Anderson County Review — May 9, 2023
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from May 9, 2023. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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C O P Y P R I C E O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
May 9, 2023
SINCE 1865 157th Year, No. 20
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
itsits
communities.
The
official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,KS,KS,and
and
communities.
E-statements & Internet Banking
www.garnett-ks.com | (785) 448-3121 | review@garnett-ks.com
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SQUARE FAIR HITS 50
Fair has survived weather,
bigger and lesser crowds,
two sponsors since 1972
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT Emblazoned across a
headline in the May 3rd, 1973 edition
of the Anderson Countian is Square
Fair Set for May 12. It chronicled
the second anniversary of what would
become Garnetts preeminent community event a staple of the citys history
downtown for the next half century.
And just like the first ever 1972
launch, the Garnett Square Fair takes
shape again downtown this coming
Saturday morning. Of course there
are changes organizers say nearly 100 vendors have scheduled for
Saturdays event, including traditional crafts, food vendors and wine and
liquor tastings.
The small eight paragraph feature
was nestled at the bottom of the page
next to a grainy picture of a woman at
a weaving loom. The article indicates
that the Square Fair, sponsored by the
American Association of University
Women or AAUW, planned to feature
artists with goods for sale as well
as demonstrations of different art
forms including weaving, caning a
chair, wood carving, macrame, modge
podge, leather crafts, taxidermy, soap
making, shadowboxes, breadmaking
and other hobby and craft work.
It was officially the second time the
Square Fair had been held, and at its
end was a sentence that begat a local
legacy:
Members of the AAUW hope to
make the Square Fair an annual event
in Garnett. But the event almost
didnt make it to this years 50th anniversary.
The very first Square Fair was a
much smaller, more intimate version
of the festival atmosphere that we
experience today. With only 60-70
booths filled at the time of the original
1973 articles publication, it filled the
lawn of the courthouse with paintings for sale and a host of people
learning through demonstrations of
the art represented. A decade later
approximately 100 exhibitors attended
the Square Fair under cloudy
skies. That event on May 7,
1983, started with a 10K Fun
Run sponsored by the Garnett
Lions Club. The article covering the fair that year indicated
that clowns strolled around the
courthouse square, and a variety of entertainment rang out
across the lawn including a Jazz
and Country band. There was a
quilt show at the Harris House
and contests in painting, jewelry, fibers, drawing, pottery and
ceramics, sculpture, crafting,
tole painting, and miscellaneous
other categories.
In latter years the fair expanded with the idea of centering
more events to round out the
day for the crowd in town. In
1993, morning showers reduced
the crowds for the AAUWs 21st
Square Fair in the morning, but
according to the picture in the
newspaper following the Square
Fair the next week, the crowds
SEE 50 ON PAGE 3
A tribute
in stone
Madrid to face 14
counts in Friday
court preliminary
COLONY The 79 year-old man accused in
multiple child rape and sexual exploitation incidents over more than a decade is scheduled
for a preliminary hearing May 12 in Anderson
CountyDistrict Court.
Isidro Madrid, 79, was
arrested August 12 after a
12 year-old girl reported to
a Childrens Mercy Hospital
social worker in July an incident that occurred at Madrids
home two days earlier at a
family gathering. He was
Madrid
subsequently charged in 14
assaults alleged against four
girls with birthdates between
1995 and 2011. The girls now reside in Kansas
City, Ks., and Wichita.
His preliminary hearing, set for a judges
Descendants mark resting place of Civil War
vet, address mysterious absence from marker
BY DANE HICKS
SEE MADRID ON PAGE 2
Chase leads to felony drug
arrest, upcoming hearing
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A Garnett man who led county
law officers on a high speed chase through the
residential streets of Garnett and Welda in April
before his arrest on drug and weapons charges
will have a hearing in Anderson County court
later this month.
Walter J. Kerns, 45 of Garnett, was arrested
April 14 for fleeing and eluding and reckless
driving as well as drug possession and parapherSEE CHARGES ON PAGE 8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-9-2023 / REVIEW ARCHIVE
The 1977 Square Fair was more pedestrian in appearance, with card tables and chairs
sufficing for what would become a focus on tent-style booths in later years. Note the
background buildings to the center which were lost the following year in the 1978
downtown fire.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 5-9-2023/ DANE HICKS
Valedictorian Trevor Church spends his last moments as a Crest
Lancer addressing the commencement audience at Saturdays 2023
USD 479 graduation ceremonies in Colony. The class graduated 21
seniors with 8 National Honor Society members.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT A chance conversation about a familys plan to pay
tribute to their Civil War veteran prompted two descendants of
an 1850s Anderson County militiaman to enact a local recognition more than a century in the
making.
Rosalee Voorhees, formerly of
the Bush City area and now a
resident of Reading, Ks., said the
idea to recognize her great-grandfather, Manly M. Minkler, came
about after another family asked
her second cousin, Jess Minkler
of Kincaid, about placing a gravestone in the Kincaid cemetery for
a relative who fought in the Civil
War.
Jess was on the cemetery
board and was telling me about
that, and I said Jess, you and I
have our own ancestor thats not
on the family headstone.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
5-9-2023 / DANE HICKS
It was true. M.M. Minkler
was one of the first settlers of
A new U.S. GovernmentAnderson County and originally
issued stone marks the
lived in the Judy Community
grave of Manly M. Minkler, a
along the Pottawatomie Creek
member of the Pottawatomie
branch. He was born in 1832 in
Rifles militia.
Ohio and in his mid 20s was
a founding member of the
Pottawatomie Rifles a miliSEE MINKLER ON PAGE 3
ta group formed of area men in
Kansas GOP claims wins with 11 rejected Kelly vetoes
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
TOPEKA Republicans holding the majority in the Kansas
Legislature claim a mixed
bag of wins and losses in the
recently concluded legislative
session, according to state
Republican Party Chairman
Mike Brown.
The short story is this:
losers this session were taxpayers, gun safety and voters
among others, Brown said
in a weekly address Friday.
The winners were life, kids,
females, minors on overnight
school trips and parents.
A summary from House
Majority Leader Chris Croft
from the 8th District, shapes
the session up this way:
Prior to the closing week,
the House and Senate had
overridden the governors
veto on Womens Sports. Last
Monday, the governor vetoed
a final round of bills of which
house members overrode eight
as well as bill vetoes and four
budget line-item vetoes, while
the Senate didnt accomplish
the same override success
on one bill (HB2325) and one
budget line-item override (HB
2184, Sec 138(f)). In total, the
legislature overrode 10 of the
governors vetoes for that week
week, making it 11 for the ses-
sion.
The bills that were overridden include:
HB 2313 Born Alive Act
– provides legal protections
for infants who are born alive
regardless of the delivery
intent and ensures those babies
receive medical care.
House: Yea: 87 Nay: 37
Senate: Yea: 31 Nay: 9
HB 2264 Requiring notification to patients that the
effects of a medication abortion
may be reversible.
House: Yea: 84 Nay: 40
Senate: Yea: 29 Nay: 11
HB 2138 Overnight School
Accommodations ProtectionProtecting our students while
away at school district-sponsored events by ensuring that
only students of the same biological sex stay together.
House:Yea: 85 Nay: 39
Senate:Yea: 30 Nay: 9
HB 2094 Requiring work
registrants ages 50 – 59, without dependents, to complete an
employment and training program to receive food assistance.
The bill also requires the DCF
Secretary to conduct reviews of
cooperation with child support
services and make some other
technical changes relating to
periods of ineligibility for child
SEE OVERRIDE ON PAGE 5
2
NEWS IN
BRIEF
SHERIFFS OFFICE HOURS
Beginning June 1st 2023 the
entrance door to the lobby of the
Sheriffs Office will be locked at
16:30. As always there will be
someone at the Sheriffs Office,
just push the button to the right
of the lobby entrance door and
someone will assist you 24/7.
The doors to the main entrance
of the Sheriffs Office, or what
some refer to as the tower shall
remain unlocked 24/7.
COMMUNITY BREAKFAST
On Saturday, May 13, from 7
a.m. – 9 a.m. there will be a
community breakfast at the Lane
Community Building sponsored
by Pottawatomie Township
Ruritans. Proceeds go to the
Lane Fair Association sound
system. Pancakes, biscuits &
gravy, french toast, scrambled
eggs and sausage patties will
be served.
BENEFIT BAKE SALE
There will be a benefit bake sale
for Ivan Keim at the GSSB drive
thru (downtown) on Saturday,
May 13, Square Fair day.
1975 CLASS REUNION
The Garnett High School Class
of 1975 will be holding their 48th
reunion on May 13. For more
information contact Deanna
(Pierce) Hedrick (913) 952-1450.
50TH ANNUAL SQUARE FAIR
Saturday, May 13 from 9 a.m. – 3
p.m. will mark the 50th annual
square fair in downtown Garnett.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 breakfast will be
Sunday, May 21, from 9 a.m. – 1
p.m. Biscuits & gravy, Belgian
waffles, bacon, sausage &
eggs will be served.
AMERICAN LEGION BINGO
Bingo at American Legion Post
48 Garnett will be held every
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
UNPLANNED PREGNANCY
Advice & Aid Pregnancy Center
in Overland Park helps women
and their families make an
educated decision about an
unplanned pregnancy by providing evidence-based, medical information about parenting,
adoption and abortion. Call
(913) 962-0200 or visit www.
adviceandaid.com.
MADRID…
FROM PAGE 1
determination as to adequate
evidence to justify a formal
arraignment, is set for 9 a.m.
Friday, May 12. Each charge
carries a mandatory sentence
of 40 years up to life imprisonment upon conviction.
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
MAY 1, 2023
Chairman Leslie McGhee called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 AM on
May 1, 2023 at the Anderson County
Commission Room. Attendance:
Leslie McGhee, Present: David
Pracht, Present: Anthony Mersman,
Present. The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes from the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road & Bridge
Supervisor, met with the commission.
He had an interview for a sign foreman and will be looking into ways to
offer a CDL course for new hires that
are more cost effective than sending employees to courses. Discussion
was held on county roads and signs
that need replaced.
Sheriff
Vernon Valentine, Sheriff, met
with the commission. He had representatives from Motorola and TFM
Communications present to discuss
upgrades to the dispatch consoles.
Motorola is contracted through the
State of Kansas for the core radio
system that supports Kansas Highway
Patrol and other state agencies. The
State of Kansas is mandating all law
enforcement radios become encrypted so information is more secure. TFM
Communications will do the update
and encryption on 10 radios which
will cost $29,071.90. The upgrade
to the dispatch consoles to make all
communication encrypted will be a
total of $501,897 with a six-year warranty of $286,240 through Motorola.
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded
to upgrade 10 radios through TFM
Communications for $29,071.90 to be
paid out of the EMS Tax Lid Reserve
fund. All voted yes. Commissioner
Pracht moved and Commissioner
Mersman seconded to upgrade the
dispatch consoles through Motorola
for $788,137 with $173,710.34 being
paid from the EMS Tax Lid Reserve
fund and $614,426.66 to be paid from
ARPA funds. All voted yes.
Executive Session
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
enter into executive session for 15
minutes for attorney-client privilege.
All voted yes. Commissioners, Sheriff
Valentine, and County Clerk Wettstein
were present. Commissioner Pracht
moved and Commissioner Mersman
seconded to re-enter into open meeting. All voted yes. No action taken.
Honor Flight
Commissioner Pracht moved and
Commissioner Mersman seconded to
give $500 to the honor flight organization to be paid out the courthouse
general fund. All voted yes. The organization has sent multiple veterans
to visit Washington DC and national landmarks, including some from
Anderson County.
Abatement and Escape
Abatement A23-122 and escape
E23-127 were approved as presented.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00 PM due
to no further business.
Unified School District No. 365
Board of Education
Regular meeting held: Thursday,
May 4, 2023, 7:00 p.m., Westphalia
Elementary.
Members present: Mike Richards
(President-presiding), Brian Schafer,
Gina Witherspoon, Gary Teel,
Gaylene Comfort and Adam Caylor.
Sonya Martin was absent.
Staff present: Donald Blome
(Superintendent), Paula Wallace
(Clerk), Stacey Hedges (Curriculum
Director), Geoff Meiss (PrincipalACJSHS), Angie Linn (PrincipalGreeley/Westphalia), Dan Ackland
(Principal-GES), Stacey Bures
(Teacher-GES), Kathy McClain (ParaGES), Debbie Wiesner (AccompanistACJSHS), Elizabeth Dyer (TeacherACJSHS).
Others present: Travis Wilson, Eva
Bures, Lawrence Comfort, Jenna
Wight.
Call to order: 7:00 p.m. by Richards.
Recognitions: Mr. Meiss and Mr.
Blome recognized all the students
who received scholarships this year.
Over $126,000 in local scholarships
and over $800,000 in total scholar-
ships.
Public Comments: Stacey Bures
spoke for a group of parents and staff
in support of the music program.
Ordering and approval of agenda:
Motion to approve the agenda as presented. Witherspoon, Caylor, passed
6-0.
Reports and Information:
Graduations
Budget Summary
Accreditation Report
Consent Agenda: Motion to approve
the consent agenda. Witherspoon,
Comfort, passed 6-0.
Approved minutes of April 6 regular meeting.
Payment of Claims
Treasurers Report
Activity Fund Account Statements
Credit Card Account Statement
Budget Transfers
KASB Membership
KASB Legal Assistance
Bus Drivers Handbook
Greenbush Perkins Consortium
Action Item
Motion to approve the summer
camps for 2023 to be held in USD
365 as presented. Witherspoon, Teel,
passed 6-0.
Discussion Items:
Consider Student Fees (20232024)
Motion to approve the 2023-2024
Activities/Athletic Handbook as presented. Witherspoon, Schafer, passed
6-0.
Alternative School Handbook
Motion to approve the USD
365 Student/Parent Handbooks for
the 2023-2024 school year including changes recommended for the
ACJSHS handbooks. Witherspoon,
Teel, passed 6-0.
Health Insurance Premiums
ACJSHS Construction Contract
Information
Break:
Motion for a break resuming at
7:40. Richards, Witherspoon, passed
6-0.
Executive session:
Motion that the board of education go into executive session to discuss the individual employee status,
applicants for employment pursuant
to the non-elected personnel exception under KOMA with Superintendent
Blome and Mr. Meiss and that the
board will resume the open meeting
in this room at 8:00 p.m.. Richards,
Schafer, passed 6-0.
Mr. Meiss left the meeting at 7:49
p.m.
Motion that the board of education go into executive session to discuss the individual employee status,
applicants for employment pursuant
to the non-elected personnel exception under KOMA with Superintendent
Blome and that the board will resume
the open meeting in this room at 8:05
p.m.. Richards, Schafer, passed 6-0
Motion that the board of education
go into executive session to discuss
topics for negotiations pursuant to
the exception for employer-employee
negotiations under KOMA with superintendent Blome and that the board
will resume the open meeting in this
room at 8:20 p.m.. Richards, Schafer,
passed 6-0.
Personnal:
Motion to approve the transfer of Janay Blome to Technology
Integration. Richards, Witherspoon,
passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the resignation
of Emily Quigley as GES 4th grade
teacher.
Richards, Caylor, passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the resignation
of Ella Lyon as bus driver. Richards,
Witherspoon, passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Jerrica McCarty as Board
Clerk/Business Manager (Asst) at a
salary of $51,500. Richards, Caylor,
passed 5-0. Witherspoon abstained.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Sandra Mills as Garnett
Elementary School secretary with salary and benefits as per the classified
handbook. Richards, Comfort, passed
6-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Stephanie Moore as 3rd/4th
grade teacher at Greeley Elementary.
Richards, Witherspoon, passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Brad Huber as ACJSHS
Business teacher. Richards, Comfort,
passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Sydney Odle as ACJSHS
Physical Education teacher. Richards,
Witherspoon, passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the recommendation of Roxanne Diaz as bus driver.
Richards, Witherspoon, passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the classified personnel, including bus drivers,
2023-2024 assignments subject to
any further action of the board of
education. Richards, Witherspoon,
passed 6-0.
Motion to approve the summer
school teacher agreements. Richards,
Witherspoon, passed 6-0.
Monica Sobba (ACJSHS)
Geoff Meiss (ACJSHS)
Marshall Nienstedt (ACJSHS)
Becca Modlin (GES)
Amy Carey (GES)
Bayley Linn (GES)
Connie Scott (GES)
Amy Persinger (GES)
Liz Foltz (GES)
Stacey Bures (GES)
Dan Ackland (GES)
Roger Raddatz (GRE)
Stephanie Moore (GRE)
Ashli Webber (WES)
Haley Madden (WES)
Angie Linn (GES/WES)
Adjourned: 8:31 p.m. Richards,
Witherspoon Passed 6-0.
Paula Wallace, Clerk
APPROVED
Land Transfers
1955 LLC to Sarah Shiels: A tract
in nwfr4 14-21-19 described as follows: com at nwcor nw4 14-21-19,
thence east along section line on an
assumed bearing of south 900000
east a distance of 969.12 feet to east
r/w line of Union Pacific Railroad; this
being the true pob; thence continuing
south 900000 east along said line
a distance of 222.00 feet; thence
south 000000 west a distance of
548.06 feet; thence north 900000
west a distance of 572.81 feet to said
east railroad r/w line; thence north
323724 east along said r/w a distance of 650.72 feet to pob.
Eldon A Pontious to Nancy Farrar:
E2 nw4 26-20-20, less all that part
thereof lying south of Northeast 1750
Road.
Brandon Benedict, Emily R
Benedict and Emily R Poss F/K/A
to Brandon S Benedict Co-Trustee,
Emily R Benedict Co-Trustee and
Brandon S & Emily R Benedict Trust
Dated 4-20-2023: Beg at nwcor sw4
nw4 17-21-21, thence south 660
thense east 660, thence north 660,
thence west 660 to pob; & sw4 33-2018.
