT&T Roll Offs
tt&t
HELP WANTED
Cook. Life Care Center of
Osawatomie. Full-time position available for evening
shift. Culinary/food services
experience preferred. High
school diploma or equivalent
required. We offer great pay
and benefits in a team-oriented
environment. David Mercier,
(913) 755-4165, (913) 755-6780 Fax,
1615 Parker Ave., Osawatomie,
KS 66064. David_Mercier@lcca.
com. LifeCareCareers.com. An
Equal Opportunity Employer
88097.
fb28t2
Water
Utility
General
Systems Manager. City of
Topeka Plans, directs, and
coordinates Operations and
Maintenance activities for
the Water Treatment Plant,
Distribution System, Pump
Stations, Towers and Meter
Services. $76K – $90K DOQ.
www.topeka.org/careers.
Need an experienced pumper
for oil company ASAP. Please
call (405) 641-6538. mc7t1
You name it,
we print it.
ryter
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
(913) 594-2495
Low Cost Conservation Tree and Shrub Seedlings
2×2 Kansas Forest Service
Spring orders, now through mid-May.
kpa forest
Bareroot & Containerized Seedlings
Shipped to Your House or
Picked Up at Manhattan
Prices Starting at
$ 0.80 per
Order online or call
www.KansasForests.org
1-888-740-8733
Seedling
SERVICES
WANTED
Printing: Business cards, custom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
Pasture to rent. (785) 241-0856.
mc7t2*
20, 30 & 40 yard containers available.
We also buy scrap.
GARAGE SALE
(785) 242-2288
CRANE GARAGE SALE
1×3
1990 2 bedroom, 2 bath mobile
home for sale in Garnett. $9,500.
(913) 669-9599. fb28t2*
SERVICES
Photo by USFS Region 5
SERVICES
Quonset Hut
crane
Friday, 10th 4-8 p.m.
Saturday, 11th 8 a.m.-1 p.m.
Saturday, March 11, 2017 9:30 A.M.
2×3
elston auction
3408 West 6th, American Legion Lawrence, KS
80 + Firearms! Revolvers/Pistols, Black Powder Cap Ball, Long Firearms
Ammo/Holsters/Knives
175 + Toys: 1/16th w/Boxes: Precision Series, Allis Chalmers, John Deere,
Massey Harris, Agco Allis, Deutz Allis, Massey Ferguson
1/16th No Boxes: John Deere, Airplanes New In Box
See the Internet for a Detailed Complete Listing of the Fireams & Toys!
Seller: Mrs. Clark Mary Ann Platt Richmond, KS
Auction Note: QUALITY IS OUTSTANDING! NO Misc.!
Preview Begins at 7:00 A.M. Day of Auction ONLY!
Elston Auctions
(785-594-0505) (785-218-7851)
Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994
Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/elston 100+ pictures!!
Pay rate: $16.50/hr
with excellent benefits.
Apply in person:
Builders Choice Concrete
745 Locust, Ottawa Ks., or
840 Elm, Garnett, Ks.
EOE, drug-free workplace.
(785) 242-1045
Edgecomb Builders
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2017 SF Farms, Inc.
Annual Performance
2×3
Tested Angus Bull Sale
sf farms
Complimentary Meal: 5:00pm
Saturday, March 11, 2017 6:00pm
Over 60 head sell – yearling and 18 month old bulls.
Ai Sires: MOGCK Sure Shot, Connealy Capitalist 028, G A R Prophet,
Connealy Black Granite & R B Tour of Duty 177
Pasture Sires: JBF 0749 Final Answer 9035, SF 0319 In Focus 2762,
SF 0221 Upward 0586 & JW 0421 Nebraska 6068
LOCATION: ANDERSON COUNTY SALES COMPANY
N. Hwy 59 Garnett, KS 66032
SF Farms, Inc. 785-937-2433 (office) 785-418-1986 (Jodi)
3582 John Brown Road Princeton, KS 66078
2×4
qsi
Specializing in Complete
Post Frame Buildings
800-374-6988
Serving: Kansas, Missouri, Iowa & Nebraska
www.qualitystructures.com
RICH HILL, MO. 13th ANNUAL
HORSES & HORSE DRAWN EQUIPMENT & TOOLS
2 – DAY CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
Fri., April 21, 2017–9:30am &
Sat., April 22, 2017–9:00am
2x7wendt
Bates County ProduceaucRich Hill, MO Hwy. A
west to PP Hwy. then southOn PP Hwy. 3 miles
tion plus $15 Consignment Fee charged on
Commission
all horses. All non-cataloged horses will be consigned
& sold in the order they arrive on Auction day!
