Anderson County Review — November 14, 2017
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from November 14, 2017. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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O N E M E A S I LY U . S . D O L L A R
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in summa.
The official newspaper of record for Anderson County, KS, and its communities.
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November 14, 2017
SINCE 1865 152nd Year, No. 12
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Former county jailer
faces 13 sex charges
GARNETT A former jailer
at the Anderson County Jail
in Garnett is being held in
Osage County after his arrest
last week on charges of unlawful sexual relations during the
time he was employed at the
local jail.
A press release from the
Kansas Bureau of Investigation
said Lexington J. Laiter, 27 of
Garnett, was arrested by KBI
agents about 6:30 a.m. Monday,
Nov., 6, at his residence in
Garnett.
The release said Laiter
worked
at
the jail from
February
2013 until he
was fired in
December
2016, and that
the Anderson
C o u n t y
Sheriffs
LAITER
Department
requested the
KBIs assistance in January of
this year to investigate the alleSEE CHARGES ON PAGE 6A
Man in cuffs recovered
Topeka man spent
cold night on the run
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
SCIPIO A Topeka man who
ran from law enforcement
custody Wednesday night in
Anderson County while in
handcuffs sparked an all-night
manhunt and was apprehended Thursday morning without
incident.
Anderson County Sheriff
Vern Valentine said a county
deputy had stopped to assist a
motorist shortly before 9 p.m.
Wednesday north of Garnett
on U.S. 59
just
south
of the 2350
Road turnoff.
The deputy
noticed suspicious items
and possible
illegal drugs
in the vehiGrimmett
cle, and upon
detaining its
three occupants, one of them
ran off while his hands were
SEE MANHUNT ON PAGE 6A
City vote elects new commissioner
BY DANE HICKS
Weldas Bill Brecheisen is embraced by French Consul General
Guillaume Lacroix during the French governments presentation
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-14-2017 / DANE HICKS
of the Legion of Honor medal at Veterans Day ceremonies Friday
at Anderson County Junior-Senior High School.
An honor long due
Weldas Bill Brecheisen joins
exclusive ranks of honorees to
hold French Legion of Honor
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
(Our thanks to The Chanute Tribune
and reporter Greg Lower for providing
portions of this story.)
GARNETT Before a crowd of several
hundred fellow military veterans, friends,
family and acquaintances and Anderson
County High School students on Friday,
Bill Brecheisen of Welda received the
French governments highest honor for
his service in World War II.
Brecheisen, 95, and a longtime Welda
resident until his recent move to Chanute,
received the French Legion of Honor last
July, but took part in a ceremony at the
annual Veterans Day event in Garnett
with an official presentation of the medal
by Guillaume Lacroix, Consul General of
France, based in Chicago.
The Legion of Honor is Frances highest official honor, akin to the Presidential
Medal of Freedom or the Congressional
Gold Medal in the United States. French
law dictates only 125,000 living individuals may hold the Legion of Honor at any
one time.
it was so important to him, it was just nice
In his presentation address, Guillaume to see it and get to be a part of it.
noted the valuable aid
Id
forgotlent by the United States
ten all about even
to his country in both
putting in for it,
World Wars and the
Brecheisen told a
part played in that by
reporter from the
American servicemen
Chanute Tribune
and women, Americas
back in July. The
Greatest Generation,
medal was sent by
saying the period folthe French Consul
lowing World War II had
General in Chicago,
brought France its first
but Brecheisen said
seven decades of endurit came in the mail
ing peace in more than
after first being
a century. He thanked
returned to France.
Brecheisen for his serThe Legion of
vice, and paid homage to
Honor was estabnearly 10,000 Americans
lished in 1802 by
lost in the war with the
Napoleon Bonaparte.
Nazis who now lay burChevalier, or Knight,
ied in French soil.
is the first of five
degrees of increasUpon his introducing distinction, up to
tion, Brecheisen, just
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
five years shy of 100
11-14-2017 / DANE HICKS Grand Cross.
years old and wounded Brecheisen salutes during the playing I never expected to
see it, Brecheisen
twice during his term in
of The National Anthem during the
said. Thats quite
Europe, spryly climbed
introduction of Fridays ceremonies.
an honor.
the steps to the ACHS
Brecheisen served
Auditorium stage unaswith the Third
sisted.
Hes always been very patriotic, said
SEE BRECHEISEN ON PAGE 6A
his daughter Rosalyn Kellstadt. Because
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
GARNETT
Brigitte
Brecheisen-Huss, the citys
first freshman
commissioner
to be elected
instead
of
appointed
since
2012, defeated
incumbent Gordon
Huss
Blackie
in
last Tuesdays
election in the
first of three contested area ballot races.
It was the first city elec-
tion held since the Kansas
Legislature in 2015 moved city
and school board elections from
April to the general election
in November of odd-numbered
years. Huss will take office in
January.
She defeated Blackie by a
healthy margin, 290-97.
I am incredibly grateful
for the outpouring of support
shown at the polls, Huss said.
This gives me confidence that,
together, we can make great
things happen for our community.
