Anderson County Review — May 17, 2016
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from May 17, 2016. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
2×2
AD
Re-connect the dots.
With state-of-the-art technology and a neurology-focused staff,
we are dedicated to improving our patients health and lifestyle.
38483
913.755.4165 913.755.6780 Fax 1615 Parker Avenue LCCA.COM
ONE U.S. DOLLAR
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Contents Copyright 2016 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
May 17, 2016
SINCE 1865 150th Year, No. 32
(785) 448-3121
| review@garnett-ks.com
The Graduating Class of 2016
STEP
FORWARD
Seniors graduate from
Anderson County,
Central Heights, Crest.
ANDERSON COUNTY
HIGH SCHOOL
See inside.
Muddogs American Legion
baseball team has clinic.
ACHS sports students
declare their intents.
See page 1B.
See page 6A.
CREST
HIGH SCHOOL
CENTRAL HEIGHTS
HIGH SCHOOL
Graduation Edition An Annual Supplement
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
E-statements & Internet Banking
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Former county Commencement
commissioner
Celebrations
files for clerk job
Johnson, Heck face
August primary; county
attorney also files
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A former hospital
administrator and county commissioner now wants to tackle
the job of county clerk.
Jim Johnson, a Republican,
filed Friday, May 13, for county clerk, setting the scene for
a primary Aug. 2 with Julie
Heck, a Republican who works
for the Franklin County Clerks
Office. The winner of that primary could face incumbent
clerk and Democrat Phyllis
Gettler, who so far does not
have a primary challenger.
So far, the
clerks race is
the only contested county
race leading
up to the
November
election.
The
City
Johnson
of Garnett,
meanwhile,
will have at
least three
people vying
for a seat currently held by
Greg Gwin,
who has not
yet filed nor
Jones
indicated his
intention.
The deadline to file for
SEE ELECTION ON PAGE 3A
Compromise reached
on lake road debate
Blackie is swing vote
after postponing road
debate from late April
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – A city commissioner who wanted a compromise in the dilemma over paving part of the Lake Garnett
road versus paving more residential streets found himself
the deciding vote on the issue.
And in the end, his hopes
of a compromise won out,
with commissioners deciding to pave more residential
streets but set aside a little
bit of money for the lake road
Central Heights senior Jacob Calvert takes a selfie
with Merrick Brown during Principal Tom Horsticks
welcome speech. Horstick encouraged graduates
to stop and take the selfies with him in the background.
repairs, too.
Commissioner
Gordon
Blackie found himself in the
middle of the debate on the road
paving issue at the Tuesday,
May 10, city commission meeting. Either way, the city would
spend up to $225,000 to pave
city streets. About $153,000 of
that money would go toward
paving a Top 5 priority list
of residential city streets.
Another $32,000 was committed
to help Anderson County road
crews chip-and-seal a county
road leading to the city-owned
Cedar Valley Reservoir.
The remainder, roughly
$39,000, could either be used to
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
5-17-2016 / Vickie Moss
Above, the Anderson County High
School Class of 2016 celebrates
after their commencement activities Sunday, May 15.
At right, Central Heights High
School seniors hug their parents
during their ceremony Saturday,
May 14.
Tim Comfort poses for a picture after receiving his
diploma.
SEE ROADS ON PAGE 3A
Valedictorians, from left, Reagan Jirak, Zane Phelps and Maci Rockers listen as
Remington Hedges gives her speech. Other valedictorians not pictured were Maci
Davidson, McKenzie Huettenmueller, Gwen Sibley and Bel Sibley. Salutatorian Central Heights principal Tom Horstick has parting
was Derrick Nelson.
words and congratulations for Jason Clissold.
Seatbelt enforcement campaign begins soon
Click It or Ticket set
to return May 23 to
June 5 throughout state
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016 / Dane Hicks
A semi-trailer was just a hair too tall to make it under the Prairie
Spirit Rail Trail bridge on U.S. 59 near the U.S. 59/169 roundabout
Saturday evening, May 14.
BY VICKIE MOSS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
Drivers and their passengers should be extra cautious
about their seat belt use starting next week, as the annual
Click It or Ticket campaign
rolls through Anderson County
and the rest of the state May 23
to June 5.
Local law enforcement will
participate in the campaign
from the Kansas Department
of Transportation, which pro-
vides for extra law enforcement
to aggressively enforce Kansas
occupant restraint and other
traffic laws. The Anderson
County Sheriffs Department is
among about 150 law enforcement agencies to take part in
the campaign.
Enforcement will occur
around the clock. Officers will
be especially vigilant at night,
because the likelihood of seatbelt use at night is much lower
than during the day and the
percentage of unrestrained
crash death soars much higher
at night.
Drivers can expect strict
enforcement of both the Safety
SEE SEATBELTS ON PAGE 5A
Custom printed balloons, wall plaques, rubber stamps – Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
BEEKEEPERS ASSOCIATION
The first general meeting of
the Golden Prairie Beekeepers
Association will be 9 a.m.
Saturday, May 21, at Garnett
City Hall, 131 W. Fifth Ave, All
beekeeping enthusiasts are
invited to attend. For more information, contact Marlin McGowin
at (785) 433-1381.
SILENT AUCTION, DINNER
Cornerstone Youth Group
will have a Silent Auction and
BBQ Dinner from 5 p.m. to 7
p.m. Saturday, May 21, at the
Garnett Chuch of the Nazarene
gymn. Adult tickets $8, children
under 10 $4. This is a fundraiser to help teens go to camp.
Dinner is your choice of pulled
pork, hamburger or hot dog with
sides, dessert and drink. You
do not have to purchase a meal
ticket to bid on auction items
and do not need to be present to win. Silent auction items
include Royals tickets, World
Champion ring replica, signed
Royals gear and donations from
local businesses.
REPUBLICANS CAN FILE
June 1 is the deadline to file
for positions on the Anderson
County Republican Party
Central Committee in preparation for the 2016 election. Each
voting precinct and township
in the county has a committee
man position and a committee
woman position up for election. County committee members serve as an organized
resource for Republican candidates at the local, state and
national level. There is no filing
fee. For information contact the
Anderson County Clerks office
at (785) 448-6841 or county
Republican Party chairman
Dane Hicks at (785) 448-3121
SCHOLARSHIPS
Ethel
Rugg
Scholarship
and Mary Morgan Nursing
Scholarship applications are
available at www.usd365endowment.com. For information
call Connie Rockers, 785-8672164.
GHS CLASS OF 1976
The Garnett High School Class
of 1976 will have a 40-year
reunion June 17 and 18. For
details see Garnett High School
Class of 76 on Facebook or
contact Rick Feuerborn at (785)
448-2975. Early registration by
May 27 is $15 per person, $25
per couple. Late registration is
$20 per person, $30 per couple.
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) 433-3118
for information.
SUICIDE AWARENESS GROUP
A new group, SAM – Suicide
Awareness Members, a division of SASS-MoKan – meets on
the first Thursday of the month
from 6:30-7:30 at the Garnett
Library located at 125 W 4th
Ave in Garnett. This group is
for family and friends who have
lost a loved one to suicide.
All are welcome to attend. The
facilitator is Lu Ann Nichols,
who may be reached at lu.ann.
nichols.1956@gmail.com.
HELP FOR ANIMALS
Anyone willing to donate kitty
litter, canned dog food or
canned cat food, dog and cat
toys, paper towels, laundry and
cleaning supplies, or newspaper to help support Prairie Paws
Animal Shelter can contact Lisa
at (785) 204-2148.
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
LOCAL
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS MAY 2
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order
at 9:00 AM on May 2, 2016 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor
met with the commission. Alan
Hire, Triangle Builders was present. He presented the commission with an update on the
progress of the new shop. Alan
presented pay requests for the
month. Commission signed off on
the pay requests.
Jail Bond Refinance
David Arteberry, George K.
Baum & Company met with the
commission concerning refinancing the jail bonds. The county will
use reserve funds from housing
prisoners to pay off approximatey
$315,000.00 of the current bonds
and will refinance the remaining
bonds at a lower interest rate.
Savings to the county will be about
$733,000.00. It was suggested
to set a meeting of the Public
Building Commission for May 25th
to consider the refinance.
ECKAN
Brandy Lopez, ECKAN met
with the commission. May is
community action month and she
requested the commission sign
a proclamation. Commissioner
Highberger moved to sign a
proclamation declaring May
as Community Action Month.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Sheriff
Sheriff Valentine met with the
commission. He has been contacted by the landowner east of the
Scipio Country Club. The owner
is wanting the cars removed from
the side of the road by his fence
line. Vernon has checked statutes
and cannot see where this is a
county issue.
GAPP
Commissioner
Highberger
moved to donate $2500.00 to the
GAPP project and to waive dump
fees except for the state fees.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30.
Emergency Management
JD Mersman, Emergency
Management
and
Sheriff
Valentine met with the commission. Discussion was held on
water rescue and the need for a
boat with a motor. JD explained
that the inflatable boat that the
county purchased in January is
housed in Colony and does not
have a motor. It is not made to
be put in the reservoir in high
winds. Sheriff Valentine would
like to donate $10,000 out of his
sheriff reserve fund to purchase
a more stable boat so that other
counties do not have to be called
in for rescues. Commission recommend getting bids on a boat
with a motor.
Calpine
Nathan
Vajdos,
Calpine
Industries met with the commission. They updated the commission on the amount of land that
citizens have committed to the
project. Commission questioned
how the payments to the county
and citizens works. Discussion
was held on the different steps
that have to be completed before
any construction can begin. They
informed the commission that they
do not have to have all the landowners along the line to proceed.
They would like to establish a pilot
agreement with the county which
they feel needs to be in place.
The project would still have to go
to the zoning board before the
actual construction could begin.
Meeting adjourned at 12:30 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
May 6, Larry South To Lonnie
South, Beg At A Point On The
East Right Of Way Line Of
North Oak Street, 590 South
Of The North Section Line Of
30-20-20, Thence East 336 To
The West Right Of Way Line Of
Santa Fe Railroad, Thence In A
Southeasterly Direction Along
Said Railroad Right Of Way 92,
Thence West 355.5 To The Said
East Right Of Way Line Of North
Oak Street, Thence North 90 To
The Pob, Less Part Taken For
Roads.
May 6, Daniel L Barnhart Ando
Judy L Barnhart To Daniel L
Barnhart And Judy L Barnhart,
Beg At The Se Corner Of The Ne/4
Of 35-20-17, Thence North Along
The Section Line On An Assumed
Bearing Of North 000000 West
A Distance Of 14 To The True
Beginning; Thence Continuing
North 000000 West A Distance
Of 402; Thence South 900000
West A Distance Of 559; Thence
South 000000 East A Distance
Of 402; Thence North 900000
East A Distance Of 559 To The
Pob. Said Tract Contains 5.16
Acres, More Or Less.
May 9, Mark A Gooding And
Mary A Gooding To Henry L Gatlin
And Carol M Gatlin, Lot 21 And
The W/2 Of Lot 22, Block 29, City
Of Garnett
May 10, Roger E Sample And
Sandy Sample To David Cox And
Lucinda Cox, Lot 1 In Block 1 In
Mcdowells Addition To The City
Of Garnett
May 10, Tamara Caudell Fka
Tamara J Horn Fka Tamara J
Caudell Fka Tamara J Dieker
And Jeffrey Dieker To Dereck S
Caudell And Lindsay A Caudell,
Beg At The Ne Corner Of The S/2
Of The Sw/4 Of 4-23-19, Thence
South 1320, Thence West 385,
Thence North 1320, Thence East
385 To The Pob.
CIVIL CASES RESOLVED
Harbour Portfolio VII, LP vs.
Donald L. Sidebottom et. al, judgment for possession of real property.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
Katherine Martin vs. Stanley
Martin, petition for divorce.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Capital One Bank (USA) NA
vs. Beverly J. Farren asking for
$2,137.59 plus costs and interest.
Saint Lukes Hospital of Garnett
vs. Garett L. Honn and Regina
Honn, asking for $2,253.42 and
$159.97 in attorney fees plus
costs and interest.
Saint Lukes Hospital of Garnett
vs. Mary A. Gooding and Mark
Gooding, asking for $667.65 count
1, $227.40 count 2, $300.90 count
3 plus costs and interest.
Pulmonary & Sleep Associates
PA vs. James Miller, asking for
$229.90 plus costs and interest.
Genesis Health Clubs, Inc., vs.
Richard E. Vandenberg III, asking
for $447.67 plus costs and interest.
City of Garnett vs. Andrew
Young, asking for $55.84 plus
costs and interest.
City of Garnett vs. Ashley
Hobbs, asking for $559.32 plus
costs and interest.
LIMITED ACTION RESOLVED
City of Garnett vs. Meleah
M. Torres, et. al, judgment for
$360.88 plus costs and interest.
City of Garnett vs. JoAnn
Cosner, judgment for $1,475.70
plus costs and interest.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Eric M. Weems was charged
May 5 with domestic battery.
Wayne Lee Allen Kirkland was
charged May 9 with theft.
Jeffrey L. Kratzberg was
charged May 10 with possession
of a controlled substance (K2)
with intent to distribute and possesion of drug paraphernalia with
intent to distribute.
Michael L. Klassen was charged
May 9 with two counts of failure to
comply with Kansas offender registration act.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Melissa Kay Andrews, $153
fine.
Allison Janae Ewign, $153 fine.
Alexandra Nichelle Ford, $264
fine.
Denis M. Gatotho, $576 fine,
diversion.
Grace Elizabeth Jabbour, $153
fine.
Louann M. Mundell, $231 fine.
James Herbert Neal, $240 fine.
Jerry W. Willis, $183 fine.
Other:
Kylie J. Kanatzer, domestic battery, diversion, $743 fine.
Wayne Lee Allen Kirkland,
domestic battery, theft, guilty plea,
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys uns
Ladies Day
Every Tuesday!
es of G
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
785-418-0711
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
thegunguys@yahoo.com
Dont Turn Your Back On Pain
If you want to feel your absolute best,
2×2
Let the healing hands of gentle chiropractic care
help
you avoid injuries,
prevent spinal degeneration
balanced
healt
and maintain a healthy balance in your life.
No Popping No Cracking No Twisting
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
805 N. Maple (Inside Baumans) Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
$553 fine.
Jeffery A. Lewis, possession of
hallucinogenic drug, guilty plea,
$293 fine.
ANDERSON COUNTY ATTORNEY
David E. Coon Jr., David E.
Coon, Jr., 42, Tulsa, OK, remains
in the Anderson County Jail awaiting sentencing, scheduled for June
13, 2016, at 2:30 PM, after he
was convicted of Felony Theft and
Possession of Methamphetamine
in Anderson County District Court
today. The convictions are the
result of a January 19, 2016, traffic stop by the Garnett Police
Department after a citizen called
in that his travel trailer had been
stolen. The defendant was pulled
over and then fled the scene
on foot eventually stealing an
Anderson County Public Works
truck and fleeing to Lawrence.
Methamphetamine was discovered in the defendants truck after
he fled.
Jason Schwenk, 35, Gardner,
was sentenced to 15 months in
prison, but granted 18 months
of probation today in Anderson
County District Court after being
convicted in March of Possession
of Methamphetamine. He has
been in jail, but will be released to
begin his probation.
Kevin D. Slover, 37, Garnett,
was convicted of Felony DUI-3rd
Offense today in Anderson County
District Court. His sentencing has
been scheduled for June 13,
2016, at 1:00 PM.
Matthew A. Joles, 28,
Osawatomie, was sentenced to
27 months in prison, but granted
probation for 24 months today in
Anderson County District Court
for the non-residential burglary of
Duffys Bar & Grill in Greeley that
occurred on November 1, 2015.
He has remained in jail since his
arrest earlier this year.
Patience J. Theiss, 32, Paola,
was convicted of Possession
of Methamphetamine today
in Anderson County District
Court. The charge stems from
a September 4, 2015, traffic
stop conducted by the Anderson
County Sheriffs Office in Garnett.
She remains in the Anderson
County Jail pending sentencing
which is scheduled for June 13,
2016, at 1:30 PM.
Michael J. Mains, 41, Garnett,
was convicted for Distribution
of Methamphetamine today in
Anderson County District Court.
The conviction comes as the
result of a joint Kansas Bureau of
Investigations, Anderson County
Sheriffs Office, and Garnett
Police Department joint operation
in which a controlled buy of methamphetamine was made from the
defendant in Anderson County on
October 31, 2014. The defendant
is scheduled to be sentenced on
June 13, 2016, at 10 AM.
James W. Dennis, 23,
Osawatomie, was convicted of
Residential Burglary and Felony
Theft today in Anderson County
District Court for two home burglary and thefts committed
between June 19, 2015, and
July 26, 2015, in Greeley and
Kincaid. The Anderson County
Sheriffs Office took the initial
reports, investigated the cases,
and apprehended the suspects.
Dennis is scheduled for sentencing on June 13, 2016, at 2:00 PM.
GARNETT MUNICIPAL COURT
Speeding violations:
Ashley
Diane
Boomer,
Collinsville, Okla., 44 in a 30, $150
fine.
Brandon
Lewis
Daniels,
Bartlesville, Okla., 39 in a 30,
$125 fine.
Robert Major Dingle Jr., Marion,
Iowa, 49 in a 30, $180 fine.
Hannah Margaret Fisher,
Thunder Bay, OT, 48 in a 30, $180
fine.
Patricia Ann Foubert, Lawrence,
39 in a 30, $125 fine.
Glenn Gabhart, Osawatomie,
43 in a 30, $150 fine.
Kimble Hruby Kueser, Chanute,
43 in a 30, $150 fine.
Joseph Lynn Linthacum,
Bartlesville, Okla., 42 in a 30,
$150 fine.
Jared W. Pyatt, Joplin, Mo., 42
in a 30, $150 fine.
H. Chris Stoner, Gardner, 44 in
a 30, $150 fine.
Andrea Nicole Taylor, Owasso,
Okla., 47 in a 30, $180 fine.
Doua Vang, East Bethel, Minn.,
47 in a 30, $180 fine.
Other:
Charles W. Bishop, Pomona,
inattentive driving, $150 fine.
Bobby I. Davis, Blue Mound,
stopping and parking in prohibited
places, $250 fine.
Robert W. Rockers, Greeley,
expired tag, $200 fine.
No seatbelts:
Rebecca Lynn Brown, Garnett,
child passenger restraint, $60
fine.
3×11.5
omalley equip
David D. Olsen, Garnett, $10
fine.
GARNETT POLICE REPORT
Incidents
On May 6, a report of theft in
the 700 block of South Hayes
Street. Miscellaneous air conditioning components were stolen.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
On April 25, the City of Kincaid
reported burglary and criminal
damage to property. A steel door
was damaged and $30 in quarters
was stolen.
On March 25, a report of burglary and criminal possession of
a firearm by a felon was reported
in Welda. Binoculars, a camera
and old cameras, a box fan and
miscellaneous toys were reported
stolen, but were later recovered.
Accidents
On May 7, a vehicle driven by
Albert Eugene Thacker Jr., 37,
Forsyth, Mo., swerved to miss a
deer on U.S. 59 near 2350 Road
and struck a culvert. The vehicle
cleared the driveway, landing on
its right side and roof area before
coming to rest.
On May 6, a vehicle driven by
Shirley A. Boan, 84, Wespthalia.
struck a deer on SW Barton Road
near SW 1100 Road.
On May 4, a vehicle driven by
Kimberely L. Burton, 44, Moran,
struck a deer on U.S. 59 near
2100 Road.
On May 2, a vehicle driven
by Jerry L. Riebel, 61, LaHarpe,
struck a deer on U.S. 169 near NE
Tennessee Road.
On May 1, a vehicle driven
by Karlee Marie Hammond, 17,
Colony, struck a deer on Idaho
Road near 800 Road.
On April 13, a vehicle driven
by Donald D. Smith, 72, Colony,
struck a deer on K-58 near SW
Barton Road.
JAIL BOOKINGS
On May 5, Sierra Dawn Doughty
Battles, 27, Iola, was booked into
jail by Anderson County Sheriff
on a warrant for failure to appear.
Bond set at $5,000.
On May 5, Rhonda Lea
Jackson, 50, Iola, was booked into
jail by Anderson County Sheriff on
suspicion of distribution of drugs.
Bond set at $50,000.
On May 5, David Lee Kern, 57,
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 2A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
POSS
OCTOBER 23, 1930-MAY 10, 2016
Nadine Teter Poss, age 85,
of Richmond, Kansas passed
away on Tuesday, May 10,
2016 at Guest Homes Estates,
Garnett, Kansas.
Nadine was born October 23,
1930 in Garnett, Kansas. She
was the fourth of nine children
born
to Tom and
Anna (Sobba)
Teter.
She
graduated
from Garnett
High School
with the class
of 1948. She
worked
at
Poss
the Garnett
S e w i n g
Factory and as a waitress
after high school. She married
Donald Edward Poss on May
30, 1949 in Garnett. This union
was blessed with seven children.
In 1958, the family moved
to a farm east of Richmond,
Kansas and became members
of St. Therese Catholic Church.