9:00am Driving Horses Hitched
9:30am TACK AUCTION
Selling New & Used Tack
10:15am Hitched to Sled
11:00am HORSE AUCTION
Selling Ponies, Draft &
Driving Horses
SATURDAY
To order horse catalog or to consign
items, call or write to:
Dennis Wendt
913-285-0076
Andrew Schrock
10519 E Albert Rd.
Rich Hill, MO 64779
or
Ethan Brubacker
2853 S 1125 Rd.
Rich Hill, MO 64779
April 22nd
Starting at 9:00am
Consignments welcome.
No gas or electrical equipment taken
& good selective merchandise only.
Deliver items to sale site on Thursday
& Friday between 8AM-5PM. All horses
must be @ sale site by 9:00 AM Friday.
All horses Must have a negative
coggins test. VET ON SITE. Small
animal & poultry consignors must
provide cage or box. Goats need scrapie tags. All out of state cattle must
have TB test & out of state fowl need
to have health papers at time
of check-in.
(We will run multiple rings)
Bake Sale & Lunch Served By The Ladies Of
The Mennonite Church
9:00am Tack (new & used)
9:30am TBA
10:00am TBA
10:30am TBA
Items to be sold include:
Tools, Furniture, Hand Crafted Furniture &
Items, Western &
Country Collectibles & Decorative Items,
Tack, Harness, Saddles, Antiques & Collectibles, Primitives, Building Material,
Small Animals, Buggies, Wagons, Sleighs,
Rare Items & Horse Drawn Machinery
1×2
AD
Help us provide dignity in life
for our elderly.
2×3
p a r k v i e w
heights
Night Shift Charge Nurses
Night Shift CNA FT/PT
Dietary Aides FT/PT
buidlers choice
FRIDAY
You name it,
we print it!
Garnett Publishing
due to family obligations.
We look forward to
serving you in the future.
MAKE MONEY
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!!
For local Ready Mix Company. Must have good
employment history and driving record.
April 21st
Starting @ 9:30AM
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
dc8tf
1300 lb. large square bales of
alfalfa. (785) 241-0856.
mc7t2*
Keims Greenhouse
will not be open for the
keim
2017 Spring Season,
Join us at Parkview Heights for more than just a paycheck.
Join to give the care youve wanted to give in a setting that
fosters quality and a family serving family atmosphere. We
are looking for:
froggattefarms@hotmail.com www.sffarms.org (Catalog available online)
ESTATE AUCTION
FARM & AG
NOTICES
Wooden Playhouse, Home Decor,
Glassware, Purses, Toys, Mens,
Womens, Boys, Girls, Toddler
& Infant Boy Clothes
READY MIX DRIVER
& LOADER OPERATOR
2×3
2×2
edgecomb
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
View this & other auctions online
@ www.wendtauction.com
DENNIS WENDT AUCTIONEER 913-285-0076
On-line applications available at
www.parkviewheights.com
or come see us at 101 N. Pine St., Garnett, KS 66032.
If you have more questions, please contact
Carol Barnes at 785-448-2434.
We look forward to visiting with you.
Experienced Concrete/Asphalt Paving Foreman
This is NOT a fake it til you make it position. At least 3 years
verifiable experience in a similar position in the paving
industry required. This is a working foreman position.
Duties include but are not limited to:
Schedule with superintendent al manpower required at
their job location.
Oversee crews working under their authority, which might
include subcontractors.
Maintain work schedule as set forth by superintendent or
construction coordinator.
Keep daily logs as to time and personnel on site, deliveries,
and changes in scope of work.
Maintain and keep time sheets for company employees
under their authority.
2×4.5
late dane ad
Kansas Asphalt, Inc., is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Al employees are respnosible to protect and promote the interests
of Kansas Asphalt, Inc., in all matters in compliance with the
companys core values of WOS the Customer; Invest in Relationships; Less Talk, More Action; Do as You Say; and Second to
None.