Mundell Outdoors LLC to Justin
Metcalfe, Crystal Metcalfe, Andrew L
Jackson and Clark R Dennison: W2
lot 9 & east 30 lot 10 blk 73 City of
Garnett.
Andrew Jackson to Clark R
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Dennison: Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11
& 12 blk 12 City of Westphalia.
William Jake Graham to Annsley
E Graham and Michael A Hermreck:
Ne4 ne4 ne4 nw4 21-20-18 & com
at secor sw4 16-20-18, thence north
330, thence west 660, thence south
330, thence east 660 to pob.
Amanda L Gray to Levi Totten and
Cassandra Totten: S2 lots 102 & 103
& all lots 102 thru 125 & all lots 127,
129, 131, 133 & 135 in blk 19 in what
was formerly known as orchard park
addition to city of garnett described
as follows: com at necor ne4 25-2019, thence west along north line of
said ne4 on an assumed bearing of
n900000w (1504 feet plat) 1499.54
feet measured to pt in center of
vacated garfield street on bearing of
s002158e (1097 feet plat) 1100.95
feet measured to pt on north line of
s2 lot 103 blk 19 in what was formerly
orchard park addition to city of garnett,
said pt being the true pob of land
to be described; thence west along
north line of s2 lots 103 and 102 on a
bearing of s895231w (376 feet plat)
374.63 feet measured to pt in center
of vacated arthur street of vacated
orchard park addition, thence south
along center of said vacated arthur
street on a bearing of s002246e
(287.5 feet plat) 288.62 feet measured
to pt on north line of lot 126 of said blk
19 extended west, thence east along
north line of said lot 126 on a bearing
of n895033e (188 feet plat) 187.28
feet measured to pt in center of vacated alley in said blk 19, thence south
along center of said vacated alley on
a bearing of s002222e (125 feet
plat 125.44 feet measured to south
line of said blk 19, thence east along
south line of said blk 19 on a bearing
of n894942e (188 feet plat) 187.27
feet measured to a pt in center of said
vacated garfield street, thence north
along center of said garfield street on
a bearing of n002158w (412.50 feet
plat) 413.80 feet measured to pob.
Tracy L Kellar to Brant McGhee and
Danelle McGhee: W2 lot 3 blk 35 City
of Colony.
Paul Pizzo to Matison Deal and
Crystal Deal: Lot no 4: commencing at the sw corner of six deal
acres, twelve rods wide (or as wide as
it take to make 6 acres) off the south
end of the ne/4 of se/4 of 13-23-20;
running north 12 rods, or as wide as it
will take to make 6 acres, thence east
to a longitudinal line eight rods east of
the house on said lot, thence south 12
rods, thence west to the pob, containing 1 1/2 acres, more or less.
Jeremy McAdam and Kimberly
McAdam to Donald M Kellerman and
Jennifer L Kellerman: The n/2 of the
ne/4 of the se/4 of the se/4 27-19-18.
Chamberlain Court LLC to Stephen
R Yutzy: All that part of the following description lying in the se/4 of
30-21-18, beginning at the se corner
of 30-21-18, thence north 2520 feet
to the south right of way line of the
missouri pacific railroad; thence in
a generally southwesterly direction
along the south right of way line of
said railroad 5744 feet to a point of
intersetion with the west section line
of said section 30; thence south 550
feet to teh sw corner of said section
30; thence east one mile to the pob.
Chamerlain Court LLC to Stephen
R Yutzy: All that part of the following description lying in the sw/4 of
30-21-18, beginning at the se corner
of 30-21-18, thence north 2520 feet
to the south right of way line of the
missouri pacific railroad; thence in
a generally southwesterly direction
along the south right of way line of
said railroad 5744 feet to a point of
intersecion with the west section line
of said section 30; thence south 550
feet to the sw corner of said section
30, thence east one mile to the pob.
ANDERSON COUNTY LIMITED
ACTION CASES FILED
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against Dustin L Barnett in the amount
of $1,871.09 for sales tax from
October and November 2022.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against John E Cox and Danielle M
Cox in the amount of $588.95 for 2019
Individual Income Tax.
The Kansas Department of
Revenue has filed a State Tax Warrant
against Diane L Sheern and Kirk
Keeler in the amount of $1,10.95 for
2019 Individual Income Tax.
ANDERSON COUNTY TRAFFIC
CASES FILED
Dustin Fredrick Dowd has been
charged with operating a vehicle without registration or an expired tag.
Victor Severo-Castro has been
charged with speeding 80 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Ethan Xavier Allen has been
charged with speeding 90 mph in a 65
mph zone.
Larry Neil Mills has been charged
with speeding 75 mph in a 55 mph
zone.
Raheel Anjum has been charged
with speeding 78 mph in a 65 mph
zone.
ANDERSON COUNTY CRIMINAL
CASES FILED
Jennifer Spurlock has been charged
with violation of the Kansas Offender
Registration Act – 2nd offense, Expired
or no vehicle registration, no proof of
motor vehicle liability insurance coverage and failure to wear a seatbelt.
ANDERSON COUNTY MARRIAGE
LICENSE FILED
Riley Sue Edgecomb and Jonathon
Elijah Rolle have filled out an application for a marriage license.
SEE RECORDS ON PAGE 6
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The ACHS golfer finished 2nd at
the Pioneer League tournament
last week shooting a 76 and also
5th at Ottawas Invitational with a
round of 79.
Top Dog of the Week wins a $10 Sonic gift card and our
special recognition vehicle window decal. Watch for
them on the road, and each week in
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Call (785) 448-3121 or email review@garnett-ks.com
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Building the Rural American Dream
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
BELLER
HERRMANN
FEBRUARY 8, 1944 – MAY 1, 2023
Carol Ann Askins Beller, age
79, of Garnett, Kansas, passed
away on Monday, May 1, 2023,
at Anderson
C o u n t y
Residential
Living Center
in Garnett.
C a r o l
was born on
February
8, 1944, in
Beller
Garnett,
Kansas, the
daughter of
John H. and Cora B. (Tush)
Askins. Carol graduated from
Garnett High School in 1962.
Following high school, Carol
attended the University of
Kansas where she earned both
her Bachelors and Masters
Degree. Carol was a born
Jayhawk. Her love for KU was
apparent to all who knew her.
Carol taught school in
the Shawnee Mission school
district until she returned
to Garnett in 1979. She then
assisted her father in the family business until he passed
away. She then owned and
operated Askins Beller Liquor
until her passing. On March
24, 1979, Carol was united
in marriage to Pat Beller in
Garnett, Kansas. Pat and Carol
co-owned Askins Beller Liquor
until his death on July 13, 2019.
Carol was very civic minded and spent countless hours
serving on the Anderson
County Hospital Foundation,
the
Anderson
County
Hospital Board, Business
and Professional Women,
The American Association of
University Women, and Harris
House restoration.
She was preceded in death
by her parents; her sister,
Linda Askins on February 25,
1970; her husband, Pat Beller;
and her beloved dogs: Brandy,
Buzzy, Raven, Pepper, Ginger,
Buck, Ringo, Coco, and JoJo.
Carol is survived by her
current fur-baby, Tucker; her
Askins Beller work family,
Wyonna, Monica and Darlene;
and numerous friends and relatives.
Funeral services were May
3, 2023, at the Feuerborn Family
Funeral Service Chapel, 219
S. Oak St., Garnett, Kansas.
Burial followed in the Garnett
Cemetery.
Memorial contributions
may be made to Friends of the
Library or W.I.N.G.S. and left
in care of the funeral home.
Condolences may be sent to
the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.
BURCHAM
AUGUST 15, 1925 – MAY 2, 2023
Helen Marie Burcham, age
97, of Shawnee, Kansas, formerly of Garnett, Kansas passed
away on Tuesday, May 2, 2023,
at Garden Terrace of Overland
Park.
Helen was born August 15,
1925 in rural Anderson County
near Bush City, the daughter of
Delbert Perry Burris and Polly
Agnes (Sherwood) Burris.
Helen married Roy, who
preceeded her in death, at the
Centerville Kansas Church on
February 2, 1947.
Memorial services will be
held at 1:30 PM, Thursday, May
11, 2023, at the First Christian
Church of Garnett, Kansas.
The family will greet friends
from 1:00-1:30 PM prior to the
service. Inurnment will follow
in the Centerville Cemetery,
Centerville, Kansas.
BROWN
NOVEMBER 5, 1937 – MAY 2, 2023
Cloyd Pee Wee Brown, age
85, of Garnett, Kansas passed
away on May 2, 2023 at his
home.
Pee Wee was born in La
Jara, Colorado on November
5, 1937. He was born to Hershel
Lee Brown and Emma Marie
(Wright) Brown.
On January 29, 1959 Pee
Wee married Virginia Ginny
McKibben
in
Chilocco,
Oklahoma.
Private family services are
planned for a later date.
IVES
NOVEMBER 2, 1946 – APRIL 24, 2023
Bonnie Faye Ives, age 76,
of St. Paul, Nebraska, passed
away on Monday, April 24,
2023, at Bryan Medical Center
East in Lincoln.
Bonnie was born on
November 2, 1946 to Russell and
Mary (Taft) Horn in Cheyenne,
Wyoming.
Memorial services for
Bonnie will be held at 2:00
PM, Friday, May 12, 2023 at
the Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett,
Kansas. Inurnment will follow
in the Holy Angels Cemetery,
Garnett.
2×2
Good Shepherd
FREE
BUY 3, GET 1
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
NOVEMBER 9, 1931 – MAY 1, 2023
Betty
Ann
(Evans)
Herrmann, 91, formerly of
Kincaid and Moran, Kansas,
passed away
May 1, 2023,
at Country
Place Senior
Living
in
Chanute,
Kansas. Betty
was
born
November
9, 1931, in
Herrmann
Bush City,
Kansas the
daughter of Clarence and Besse
(Cavender) Evans. She attended
Willow Branch School through
8th grade then Kincaid High
School, graduating in 1948.
Betty earned a teaching degree
from Kansas State Teachers
College of Pittsburg and taught
one semester at Lone Elm
School. She met the love of her
life, Lawrence Herrmann, on
the school bus in 1945 and they
were married on October 20,
1950.
Betty and Lawrence lived in
and around the Selma/Kincaid
area most of their lives before
moving to Moran in 2005. The
life of a farmer's wife kept her
very busy with taking meals
to the field during harvests,
running to town for machine
parts, raising and dressing
chickens, gardening, and sewing clothes for her children.
Betty still found time for vari-
ous clubs and activities being a
charter member of the Kincaid
Advancers Club, enjoying
being part of a bowling team,
serving on the school board,
working for a short time as a
nurse's aide, and plenty of fishing. Betty was always active in
the Kincaid Methodist Church,
including UMW, and making
hundreds of gallons of chicken
and noodles for dinners and
fundraisers. She was on-site
many days during the construction of the current church
building.
Betty is survived by daughters Sheryl Bussell of Chanute,
Diana Brannon of Maricopa,
Arizona, Peggy Lundine of
Humboldt, and son Jim (Linda)
Herrmann, of Greensboro,
North Carolina. She has been
blessed with 10 grandchildren,
21 great-grandchildren, and 4
great-great-grandchildren.
Betty was preceded in death
by her parents, husband in
2014, son, Larry, in 1984, one
sister, and 5 brothers.
Services were May 6, 2023,
at the Kincaid Selma United
Methodist Church, Kincaid,
Kansas. Burial followed at the
Kincaid cemetery. Memorial
donations in Betty's name can
be made to the Kincaid Selma
United Methodist Church and
may be left with or mailed to
the funeral home.
50…
The tension between
expectation levels
I cannot speak for anyone
but myself but I fear I have
allowed my expectation level
to erode. Like everything else
there are two sides to every
story. If I purchase goods
or services I have a level of
satisfaction I am expecting.
Whoever sells me the goods
or services has an expectation
level for their product or service. I believe we have allowed
this to creep into our churchs
as well. Gods expectation for
our lives is absolute. There is
no wiggle room. In other words
we have to raise our expectation level to meet the bar God
has set.
What is that bar? Love
the Lord your God and your
neighbor as yourself. Now
immediately when we read that
we start to think how can I
soften that just a little? Tailor
it just to suit my needs. Our
first thought is, well I dont
know anyone that actually does
that. For a brief moment we
feel some relief. However I
must point out the consequences of ignoring this command.
Hebrews 10:26-27 says, If we
deliberately keep on sinning
after we have received the
knowledge of truth, no sacrifice for sin is left, but only
a fearful expectation of judgment and of raging fire that
will consume the enemies of
God. That sounds very harsh
for just wanting to soften our
requirement for salvation. You
see some people have become
so accustomed to having their
way they believe they can bargain with God.
Expectation is a word like
truth, honesty, integrity and so
on that has fallen out of favor
or at least there original meaning has. Our personal preference is surely more important
than some outdated bible. I
must admit because of numerous reasons I have lowered my
expectation level to try and
exist in this current environment. But that does not include
my high view of God. You see
I believe what Jesus says in
Matthew 24:44. So you also
must be ready, because the Son
of Man will come at an hour
when you do not expect him.
So which bar are you working
toward Gods or yours? If you
are thinking you can bargain
with God you are wrong in fact
you are dead wrong.
Over the years, many fair-goers would tell you that the fair
has seen all different kinds of
unpredictable Kansas weather,
but its never been cancelled
because of it. The Square Fair
has been the kick-off point to
the summer countdown for
many, at the beginning of what
crafters call Festival Season,
the Garnett Square Fair marks
only a few weeks of school left
and summer on the horizon
for school children. Only cancelling Square Fair during the
Covid-19 Pandemic, this year
marks 50 years of the Square
Fair since its inception. Helen
said, We are going to have
music, food, and crafts, just
like weve always had, but with
more celebrating.
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
FROM PAGE 1
werent dissuaded.
Another ten years later, we
find a similarly growing festival story in 2003; that year
the AAUW Square Fair was
held downtown as usual, but
it was in conjunction with the
Country Mart and Anderson
County Review sponsored
Garnett Food Show at ACJSHS,
and a car seat safety check at
a local business. Craft exhibitors from 45 different cities
and across several states came
to participate in the annual
event. Area vendors of national brand-name food companies and housewares were in
attendance amid the contests,
prizes, and entertainment that
included a pie auction and kept
the downtown area busier than
normal. In more recent years
an Air Fair would be held at
the city airport in conjunction
with the downtown festival.
The next decade proved to be
difficult, as the AAUWs chapter in Garnett aged and lacked
new members to keep the organization and tradition alive. Its
members decided they were no
longer able to keep up with the
rigorous planning and execution of the Square Fair so new
sponsors had to be found.
We had about a month
between finding out that the
AAUW was not going to put on
the Square Fair to get it pulled
together, said Helen Norman
of BPWs assumption of the
event. We just couldnt let the
Square Fair go.
Through some quick adjustments and determination, few
festival goers really noticed
a difference in the transition
between AAUW event to the
new one hosted by Business
and Professional Women. The
Fair had truly taken on a life
and identity all its own.
Traditionally held on the
Saturday before Mothers Day,
it has been a time for families
to return to Garnett to visit
mothers and grandmothers.
The Fair is often full of families and children, strolling
between the booths, much like
the matriarchs walking had
done back in 1972 and 1973
with their children stopping
to learn about macrame, weaving, and modge podge. The
only difference between the
eras are the small trinkets purchased to take home or as gifts
to send with grandchildren to
mark a memory of walking on
the courthouse lawn in sunshine.
The weather for the BPW
Square Fair has always been
on the forefront of thought,
but whether, rain, snow, or
sunshine, the Fair will go on.
Call to Subscribe
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DIRECTORY
Dentistry
Family Care
Hospice
(785) 448-6988
Ross Kimball, M.D.
Sarah Nuessen, P.A.
312 S. MAPLE GARNETT
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for a $10 fee. Obituaries, jpeg photos and death
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major credit cards. Questions? Call The Review
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OBITUARIES
Eye Care
(785) 448-6590
427 S. Oak
Garnett
Pharmacy
Chiropractic
Chronic
Back or Neck
Pain?
Ask how the
Triton
DecompressionTraction Therapy
can help.
A non-surgical
approach for
chronic sufferors.
MON-FRI 8:30am-7pm
Maple & Hwy. 31
Garnett, KS
SAT 8:30am-2pm
Next to Country Mart
Ottawa, Kansas
Call (785) 242-3116 to
schedule your exam.
We accept all Medicare drug plans.
(785) 448-6122
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4
Awarded more than 60 times for excellence in news, opinion and advertsing by
newspaper professionals across the country but our highest honor is your readership.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
OPINION
Take a Pro-Life Kansas vacation
This is the time of year when the Review
reminds our readers planning their summer
vacations that you dont have to spend your
money with people who hate you, who despise
your values and who think of you as filthy conservative mongrels.
Because as we state every year about this
time, theres no reason to take your life in
your hands going to Chicago or Los Angeles
or Boston or New York and giving your money
to folks who continually elect Left Wing kooks
who give criminals a free pass at the same time
theyre letting men play girls sports and cant
get their garbage picked up on time.
Instead, you can go to amazing places
like Missouri and Arkansas and Florida and
Texas where the scenery is nicer, hotels and
food more affordable; where people still fly
American flags and where theres no homeless
dude asleep on your hotel room balcony.
And if youre looking for a day trip or even
longer in Kansas, theres a whole slew of counties which showed their Red Cred and voted
to pass last falls amendment which would
have stripped the imaginary right to abortion
from the Kansas Constitution. These are places
where hard working folks believe in American
values and usually dont have pink hair.
In fact, the rule of thumb for a Red County
vacation in Kansas is pretty simple: If the
countys got a college or university in it
stay clear. Johnson, Douglas, Riley, Lyon,
Shawnee, Crawford, Franklin its hard to get
excited about buying overpriced popcorn at a
KU basketball game or hitting balls at TopGolf
in OPK when you know the folks running
those joints helped increase abortion tourism
in Kansas after the amendments failure by 36
percent between April and August of last year
the second largest percentage increase in the
country behind only North Carolina.