The 387 votes cast in the city
SEE RESULTS ON PAGE 6A
$1,000 prize set in local
Christmas contest
GARNETT Area merchants
are rewarding their customers for their shopping loyalty again this Christmas season as sponsors in
the Reviews Great
Christmas Giveaway
contest which begins
today. Start collecting those participating merchant today
receipts and you may
win a $1,000 grand prize in time
for Christmas shopping!
Now in its 19th year, the
Great Christmas Giveaway
runs today through December
15, with prizes of $50 to be awarded each week and the grand
prize ticket number published
on December 19. Winnings in
the game are spendable only at
SEE CONTEST ON PAGE 4B
Direct mail services. We print and mail your materials anywhere! Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
REVIEW EARLY DEADLINES
The Anderson County Review
will have early deadlines and
the offices of Garnett Publishing
will be closed Thursday, Nov.
23 and Friday, Nov 24. Display
ad deadline will be Tuesday,
Nov. 21 by noon and classified
ads will be due by 10 a.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 22.
BUCK BINGO
Buck Bingo night at Greeley
Elementary School will be
Friday, November 17th from
5:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
ACHS BAND WILL PERFORM
Attention Anderson County!
The ACHS Band will be performing an Electric Light Show
on Tuesday, November 14th
at 6:30 P.M. at the high school
football stadium. This performance is the first of its kind
here in Garnett and everyone
is invited! We hope to see you
there!
RICHMOND MUSEUM
The Richmond Museum is having a chili and soup supper
on Saturday, Nov. 18th from 5
p.m. – 7 p.m. for a donation to
pay for a new floor.
HOLIDAY HOMES TOUR
F.O.L. Holiday Homes Tour will
be Sunday, December 3rd from
12 p.m. – 4 p.m. Tickets are $8
in advance and $10 the day of
the event. Tickets and maps
are available at the library.
SENIOR CENTER
NOVEMBER BIRTHDAYS
The Garnett Senior Center will
celebrate November birthdays
on Wednesday, November
15th. Entertainment will be Gale
Seibert on banjo and vocals
starting at 11 a.m. Anyone 60
or older is invited to attend. If
you plan to eat please call the
day before 785-448-6996. Cost
of meal is a $3.50 donation..
CAFFEINE & COLORS
Caffeine & Colors will take place
at the Garnett Public Library on
Wednesday, Nov 15th at 1 p.m.
All adults are invited to come
enjoy a relaxing afternoon chatting with friends and coloring
away your stress. Coffee, iced
tea, coloring pages, and colored pencils will be provided,
but if you have your own, feel
free to bring them along.
HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE
The Garnett BPW organization has announced that the
Holiday Boutique will NOT be
held this year. Look for this
event to return in December
2018.
DRUG TAKE BACK
The Anderson County Sheriffs
Department has purchased
a drug take-back box using
money collected from registered offenders. It is located
just inside the front office door
of the sheriffs department.
Drop off expired or unused
medication 24 hours a day,
seven days a week.
Remember you are on survelliance camera so do not try
and remove anything from the
box. Do not place needles in
the box. Dispose of sharps by
placing them in plastic laundry
detergent bottles or a plastic
milk jug, secure the lid and
throw them in your trash.
SUICIDE AWARENESS
GROUP 1ST TUESDAYS
SAM – Suicide Awareness
Members, a division of SASSMoKan – meets on the first
Tuesday of the month from
6:30-7:30 at the Garnett
Library located at 125 W 4th
Ave in Garnett. The facilitator
is Lu Ann Nichols, who may
be reached at lu.ann.nichols.1956@gmail.com.
KS-VINE AVAILABLE
Kansas VINE: Victim Information
&
Notification
Everyday
(KS-VINE), is an automated victim notification service. Kansas
VINE is free and anonymous
telephone and online service
that provides victims of crime
and the general public the ability
to search for an offender housed
in a county jail and receive notifications.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
MEETING, OCTOBER 30, 2017
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00 a.m.,
on October 30, 2017, at the County
Commission Room. In attendance
were Jerry Howarter, David Pracht,
and Leslie McGhee. The pledge of
allegiance was recited. Minutes from
the previous meeting were approved
as presented.
Road
Lester Welsh, Road Supervisor,
met with the commission. Discussion
was held on the motor graders and
their engines.
Harris
Residents of Harris and descendants of Roy Monroe who originally granted the land to the City of
Harris met with the commission. They
expressed their concern about the
land being sold to someone who
doesnt want to leave it as a ball field.
Once the title is cleared, the commissioners have an option to grant it back
to Roy Monroe or put it up for bid with
a restrictive covenant of use of a ball
field only. A decision will be made
once the title is cleared on December
11th.
SEK Library
Roger Carswell, SEK Library
Director, met with the commission.
He discussed the SEK library system
and how they appoint the board members. The county officials in which
the member resides must appoint the
individual. The current board member
for Anderson County is Karen Miller
and her 4-year term has expired. She
would like to be reappointed to the
board. Commissioner McGhee moved
and Commissioner Pracht seconded to reappoint Karen Miller to the
Southeast Kansas Library Board. All
voted yes.
Emergency Managment
J.D.
Mersman,
Emergency
Managment Director, met with the
commission. He gave an update
on the monies paying for the radio
upgrade and the grants that are
involved. Discussion was held on how
the communication will be enhanced
with the new system county wide.