She became a realtor in 1975,
and then she and her husband
opened Poss Real Estate in
1978 in Richmond. Nadine was
a broker and office manager
until they retired in 2013.
At St. Therese, she taught
CCD for 25 years, served in all
offices of the Altar Society, and
was a lector and Eucharistic
Minister. She became a member of the Carmelite 3rd Order
of Scipio in 1990.
Nadine
was
involved
with Richmond Recreation
Commission, Berea Boosters
4-H
Club,
Richmond
Community Center, Richmond
Free Fair Board and Richmond
Community Museum. She
and Don were honored as
Parade Marshalls for the
Richmond Fair Parade in 2005.
Her most recent passion was
the Richmond Community
Museum, where she served as
a Charter Board Member until
she recently resigned due to
her health.
Her hobbies throughout life
involved ceramics where she
handmade Christmas Nativity
sets for all her children and
grandchildren. She loved to
cook and was always counted
on to bring food when a friend
was sick, and no one ever left
her house hungry. Nadine also
collected rosaries and had over
80 in her collection, from 4 different continents.
Nadine was preceded in
death by her parents; three
sisters, Velva Hermreck, Betty
Heistand and Dorthea Koehler;
one brother, Larry Teter; her
daughter, Marcia Peine.
She is survived by her husband, three daughters, Jeanne
Wolken and husband Ron of
Merriam, Donna Zimmerman
and husband Ken of Shawnee,
Mariann Moore and husband
Mike of Shawnee; three sons,
Gary Poss and wife Gwen of
Olathe, Larry Poss and wife
Trayce of St. Joseph, and Doug
Poss of Shawnee; 17 grandchildren and 22 great grandchildren; two sisters, Phyllis
Callahan of Garnett and Mavis
Horner of Wichita; two brothers, Tom Teter of LaPorte, IN
and Norman Teter of Chico,
CA.
Mass of Christian Burial
was Monday, May 16, 2016, at
St. Boniface Catholic Church,
Scipio, with burial in the Holy
Angels Cemetery, Garnett.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to the Richmond
Community Museum, St.
Therese Catholic Church or to
Crossroads Hospice.
You may send your condolences to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com.
ROADS…
FROM PAGE 1A
pave more residential streets
or repair about 1,000 feet near
the Country Club Golf Course
entrance on Lake Garnett
Road.
On one side of the debate,
Mayor Greg Gwin wanted to use the money to pave
the lake road, On the other,
Commissioner Jody Cole wanted to spend about $30,000 to
pave more residential streets.
Either way, the city will pull
money from its reserve funds.
The city budgets about $150,000
for street repair each year,
using money that comes from
a half-cent sales tax for such
purposes. At times, however,
the city has used other funds
to repair more streets. City
Manager Joyce Martin said the
citys utility reserve fund and
bond and interest fund could
be used for street repair, up to
$225,000.
Commissioners last week
continued the debate from the
April 26 meeting. At the previous meeting, Blackie asked for
more time to study the matter
and attempt to find a compromise.
The Lake Garnett Racing
Association, which organized
historic sports car races on
the lake road in the 1950s, 60s
and 70s, had offered to donate
the last of the money it had
raised during those races about $32,000 – toward repairs
to the lake road. Member Terry
Solander, who also serves as
the city attorney, said the donation of the money would be the
groups final act.
Were in a mode to close up
shop, and this is a way to do it,
Solander said.
Members also made it clear
they wanted the money used
to fix problems with the base
of the lake road and not just
apply an asphalt overlay as
a Band-aid solution. If the
money couldnt be used as the
group required, they would
instead donate it to the Garnett
Community Foundation to be
used in other ways at Lake
Garnett park.
The original estimate to
repair the road with a new base
and thick asphalt was about
$71,000. A revised bid, using
less asphalt, was submitted at
about $52,000.
To fix the entire lake road,
it would cost about $309,000,
Gwin said.
He was opposed to devoting small amounts of money
each year to fix the road, say-
ing such a patchwork process
would amount to the bumpiest
new road in the country over
time.
That (lake) road is our
responsibility to maintain,
Gwin said.
The road repair has become
a hot-button issue for the city
in recent years, primarily as
a new event, the Lake Garnett
Grand Prix Revival, brings
classic race cars to the lake
each fall to celebrate the historic races. Cars drive around the
lake at speed in a series of exhibition laps, but organizers said
some car owners complained
about the condition of the road.
Some groups pulled out of the
event because of concerns the
poor road condition would
damage expensive vehicles.
The event, which will celebrate its third year in October,
brings hundreds of people from
out-of-town to the lake. Blackie
noted those people likely will
purchase goods and services,
thus paying sales tax that will
be used to pay for future road
repairs.
Weve got an event that is
growing and bringing people to
the town, Blackie said. Were
getting $32,000 from an outside
source. This looks to me like a
good way to start and keep the
ball rolling.
At the same time, Blackie
said he agreed with Cole that
repairs to city streets should be
the first priority.
Cole also suggested postponing repairs to the lake road
for another year while city
staff research potential grants.
Gwin pointed out that grants
typically require the city match
some portion of the money, and
the lake associations donation
essentially did the same thing.
In the end, Blackie agreed
that Coles proposal essentially reached the compromise he
wanted. The city would pay for
the Top 5 city street repairs
and the countys reservoir
road project, as agreed. On top
of that, the city would spend
about $30,000 to expand its residential street repair work.
That would leave about
$18,000 for repairs to the lake
road. When combined with the
racing associations $32,000,
the money available for repairs
to the lake road totals about
$50,000. Thats less than the
paving company estimated, but
commissioners said they would
leave it to the discretion of the
paving company and city staff
to best determine how to use
the money to best fix the road.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
3A
LOCAL
RECORDS…
FROM PAGE 2A
Osawatomie, was booked into jail
by Miami County Sheriff on a probation violation. No bond.
On May 5, Benjamin Craig
Degrande, 28, Osawatomie, was
booked into jail by Miami County
Sheriff onsuspicion of criminal
damage to property. No bond.
On May 6, Pabla Zacarias
Romero, 38, Independence, Mo.,
was booked into jail by Miami
County Sheriff onsuspicion of driving while suspended, no liability
insurance, transporting an open
container, no vehicle registration
and a warrant for failure to appear.
Bond set at $743.
On May 7, Shawn Michael
Mansell, 34, Coffeyville, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriff on a warrant for
failure to appear. Bond set at
$750.
On May 8, Matthew Alan Joles,
28, Osawatomie, was booked into
jail by Anderson County Sheriff
on suspicion of burglary, theft and
criminal damage to property. No
bond.
On May 9, Wayne Lee Allen
Kirkland, 22, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of theft. Bond
set at $750. Released May 10.
On May 9, James Leo Hogan,
21, Princeton, was booked into
jail by Anderson County Sheriff on
two warrants for failure to appear.
Bond set at $5,000.
On May 10, Wayne Lee Allen
Kirkland, 22, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Kansas Department
of Corrections on a warrant. No
bond.
On May 11, Brandon Daniel
James Wall, 19, Lawrence, was
booked into jail by Douglas County
Sheriff on a warrant for failure to
appear. No bond.
On May 11, Jeffrey Lewis
Kratzberg, 53, Garnett, was
booked into jail by Anderson
County Sheriff on suspicion of distribution of marijuana and possession of paraphernalia with intent to
distribute. Bond set at $10,000.
On May 11, Cody Alex Trester,
21, Chanute, was booked into
jail by Anderson County Sheriff.
Charge not provided. Released
May 11.
On May 11, Andrew James
Holstine, 26, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of possession
of stimulant. Bond set at $10,000.
On May 11, Robert David
Soulia, 58, Garnett, was booked
into jail by Garnett Police on suspicion of criminal trespass. Bond
set at $500. Released May 11.
On May 12, Kati Aliieen Yeager,
20, Garnett, was booked into jail
by Garnett Police on suspicion of
no drivers license. Bond set at
$250. Released May 12.
JAIL ROSTER
Joseph Daulton was booked
into jail August 15 for Anderson
County, bond set at $15,000.
Nathanael Talbert was booked
into jail August 28 for Anderson
County, bond set at $100,000.
David Gordon was booked into
jail December 11 for Anderson
County, serving sentence until
July 13, 2016
David Coon was booked into
jail on January 20 for Anderson
County. No bond info.
Jeremy Smith was booked into
jail February 17 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $7,500.
John Miller was booked into jail
March 11 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $2,500.
Wayne Kirkland was booked
into jail April 5 for Anderson
County. Not bondable.
Racheal Westman was booked
into jail April 9 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Kenny Hermreck was booked
into jail April 12 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $5,000.
Tim Fagg was booked into jail
April 19 for Garnett Police. Bond
set at $300.
Patience Theiss was booked
into jail April 20 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000.
Kenneth Morse was booked
into jail April 23 for Colorado. No
bond.
Crystal Hall was booked into jail
April 26 for Anderson County to
serve a sentence.
David Engel was booked into
jail May 3 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $5,000.
Eric Weems was booked into
jail May 4 for Anderson County.
Bond set at $5,000.
Andrew Holstein was booked
into jail May 11 for Allen County.
Bond set at $10,000.
Shawn Mansell was booked
into jail May 7 for Allen County.
Bond set at $750.
Jeffrey Kratzberg was booked
into jail May 11 for Anderson
County. Bond set at $10,000.
James Hogan was booked into
jail May 9 for Anderson County to
serve a sentence.
Register of Deeds Sandra
Baugher, a Democrat
Treasurer Dena McDaniel,
a Republican.
Voters also will decide township treasurers and township
trustees, as well as Democrat
and Republican county committee precinct positions.
Offices in the Kansas
Senate and House and U.S.
Congressional seats from
Kansas, and state school board
districts also will be up for election. Then, of course, theres
the Presidential election,
which already has proven to be
hotly contested races in both of
the major parties.
At the state level, Caryn
Tyson, R-Parker, who represents the 12th Senate District,
which covers all of Anderson
County, has filed to retain her
seat. She is being challenged
on the Democratic side by
Christopher B. Johnston of
Ottawa.
Kevin Jones, R-Wellsville,
who represents the 5th District
House of Representatives,
which covers most of Anderson
County, has filed to retain his
seat. He will face at least one
challenger. Democrat Doug
Walker filed Monday, May 16,
for the 5th District. Walker
served in the Kansas Senate
from 1989 to 1996.
Arlyn Briggs, a Republican
from Kincaid, and Rick James,
a Republican from LaCygne,
have filed for the 4th District,
which covers the southeastern
part of the county. The position currently is held by Marty
Read, R-Mound City.
At the federal level, Democrat
Mike Pryor of Lawrence filed
for the 2nd District House of
Representatives, currently held
by Lynn Jenkins, a Republican
from Topeka. Jenkins also is
running to retain her position.
FARM-INS
Jason Hutchinson was booked
into jail February 24 for Douglas
County.
John Jack Stotlar was booked
into jail April 21 for Miami County.
Alex Bohlander was booked into
jail April 21 for Douglas County.
Felicia Hinkle was booked into
jail May 2 for Douglas County.
Brandon Wall was booked into
jail May 11 for Douglas County.
Benjamin Degrande was
booked into jail May 5 for Miami
County.
Joel Sanchez was booked into
jail May 5 for Miami County.
Rhonda Jackson was booked
into jail May 5 for Douglas County.
George Ward was booked into
jail May 5 for Miami County.
Scott Shay was booked into jail
May 5 for Miami County.
ELECTION…
FROM PAGE 1A
election is noon June 1 at the
Anderson County Clerks office
at the Courthouse in downtown
Garnett. The election will be
Nov. 8.
Johnson said he filed for
the clerks position because of
his history as a county commissioner. Johnson served one
four-year term as District 1
county commissioner; he lost
the seat in November 2014 to
Independent Les McGhee. As a
commissioner, Johnson said he
gained insight into the clerks
job and felt he could serve the
position.
The county clerk is the chief
election officer for the county
and also serves as the secretary
for the county commission, as
payroll and payables agent for
various county transactions,
and is the chief budgeting official. Johnson said his experience as a hospital administrator, who oversaw similar functions, makes him qualified for
the job.
Johnson served as administrator of Anderson County
Hospital from 1988 to 1998 and
led the hospital through its
transition to a management
agreement with Saint Lukes
Health System in the late
1990s. Although he is retired,
Johnson said he enjoyed serving the county and working
with people, and some of us
just have a need to keep busy.
In addition to Johnson, two
other people filed for election
last week.
Chris Kanawyer filed for
the Garnett city commission.
Two other people, Paula Scott
and Travis Wilson, also have
filed for the position.
Anderson County Attorney
Brandon Jones, a Republican,
filed to retain his seat. Jones,
who lives in Ottawa, won the
seat in 2012, and also serves as
Osage County Attorney. He has
tried more than 60 jury trials,
including high profile murder
cases and child sex crimes, in
addition to other trials, hearings and court proceedings.
Jones said he was committed
to making the attorneys office
more professional and technologically advanced with better
communication with the public and other law enforcement
agencies, without increasing
the county attorneys budget.
I feel that I have kept my
campaign promise of professionalizing the Anderson
County Attorneys office and
bringing a consistent and fair
approach to the charging and
resolution of cases in Anderson
County, Jones said. I have
really enjoyed serving as
County Attorney, and feel that
I have done my best to make
sure that victims needs are
met and that defendants are
treated fairly and appropriately under the law.
Other
election
filings
include:
Dave Pracht of Westphalia
has
filed
for
County
Commission Dist. 3, currently
held by Eugene Highberger of
Westphalia.
Anderson
County
Commission District 2 incumbent Jerry Howarter, a
Democrat.
Sheriff Vernon Valentine, a
Republican;
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
Visit Iola & Allen County!
These4x5.5
Iola and Allen County businesses appreciate your patronage
and encourage you to visit your local merchants in Allen County!
iola allen co guide
Flynn Appliance & Hi-Def Center
11 N. Jefferson IOLA (620) 365-5940
M-F 8-6 / Sat 8-1
Best selection of
Home Appliances.
Flat Panel Televisions
Plasma & LCD
IOLA PHARMACY
109 E. Madison IOLA
(620) 365-3176 or (800) 505-6055
Your hometown full line full service pharmacy.
Free delivery in Iola.
24-hour Prescription Services
VoiceTech Automated Prescription Refill Service
DTI
Diesel & Turbo of Iola
(620) 365-5232
dlayman@dieselandturbo.com
Senior & Member
Discounts
Gluten Free Foods
1 S. Walnut IOLA
David Layman, Mgr.
You just proved
advertising works! Call
(785) 448-3121 to advertise
your business today!
Duanes Flowers
Mon.-Sat. 8-5
Visit our website at www.duanesflowers.com
to order flowers 24 hours a day!
TOLL
FREE
(800) 279-9237 (620) 365-5723
EAST SIDE OF SQUARE IN DOWNTOWN IOLA
Monday – Saturday 9-5
Thursday until 6 p.m.
Closed Sunday
To advertise your
business here,
call Stacey at
(785) 448-3121.
PSI,
PSI Inc.
INC.
See us for all your insurance needs.
See us for all of your insurance needs.
MOUND CITY OFFICE
MOUND
OFFICE
David CITY
Ungeheuer
Terry Smethers
(913) 837-7825
(913) 795-2344
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
Occupied:
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
LOCAL
The President in your potty
You have to hand it to President Obama and
the radical left for the latest change-up pitch in
their game of re-engineering American culture
into a socialist Nirvana. Those of us opposed to
that transition knew we had to protect our guns
and our wallets and our fetuses but we had no
idea we had to protect our kids bathrooms.
But last weeks end brought the federal dictate
from the U.S. Department of Education and the
Justice Department that all school districts in
the nation will soon receive a letter telling them
to toe the line in Obamas cultural re-adaptation
process let transgender students use the bathroom, locker room or shower facility according to
the sex with which they identify, not according
to the ovaries or testicles with which they were
born. Schools that dont could face a federal
lawsuit and the loss of their federal funding for
at-risk programs, subsidized lunches, etc.
The language from the justice department calls
it federal guidance, in following its definition of
anti-discrimination law rather than blackmail,
all intended to put a shot over the bow of states
who might think of passing legislation to keep
their cities and counties from writing ordinances forcing businesses to serve homosexuals and
transgender people, as North Carolina did.
Regardless of the legal challenges which will
develop in public schools, the ramifications of
creating a preferred class specifically among
transgenders with legal authority to switch identities at will and the repercussions of that on
other laws and policy could keep government lawyers working for decades. Following the school
bathroom dictate, a man who now identifies as a
woman wouldnt have to register for the military
draft; should receive preference in SBA applications and in federal hiring, etc. Think of how
many government forms required by banks, taxing authorities, drivers licenses, passport applications, etc., ask whether youre male or female.
So now, with nothing apparently better to do
and in keeping with Obamas preferences for our
culture, the federal government will single-handedly neutralize gender in America?
Even for Democrats the action amounts to yet
another Obama blunder; one that illustrates how
far out of step the president is on social issues
with mainstream America and further explanation of the Republican majorities that stymie him
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
in the U.S. House and Senate as well as the fuel for
the fire in Donald Trumps presidential candidacy. Obama gives people reason to believe the federal government has gone all HAL from 2001 A
Space Odyssey, so his consternation at why they
protest him so is either oblivious disengagement
or denial.
No doubt the weekends news of the backlash
should have given the President plenty of time
to regret stoking the fires of Democrat opposition in every state and national race for the fall
elections. Democrats themselves have to wonder
if the President is even paying attention to the
repercussions his radical actions have on their
campaigns and their efforts to wrest congressional seats from Republicans.
A lot of more-traditional Democrats but still
likely Hillary voters not to mention uncommitted voters, will see the Great Bathroom Grab
as the last straw. They dont have to go over to
Trump they just have to be disgusted enough
to stay home on election day. Republicans have
been waiting for this opportunity to revise their
election mailers with something more potent
against Democrats than images of Obama and
messages about bankrupting healthcare, bringing
Guantanamo detainees to your county jail and
abortion. Painting Democrats with the Obama
brush has been pretty effective in the last two
elections.
A picture of the president as the Bathroom
Monitor in-Chief
may be just what the
Republicans ordered.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
The Phone Forum column is missing from today edition due to a technical problem.
The tawdry quandary
You gotta hand it to House Speaker
Paul Ryan. He has successfully staked his
claim to the moral high ground — at least
when it comes to his image crafting. So it
shouldnt have been a surprise when he
was asked by CNNs Jake Tapper whether
hed now endorse his partys presumptive
nominee, Donald Trump, that he and his
staff had prepared a ready answer: Im
just not ready to do that at this point. Im
not there right now. Translation: Whats
in this for me?
In politics, its whatever keeps me/
us in power. Remember that as we ponder the ethical dilemma confronting
Republicans who believe that Donald
Trump as president would be a disaster
Blowing smoke on e-cigarettes
Down through all the millennia that
mankind has smoked tobacco, no one would
have believed (or even imagined) that a battery-powered contraption with no tobacco
would one day be considered a tobacco product.
Weve long had smokeless tobacco; now
we have tobaccoless tobacco. This conceptual
breakthrough is the work of federal bureaucrats who are bringing the regulatory hammer down on e-cigarettes in a misbegotten
extension of the war on smoking.
The Food and Drug Administration has
issued new rules so onerous that they will
likely suppress the manufacture of e-cigarettes and kill off small companies making
them. Health and Human Services Secretary
Sylvia Burwell hailed the action as an
important step in the fight for a tobacco-free
generation — never mind, of course, that
e-cigarettes are tobacco-free.
It is a strange country that is simultaneously moving to legalize marijuana and to
crack down on vaping. But here we are.
There is no doubt that cigarettes are a
great cause of human misery; they kill almost
500,000 people a year in the U.S. This is why
e-cigarettes, with their potential to diminish
smoking, could be a boon to public health.
They deliver nicotine without the truly harmful part of cigarettes, the tar and chemicals.
The FDA is evidently operating on the
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
basis of a regulators reverse Hippocratic
oath: First, do harm to a burgeoning industry
— then hope to find some evidentiary justification for it at some later date.
The new rules are crafted so that every
vaping product currently on the market will
have to go through an onerous FDA review
process. Any new products will have to do
the same. The American Vaping Association
maintains that submitting an application
will cost more than $1 million and take more
than 1,700 hours. The regulatory burden
will swamp small companies that lack the
resources to pour into compliance costs. (The
big tobacco companies, in contrast, will be
fine.)
The small firms have driven innovation in
e-cigarettes. The products have gotten better,
with more variety, since their introduction
in 2007. Thats manifestly a good thing. The
more satisfying e-cigarettes are, and the more
they replicate the real smoking experience,
the more likely it is that smokers will switch
over, or at least use fewer cigarettes.
The highly respected Royal College of
Physicians in Britain gets the logic. It issued a
report emphasizing the enormous promise of
e-cigarettes, which it estimates are 5 percent
as dangerous as the real thing. An authority
who worked on the report explained to The
New York Times that e-cigarettes have the
potential to help half or more of all smokers
get off cigarettes. Thats a huge health benefit, bigger than just about any medical intervention.
The U.S. is rejecting that common-sense
approach to harm reduction. It is against
vaping no matter how safe it is or how many
people it might coax into giving up smoking.