In fact abortion tourism from other states
which have restricted or banned the barbarity
is a booming industry in Kansas so much so
that Planned Parenthood Great Plains says its
turning down 85-90 percent of women ordering
up abortions and having to refer them to other
abortion states.
So, you know. yay, Kansas.
But out in Wallace County, which also won
our top ranking last year for Kansas Red
County vacation spots by voting Trump by
the largest percentage of any other county in
the state back in 2016, you can still visit The
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
Fightingest Fort in the West or Junkin Sistas
junk & antiques and have a pretty good bet
youre spending your money with pro-life voters.
Wallace County led the state with the highest percentage support for the Kansas abortion amendment at 83 percent.
In fact lots of Western Kansas counties held
tight for right during the amendment vote.
Wichita, Gove and Sheridan counties all shunned
abortion by a 78 percent majority, so you can visit
the 8 Wonders of Wichita County or the hand
dug Selkirk Well in Leoti with a clear conscience;
you can take a gander at Monument Rock or
Castle Rock or the Fick Fossil & History Museum
in Gove; you can spend the night in a sheep herders wagon on the Cottonwood Ranch in Sheridan
County and have very little fear youll be doing
business with Leftist abortion supporters.
Theres the Gas & Historical Museum in
Stevens County, (73%); Morton County (68%) has
8 Mile Corner and Point of Rocks; the Western
Vistas Byway in Scott County (67%) and Horse
Thief Reservoir and Kenyon Nature Park in
Hodgeman County (72%).
Anderson County may have only carried the
amendment by 60 percent, but here we have the
Prairie Spirit Trail and the annual Cornstock
country music concert in September; Nemaha
County notched 74 percent support for the amendment and has the Flint Hills Discovery Center,
the Whiskey Run Creek Vineyard & Winery, and
if youre lucky you might even catch the Bite Me
BBQ Food Truck out and about.
So forget the places both inside and outside
Kansas that despise both you and your moral
values. Head on out this summer to the counties
in Kansas where the good life still at least means
life. ###
The Anderson County Reviews
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice
at (785) 448-2500. You do not need to leave your
name. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Thank you Lord for the wonderful blessed
Christian Church people who deliver gifts
to Parkside Place residents on May Day and
other special occasions. It makes our days.
God bless you all.
In this weeks paper Vern Valentine admitted
the laws had been in effect since 2012 regarding dark windows. Hes just now starting to
enforce that law. By his own admission hes
guilty of not doing his job. Time to go bye-bye
Vern.
Vern Valentine says hes suggesting his deputies do something. Isnt he their boss? Either
tell them to do something or tell them not to
do something and take the appropriate action
if they dont follow his orders. Vern, youre
xxx
Mothers: You must teach boys not to be men
Last week, a brave Marine acted when no
one else would to restrain a deranged homeless schizophrenic on a New York City F train
who was, by all accounts, terrorizing people
and shouting Ill hurt anyone on this train.
I dont mind going to jail and getting life
in prison, screamed the 30-year-old Jordan
Neely, who had 44 arrests under his belt and
an outstanding warrant for felony assault
(he punched an old woman in the face), as he
flailed around throwing items of his clothing.
Im ready to die! In response, a 24-year-old
Marine Corps veteran put Neely in a chokehold, incapacitating him and releasing him
after he stopped struggling and passed out,
Inez Stepman wrote.
When Neely died at the hospital, all hell
broke loose.
This is not the first time a courageous man
minding his own business has put himself in
danger to protect others. Its happened many
times, in fact. Toxic masculinity has saved
more lives than penicillin.
But in this case, the erratic lunatic was
black, the courageous restrainer was not just
white but blond and handsome, and worst of
all: the lunatic shuffled off this mortal coil
when he arrived at the hospital.
Inevitably, the lefts muscle memory of how
politically lucrative George Floyds 2020 death
was for them kicked in. The Floyd Playbook
Peachy Keenan
could be run!
AOC fired up her Twitter and called his
death a murder. Al Sharpton is polishing
his diamond cufflinks before his press conference. Neelys cousins are getting fitted for
new suits before their Oval Office visit. Nancy
Pelosi has already ordered the solid gold casket and white horse-drawn carriage for the
funeral, which will be held after Neely lies in
state in the Capitol. Kente cloth scarves are
being passed out in the Old Executive Office
Building. Kamala Harriss speechwriter is ripping nitrous balloons as he crafts her eulogy.
The whole band is getting back together!
In the aftermath, I tweeted this: Strong men
brave enough to intervene publicly when a
deranged lunatic is terrifying people are going
to be rounded up first; this is brilliant strategy for the Regime. Pick off the bravest and
most selfless heroes first. Leave the cowards
behind, who will fall in line fast.
The worse the subway Vikings fate is, the
less likely any of us, the sane ones, will be
tempted to lift a finger when they come for us,
our friends, or our neighbors. If the Viking
gets 20 years on Rikers Island, plus some pris-
on rapes and beatings for good measure as the
guards look the other way thatll teach you
boys a lesson.
Since literally the morning the first
European settlers set foot in the new country,
the ethos drilled into American men is to be
strong, be brave, and be prepared to protect
and defend your family, your homestead, and
your fellow man. This is what men are for,
after all. This is why God made them stronger
than women. Those biceps are not just for
deadlifting. Their main purpose is twofold:
wielding a spear for the hunt, and wielding
your fists or a sword for defense.
It feels like Good Samaritan laws have gone
in and out of favor over time in America. For
many years after 9/11, no able-bodied man
boarded an airplane without first preparing
himself to tackle a terrorist if he had to. Does
that happen anymore? Or would the passengers laugh and whip out their phones as the
terrorist slit a flight attendants throat? You
will not go to jail for watching someone beat
another person to death as you stream it live
on social media. Thats perfectly acceptable
now, even encouraged.
But every normal man I know would be
unable to stand and watch a psycho assaulting an innocent stranger. My future husband
once threw the first punch in a bloody fistSEE KEENAN ON PAGE 6
SAT makes too much sense for modern colleges
The long era of the dominance of the SAT in
college admissions is coming to an end.
The test is increasingly being shelved not
because it failed but because it succeeded in
all the wrong ways.
According to a survey from an anti-testing
outfit, more than 80% of four-year colleges
wont require standardized tests for admissions this coming fall. Many have made the
tests optional, and some wont consider them
at all. In a swath of academia, the pandemic
expedient of dropping the tests has seamlessly
transitioned to a permanent change.
If this isnt a leap forward for fairness
or rationality, it is another ringing victory for the equity of diversity, equity, and
inclusion fame. With homework now on the
chopping block for not being equitable enough
— kids with involved parents tend to actually
do their homework — it shouldnt be a surprise
that the SAT is being shown the door.
(If only there were some time-honored
arrangement to have two adults wholly devoted to the well-being of one or more children
regardless of their race or income and providing support, discipline, and moral instruction.)
The SAT, with its signature four-option
multiple-choice answers, isnt perfect. As a
mass-administered, easy-to-grade, objective
test, though, its hard to beat.
Despite progressive denialism, it has been
established that the SAT and ACT predict academic performance.
As the renegade academic Freddie deBoer
points out, there is a correlation between
family income and SAT scores, but it doesnt
account for most of the divergence in scores.
Nonetheless, other metrics that schools
consider in the admissions process are just
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
as susceptible, if not more, to socioeconomic
factors.
As the writer and scientist Erik Hoel puts
it, On the one side there is the litany of activities, academic successes, and school pedigrees
that make up the bulk of a good college application, and the massive amounts of wealth
and parental involvement that implies from
essentially diapers onwards, and, on the other
side, theres a $20 Kaplan SAT prep book and
getting your butt in a chair to go through
example problems.
MIT, which cant fool around thanks to its
demanding math requirements, has bucked
the trend toward minimizing or dumping the
SAT. The dean of admissions explained in
2022 why the school was bringing back the
SAT requirement after the pandemic: Our
ability to accurately predict student academic
success at MIT is significantly improved by
considering standardized testing — especially
in mathematics — alongside other factors.
The deeper problem with the SAT, of
course, is that it doesnt produce the racial
outcomes that the people who run institutions
of higher education, especially elite ones,
want.
The test that has been smeared as a tool of
white supremacy is a conveyor belt for Asian
Americans into top colleges in numbers that
college administrators find embarrassing and
inconvenient. So, they have an affirmation-action regime designed to keep those numbers
down, and fine-tune the racial balance of their
student bodies to their liking.
This is where the SAT is unwelcome in
another way. As a measure of preparedness
with hard numbers attached, it provides
incontrovertible evidence of the racial bias
against Asian Americans.
With a potential loss in the Supreme
Courts big affirmative action case looming,
colleges and universities are already finding
a way to finagle out of the decision. Without
the SAT, they can continue to get the racial
results they want without as obvious a paper
trail.
In Agatha Christie terms, the crime will no
longer be carried out with a candlestick but
small, untraceable doses of arsenic.
If its harder to find the best future students, or at least the best future students who
havent been building their resumes toward
an impressive college application from a very
young age, so be it.
You can have the twisted notion of equity that now prevails throughout our elite
culture, or you can have a test that demonstrates academic talent regardless of race, but
you cant have both. Academia is making its
choice.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
spineless. Youre an ignorant fool. Bye.
The thief who came to town has already stolen one church and has others to begin taking away. He has planted the seeds of doubt
in those holy places in subtle ways. Ask
around sisters and brothers in Christ. Your
Bible tells the story, so watch our for him, he
has arrived as described in your word, the
Bible. Thank you.
Hey, its nurses week. Lets thank those who
care for us year round.
Everybody pray for that Marine who killed
that guy on the subway in New York trying to protect the other passengers. Theyre
gonna crucify another white man for trying
to do the right thing. Makes me sick.
First it was a tax increase, then he wanted
your gas stove, now Joe Biden and his gang
of idiots want your dishwasher. Someone
please tell me when the clown show ends.
Contact your elected leadership:
President Joseph Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(202) 224-6521
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Senator Roger Marshall
Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
3rd Dist. Congressman
Sharice Davids
1541 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2865
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
9th Dist. Rep Fred Gardner
State Capitol Room512-N
Topeka, KS 66612
Office: (620) 296-7451
fred.gardner@house.ks.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
5
HISTORY
Mystery trip down south comes to an end P.E.O. Chapter Y members tour
Our Mystery Trip continues:
Day 4: This morning we
went to the Houmas House
Plantation & Garden. The tour
of the house was wonderful and
the gardens were beautiful.
This house was in the movie
Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte
starring Betty Davis & Joan
Crawford.
Lunch was at the Dixie
Cafe. A thunderstorm moved
in at 12:30 p.m. Our next stop
was at First Our Lady of Grace
Catholic Church Sanctuary in
Reserve, La. This was the place
of the Riverlands 1911 Slave
Revolt. We had 1 hour of educational History of Black music.
Our hostess Angie Bozeman
passed out fresh strawberries
to everyone as we traveled to
our next stop the Ragin-Cajun
Air Boat Swamp Tour. Wow!
What an experience that was.
The name of our boat was the
Rising Sun, it held 16 passengers. During our 1 hour ride
thru the swampland we saw
lots of gators.
We stopped several times
and fed them marshmallows of
all things. They loved them.
This evening we had dinner
at the Gate Street Sea Food
Station in Hammond, La.
before retiring for the day.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
Day 5: Heading for home at
8:15 a.m. At 9:00 a.m. we crossed
the Mighty Mississippi, lots of
barges going both directions.
Fields of sugar cane and the
magnolias were in full bloom.
Our first rest stop was at a Loves
station in Fort Bear, Miss. Our
next stop was an emergency
stop at the Regional Medical
Center in Natchitaches, one of
our passengers took ill. We left
he and his wife there and continued on our way home. Lunch
was on our own. Afternoon rest
stop was at a Loves station in
Wyane, Tx. Our next stop was
at the Drury Inn in Dallas, Tx
where we enjoyed their Kick
Back dinner.
Day 6: We started seeing lots
of Bluebonnets as we travelled
thru Texas. We crossed the
Oklahoma state line at 8:55 a.m.
and we took a break at their
Welcome Center. Lunch stop
was at the Fathers Daughter
Cafe in Tecumseh, Okl. Next
we stopped at the Potawatomi
Nation Cultural Heritage
Center for a 1 hour tour in
Guthrie, Okl. While traveling
along, all of a sudden everyones cell phone went off, signaling a Wildfire Alert. We
could actually see all the smoke
in the distance.
At 4:15 p.m. we stopped at
a Braums for ice cream. At
5:15 p.m. we made a quick stop
in Maize, Ks and dropped off
three passengers before continuing on to our final stop in
Yoder, Ks.
We had traveled 2,155 miles
on this trip.
Day 7: Since it was late
when we got in last evening,
we decided to spend the night
in South Hutchinson and continue on home today. We did
stop for car gas in Yates Center,
Ks. Arriving home at 11:45.
We thanked our Lord for
both the safety and fun times
on our trip and the watch care
over our home while we were
away.
Anderson County Museum
Members of P. E. O. Chapter
Y gathered at the Anderson
County Museum on May 1.
Kenny Kellstadt and Dorothy
Miller guided members to
points of interest and some
of the newly organized rooms
and displays. Questions were
answered and many members
made plans to continue their
own tours at a later time. Each
person continues the history of
Anderson County as we live,
work and participate in the
changing life of our county.
Seventeen
members
returned to the home of Alice
Anderegg for the business
meeting. Members were given
a review of proposed amendments to be voted on at State
Convention by our delegate,
Sonya Martin.
The Daddy Daughter Dance
was a success this year. One
hundred thirty seven daughters
and daddies danced together
Under the Big Top. Proceeds
will help fund the scholarships
provided by Chapter Y to our
Anderson County graduating
senior girls.
Alice Anderegg, Michelle
Miller and Marilyn Benjamin
served refreshments and members shared time together.
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers.
2May2023
OVERRIDE…
FROM PAGE 1
periods of ineligibility for child
care support services.
House: Yea: 84 Nay: 40
Senate:Yea: 28 Nay: 12
HB 2350 Human SmugglingAddressing the issue of human
smuggling by creating crimes
for human smuggling and
aggravated human smuggling.
House:Yea: 85 Nay: 39
Senate:Yea: 30 Nay: 9
SB 180 Womens Bill of
Rights – establishes the womens bill of rights, ensuring privacy, safety and dignity. The
bill also defines a biological
woman.
House:Yea: 84 Nay: 40
Senate:Yea: 28 Nay: 12
SB 228 Biological Sex
Separation in County JailsProtecting female inmates
from being housed with biological males.
House: Yea: 87 Nay: 37
Senate:Yea: 31 Nay: 9
Budget Line Item Vetos:
HB 2194, Sec 39(e) – Attorney
General Tabasco Settlement
Fund – this section establishes
the fund to support exemptions
for donations to pregnancy centers under the Treasurer.
House: 85-40
Senate: 29-11
HB 2194, A portion of
Sec. 42(a): State Treasurer
Alternatives to Abortion
Fund The Kansas budget line
item dealing with the State
Treasurer Alternatives to
Abortion Fund is a responsible
allocation of funds that supports women who choose to
carry their pregnancies to term
by providing them with access
to critical resources and services. The fund helps promote
a culture of life and empowers
women to make fully informed
decisions about their reproductive healthcare.
House: 85-40
Senate: 29-11
HB 2194, Sec. 143: Grant
transparency database
House: 84-40
Senate: 28-11
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 05-09-2023 / ARCHIVE
January 1943 – The Kansas City Star ran this photo Jan. 6, 1943, of Garnetts Amer Brown being carried
by two comrades after being shot in his left ankle while serving in New Guinea in WWII. Carrying Brown
are Sgt. Frederick Zimmel of Allenton, WI, and Sgt. Roy Green of Millville, WI.
IN BUSINESS
A directory of Anderson County area businesses ready to serve you!
TC Auto Repair
Parker, Ks
Specializing in:
Autos ATV/UTV equipment
repair oil changes
Taylor Chapman (913) 600-3692
Denis Wiesner (620) 224-6107
Just 8 bucks a
block per week to
list your
business here!
PERFORMANCE ELECTRIC SOLUTIONS
206 North Oak Ottawa, KS (785) 242-5748
www.performance-electric.com
A complete residential electrical service company
Rural Electrical Service
Transfer Switch & Generator Connection
Bucket Truck
7-Block Certified
LicensedElectricians
Bonded Insured
Free Estimates
QualityServiceFor
Over 20 Years.
ServingAnderson
&FranklinCounties.
Always
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WHOLESALE WASHER CO.
Providing quality
products and
service
Quality
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HOT & COLD HIGH
PRESSURE WASHERS
New & Reconditioned
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
(620) 583-2421 Eureka, Ks.
Hecks Moving Service
E-Statements &
Online Banking
Howard Yoder
Owner-Operator
22468 NW Indiana Rd Welda, Ks
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
(785) 489-2212
FurnitureAppliancesGarage etc.
Inspected Facility
Ashton Heck
(785) 204-0369
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
1-800-823-8609
Post Frame Construction
Residential Slab Homes
www.yutzyconstruction.com
6
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
LOCAL
Let it rain
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 05-09-2023 / SUBMITTED
The Friends of Prairie Spirit Rail Trail spent last Wednesday morning cleaning up at the Garnett Depot on the Rail Trail. This group trimmed
bushes and trees, cleaned up debris and mulched. This fun group does alot for the community and the trail. If you are interested in coming
to a meeting or join this group, contact President Kathy at 785-871-7019.
Kansas Garden Guide helps gardeners
better manage states climate
By Pat Melgares, K-State
Research and Extension news
service
MANHATTAN, Kan. Shes
not meaning to throw shade
to social media, but Rebecca
McMahon
knows
that
Instagram Gardens arent
likely to do well in Kansas
climate.