Executive Session
Commissioner McGhee moved and
Commissioner Pracht seconded to
enter into executive session for nonelected personnel at 10:45 a.m. for
30 minutes. James Campbell, County
Counselor; Scott Garrett, Solid Waste
Supervisor; Julie Heck, County Clerk;
and all commissioners were present.
Commissioner McGhee moved and
Commissioner Pracht seconded to
reenter into open meeting. All voted
yes. No action taken.
Noxious Weeds
Vernon Yoder, Noxious Weeds
Supervisor, met with the commission.
He presented the 2017 Anderson
County mower data. It was an overview of the costs and savings of
the mowing year. The commissioners
discussed the mowers and a replacement cycle for them.
Executive Session
Commissioner McGhee moved
and Commissioner Pracht seconded
to enter into executive session for
15 minutes for nonelected personnel.
James Campbell, County Counselor;
Vernon Yoder, Noxious Weeds
Supervisor; and all Commissioners
were present. Commissioner McGhee
moved and Commissioner Pracht seconded to reenter into open meeting.
All voted yes. No action taken.
LAND TRANSFERS
Kenneth Sprague and Patricia A.
Fail to Spragues Spread LLC: The
southeast quarter of the northwest
quarter and the east half of the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter
and the east half of the southwest
quarter and the east half of the west
half of the southwest quarter of 12-2320. Beginning at a point on the west
roadway line of US Highway 59, 60
west and 155 south of the northeast
corner of the south half of the southeast quarter of 14-23-20. Thence in
a south and southwesterly direction
along said west highway roadway line
until it intersects the south line of
said section 14, which is also the
Anderson-Allen County line. Thence
west on said section and county line
610. Thence in a northeasterly direction 1,156. Thence east 395. Thence
north 22. Thence east 400 to the
place of beginning. And the southwest
quarter of 27-22-20. And the northwest quarter of 27-22-20.
Kevin Wayne Vencel and Lisa
Marie Vencel to William Starr Jr.: Lots
14, 15, 16, 17 and 18 in Block 16 in
the City of Kincaid.
Hank L. Steinbrook Jr. to Donna
J. Diebolt and Zachary Hubbard: The
north half of lots 7, 8, and 9 in Block 27
of the Railroad Addition to the Town of
Welda.
Connie Gamberel and Robert
Gamberel to Christopher Brian
Gamberel: Lots 4, 5, and 6 in Block 15
in the City of Colony.
Gordon C. Brown to Haley Nicole
Ladewig: Lots 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15
in Block 10 of the Mandovi Addition to
the City of Garnett.
DOMESTIC CASES FILED
The State of Kansas, DCF, and
Tammy M. Winterringer, Garnett, have
filed a petition to determine paternity against Gavino D. Mendoza,
Edwardsville, and Keith J. Dougherty,
Ottawa.
TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS
Gwendolyn J. Sapienza has been
charged with failure to yield at a stop
or yield sign, $183.
Brig R. Merritt has been charged
with speeding 108 mph in a 65 mph
zone, $498.
Janessa Lea Peine has been
charged with failure to follow the basic
rule governing the speed of vehicles,
$183.
Kevin Ray Mahan has been
charged with failure to register a vehicle and failure to have vehicle liability
insurance, $468.
GARNETT POLICE DEPARTMENT
ARRESTS
On November 1, Savanna Garcia,
Ottawa, was arrested for interference
with a law enforcement officer and
purchasing liquor by a minor.
On November 4, Samantha
Macklin, Garnett, was arrested for
possession of drug paraphernalia and
possession of hallucinogenic drugs.
On November 5, Tyler Reynolds,
Garnett, was arrested for domestic
battery and criminal damage to property.
On November 6, Richard Godwin,
Garnett, was arrested for disorderly
conduct.
GARNETT POLICE DEPARTMENT
INCIDENT REPORTS
On October 4, David D. Olsen,
Garnett, was the victim of theft. A
window air conditioner unit, decorative
outdoor fans, and frog cages were
stolen, valued at $215.
On November 2, Russell Rockers,
Garnett, was the victim of theft. A full
propane tank was stolen, valued at
$20.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
DEPARTMENT ARRESTS
On November 1, Gary Wayne
Goodwin, Independence, was booked
into jail as a hold for the City of
Chanute on a warrant.
On November 2, Raymond James
Williams, Paola, was booked into
jail as a hold for the Miami County
Sheriffs Office for possession of hallucinogenic drugs.
On November 3, Samantha Nicole
Macklin, Garnett, was arrested for
possession of hallucinogenic drugs
and possession of drug paraphernalia.
On November 5, Tyler Lee
Reynolds, Garnett, was arrested for
domestic battery and criminal damage
to property.
On November 6, Lexington James
Laiter, Garnett, was arrested for
unlawful sexual relations and unlawful
sexual relations with an inmate.
On November 6, Tavaras Lamar
Hunter, Lawrence, was booked into
jail as a hold for the Douglas County
Sheriffs Department for aggravated
robbery.
On November 6, Curtis Cyle Cooley,
Osawatomie, was booked into jail as a
hold for the Miami County Sheriffs
Office for involuntary manslaughter.