The famous line attributed to Mark Twain
is that nothing is as easy as quitting smoking
— hes done it thousands of times. Of course,
Twain didnt have the option of vaping. If the
FDA has anything to say about it, neither will
anyone else.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Govenor could weild line-item veto power
By midweek, well know just what Gov.
Sam Brownback intends to do in the way of a
budget to get Kansas through this fiscal year
and at least make it appear on paper that the
Legislature has appropriated enough money for
the state to do its business next year.
Some legislators are fearful that the governor will line-item veto the most politically
important provision in the budget bill that he
has until mid-week to sign.
Its a provision that says simply that the
governor cant reduce the amount of general
state aid to school districts this fiscal year or
next. Those reductions in appropriated funds
they call them allotments in the Statehouse
would make it relatively simple to give most
state agencies a financial haircut and wind up
this and next fiscal year with a balance in the
budget, the constitutional bright yellow line in
a legal budget.
Now, that provision in the budget bill is
probably the best part of it for the lawmakers
who passed the bill to the governor on a vote
of 63-59 in the House and, after about an hours
discreet lobbying, the Senate 22-18.
That provision that prevents the governor
from dipping into K-12 funds is the one part of
the bill that makes cuts to agency budgets that
allows legislators seeking re-election to maintain that they protected the basic state appropriation to the states 278 public school districts.
That protection of school fundsif the governor allows it to become law by not line-item
vetoing itmakes schools about the only state
business that isnt trimmed and clipped by
the budget. On the campaign trail, for the vast
majority of lawmakers this session, that pre-
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
vent the governor from cutting K-12 money
proviso will be the equivalent of telling constituents that they pulled a child out of the burning
barn.
Now, the reason for the funds shortage isnt
hard to remember, those 2012 income tax cuts
that slashed revenues to the states coffers and
required last years record tax increase measure, the one that raised the sales tax, slashed
income tax deductions (like home mortgage
interest and property taxes) and even sent
smokers out onto the porch with cigarettes that
cost 2.5 cents more per smoke due to a 50-cent a
pack tax hike.
***
Oh, and while some lawmakers believe that
schools should share funds cuts like every other
state adventure, the Kansas Supreme Court
warned lawmakers in generalthough we suspect it was aimed at Brownbackthat while
lawmakers attempted to make two aspects
of school finance dealing with Local Option
Budgets and capital outlay funds equitable, the
other two branches of government shouldnt cut
into that base state aid that the proviso deals
with.
***
So, its this week that legislators are awaiting action on that final budget bill, and what if
anything the governor intends to do with it, and
just what, if the governor leaves that proviso in
place, he intends to cut in virtually other state
agency to protect that school aid.
And, recall, the Supreme Court hasnt determined just how much money the state ought to
spend to provide an adequate education for all
schoolchildren in Kansas. That amountadequacy is a different topic than equityis
also based on 20-year-old study that defined
what a private consulting company believed
then was necessary to adequately and equitably
finance public education.
See why there is some tension in the halls of
the Statehouse? And, are you wondering whether the Legislature will allow the governor to
veto the proviso, or wonder just what else gets
cut if there is a veto and lawmakers override it?
Thats what this week is all about, and whatever happens probably will tell us whether
lawmakers adjourn the 2016 session in an hour
or two on June 1, or whether they hang around
for another weekor so
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of
Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawvers
Capitol Report to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the
website at www.hawvernews.com
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
BOB FRANKEN, King Features Syndicate
for the country and certainly the party. Some
are staying defiant, saying theres no way
hes their guy, but for most others there is
no dilemma; theyre falling in line, their
feelings of horror about Trump a dim memory, obliterated by their canny instinct for
self-interest.
They are frantically calculating what
leaves them in the best position to maintain
their power and prosperity. Can they get
ahead or at least survive better by being
good soldiers, or do they benefit in the long
run by repudiating Trump so that after a
Republican debacle on Election Day, they are
able to loudly shout, I told you so!
Then you have the Paul Ryans of this
world who are playing for time to squeeze out
whatever advantage they can. Others who
face tough election prospects of their own are
taking the mealy-mouthed stand that they
support but wont endorse the new GOP
leader.
And then there are those like Ted Cruz,
who wouldnt seem to have any choice. Cruz
really embarrassed himself in Indiana and
got so badly hammered that he had to shut
down his campaign. That was after he got
goaded into ranting that Donald Trump was
a pathological liar and philanderer. For
now, one would think he can only pout and
plot while he just returns to his friends in the
Senate. Oh, wait …
John Kasich also gave up the ghost and
ended his smiley-face run with a sad look. He
finally realized that Dont Worry Be Happy
wont cut it with this years angry voters.
Trump has constantly proved everyone wrong, at every turn. Its a mistake
to underestimate the chance this country
wont choose him to be the next president of
the United States. His opponent presumably
will be Hillary Clinton, who is not exactly the most adept candidate. Even in the
world of deceptive politics, shes managed to
look untrustworthy. Additionally, shes been
tarred by a perception that shes in the same
boat with the people who so many feel are the
pirates sailing our rigged economic ship.
Both candidates have remarkably high unfavorable ratings, so their choice of a running
mate will be critical. As usual, the mentionables in both parties are pretending theyre
aloof, not letting people see that theyre foaming at the mouth. That doesnt include Newt
Gingrich, who is maneuvering in his typical
unsubtle way. Hes a great match for Trump.
Both are demagogues who shoot from the
lips. Neither is the slightest bit concerned
over right and wrong. Like most politicians.
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, May 17, 2016
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW XXXXXX / Photo
This map of shows the Kodiak Island and surrounding islands of
Alaska.
Map shows rarely
seen part of U.S.
This is a map of a part of the
United States of America we
rarely see. I acquired this map
of Kodiak Island and surrounding islands of Alaska in 1959
while I was in the United States
Navy and stationed there.
On my weekends I often
worked on the Zentner Ranch.
Joe Zentner was originally a
native of Garnett, Kansas. Joe
spent most of his life managing
a very large ranch on the island
of Kodiak. As a matter of fact,
he either owned or leased from
the United States Government
approximately 25, 000 acres of
very rugged tundra grass land,
with only a few acres tillable
ground. I helped prepare this
ground and plant oats for his
winter hay crop. Joe raised
around 350 head of cattle. For a
number of years he owned and
flew his own airplane, guarding his herd of cattle from the
ever present prowling Kodiak
bears and also keeping count of
his herd.
Joes ranch was located 42
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
local archeology information.
miles from the Naval Base. He
would pick me up at the base
after grocery shopping, etc.in
Kodiak on his way home, either
Friday evening or Saturday
morning and I would spend the
weekend at his ranch.
Im very sorry to write that
Joe Zentner is now deceased.
Note: As you can see by
the picture of my map Kodiak
Island and all its surrounding
islands consists of many cattle, sheep and horse ranches,
fisheries, canning companies
and an abundance of sea and
wildlife.
SEATBELTS…
FROM PAGE 1A
Belt Use Act and the Child
Passenger Safety Act. Briefly,
these acts require that all occupants must be appropriately
restrained. Law enforcement
officers can stop vehicles and
issue tickets when they observe
front seat occupants, or children under the age of 14, riding without proper restraint.
Occupants, ages 14 and over,
are cited individually. In the
event that a passenger under
the age of 14 is observed to
be unrestrained the driver will
be cited. Children under the
age of four must be secured in
an approved child safety seat.
Children, ages four through
seven, must be securely belted into an approved booster
seat unless taller than 4 feet
9 inches or heavier than 80
pounds. Children, ages eight
through 13 must be safety-belted. In addition, the act prohibits persons under the age
of 14 from riding in any part
of a vehicle not intended for
carrying passengers, such as
a pickup bed. For answers to
child safety restraint questions
and the location of the nearest
safety seat fitting station or
technician, contact the Kansas
Traffic Safety Resource Office
at 1-800-416-2522, or ktsro@
dccca.org.
The aim of Click It or Ticket
is to drastically reduce the
number of preventable deaths
and injuries that occur when
unbelted drivers and passengers are involved in traffic
crashes. According to KDOTs
Traffic Safety section, almost
half of those killed in crashes
are not belted in. At the same
time, fully 98 percent of crash
occupants who suffer no injuries of any kind are belted in.
In general, unrestrained occupants who are involved in a
crash have, at most, only about
an 8% chance of not suffering
some degree of injury. And all
for simply not taking the brief
moments necessary to secure
themselves and ensure that
their passengers are secured.
Kansas adult seat belt compliance rate is 80% and ranges,
by county, from 66 to 89 percent, with higher rates generally associated with urban counties. Given that unrestrained
vehicle occupants are much
more likely to die in crashes
than are those who buckle in,
it is no surprise that the lower
restraint usage rate in rural
areas is associated with a higher crash fatality rate. In fact,
in Kansas, while only about
one-third of all crashes occur
on rural roadways, those roads
see fully two-thirds of all crashes with fatalities. This is frequently due to vehicles in rural
areas unintentionally leaving
their driving lane and colliding
with off-road obstacles, such as
culverts, and/or rolling over
and ejecting unbelted occupants.
Anderson County Sheriff
Vern Valentine said he wants
people in Anderson County
remember that when you dont
buckle up yourself, or require
your passengers to buckle up,
you are, in effect, promising
yourself and your passenger
that no circumstance will arise
that will trigger seat belt activation, or you will encounter
no other drivers on the road
whose driving skills may be
critically affected by drug or
medical impairment, sleepiness, cell phone conversations,
texting, sloshing coffee, the
radio dial or kids fighting in
the backseat. Youre also not
taking into account that there
will be no animals in the road
or a mechanical circumstance
that will cause you to slow or
suddenly veer out of the lane.
I want people to know that,
day or night, Anderson County
law enforcement officers and
the Kansas Highway Patrol are
committed to aggressively ticket violators of seat belt and
child safety laws, as well as
other traffic infractions, such
as speeding or texting while
driving, which makes the need
for occupant restraint so necessary, Valentine said.
5A
LOCAL
Colony Little League gears up for season
Calendar
May 18-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church basement,
7 p.m.; 19-County bus to Iola,
phone 24 hrs. before you need a
ride 785-448-4410 any weekday;
25-Fire Dept. fire meeting, fire
station, 7 p.m.
School Calendar
19-Last day for Seniors,
20-Award
Scholarship
Assembly, 10 a.m.; Track
Regionals at Central Burden;
21-Senior High School graduation, 2 p.m.
Meal Site
20-salmon patty, macaroni
salad, peas, bread, cranberry
juice; 23-Mr. Rib, baked beans,
spinach salad, hamburger bun,
peaches; 25-chili, coleslaw,
crackers, cinnamon roll. Phone
620-852-3450 for meal reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented at
Mothers Day service was
Matthew 18:1-10. Charlie
Towne, fill-in pastor, presented the sermon Help! Theres
a Baby in the House. Mens
Bible Study Tuesday morning, 7 a.m.; May 29-last date to
bring items to take to camp.
Check the sign up on the back
desk for what you can bring.
Our church will provide these
items. Work Days to get things
ready for VBSPlease come
and helpMay 28 at 1 p.m.,
June 4 at 12 noon, and June 5
after church; June 5-Breakfast
at the Church at 9:30 a.m.; June
6-10Vacation Bible School,
begins 8:30 a.m. Monday thru
Friday; June 12-Church picnic
at the park.
CWC
The annual salad luncheon
held by the Christian Womens
Council brought an attendance
of about 50. Julia Martin did a
wonderful job as the speaker
as usual. We had about 50 in
attendance. This years theme
was Up , Up and away with
Joy. Decorations included little hot air balloons hung from
the ceiling.
Northcott Church
May 15- Global Day of
Prayer; May 26-Northcott
Women of Faith meeting, 6:30
p.m. (Menu is Italian).
UMC
Scripture presented at the
Mothers Day service was
Psalm 97:1-12, Acts 16:16-34 and
Revelations 22: 12-22; 14: 23-29,
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, When the
Demons are Gone.
109th Alumni
Time is running short. Get
your reservations in immediately to attend the alumni banquet May 28 at the Crest High
School auditorium in Colony
May 28. Visitation and registration begins at 5 p.m. and
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
the banquet at 7 p.m. Tickets
are $17 per plate in advance or
$18 at the door which covers
the dues of $5.00 and the dinner. Reservations are needed
so caterer can prepare enough
food for all. Send reservations
to secretary Linda Ellis, 1872
Haskell Road, Ottawa, KS 66067
or phone her at 785-214-9791.
She needs your class year and
new address if applicable with
your reservation. Make checks
payable to Colony/Crest
Alumni Association.
Lions
Following the meal cooked
and served by the United
Methodist Women, Acting
President Al Richardson called
the meeting to order. Eleven
members attended. Members
Butch Lytle and Ron McMullin
offered to set up the sign for
the citywide yard sales. The
appointed nominating committee could not make a report at
this time. It was reported the
cans had been picked up and
delivered to Centerville and
a check was returned. Report
was made that Kincaid Lions
may be interested in joining
Colonys tree cutting program since they have younger
members; this will be further
checked. Gun drawering winner was Jerry Bowen with a
Remington 870 express shotgun.
At the May 4 meeting 13
members were in attendance.
President Sue Colgin presided. The nominating committee gave the following report:
President, Al Richardson;1st
Vice President, Bill Ulrich;
2nd Vice President, DeDe
McMullen; 3rd Vice President,
Ron McMullen; Secretary,
Kim
Colgin;
Treasurer,
Kenton King; 1st Director, Jay
Dutton and Dian Prasko; 2nd
Directors, Butch Lytle and
Gene Anderson; Tail Twister,
Victoria Faulkner; Lion Tamer,
Robert Faulkner; Membership,
Sue Colgin; David Tetreault
and Stephen Thomas. Vote was
unanimous to elect the officers.
Katelynn Brewer was selected to be the Lions Club band
student this year. Kincaid and
Colony Lions split the cost for
the student and all voted to
send the student to band camp.
Several members raised
issues with the tree cutting program and with the proposition
of working with other clubs
on this. The final resolution
was to give the saw to Steve
Weatherman in appreciation
of the years he donated the
use of a saw. Vote on this end
was twelve in favor and one
abstaining.
Members will not serve hot
dogs on the last day of school
as information received was
the school would be serving
lunch that day. Lion Butch
Lytle wanted the sign made
for citywide sales for usage
on an upcoming auction and
all agreed he could use it. A
donation was agreed upon to
the service dog program in
Washington, KS. as has been
done in the past.
The next meeting will be
May 18, at 7 p.m.
Colony Little League
Due to the number of girls
this year there are two girls
T-ball teams and two Coach
Pitch teams.
Colony 1: T ball coaches are
Gerald Jones, Miranda Golden
Curtland, Rachelle Slyter and
Seth Black.
Coachs Pitch coaches are:
Miranda Golden Curtland,
Shelby Ramsey and Gerald
Jones.
More progress has been
made at the ball park with
the adjoining of the roof for
the womens rest room to the
newly roofing of the concession
stand. Kevin Nilges and Seth
Black Chase Preston did this
work with assistance of Kacie
Nilges and Angie Black.
Concession stand, mens rest
room and other things have
been cleaned also. Next time a
parent signs their kid to play,
please volunteer to help with
cleanup, etc. Many thanks to
Arlene Gilliland, Les Gilliland,
Kevin Nilges mother and sister, for stopping in and helping.
School teachers, beauty operators, truck drivers- all have
lent a helping hand. Local kids
stopped in and help pick up
shingles, too. It takes a team
like the Colony League to
get things done. Such a nice
improvement to the community during the summer months
and one that is enjoyed so
much by the players, their parents, friends, all that have an
interest in ball playing.
Due to safety of ball players
it is asked all players that come
to practice, games, and tournaments to please wear closed
toe shoes (no flip-flops, sandals,
crocs, etc.). If a child shows up
wearing anything other than
tennis shoes or cleats (no metal
cleats please) they will not be
allowed to practice or play in
the game or tournament. We
thank all for your cooperation
and help so coaches can keep
each child safe.
Around Town
Glen and Shelia Luedke
of Louisiana were recent visitors of her mother, Dorothy
Fillmore. They also visited
with Allene and Mark Luedke,
Jerry and Susan Luedke.
Lois Ternes, niece of Stanley
Luedke and Ralph Bunnel and
cousin of Mark Luedke recently underwent knee surgery.
She is now home at her apartment in Atchison recuperating.
Mark Luedke took his mother, Allene to Sirloin Stockade,
Ottawa for Mothers Day dinner.
Allenes daughter, Cheryl,
phoned her from St. Augustine,
Fla.
A carry-in dinner was held
at the home of Jody Church for
his mother, Doris Church on
Mothers Day. Her three daughters and spouses, Linda and
Slug Ellis, LaCygne, Patty Jo
and Deane Ramsey, Kincaid,
Susan and Jerry Luedke,
Colony, and several of Doris
grandchildren, great grandchildren also attended.
Mothers Day evening guests
of Susan and Jerry Luedke
were Jarred and Heather
Luedke and children, Iola, and
Justin Luedke, Garnett.
Spring on in!
Let us get you ready for warm weather
2×6 projects, travel & recreation
Lawnmower Tires tire
ATV Tires Tiller Tires Golf Cart Tires
wolken
Tires to handle everything from heavy hauling, mowing, green
maintenance, to general purpose needs.
Get Your Car Ready for Spring & Summer!
2×3 Air Conditioning Service
penkaComplete Auto Service
Now Providing Tire Service
Penka Auto Repair
171 U.S. HWY 59
Richmond, KS 66080
M-F 8am – 5:30pm
(785) 835-6699
Tires that offer puncture-resistant tread patterns, low wear rates and
features for high maneuverability and less ground disturbance.
Tire Repair Farm Tires (front & rear)
Pickup Tires Car Tires Alignments
Brake Work Automotive Care
601 South Oak Garnett 785-448-3212
REAL ESTATE
4×5.5
real estate
guideand Related Services
Brokers
Also, be sure to check the Reviews Regional Classifieds for listings.
B
R
Benjamin Realty
Sherry Benjamin,Broker
Land Homes Commercial
201 N. Maple
Garnett, Ks 66032
benjaminrealty@earthlink.net
HIGHWAY LOCATION
213 S. Maple, Garnett
(785) 448-6200
(866) 448-6258
hwy@garnettrealestate.com
REALTOR
Office: (785) 448-2550
Home: (785) 241-0532
Cell: (785) 304-2029
DOWNTOWN LOCATION
114 W. 4th, Garnett
(785) 448-6191
(800) 530-5971
downtown@garnettrealestate.com
Scott Schulte, Broker
(785) 448-5351
Delton Hodgson (785) 448-6118
Ron Ratliff
(785) 448-8200
Bob
Umbarger
(785)
448-5905
Beth
Mersman (785) 448-7500
Alberta Bishop (785) 448-7534
Carol Barnes
(785) 448-5300
Mary
Lizer
(785) 448-3238
Donna Morris
(913) 731-2456
SERVING OUR COMMUNITY
Michelle Ware
(785) 214-8489
Cris Anderson
(785) 304-1591
FOR 50 YEARS
Pam Ahring
(785) 204-2405
Marlo Kimzey
(913) 980-3267
Visit our informative website at www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all MLS listings & more.
Carla (Schulte) Walter, Broker
(785)
448-7658
AFFORDABLE HOME LOANS
To be added to this
once-a-month real estate guide
Call Stacey at (785) 448-3121.
6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
LOCAL
AC girls dominate Pioneer
League Championship
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT The Anderson
County girls pummeled out a 95
point margin over second-place
Santa Fe Trail on Friday in
ACs Pioneer League Track
Championship win.
The girls squad won 11 gold
medals on the afternoon and
massed 203 points.
The highlights of the gold
medal winners were Averi
Wilson winning both the 800
meter and 1600 meter runs.
Makayla Kueser set another
school record and the league
record on her way to winning
the long jump. Kueser also took
home gold medals in the high
jump and was a part of the
4×100 relay team that finished
first.
The Anderson County boys
and Central Heights boys and
girls also earned a handful of
medals at the 2016 league championship.