Full time, seasonal. Must pass a physical, drug testing, and
background investigation before job offer is made. Benefits
included health/vision/dental insurance, paid sick/vacation,
and 401(k) w/match. Please email your resume to rolesen@
kansasasphalt.com making sure to include yoru phone
number and personal email address so that we can contact
you. You may also apply in person at Kansas Asphalt, Inc., 7000
W. 206th Street, Bucyrus, KS 66013. No recruiter calls please!
RN/LPN, CNA
Life Care Center of Burlington
2×3
lifecare
burlingRN/LPN
– FT/PT
ton CNA – FT/PT
Please apply at
http://lifecarecenterofburlington.com/careers,
in person at
601 Cross St.
Burlington, KS
or send your resume to
Tracy_Bartley@lcca.com
PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 2017, @ 10 AM
2 m. S of Ottawa on Hwy. 59, to Rockcreek Rd.
7 m. E to Rockcreek Terr.,
1 m. N on Rockcreek Terr. (4030 Rockcreek Terr.)
2×6.5
TRACTORS, BACKHOE & MACH: 1941 IH-H; 1950 IH-H w/3 pt, both w/12 v.-good; Case 580-B
Edgeomb aucgas backhoe #5419214, cab, 3 pt, live power-good; King Kutter 5 3 pt tiller; 5 3 pt & pull type
rotary mowers; 3 pt 2 bot plow; 5 3 pt gravel rake; 5 3 pt blade; JD 5 sickle mower.
tion
4 WHEELER
& LAWN MOWERS: Yamaha Wolverine 4×4, Sears 22 & 25 Hp, 50 riding mowers;
Rally 22 self-propelled mower; Yard Man walk behind string trimmer; Troy Bilt 6Hp tiller; Tillamatic 6Hp walk behind or 3 pt tiller; 2 plows, disk & harrow, 3& 4 blades for lawn tractors;
new 50 mower deck; el start DR chipper; Troy Bilt el start log splitter; pull 4 grass catcher &
fertilizer spreader; 15 gal sprayer; 2 pull dump trailers.
TOOLS: Campbell Hausfeld 60 gal air comp; drill press; Sears 10 table saw; Farmhand 125 wire
welder; el welder; , – socket sets; vices; workmate; sev gas string trimmers; pole saw; 14,
16, 18 chain saws; tile saws-1 is new; el power washers; el chain saw sharpener; Stack On roll
around tool chest; lots of hand tools; 3/8 & air impacts; & other power tools.
OTHER MISC: 75 steel posts; 20 wood ext ladder; 5 & 10 fiberglass ext ladders; 55 gal barrels;
chain hoists; 220 ext cord; commercial shelving; house jacks; 5 rolls of new 48 woven wire;
new barb wire; yard gates; treated posts; 5 -10 & 11 Hp new engs; 4 & 6 Hp used engs; 5
gal lub grease; 3-work benches; yard & garden tools; splitting mauls & sledge hammers; pile of
fire wood; sm propane tanks; lineman tools; 10×10 screened in tent; push garden plow; lawn
mower & trailer wheels.
HOUSEHOLD: Murphy bed; Queen bed; wood chairs; Eden pure heater; old lg beveled Oak mirror; Lazy Boy recliner; dbl recliner couch & matching recliner; Oak coffee, end, wall table, drop
leaf table w/4 chairs & highboy; lg frosted mirror; book case; 3 & 5 dr chests; sm wood table;
quilt rack; Kenmore washer & dryer; 6 & 8 folding tables; sm appl; cast skillets; Pfaltzgraff,
Corning & other glassware; pots & pans; steamer trunk; other HH.
ALL ITEMS IN CLEAN & VERY GOOD CONDITION
MUCH MISC NOT LISTED
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS, LOST OR STOLEN ITEMS LUNCH AVAILABLE
TERMS: CASH, CHECKS OR CREDIT CARDS W/PHOTO ID.
GARY DUBOIS – OWNER
Edgecomb Auctions
785-594-3507 or 785-766-6074
www.edgecombauction.net/edgecomb
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
7B
CLASSIFIEDS
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a Happy Ad!
More LOCAL customers read Review classifieds than any other newspaper!
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
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
AUTOS
40
Grade
A
Steel
Cargo
Containers $1600.00
in KC. $2100.00 in Solomon
Ks. 20s 45s 48s & 53s also
available Call 785 655 9430 or go
online to Chuckhenry.comfor
pricing, availability & Freight
estimates.
Digital hearing aids – now
offering a 45-day risk free
offer!
Free batteries for
life! Call to start your free
trial! 877-687-4650
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
Lenders Offering Special
Govt Programs for Mobile
Homes and $0 Down for Land
Owners. Promo homes with
reduced down payments.
Use Tax Refund for additional incentives. Singles from
$39,900. Doubles from $59,900
866-858-6862
Living with knee or back
pain?