On November 7, James Victor
Haasch, Linn Valley Lakes, was
booked into jail as a hold for the Linn
County Sheriffs Office for domestic
battery and abuse of a child.
On November 7, Darin Ray
Thomsen, Kansas City, was booked
into jail as a hold for the Linn County
Sheriffs Office for possession of opiates.
On November 7, Duell Thomas
Sanders, Kansas City, Mo., was
booked into jail as a hold for the Linn
County Sheriffs Office for a probation
violation.
On November 8, Chad Edward
Lindley, Independence, Mo., was
booked into jail as a hold for the Linn
County Sheriffs Office for rape.
On November 8, Dakota Thomas
Gile, Osawatomie, was booked into
jail as a hold for the Miami County
Sheriffs Office for possession of opiates.
On November 8, Edward Kenneth
Gulley, Osawatomie, was booked into
jail as a hold for the Miami County
Sheriffs Office for battery of a correctional officer.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE
INCIDENT REPORTS
On October 15, Alexis Yvonne
Powell, Garnett, was the victim of
violation of a protection order.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE
ACCIDENT REPORTS
On October 23, a vehicle driven
by Michael Sean Kenyon, Tulsa,
Okla., didnt see the roundabout while
southbound in Highway 59, struck the
curb, traveled across the median, and
struck a highway sign.
On October 28, a vehicle driven by
Ryan N. Gettler, Garnett, struck a deer
while eastbound on 1600 Road.
On October 29, a vehicle driven by
Kaley C. Nilges, Garnett, struck a deer
while southbound on Montana Road.
On November 1, a vehicle driven
by Luther McCutcheon, Houston, Tex.,
crossed the center line and struck
the mirror of a vehicle driven by Eric
Parton, Shawnee, while traveling on
Highway 169.
On November 2, a vehicle driven by
Gwendolyn Sapienza, Colony, failed
to yield while traveling on Highway
169, and was struck by a vehicle driven by David Panich, Framingham, Ma.
On November 3, a vehicle driven
by Stanley Milliken, Garnett, struck a
deer while northbound on Highway 59.
On November 6, a vehicle driven by
Janessa Peine, Garnett, lost control
while adjusting an electronic device,
left the roadway while traveling on
Highway 169, struck a bridge marker,
traveled down an embankment and
stopped against a barbed wire fence.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
John Miller was booked into jail on
February 22, 2017.
Herold Stults was booked into jail
on April 13, 2017.
Jason Wilson was booked into jail
on June 12, 2017.
Daniel Vannorman was booked into
jail on April 13, 2017.
Andrew James Holstine was
booked into jail on July 5, 2017.
William Vandenberg was booked
into jail on August 29, 2017.
Hannah Miller was booked into jail
on October 15, 2017.
Michael Taylor was booked into jail
on October 18, 2017.
Shawn Coleman was booked into
jail on October 24, 2017.
Jon Reed was booked into jail on
November 7, 2017.
Ashley Hobbs was booked into jail
on November 6, 2017.
Lexington Laiter was booked into
jail on November 6, 2017.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL FARM-INS
ROSTER
Kevin Gedrose was booked into jail
on June 21, 2017.
Jacob Matthews was booked into
jail on June 14, 2017.
Wesley Eugene Mull was booked
into jail on June 29, 2017.
Joshua Knapp was booked into jail
on December 9, 2016.
Rhonda Jackson was booked into
jail on July 27, 2016.
Crystal Morrison was booked into
jail on July 12, 2017.
Jason Shadwell was booked into
jail on July 18, 2017.
Amber Lea Adkins was booked into
jail on July 28, 2017.
Seth Herron was booked into jail on
July 22, 2017.
Jack Higginbotham was booked
into jail on June 21, 2017.
Dylan Guinn was booked into jail on
September 1, 2017.
James Johnson was booked into
jail on September 22, 2017.
Jimmie Miller was booked into jail
on September 28, 2017.
John Lane was booked into jail on
October 6, 2017.
Benjamin Lewis was booked into
jail on October 10, 2017.
Travis Myers was booked into jail
on October 12, 2017.
Brandon Vanderbur was booked
into jail on October 12, 2017.
Colton Dunnagan was booked into
jail on September 27, 2017.
Cody Derry was booked into jail on
October 23, 2017.
Dakota Gile was booked into jail on
October 25, 2017.
Edward Gulley was booked into jail
on October 31, 2017.
Yesake Teshome was booked into
jail on October 27, 2017.
Dakota Willis was booked into jail
on October 27, 2017.
Rodney Blevins was booked into
jail on October 27, 2017.
Temprance Eller was booked into
jail on October 31, 2017.
Raymond Williams was booked into
jail on November 2, 2017.
Chad Lindley was booked into jail
on November 8, 2017.
Tavaras Hunter was booked into jail
on November 6, 2017
Kansas Farm Bureau
plans 99th annual event
More than 800 Farm Bureau gency management and holiday
members from across Kansas cooking.
will gather in Manhattan Dec.