Many of those resources that you run across on
Instagram are from the Pacific
Northwest or the Northeast or
even the Great Lakes region,
said McMahon, administrator
of Kansas State Universitys
local foods systems program,
who grew up in the cooler climate of northern Wisconsin.
All of those places have
much milder climates and
much cooler summers than we
have in Kansas, so its so critical to know what to plant and
when in Kansas because the
KEENAN…
FROM PAGE 4
fight against a much larger,
much drunker man who was
persistently harassing me and
getting in my face late at night
outside a bar in New York City.
(My husband won, so I married
him soon after.)
You Wont Get In Trouble for
Being a Coward
As an avid Twitter user, I
probably see a dozen graphic
videos a week of men doing
the opposite: standing idly by,
shouting approval and laughing, cameras out, as violent
individuals assault, beat, rape,
and shoot innocent strangers.
This violence is almost exclusively black-on-white, or blackon-Asian.
In April, such a video made
national news: a terrified
young woman in downtown
Chicago is knocked down and
stomped on by a large mob
during a teen takeover of the
city. Where are all the videos
showing the white-on-black
and white-on-Asian stompings? Im sure if they existed,
AOC herself would be tweeting
them out 24/7.
In this terrible, ugly, upsidedown, zero-trust society Ive
been forced to raise a family
in, I have developed new sur-
weather is going to fight back.
McMahon is a co-author
of the newest version of the
Kansas Garden Guide, which
was released this spring
and available online from
the K-State Research and
Extension bookstore.
The Kansas Garden Guide
has been around a long time; in
fact, I have a copy from 1983 that
is about 22 pages and includes
line drawings, McMahon said.
Ive even had folks tell me that
they have versions from the
1970s and earlier. So, as with
many things, every so often
they need an update and some
changes to better reflect the
needs of the gardeners that use
the guide.
McMahon said the Kansas
Garden Guide was last updated
in 2010 with 76 pages. The 2023
version has expanded to 202
pages with full-color pictures
vival rules. I have instructed
my husband and son to be cowards. Thats right: to do nothing
if they are in a situation where
a dangerous psycho is threatening violence to a stranger.
I have begged them to sit
on their hands; to be one of
the people who just watches, runs away, or calls 911. It
goes against every chivalric
instinct in their bodies, but
I do not want them dead or
in jail. Instead of being hailed
as heroes for saving some old
ladys life, they would be tried
as killers and put away for life.
My teenage son informed
me he wont go along with my
surrender monkey ethos and
is prepared to defend himself
and others if he has to. This is
a dangerous virtue for a boy
to have in a blue city in 2023!
Does he want his mother to
get gray hair? Doesnt he know
how much good hair colorists
cost these days?
I have failed as a mother
because I forgot to teach my
sons to be cowards.
This weeks watershed event
on the New York City F train
illustrates the blackpilling utility of my new rules. Son, you
see that damsel in distress over
there getting her teeth kicked
out by that filthy homeless
man? You just sit tight and get
off at the next stop and tell the
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Monday: taco platters, beef/chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: bbq & burgers, open-face roast
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Wednesday: Fried chicken
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Thursday: Meatloaf
Friday: Chicken fried steak or chicken
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Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
1st Saturday:
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2nd Saturday:
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3rd Saturday:
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Every Sunday
4th Saturday:
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5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
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PAN-FRIED
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Sunday: Homemade pan-fried chicken w/sides
Homemade
and illustrations. The intent of
the Kansas Garden Guide is to
provide assistance specific to
gardening in Kansas climate.
I think one of the big changes is theres a lot more emphasis in this guide on options for
folks with smaller gardens, like
we often see in our more urban
settings and accessible gardens for folks that either dont
have space or the physical ability to have a large traditional type of garden, McMahon
said.
Much of the content is also
published with new gardeners
in mind, she adds.
One of the things I noticed
when I started looking at older
versions of the guide is that
there was this assumption that
people had grown up as gardeners, McMahon said. But what
we see anymore is that many of
our gardeners are not coming
nearest social worker. Its not
your problem.
Podcaster Aimee Terese
tweeted: A man threatening
the safety of everyone else in
a tiny, highly populated, contained space, is a liability to
himself and to others. The
marine is a hero, and we need
more men like him, which is
why the left is wetting the bed
about it. They dont want that
ethos to catch on.
Courage and Nobility
Will Be Punished
Neely was lynched by a racist and this racist will be made
an example of. This is a teaching moment for Democrats
young American men will
be taught the hard way that
nobility, selflessness, courage,
and their masculine instinct
to defend the innocent are
bad. Dont be like this former
Marine!
Mohammed Attas immortal words to the doomed pas-
to it with experience. Maybe
their parents, grandparents or
great grandparents didnt grow
up around the garden.
McMahon said experienced
gardeners also will benefit
because were always learning more. She said one of
the advancements in the past
decade has been agricultures
understanding of soil chemistry, including organic matter
and soil biology.
In addition to horticulture
experts, the Kansas Garden
Guide includes updated information from K-State specialists
in entomology, plant pathology, food safety and more.
Ordering information and a
direct link to the guide is at
www.bookstore.ksre.ksu.edu/
pubs/S51.pdf.
sengers of American Airlines
Flight 11 were Just stay quiet
and youll be okay. Of course,
it only applies to some of us.
The raving maniacs on our
subways, in our parks, and on
our buses are free to live their
best lives.
Democrat politicians have
made forced passivity the new
rule for normal people out in
public. We are all cuckolds
now. After all, what other sane
choice do we have?
Peachy Keenan is a contributing editor and regular essayist for The American Mind, a
publication of The Claremont
Institute. She is the author
of Domestic Extremist: A
Practical Guide to Winning the
Culture War (coming June 6th
from Regnery). She also writes
at peachykeenan.substack.com
, and you can always find her
on Twitter @keenanpeachy, at
least until she is canceled.
rienced an incredibly dry 2022.
The drought stressed our crops,
stressed our water sources and
stressed us. We had hoped for
a wet winter, but instead it
remained mild. It feels as if the
first five months of 2023 is a continuation of last years drought.
The ponds in our pastures,
which would normally be filled
by now, are totally dry. Weve
been watching our wheat slowly grow. We hesitated to begin
the spring planting of our fall
crops in hopes it would rain;
and when we did begin planting, we planted the seeds deeper
than weve ever planted them to
ensure they had some moisture
to begin their growth.
My husband has always halfjoked that when a farmer prays
for rain, theres more people
praying for the opposite. Hes
probably right. After all, people have parades, picnics, car
shows, golf outings, garage
sales, field trips and weekend
plans that call for nice, sunny
days to be enjoyed in the spring.
Even though my prayers for
rain might be outnumbered, I
will continue to pray for it multiple times daily.
I generally keep my daily
prayers between God and myself,
but like many other farmers, Im
openly calling for others to join
me in our request.
Please Lord let it rain.
"Insight" is a weekly column published by Kansas Farm Bureau,
the state's largest farm organization whose mission is to strengthen agriculture and the lives of
Kansans through advocacy, education and service.
RECORDS…
on July 19, 2022.
Isidro Madrid was booked into jail
on August 12, 2022.
Sean Williams was booked into jail
on August 22, 2022.
Steven Salazar was booked into jail
on December 31, 2022.
Garland White was booked into jail
on February 16, 2023.
Anthony Tomblin was booked into
jail on March 2, 2023.
Jennifer McBrearety was booked
into jail on March 7, 2023.
Eric Klotz was booked into jail on
March 10, 2023.
Susan Oler was booked into jail on
April 18, 2023.
Jody Rayl was booked into jail on
April 17, 2023.
Eric Howell was booked into jail on
April 20, 2023.
Michael Gritz was booked into jail
on April 24, 2023.
Jennifer Spurlock was booked into
jail on May 1, 2023.
FROM PAGE 2
ANDERSON COUNTY ARRESTS FILED
On April 27, Brad Allen Bishop,
Bartlesville, OK, was booked into jail
on a probation violation.
On May 1, Eric Keith Spurgeon,
Osawatomie, arrested for an outstanding warrant.
On May 1, Jennifer Leigh Spurlock,
Garnett, was arrested for violation of
offender registration act; 2nd offense,
operating a vehicle without a license
and operating a vehicle without insurance.
On May 2, Lorenda Sue Twohearts,
Lawrence, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Douglas County Sheriff
as she was arrested for aggravated
arson.
On May 2, Destiny Carmen Peters,
Wichita, was booked into jail as a hold
for the Douglas County Sheriff as she
was arrested for possession of drugs
and a probation violation.
On May 3, Kevin Lloyd Frazier,
Greeley, was arrested for driving without a license.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Giovanna Rodriguez into jail on
March 3, 2021.
Jeffrey Gregg was booked into jail
ANDERSON COUNTY
JAIL FARM-INS
Todd Banfield was booked into jail
on April 12, 2023.
Chelsea Snyder was booked into
jail on April 13, 2023.
Lorenda Twohearts was booked
into jail on May 2, 2023.
Destiny Peters was booked into jail
on May 2, 2023.
2×3
Agency West
205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
Our Ottawa office:
706 N. Lindenwood Dr.
Hannah Morgan, Agent
Olathe, Ks. 66062
427 S Main St. Ottawa
(913) 661-0466
785-521-2030
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker,
Tucker, Agent
Courtney
Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
REAL ESTATE
Brokers and Related Services
Also, be sure to check the Reviews Regional Classifieds for listings.
B
R
Benjamin Realty
Land Homes Commercial
201 N. Maple
Garnett, Ks 66032
benjaminrealty@earthlink.net
HIGHWAY LOCATION
213 S. Maple, Garnett
REALTOR
Office: (785) 448-2550
Home: (785) 241-0532
Cell: (785) 304-2029
Check out the
DOWNTOWN LOCATION
114 W. 4th, Garnett
To be added to this
(785) 448-6191
(800) 530-5971
once-a-month real estate guide
LAND & HOME REVIEW
downtown@garnettrealestate.com
for local
Schulte, Broker
Real Estate ListingsScott
(785) 448-5351
the first Tuesday of each month in
hwy@garnettrealestate.com
Carla (Schulte) Walter, Broker
(785) 448-7658
Delton Hodgson
Bob Umbarger
Alberta Bishop
Mary Lizer
Michelle Ware
Marlo Kimzey
(785) 448-6118
(785) 448-5905
(785) 448-7534
(785) 448-3238
(785) 214-8489
(913) 980-3267
AFFORDABLE HOME LOANS
Sherry Benjamin,Broker
(785) 448-6200
(866) 448-6258
Call to Subscribe
(785) 448-3121
Kim Baldwnin, McPherson
County farmer and rancher
The saying April showers
bring May flowers is what runs
through my mind every spring.
Its a saying that has held true
for almost every year I have
lived on our Kansas farm.
Like clockwork, the crocus
and daffodils are the first to
appear followed by my tulips,
lilacs and peonies. Add in the
fruit trees blooming and you
have a beautiful spring floral
assortment.
Generally, by the time my
peonies and lilacs bloom, I cant
help but attempt to capture the
aromas and beauty by arranging
cuttings of these flowers into a
table-top display to be enjoyed
in my kitchen as a precursor of
Junes wheat harvest.
However, this years blooms
never went on display to be
enjoyed at my kitchen table. The
sweet smells from one of my
lilacs have been enjoyed only
when I walk up to the bush and
bring my nose close to the smaller-than-normal white blooms.
Im still waiting on my peonies to appear. Like normal, the
plant has grown and buds have
formed; but as Ive kept watch
over this plant anticipating its
May bloom, Ive been left wondering if weve somehow missed
the last step and the flowers will
not come this year.
Perhaps it is just a little late
to bloom this year, but I cant
help but wonder if the delay of
my peonies and stunted lilacs
are signs of what our wheat harvest will look like.
Its no secret that we expe-
SERVING OUR COMMUNITY
FOR 50 YEARS
Ron Ratliff
Beth Mersman
Carol Barnes
Donna Morris
Cris Anderson
Pam Ahring
Visit our informative website at www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all MLS listings & more.
(785) 448-8200
(785) 448-7500
(785) 448-5300
(913) 731-2456
(785) 304-1591
(785) 204-2405
Call Stacey
at (785)
448-3121.
Contact
the Review
(785)
448-3121
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Safety Poster Program
winners announced
CALENDAR
Tuesday, May 9
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
1:30 p.m. – Ministerial Alliance
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, May 10
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
10:00 a.m. – Remember When
Wednesday
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
4:30 p.m. – Tourism Advisory Board
Meeting
6:00 p.m. – VFW Auxiliary Meeting
6:00 p.m. – VFW Post 6397 Meeting
6:00 p.m. – Parks & Recreation
Advisory Board
7:00 p.m. – Friends of the PSRT
Meeting
Thursday, May 11
8:00 a.m. – Morning Mingle
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44 Meeting
Friday, May 12
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
4:00 p.m. – Airport Advisory Board
Meeting
Saturday, May 13
7:00 a.m. – Fire Department/Ladies
Auxiliary Breakfast
9:00 a.m. – Square Fair on the
Downtown Square in Garnett
2:00 p.m. – Anderson County High
School Graduation at
ACHS Stadium
2:00 p.m. – Central Heights High
School Graduation
Sunday, May 14
Mothers Day
Monday, May 15
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
3:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting @
Miracle House
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
Meeting
Tuesday, May 16
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:00 p.m. – Anderson County
Economic Development Meeting
5:30 p.m. – BPW Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – Planning Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, May 17
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, May 18
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committee
Meeting
4:30 p.m. – Celebration of Service We Remember
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, May 19
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Sunday, May 21
9:00 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
Monday, May 22
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
3:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting @
Miracle House
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
Tuesday, May 23
10:00 a.m. – Storytime For
Preschoolers
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – City Commission
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, May 24
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
1:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, May 25
2:00 p.m. – Emergency Food
Assistance Program (Harvesters)
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, May 26
– Avenue of Flags hosted by
Garnett Parks & Recreation
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Saturday, May 27
– Avenue of Flags hosted by
Garnett Parks & Recreation
Sunday, May 28
Memoria Day
– Avenue of Flags hosted by
Garnett Parks & Recreation
Monday, May 29
– Avenue of Flags hosted by
Garnett Parks & Recreation
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
3:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting @
Miracle House
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 05-09-2023 / SUBMITTED
Pictured from left: Willis Benedict, Marlee Bures, Katelynn Barnett, Alli Rockers. They are St. Rose students that were winners in the Kansas Farm Bureau Safety Poster Program contest.
For more than 70 years,
Kansas Farm Bureau has hosted a Safety Poster Program to
help kids visualize ways to stay
safe on the farm. Each year,
youth in the first through sixth
grades participate statewide.
Posters are judged on the
county level with the first-place
poster from the three divisions
is submitted for judging at the
state level where winners and
their teachers receive a cash
prize!
There were 120 entries from
Anderson County.
On the county level Winners in Division I (Grades
1-2) were: first place, Rebekah
Born, Garnett Elementary;
second place Dwight Roberts,
Garnett Elementary; third
place
Novalee
Milliken,
Garnett Elementary; honorable mention Marlee Bures, St.
Rose.
Winners in Division II
(Grades 3-4) were: first place,
Benton Moody, Greeley; second place Adelynn Richardson,
Garnett Elementary; third
place Klaire Nilges, Crest; honorable mention Willis Benedict,
St. Rose.
Winners in Division III
(Grades 5-6) were: first place
Jared Shilling, Westphalia;
second place Alli Rockers, St.
Rose; third place Katelynn
Barnett, St. Rose; honorable
mention Jeremiah Smelser,
Greeley.
On the county level first, second and third place winners
received a personalized medallion & certificate and honorable mention received a ribbon
& certificate.
Norma Rockers, is the
Farm Safety & Ag Education
Chairman
for
Anderson
County Farm Bureau.
Pieces & Patches Quilt Guild minutes for April
The Pieces and Patches
Quilt Guild was called to order
by President Mary Parrott on
Thursday, April 27th, 2023,
at 9:30 a.m. The meeting was
held at Kansas State Extension
Office Conference Room.
There were 27 members in
attendance.
Minutes of the March 23rd,
2023 meeting were approved as
printed.
Helen Norman gave the treasurers report for April 27th,
2023
COMMITTEE REPORTS:
Programs: Connie Hatch
reported that members can
continue to make the Quilts of
Valor star block and give them
to her or Lori Hoyt. Terrie
Gifford and Lynda Feuerborn
showed their QOV star
blocks. Connie reported on
the Heartland Quilt Network
(HQN) meeting that occurred
in March. She spoke about different fundraising ideas: raffles
at meetings; raffle of curated
baskets made by members, and
quilters attic items. There was
also discussion at the meeting
on how to recruit more members and find members willing to be officers. The April
meeting will be Joyce Buckley
and Jeanette Gadelman on the
use of the Accu-Quilt cutting
machine. The May program
is on Vintage Pincushions and
will be given by Karen Roth
from Valley Center. There is a
trunk show in the morning and
an afternoon workshop. Those
members who will attend the
workshop are urged to bring
a salad dish and all will have
an salad luncheon before the
workshop. The cost is $12 for
the workshop and will need
to bring vintage linens and
lace to use at the workshop.
The road trip to Nebraska is
scheduled for August 3rd and
4th; the group plans to leave
BETO Junction at 8 a.m. on
Thursday for the Valley Falls,
KS quilt store, and then on to
quilt stores in Auburn NE,
Nebraska City, and Omaha.
There will be an overnight stay
in Omaha and the group will
tour 3 quilt stores on the return
trip. Approximate cost is $100;
double occupancy rate, non-refundable deposit due in June.
The deadline to sign up is in
June.
Scholarships: The scholarships have been awarded.
BOM: Joyce and Sharon
showed two spring flower wall
hangings for the block of the
month.
AN County Fair: Terrie
reported fair entries are due
July 24th. If a person is interested in making a challenge
block for the fair, the fabrics
can be purchased for $3 at
Country Fabrics.