All Results
Girls
M. Martin (3rd) shot put 34 feet
11 inches
R. Jirak (4th) shot put 33 feet 5
inches
G. Urquhart (7th) shot put 29
feet 10 inches
M. Martin (1st) discus (not available)
M. Kueser (1st) high jump 5 feet
2 inches
M. Kueser (1st) long jump 17
feet 11.5 inches
C. Parks (4th) long jump 14 feet
10.5 inches
J. White (11th) long jump 13 feet
11 inches
R. Jirak (4th) javelin 93 feet 7
inches
M. Martin (5th) javelin 88 feet 5
inches
A. Ball (9th) javelin 75 feet 3
inches
C. Parks (1st) triple jump 32 feet
5.5 inches
J. White (3rd) triple Jump 30 feet
10 inches
G. Sibley (1st) pole vault 7 feet
6 inches
4×800 meter relay (1st) E. Porter,
R. Hedges, B. Sibley, P. Rupp (time
n/a)
E. Lutz (1st) 100 meter hurdles
18.35 seconds
A. Goode (1st) 100 meter dash
13.53 seconds
M. Kueser (3rd) 100 meter dash
13.56 seconds
S. Quinn (12th) 100 meter dash
16.91 seconds
A. Wilson (1st) 1600 meter run
5:23.89
P. Rupp (6th) 1600 meter run
6:20.15
4×100 meter relay (1st) E. Lutz,
C. Parks, A. Goode, M. Kueser 52.08
seconds
G. Sibley (3rd) 400 meter run
1:06.42
D. Mills (4th) 400 meter run
1:08.17
E. Porter (6th) 400 meter run
1:10.76
A. Goode (2nd) 300 meter hurdles 51.68 seconds
J. White (4th) 300 meter hurdles
57.70 seconds
E. Lutz (7th) 300 meter hurdles
1:00.72
A. Wilson (1st) 800 meter run
2:33.55
P. Rupp (2nd) 800 meter run
2:44.88
A. Goode (2nd) 200 meter dash
29.19 seconds
D. Mills (4th) 200 meter dash
30.03 seconds
T. Jirak (6th) 200 meter dash
31.56 seconds
R. Hedges (3rd) 3200 meter run
14:28.74
B. Sibley (5th) 3200 meter run
15:00.27
4×400 meter relay (2nd) G. Sibley,
C. Parks, A. Wilson, D. Mills 4:22.00
Boys
Z. Phelps (6th) shot put 40 feet
9 inches
W. Mechnig (16th) shot put 27
feet
Z. Phelps (6th) discus 116 feet
W. Mechnig (16th) discus – 77
feet 5 inches
T. Jumet (5th) long jump 18 feet
6.5 inches
M. Roberts (11th) long jump 16
feet 2 inches
T. LeBlanc (14th) javelin 97 feet
10 inches
W. Mechnig (16th) javelin 68 feet
5 inches
T. Jumet (2nd) triple jump 39
feet 3.5 inches
K. Weirich (7th) triple jump 34
feet 0.5 inches
M. Roberts (8th) triple jump 33
feet 3.5 inches
A. Kropf (3rd) pole vault 9 feet 6
inches
4×800 meter relay (2nd) O. Lutz,
R. Porter, T. McDaniel, D. Kueser (time
n/a)
K. Weirich (6th) 100 meter dash
12.58 seconds
S. Threewitt (15th) 100 meter
dash 13.22 seconds
T. Leblanc (16th) 100 meter dash
13.57 seconds
R. Porter (9th) 1600 meter run
5:35.49
S. Threewitt (7th) 400 meter dash
59.51 seconds
M. Roberts (9th) 400 meter dash
1:03.35
T. LeBlanc (10th) 400 meter dash
1:06.13
T. Jumet (2nd) 300 meter hurdles
43.76 seconds
A. Kroph (5th) 300 meter hurdles
45.14 seconds
K. Weirich (10th) 300 meter hurdles 54.09 seconds
D. Kueser (4th) 800 meter run
2:12.49
T. McDaniel (6th) 800 meter run
2:23.28
H. Crane (13th) 800 meter run
2:39.59
K. Weirich (4th) 200 meter dash
24.42 seconds
M. Roberts (15th) 200 meter dash
27.20 seconds
S. Threewitt (17th) 200 meter
dash 27.68 seconds
O. Lutz (5th) 3200 meter run
11:49.00
E. Gruver (14th) 3200 meter run
14:57.77
J. Skedel (15th) 3200 meter run
14:59.78
4×400 meter relay (2nd) D.
Dueser, T. McDaniel. A. Krophf, T.
Jumet (time n/a)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
MOUND CITY Evan
Godderz notched Crests sole
1st place finish Thursday when
the Crest Lancers track and
field teams traveled to Mound
City to compete in the Three
Rivers League Track Meet.
The girls team finished with
46.5 points, which placed them
in 5th. Jayhawk-Linn won the
meet with 114 points on the
afternoon.
The boys had their share
of top medals as well, finishing with 36 points on the day.
Jayhawk-Linn also won the
boys title with 133 points.
Medal Winners
Girls
C. Strickler (5th) 100 Meter
Hurdles 17.78 seconds
C. Strickler (2nd) 300 Meter
Hurdles 54.68 seconds
4×100 Meter Relay (2nd)
56.55 seconds
V. Rodriguez (6th) 3:06.89
L. Godderz (2nd) Discus
9010
C. Bowen (3rd) High Jump
44
L. Godderz (3rd) Javelin
963
C. Strickler (5th) Long
Jump 147.25
Boys
J. Wood (6th) 110 Meter
Boys
C. Gardner (4th) shot put 35 feet
11 inches
C. Gardner (8th) discus 115 feet
4 inches
D. Weber (3rd) high jump 6 feet
D. Weber (4th) long jump 19 feet
1 inch
J. Hitsman (8th) long jump 17
feet 2 inches
C. Hampton (5th) 110 meter hurdles 19.24 seconds
J. Hitsman (7th) 100 meter dash
12.67 seconds
D. Weber (10th) 100 meter dash
12.75 seconds
K. Cardin (5th) 1600 meter run
5:16.46
C. Meyer (6th) 1600 meter run
5:18.14
4×100 meter relay (4th) C.
Hampton, J. Hitman, D. Weber, S.
Skeet 48.62 seconds
C. Hampton (6th) 45.17 seconds
J. Hitsman (10th) 200 meter dash
25.94 seconds
S. Skeet (12th) 200 meter dash
Hurdles 18.68 seconds
C. Stephens (6th) 200 Meter
Run 25.3 seconds
J. Wood (6th) 300 Meter
Hurdles 48.14 seconds
4×400 Meter Relay (5th)
4:20.42
C. Stephens (3rd) High
Jump – 510
J. Wood (5th) High Jump 54
E. Godderz (1st) Javelin 148 10
E. Godderz (5th) Long
Jump 186.75
E. Godderz (5th) Triple
Jump 368.5
H. Seabolt (6th) Triple
Jump 354.25
AC baseball splits with Prairie View
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
LACYGNE Offenses dominated the double-header as
the Anderson County Bulldogs
split with the Prairie View
Buffaloes combining for 35
runs in the two games.
In the opener, the Bulldogs
jumped on top with 5 runs in
the top of the first and scored
4 more in the top of the third
to open up a commanding 9-2
advantage.
Prairie View trailed 12-5
heading into the bottom of the
seventh but they scored 3 runs
to make the score look a little
more respectable, losing 12-8.
Mitchell Highberger, Dalton
Duke and Cole Denny each
drove in three runs and combined for 7 hits in the first
game.
The late game looked to be
heading down the same path as
the opener.
Anderson County jumped
out early and led 3-0 before the
Buffaloes even had a chance to
bat.
Fortunately
for
the
Buffaloes, they immediately
answered with three runs of
their own to knot the score up
at 3 each.
Prairie View took control by
scoring 3 more in the bottom
of the 2nd and 4 more in the
bottom of the 4th to jump out to
a 10-4 lead before winning 10-5.
Austin Ewert led AC with
three hits and a run batted
in. Bryce Feuerborn, Brady
Rockers and Devin Katzer
chipped in with two hits apiece.
Westphalia Jr. High track season ends
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
WESTPHALIA
The
Westphalia Junior High track
season came to a close May 3 at
Jayhawk Linn for the 3 Rivers
League track meet.
Overall, the season was
an enjoyable one, we had good
weather at our meets to compete in. We had students set personal records at each meet with
the team setting 20 PRs at the
league meet as a team including Derek Ratzlaff setting the
Westphalia school record in the
3200 meter, running a time of
12:09 beating the previous time
set by Brian Kennedy 12:21
set in 2004. Derek had worked
hard all year to put himself
in a situation to achieve his
goal of breaking that record
before his junior high athletic
career came to a close, I am
very happy to watch him be
able to make that happen. All
of our student athletes worked
hard at getting better physically and mentally tougher as
they grew into track athletes as
the season progressed, learn-
Anderson County High School senior Zach Miller is heading to Kansas City Kansas Community College
for golf. Pictured from left are Mark Miller, Zach Miller, Amy Miller and Coach Steve Lyon in back.
CENTRAL HEIGHTS
Girls
R. Markley (6th) shot put 33 feet
1 inch
R. Markley (2nd) javelin 96 feet
9 inches
S. Wood (10th) 1600 meter run
6:52.66
S. Wood (7th) 800 meter run
3:21.98
Crest competes at League track
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016/ Dane Hicks
ing more about themselves.
Coach Jeremy Ball
7th grade participants: Zack
Ballard, Nathan Borntreger,
Katina Brown, Dylan Cole,
Sophia Cole, Hannah Corley,
Carter
Edgecomb,
Drew
Filbrun, Hannah Gardner,
Larry Ratzlaff, Korey Rohde,
Katie
Schmit,
Maddie
Womelsdorf, and Teresa Yoder.
8th graders include: Maya
Corley, Morgan Hall, Becky
Kropf, Derek Ratzlaff, Sylvia
Keim, Jonathon Yoder, and
Jacob Yoder.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016/ Dane Hicks
Anderson County High School senior MaKayla Kueser is heading to Washburn to run track. PIctured
from left are her sister Breckyn Kueser, Dan Kueser, Makayla Kueser, Jalissa Kueser, brother Preston
Kueser. Coach Mike Sibley is in back.
Vikings sweep Bulldogs baseball
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT – The regular
season finale for the Central
Heights Vikings saw them win
both games of a doubleheader
against the Anderson County
Bulldogs in Garnett Tuesday.
The Vikings won the opener 7-5 despite some mistakes
defensively that nearly cost
them.
Central Heights began the
scoring with one run in the
top of the first to take an early
lead. The Bulldogs finally got
on the board themselves with
two runs in the bottom of the
third.
The Viking bats finally
got going in the fifth inning,
scoring four runs to open a
5-2 advantage in the top of
the inning which was quickly answered by the Bulldogs
in the bottom half to knot the
game at 5 heading into the final
two innings.
The top of the seventh was
the difference as the Vikings
scored 2 runs to take a 7-5 lead,
which would be the final.
The Vikings Ethan Shields
pitched 7 innings while giving
up four hits and 5 runs, only
one of them earned.
Shields did a tremendous
job, Coach Jason Brown stated. He battled the whole night
and kept us in the game and
kept his composure when we
made some mistakes, Brown
added.
Shields also led his squad
offensively with three hits and
scored twice.
It was an offensive explosion in the late game with the
Vikings winning again 14-10.
Central Heights opened up
with 4 runs in the first and
two more in the second to give
them a 6-1 advantage after the
second inning.
Merrick Brown, Central
Heights, pounded out 4 hits
while scoring 4 times and driving in a run.
Leading the way on the
evening for the Bulldogs was
Brady Rockers. Rockers picked
up 3 hits, including a single,
double and triple. Rockers also
scored twice and drove in 3
more runs.
Percy rises from tie-breaker at Garnett
BY KEVIN GAINES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Eighteen holes
werent enough to decide the
Anderson County Invitational
last Tuesday as there was a
three-way tie that had to be broken by a sudden death playoff
beginning on the first hole.
Matt Percy from Central
Heights, Zach Miller from
Anderson County and Parker
Olmstead of Ottawa all shot a
71 on the afternoon to finish in
a tie after 18 holes.
Percy took control on the
sudden death playoff by scoring an eagle on the first hole
to bring home the title. Miller
finished in second followed by
Olmstead.
Quentin Sams of Anderson
County finished the day with
an 85, which placed him just
outside the top 10 in 11th place.
Kyle Paulson and Carson
Paulson, competing for Central
Heights, scored an 84 and 86
respectively.
29,0
Total R 00
eaders!
3×10.5
filler
MORE
REACH,
1/2 PRICE
Run any display ad
in The Review, get
additional readers
in Lawrence/Douglas
County with
The Trading Post
at 1/2 price.
Contact us for details.
(785) 448-3121
review@garnett-ks.com
1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Aspiring baseball players
in Anderson County got a
chance to hone their baseball skills at the first annual Muddog Baseball Clinic
on Saturday, May 7, in
Garnett. The free clinic was
sponsored by the Muddogs
American Legion Baseball
Team, Anderson County
High School Baseball,
and Garnett Parks and
Recreation, for baseball
players 9 to 12 years of age
and their coaches.
Volunteer
instructors included Joe Strobel,
Muddogs head coach and
Central
Heights
High
School assistant coach,
Matt Stevenson, Anderson
County High School varsity
coach, Jason Brown, Central
Heights varsity coach, Ian
Rocker, assistant Muddog
coach, and numerous varsity players from both high
school teams, that will be
playing summer ball with
the Muddogs this summer.
The young baseball enthusiasts learned basic skills
of the game including hitting, pitching, and catching,
as well as infield/outfield
defensive techniques. Over
40 players and 8 coaches
took part in the event, which
the sponsors hope will raise
the level of skill and competitiveness of all levels of
area baseball over the next
several seasons.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
5-17-2016/ Photo Submitted
Above, students practice their
form under the watchful eye of
one of the volunteer instructors
during the Muddogs American
Legion baseball team clinic May
7.
At right, participants practice
their catching skills.
At left, students work on their
form.
Chamber Players wrap up 25th season with Southern Fried Murder
The
final
production
of the Chamber Players
25th Anniversary season,
Southern Fried Murder by
Billy St. John, opens May 19th.
The local dinner theatre will
perform 8 times: May 19-22 and
26-29. Three matinees on May
22, 28 & 29 and five evening
performances will be catered
by Country Mart serving fried
chicken, corn, mustard potato
salad and biscuits with honey
and butter. Tickets are $22
for adults and $17 for K-12 students. Advanced reservations
are required.
The company set a sales
record with its most recent
offering in March local playwright Gary Stapps Leona,
Love Thy Neighbor, Too. The
sequel to his first play, Love
Thy Neighbor, which debuted
in Garnett in 2003, sold 800 tickets before they were even available to the general public.
Southern Fried Murder is
an ambitious, energetic departure for the Chamber Players
a fully interactive, audience-participation show. Clues
to help solve the murder mystery will be planted throughout the theater. The cast will
mingle with patrons during
the dinner hour sharing tidbits
about themselves and their fellow characters that will also
help solve the shows crime.
One ticket holder each night
will be invited to play a key
JJJ Club members meet
The JJJ Club met May 11
with Irene Wittman. There
were four memers present.
Minutes of the last meeting
were read.
Cards were played with
Colo
ny
29,000
$ 695
2×5
AD
ett
Garn
Darlene Olson receiving high
and Bert Jackson low.
Refreshments of ice cream,
cookies and coffee were served.
Next meeting is June 8 with
Bert Jackson.
Sell to
eley
Gre
customers
for only
Bal
dw
a
taw
a
or
La
wr
en
lia
ha
Osk
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
ce
sa
aloo
Reach 29,000 readers in Anderson, Franklin and
Douglas counties – and beyond – when you run your
For Sale, Services, Auction or Help Wanted ad
in The Anderson County Review and
The Trading Post. Its almost a GUARANTEED sale,
and all for just $6.95 for 20 words (larger ads cost a
little more). Just drop by our ofce at 112 W. 6th in
Garnett or use the handy form below to print your ad
and mail with your payment.
Heading:
Ad Start Date:
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
in
Ot
stp
We
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
Muddogs American
Legion team has
baseball clinic
d
Eu
Tuesday, May 17
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
7 p.m. – Westphalia 8th grade
graduation
Wednesday, May 18
USD 365 Play Day
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
5:30 p.m. – AC Athletic Physical
Clinic
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
Thursday, May 19
USD 365 last day of school
8:30 a.m. – GES 3rd-6th grade
Award Assembly
11:30 a.m. – Greeley Pride
Assembly
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, May 20
ACHS Regional track
Saturday, May 21
2 p.m. – Crest High School
graduation
Monday, May 23
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
1-2 p.m. – Anderson County
Caregiver Support Group,
Garnett Recreation Center
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade)
Den Cub Scouts and Wolves
(second grade) Den Cub Scouts
meeting
Tuesday, May 24
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
9 a.m. – ACHS boys golf state
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1:30 p.m. – Central Heights eighth
grade promotion
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
7 p.m. – Legion BIngo at VFW
Wednesday, May 25
Last day of school, Central Heights
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
Thursday, May 26
9:30 a.m. – Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild at the Anderson
County Annex
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett
Senior Center
Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
Friday, May 27
State track
Wednesday, June 1
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
5:30 p.m. – USD 365 Booster
Club
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, June 2
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
community
No. times ad to run:
x$6.95 = Amount Enclosed
on-stage role as the local hotel
manager who will also meet a
cruel demise.
Lori Barcus (Garnett) plays
wealthy, ill-fated Magnolia
Davis Capote. She has summoned her potential heirs a
son, Louisiana (Les Thomas,
Garnett), and 5 grandchildren
to learn of their place in
her Last Will and Testament.
The grandkids are played by
local stage veterans Hannah
Snedecor and Katy Holloran
joined by three actors making
their local debuts: Joe Gardner
3×9
baumans
(Ottawa), Kristy Hamilton
(Garnett) and Tracy Conard
(Ottawa). Tom Emerson, Jr and
Dennis Richards are the family attorney and local sheriff,
respectively. Shauna Devening
(New Strawn) directs the show.
The Chamber Players will
launch their 26th Season this
summer beginning with a twoday audition period for all five
of the seasons shows on June
13 & 14 at 7 pm in the theater.
All interested actors and stage
hands are encouraged to attend
on either date to be considered
for any of the upcoming shows.
The announcement of the new
seasons titles will be made on
opening night, May 19th, of
Southern Fried Murder and
publicized via the companys
website and Facebook pages in
the following days.
Contact
the
theatre
company
by
phone
at
785.304.1683, by email at
ChamberPlayersGarnett@
gmail.com, or via their
Facebook page for reservations
and more information.
2B
The great trade
show failure
Remember that trade show
you went to that you thought
was such a waste of time?
Remember how those darn
people walked right by your
booth that you paid all that
money for and just took your
free pens and key chains
and breath mints and then
trotted off to the next booth?
Remember how you pulled that
muscle in your back loading
the booth back in your van?
You probably blew it.
In some industries trade
shows are declining in popularity because vendors question
their return on investment. I
think the biggest part of the
problem is that booth workers
at trade shows are doing it all
wrong.
These facts are pretty solid
out of every 100 attendees at
any trade show, 10 are qualified
to purchase the average product or service; of those, only
2-3 have an immediate need to
purchase.
But any of the other 7-8
are potential future customers.
Your job, if youre operating a
trade show booth, is two-fold. 1)
qualify the contacts you make
to determine if theyre one of
the 7 or one of the 3 or one
of the 90; and 2) (italic) follow
up (end italic) on leads youve
qualified as one of the 7.
Qualify: Dont just sit at
your table watching the crowd.
Stand, in front off to the side or
behind your table. Make eye
contact and speak to everyone who pauses or walks by.
Be friendly, polite and engaging. If this isnt you, hire and
train someone for the show
who is! Dont ask How are
you?, instead ask an engaging,
open-ended question that promotes dialogue like How are
you enjoying the show today?
Introduce yourself and deliver
your punchline: Were Super-
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
Duper Custom Automotive and
we stock 50,000 different styles of
custom wheels. Are you interested in new wheels for your car?
Maybe they guy drives a
truck. If so, hell tell you. If he
drives a bicycle, you just disqualified him and can move on
to more contacts. Voila!
Follow up: Maybe a warm
prospect fills out a questionnaire or an entry form for your
Bahama vacation giveaway or
maybe even gives you his/her
card. Have a plan, worked out
in advance, for how you will
handle these leads and make
notes as to how warm the
lead was. You should input the
info into a database of some
kind or at least transcribe them
with contact info onto a Big
Chief tablet, tear out the page,
and hang it on your office door.
No matter what you do, follow
up!
Its estimated that 80 percenet thats right, 80 percent
of trade show leads are never
followed up. Approach your
trade show experience like a
bonafide opportunity to recruit
customers and not some boring
drudgery, and youll sell more
stuff!
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.
BUSINESS BEAT
ACH EMS team to
provide
community
outreach
GARNETT The EMS team
at Anderson County Hospital
plans to visit several community groups and provide education about the importance
of emergency services during
National EMS week, May
15-21, 2016. EMS Director
Robert Robbins and his team
will visit local schools during
the week with a special
appearance of the ambulance
for children, including participating in the USD 365 play
day on May 18. In addition,
the team will visit the local
assisted living facility and
area nursing homes during
the week.
Our team is eager to go
out into the community and
talk with the people we are
dedicated to serving, said
Robbins. We take great
pride in the lifesaving services we provide, and want
to make sure the community
is aware of the services we
offer. Roberts credits EMS
team member Sherry Lee for
her initiative in planning the
weeks activities and coordinating the teams for each
event.
The great relationship
between our EMS and hospital teams allows us to collaborate and provide the
best quality care for our
patients, said Rich McKain,
Chief Executive Officer of
Anderson County Hospital.
We are excited to recognize
the great work of our EMS
professionals this week, and
we are honored to provide
the most comprehensive care
to patients when they need us
most.
EMS Week began in 1973
when President Gerald Ford
authorized a week of recognition for the important work
that Emergency Medical
Services provide to communities. EMS services are a
key part of emergency medicine and essential to public
health safety.