At 11 a.m., the second round
3-5 for their organizations 99th of workshops begin and include
annual meeting.
crop insurance, a KFB Legal
Held at the Manhattan Foundation update, farm bill and
Conference Center, the meeting transportation regulations.
will discuss public policy issues,
The general session begining
craft Farm Bureau resolutions at 1:30 p.m. on Dec. 4 will feature
and workshops on water, farm county Farm Bureau awards for
bill, crop insurance and estate excellence, new horizon awards
planning will be offered.
and progress awards. Graduates
Speakers at this years from class III of Leadership KFB
meeting include Kansas State will be recognized. They include
Mindy
Andres,
University
Morris County; Alfred
President Gen. Speakers at this
Crawshaw, Wilson
Richard
B. years meeting
County; Jessica Flory,
Myers and Mary
Douglas
County;
Kay Thatcher, include Kansas
Jacquelyne Leffler,
Senior Director State University
Lyon County; Leigh
of Congressional President Gen.
Affairs
for Richard B. Myers and Ann Maurath, Logan
County; and Jackie
A m e r i c a n Mary Kay Thatcher,
Farm
Bureau
Mundt, Pratt County.
Senior Director of
Federation.
After the conThe meeting Congressional Affairs clusion of the generbegins the eve- for American Farm
al session, the third
ning of Sun., Bureau Federation.
round of workshops
Dec. 3 with the
will begin at 3 p.m.
annual banquet.
and include an update
Kansas Farm Bureau President on the farm economy, ideas for
Rich Felts will deliver his state membership growth for county
of agriculture address followed Farm Bureaus, an overview of
by recognizing 10 Kansas farm the NASS census and survey profamilies for their service to grams and agritourism.
Farm Bureau and their comThe fourth and final workmunities. Jerry McReynolds, shop sessions will begin at 4:15
Rooks County, will receive the p.m. and include ways to tell the
Distinguished Service Award.
story of agriculture, an update
On Mon., Dec. 4, the morn- on unmanned aircraft systems,
ing general session will include a legislative update, ways to
awards for KFBs Friends of engage young leaders and farm
Agriculture including Alan transition.
Boultinghouse,
Crawford
On Monday evening, a fundCounty; Marjorie Cartmill, raiser for Kansas Farm Bureaus
Harper County; Mel Heddlesten, Foundation for Agriculture and
Haskell County; Harold & Legal Foundation will be held
Jeanne Mertz, Riley County at Kansas State Universitys
(posthumously); Warren Parker, Forum Hall. The event will feaRiley County; and Mick Rausch, ture dueling pianos. The event
Sedgwick County. Marvin and is open to the public. Tickets can
Twylia Sekavec from Ness be purchased at www.kfb.org/
County will receive the Kansas fundraiser.
Farm Bureau Natural Resources
On Tue., Dec. 5, more than
Award. This award goes to the 400 voting delegates will debate
farm family who exemplifies and adopt policy statements for
good land stewardship.
2018 and elect the KFB vice presThe first round of workshops ident and board members from
will begin at 9:45 a.m. and run the odd-number Farm Bureau
through 10:45 a.m. Topics include districts.
water, using social media, emer-
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2012 Ford
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2015 Buick
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Darin Thomsen was booked into jail
on November 7, 2017.
Duell Sanders was booked into jail
on November 7, 2017.
James Haasch was booked into jail
on November 7, 2017.
Hunter McQueen was booked into
jail on November 8, 2017.
Curtis Cooley was booked into jail
on November 6, 2017.
21,350 Miles, Power
Seat, Bluetooth,
Backup Camera,
Wi-Fi Hotspot,
18-inch Aluminum
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$13,400
67,500 Miles,
Rear Spoiler,
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Activated Systems.
2011 Chevrolet
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84,500 Miles,
Leather Seats,
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for Phone,
Power Liftgate.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
WILLIAMS
FEBRUARY 16, 2962 – NOVEMBER 9, 2017
Michael Allen Mike
Williams,
55,
Emporia,
passed away at Stormont-Vail
Hospital, Topeka on Thursday,
November 9, 2017.
Mike was born at Columbia,
Missouri on February 16, 1962,
the son of Chuck and Joan
(Robertson) Williams, who died
earlier. Mike married Joan
Olsen in Florida on March 9,
1998. She survives.
Cremation is planned.
Obituary charges: Full obituaries are published as submitted in the
Review at the rate of 15 per word and include a photo at no charge.
Death notices are published free and inlucde name, date of birth and
death, name of parents, spouse and service information.
Questions? Call (785) 448-3121.
Research finds substance abuse varies widely
in association with child abuse, neglect
LAWRENCE Alcohol and
other drug use are regularly
linked to child abuse or neglect
in families, but simply assuming
the former causes the latter is
not taking a deep enough look. A
University of Kansas professor
has authored a pair of studies
examining how a range of parental alcohol and substance use
behaviors are related to abusive
and neglectful parenting behaviors and argues that a more thorough understanding can help
The words we never want to hear
Perhaps one of the most
complimentary things anyone
can say about you is he or she
has a passion for what they
do. Passion tends to run deep
in people. People who are passionate about things tend to
rise to the top and become leaders. People are willing to follow someone who is completely sold out to their cause. Such
a man was the Apostle Paul.
Initially Saul, later called Paul,
which was part of his Roman
name, passions were misdirected. In Acts chapter 9:1-2 we read
that , Saul was still breathing
out murderous threats against
the Lords disciples. He went to
the high priest and asked him
for letters to the synagogues in
Damascus, so that if he found
any there who belonged to the
Way, whether man or woman
he might take them as prisoners
to Jerusalem.