Opportunity Quilt: The 2024
quilt top is finished using the
Tennessee Waltz block as its
design. Members were urged
to suggest a Kansas themed
dance title for this quilt. The
2025 quilt top is together and is
ready for borders.
Challenge: Signed signature blocks are due at the June
meeting.
Quilters Hugs quilts: Quilts
are needed.
May Quilt Show: The work
schedule was distributed and
members were encouraged to
sign up to help. Members were
also encouraged to enter quilts
in the show. Sandra Moffatt
moved that we pay $100 for
the Boy Scouts to help Friday
afternoon and evening to help
set up the quilt show; and if
any individual helpers show up
to help (excluding guild members) on Saturday, then they be
paid $20 total for helping. Lynn
Wawrzewski seconded. Motion
passed.
President Mary Parrott
reminded members that the
following committees would
be active in the next months:
Auditing, August Luncheon,
and Nominating. Committee
members were encouraged to
be ready.
Old Business: None
New Business: None
Secret Sister Gifts: There
were no secret sister gifts but
Sandra, Terrie, Donna, Mary
P, Lori, Bonnie, and Brenda
all reported receiving cards in
the mail with assorted goodies
tucked inside.
Show and Tell
Many beautiful and creative quilting projects were
shared. Connie Hatch showed
three Quilts of Valor: a scrappy
square quilt, a stars & applique quilt, and a diagonal HSTs
quilt. Donna Sutton showed
a BOM table runner made in
black, red, and white. She
also showed a signature quilt
done in browns, golds, with
a beige background (for her
cousin) and a second throw
of the extra signature blocks
reminiscent of the traveling
ladies. Jeannette Gadelman
showed a Rippity doo doh
square bag with a bear paw
block on the other side. Jackie
Gardner showed a table runner of golds and browns and
several country themed pillows for the Boutique. Sandra
Moffatt showed a quilt made
with the Brickhouse pattern; it was scrappy houses
on a white background. She
also showed a Frosty goes
to Town appliqued quilt in
reds and greens with a white
background. Caroline Crupper
made several items for the boutique; Christmas placemats,
snowmen, and trees. Terrie
Gifford showed three sets of
coasters to the boutique. Mary
Cubit showed a 4H quilt made
of churn dash blocks. Brenda
Futtrell showed a throw quilt
that celebrated 60 years on
Route 66; it will be displayed
at the Mothers of Twins convention. She also showed a
quilt using an Alien panel
with red and green borders.
Shirley Allen showed a table
runner made with purple stars.
She also showed a large quilt
using the Cactus Wreath pattern done in reds and greens
with a white background. Kay
Roeckers showed a green and
white 9-patch and snowball
block quilt which she had hand
quilted.
Lynda Feuerborn
showed a table runner made
using the BOM star block done
in blues and whites. She also
made a table runner using tropical fabrics. She showed a quilt
done in pastel batiks with purple background. Sharon Rich
showed a quilt made in medium blues and bright colors
using the BOM from Overbrook
Quilt Connection.
Bonnie
Deiter showed a throw made
with 4-patch blocks. Mary
Parrott showed some quilts
that Vickie Hurt had made: a
lap quilt made with soft colors;
a KU lap quilt; a wall hanging
using the Frond brown flowers panel with thread painting
quilting; and a lap quilt made
with Christmas reds, greens,
and creams. Mary Parrott
showed a QOV flimsy.
The meeting was adjourned.
Minutes recorded by Bonnie
Deiter
Program: Accu-Quilter by
Joyce Buckley and Jeanette
Gadelman. The Accu-Cutter
was first introduced in 1990
for use with scrapbooking
and paper crafting. The AccuQuilter introduced in 2008 was
used to cut fabrics. The benefits of using the Accu-Quilter
are more perfectly cut pieces of fabric, saves time, and
lowers the risk of injury. For
more information, check out
Accuquilt.com
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785 448 3121
112 W. Sixth Ave. Garnett, KS 66032
8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
LOCAL
Dining with Diabetes Students enjoy a Day on the Farm
online program to begin
The Frontier Extension
District and Marais des Cygnes
Extension District are jointly
hosting an online Dining with
Diabetes program. The fourweek program will begin on
May 22nd and conclude June
19th.
In Kansas, 9.4% of adults
have been diagnosed as having
diabetes. It is the seventh leading cause of death in Kansas
and those with diabetes have
medical expenses that are, on
average, 2.3 times higher than
those who do not have diabetes.
Nationally, it is estimated
that 34.2 million people have
diabetes or about 1 in every
10 people. Additionally, health
officials estimate that 1 in 5
people dont even know they
have diabetes. And, the risk for
death for adults with diabetes
is approximately 60% higher
than for adults without diabetes.
The virtual program is selfpaced and participants are able
to complete four modules, one
each week, on their own time.
The information in each of the
modules includes diabetes and
self-care information, educational videos, meal planning
and healthy snack ideas, information for reading food labels,
ideas for low-impact physical
activity, cooking techniques
using artificial sweeteners,
tips for seasoning with herbs
and spices, and food demonstrations including healthy,
diabetic friendly recipes.
The program is also open
to caregivers and family members of those who have pre-diabetes or Type 2 diabetes.
Registration is now open
online through May 26th and
the cost to participate is $25.
With support of a local grant
through the East Central
Kansas Area Agency on Aging,
however, the cost to participate
is free of charge to those 60 and
older. The class size is limited
to 30 people.
If you are interested in
participating or would like
more information, please
contact Chelsea Richmond
in the Garnett Office of the
Frontier Extension District
at 785.448.6826 or by email at
crichmon@ksu.edu.
CHARGES…
nalia count.
A probable cause affidavit drafted by ACSO Deputy
Kaelin Eslinger describing
the incident said Garnett
police stopped a pickup truck
which was driving erratically
and appeared to be traveling
with a white Chrysler with
Missouri tags. The driver of
the pickup, Roy Helton-Ball,
was arrested for DUI and also
had drug paraphernalia on his
person. During a search of his
truck, officers noted the behavior of a female passenger in
the Chrysler, Katie Yost. In
retrieving items for Kerns,
the driver of that vehicle, Yost
rolled the passenger side window down only enough to allow
the item to pass through.
As officers were searching Helton-Balls truck Kerns
jumped into the Chrysler
and sped from the parking lot onto 5th Avenue and
sped east through the neighborhood apparently trying to
elude Deputy Eslinger. The
chase headed to U.S. Highway
169 where Kerns stopped the
car near 700 and Montanna
Road and Kerns fled the vehicle carrying a black backpack
and throwing objects out of it
before returning in obeisance
to officers commands.
Eslingers affidavit said
Kerns had a substance believed
to be methamphetamine in his
pocket. A search of the scene
discovered more materials
believed to be meth, along with
other materials believed to contain marijuana wax residue,
scales, a gun box for SCCY firearms, 9mm ammunition and
a gun cleaning kit for a 9mm
handgun.
Upon Yosts arrest and subsequent search at the Anderson
County Jail, she was found to
have more than $2,100 cash
on her person. Yost was also
detained in connection with the
drugs found in the Chrysler,
but as of Friday had not been
charged.
Eslinger said Kerns told him
at the traffic stop at Short Stop
he was a felony drug offender
who had served time in federal prison but was released for
good behavior. Court records
show Kerns was released from
probation in 2019. Felons in
Kansas are not allowed to purchase or possess firearms, but
Eslinger said no firearm was
found in Kerns possession.
The affidavit said an empty
pistol holster had been found
in Helton-Balls pickup at the
initial stop.
Kerns is set for a status
hearing in Anderson County
District Court May 20.
EVERY RIDER IS
2×4 kpa kdotLOVED ONE
SOMEONES
LOOK TWICE FOR BIKES
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 05-09-2023 / SUBMITTED
Recently elementary students went to the Anderson County Fairgrounds and were able to experience
a Day on the Farm.
Debbie Kueser, Anderson
Co. FB Vice-President &
Womens Chairman and Cindy
Ecclefield, Anderson County
FB Coordinator told the story
of On the Trail of the Giant
Cheeseburger. They had a
large handmade hamburger with all the condiments to
show and talk about.
Kansas Farm Bureaus
Greg Doering from the
Communications & Marketing
Division was there and helped
throughout the day. Anderson
County Farm Bureau board
members & members helping,
were as follows:
Rick Feuerborn, President
& Membership Chairman; Gail
Kueser, board member & Policy
Chairman; Randy Bunnel,
board member & ENR chairman; John Pracht, board member & Marketing Chairman;
Jake Strobel, board member;
Butch Fox, member; and
Debbie Kueser, Vice-President
& Womens Chairperson presented as well as helped. Cindy
Ecclefield, County Coordinator
planned and organized the
event as well as helped.
At the end of the day Farm
Bureau bags with information
were handed out to the kids.
The teachers received a bag
with KFB information in it and
the teachers as well as their
helpers were given a plant.
Sponsors donating to
the event were: Anderson
County Cornfest; East Kansas
Agri-Energy; GSSB; R&R
Equipment, Greeley; Farmers
State Bank; The Jones Agency,
Amanda Jones agent; Valley R
Agri Service; Bank of Greeley;
Victory Chevrolet/Victory
Ford; Brummel Farm Service.
Thank you to everyone for
helping make this event a great
success.
Freelance Writer/Reporter
2×3
KPA 4 State
Farm
SUBSCRIBE!
FROM PAGE 1
The Anderson County Farm
Bureau Association held its
annual Day on the Farm
event April 27, 2023, at the
Anderson County Fairgrounds.
Starting off the day 125
students teachers & helpers
heard from Amanda Allison
DVM from Garnett Veterinary
Clinic brought some of their
equipment and specimens to
show the children and talk to
them about what they do as veterinarians. The children were
then divided up and visited
three different ag related stations, presenters were Debbie
Davis & Lacie Davis, Natural
Resources
Conservation
Service; Johnna Rios and
Mary, Kansas Corn Grower
Association and Sherry Siefert
with the Kansas Soybean
Association.
Morgan Parks
and Kendra Louk had the kids
wash their hands properly
before they went to lunch.
The Garnett Optimists provided grilled hamburgers and
hotdogs and Anderson County
Farm Bureau provided chips
and drinks as well as serving
them lunch.
The Garnett
Sonic provided ice cream for
an afternoon snack.
The Anderson County
FFA along with sponsor Jeff
Gillespie had learning stations
for the kids to tour and they
were shown different farm animals and farm equipment as
well as each individual FFA
member spoke on each subject.
Finishing up the day was
The Anderson County Review is in search of freelance writers
who can write feature stories and cover
occasional straight news assignments.
Some experience preferred but well
train you if youve got the chops. Remote
workers okay most interviews/ research
conducted online, by phone or email. Work
from home or from our office in Garnett.
Pay is by assignment. Must follow schedules
and understand what the word DEADLINE means.
Contact publisher Dane Hicks
at review@garnett-ks.com.
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THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
9
SPORTS
Vikings regular season concludes, now focus on postseason
ARMA In all sports it's important to peak at the right time but
track & field is also unique in
the fact that the coaches and
athletes are also eyeing the
postseason to place their athletes not always in their best
event, but the event that could
catapult them to the state competition next week.
Coach Prosser is happy his
teams can get a little rest before
the league meet this Friday at
Chase County. At this time
of year, recovery and focus
become more important as the
meets tend to have more meaning as well as the school year
wrapping up. With less than
a week of school remaining,
our goal is to refocus, regroup
and re-evaluate where our best
opportunities are, Prosser
said.
Another key to any sports
season is staying healthy and
the Central Heights Vikings
have done exactly that this
year.
Prosser added, The good
news is that we came away
healthy and get a longer rest
before the Flint Hills League
meet on Friday.
It was much of the same for
the Vikings. The boy's distance
runners were the highlight as
the sprinters and field events
continue to improve each week.
Prosser concluded, We have
had some performances that
were consistent with where we
have been recently. In particular, our throwers and sprinters
made the most improvement
on personal results while our
distance group was at or near
the fronts of their races from
the 800 meter run and longer
distances.
Boys Results
100m
8th – Matthew Wilt – 13.24
11th – Max Chrisjohn – 14.24
200m
16th – Matthew Wilt – 26.88
22nd – Cooper Moore – 29.16
400m
7th – Aidan Howland – 1:00.41
16th – Cooper Moore – 1:10.24
17th – Riley Sprinkle – 1:19.19
800m
1st – Cody Hammond – 2:02.65
12th – Aidan Howland 2:28.51
1600m
2nd – Connor Burkdoll 4:42.48
3rd – Owen Miller – 5:02.53
10th – Russell Reed – 5:50.79
3200m
1st – Connor Burkdoll 11:02.54
4×800 Relay
1st – C. McCord, O. Miller, C.
Burkdoll, C. Hammond – 8:42.46
Shot Put
8th – Max Chrisjohn – 34-04
Discus
17th – Max Chrisjohn – 76-00
24th – Riley Sprinkle – 60-00
Javelin
19th – Riley Sprinkle – 77-03
Girls Results
100m
14th – Alaina Wade – 15.02
200m
11th – Alaina Wade – 32.50
100m Hurdles
5th – Arabella Dunbar – 18.96
300m Hurdles
7th – Arabella Dunbar – 57.21
Long Jump
11th – Arabella Dunbar 13-00-50
Shot Put
18th – Aubrie Savage – 24-02
21st – Alyssa Welch 25th – Alaina Wade – 20-10
Discus
10th – Aubrie Savage – 71-09
17th – Alyssa Welch – 60-10
23rd – Ava Bergen – 55-01
Javelin
13th – Ava Bergen – 69-11
22nd – Aubrie Savage 52-05.50
23rd – Alyssa Welch 51-06.50
Bulldogs split doubleheader with SFT
CARBONDALE After winning a pitcher's dual in game 1,
the Bulldogs let a big lead slip
away in a second game defeat
to Santa Fe Trail last Tuesday
as the teams split the doubleheader.
The Bulldogs won the opener, 2-1. Both teams scored a lone
run in the first and AC tacked
on what would be the game
winning run in the bottom of
the third as the pitchers would
dominate the rest of the way.
The teams combined for just
10 hits in the 7 inning contest, 6
of those came via the Bulldogs.
The hot bat in the opener for
Anderson County was Preston
Keuser who picked up 3 hits in
3 at-bats and scored a run.
Jack Crane doubled in the
game's only official run driven
in for the game.
Garrison Martin was pretty
dominant on the mound pitching 7 innings, allowing just 3
hits, 1 unearned run and struck
out 8 hitters while only walking
1.
The second game was knotted at zero after 2 innings
before the Bulldogs erupted for
8 runs in the top of the third
innings.
Seemingly cruising, the
Bulldogs went into the bottom
half of the fourth leading 8-0
before Santa Fe Trail got on the
board with 7 runs of their own,
then tacked on 5 more in the
fifth. SFT would shut down the
Bulldogs the rest of the game
and pull off the improbable 12-8
win.
Colten Wittman and Braden
Wheat each garnered two hits
to lead the Bulldogs.
Braxton Spencer drove in 2
runs with a single in the third
inning and then two batters
later Dallas Kueser provided a
bases loaded triple to drive in 3
more runs. AJ Schaffer, Martin
and Kueser each drove in a run
in consecutive at-bats.
The defense let down the
Bulldogs in those 2 big innings.
AC tallied 7 errors in the
contest. Kueser pitched 3 2/3
innings, allowed 6 hits, 7 runs
but just 2 of them earned in the
loss.
Porter Foltz didn't fare any
better as he closed out the 4th
inning but could only get one
out in the 5th before exiting
allowing 2 hits in 2/3 of an
inning but allowed 5 runs
which were all unearned.
Braden Blaufuss closed
things out pitching the final 2
2/3 innings, allowing just 1 hit
and striking out 3 while not
allowing a run.
AC girls 3rd, boys 6th at Burlington Invite
Viking boys split
with Council Grove
RICHMOND After a tough
first game of the doubleheader, the Central Heights Vikings
responded to win the second
game easily over the Council
Grove Bears.
The first game was a 4-1
defeat by Council Grove to the
Vikings. Council Grove tallied
1 run in the first, 2 in the third
and then both teams scored a
lone run in the fifth to account
for the scoring.
Max Cannady, who picked
up 2 hits in 3 at-bats, and Luke
Burkdoll, 2 hits in 4 at-bats, led
the way offensively. Cannady
drove in the team's only run for
the game.
Cannady was also the
game's starting pitcher going
4 innings, allowing just 2 hits
but struggled with his control walking 7 hitters. He also
struck out 7 as well, but the
base on balls helped contribute
to 3 runs allowed over the 4
innings.
The Vikings took out their
recent struggles in the second
game and are hoping to build
on that as the postseason nears.
Central Heights cruised to a
10-0 win, which makes them
just 3-7 in their last 10 games
after an 8-0 start.
Burkdoll continued to be hot
at the plate, garnering 4 hits
in 4 at-bats, scored twice and
drove in a run.
Ethan Rowan accounted for
5 runs, picking up 3 hits in 3
at-bats, drove in 3 and scored
twice.
The rest of the team combined for just 1 hit in 16 official
at-bats.
Freshman Kreig Garrett was
efficient as the starting pitcher,
allowing 5 hits and 1 walk over
6 innings while striking out 5
in six shutout innings.
Bulldog golf finishes
4th at Ottawa Invite
OTTAWA It was a 4th place
finish for the Anderson County
Bulldogs golf team, but it was
tight much of the day as the top
4 teams were separated by just
14 strokes.
Heritage Christian Academy
finished in first with a score of
318, Spring Hill second with
330, Ottawa in third with 331
and the Bulldogs finished the
afternoon with 332.
The trio of Eli Martin, Lane
Richards and Carter Blome all
finished in the top 10.
Martin was 3rd with a 77,
3 strokes behind overall winner Owen Evans of Heritage
Christian Academy.