Medicare recipients
may qualify to receive a pain
relieving brace at little or no
cost. Call now! 855-796-7301
Oxygen – Anytime. Anywhere.
No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One
G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA
approved! Free info kit:
844-359-3973
Save your home! Are you
behind paying your mortgage?
Denied a loan modification? Is
the bank threatening foreclosure? Call Homeowners Relief
Line now for Help! 855-401-4513
Viagra and Cialis users!
Theres a cheaper alternative than high drugstore prices! 50 Pills Special $99.00 Free
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call n ow! 855-850-3904
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
1×4
STILES
delp
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Happiness is… having your
engagement announcement
and photo published FREE
in the Review! Go to www.
garnett-ks.com and click the
form under Submit News.
Available FREE 24 hours/day!
mc1tf
Happiness is… Having the
Reviews EagleEye News
Drone do aerial photography or
videography for your wedding,
special event, property survey,
promotional video, high-altitude equipment or building
inspection, etc. Real-time view
from up to 400 feet elevation, up
to nearly 1 mile range. Contact
the Anderson County Review
at (785) 448-3121 for more info.
oc11tfn
Gates Corporation
1450 Montana Road
Iola, KS
2×3
Production and Warehouse help needed.
filler
or and
gates
Production
Warehouse help needed.
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
You name it,
we print it.
Happiness is… Breakfast
at the VFW. 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.
Saturday, March 11. Biscuits
and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage and eggs. mc7t1
Anderson County news
DAILY at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
HAPPY ADS
Happiness
is…
March
Madness! 15% off in Booth #3
at BlackHorse Trading, 600 N.
Maple, Garnett. mc7t4
JB Construction
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
3×5
AD
Outstanding Performance in
GM Sales for all of Kansas
Eight
Please apply in person.
Applications will be taken weekdays 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Applications must be completed in the facility.
GED or high school diploma required.
Pre-employment background checks, drug screen and
BTE Physical ability testing required.
Benefits available.
Equal Opportunity Employer
In anticipation of a GREAT 2017 paving season,
Kansas Asphalt is now hiring
for the following positions:
2×3.5
late dane ad
Truck drivers (Valid Class A or B CDL license required
Experienced Equipment Operators
Asphalt/Concrete Crew laborers (No experience
necessary. Will train the right candidate)
Kansas Asphalt, Inc., is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
All employees are responsible to protect and promote the
interests of Kansas Asphalt, Inc., in all matters in compliance
with the companys core values of WOW the Customer;
Invest in Relationships; Less Talk, More Action; Do as You
Say; and Second to None.
Full time, seasonal. Must pass a physical, drug testing, and
background investigation before jot offer is made. Benefits
package includes health, dental, vision, and 401k. Please
email resume to rolesen@kansasasphalt.com making sure
to include your phone number and personal email address
so that we can contact you. You may also apply in person
at Kansas Asphalt, Inc., 7000 W. 206th Street, Bucyrus, KS
SPEAKER
LABOR POSITION
Rickerson Pipe Lining has a Labor position available.
Requirements:
Valid Drivers License, reliable transportation,
ability to lift 80 pounds, must have a good
attendance and will need to pass a drug test.
Fill out an application at:
2×3
rickerson
210 S. Catalpa
Garnett, KS
Monday – Thursday
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m.
2×4
kpa morton
AUTOS
Dental Hygienists and Dental Assistants
Come join our growing practice. We are
2×3
staffing for our new location in Garnett as
hale
well
as our current busy location in Ottawa.
Both offices are modern, paperless
and digital. Knowledge of Eaglesoft
is preferred, but not required.
SERIES
2017
Buy
of
a
lifetime:
Whites 6000 Pro XL Metal
Detector,Whites Dual Control
Headphones,Whites 2yr old
Bullseye 5.3 inch Coil, Whites
Pro XL Deep Scan Coil (like
new), brand new Whites
Rechargeable Nicad Battery
Pack,Whites Battery Pack
Charger ( overnight or fast
charging),8-AA Battery Pack
Holder,Fast Charge Model
CC-8 Nickel-Cadium Battery
Charger,Instruction Manual.
Asking $250 If interested call
448-6244.
fb14tf*
100 pieces more or less of seasoned barn wood. Mixed species. 46 inches long by varying
widths 6 inches to 12 inches 3/4
inch thick. Great for framing
or craft projects. You haul. $3/
linear foot. Greeley KS. (785)
304-3870.
ja10tf
Lung Cancer? And 60+ Years
Old? If So, You And Your
Family May Be Entitled To A
Significant Cash Award. Call
866-327-2721 To Learn More. No
Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.