At the height of Pauls campaign of repression against the
Way he was confronted on the
road to Damascus by the risen
Christ. In an instant Pauls life
was changed. Pauls passion for
the Jewish law was replaced by
a passion for Jesus Christ. He
became the leading champion
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
of the cause he had tried to overthrow. Paul ultimately became
Gods voice to the Gentiles.
Perhaps an even greater
attribute to possess is compassion. In Luke chapter 10 we
read the parable of the good
Samaritan where a man traveling from Jerusalem to Jericho
falls into the hands of robbers.
Three men come upon this man
but only one stopped to help
him. Two of the men, a priest
and a Levite passed by and left
the man. A Samaritan had compassion for him and took him
and bandaged his wounds and
took him to an inn.
In Matthew 20 as Jesus is
leaving Jericho he comes upon
two blind men who plead for
him to have mercy on them. In
Matthew 20:34, we read, Jesus
3A
REMEMBRANCES
had compassion on them and
touched their eyes. Immediately
they received their sight and followed him. Compassion is a
wonderful attribute to possess,
however God seems to place a
limit on his own compassion in
Exodus 33:19b when he says to
Moses, I will have compassion
on whom I will have compassion . I believe what God is
saying here is explained somewhat in Matthew 7:22-23 when
Jesus says, Many will say to
me on that day, Lord, Lord, did
we not prophecy in your name,
and in your name drive out
demons and perform many miracles. Then I (Jesus) will tell
them plainly, I never knew you.
Away from me you evil doers.
To me this is one of the most
sobering texts in the Bible. The
clock is ticking. If ever there
was a time for passion and compassion from Gods people that
time is now. I cant imagine
how it would feel to hear these
words from Jesus.
Author of the book On the
Other Side of the Door
Like David Bilderback on
Facebook
address the associated problems
to better serve families.
Research has tended to view
parental substance abuse as
any harmful use or substance
use disorder. That has limited
understanding of how a range
of behaviors can contribute to
child maltreatment. Nancy Jo
Kepple, assistant professor of
social welfare, has authored two
studies examining data on severity of alcohol and other drug use
among parents and the type of
child maltreatment behaviors
associated with them. She argues
that the current ways of studying substance abuse and child
maltreatment are inadequate
because they frame substance
use behaviors too narrowly.
Very few of us have tried to
look beyond a basic way to measure substance use. Some of the
confusion regarding the relationship between parental substance
use and child maltreatment has
been around the fact that we look
at it as an either-or proposition,
Kepple said. By definition, drug
use varies widely and along
many dimensions.
For her studies, published
in Substance Use & Misuse and
Child Abuse & Neglect, respectively, Kepple analyzed data from
the National Survey of Child and
Adolescent Well-Being. The data
is a panel survey of children sampled from nine regions across
the United States identified as
being at high risk for experiencing maltreatment based on child
welfare investigation or involvement. For the studies, the sample
included children who were not
removed from their homes but
had at least one investigation
of child maltreatment conducted
by a child welfare professional.
The parents reported on their
substance use, substance-related
problems and parenting behaviors during three interviews conducted over three years.
The analysis showed that parents who reported at least light
to moderate drinking of alcohol
or more intensive alcohol and
other drug use were associated
with a higher annual frequency
of physical or emotional abuse
behaviors compared with those
who reported no past year use of
any alcohol or drugs. In contrast,
only those who reported past
year substance use disorders
were associated with a higher
annual frequency of neglect compared with other substance use
behaviors. The findings show it
is not enough to simply assume
substance use alone will lead to
the same problems for all families.
Many caseworkers and social
work professionals are doing
great work adopting a more
nuanced view of substance use
when working with families,
Kepple said. But improving our
approach in research could help
provide practitioners with better
data and support about how to
screen and assess for potentially problematic behaviors before
they escalate to maltreatment.
Additionally, this information
could help professionals in identifying families who may benefit from help early, preventing
such negative behaviors before
they happen, lessening the trauma to children and the need to
remove them from their homes.
Evaluating parents for early or
high-risk substance use behaviors before they reach criteria
for use disorders could greatly
assist in efforts to prevent systems from being overburdened
by escalating substance-related
problems, such as the current
opioid epidemic faced in the
United States.
Right now, the news is,
What are we going to do with
these kids who are losing parents or being removed from their
families because of the opioid
epidemic? Kepple said. My
argument is we should look at
what we can do to help parents
early on and help prevent these
problems from escalating in the
first place.
Increased understanding of
the parenting behaviors associated with different aspects
of substance use, such as frequency, type or associated problems in functioning, could help
social work develop more effective screening, assessment and
interventions. Families affected
by substance-using parents may
require flexible and adaptive
response. Kepple said in future
research she hopes to examine
different aspects of substance
use, such as the experiences of
parents in long-term addiction
recovery, and add to the body
of literature on how and why
certain aspects of substance use
may contribute to problematic
parenting behaviors.