Lane Richards finished the
afternoon tied for 5th place
with a 79 and Carter Blome
was tied for 10th with an 81.
The other two Bulldog golfers were Isaak Porter who
finished in 33rd place with a
95 and Issac Richards who finished 43rd with a score of 102.
BURLINGTON The Lady
Bulldogs (78.5 points) finished
3rd behind Burlington (108.5)
and Wabaunsee (84.5) while the
boys finished in sixth with 49
points, well behind Burlington
with 117 points on the afternoon.
Emma Schaffer paced the
way for the girls with first
place finishes in both the 100
meter dash (12.67 seconds) and
200 meter dash (26.12).
Whitney Wight competed
along with Schaffer and fared
well with a 3rd place finish in
the 100 meter dash (13.32) and
6th place in the 200 meter dash
(28.80).
Continuing with the sprints,
Rilyn Sommer finished second
in the 400 meter dash with a
time of 1:02.92.
The 4×100 (53.77) and 4×400
(4:27.38) meter relays both finished in 2nd place.
Addie Fudge finished her
afternoon with 3rd place finishes in the 100 meter hurdles
(18.14), 300 meter hurdles (53.77)
and finished 7th in the 1600
meter run with a time of 6:12.10.
In the field events, Jordan
Miller led the way with a 2nd
place finish in the triple jump
(32'10.5).
Josie Miller finished 7th
in the high jump (4'6), Ella
Reichard finished 7th in the
long jump (14'4) and Miller
placed 9th in the triple jump
(30'3) to round out all the top
10 finishers on the day.
The top finishers for the boys
on the day were Ty Hedrick
in the 100 meter hurdles (19.4)
and Easton Wettstein in the 400
meter dash (55.02) as they both
finished in 3rd place.
Danny Jungo was right
behind Hedrick in the 100
meter hurdles with a time of
19.44 to finish in 4th. Jungo
also ran the 300 meter hurdles
in 48.08 seconds, good for 5th
place.
Christian Barnett finished
6th in the 100 meter dash (11.87)
and 10th in the 200 meter dash
(25.21) along with Trey Clark
who finished the 200 with a
time of 25.13, which was good
for 9th place.
Tucker Nelson placed 5th
in the 1600 meter run (4:49.86)
and 8th in the 800 meter run
(2:14.35). Landon Kraft finished
the 1600 with a time of 5:25.13,
good for 9th place.
The Bulldogs 4×100 (48.37)
and 4×400 (3:45.49) both place in
4th place.
The field events saw only
3 Bulldogs finish within the
top 10. Trey Clark (38'8) and
Teagan Wolken (37'5.25) finished 4th and 6th in the triple
jump respectively.
Aleck Smith rounds out the
top 10 finishers with a 7th place
finish in the pole vault (8'6).
AC golf takes 3rd in league
CHEROKEE On paper it
would be nearly impossible to
find a more dominant season
then what the Crest Lancers
have had to date as they moved
to 14-0 with another sweep, this
time against Southeast, by a
combined score of 30-0.
On the season now the
Lancers have outscored their
opponents 165-8, an average of
11.8-0.6 per game.
In the first game against
Southeast, the Lancers won
11-0 in 6 innings.
Trevor Church, Jensen
Barker and Jack White all had
a pair of hits to lead the way.
Freshman Barker hit a triple, led the team with 2 runs
driven in and also scored once.
Church continued to dominate on the mound going
all 6 innings, allowing 4 hits
and struck out 12 to earn the
win. Church is now 7-0 on the
season. He has pitched 34.1
innings, allowed just 9 hits and
struck out 74 while not allowing a run.
In the second game of the
day, Crest erupted for 12 runs
in the fifth to blow the game
open en route to a 19-0 victory.
Rogan Weir did the most
damage garnering 3 hits in 3
at-bats, scoring 3 runs, drove in
6 runs off a single, double and
home run on the day.
Kaden Nilges had a pair of
hits in 4 at-bats, drove in 4 runs
and scored once.
Holden Barker helped out
with 3 hits in 5 at bats, drove in
3 runs and scored twice.
Stetson Setter picked up the
win on the mound allowing
just 1 hit and striking out 6 in
4 innings. Jack White closed
things out with a pair of strikeouts in a perfect 5th inning.
GARNETT In action last
Friday, the Anderson County
Bulldogs downed the Baldwin
Bulldogs 10-0 in the only game
of the afternoon.
Anderson County pounded
out 13 hits in the 5 inning victory while limited Baldwin to
just 3 hits on the afternoon.
Jack Crane led the way
with a hit in each of his three
at-bats, scoring 2 runs. Crane
hit a double and a triple in the
game.
Braden Blaufuss, Colton
Wittman and Preston Kueser
each picked up 2 hits in 3
at-bats.
Kueser also drove in a run
and scored twice, Wittman and
Blaufuss each had 2 runs batted in.
Brayden Wheat pitched all
5 innings, allowed 3 hits and
struck out 7 in the shutout.
use to build a schoolhouse,
and agreed the district could
have the land as long as it was
used for a school. In 1898 he
sold the adjoining 39 acres to a
local woman, who would later
pass the land down through
a number of owners until the
unification of local schools
into USD 365, at which time
the old schoolhouse on the acre
tract continued to be used as
a public gathering building.
At issue was whether reversionary interests for the single acre plot to the owner of
its additional 39 acres included the structure subsequently
built on it. The court ruled in
1973 those rights did not extend
to the building, and it subsequently had to be moved from
the acreage. But the concerns
of the Minkler family became
the quest to memorialize their
ancestor for his Civil War and
community service and for a
life that helped make Kansas a
free state.
The family was able to
obtain authorization for a
Veterans
Administration
marker and headstone furnished at no charge by the U.S.
Government for U.S. military
veterans. The familys private
ceremony April 29 included a
dedication service and a 21 gun
salute from an Honor Guard
staffed by members of the local
VFW and American Legion
Posts, along with a gathering of
35 relatives some whod only
met each other once or twice
over the years.
A part of Anderson Countys
history now only rarely
remembered, Manly Minkler
and others live on in the pages
of local history. Now, his name
is etched in stone as well.
LINN VALLEY The
ACHS Bulldogs golf squad finished the 2023 Pioneer League
Tournament in 3rd place at the
Deer Trace golf course in Linn
Valley.
Iola won with a score of 336.
Santa Fe Trail edged out the
Bulldogs with a score of 349
while AC finished the afternoon with 351.
Richards led the way for
Anderson County with a 76,
just one stroke off tournament
winner Lane Workman of
Santa Fe Trail.
Eli Martin (85) finished in
6th place and Carter Blome finished 10th with an 89.
Isaak Porter (101) tied for
16th and Issac Richards (109)
tied for 22nd to round out the
day for the Bulldogs.
Bulldogs baseball hand
Lancers roll again in doubleheader, move to 14-0 Baldwin lopsided loss
Crest Lancer runners
continue to lead the way
HUMBOLDT At last week's
Humboldt Invitational, the
Crest Lancers runners continue to pace the teams, especially
in the longer distance events.
For the girls, Peyton Schmidt
picked up the lone gold medal
with a 1st place finish in the
800 meter run (2:42.34) and also
placed 3rd in the 3200 meter
run with a time of 13:10.82.
Josie Walter finished one
spot better in the 3200 meter
run with a time of 12:32.38, good
for 2nd place. Walter also finished second in the 1600 meter
run with a time of 5:44.16.
Aubrey Allen placed 5th in
both the 1600 (6:31.08) and 3200
(14:11.65).
In the sprints, Kinley
Edgerton finished 3rd in the 400
meter dash (1:05.54), Brinley
McGhee finished 9th in the 100
meter hurdles (19.41) while Mia
Coleman finished 8th in the 100
meter dash (14.75) and 5th in
the 100 meter hurdles (18.62).
The girls 4×100 meter relay
(53.8) finished 3rd and the 4×400
relay (4:39.83) finished 4th.
The top finishers in field
events were McGhee in 4th
place (14' 4.25) and Edgerton
in 6th place (13' 10) in the long
jump.
On the boy's side the top fin-
isher came via the field events
with Ethan Godderz winning
the triple jump with a distance
of 41'6. Godderz also finished
3rd in the long jump (19' 4.5).
McGhee finished 7th in the
long jump with a best jump of
18' 8.
Gunner Ellington earned a
pair of second place finishes in
the 1600 meter (5:12.64) and 3200
meter runs (11:23.74).
Elijah Taylor finished 2nd
in the 800 meter run (2:24.26)
and 5th in the 1600 meter run
(5:29.89).
In the sprints, Brenton
Edgerton finished 4th in the 100
meter dash (12.23) and Jerry
Rodriguez 9th in the 200 meter
dash (25.86).
The boys 4×100 meter relay
(45.93) and 4×800 meter relay
(9:53.29) finished 3rd and 4th
respectively.
MINKLER…
FROM PAGE 1
response to raids and harassment of locals by Missouri ruffians in the years preceding
the Civil War when pro-slave
elements set about an attempt
to clear Eastern Kansas of free
state sympathizers in hopes of
bringing Kansas into the union
as a slave state.
The elder Minkler passed
in 1918 at the Old Soldiers
Home in Leavenworth. His
funeral was conducted in
Garnett by the Grand Army
of the Republic a Civil War
veterans association made up
of soldiers of the Union and
Voorhees surmises plans for a
grave marker may have simply
fallen through the cracks. For
reasons just as unknown, his
name was never added to the
Minkler family monument in
Garnett Cemetery that includes
his wife, two of their children
and a grandson who preceded
him.
We had to have them look
it up to find where he was buried, Voorhees said.
M.M. Minkler is also known
for his involvement in what
has become textbook Kansas
law regarding property reversion rights. In 1885, Minkler
and his wife gave a single
acre tract of land to Anderson
County School District 51 for
2×4
ksf
BUYkpa
3, GET
1
FREE
ON CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
10
PUZZLES/COMICS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
CLASSIFIED
Happy Ad!
11
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Place a
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Garnett, KS 66032
REAL ESTATE
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
1x1property
913-884-4500
YOUR SOURCE FOR GREAT INVESTMENTS!
source
Chris Cygan
785-418-5435
LAND-FARMS
Investment Property
RESIDENTIAL
1×3
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
REAL ESTATE
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
Call
(785) 448-3999
TRUCKS
2015 Ford 150 XLT – loaded,
Home Riffey, (785) 448-2384 or
(785) 448-4356.
my9t1*
MISCELLANEOUS
Furniture – table and chairs,
hutches, coffee table, end
tables, cabinets, curio cabinets.
CACall or text (785) 304-2116 or
(785) 304-2302, can text pictures.
my2tf*
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
Association @ 785-271-5304 tod
ay!
Need new flooring? Call
Empire Today to schedule
a free in-home estimate on
Carpeting & Flooring. Call
Today! 844-580-2974
Professional
Lawn
Service: Fertilization, weed
control, seeding, aeration and
mosquito control. Call now for
a free quote. Ask about our
first application special! 855288-8649.
Looking for beautiful, energy efficient new windows for
your home? Call now and set
up your free, no-obligation
estimate. Beautify your home
today! 855-727-0043.
Long Distance Moving:
Call today for a free quote
from Americas Most Trusted
Interstate Movers. Let us take
the stress out of moving! Speak
to a Relocation Specialist, call
888-788-0471
Never Pay For Covered Home
Repairs Again! Complete Care
Home Warranty covers all
major systems and appliances.
30 day risk free. $200.00 off + 2
Free Months! 844-237-1432
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
B a t h r o o m
Renovations. Easy, one day
updates! We specialize in safe
bathing. Grab bars, no slip
flooring & seated showers. Call
for a free in-home consultation: 855-382-1221
New Authors Wanted! Page
Publishing will help you
self-publish your own book.
Free
author
submission
kit!
Limited offer!Why
wait? Call now: 855-939-2090
DirecTV Satellite TV Service
Starting at $64.99/mo For 24
mos, Free Installation! 165+
Channels Available.
Call
Now For The Most Sports &
Entertainment On TV! 888-7211550
Never clean your gutters
again! Affordable, professionally installed gutter guards
protect your gutters and home
from debris and leaves forever!
For a Free Quote call: 844-6071363
Top Ca$h paid for old guitars! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin,
Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone,
Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker,
Prairie State, DAngelico,
Stromberg.
And
Gibson
Mandolins / Banjos. 855-4546658
Paying Top Ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Discount Air Travel. Call
Flight Services for best pricing on domestic & international flights inside and from
the US. Serving United, Delta,
American & Southwest and
many more airlines. Call for
free quote now! Have travel
dates ready! 833-381-1348
Save your home! Are you
behind paying your mortgage?
Denied a Loan Modification?
Threatened with foreclosure?
Call the Homeowners Relief
Line now for Help! 888-975-1473
GARAGE SALES
Davisons Annual – garage sale
is rescheduled for June 16 & 17th,
Friday and Saturday, Quonset
Hut. Watch for upcoming ads.
my9t1*
FARM & AG
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
LAWN & GARDEN
Little John Sherwood
Farm
& Greenhouse
lil john
785-835-7057
Bedding Plants, Roses,
Hanging Baskets
513 Ohio Rd, Richmond,
Off of 59 Hwy, 3 miles, E. on Cloud
Rd., 1 mile S. on Ohio Rd.
Follow the yellow chicken.
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
2×2 Garden Gate Greenhouse
Decorative planters & hanging
garden gate
baskets for Mothers Day!
2×2
Help
Wanted
Sign Crew Foreman
Anderson
taking applications for
2×3 County
and iscounty
a Sign Crew Foreman position until filled.
sign
Driver
mustcres
already have a Class B CDL.
Position is subject to drug testing. Applications and job description are available at the
County Road Department, 823 W. 7th Ave.,
Garnett KS. Anderson County is an Equal
Opportunity Employer and
position is Veterans Preference Eligible (VPE),
State Law K.S.A. 73-201.
Warehouse Associate
Baumans Carpet & Furniture is in search of a fulltime, Mon.-Fri. Warehouse associate. Some sales
experience preferred but will train the right person.
Some Saturdays, occasional lifting up to 100 pounds.
Requires GED or high school diploma, clean driving
record, own transportation.
Pre-employment drug test required.
In-store
applications
available at 805
North Maple,
Garnett.
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Monthly Specials
NOTICES
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
delph
2nd Thursday 7:30 p.m.
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… A community
breakfast! Saturday, May 13,
7am-9am, Lane Community
Building. Pancakes, Biscuits
and gravy, french toast, scrambled eggs and sausage patties. Proceeds to Lane Fair
sound system. Sponsored
by Pottawatomie Township
Ruritans.
my9t1*
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth
Announcements
Business News
Send it in…
ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com
and click one of the forms
under Submit News.*
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to
garnett-ks.com
2×2
jb construction
Anderson County
news DAILY
MAKE MONEY
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!!
Annuals & Perennials Hanging Baskets
Vegetable Plants.
10003 NW 1600 Rd Westphalia
(from 7th St. in Garnett west 15 miles)
(785) 489 -2483 Hrs: Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat 9-4
SERVICES
2×2
USD 288
rickerson
We are currently seeking hardworking, dependable
employees to join our team. Must be abl to lift 50
pounds, function as a team player
and have reliable transportation.
Apply at Rickerson Pipe Lining, LLC,
at 210 Catalpa, Garnett, Ks.
2x2HELP WANTED
Laborers/Dumptruck Driver
diversified
Pick up application at
21368 Earnest Road
Parker, Kansas
or call: (913) 898-4722
2×4 kpa dcf
Emergency Dispatcher
Effective immediately Anderson County Kansas
Sheriff Office has a full time 911 operator position open. Must be 18 years old, high school
diploma or its equivalent have a valid drivers
license. No experience needed, starting pay
17.09 with a possible increase based on experience. Must be able to pass criminal background
check along with written and physical Exam. 12
hour shifts. Call 785-448-5678
for application or stop by 135
E 5th Ave Garnett KS. 66032.
ANCOSO is an equal opportunity employer complies with
veterans preference laws.
12
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
LOCAL
Mothers Day Weekend
Square Fair is Saturday, May 13 Mothers Day is Sunday, May 14
Square Fair Just
in…
Information
Petunias,
Geraniums…
Vendor Booths @ Garnett Square Downtown from 9 AM – 3 PM
Fire Department/Ladies Auxiliary Breakfast @ 7 AM
Quilt Show @ Senior Citizens Center from 10 AM – 3 PM
HANGING BASKETS
Stop in & check out our
Square Fair
Specials
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett 785-448-5856
Saturday, May 13th
20% OFF
STOREWIDE
2×5
6th Ave
Boutique
6th Ave Gift Certificates make
a great Mothers Day gift!
6th Ave Boutique &
Western Wear
$21
99
Great selection
of beautiful
Mon.-Fr. 8-5:30 Sat. 8-4 Closed Sun.
22800 NW 1700 Rd Garnett (785) 204-1961
Happy
Mothers Day!
Stop in and find the
Perfect Gift for Mom!
Fresh Flowers
Blooming Patio Baskets
Hanging Baskets
Annuals Perennials
4th & Maple Garnett 785-448-5531
Monday – Friday 9 am to 5:30pm Sat 9am – 1pm
See you at the
Garnett BPW
Square Fair!
2×3 4th St.
Flea Market
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-2276
131 E. 4th Ave., P.O. Box 327 Garnett, KS 66032-0327 (785) 448-3191
Wines the perfect gift!
2×3
Monroe 816
105 E. 4TH VENUE
GARNETT, KS.
105 E 4th Avenue Garnett, KS 66032
SQUAREFAIR
FAIRDEALS
DEALS IN
IN STORE
STORE MAY
SQUARE
MAY13
7-9
Dont forget to stop by the
Garnett Square Fair!
Visit our website at www.benjaminrealty.info
Mom
needs her
sippy cup
filled!
MAPLE STREET LIQUOR
Mothers Day Gifts
Spring Decor
Check out our selection of
Specialty Greeting Cards!