Anderson County Hospital
is a member of Saint Lukes
Health System, which consists of 10 area hospitals and
several primary and specialty
care practices, and provides a
range of inpatient, outpatient
and home care services.
Peace Run heads
through Garnett today
GARNETT – The Peace Run
(aka, Sri Chinmoy OnenessHome Peace Run) will be coming through Garnett on its
journey south toward Iola on
Tuesday, May 17. A representative of the organization contacted the City on May 3rd in
hopes the community would
embrace the Peace Run and
its mission to spread goodwill
among all people in every community they come in contact
with.
The Peace Run is a global
relay that began in 1987 and has
traversed over 100 nations promoting international friendship and understanding. The
run consists of a runner or runners who carry a torch symbolizing peace and are followed by
a support vehicle. The United
States Peace Run will be passing through Garnett on May
17th.
In discussing how the
Garnett community can be
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
BUSINESS
involved it was suggested the
run representative contact
GES Principal Krista Hedrick,
as the local elementary school
sits alongside the run route.
Mrs. Hedrick has taken great
initiative to create positive
student involvement at GES.
They are planning a special
event where the children and
staff at GES will engage in an
interactive assembly with the
runners. The anticipated time
start time of this event will be
1:25 p.m. Garnett City Mayor
and City Manager are planning
to attend this event at GES.
Citizens of Garnett are
encouraged to show support
of the Peace Run as it travels down US Highway 59 from
Ottawa to Iola on Tuesday,
May 17th. More information
will be released next week.
Information about the global peace run can be found at:
www.peacerun.org
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016 / Photo Submitted
Mayor Gwin read a proclamation at the City Commission Meeting on May 10, 2016, proclaiming May 2016 Community Action Month in
recognition of the hard work and dedication of Kansas Community Agencies. East Central Kansas Economic Opportunity Corp. (ECKAN)
is celebrating a 50-year history of working towards the common good in Garnett. Pictured Left to Right: Jeremy DuPont, ACHS Youth in
Government Representative; Commissioner Jody Cole; Brandy Lopez, ECKAN; Mayor Greg Gwin; and Commissioner Gordon Blackie.
Garnett launches new website: SimplyGarnett.com
GARNETT – For years now the
City of Garnett has had three
or more websites to tell its
story and provide resources to
online visitors.
Those websites are:
Municipal Government
website: www.garnettks.net
(aka, www.garnettksonline.
com)
Tourism:
www.experiencegarnettks.com
Garnett/Anderson County
Economic Development: www.
andersoncountyks.net
The City of Garnett is
launching a new website, www.
SimplyGarnett.com. This website combines all three websites into one. Migrating
information from the 3 existing
websites has been a daunting
task but we are getting closer to a user friendly website
that we hope will make life
easier for online users, says
Susan Wettstein. The website
is still a work in progress but
is viewable by the public. If
we waited to make it live until
it was perfect, it would never
happen.
The website provides information for residents, such as
Business Cards Car Magnets
Project Bid Forms More!
You name it,
we print it.
utility information and online
payments. City commission
agendas and audio from previous meetings are on the
website, as well as minutes
from advisory boards. Useful
information is available to persons new to the community;
whether a first time resident
or visitor/tourist. Recreation
programs, including downloadable forms and schedules, and
information about sports facilities can be accessed.
Once most of the information has been migrated the next
goal will be to optimize the sight
to make it as mobile friendly as possible as more users
access information from their
cell phones. Wettstein said they
hope to create a better way
in the future to make online
payments for utility bills, court
fines and online sign-up of recreation programs.
Feedback after viewing the
website is appreciated. Either
complete the survey found on
the website or email info@garnettks.net.
2×2
diy
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
Sales & Service
(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
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
E-Statements &
Online Banking
111 E. 4th Ave.
Garnett
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
Millers Construction, Inc.
Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country
Favorites
Country
Favorites
Anderson County News
Mon-Fri 8:00am.
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
To advertise in this
contact Stacey at
Cooper Jetzondirectory
Kumho
785-448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
3B
LOCAL
To follow Christ or
not to follow Christ?
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016 / Photo Submitted
The Garnett Police Department held its annual Bike Rodeo Thursday, May 12, at GES. Officers helped teach the students about bike
safety, registered their bikes and conducted bicycle safety checks.
Local Safety Poster Program winners announced
According to Cindy Ecclefield, County
Coordinator Anderson County Farm
Bureau, preventable injury is the leading
cause of death for Kansas children. More
children die annually from preventable,
unintentional injuries than from all childhood diseases combined. This year, one
child in four will suffer a preventable
injury serious enough to require medical
attention. The great tragedy is that most
of these injuries can be prevented.
In an effort to reduce accidents by developing safety minded youth, Kansas Farm
Bureau has sponsored a Safety Poster
Programs since 1950. Every year, several
thousand youth in the first through sixth
grades participate statewide.
Posters are judged on the county level
and the top poster from each division is
submitted for judging at the state level.
Those posters were narrowed down to the
top 10 in each division then judged by a
team of volunteers to determine the winning posters.
There were 221 entries from Anderson
County.
Winners in Division I (Grades 1-2) were:
first place, Owen Rockers, St. Rose; second place, Wyatt Whitham, St. Rose; third
place, Colton Summers, Crest and honorable mention, Dylan Hoffman, St. Rose.
Winners in Division II (Grades 3-4) were:
first place, Eva Bures, Garnett Elementary;
second place, Caleb Yoder, Mont Ida; third
place, Brook Hughes, Garnett Elementary;
honorable mention, Emma Sims, Garnett
Elementary.
Winners in Division III (Grades 5-6)
were: first place, Andrew Peine, Garnett
Elementary; second place, Molly Comfort,
Westphalia; third place, Braden Blaufuss,
Garnett Elementary and honorable mention Logan Walter, Garnett Elementary.
Cindy is proud to announce that Owen
Rockers was awarded Honorable Mention
in the state for Division I. Owen is the son
of Troy Rockers, Garnett and is a 1st grader at St Rose School. His poster was about
combining farm & safety for a successful
harvest. Owen received a certificate of
achievement from Kansas Farm Bureau.
On the county level first, second and third
place winners will receive a personalized
medallion & certificate and honorable
mention will receive a ribbon & certificate.
As I have grown older and
experienced life I have grown
to appreciate it more and
more. We just had a day with
our family. There is a lot of
work that goes into a family
gathering, but to see everyone
enjoy themselves makes it all
worth while. We need to put
an emphasis on enjoying our
family, friends and co-workers.
Life is more about relationships than anything else. It is
impossible to make it through
life without interacting with
people. I believe the better you
are able to interact with people
the easier your life will be. It
is very easy to just try and
do everything for yourself but
that causes you to assume too
much and you become ineffective.
Jesus provides quite a study
on interacting with people. He
chastised those who opposed
him, referring to the teachers
of the law and the Pharisees as
hypocrites for, neglecting the
more important matters of the
law-justice, mercy and faithfulness. In essence they were
using the law to burden those
who were not part of their sect.
Jesus spent most of his time
among the poor, the sick and the
downtrodden. The very people
the Sadducees and Pharisees
were exploiting. Interestingly
enough Jesus makes this statement concerning those groups.
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
The teachers of the law and
the Pharisees sit in Moses seat.
So you must obey them and
do everything they tell you.
But do not do what they do as
they do not practice what they
preach. (Matthew 23:3)
God put one prohibition on
Adam in the Garden of Eden.
And the LORD God commanded the man, 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. When Adam
ate of the fruit sin entered into
the world. You and I have lost
our way as a result. Because
Jesus did what he said he was
going to do and was resurrected
from the grave we must make a
choice. To follow Christ or
not to follow Christ. Following
Jesus is difficult because there
are so many other choices that
are more appealing. Like I said
life is about relationships. A
relationship with Jesus is the
most important one you will
ever have.
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Duplicate bridge played
Charles and Peggy Carlson
won the duplicate bridge match
May 11 in Garnett. Tom Peavler
and Peggy Wilcox came in second. Dave Leitch and Patty
Barr were in third place.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all
bridge players Wednesdays at
1 p.m. at the Garnett Inn.
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday 9am
Wednesday 7:30pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
6×12
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday School 9am
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
church directory
Morning Worship 10:00am
Evening Worship 6:30pm
Wednesday Service 7pm
(785) 448-3208 258 Park, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Phil Rhoades
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Elder Planning Specialists
Annuities
Medicare Supplement
Long Term Care
Scott D. Schulte CSA
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th Garnett
340 E. South St.
Richmond, Kansas 66080
(785) 835-6135
Hwy 59 at Hwy 31 GARNETT
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3558
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
LWML 2nd Sunday 11:30am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ervin A. Daugherty Jr.
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9 am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9:28 am
Sunday Worship 10:28 am
Childrens Church 10:30 am
Wed. Evening Bible Study 6:28 pm
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Mike Farran
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm, Youth Mtg. 7pm
Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Ron Jones
BEACON OF TRUTH
Saturday Sabbath Worship 9:30am
Saturday Evening Service 6pm
(except 4th Saturday)
Wednesday Evening Prayer Svc. 7:00pm
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Andrew Zoll
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 10am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Pastor Chris Goetz
Children & Youth Pastor – Brett Hartman
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – David Hill
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15am
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am/Thurs 7pm
Chancel Bells Wed 6pm
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
Jr. & Sr. UMYF Sundays
U.M. Women 1st Wednesday
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
Reverend – Bill Driver
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:45am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
Pastor – Butch Ritter
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
GREELEY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship 9am
Bible Study (Teens, Adults) 10am
Sunday School (Children) 10am
204 N. Main, PO Box 37, Greeley, KS 66033
(913) 755-2225
Pastor – Bill Driver
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 448-3947
1300 & Broomall Rd, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Vernon Yoder
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Fr. Matthew Schiffelbein
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 8:30am
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
Classied ads
only three dollars.
25,000 area customers
read us everyread
weekus
just for your ads!
25,000 customers
Dont justWEEK
sit there… place
yourfor
ad now
by phone!
EVERY
just
your
ads!
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
(785) 842-6440 (800) 683-4505
ads@tradingpostdeals.com
www.tradingpostdeals.com
Anderson
County
News
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country Favorites
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Heating &
Air Conditioning
(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Sunday School 9:30am
Worship Service 10:30am
2nd & Pine, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Cody Knapik
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
For additions, subtractions or changes to your
church information, a church official may
contact the Review at (785) 448-3121.
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
4B
LOCAL
Morgan receives 70-year member pin
Henry Morgan of Greeley
joined the Greeley Knights of
Columbus Council # 1901 on
June 9, 1946, just a few days
later he took his Second and
Third Degrees. In 1964, he
joined the Fourth Degree.
Next month, Henry will have
been a member for 70 years, an
honor not achieved by many
members. Since he joined the
Knights of Columbus, he has
held numerous officer positions, including Grand Knight.
In January 2016, he was
recognized at Greeleys annual Ladies Appreciation and
Awards Night. Unfortunately,
due to his health, he was not
able to join his Brother Knights
for the evening. On Monday,
May 3rd, members of the
Greeley Council visited Henry.
Tony Hermreck, current Grand
Knight, presented Henry with
a 70-year member lapel pin
and an Honoree Scroll. The
Honoree Scroll is from a First
Degree that was held in Henrys
honor with six new men joining: three from Greeley, two
from Westphalia and one from
Scipio. Joining Tony was former District Deputy Ed Miller
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
2 bedroom, very clean, CH/
CA, $500 per month. (785) 4185435.
my3tf
Osawatomie, 2 bedroom, 1
bath, Section 8 welcome. Nice
location, clean. (913) 731-1800.
my10t2*
Newly listed: Nice 3 BR
home on 3/4 acre—-EDGE of
Lecompton! Do you like to sit
on a big porch and listen to
birds instead of neighbors? Do
you like to grow your own food?
If so, this home could be for you.
Located on the edge of lecompton on 3/4 acre, this home features 3 BR, 2 bath, big front
porch, many vegetable gardens,
flower gardens, fruit trees, etc.
Home also has a wood stove
in addition to Central heat/
air. Live the Self Sustained
Lifestyle you have been dreaming about!! $132,000 Contact
Darrell Mooney at Pia Friend
Realty. 785-393-3957. More pictures at www.piafriend.com
**ap26**
REAL ESTATE
4 buildable lots, a house can be
built on each lot. SW of Wichita
in Harper, Kansas. $20,000 talkes all. taxes are low, 1 lot has
cave. Harper is at Hwy. 2 and
160. Iris Faucett, (620) 491-0936.
**jn30**
FSBO Country Home – 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, move in ready.
Covered porches, shaded patio,
2 vehicle carport. Log siding,
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016 / Photo Submitted
metal roof, mature trees. Nice
(From L. to R.) Tony Hermreck, Grand Knight; Henry Morgan, recipient of the 70-year membership 50 x 40 shed with 50 x 16 lean
pin; George E. Miller, Financial Secretary and Past State Deputy; not pictured (took picture), Ed Miller to, concrete floor, and 12 x 36
Chancellor and Former District Deputy.
RV addition. $135,000. All on 2.1
acres, blacktop road, close to
Garnett. (785) 204-0730.
and Kansas State Council Past members. On April 1, 2018, the Tree in Overland Park.
**fb9**
State Deputy and current coun- Greeley Knights council will
If you are interested in learn1820
Miller
Drive,
Lawrence,
cil Financial Secretary, George celebrate its 100-year anniver- ing more about or would like to
E. Miller.
sary. Highlighting the anni- join the Knights of Columbus, $99,900. 3 bedroom, 1 bath
The Greeley Knights of versary year Greeley will be please contact Tony, George or remodeled in (02). Just updated with new HVAC, new paint
Columbus currently has 137 co-hosting the Kansas State Ed. If you wish to join another
inside and out, carpet thru-out,
members; Kansas has over Council State Convention with Council besides Greeley, they kitchen floor plus lots more.
37,000 with a worldwide mem- Olathe-St. Paul. The conven- can help you contact the cor- Vacant and move-in-ready. Not
bership of over 1.8 million tion will be held at the Double rect person in that Council.
a drive by. Diann Lutackas, KW
Legacy Partners, Inc. (785) 6334333, text: 80354 to 79564.
**jn16**
Built in 1901 – by the town
Banker, this 3-4 bedroom, 3
Zig Zag Sewing Club had a Tootle Russell and Doris bath Victorian is located at 906
picnic luncheon meeting May Rommelfinger.
Liberty in charming Oskaloosa.
4, 2016 at the Osawatomie Lake
A variety of show and tell Wrap around porch, new kitchShelter house and hosted by were shared including colorful en, new baths, new siding,
the Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of the Northwest Loretta Crozier of Osawatomie
hotpads and reversible aprons pcket dors, stained glass winQuarter (NW/4) of Section Thirty (30), Township and her husband at the grill.
dows, original woodwork, auxand a welcome table runner.
Twenty (20) South, Range Twenty (20) East of Nine members and one guest,
Loretta Crozier gave a short iliary wood furnace, full dry
the Sixth Principal Meridian; LESS the West Evelyn Gillogly of Garnett
lesson on facts and habits of the basement, fireplace, garag and
140 feet thereof as described in that cer- attended.
hummingbirds and gave each much more. Home has been
Birthdays were recognized
tain deed dated March 11, 1958, recorded in
renovated from top to bottom
member their own hummingin the last 8 years. 30 minutes
Book 115 at page 531, wherein Charles F. for May: Loretta Crozier and
bird feeder.
to Lawrence and Topeka. Dont
Southerland and Lottie Southerland were grant- Judy Wiederholt.
Next months meeting miss this chance of a lifetime to
President Grace Donham
ees, the division line of which has heretofore
will be June 1, hosted by Jan own this timeless beauty! See
been determined on the premises by agree- conducted the meeting. Jackie
Ouderkirk and Sylvia Kehoe pictures at www.piafriend.com.
Leach
Sec/Tres
read
the
minment between the said Henry J. Allen and the
at the club house at Woodland Darrell Mooney, Pia Friend
said Charles F. Southerland., commonly known utes from last months meeting.
Realty, (785) 393-3957.
Door prize was won by Hills.
as 143 North Oak Street, Garnett, KS 66032
**ap12**
(the Property)
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled
Enrolling Now for 2016-17
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
Virtual Education With a Personal Touch
as provided by law, and further subject to the
Haven Virtual Academy's online
approval of the Court. For more information,
program is now accepting enrollment
visit www.Southlaw.com
1×3
schulte
1×3
Notice of intent to sell Zig Zag Sewing Club meets
Spellmeier property
(First published in The Anderson County
Review Tuesday, May 17, 2016)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
Michael J. Spellmeier and Amber M. Spellmeier,
et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 16CV2
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
Notice Of Sale
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale
issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court
of Anderson County, Kansas, the undersigned
Sheriff of Anderson County, Kansas, will offer
for sale at public auction and sell to the highest
bidder for cash in hand, at the West Door of
the Courthouse at Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, on June 8, 2016, at 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
Beginning 220 feet North of the center
of the North end of Oak Street in the City of
Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas, and running thence North 80 feet, thence West 24.88
rods, thence South 80 feet, thence East 24.88
rods to the place of beginning, being a part of
Haven Virtual Academy
Vernon L Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Prepared By:
SouthLaw, P.C.
Mark Mellor (KS #10255)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS 67202
(316) 684-7733
(316) 684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(184967)
for the 2016-17 school year.
Classes begin August 24. Our program
is open to all K-12 students and adults
who reside in Kansas. Students learn
and work from home, but have online
teacher support using online-based
curriculum. Haven Virtual Academys
Diploma Plus Program provides adult
students opportunity to return to their
studies via the Internet to earn a
diploma. Our programs are tuition free with no enrollment fees or
school charges. Families have the option of leasing a school laptop
to use for a yearly charge if their student needs it for schooling.
For more information about
Haven USD 312 Virtual Academy,
please contact: Penny Wilt
my17t3
Email: pwilt@havenschools.com
Phone: 620.960.3745 or visit the HVA website:
http://virtualprogram.weebly.com
Kids art classes offered
ACH Auxiliary has luncheon
The May 2nd meeting of the
Auxiliary was at Prairie Belles
for the annual luncheon courtesy of the hospital. There were
34 members present to enjoy
a delicious lunch and bring
home a beautiful geranium
plant. A big thank you to the
hospital for this recognization.
Janice conducterd a short
business meeting. Nancy presented an idea of purchasing
an umbrella stand for the hospital. Janice recognized Mary
Finkenbinder for 30 years of
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
service as a volunteer. She was
presented with a certificate
award at the District Meeting
in Parsons. She presented Mary
Pud Hubler with a 10 year
certificate. Congrats ladies.
Doctors Day, Hospital and
Nursing Home week has been
recognized by Ruth and her
helpers.
The next meeting will be
July 11, since the first Monday
is the 4th, with a salad pot luck
at the North Lake East Shelter
House.
Sell to
G
Col
o
29,000
$ 695
ley
ree
2×5
ett
GarnAD
customers
for only
ny
Bal
dw
in
wa
ta
La
wr
en
a
ali
h
stp
We
ce
oosa
l
Oska
Reach 29,000 readers in Anderson, Franklin and
Douglas counties – and beyond – when you run your
For Sale, Services, Auction or Help Wanted ad
in The Anderson County Review and
The Trading Post. Its almost a GUARANTEED sale,
and all for just $6.95 for 20 words (larger ads cost a
little more). Just drop by our ofce at 112 W. 6th in
Garnett or use the handy form below to print your ad
and mail with your payment.
Heading:
No. times ad to run:
Ad Start Date:
x$6.95 = Amount Enclosed
1999 Ford – V8, diesel 250,
white, extended cab, power
stroke, 2 new batteries. (785)
448-7053.
my17t1*
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Account Clerk I/Assistant Court Clerk
City of Garnett, Kansas
2×2
city of garnett
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for the
position of Account clerk I/Assistant Court Clerk. Positive
and strong interpersonal skills, attention to detail and computer
skills are essential requirements of this role. For a complete
job description and application, stop by City Hall, 131 W. 5th
Avenue, Garnett or visit www.HRePartners.com. Salary is
dependent on qualifications. Employee benefits include
life/health insurance, paid holidays, vacation and sick leave,
KPERS retirement. Position open until filled. EOE.
Anderson County Hospital, Saint Lukes
Health System has jobs available!
Apply online at
www.saintlukeshealthsystem.org/jobs
2×3
and co hosp
Ot
ra
area through murals.
The classes will be held for
students ages 10 and up, in the
Archer Room of the Garnett
Public Library, from 10:00am
to 12:00noon on Saturday, June
18, and Saturday June 25. At
the end of the second session,
there will be an opportunity to
show the finished artwork in
the West Wing Gallery adjoining the Walker Art Collection.
Tuition is $20 and all supplies are included. Registration
forms are available at the
Garnett
Public
Library.
Tuition is non-refundable and
must be paid in full at time of
registration. Space is limited.
Register now to save a spot.
do
Eu
Watercolor Painting Classes
for Kids will be held this summer thanks to the Walker Art
Committee and grant funds
from a Creative Economic
Grant from the State of Kansas.
At The Walker Art
Experience 2016, students will
have the opportunity to learn
from a professional mural artist/educator, Jim Stukey.