Ultimately, Kepple said, the
findings show the importance
of studying the unique experiences of substance-using parents
across a range of behaviors. This
means thinking about them as a
unique population rather than
collapsing them into a general substance-using population
or general parenting population. Its about combining the
best approaches from addiction
research and child maltreatment
research to move our understanding forward.
We can strive to improve how
we measure both substance use
and parenting behaviors in the
research literature, Kepple
said. Its hard to do, and my
studies are far from perfect. But
if we make it a priority, we can
greatly improve our understanding and give guidance back to the
field in a way that helps to better
serve families.
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday 9am
Wednesday 7:30pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 304-6581
6×12 Church
Directory
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
Elder Planning Specialists
Annuities
Medicare Supplement
Long Term Care
Scott D. Schulte CSA
(785) 448-6191
114 W. 4th Garnett
340 E. South St.
Richmond, Kansas 66080
(785) 835-6135
Hwy 59 at Hwy 31 GARNETT
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Service 10:00am
Small Groups 6:30pm
Bible Studies Wednesday 7pm
258 W. Park Road, Garnett, Ks.
(785) 448-3208
Interim Pastor – David Childers
Childrens Pastor -Sarah Pridey
LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45am
Sunday Worship 11am, 6pm
Wednesday Bible Study 6pm
Park Road, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3558
Pastors – Glenda & Joe Johnson
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
Bible Study – Wednesday 7pm
(785) 448-6930
Hwy 31 & Grant, Garnett, KS
KINCAID SELMA UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Worship 9 am
Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
709 E. 5th St., Kincaid, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
Church Office (620) 439-5773
ST. THERESE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Worship Service Saturday 5pm
Richmond, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
(785) 835-6273
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9:28 am
Sunday Worship 10:28 am
Childrens Church 10:30 am
Wed. Evening Bible Study 6:28 pm
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
(620) 228-2844
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am, Morning Svc. 10:30am
Evening Svc. 6pm, Youth Mtg. 7pm
Wednesday Prayer Meeting 6:30pm
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Timothy Conner
BEACON OF TRUTH
Saturday Sabbath Worship 9:30am
Saturday Evening Service 6pm
(except 4th Saturday)
Wednesday Evening Prayer Svc. 7:00pm
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Andrew Zoll
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 10am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Pastor Chris Goetz
Children & Youth Pastor – Brett Hartman
COLONY COMMUNITY CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9:30am
Sunday School 10:30am
Risen & Rockin Sunday School Service
10:35am
(620) 852-3237
Colony, KS 66015
Pastor – Steve Bubna
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH KINCAID
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:45am, Eve Worship 7pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7pm
3rd & Osage, Kincaid, KS
(620) 439-5311
Pastor – David Hill
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15am
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am/Thurs 7pm
Chancel Bells Wed 6pm
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
Jr. & Sr. UMYF Sundays
U.M. Women 1st Wednesday
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
Reverend – Bill Driver
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:45am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
WELDA UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
GREELEY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship 9am
Bible Study (Teens, Adults) 10am
Sunday School (Children) 10am
204 N. Main, PO Box 37, Greeley, KS 66033
(913) 755-2225
Pastor – Bill Driver
MONT IDA CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 448-3947
1300 & Broomall Rd, Welda, KS 66091
Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Vernon Yoder
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Fr. Adam Wilczak
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAHS
WITNESSES
Sunday Public Meeting 10am
Sunday Watchtower Study 10:50am
Tuesday Ministry School 7:30pm
Tuesday Service Meeting 8:20pm
Thursday Congregation Book Study 8pm
704 Westgate – Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6755
HOLY ANGELS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass: Saturday 5:30pm, Sunday 10am
(785) 448-3846
514 E. 4th, Garnett, KS
Fr. Adam Wilczak
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Saturday 5:00pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
NEW LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Worship 11am, 1:30pm
705 S. Westgate (end of 7th St.)
Garnett, KS
(785) 204-1769
Pastor – Chadd Lemaster
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 5pm
Fr. Quentin Schmitz
(620) 364-2416
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email review@garnett-ks.com
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Anderson
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News
Mon – Fri
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Country Favorites
Wilson Chiropractic Clinic
Lynn A. Wilson D.C., P.A.
Treatment For Your Back & Joint Pain
Sports, Auto and Work Injury Care
414 W. First Garnett
(785) 448-6151
Heating &
Air Conditioning
(785) 448-3235
519 W. First Ave. Garnett
UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Sunday School 9:30am
Worship Service 10:30am
2nd & Pine, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Cody Knapik
COLONY UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
TRUE HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Worship Gathering Sunday 6:30pm
1020 S. Westgate Rd.
Garnett, KS
(785) 409-3595
truehopecommunitychurch@gmail.com
Pastor – Tony Thornton
For additions, subtractions or changes to your
church information, a church official may
contact the Review at (785) 448-3121.
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
OPINION
Burying the Trumpconomy
You have to dig pretty deep amid the muck of
the anti-Trump media reports to find it, but its
there the story of just how good the American
economy is doing since Trumps election a year
ago.
In fact, liberals in the Trump-hating media
corps spread the news as sparingly as they possibly can, rarely allowing the sunshine of the
countrys economic picture to shine through
onto their latest incanted demonization of the
president. Youll notice the story instead is a
looping narrative of factless, sourceless stories
on Trump colluding with Russians, the rebuke
handed the president from some Democrat election wins last week, or Trump and the Japanese
Prime Minister dumping their boxes of fish food
into a koi pond. Does the mainstream media
really have to wonder why we dont trust them
anymore?