785-448-3038
Little John Sherwood
Farm & Greenhouse
(785) 448-2487
240 W. 4th Ave. Garnett
www.garnettfamilydental.com
HIGHWAY 59 GARNETT (785) 448-2102
421 S. Oak Garnett
Wed – Fri. 10-4
Sat. 10-2
Garnett
Perennials, Annuals,
Roses & Hanging
Baskets
Tues-Sat 9 a.m.-6 p.m
513 Ohio Rd
Richmond, Ks
Off 59 Hwy, 3 mi east
on Cloud Rd, 1 mile
south on Ohio Rd. Follow the yellow chicken.
(785) 835-7057
See you at the
Garnett BPW Square Fair!
2×4
AD
6×6
GREENHOUSE
1 6 ft. shelf, 1 pot hanger, 1 gable vent &
2 windows. ONly $1,345 plus tax Call to
order yours today: (785) 504-9625
24751 N Hwy 169 Garnett
Crest High School
Central Heights
High School
Anderson County
High School
Published as a supplement to THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, May 9, 2023
2 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Graduation Ceremonies
Central Heights
2 p.m. Saturday,
May 13, 2023
Crest
10 a.m. Saturday,
May 6, 2023
ACHS
2 p.m. Saturday,
May 13, 2022
ACHS Stadium
Hug Your Sponsor
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 2023 and making it possible to show them
off a little bit!
TABLE OF CONTENTS
The 31st Graduating Class of
Anderson County High School…………………Page 2
The 55th Graduating Class of
Crest High School…………………………………Page 14
The 57th Graduating Class of
Central Heights High School………………….Page 18
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.
Anderson County High School 2023 Senior Class
Morgan Alexander
Parents: Shelley Alexander and
Kevin Alexander
Trevor Black
Parents: Leah Donohue
Wyatt Black
Parents: Ashley Sanderson and
Ben Zimmerman
Activities: Skills USA and golf.
Plans: Enter the workforce.
Braden Blaufuss
Parents: Amy Blaufuss and
Mike Blaufuss
Activities: Baseball, football
Plans: Going to Northwest Lineman
College.
Carter Blome
Parents: Janay Blome and Don Blome
Activities: Golf, Skills USA, FFA, Drama
Club, Science Club, National Honor
Society
Plans: Go to Kansas State University for
Agricultural Technology Management
Engineering.
Cassandra Carver
Parents: Tami Carver and Jeremy Carver
Morgan Alexander
Trevor Black
Shelley Alexander and
Kevin Alexander
Leah Donohue
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett Home Center & Rental
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7106
Garnett Flowers & Gifts
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5531
GRADUATION EDITION
Bailey Clawson
Parents: Aimee Wittman,
Brandon Clawson, Eric WIttman
Activities: Wrestling, Chamber Choir,
band
Plans: Going to Neosho Community College for General Education. Then Im going to Ottawa University with a wrestling
scholarship and studying Psychology.
Jack Crane
Parents: Stacy Crane and John Crane
Levi Corley
Parents: Heather Corley and Gaylon
Corley
Activities: Cross country
Plans: Be successful.
Rylea Felt
Parents: Jennifer Felt and Rick D. Felt
Plans: Get a job.
Kalina Edgecomb
Parents: Julie Edgecomb and Lonnie
Edgecomb
Kelson Egelhoff
Parents: Niki Egelhoff
Tyler Gillespie
Parents: Karen Gillespie and Jeff Gillespie
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 3
Trinten Guernsey
Parents: Rhonda Guernsey and Timothy
Guernsey
Activities: FFA, wrestling
Plans: Attend Kansas State University.
Haelie Hansen
Parents: Tonya Jones and Brett Hansen
Ty Hedrick
Parents: Trista Hedrick and Aaron Hedrick
Brayden Hermreck
Parents: Kayla Schulte and
Joshua Hermreck
Drake Horning
Parents: Jeff East
Talon Jasper
Parents: Jenny Jasper and
Charlie Jasper
Plans: To attend Butler Community
College.
Emily Kabel
Parents: Regina Kabel and
Dewayne William Kabel
Wyatt Black
Braden Blaufuss
Ashley Sanderson and
Ben Zimmerman
Amy Blaufuss and
Mike Blaufuss
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5531
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3241
Garnett Flowers & Gifts
Miller Hardware
Carter Blome
Cassandra Carver
Janay Blome and
Donald Blome
Tami Carver and
Jeremy Carver
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7171
Dana Spencer
(785) 304-1439
Edward Jones
Infinity Real Estate
Bailey Clawson
Levi Corley
Aimee Wittman, Brandon
Clawson & ERIC WITTMAN
Heather Corley and
Gaylon Corley
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2888
4 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
George Kent
Parents: Candy Kent and Jason Kent
Mental Health
Plans: Go straight to work.
Kansas to major in Behavioral Neuroscience on the Premed track.
Dylan Kiatoukaysy
Parents: Merry Kiatoukaysy and
Lo Xao Kiatoukaysy
Activities: Band, cross country, track,
Science Club, Jazz band
Plans: Go to Kansas State University
for Premed and enroll into the ROTC
program. I also want to be able to do a
backflip before I turn 21.
Dallas Kueser
Parents: Amanda Kueser and
David Kueser
Trystan Locicero
Parents: Sherrie Locicero (grandma) and
Jason Warner
Lacy Lattimer
Parents: Amanda Lattimer and
John Lattimer
Orra Lutz
Parents: Charlotte Lutz and Kevin Lutz
Activities: Cross country, track, FCCLA,
Drama Club, KAY, Science Club
Plans: Attending Washburn University for
Occupational Therapy.
Kyrie King
Parents: Shannon King and Adam King
Activities: Art Club, GSA, Drama Club,
Reggi Lickteig
Parents: Gail Lickteig and Rick Lickteig
Activities: Softball, Drama Club, KAY,
Internationals, Science Club, Yearbook
Plans: Plan to attend the University of
Peyton Markham
Parents: Vicki Markham and
Steve Markham
Garrison Martin
Parents: Mackayla Martin and
Gary Martin
Activities: Football, baseball, basketball,
track & field, Science Club, Drama Club,
FBLA, KAY, Skills USA
Plans: Attend and play baseball at Coffeyville Community College.
Parker McCarty
Parents: Jerrica McCarty and
Tim McCarty
Jack Crane
Kalina Edgecomb
Stacy Crane and
John Crane
Julie Edgecomb and
Lonnie Edgecomb
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-1660
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5711
State Farm Insurance
Dutch Country Cafe
Kelson Egelhoff
Rylea Felt
Niki Egelhoff
Jennifer Felt and
Richard Felt
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6767
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 204-1580
Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce
Edgecomb Builders
Tyler Gillespie
Trinten Guernsey
Karen Gillespie and
Jeff Gillespie
Rhonda Guernsey and
Timothy Guernsey
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5720
Countryside Veterinary Clinic
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6454
GRADUATION EDITION
Faith Miller
Parents: Margie Miller and John Miller
Activities: Drama Club, Art Club, StuCo,
FBLA, National Honor Society
Plans: Major in Cyber Security Engineering at Illinois Institute of Technology.
Kami Modlin
Parents: Becca Modlin and Andy Modlin
Activities: Band, Chambers Singers,
Drama Club, cheerleader, Cheer Captain
Plans: Attend Allen County Community
College and majoring in Music.
Josie Miller
Parents: Erin Miller and Jason Miller
Activities: Volleyball, basketball manager,
track, KAY, Science Club, Mental Health
Club, Drama Club, STUCO
Plans: Attend Kansas State University.
Tucker Nelson
Parents: Patrisha Nelson and
Andy Nelson
Activities: Track, Cross County, One-Acts
Plans: Plan to race motocross
professionally and going to flight school.
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 5
Andrew Peine
Parents: Ruth Peine and Earl Peine
Activities: Drama Club, FFA, Skills USA
Plans: Attend Flint Hills Tech and major in
Network Technology.
Alexis Peterson
Parents: Ashley Peterson and
Derek Stahnke
Plans: Attending Neosho Community
College to study Sonography.
Elijah Peterson
Parents: Mackenzie Peterson and
Burt Peterson
Walker Porter
Parents: Jamie Porter and Curt Porter
Caden Register
Parents: Lindy Katzer and Jess Register
Activities: Baseball, Football, Basketball,
Baseball, Golf, Baseball Manager, FFA
Plans: Playing basketball at the University
of St. Mary.
Ella Reichard
Parents: Ashley Faries and
Bryan Reichard
Haelie Hansen
Ty Hedrick
Tonya Jones and
Brian Hansen
Krista Hedrick and
Aaron Hedrick
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems
Farm Bureau Financial Services
Brayden Hermreck
Drake Horning
Kayla Schulte and
Joshua Hermreck
Jeff East
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2550
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Paola & Greeley, Kansas
(913) 294-5331
Benjamin Realty
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6125
Sonic Drive-In
Talon Jasper
Emily Kabel
Jenny Jasper and
Charlie Jasper
Regina Kabel and
Dewayne William Kabel
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Iola, Kansas – Member FDIC
(620) 365-5212
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Landmark Bank
Patriots Bank
6 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Lane Richards
Parents: Stacey Richards and
Michael Richards
Activities: Basketball, golf
Plans: Play golf at Fort Scott Community
College.
Issac Richardscn
Parents: Sarah/Nikki Sutton and
David Richardson
Jadalyn Rowland
Parents: Andrea Layng and
Paul Rowland
Tarin Rues
Parents: Angie Rues and Jarod Rues
Activities: Volleyball, softball, Student
Council VP, Senior Class President,
International Club, Drama Club, Science
Club, Kansas Association of Youth, FBLA,
National Honor Society, Mental Health
Club
Plans: Attend Neosho Community College
for Nursing, then continue my education
at the University of Kansas for my BSN
and specialize in the care of Neonatal.
Emma Schaffer
Parents: Tammie Schaffer and
Troy Schaffer
Activities: Volleyball, wrestling manager,
track, Crimson dancers, Student Council,
Drama Club, Science Club, KAY Club,
Mental Health Club, Chamber choir
Plans: Attending Pittsburg State University to obtain a Bachelors Degree of
Science in Nursing.
Kinzee Scheckel
Parents: Carrie Scheckel and
Greg Scheckel
Activities: Science Club, FFA, Drama
Club, National Honor Society
Plans: Attend Kansas State for Nursing
and Air Force for ROTC.
Kristen Schmit
Parents: Donna Schmit and
Bryan Schmit
Activities: Student Council, KAY, Drama
Club, Science Club, Internationals Club,
volleyball, basketball, choir, band, theater
Plans: Study Secondary Education
with a focus in English at Kansas State
University.
Harley Self
Parents: Libby Self and Brant Self
George Kent
Dylan Kiatoukaysy
Candy Kent and
Jason Kent
Merry Kiatoukaysy and
Lo Xao Kiatoukaysy
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Farmers State Bank
Garnett Family Dental
Kyrie King
Dallas Kueser
Shannon King and
Adam King
Amanda Kueser and
David Kueser
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3241
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-5451
The Anderson County Review
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2487
Miller Hardware
Lacy Lattimer
Reggi Lickteig
Amanda Lattimer and
John Lattimer
Gail Lickteig and
Rick Lickteig
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 504-9414
Paola, Kansas
(913) 294-4016
Jammin Nutrition
Midwest Collision
GRADUATION EDITION
Aislyn Smith
Parents: Stephanie Smith and
Jason Smith
Activities: Golf, Drama Club,
yearbook/journalism
Plans: Enter the workforce.
Braxton Spencer
Parents: Kimberly Spencer and
Jason Spencer
Javin Stoltzfus
Parents: Colin (Sean) Stoltzfus
Morgan Sumner
Parents: Mary Sumner and
Jason Sumner
Activities: Cheer, Drama Club, FCCLA,
Science Club, Senior Class Officer
Plans: Attend the University of Kansas to
major in Human Biology on the
pre-medical track.
Tatem Troyer
Parents: Jody Troyer and Scott Troyer
Activities: Volleyball, wrestling manager,
track, Science Club, Drama Club
Plans: Get my Vet Tech license.
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 7
Hershyl Weaver
Parents: Natasha Weaver and
Jason Weaver
Trent Wettstein
Parents: Jessica Wettstein and
Jake Wettstein
Plans: Work at NAPA.
Reese Witherspoon
Parents: Gina Witherspoon and
Adam Witherspoon
Activities: Drama Club, golf, softball,
STUCO, National Honor Society, 4-H
Plans: Attend Allen Community College
for Pre-Vet then transferring to K-State for
Veterinary.
Mallory Wheat
Parents: Danell Rockers and
Chad Wheat
Johnathon Wright
Parents: Jessica Wright and
Warren Wright
Trystan Locicero
Orra Lutz
Sherrie Locicero (grandma) and
Jason Warner
Charlotte Lutz and
Kevin Lutz
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 204-1580
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3241
Edgecomb Builders
Miller Hardware
Peyton Markham
Garrison Martin
Vicki Markham and
Steve Markham
Mackayla Martin and
Gary Martin
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
AuBurn Pharmacy
Anderson County Farm Bureau
Parker McCarty
Faith Miller
Jerrica McCarty and
Tim McCarty
Margie Miller and
John Miller
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2888
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 304-0282
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6122
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-0099
Troyers Prairie Gold
8 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Josie Miller
Kami Modlin
Erin Miller and
Jason Miller
Becca Modlin and
Andy Modlin
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 504-9414
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-5451
Jammin Nutrition
Tucker Nelson
Farmers State Bank
Kaden Page
Patrisha Nelson and
Andy Nelson
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
The Anderson County Review
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
Andrew Peine
Alexis Peterson
Ruth Peine and
Earl Peine
Ashley Peterson and
Derek Stahnke
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3465
Elijah Peterson
Walker Porter
Mackenzie Peterson and
Burt Peterson
Jamie Porter and
Curt Porter
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6767
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6699
Quality Structures, Inc.
Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce
Pizza Hut
Penka Auto Repair
GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 9
Caden Register
Ella Reichard
Lindy Katzer
anD Jess Register
Ashley Faries and
Bryan Reichard
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Midwest Collision
Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce
Lane Richards
Issac Richardson
Stacey Richards and
Michael Richards
Sarah/Nikki Sutton and
David Richardson
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6131
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3465
Jadalyn Rowland
Tarin Rues
Andrea Layng and
Paul Rowland
Angie Rues and
Jarod Rues
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Paola, Kansas
(913) 294-4016
Terry Solander, Attorney
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6767
Pizza Hut
State Farm Insurance
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-1660
Emma Schaffer
Kinzee Scheckel
Tammie Schaffer and
Troy Schaffer
Carrie Scheckel and
Greg Scheckel
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Midwest Collision
Paola, Kansas
(913) 294-4016
Brummel Farm Service
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5720
10 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Kristen Schmit
Harley Self
Donna Schmit and
Bryan Schmit
Libby Self and
Brant Self
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Goppert State Service Bank
Garnett Family Dental
Aislyn Smith
Braxton Spencer
Stephanie Smith and
Jason Smith
Kimberly Spencer and
Jason Spencer
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2487
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Javin Stoltzfus
Morgan Sumner
Colin (Sean) Stoltzfus
Mary Sumner and
Jason Sumner
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Paola & Greeley, Kansas
(913) 294-5331
Goppert State Service Bank
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2888
Garnett Family Dental
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2487
Tatem Troyer
Hershyl Weaver
Jody Troyer and
Scott Troyer
Natasha Weaver and
Jason Weaver
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Troyers Prairie Gold
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 304-0282
The Anderson County Review
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 11
Trent Wettstein
Mallory Wheat
Jessica Wettstein and
Jason Wettstein
Danell Rockers and
Chad Wheat
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6611
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6699
WIttman Auto
Penka Auto Repair
Reese Witherspoon
Johnathon Wright
Gina Witherspoon and
Adam Witherspoon
Jessica Wright and
Warren Wright
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2888
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 304-2500
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Barnes Seed Service
12 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
7 reasons College is important
1. Earn More on Average
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) notes that workers with a postsecondary degree typically earn more than
those with only a high school education.
The median weekly earningsor the
middle amount in a set of datafor people with an associate degree was $963
per week in 2021. Thats an increase of
$154 per week or over $8,000 more per
year than those with only a high school
diploma.
Workers with a bachelors degree
earned a median of $1,334 weekly$525
more per week than workers without
a postsecondary education and an
increase of more than $27,000 per year.
A masters degree helped workers earn
even more at a median of $1,574 per
week, $765 more weekly than those with
only a high school diploma and almost
$40,000 more per year.
2. Increase Chances of Employment
Its not uncommon to see bachelors
degree required on job descriptions
or listed as a preferred qualification.
A 2020 survey, done by the Association
of American Colleges and Universities
(AAC&U) in collaboration with Hanover
Research, found a growing number of
employers deem college a good investment. Of those surveyed, 87% cited college as definitely or probably worth
it (AAC&U PDF source).
3. Expand Your Opportunities
A college degree can be the extra
credential you need to land the dream
job youve always wanted. Getting your
bachelors degree may also allow you to
view your work as a career and not just
a job.
A 2016 Pew Research Center report
states that 77% of workers with a
post-graduate degree and 60% of work-
ers with a bachelors degree believe
their jobs give them a sense of identity,
versus just 38% of those with only a
high school diploma or less.
4. Prepare for the Future
You can also gain practical life skills
as a college student. For example, you
will need to meet regular assignment
deadlines for each class. The discipline
and time management strategies you
learn along the way can be applied to all
aspects of your life, whether youre navigating projects at work or your familys
busy schedule.
A college degree can also impact
your family members and their futures.
For some, earning a bachelors meant
setting an example for their children.
They may want to go to college now
after seeing their parents do it. It can
often be a way to start a legacy.
Since your earning potential is typically greater as a college graduate,
your degree may lead toward financial stability for you and your family.