Stukey, a native born
Kansas artist from Burlington,
KS, has over fifty years experience painting everything
from portraits to landscapes.
He has worked on mural projects in Coffey County, Wichita,
Kansas City, and several surrounding sites. His mission is
to preserve the history of the
AUTOS
RN – full-time nights in Med/Surg
RN – full-time days in Family Care Center
RN – part-time days in Surgical Services
RN – PRN in Surgical Services
Patient Access Representative – full-time day shift in Patient Access
Patient Access Representative – part time as needed all shifts in
Patient Access
Medical Lab Technician/Clinical Lab Scientist – full-time
nights in Laboratory
Patient Account Representative – full time in Patient Accounts
Certified Nursing Assistant – full time day/evening/night shifts
Certified Nursing Assistant – part time as needed all shifts in RLC
LPN – part time as needed in RLC
Other part-time jobs: Housekeeper, Laundry Associate, Medical Lab
Technician and Radiology Technician
We Hire Only Non-Tobacco Users. EOE.
CITY OF TULSA AUCTION
SAT., MAY 21, 2016 | STARTS @ 9:32 A.M.
Location: 108 N. Trenton l Tulsa, OK
Huge
auction
running
three auction
ringsROAD
all day!
SKID
STEER,
BULLDOZER,
BACKHOE,
SKID STEER,
BULLDOZER,
BACKHOE,
ROAD
GRADER,
TRAILERS,
VEHICLES,
BOAT, MOWERS,
GRADER,
TRAILERS,
VEHICLES,
BOAT, MOWERS,
WELDER,
SHOP
TOOLS,
PLAYGROUND
TOYS,
WELDER, SHOP TOOLS, PLAYGROUND TOYS,
SWORDS, CONFISCATED
CONFISCATED ITEMS,
SWORDS,
ITEMS, ELECTRONICS,
ELECTRONICS,
MOTORCYCLE
JACKETS AND
AND MORE
MORE
MOTORCYCLE SUITS
SUITS & JACKETS
Directions: If coming from the East I-244: Take Utica (Exit 7). Turn right onto Utica and go 3
blocks and turn left to auction site. If coming from US-75 North or I-44 East take I-244 east,
then take Utica (Exit 7) and turn left on Utica. Go 3 block and turn left to auction site. If coming
from US-75 South, take I-244 east then take Utica (Exit 7) and turn left onto Utica. Go 3 blocks
and turn left to auction site. Watch for auction signs.
Auctioneers Note: Selling City Vehicles, Equipment, Conscated items and City Surplus to
the highest auction bidder. Come register and preview on Friday, May 20th from 9 am until
4 pm. The gate will reopen on Saturday morning at 7:30am. We will be running 3 AUCTION
RINGS ALL DAY so bring a friend or two. Please read all terms and conditions of the auction!
Due to insurance restrictions no person under 16 years of age will be admitted. Buyers will
be required to sign City of Tulsas Terms and Conditions before getting a buyers number. All
payments will be made to City of Tulsa. All titles will be assigned to the buyersname on your
invoice. Bring your TAX EXEMPT CARDS FOR PROOF OF TAX STATUS. Visit our website
for complete terms, auction catalog, and pictures at www.chuppsauction.com.
TERMS: All Sales AS IS. Cash, MasterCard, Visa, or Check with Bank Letter. All purchases
must be paid day of auction. Sales Tax will apply unless you show your tax exemption card.
Despite our efforts to avoid withdrawal of items from the sale list after they are advertised, it is
sometimes necessary for the City of Tulsa to do so in order to fulll certain responsibilities to
its citizens. See complete terms at www.chuppsauction.com.
For full item list, more info & pictures visit
www.ChuppsAuction.com
CHUPPS AUCTION CO.
Stan Chupp | (918) 638-1157
Dale Chupp, Realtor | Century 21, NEOKLA (918) 630-0495
E. J. Chupp | (918) 639-8555
it
it
it
it
it
it
it
it it it
it it
Find
it
in
the
Classifi
eds.
it
it
it
it
it
it it it
it
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
tit
it
it
it
it
it
it
it
it
it
it it Looking
it
it for something?
LOCAL
it
it
it
it
5B
it
it
it
it
Its EASY to place
your ad! it (785)
448-3121 (800) 683-4505it admin@garnett-ks.com it
it
it
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
HELP WANTED
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Tina ext. 301 or Lori ext. 303
1-800-926-6869.
1 X 3
a c c
home-
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
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
1×4
STILES
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
HELP WANTED
Semi driver – wanted for local
deliveries. Hazmat & CDL
required. Apply in person at
Taylor Oil, 504 Main Street,
Wellsville, KS
my10t4
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
1×3
1×3
COMPUTER
AD
WORK
COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
Come See Why Country Clipper
Stands Out
1×2
hecks
Joystick or Twin Stick Steering
Patented Stand-Up Deck For Easy Maintenance
All Welded Steel Decks
3/5 Year Limited Warranty
Jonsered Tillers, Walk Mowers,
Tractor Mowers, Trimmers in Stock
Hecks Small Engine Repair
1×2
AD
A leader in the healthcare
industry, Genesis HealthCare
is now hiring at Richmond
Healthcare and Rehabilitation
Center located in Richmond, KS
AUTOS
SERVICES
LPNs & RNs – All Shifts
CNAs – All shifts
Dietary Aides part time evenings
Day Cook – full time
We offer competitive
compensation, medical, dental,
vision benefits, 401K, vacation
time, growth opportunity
and more.
Apply online:
www.genesishcc.com
Email:
chasidee.stark@genesishcc.com
EEO/AA, M/F, Vet, Disabled
SERVICES
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 pm,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
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
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or mor trees. Call (916) 232-6781
in St. Joseph for details. dc8tf
Straw for Sale – $4 a bale. (785)
448-2228, leave message.
my17t2*
Our Hunters will Pay Top $$$
To hunt your land. Call for a
Free Base Camp Leasing info
packet & Quote. 1-866-309-1507
www.BaseCampLeasing.com
LAWN & GARDEN
Keims Greenhouse
REDUCED PRICES
keims
785-218-1785 785-448-7108
10 miles west of Garnett on Hwy 31
then 1 mile south on Finney Rd.
Hours: M-Sat 8am – 7pm
See us every Tuesday at the Sale Barn!
Little John Sherwood
Farm & Greenhouse
1×2
785-835-7057
Roses Perennials
AD
Hanging Baskets Annuals
Westphalia, KS 785-893-1620
OPEN Mon. – Fri. Sat. by Appointment
1×3
AD
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is . . . submitting
your FREE wedding announcement ONLINE for publication in The Anderson County
Review. Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click the form
under Submit News. Fill in
the form and click SUBMIT.
Available FREE 24 hours/day!
mc1tf
Happiness is… The Farmers
Market
returning
on
Thursdays, 4:30-7pm, downtown. Spinach, radishes,
onions, baked goods, local meat
and eggs. Credit and SNAP
accepted.
my10t2*
Happiness is… Cornerstone
Youth Group Silent Auction &
BBQ May 21, 5-7pm, Garnett
Nazarene Church Gym. Adults,
$8; children under 10, $4. Camp
fundraiser. Meal ticket not
needed or be presnet for auction. Royals tickets, ring, gear
and other local business donated items.
my17t1
Happiness is… celebrating
your wedding anniversary
with a FREE announcement
and photo in the Review. Go
to www.garnett-ks.com and
click the form under Submit
News. Available FREE 24
hours/day! mc1tf
JB Construction
2×2
jb construction
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
1×3
AD
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joeborntreger@yahoo.com
Check out our
Monthly Specials
2×4
franklin co
GARAGE SALE
Huge Garage Sale – with
antiques, lots of boys, 18 month3 and misc. Friday, May 20th
and Saturday, May 21st. 1664
S. Maple St., Hwy. 59, Garnett.
my17t1
Multi-family sale. Friday 8-?,
Saturday 8-3. Rommelfangers.
258 Kay.
my17t1
You name it,
we print it.
PETS
Registered – Shih Tzu puppies.
Male, $300; female, $350. (785)
733-2699.
my17t3*
NOTICES
delp
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121 1 6/25/14 1:30 PM Page 5
randy.new.5.2014.xx.ads_Layout
AGRICULTURE | EQUESTRIAN | GARAGE | COMMERCIAL
Journeyman Electrical Lineman
City of Girard
2×4
AD
2×4
kpa morton
The Difference is in the Details
All paint is not created equally. Mortons exclusive
FLUOROFLEX 1000 paint system provides superior
protection and long-lasting beauty for your building.
Protection against fading, chalking, peeling and red rust
Designed to withstand the effects of ultraviolet rays,
rain and pollution
Color and gloss retention that outlasts all others
The industrys best warranty against fading, peeling,
chalking and rust
2014 Morton Buildings, Inc. A listing of GC licenses available at mortonbuildings.com/licenses. Ref Code 043.
Eight offices serving Kansas
800-447-7436
mortonbuildings.com
3×2.5 bobcat oil
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
Tues – Sat: 9am – 6pm
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud Rd., 1 mile
S. on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
it
The City of Girard is seeking applications for the full-time
position of a journeyman electrical lineman.
Duties include construction and maintenance of the
electric distribution system and power plant operations.
Qualifications for this position include: High School
Diploma or GED; Certificate of Completion of an
accredited electrical lineman school and journeymans
certificate; valid Kansas Commercial Drivers License;
experience operating electrical distribution equipment and
knowledge of safety procedures. Applications and resumes
for this position should be mailed to the
Girard City Hall
120 N. Ozark St., Girard, KS 66743;
emailed to cityclerk@girardkansas.gov
or submitted online at HREpartners.com.
Previous applicants must reapply. Salary range from
$18 – $28 per hour depending upon experience, with
excellent benefits. The position is open until filled.
The City of Girard is an equal opportunity employer.
3×3 beckman motors
Eight
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 17, 2016
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016 / Photo Submitted
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-17-2016 / Photo Submitted
Breyanna Benjamin is a freshman at Crest School in Colony. Earlier
in the year Breyanna qualified to compete at State Forensics. On
April 30,2016, Breyanna performed her serious solo at the State
Forensic Festival at Kansas City Community College, where she
received a 1 rating.
Greeley Elementary School K-2 students spent the day exploring
Greeley Friday, May 6. Above, the Greeley Caf was opened for ice
cream and cookies for the students, who are pictured by the wooden
Indian outside. Below, Mike Rockers, Bank of Greeley President,
gives a tour of the vault. At right are Greeley Elementary staff, fro
left, Kim Gordon (Miss Kim), Mrs. Terry Messick andMrs. Cubit.
K-State spring 2016
graduation candidates
MANHATTAN Nearly 3,000
students are candidates for
graduation from Kansas State
University this spring.
Graduate candidates are
from 94 Kansas counties, 44
states and 35 countries.
Local graduates include:
Jessica Holloran,Garnett,
Bachelor of Science;
Amanda Nelson, Garnett,
Bachelor of Science;
Miranda Rickel, Garnett,
Bachelor of Science;
Jesica Steele, Garnett,
Bachelor of Science in Athletic
Training, Secondary Major
Amanda Bures, Richmond,
Doctor of Veterinary Medicine
Ashton Yoder, Welda,
Bachelor of Science in Feed
Science and Management
Jared Schaefer, Richmond,
Bachelor of Science in
Information Systems
Farm Bureau
ESU students get degrees Scholarship
winners
announced
EMPORIA – Hats off to the
more than 1,000 candidates for
spring graduation at Emporia
State University on May 14.
Undergraduates
received
their degrees during baccalaureate ceremonies at White
Auditorium, 111 E. Sixth Ave.
Graduate students were hooded at Albert Taylor Hall in
Plumb Hall on the Emporia
State campus.
Students from this area who
are candidates for degrees are:
Anna Victoria BetancourtMarkert of Garnett, Kansas,
Cum Laude with a B.S.
in Education degree in
Elementary Education
Megan Diane Sprague of
Garnett, Kansas, with a Master
of Science degree in Physical
Science with a concentration in
Earth Science
Kristin Michelle Stephens
of Westphalia, Kansas, with a
Bachelor of Science degree in
Biology with a concentration in
Pre-Physician Assistant
Ann Brandau-Murguia, a
member of the Kansas Board of
Regents, spoke at both the baccalaureate and graduate ceremonies. Dr. James Persinger,
professor of psychology and
2015 Roe R. Cross Distinguished
Professor, addressed the baccalaureate crowd.
Rail trail group meets
Twenty-two members of the
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail met
May 11, 2016 at the depot.
Donna Flamez and John and
Joyce Malone were welcomed
as new members.
Skip Landis, chairman, of
the May 14, 2016 Bicycle Safety
Rodeo finalized plans for the
event. Two new bicycles will be
given away that day.
Schedule for the June 4,
2016 National Trail Day was
discussed. A 7:30 A.M. run
will begin that morning at the
depot. At 9:30 A.M. bikers and
walkers will walk the trail. The
hospital Women In Training
will have a booth at the depot
to promote healthy life styles.
Refreshments will be provided
from 7:30 to noon at the depot.
At 4 oclock anyone interested
in biking again may.
Ruth Lee Hastert reported
on plans for the train memorabilia room.
The PSRT voted to be listed
in the Kansas Visitors Guide.
The next regular meeting
will be June 8, 2016.
New members are always
welcome.
The trail meets the second
Wednesday of each month.
3×5
wolken tire
Winners of the two Anderson
County Farm Bureau scholarships are
Maci Rockers
daughter of
Bob & Denise
Rockers,
Greeley and
Remington
H e d g e s
daughter
of the late
Rockers
Lance Hedges
&
Stacey
H e d g e s ,
Garnett.
Maci graduated from
Anderson
County High
School. She
has
been
Hedges
active in FFA,
basketball,
volleyball, Internationals and
the National Honors Society.
She plans to attend Kansas
State University.
Remington graduated from
Anderson County High School.
She has been active in varsity
cross country, Student Council
(STUCO), has been in musicals,
Internationals and the Nation
Honors Society.
She plans to attend Kansas
State University.
ACHS FFA competes at state
Members of the Anderson
County FFA Chapter competed at State FFA Career
Development Events in multiple events in Manhattan,
Kansas on May 1st through
May 3rd. Two of our teams
placed in the top five as a team
at state.
State Nursery Landscape
Isaac Kubacka
Trent Lutz
Briley Wolken
Austin Ewert
State Meats 5th Place
Cassidy Lutz 9th individual placer
Bryce Feuerborn 20th
individual placer
Adam Kropf 15th individual placer
Katie Lybarger
State Dairy Foods 7th state
team
Maci Rockers 17th individual placer
Shylie Scheckel
Emma Porter 20th individual placer
Justin Rockers
State Entomology 7th state
team
Lauren Egidy
Hunter Crane 19th individual placer
Paige Rupp 11th individu-
al placer
Ryland Porter
State Livestock 9th state
team
Chase Ratliff 16th individual placer
Madison Ratliff
Grady Schuster
Ridge Pracht
State Food Science 3rd
state team
Zane Phelps 17th individual placer
Ryan Whittman
Zeke Hermreck 11th individual placer
Corey Bowen 14th individual placer
Realtors
FSBOs:
FULL $
1YEAR 50
3×9
review re
&
Advertise your real estate properties
Classified liner up to 48 words
Published in The Trading Post
and
The Anderson County
Review, 29,000 readers
each week PLUS online traffic
runs until your property
Ad
sells or for 1 full year,
whichever comes first
Non-refundable $50 prepayment required at time of
placement
(785) 448-3121
Clem Filbrun Fifth Grade Westphalia Mrs. Brandt
The Graduating Class of 2016
STEP
FORWARD
ANDERSON COUNTY
HIGH SCHOOL
CREST
HIGH SCHOOL
CENTRAL HEIGHTS
HIGH SCHOOL
Graduation Edition An Annual Supplement
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
2 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Graduation Ceremonies
Central Heights
2 p.m. Saturday,
May 14, 2016
Ike Cearfoss
Gymnasium
Crest
2 p.m. Saturday,
May 21, 2016
Crest High School
Gym, Colony
ACHS
3 pm. Sunday,
May 15, 2016
ACHS Stadium,
(Rain: ACHS gym)
Hug Your Sponsor
TABLE OF CONTENTS
This keepsake edition is made possible only because of the advertisers and sponsors
who support our students and their educational endeavors. Be sure to thank them for
recognizing the Class of 2016 and making it possible to show them off a little bit!
The 24th Graduating Class of
Anderson County High School. ………………. Page 3
Evan Godderz of the Crest High School Class of 2016 is the son of Eric and Gerri
Godderz. He plans to continue his education at a university, perhaps the University of
Kansas. An athlete, he plans to continue to play sports.
The 50th Graduating Class of
Central Heights High School…………………… Page 18
On the Cover
The 48th Graduating Class of
Crest High School. ………………………………… Page 16
The staff at The Anderson County Review would like to thank the staff at all three schools
for their assistance collecting the information and photographs for this section.
Making the most of college financial aid: 7 tips you should know
(BPT) – What do parents of toddlers
and parents of high school students
have in common? Both worry about
paying for college. With the constantly rising costs of higher education,
financial aid becomes more important
than ever for making the dream of a
college education possible. So if youre
interested in receiving financial aid,
where should you start?
The Free Application for Federal
Student Aid, or FAFSA, is your gateway to money for college from both
the federal and state governments for
most colleges and universities, says
Mark Kantrowitz, author of Filing
the FAFSA and Secrets to Winning
a Scholarship. Filing the FAFSA
correctly is crucial, as it has a direct
effect on how much money you receive
from various types of financial aid.
College Ave Student Loans partnered with Kantrowitz to offer top
tips for maximizing your need-based
financial aid for college:
1. Save strategically
When it comes to covering the cost
of college, financial aid should be at
the forefront of your mind, whether
youre ready to file the FAFSA right
now or not. Its best to save money
for college in a parents name, rather than the students, as the FAFSA
assesses money in the parents name
at a much lower rate. Every $10,000 in
student assets reduces aid eligibility
by $2,000, while every $10,000 in parent assets only reduces eligibility by
up to $564.
2. File early
The earlier you file the FAFSA,
the better. Right now, you should file
the FAFSA as soon as possible on or
after Jan. 1, but starting in 2017, you
can start as early as Oct. 1. Ten states
award aid on a first come, first served
basis, and 12 have hard deadlines in
February and March. Specific schools
can also have specific deadlines, and
students who file early may qualify
for more aid. So, as a rule of thumb,
file the FAFSA in January to maximize your eligibility.
3. Minimize income in the base
year
Using income and tax information
from a previous year, or base year,
the FAFSA calculates the financial
strength of your family. Because
the formula is heavily weighted on
income, its a good idea to reduce
your income in the base year. If you
can, avoid realizing capital gains. If
you must sell stocks, bonds or other
investments, try to offset capital gains
with losses. Taking retirement plan
distributions during the base year
will also count as income.
4. Reduce reportable assets
Minimize your money in the bank
by using it to pay credit card and loan
debts. This not only makes good financial planning sense, but may help you
qualify for more aid.
5. Maximize the number of children
in college at the same time
Something as simple as having
more than one child in college can
dramatically increase your changes
of receiving more financial aid. While
you cant change the ages of your children, you can use this impact on aid
eligibility as a deciding factor when
determining whether to allow your
child to skip a grade.
6. Seek generous and low-cost colleges
There are many generous colleges,
including some in the Ivy League,
which implement no loans financial
aid policies. This means they replace
loans with grants in the students
need-based financial aid package.
Additionally, in-state public colleges
are likely to be your least expensive
option, especially after subtracting
gift aid, grants and scholarships.
7. Organize your documents and
information
Filing the FAFSA is all about the
details. Pay attention and stay organized to get the job done right, starting
by filing the FAFSA for the correct
year and staying on top of deadlines.
Make sure to use the right Social
Security Number, date or birth, marital status and correct financial infor-
mation. Follow the instructions and
fill out the forms as carefully as possible to get the most accurate results.
Once you receive your financial aid
award letter and assess your savings,
youll have time to consider taking
out a loan. If you need it, find a simple
option that works for you, such as
College Ave Student Loans.
Navigating the world of financial
aid can be tricky, so follow these tips
to maximize your eligibility and make
college a reality. For more information and resources, visit collegeavestudentloans.com.
GRADUATION EDITION
ams, Phyllis Adams, Roger Adams
Activities: Football 2 years, art
club 3 years.
Plans: Artist, beta tester, spend my
life with loved ones, plus enjoy
life.
ANDERSON COUNTY HIGH
SCHOOL
Jonathan N. Adams
Parents: Libby Rose, Rodney Ad-
Trey Andrew Ahring
Parents: Travis and Tracey Ahring
Activities: I played baseball and
football my freshman year and
basketball all four years.
Plans: I will be attending Fort Scott
Community College on a rodeo
scholarship.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 3
Activities: Dance team, FFA, FCCLA
Plans: Attend Emporia State
University majoirng in elementary
education.
Candice Michelle Brown
Parents: Genia and Theodore
Brown
Plans: Plan to go to Allen County for a year then plan to go to
K-State and major in veterinary
science. I want to become a vet.