MISCELLANEOUS
The Kansas Press Association
invites you to the first-ever
Kansans To Watch
Speaker Series
Mark Hamrick
Washington Bureau Chief and
Senior Economic Analyst
Bankrate.com
Please join us for an evening of dinner,
drinks and conversation. Space is limitedso order your tickets today!
Saturday, April 8th, 2017
6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Tickets – $75
Please send resume to:
Richard T. Hale, DDS
1136 W. 15th St.
Ottawa, KS 66067
5423 SW 7th St., Topeka, KS | p: 785-271-5304 | kspress.com
Training Services, Inc.
Training Services, Inc.
Serving Coffey, Osage and Franklin Counties in Kansas
2×4
cof
training
accounting
Capital Plaza Hotel
1717 SW Topeka Blvd, Topeka, KS
Order online today at www.kspress.com
Serving Coffey, Osage and Franklin Counties in Kansas
2×4
cof
training
case mgr
COF Training Services, Inc., a non-profit organization
providing services and supports to developmentally
disabled adults, is seeking an Accounting Assistant in
our Ottawa office. Applicants should have an interest
in working with individuals with disabilities. Required:
Experience with Quickbooks Bank; knowledge in using
standard office equipment such as computer, copier,
and fax machine; a high school diploma/GED; and a
good driving record. COF offers competitive wages
and excellent benefits including medical, dental and
life insurance, paid time off and KPERS. Applications
accepted through 3-9-17. Drug-free workplace.
Pre-employment and random drug/alcohol testing
is required. Equal Opportunity Employer
COF, a non-profit organization providing services and
support to disabled individuals, is currently seeking a
Targeted Case Manager. Applicants should have an
interest in working with individuals with disabilities. A
bachelors degree from a four year college/university is
preferred; a high school diploma/GED is required. One
year of work experience with individuals with MR/DD is
required along with a valid Kansas drivers license and a
good driving record. Knowledge of Excel and Microsoft
Word software is also required. Applicants must be able
to work flexible schedules and some travel is required.
COF offers competitive wages and excellent benefits
including medical, dental and life insurance, paid time
off and KPERS. Drug free workplace. Pre-employment
and random drug/alcohol testing is required.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
Apply at 1516 N. Davis Ave.
Ottawa, KS 66067
Look us up online at cofts.org
Apply at 1516 N. Davis Ave. in Ottawa,
or 1415 S. 6th St. in Burlington.
Look us up online at cofts.org
8B
LOCAL
Jump Rope for Heart
sets GES record
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, March 7, 2017
THIS
IS IT!
3×21
gpi sweepstakes
Your entry is in
todays newspaper!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
3-7-2017 / Photo Submitted
Above, Garnett Elementary
School had its Jump Rope for
Heart event Feb. 23 and 24.
At right, Peyton Markham with
kindergarten buddy Camden
Bettinger and Jack Crane with
his kindergarten buddy Cambree
Miller try out Chinese jump rope
skills. Everett Cox graciously
donated his time and talent to
play music for us again. Almost
$17,000 was raised in 2017,
which was the largest donation
ever from GES or the former
Garnett Elementary Center.
The Anderson County Reviews
SPRING
SWEEPSTAKES
2×3
yutzy
Fill out and return
your entry ASAP!
500
$
100
$
50
$
3×10
allen co regional hospital
BONUS DRAWING!
4 Sets of 4 FREE tickets to
Schlitterbahn 2017 season!
(Registration found elsewhere in
todays paper. To be eligible, you MUST
return your Schlitterbahn entry in the
envelope with your
Spring Sweepstakes entry.)
All subscription orders in this contest
get 2 EXTRA MONTHS FREE!
No purchase necessary to win a prize
See your entry packet for full rules
and game details
Contest deadline 5 p.m. March 31
You must return the numbered entry
card in the envelope to be eligible to
win any listed prize
Enclosed business coupons may have
expiration dates different from any
contest deadline; please read all
coupons carefully
Subscriptions ordered by March 31
deadline will escape our upcoming
April 1 rate increase
GRAND PRIZE
RUNNER UP
8 WINNERS
*If you did not receive an entry in your
newspaper, contact the Review ASAP.
(785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 review@garnett-ks.com