Your schools finance counselors can
walk you through more than just how
to pay for college. With their tips and
advice, you may discover helpful budgeting techniques and learn more about
financing options and processes that
may be relevant to future investments
such as purchasing a car or a home.
5. Build New Relationships
College can be more than just an
education; it can be a place you build
all types of new relationships. Initially,
you may establish a connection with an
academic advisorsomeone who will
be there to support you throughout your
college experience by scheduling classes, providing direction to university
SEE COLLEGE ON PAGE 13
GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 13
COLLEGE…
FROM PAGE 12
resources, and encouraging and mentoring you for personal success, and more.
Facultyyour course instructorsalso
can provide help with understanding
your assignments and whats expected
of you as a student.
Once classes begin, youll be surrounded by peers. Engaging with your
peers through activities like group work
or class discussions can be a great way
to start a professional network, meet
your future partner and make lasting
friendships.
6. Achieve Your Personal Goals
While your degree can have many
perks for your professional goals, finishing college can be an important personal goal.
In a survey completed, 500 people
were asked what the greatest benefit
was in achieving their degree, and 57%
said it was accomplishing a personal
goal for themselves. For first-generation
college students, achieving a degree is a
major personal goal for themselves and
their families.
7. Make a Difference
Earning your college degree can
improve the lives of those around you,
too. The College Boards 2019 report
on the benefits of higher education for
individuals and society notes that college graduates are more likely to donate
money to charity organizations, volunteer and vote (College Board PDF
Source).
A TIME magazine article notes that
higher education is rapidly working
to improve climate education in many
fields, including architecture, economics and law. As a result of this new
emphasis on ecology and sustainability
in higher education, graduates from
various areas of study are now applying
their knowledge to improve sustainability practices and address climate
change in several sectors. You can also
get a degree focusing on these issues
directly. Higher education can give you
the chance to make a difference in other
ways, too. You can get a degree in a
field that will help you improve peoples
lives.
College can also broaden your horizons by introducing you to a diverse
range of perspectives. A chance to
engage with other viewpoints can lead
you to better understand people who
are different from you and situations
you have never personally encountered.
This may lead to heightened empathy,
improve your communication skills and
help grow your confidence as you strive
to make the world a better place.
Congratulations to the Class of 2023!
Ethanol 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 onforeign 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 Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Crest High School 2023 Senior Class
Allyssa Adams
Parents: Dawn Adams and
Doug Adams
Activities: Volleyball, cheer,
dance, softball, STUCO and
FCCLA
Plans: Attend Northwest Missouri State and major in Psychology.
Kammee Bachman
Parents: Racheal Bachman and
Mike Bachman
Activities: Cheer, softball
Plans: Attend Butler Community College for Culinary.
Holden Barker
Parents: Missy Barker and
Sterling Barker
Activities: Football, baseball,
FFA
Plans: Farming and ranching.
Haylee Beckmon
Parents: Krissy Beckmon and
Nathan Beckmon
Activities: Basketball, volleyball, softball, FCCLA, FFA,
National Honor Society
Plans: To open a daycare.
Allyssa Adams
Kammee Bachman
Dawn Adams and Doug Adams
Racheal Bachman and
Mike Bachman
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-1660
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5711
State Farm Insurance
Dutch Country Cafe
Holden Barker
Haylee Beckmon
Missy Barker and
Sterling Barker
Krissy Beckmon and
Nathan Beckmon
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Iola, Kansas – Member FDIC
(620) 365-5212
Lonna Belshe
Avery Blaufuss
Erin Belshe and
Gene Becker (grandpa)
Jennifer Blaufuss and
MICK Blaufuss
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Goppert State Service Bank
Sonic Drive-In
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Landmark Bank
Anipro/Xtraformance Feeds
Robert Miller
(785) 448-4301
GRADUATION EDITION
Lonna Belshe
Parents: Erin Belshe and Gene
Becker (grandpa)
Activities: Girls wrestling,
softball
Plans: Enter the workforce and
train horses.
Avery Blaufuss
Parents: Jennifer Blaufuss and
Mick Blaufuss
Activities: Football, baseball,
FFA, National Honor Society
Plans: To play baseball at
McPherson College with an
undecided major.
Ty Chambers
Parents: Margaret Chambers
and Doug Chambers
Activities: Football, baseball,
FFA
Plans: Go into the work force.
Trevor Church
Parents: LeAnn Church and
Travis Church
Activities: Baseball, football,
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 15
FCCLA, FFA, FBLA,
Student Council, National
Honor Society
Plans: Attending Fort Scott
Community College to pursue a business degree and play
baseball.
Audrey DuPrey
Parents: Sarah Taylor, Mark
Taylor and Dennis Chanay
Plans: Continue working at
Wal-Mart.
Ethan Godderz
Parents: Gerri Godderz and
Eric Godderz
Activities: Football, basketball,
track & field, STUCO, Senior
class President
Plans: To continue my
education & track careers at
Fort Scott Community College.
Ty Chambers
Trevor Church
Margaret Chambers and
Doug Chambers
LeAnn Church and
Travis Church
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Goppert State Service Bank
Goppert State Service Bank
Audrey DuPrey
Ethan Godderz
Sarah Taylor, Mark Taylor
and Dennis Chanay
Gerri Godderz and
Eric Godderz
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Patriots Bank
Goppert State Service Bank
McKenna Hammond
Kamryn Luedke
Brenna Hammond and
Chad Hammond
Angie Luedke and
Brent Luedke
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Landmark Bank
Iola, Kansas – Member FDIC
(620) 365-5212
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Flynn Appliance Center
Iola, Kansas
(620) 365-2538
16 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
McKenna Hammond
Parents: Brenna Hammond and
Chad Hammond
Activities: Volleyball, basketball, softball, cheer, FCCLA,
FBLA, National Honor Society,
STUCCO
Plans: To attend Neosho
Community College to play
volleyball and complete my
prerequisites.
Kamryn Luedke
Parents: Angie Luedke and
Brent Luedke
Activities: Volleyball, basketball, FFA, National Honor
Society
Plans: Attend Northeastern
Oklahoma A&M College to be
on the rodeo team and pursue
in Agriculture.
Colby McAdam
Parents: Emily McAdam and
Jeff McAdam
Activities: Football, FFA
Plans: Attend college and start
a cattle operation.
Brinley McGhee
Parents: Danelle McGhee and
Brant McGhee
Activities: Volleyball, track,
basketball, dance, FCCLA
Plans: Pursue art and study
holistic health.
Karter Miller
Parents: Aundi Miller and
Brandt Miller
Activities: Football, basketball,
baseball, track, FFA
Plans: To attend Fort Scott
Community College for Rodeo.
Cody Nolan
Parents: Autumn Turner and
John Nolan
Activities: Football, basketball,
baseball
Plans: Move to Texas and work
in HVAC.
Stetson Setter
Parents: Karla Lavor and
Doug Setter
Activities: Football, baseball,
basketball
Plans: Plan to play baseball at
Coffeyville Community College
and study for a business degree.
Sydney Stephens
Parents: Cathy Stephens and
Paul Stephens
Activities: Volleyball, cheer,
dance, softball, FCCLA, FBLA,
FFA, student council
Plans: Achieve a mortuary
degree at Kansas City Kansas
Community College.
Malachi Trester
Parents: Tracy Call
Activities: Band, football
Plans: Plan to major in instrumental music.
Logan Walter
Parents: Monica Walter and
Nathan Walter
Activities: FFA
Plans: Attain a bachelor's in
Automotive Technology at Pitt
State.
Jack White
Parents: Allegra Franklin and
Jeffrey White
Activities: Baseball, basketball,
football, FCCLA, NHS, Class
VP, scholar's bowl
Plans: Attend college and major
in marriage and family therapy.
Colby McAdam
Brinley McGhee
Emily McAdam and
Jeff McAdam
Danelle McGhee and
Brandt McGhee
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Brummel Farm Service
Farm Bureau Financial
Karter Miller
Cody Nolan
Aundi Miller and
Brandt Miller
Autumn Turner and
John Nolan
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Dana Spencer
(785) 304-1439
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7106
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5720
Infinity Real Estate
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6125
Garnett Home Center
GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 17
Stetson Setter
Sydney Stephens
Karla Lavor and
Doug Setter
Cathy Stephens and
Paul Stephens
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Midwest Collision
Flynn Appliance Center
Malachi Trester
Logan Walter
Tracy Call
Monica Walter and
Nathan Walter
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Paola, Kansas
(913) 294-4016
Anderson County Review
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
Jack White
Allegra Franklin and
Jeffrey White
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Flynn Appliance Center
Iola, Kansas
(620) 365-2538
Iola, Kansas
(620) 365-2538
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
18 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Central Heights High School 2023 Senior Class
Bailey Brockus
Parents: Heather Brockus and
Lucas Brockus
Luke Burkdoll
Parents: Amy Burkdoll and
Cody Burkdoll
Luke Brown
Parents: Sara Brown and
Jason Brown
Ely Burroughs
Parents: Lynnet Burroughs and
Todd Burroughs
Activities: Baseball, football,
Pep Club, Scholars Bowl,
STUCCO, FCA, 4-H, National
Honor Society, Phi Theta
Lydia Burbank
Parents: Bethany Rodriguez
and Ezekiel Rodriguez
Kappa, Key Club, FCA
Plans: To attend Kansas State
University and major in News
and Sports Media.
Maxson Cannady
Parents: Stephanie Cannady
and Rusty Cannady
Bailey Brockus
Luke Brown
Heather Brockus and
Lucas Brockus
Sara Brown and
Jason Brown
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Patriots Bank
Garnett Home Center & Rental
Lydia Burbank
Luke Burkdoll
Bethany Rodriguez and
Ezekiel Rodriguez
Amy Burkdoll and
Cody Burkdoll
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5711
Dana Spencer
(785) 304-1439
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Dutch Country Cafe
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-7106
Infinity Real Estate
Ely Burroughs
Maxson Cannady
Lynnett Burroughs and
Todd Burroughs
Stephanie Cannady and
Rusty Cannady
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond Body Works
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6395
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2888
GRADUATION EDITION
Taylor Chrisjohn
Parents: Michelle Chrisjohn
and BJ Chrisjohn
Activities: FFA, volleyball,
basketball, softball,
powerlifting, cheerleading
Plans: Attend Fort Scott
Community College.
Jadynn Criqui
Parents: Tricia Beaty and
Kevin Baker
Activities: Softball, basketball,
cheerleading, yearbook, Pep
Club, Key Club, Honor Flight
Plans: Go to Fort Scott
Community College for
Psychology and Photography/
Videography.
Mieka Crump
Parents: Kristna Crump and
Randall Crump
Activities: Softball, volleyball,
dance
Plans: To attend Washburn and
plan to become a Sonographer.
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 19
Alexis Davis
Parents: Ginger Davis and
Bryan Davis
Activities: Cross country, basketball, track, yearbook
Plans: To attend college at
Pittsburg.
Tyler Emert
Parents: Shannon Emert and
Nathan Emert
Trey Hamblin
Parents: Kellie Campbell and
Garry Hamblin
Erykah Haynes
Parents: Jeri Lynn Haynes
Activities: Cheer, dance,
volleyball, powerlifting,
softball, basketball, yearbook
Plans: Attend Cosmetology
school.
Ryan Hale
Parents: Lori Hale and Sean Hale
Taylor Chrisjohn
Jadynn Criqui
Michelle Chrisjohn and
Benjamin Chrisjohn
Tricia Beatty and
Kevin Baker
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 204-1580
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3465
Mieka Crump
Alexis Davis
Kristina Zhilkina-Crump and
Randall Crump
Ginger Davis and
Bryan Davis
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-2888
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-6393
Edgecomb Builders
East Kansas Agri-Energy
Pizza Hut
Sonic Drive-In
Tyler Emert
Ryan Hale
Shannon Emert and
Nathan Emert
Lori Hale and
Sean Hale
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Patriots Bank
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Quality Structures, Inc.
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
20 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Christian Johnson
Parents: Elizabeth Lewis and
David Johnson
National Honor Society
Plans: Plan to enter the
Pre-Dental Program at the
University of Kansas City.
Carlee Johnson
Parents: M Johnson and
DJ Johnson
Lilie Johnson
Parents: Shannon Johnson and
Billy Johnson
Activities: Cross country,
softball, basketball, cheer,
Honor Flight, Key Club,
Emma Jumet
Parents: Stephanie Jumet and
John Jumet
Activities: Band, swing
group, Art Club, National
Honor Society
Plans: To attend Neosho
Community College.
Lane Kimball
Parents: Shelley Kimball and
Leland Kimball
Activities: FFA
Plans: Attend FHTC for
Auto Tech.
Seven King
Parents: Serena King
Activities: Art Club, Student
Lighthouse team, Lighthouse
Mural, teaching kids about
horses for their fair day
Plans: Plan to either spend a
year out of school to do work
but also plan to go to Flint
Hills Technical School to get a
degree in Culinary Arts. If that
plan doesnt work I can go for
Woodworking or Mechanic
degree.
Leo Kirkland
Parents: Danielle Kirkland and
Johnnie Kirkland
Activities: Football
Plans: Enter the workforce.
Trey Hamblin
Erykah Haynes
Kellie Campbell and
Garry Hamblin
Jeri Haynes
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Taylor Forge Engineered Systems
Goppert State Service Bank
Christian Johnson
Carlee Johnson
Elizabeth Lewis and
David Johnson
Misti Johnson and
DJ Johnson
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-5451
Lilie Johnson
Emma Jumet
Shannon Johnson and
Billy Johnson
Stephanie Jumet and
John Jumet
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 504-9414
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6699
Paola & Greeley, Kansas
(913) 294-5331
Quality Structures, Inc.
Jammin Nutrition
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Farmers State Bank
Penka Auto Repair
GRADUATION EDITION
Kaden Krone
Parents: Jane Krone and
Jamie Krone
Plans: To join the local union
for Heavy Equipment
Operations.
Conner Peel
Parents: Jennifer Caswell and
Trenton Caswell
Aubrie Savage
Parents: Tera Chapman and
Justn Deal-Chapman
Isaac Roullett
Parents: Royal Simms and
Robert Roullet
Activities: FFA, football,
basketball, baseball,
powerlifting, band
Nicholas Schultze
Parents: Kari Schultze and
Craig Schultze
Activities: Cross country,
basketball, baseball, Student
Council, band, FCA, National
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 21
Honor Society, Pep Club,
Scholars Bowl, Student
Lighthouse team
Plans: Attend and pursue a
four year degree at Ottawa
University.
Josie Stottlemire
Parents: Jessica Stotlemire and
Kenneth Stotlemire
Activities: Yearbook, swing
group, football manager
Plans: To take the year off and
then next Spring apply at
Metropolitan Community
College.
AnneLeese Thao
Parents: Joanna Thao and
Cave Thao
Activities: Cheerleading, dance,
volleyball, basketball, softball,
powerlifting, STUCCO, FCCLA,
Spanish Club, Pep Club, Key Club
Plans: To attend the University
of Kansas to major in Business
Management and Leadership
with a minor in Finance.
Lane Kimball
Seven King
Shelley Kimball and
Leland Kimball
Serena King
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Patriots Bank
Quality Structures, Inc.
Leo Kirkland
Kaden Krone
Johnnie Kirkland
Jane Krone and
Jamie Krone
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-3070
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Goppert State Service Bank
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Bones Rock Yard
Conner Peel
Isaac Roullett
Jennifer Caswell and
Trenton Caswell
Royal Simms and
Robert Roullett
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-5531
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-3070
Garnett Flowers & Gifts
Bones Rock Yard
22 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Aiden Welch
Parents: Angie Cline Leahew
and Glenn Welch
Carson Wood
Parents: Kim Wood and
Bill Wood
Activities: Football,
powerlifting
Plans: Attend Coffeyville
Community College to play
football.
Aubrie Savage
Nicholas Schultze
Tera Chapman and
Justin Deal-Chapman
Kari Schultze and
Craig Schultze
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Ottawa, Kansas
(785) 242-3070
Quality Structures, Inc.
Bones Rock Yard
Josie Stottlemire
AnneLeese Thao
Jessica Stottlemire and
Kenny Stottlemire
Joanna Thao and
Cave Thao
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
The Anderson County Review
Goppert State Service Bank
Aiden Welch
Carson Wood
Angie Cline Leahew and
Glenn Welch
Kimberley Wood and
William Wood
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Richmond, Kansas
(785) 835-6100
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
www.patriotsbank.com
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3121
Quality Structures, Inc.
Garnett, Kansas – Member FDIC
(785) 448-3111
Patriots Bank
GRADUATION EDITION
Our leaders must remember
that education doesn't
begin with some isolated
bureaucrat in Washington.
It doesn't even begin with
state or local officials.
Education begins in the
home, where it is a parental
right and responsibility.
President Ronald Reagan
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023 23
24 GRADUATION EDITION
Special to the Anderson County Review Tuesday, May 9, 2023
The team at
The team at
Garnett
Family
Dental
Garnett
Family
Dental
is focused on delivering an amazing patient experience!
is focused
on delivering an amazing
Warmest
congratulations
onpatient
yourexperience!
graduation!
Dr. Lynne Schopper
Dr. Lynne Schopper
Dr. Jarret Grosdidier
Dr. Jarrett Grosdidier
Dr. Clare Mulgrue
Dr. Clare Mulgrue
General and Family
Dentistry
Family Dentistry
Orthodontics
Orthodontics
Dental
DentalImplants
Implants
Dr. Sandi Otipoby
Dr. Sandi Otipoby
Sleep Apnea
Sleep Apnea
Cosmetics and More
Cosmetics
Dr. Robert Carlson
Dr. Robert Carlson
Call to
Call to
schedule your
schedule your
appointment
appointment
today!
today!
(785) 448-2487
(785) 448-2487
GarnettFamilyDental.com 240 W. 4th Avenue, Garnett, KS
GarnettFamilyDental.com 240 W. 4th Avenue, Garnett, KS