Kerry Julian Burgoon
Parents: Jason and Cindi Burgoon
Plans: Work in the HVAC industry.
Remi Burns
Parents: Mike and Eileen Burns
Stephen Todd Callow
Parents: John and Jackie Olson
Activities: Band, choir, Boy Scouts
Plans: Attend Johnson County
Community College to get my conductors certificate for the railroad.
Become a voluntary firefighter.
Live life to the fullest.
Jonathan Adams
Remington Burns
Libby Rose, Rodney Adams,
Phyllis Adams, Roger Adams
Mike & Eileen Burns
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
GSSB
AuBurn Pharmacy
Trey Ahring
Stephen Callow
Travis & Tracey Ahring
John & Jackie Olson
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3333
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Kansas State Title Co.
Sonic Drive-In
Candice Brown
Kacey Coffelt
Genia & Theodore Brown
Laurie & Chad Coffelt
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
AuBurn Pharmacy
Lutz Towing & Recovery
Kerry Burgoon
Timothy Comfort
Jason & Cindi Burgoon
Lawrence & Gaylene Comfort
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6602
Westphalia, Kansas
(785) 489-2505
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Sandras Quick Stop
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5830
Corley Seed Farms
4 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Kacey Lynn Coffelt
Parents: Laurie and Chad Coffelt
Activities: Track, basketball.
Plans: Move to Missouri and go to
college.
Timothy N. Comfort
Parents: Lawrence and Gaylene
Comfort
Activities: FFA, football, drama
club, TSA, science club, NHS,
wrestling.
Plans: Major in mechanical engineering at KSU, make some mon-
ey, go exploring.
Macy Chantel Davison
Parents: Lynn and Valinda Davison
Activities: KAY, 9, 10; FFA, 9, 10,
12; FCCLA, 10, 11, 12; volleyball,
11; NHS treasurer, 12; yearbook,
11.
Plans: I will attend Emporia State
University and major in accounting.
Cheyenne Rae Eddings
Parents:Troy and Connie Eddings
Activities:Internationals, Dawg
Pound, wrestling manager, FFA
and drama club.
Plans: Attending Allen County for
two years and later becoming an
RN.
Lauren Jean Egidy
Parents: Deborah Sommer and the
late Patrick Egidy
Activities: FFA, KAY, FBLA,
FCCLA, drama club, Internationals, Science Club, track and field,
yearbook.
Plans: Attend Neosho County
Community College, major in
criminology/criminal justice and
transfer to Kansas State University.
Morgan Alisabeth Egidy
Parents: Terry and Tammy Egidy
Activities: Cross country, track,
basketball, Scholars Bowl, band,
Internationals Club, KAY Club,
4-H, Youth Group, FFA.
Plans: I will be attending K-State
on a music scholarship and majoring in music education.
Macy Davison
Meranda Fair
Lynn & Valinda Davison
Lisa Fair
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6191
GSSB
C.D. Schulte Agency
Cheyenne Eddings
Bryce Feuerborn
Troy & Connie Eddings
Cliff & Karen Feuerborn
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
AuBurn Pharmacy
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Greeley, Kansas
(785) 867-2858
Lauren Egidy
Shane Figgins Jr.
Deborah Sommer &
the late Patrick Egidy
Shane Sr. & Shannon Figgins
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2284
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6602
Morgan Egidy
Danthony Fredricks
Terry & Tammy Egidy
Landon Fredricks & Mandy Lickteig
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Beachner Grain, Inc.
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3712
Greeley Excavating
Sandras Quick Stop
Richmond Body Works
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6395
GRADUATION EDITION
Meranda Diane Fair
Parents: Lisa Fair
Plans: Go to college.
Bryce Johnathan Feuerborn
Parents: Cliff and Karen Feuerborn
Activities: Football, golf, baseball,
FFA, TSA, Drama Club, Science
Club, and STUCO.
Plans: I plan to attend Kansas State
University and major in biological
systems engineering with an emphasis in machinery.
Shane Matthew Figgins Jr.
Parents: Shane Sr. and Shannon
Figgins
Activities: Chamber Singers, freshman/sophomore; basketball, senior;
Emma musical.
Plans: Attend Neosho County
Community College for business.
Danthony Fredricks
Parents: Landon Fredricks, Mandy
Lickteig
Activities: Basketball, football.
Plans: Air Force.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 5
Madelyn Jean Goode
Parents: John Goode and Danielle
Sumrall
Activities: Volleyball (2), cross
country (1), wrestling (2), track
(2), FFA (4), FCCLA (1).
Plans: Attend Fort Scott Community College and major in nursing.
Parker Jay Griffin
Parents: Jennifer Nicole Walford,
Matthew Alan Umbarger
Activities: FIRST Robotics, Schol-
ars Bowl, theater, FFA, baseball.
Plans: I plan to join the Army and
serve as a mechanic for at least
four years.
Brandy Lynn Grimes
Parents: Ronald and Oneda Grimes
Activities: FFA, 1, 2, 3, 4; FCCLA,
1, 2; Internationals 1, 2; Art Club,
3; Scholars Bowl, 1, 2; volleyball,
1; wrestling manager, 2.
Plans: Attend the University of
Kansas and major in nursing.
Madelyn Goode
Riley Hadl
John Goode & Danielle Sumrall
Jessica McGinn
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
AuBurn Pharmacy
AuBurn Pharmacy
Parker Griffin
Julie Hartman
Jennifer Walford &
Matthew Umbarger
Rex Hartman & Dotti Baker
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Sonic Drive-In
Sonic Drive-In
Brandy Grimes
Remington Hedges
Ronald & Oneda Grimes
The late Lance Hedges
& Stacey Hedges
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Iola, Kansas
(620) 365-2538
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Tregon Guernsey
Ezekial Hermreck
Rhonda Guernsey & Tim Guernsey
Jerry & Ramona Hermreck
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Flynn Appliance & Hi Def Center
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
GSSB
Anderson County Farm Bureau
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-0099
6 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Tregon June Guernsey
Parents: Rhonda Guernsey and Tim
Guernsey
Activities: Volleyball, basketball,
track.
Plans: To start my own bakery after
taking online classes in the next
two years.
Riley Dean Pape Hadl
Parents: Jessica McGinn
Activities: FFA
Plans: Army
Julie Mae Hartman
Parents: Rex Hartman and Dotti
Baker
Activities: Internationals, Drama
Club, Big Brothers Big Sisters, FCCLA, track, cross country, Legacy
Youth Group at Garnett First Christian Church.
Plans: I will be attending Ozark
Christian College in the fall of
2016. After graduation at Ozark,
I will have a bachelors in nursing and bachelors in vocational
ministry.
Remington Elaine Hedges
Parents: The late Lance and Stacey
Hedges
Activities: Student council, Internationals, dance team, cross country, track, Drama Club, National
Honor Society.
Plans: Attend Kansas State University and major in family and
consumer science education.
Ezekial A. Hermreck
Parents: Jerry and Ramona Herm-
reck
Activities: Basketball, FFA, Science Club, Drama Club.
Plans: To attend Allen Community
College.
Mitchell Highberger
Parents: Margie and Dan Highberger
Activities: Baseball, FFA.
Plans: Attend Washburn Tech for
diesel technology and then return
back to Westphalia and farm alongside my father.
Mitchell Highberger
Andrew Johnson
Dan & Margie Highberger
Michelle Johnson &
Vincent Johnson
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Anipro/Xtraformance Feeds
Trade Winds Bar & Grill
McKenzi Huettenmueller
Tyler Jumet
Ron & Linda Huettenmueller
Mike & Tara Jumet
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Paola, Kansas
(913) 294-4016
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-5451
Reagan Jirak
Devin Katzer
Alisa & Matt Self & Kevin Jirak
Stephanie & Tony Kline
& Jason Katzer
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Westphalia, Kansas
(785) 448-7722
Robert Miller Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-4301
Midwest Collision
Patriots Bank
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5856
Farmers State Bank
Lazy H Trucking
Kinlee Jones
Ashley Kaufman
Sheldon & Deadra Jones
Michael Kaufman,
Jessee & Debbie Spears
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
GRADUATION EDITION
McKenzi Lynn Huettenmueller
Parents: Ron and Linda Huettenmueller
Activities: Cheerleading, Dawg
Pound, NHS.
Plans: Attend Emporia State University.
Reagan Leigh Jirak
Parents: Alisa and Matt Self, Kevin
Jirak
Activities: Volleyball, basketball,
track, FFA, STUCO, Drama Club,
Internationals, Science Club,
FCCLA, NHS (National Honor
Society).
Plans: Attend Washburn University
majoring in forensic science.
Andrew Wesley Johnson
Parents: Michelle Johnson, Vincent
Johnson
Activities: Golf, FFA, Kay.
Plans: Get a house with my girlfriend and attending Neosho County Community College.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 7
Kinlee Ann Jones
Parents: Sheldon and Deadra Jones
Activities: Volleyball, softball,
dance team, STUCO, NHS, FFA,
FCCLA. Internationals, Kay.
Plans: Attending Kansas State
University.
Devin Anthony Katzer
Parents: Stephanie and Tony Kline,
and Jason Katzer
Activities: Football, baseball, Drama Club, Internationals.
Plans: Attend Butler Community
College.
Tyler James Jumet
Parents: Mike and Tara Jumet
Activities: Cross country, track.
Plans: Attend Neosho County
Community College and major in
athletic training.
Ashley Marie Kaufman
Parents: Michael Kaufman, Jessee
and Debbie Spears
Activities: Varsity cheerleading,
National Honor Society, FCCLA,
Dawg Pound, volleyball.
Samuel Kazazian
Dal Lacey
Kat & Chris Rouse
CJ & Gail Lacey
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2121
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Austin King
Nicolas Lee
Adam King & Shannon King
Kayla King-Hermreck & John Lee
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2121
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2121
Country Mart
Country Mart
Patriots Bank
Country Mart
Matthew Kirkland
Lane Logan
Russell & Steffanie Kirkland
Lynetta & Scott Logan
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2121
AuBurn Pharmacy
Country Mart
MaKayla Kueser
Cassidy Lutz
Dan & Jalissa Kueser
Teena Lutz & Gerald Lutz
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Terry J. Solander – Atty at Law
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6131
Ratliffs Cherry Creek Farms
Westphalia, Kansas
(785) 489-2307
8 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Plans: Attend Neosho County
Community College.
Sam Kazazian
Parents: Kat and Chris Rouse
Activities: Art Club, TSA
Plans: Go to college, get my masters degree for computer science
and become a software engineer.
Austin James King
Parents: Adam James King, Shannon King
Activities: TSA
Plans: Working at American Eagle
with my family, or playing video
games on YouTube and getting
paid for it.
Matthew Kirkland
Parents: Russell and Steffanie
Kirkland
Activities: Football, wrestling,
FFA, FBLA, basketball.
Plans: Attend WSU to obtain my
degree in aerospace engineering.
MaKayla LaNeil Kueser
Parents: Dan and Jalissa Kueser
Activities: Internationals, FFA,
FCCLA, National Honor Society,
basketball, volleyball, track.
Plans: Attend Washburn University
and become a physical therapist
assistant and be part of the Ichabod
track and field team.
Nicolas Ronnie Lee
Parents: Kayla Ranae King-Hermreck, John Paul Lee
Plans: To find a job after graduation and then try to pursue a career
in law enforcement as a police
officer.
Dal Lacey
Parents: CJ and Gail Lacey
Activities: FFA.
Plans: Diesel mechanic, welder and
Lane Thomas Logan
Parents: Lynetta and Scott Logan
Plans: Get a good job and be successful.
rancher.
Eleanor Lutz
Blade Marmon
Milton & Carol Lutz
Travis Marmon & Lori McDougal
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Natures Touch
Quality Structures, Inc.
Mackenzie Lutz
Trent McDaniel
Jeff Lutz & Victoria Lutz
Thane McDaniel & Dena McDaniel
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7152
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Lutz Towing & Recovery
T.L. McDaniel Trucking
Holley Magee
Hannah Mead
Rhonda Dick, Lyle Magee,
Dan Dick
William Mead & Connie Mead
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5830
Welda, Kansas
(785) 229-2341
AuBurn Pharmacy
Farm Bureau Financial Services
Madison Malone
Teela Meineke Sumner
Kari & Joe Malone
Teela Meineke &
Rick & Lora Sumner
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Patriots Bank
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6125
Sonic Drive-In
Cassidy Emagail Lutz
Parents: Teena Lutz and Gerald
Lutz
Activities: Basketball, volleyball,
FFA, Internationals, Kay, Drama
Club, NHS, class officer all four
years.
Plans: I will attend Butler Community College and major in food
science and safety for two years
before attending Kansas State
University.
Eleanor Jean Lutz
Parents: Milton and Carol Lutz
Activities: KAY; Drama Club, 3
years; volleyball, 1 year; cross
country, 3 years; choir; track, 4
years; NHS.
Plans: Attend Emporia State Unversity to major in psychology.
Mackenzie Lynn Lutz
Parents: Jeff Lutz, Victoria Lutz
Activities: FBLA, KAY, FFA,
Internationals, Big Brothers Big
Sisters, dance team, volleyball,
GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 9
softball, basketball.
Plans: Attending Emporia State
University to major in elementary
education.
Madison Nicole Malone
Parents: Kari and Joe Malone
Activities: National Honors Society, track, FCCLA, Dawg Pound.
Plans: Attend NCCC in Ottawa this
fall, get my associates degree and
transfer to KU Med and become an
obstetrician.
Holley Delores Ann Magee
Parents: Rhonda Dick, Lyle Magee, Dan Dick
Activities: Band, Kay, FFA, Treble
Singers.
Plans: Im going to animal behavior college to get certified as a vet
assistant.
Blade Taylor Marmon
Parents:Travis Marmon, Lori McDougal.
Activities: Wrestling.
Plans: To live life to the fullest.
Rebecca Miller
Derrick Nelson
Kelsey & Melissa Miller
Dwight Nelson & Sandi Otipoby
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6602
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2487
Sandras Quick Stop
Sandi Otipoby, DDS
Zachariah Miller
Conner Parks
Mark & Amy Miller
Scott & Leah Parks
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
Garnett True Value Home Center
Charles Moffett
Zane Phelps
Jesus Robinson &
Nathaniel Robinson
Doug & Jan Phelps
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2284
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7106
Sonic Drive-In
Valley R. Agri-Service, Inc.
Gabriel Moore
David Pozzie
Cora Brown
Gina Baldwin & John Baldwin
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5830
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2121
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Lutz Towing & Recovery
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6533
Country Mart
10 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Trent McDaniel
Parents: Thane McDaniel, Dena
McDaniel.
Activities: Football, 1, 2; baseball,
1, 2; honor roll, 1; Internationals, 1.
Plans: Attend Allen in the fall.
Hannah Krystine Mead
Parents:William Mead and Connie
Mead
Activities: Choir all four years.
Plans: I plan to attend a community college until I decide my final
major.
Teela Cheyenne Meineke Sumner
Parents: Teela Meineke, Rick and
Lora Sumner
Activities: 4-H freshmen and sophomore year; track freshman year;
prom and after prom senior year.
Plans: Attend Neosho County
Community College and major in
nursing.
Activities: Scholars Bowl, Treble
Singers, Chamber Singers, FCCLA,
Drama Club, Science Club.
Plans: Attend Emporia State University and study nursing.
Derrick Scott Nelson
Parents: Dwight Nelson, Sandi
Otipoby
Activities: Football, basketball, Internationals, Drama Club, Science
Club, NHS, FFA, 4-H.
Plans: Attend K-State and obtain a
degree in milling science.
track.
Plans: I will be attending Washburn
University where I will be studying
occupational therapy.
Zane Phelps
Parents: Doug and Jan Phelps
Activities: I have been an active
member of FFA, TSA, Internationals, NHS and Drama Club. I have
participated in football, basketball
and track all four years of high
school.
Plans: Get my PhD in physics and
become a theoretical physicist.
Zach Miller
Parents: Mark and Amy Miller
Activities: STUCO, golf, basketConner Jordan Parks
ball, football statistician, Drama
Parents: Scott and Leah Parks
Club, FFA.
Plans: Attending and playing golf at Activities: FBLA, Science Club,
Internationals, STUCO, National
Kansas City Community College.
Honor Society, Art Club, Dawg
Pound, volleyball, basketball,
Charles Phillip Riley Moffett
Parents: Jesus Robinson and Nathaniel Robinson
Activities: Choir.
Plans: Attend Neosho Community
College for two years, transfer to a
Jill Reynolds & Ken Reynolds
4-year college to complete bachelors degree in history (to teach).
Mikaela Reynolds
Gabriel Moore
Parents: Cora Brown.
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Chase Ratliff
Maci Rockers
David & Michelle Ratliff
Bob & Denise Rockers
Rebecca Miller
Parents: Kelsey and Melissa Miller
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Country Mart
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2121
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ratliffs Cherry Creek Farms
Kansas State Title Co.
Madison Ratliff
Jacob Rundle
David & Michelle Ratliff
Jack & Patty Rundle
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Westphalia, Kansas
(785) 489-2307
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Westphalia, Kansas
(785) 489-2307
Ratliffs Cherry Creek Farms
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3333
Wolken Tire
Joanna Read
Bryan Rycheck
Justin & Monica Miller
Kevin & Stacy Rycheck
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Scipio, Kansas
(785) 835-6246
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6650
Scipio Supper Club
The Medicine Shoppe
GRADUATION EDITION
David Pozzie
Parents: Gina Baldwin, John
Baldwin
Activities: Drama Club.
Plans: To become a high school
chemistry teacher.
and get a degree in animal science.
Chase Zenn Ratliff
Parents: David and Michelle Ratliff
Activities: Football, four years;
basketball, 4 years, FFA.
Plans: I plan to attend Hutchinson
Community College to livestock
judge, then transfer to Kansas State
Madison Renee Ratliff
Parents: David and Michelle Ratliff
Activities: FFA, FBLA, basketball,
Dawg Pound, NHS.
Plans: Attend Butler Community
College for two years, then transfer to K-State and get my animal
science degree.
Joanna Denise Read
Parents: Justin and Monica Miller
Activities: Track and volleyball.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 11
Plans: Move to Kentucky and
choose a college near there.
Mikaela Renee Reynolds
Parents: Jill Reynolds, Ken Reynolds
Activities: Volleyball.
Plans: Attend Allen Community
College.
Maci Lynn Rockers
Parents: Bob and Denise Rockers
Activities: FFA, basketball, volleyball, track and field, KHAOS
MAYB girls basketball, National
Honor Society, Internationals, Carmelite Stars Youth Group.
Plans: Attend Kansas State University to major in food science and
industry with a minor in leadership
studies.
Jacob Raymond Rundle
Parents: Jack and Patty Rundle
Activities: Football, basketball,
baseball, FFA, Drama Club.
Plans: Attend FSCC, then Pittsburg
State University to obtain a busi-
Quentin Sams
Garrett Scott
Renee Bartlett & Danny Sams
Dever Scott & Connie Scott
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5441
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5441
Beckman Motors
Beckman Motors
Timothy Savage
Chloe Shriber
James & Becky Savage
Joni Shriber
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2284
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
AuBurn Pharmacy
Paige Scheckel
Gwendolyn Sibley
Philip Scheckel & Stacy Smith
Michael & Jennifer Sibley
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Kansas State Title Co.
Garnett True Value Home Center
Grady Schuster
Isabel Sibley
David & Kathy Schuster
Michael & Jennifer Sibley
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3333
Farmers State Bank
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-5451
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7106
Garnett True Value Home Center
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7106
12 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
To all graduating seniors congratulations and best wishes for the future.
2×5
nccc
CONGRATULATIONS
2×3
crest
CONGRATULATIONS
to the
GRADUATING
to
the
CLASS OF
GRADUATING
2016
FROM USD 479
A School Where Every Student Counts
CLASS OF
2015
Congratulations
to all graduates on a job well done!
2×3
AD
P.S.I., Inc.
Personal Service Insurance, Inc.
Iola, KS
(620) 365-6908
Moran, KS
(620) 237-4631
Mound City, KS
(913) 837-7825
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
2×4
auburn
2×6
AD
GRADUATION EDITION
2×3
AD
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 13
2×3
AD
We would like to honor
2×3
David Pozzie of Garnett
forAD
receiving his diploma from
Anderson County High School
on May 15, 2016
2×3
AD
Congratulations from your family at
Congratulations to the Class of 2016!
Ethanol
2×6
AD
Fueling A New Generation
Ethanol has been used in vehicles in the
United States for decades. With its
increased demand and our countrys
growing need for less dependence on
foreign oil, Ethanol is the fuel of the future.
Friendly to the environment, friendly to the
farmer, ethanol is great for your vehicle,
clean to the environment, and puts money
back in the pockets of our local farmers.
Were proud to be on the forefront of new fuel
technologies while decreasing Americas
dependence on foreign oil.
14 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Garrett Dever Scott
Parents: Dever Scott and Connie
Scott
Activities: FFA, baseball, welding.
Plans: Go to tech school then make
a lot of money.
ness degree.
Bryan Andrew Rycheck
Parents: Kevin and Stacy Rycheck
Activities: Scholars Bowl.
Plans: Go to college.
Quentin Robert Sams
Parents: Renee Bartlett and Danny
Sams
Activities: FFA, FBLA, TSA, Science Club, golf, Drama Club.
Plans: Attend two years at Salina
Tech for auto tech and then two
years at Pittsburg State University.
Timothy J. Savage
Parents: James and Becky Savage
Activities: Basketball.
Plans: Plan to go to work right out
of high school.
Paige Marie Scheckel
Parents: Philip Scheckel and Stacy
Smith
Activities: STUCO, Internationals,
basketball, cross country, softball,
track, National Honor Society.
Plans: Attending the University of
St. Mary where I will play basketball and major in exercise science.
Grady Donivan Schuster
Parents: David and Kathy Schuster
Activities: Football, FFA, STUCO,
4-H.
Plans: Attend Butler Community
College to major in ag business.
Chloe Elise Shriber
Parents: Jonie Shriber
Gwendolyn Rae Sibley
Parents: Michael and Jennifer
Sibley
Activities: Drama Club, cross
country, Scholar Bowl, basketball,
track, NHS.
Plans: I am attending KU pursuing a major in English literature.
I hope to be a publisher/editor of
books.
Isabel Hanna Sibley
Parents: Michael and Jennifer
Sibley
Activities: Band, choir, cross country, track, basketball, Drama Club.
Plans: Graduate college and get a
job that puts me above the poverty
line. Dont have a mid-life crisis.
Maintain a consistent amount of
happiness.
Kristen Paige Simpson
Parents: Mark and Kandice Simpson
Activities: Dance team, Drama
Club, Kay Club, Treble Singers.
Plans: I plan to attend Emporia
State University and study sociol-
ogy.
with a minor in Spanish.
Mason Randall Skiles
Parents: Mike and Carla Skiles
Activities: FFA, baseball, basketball, football.
Plans: Attending Fort Scott Community College to play baseball
and then transferring to Emporia
State University.
Jami Alexandra Sutton
Parents: Carol Belt and Kenny
Belt
Activities: Drama Club, softball,
Internationals, FCCLA.
Plans: Attend Johnson County
Community College for a major in
psychology and continue to New
York to be as social worker.
Austin Eugene Smith
Parents: Terry and Shari Smith
Activities: Baseball, FFA, TSA,
work study program with Wolken
Tire.
Plans: Attend Fort Scott Community College and transfer to Kansas State University majoring in
wildlife ecology, conservation and
management.
Zadie Dael-Marie Smith
Parents: Joanna Davidson Smith
and David Smith (deceased)
Plans: Attend McPherson College
in McPherson to study sociology
Shiloh Leif Sutton
Parents: Sarah Sutton and Adam
Sutton
Activities: Football, 3 years; wrestling, 4 years; baseball, 2 years.
Plans: Attend college, graduate
and find a career thats successful
and that I enjoy.
Zachary Ryan Taylor
Parents: Jeff and Tammy Taylor
Kevin Lowell Weirich
Parents: David Eugene Weirich,
Dawn Paula Weirich
Austin Smith
Terry & Shari Smith
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Wolken Tire
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Kristen Simpson
Zadie Smith
Mark & Kandice Simpson
Joanna Davidson Smith
& the late David Smith
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Edward Jones – Josh Nelson
Trade Winds Bar & Grill
Mason Skiles
Jami Sutton
Mike & Carla Skiles
Carol Belt & Kenny Belt
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7171
Wolken Tire
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5856
Craig E. Cole, Atty at Law
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3515
GRADUATION EDITION
Activities: Played basketball most
of the four years, track for two
years, cross country one year and
was a member of TSA for three
years.
Plans: I plan on going to Fort Scott
to get an associates degree in
construction.
and Custom Exhaust
Plans: Graduate from Salina Area
Technical College and then come
back to Garnett to work in fathers
shop, Rods Auto Repair & Custom Exhaust.
Bailey Lynn Whitcomb
Parents: Danny Whitcomb and
Stacey Whitcomb
Activities: Four years of cheerleading, four years of Dawg
Pound, two years of softball, two
years of volleyball.
Plans: Attend Hutchinson Community on a cheerleading scholarship
and major in elementary education.
Ryan Joseph Wittman
Parents: Robert and Connie Wittman.
Activities: FFA, went to state for
food science for three years.
Plans: To go to ACCC and study
for food science, progress to
K-State or KU in later years.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 15
Bailey Whitcomb
Danny Whitcomb &
Stacey Whitcomb
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Trade Winds Bar & Grill
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5856
Colby Wittman
Rod & Kim Wittman
Colby Francis Wittman
Parents: Rod and Kim Wittman
Activities: Baseball, FFA, TSA,
work study at Rods Auto Repair
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Wittman Auto Parts
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6611
Shiloh Sutton
Ryan Wittman
Sarah Sutton & Adam Sutton
Robert & Connie Wittman
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2280
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2121
Zenergy Massage & Skin Care
Zachary Taylor
Jeff & Tammy Taylor
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Kevin Weirich
David & Dawn Weirich
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
AuBurn Pharmacy
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Country Mart
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary
& Birth Announcements
Sports Scores Business News
Send
it in…
ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click one the appropriate form
under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
16 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
CREST HIGH SCHOOL
Brandon Brallier
Parents: Jeanette Irwin and
Kenneth Brallier
Plans: Attend college.
sey
Ashley Geary
Plans: Attend Allen CommuniParents: Doug and Gina Geary ty College and then transfer to
Plans: Attend Allen Communi- Pittsburg State University.
ty College and then transfer to
Emporia State University.
Kyle Riblett
Parents: Darin and Bonnie
Evan Godderz
Dalsing
Parents: Eric and Gerri GodPlans: Join the military.
derz
Plans: Attend the University of
Lupita Rodriguez
Kansas or another college and Parents: Juan and Graciela
continue in sports.
Rodriguez
Plans: Attend Allen Community College and then transfer to
Emporia State University.
Maya Piper
Parents: Katie Piper and Waylon Piper
Plans: Attend Allen Community College and then transfer to
Wichita State University.
Evan Godderz
Hunter Frazell
Parents: Craig and Sharon
Frazell
Plans: Attend Allen Community College and then transfer to
Kellen Ramsey
Pittsburg State University.
Parents: Lance and Jill Ram-
Garrett Sipe
Parents: Joyce Sipe and Steve
Sipe
Plans: Attend a welding
school.
Eric & Gerri Godderz
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
GSSB
Colony, Kansas – Member FDIC
(620) 852-3512
Brandon Brallier
Maya Piper
Jeanette Irwin & Kenneth Brallier
Katie Piper & Waylon Piper
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Landmark National Bank
Flynn Appliance & Hi Def Center
Hunter Frazell
Kellen Ramsey
Craig & Sharon Frazell
Lance & Jill Ramsey
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Kincaid, Kansas
(620) 439-5315
Iola, Kansas
(620) 365-2538
Colony Hi Point Caf & Convenience Store
Landmark National Bank
Ashley Geary
Kyle Riblett
Doug & Gina Geary
Darin & Bonnie Dalsing
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Colony, Kansas
(620) 852-3007
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Kincaid, Kansas
(620) 439-5315
Landmark National Bank
Kincaid, Kansas
(620) 439-5315
GRADUATION EDITION
Will Starr
Parents: Will Starr and Michelle Rhea
Plans: Attend a welding
school.
Kaden Strickler
Parents: Jeff and Missy Strickler
Plans: Attend Wichita State
University.
transfer to a university.
Colton Strickler
Parents: Todd and Sammye
Strickler
Plans: Attend Kansas State
University.
Emily Webber
Parents: Richard and Heather
Webber
Plans: Attend Neosho County
Community College and then
Dylan Young
Parents: Roger and Brenda
Young
Plans: Join the military.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 17
Travis Wilson
Parents: Cheryl and John
Shaw
Lupita Rodriguez
Kaden Strickler
Juan & Graciela Rodriguez
Jeff & Missy Strickler
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Colony, Kansas
(620) 852-3007
Colony, Kansas – Member FDIC
(620) 852-3512
Garrett Sipe
Emily Webber
Joyce Sipe & Steve Sipe
Richard & Heather Webber
Colony Hi Point Caf & Convenience Store
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
GSSB
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Farmers State Bank
Flynn Appliance & Hi Def Center
Will Starr
Travis Wilson
Will Starr & Michelle Rhea
Cheryl & John Shaw
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-5451
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Iola, Kansas
(620) 365-2538
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Colony Hi Point Caf & Convenience Store
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
Colton Strickler
Dylan Young
Todd & Sammye Strickler
Roger & Brenda Young
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Colony, Kansas – Member FDIC
(620) 852-3512
Iola, Kansas
(620) 365-3176
Colony, Kansas
(620) 852-3007
GSSB
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2269
Iola Pharmacy
18 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Plans: Enroll in a community College or
technical College.
Jessica Lee Beets
Parents: Allan Duane Beets, Jodie Ann Beets
Plans: Attend Fort Scott Community College
majoring in animal science.
Deanna Renae Blackwell
Parents: Travis Justen Blackwell, Connie Sue
Blackwell
Plans: Attend Pinnacle Career Institute majoring in massage therapy.
CENTRAL HEIGHTS HIGH SCHOOL
Cody Alexander Asbury
Parents: Brian Jerome Asbury, Angela Sue
Asbury
Colton Lee Bosse
Parents: Dallas Bosse, Amy Bosse
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Ashlynn Janelle Brockus
Parents: Jeremy Justin Brockus, Melissa
Dawn Brockus
Plans: Attend Hutchinson Community College majoring in agriculture.
Jean Castleberry
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College majoring in nursing.
Merrick Lyle Brown
Parents: Jason and Kelli Brown, Lara and
Ron Benham
Plans: Attend Ottawa University majoring in
biology.
Jacob Nathaniel Calvert
Parents: Jacob Nathaniel Calvert, Kirstin
Calvert
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Katelyn Elizabeth Castleberry
Parents: Jeffery Scott Castleberry, Kelly
Wyatt Dee Castleberry
Parents: Steven Lee Castleberry
Plans: Join the military.
Jason Erick Clissold
Parents: Michael Jason Clissold, Melissa
Marie Clissold
Plans: Attend Fort Scott Community College
majoring in communications.
Hannah Marie Dickey
Parents: Robin Jolee Dickey
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College majoring in nursing.
Cody Asbury
Ashlynn Brockus
Brian & Angela Asbury
Jeremy & Missy Brockus
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Carstar
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-8916
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Jessica Beets
Merrick Brown
Allan & Jodie Beets
Jason & Kelli Brown,
Lara & Ron Benham
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Garnett-Richmond-Princeton, Kansas-Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Deanna Blackwell
Jacob Calvert
Travis & Connie Blackwell
Jacob N. & Kirstin Calvert
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-2515
Quality Structures, Inc.
The Anderson County Review
AuBurn Pharmacy
Patriots Bank
Suffron Glass
Colton Bosse
Katelyn Castleberry
Dallas & Amy Bosse
Jeffery & Kelly Castleberry
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Gerken-Rent-All
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-4144
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
The Anderson County Review
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
GRADUATION EDITION
Alyssa Nicole Dunnivan
Parents: James Warren Dunivan, Vanessa
Suzann Dunnivan
Plans: Attend Kansas State University majoring in horticulture.
Plans: Attend Washburn University majoring
in nursing.
Alexis D. Finch
Parents: Jeff Finch, Ashea Finch
Plans: Attend Georgia State University majoring in dietetics.
Lindsey Marie Folsom
Parents: Daniel L. Folsom, Anna Marie
Folsom
Plans: Attend Allen Community College
majoring in business.
Mercedes Mariah Chanel Goodman
Parents: Jose Toreno Goodman, Melanie
Kay Dionne
Makayla Suzanne Hamilton
Parents: Daniel Joseph Hamilton, Wendy
Suzanne Hamilton
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College majoring in social work/psychology.
Troy W. Herring
Parents: Brad Herring, Jennifer Rose Herring
Plans: Attend Missouri Welding Institute
studying welding.
Cade Leo Hibdon
Parents: Darren D. Hibdon, Julie Lee Hibdon
Plans: Attend Butler Community College
majoring in agribusiness.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 19
Ronald Jay Hunter
Parents: Timothy Jay Hunter, Marcia Marie
Hunter
Plans: Join the military.
Elizabeth Danniele Johnson
Parents: Tony Wayne Johnson, Paula Elane
Johnson
Plans: Attend Emporia State Unviersity
majoring in nursing.
Tanner Dean Johnson
Parents: Charles and Michelle Johnson,
Dawn and Gary Cameron
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College studying welding.
Merisa Dawn Kennedy
Parents: Ray Dean Kennedy, Deana Lynn
Bohlken
Plans: Attend Bellus Academy studying
make-up artistry.
Jacob W. Kice
Parents: Jim W. Kice, Julia A. Kice
Plans: Attend University of Kansas majoring
in aerospace engineering.
Nathaniel Shawn King
Parents: Mike Shawn King, Christina Lynn
Register
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Hannah Elizabeth Kirkland
Parents: Robert Leroy Kirkland, Katie Loree
Kirkland
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College majoring in photography.
Wyatt Castleberry
Alexis Finch
Steven Castleberry
Jeff & Ashea Finch
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2061
Quality Structures, Inc.
Princeton Quick Stop
Jason Clissold
Lindsey Folsom
Michael & Melissa Clissold
Dan & Anna Folsom
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
AuBurn Pharmacy
Quality Structures, Inc.
Hannah Dickey
Mercedes Goodman
Robin Dickey
Jose Goodman & Melanie K. Dionne
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Adamson Bros. Htg. & Cooling
The Anderson County Review
Alyssa Dunnivan
Makayla Hamilton
James W. & Vanessa Dunnivan
Dan & Wendy Hamilton
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-8916
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-9273
Carstar
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
AuBurn Pharmacy
20 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Misty Dawn Leach
Parents: Brad Scott Leach, Lori Ann Leach
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Emilio Luis John Lopez
Parents: Stephanie Jean Lopez
Plans: Attend College to study nursing.
James W. Louden
Parents: Robert J. Louden, Ferna I. Louden
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Jessica Gale Louden
Parents: Robert J. Louden, Ferna I. Louden
Plans: Obtain full-time employment
Acacia Marie Malone
Parents: Doug Malone, Angie Malone
Plans: Attend Barton Community College
majoring in marketing.
Ciara Nicole Malone
Parents: Doug Malone, Angie Malone
Plans: Attend Barton Community College
majoring in accounting.
Regan Michelle Markley
Parents: Chad E. Markley, Ginger M. Markley
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College, criminal justice.
Cade Werner Masingale
Parents: Kipp Werner Masingale, Renee
Bellerive
Plans: Attend Hutchinson Community College majoring in communciations.
Austin Earl Massengale
Parents: Keith Alan Massengale, Sherry
Masengale
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Austin Robert Dean McGowin
Parents: Burl Roy McGowin, Sherri Gayle
Williams
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Tanner Johnson
Charles & Michelle Johnson,
Dawn & Gary Cameron
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Gerken-Rent-All
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-4144
Troy Herring
Merisa Kennedy
Brad & Jennifer Herring
Ray Kennedy & Deana Bohlken
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-5170
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Ottawa Coop
AuBurn Pharmacy
Cade Hibdon
Jacob Kice
Darren & Julie Hibdon
Jim & Julia Kice
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-5748
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2225
Performance Electric
Brand N Iron
Ronald Hunter
Nathaniel King
Tim & Marcia Hunter
Michael King & Christina Register
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Carswell Automotive
Quality Structures, Inc.
Elizabeth Johnson
Hannah Kirkland
Tony & Paula Johnson
Leroy & Katie Kirkland
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-6360
Princeton Quick Stop
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2061
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Adamson Bros. Htg. & Cooling
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-9273
GRADUATION EDITION
Jared Christopher Oshel
Parents: David Duane Oshel, Amy Leah
Oshel
Plans: Attend Fort Scott Community College
majoring in criminal justice.
Matthew Glenn Percy
Parents: Mark Tyler Percy, Lynn Loree
Percy
Plans: Attend Hutchinson Community
College majoring in communications/sports
management.
Jacob Alexander Pryor
Parents: Richard James Pryor, Barbara Ann
Pryor
Plans: Attend Baker University majoring in
architecture.
Justin William Taylor Scheckel
Parents: Gerald William Scheckel, Leslie
Carol Scheckel
Plans: Attend North Central Kansas Technical College majoring in heavy equipment
operation.
Cameron Schroeder
Parents: Charles Schroeder, Leann Schroeder
Plans: Attend a four-year university.
Samuel Aarone-McKone Skeet
Parents: Bart Matthew Skeet, Lori Ann
Skeet
Plans: Attend Butler County Community
College majoring in meterology.
Zele Isaiah Smith
Parents: Tim William Smith, Lisa Anna
Smith
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 21
Plans: Attend Emporia State University
majoring in international business.
Acacia Malone
Doug & Angie Malone
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Patriots Bank
Garnett-Richmond-Princeton, Kansas-Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Misty Leach
Ciara Malone
Brad & Lori Leach
Doug & Angie Malone
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2061
Garnett-Richmond-Princeton, Kansas-Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Emilio Lopez
Regan Markley
Stephanie Lopez
Chad & Ginger Markley
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6135
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Princeton Quick Stop
Patriots Bank
Richmond Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center
AuBurn Pharmacy
James Louden
Cade Masingale
Robert & Ferna Louden
Kipp Masingale & Renee Bellerive
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-2263
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-5170
All About Taxes
Ottawa Coop
Jessica Louden
Austin Massengale
Robert & Ferna Louden
Keith & Sherry Massengale
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-2263
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2225
All About Taxes
Brand N Iron
22 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016
Jo Nicole Sparks/Haney
Parents: Joshua F. Haney, Sarah A. Haney
Plans: Attend Bellus Academy studying
makeup artistry.
majoring in business.
Logan Michael Spears
Parents: Neil Eugene Spears, Cristina Spears
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College majoring in wildlife biology.
Blake McKenzie Stephens
Parents: John Tyler Bird, Angela Cristena
Bird
Plans: Attend Allen Community College
majoring in law.
Caylie Ellen Stottlemire
Parents: Mark Ray Stottlemire, Rachel Lee
Endsley
Plans: Attend Butler Community College
Heather Paige Valdiviez
Parents: Ronald Paul Valdiviez, Lisa Jeanntte Valdiviez
Plans: Attend Fort Scott Community College
majoring in pre-reqs.
Kassandra May Weber
Parents: Michael Ray Weber, Kathy May
Weber
Plans: Attend Washburn University majoring
in anthropology.
Amanda Elizabeth Welch
Parents: Richard Lee Welch (deceased) and
Dorothy Mae Welch
Plans: Obtain full-time employment.
Tabitha Wicks
Parents: Jerry Wicks, Leesa Wicks
Plans: Attend Allen Community College
majoring in elementary education.
Justin Scheckel
Gerald & Leslie Scheckel
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Beckman Motors
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5441
Austin McGowin
Cameron Schroeder
Burl McGowin & Sherri Williams
Charles & Leann Schroeder
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6135
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
Richmond Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center
AuBurn Pharmacy
Jared Oshel
Sam Skeet
David & Amy Oshel
Bart & Lori Skeet
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2269
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-8916
Matthew Percy
Zelalem Smith
Mark & Lynn Percy
Tim & Lisa Smith
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
Carstar
Princeton Quick Stop
Quality Structures, Inc.
Jacob Pryor
Jo Sparks
Richard & Barbara Pryor
Joshua & Sarah Haney
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-4144
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2061
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2061
Gerken-Rent-All
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Princeton Quick Stop
GRADUATION EDITION
Samantha Jo Wiederholt
Parents: Michael Allen Wiederholt, Angela
Gayle Wiederholt
Plans: Attend Paul Mitchell Schools study-
ing cosmetology.
Mia Shea Wiley
Parents: The late Robert L. Wiley and Anita
Poe-Wiley
Plans: Attend Neosho County Community
College majoring in nursing.
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016 23
Hunter Alexandra Williams
Parents: Karen A. Williams
Plans: Attend Pittsburg State University.
Logan Speaks
Amanda Welch
Neil & Cristina Speaks
The late Richard Welch
& Dorothy Welch
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Brand N Iron
Quality Structures, Inc.
Blake Stephens
Tabitha Wicks
John & Angela Bird
Jerry & Leesa Wicks
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2225
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
AuBurn Pharmacy
Dornes Insurance Agency, LLC
Caylie Stottlemire
Samantha Wiederholt
Mark Stottlemire &
Rachel Endsley
Michael & Angela Wiederholt
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2269
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Adamson Bros. Htg. & Cooling
Richmond Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center
Heather Valdiviez
Mia Wiley
Ronald & Lisa Valdiviez
The late Robert Wiley
& Anita Poe-Wiley
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-5170
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-2263
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-9273
Ottawa Coop
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6135
All About Taxes
Kassandra Weber
Hunter Williams
Michael & Kathy Weber
Karen Williams
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Princeton Quick Stop
Princeton, Kansas
(785) 937-2061
The Anderson County Review
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
24 GRADUATION EDITION
2×6
AD
Special to The Anderson County Review – May 17, 2016