The burgeoning economy is rarely discussed,
usually only amid daily stock reports on the performance of the markets and in some obscure
monthly unemployment report (which many
mainstream media outlets have now taken to
ignoring altogether).
Its clear the news about the Trumpconomy
isnt going to be heralded with trumpets at the
NBC building in New York. Its going to sort of
slip out between the lines
First lets look at jobs. Last week it was
announced the U.S. unemployment rate had
dropped 7/10 of one percent since January (4.8
percent to 4.1 percent), which translates to 1.1
million Americans back on the employment
rolls. If you were among the ranks of the unemployed during the Great Recession, you know
the difference in morale, self esteem and lifestyle which finding a job after protracted unemployment can make. Since Trump took office, 1.1
million people and families have experienced
that same sense of substance.
The number of people working part time
jobs for economic reasons last month (in other
words, not because they chose part time work
typically what we would call underemployed
workers) declined by 369,000 to 4.8 million, and
over the past 12 months since President Trump
was elected, that number is down 1.1 million as
well. Overall, the November report revealed the
best U.S. employment picture since 2001 or as
millennials describe it the prehistoric times
before smartphones.
Perhaps buried even deeper in the bowels of
those mainstream news copy piles is an expla-
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
nation of just what those record setting gains
in the stock market mean for the majority of
Americans.
More than half of Americans far and above
the fabled 1 percenters have money invested
in market vehicles of some form or another.
Anyone with an Individual Retirement Account
(IRA), pensions, mutual funds, 401(k) accounts,
529 education accounts or Exchange Traded
Funds even about 20 percent of those earning
$30,000 or less has seen the benefit. For those
investors, a stock market that has soared some
25 percent since Trumps election to a record-setting score card of 23,000 is a new source of confidence and economic stability. That $5.4 trillion
in market gains spread out across more than
half the population is a fertile and solidifying
backdrop for an economy that believes in itself
and thats one of the most important attributes
of an economy, after all.
Despite attempts by the Trump-hating media
to discredit the president at every turn, those
economic indicators are clear proof that the
American business community, which invests
and creates jobs when it senses opportunity, is
indeed enamored with the prospects the president presents. Its all a far cry from the nearly
400 point tumble the markets took the day after
President Obamas second election win.
This economic boom is an amazing story of
benefit for our country and for the people who
live here, but its being greatly sacrificed to
provide airtime favoring the social and political agenda of a corrupt elite caste which really
wishes this good news wasnt happening.
More than half of Americans know the true
story. And their wallets know it too.
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.
We recently had friends who came to Garnett to
purchase a home and work. They checked out the
schools, very good. As they left the grade school
they noticed a home across the road with some
construction equipment. They decided to contact these people to do some excavating on the
new home property they intended to purchase.
Next they checked out the grocery store, which
was also very good, and bought a local paper.
After reading a critical article in the newspaper
concerning the construction equipment across
from the grade school they asked us about it. We
told them it was an ongoing thing in the Phone
Forum and showed them other articles on the
subject. They decided they did not want to live
in a town where a sniping, vengeful pompus
busy-body may take it upon themselves to run a
newspaper hate campaign against a law abiding
A call to action: Two very American heroes in Texas
Before the Texas church shooter encountered any police officers, he was run off a highway and dead. He had been shot and chased by
two private citizens who took it upon themselves to respond to a heinous crime when no
one with a badge was anywhere to be found.
The church shooting in Sutherland Springs,
Texas is another heartbreaking chapter in the
countrys epidemic of mass shootings. Devin
Patrick Kelley shot and killed 26 people and
wounded another 20, accounting for nearly
everyone in the small church. The senseless
cruelty is hard to fathom.
The response by the two bystanders who
refused to stand by is something else entirely. It was a characteristically small-town
American act of self-reliance that shows, no
matter how tattered our civil society may be,
it still produces people who will risk life and
limb for others without hesitation, unbidden
by anything other than their own sense of
obligation.
When Stephen Willeford, 55, heard of the
shooting, he left his house barefoot with his
AR-15 and started exchanging fire with Kelley
outside the church. An expert shot, Willeford
hit Kelley and reportedly aimed for the gaps
on his body armor. When Kelley got in an SUV
and sped off, Willeford jumped in Johnnie
Langendorffs truck and told him to give chase.
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
Langendorff, 27, didnt ask any questions.
He followed Kelley at 95 mph down the highway, until the perpetrator ran off the road.
Willeford jump out of the truck and rested his
rifle on top of Langendorffs hood and shouted
for Kelley to get out. The murderer apparently took his own life with a gunshot.
In his interviews, Langendorff, with a
scraggly beard and a tattoo of a bull skull on
his neck, invariably wears a cowboy hat. He is
polite and matter of fact (he said chase him
and so thats what I did — I just chased him),
implying that anyone would have done it.
This isnt true, although it is almost certainly more true in Americas out-of-the-way
places. Self-help is imperative in these areas
because the alternative is no help, at least not
on a timely basis. Small towns might not even
have a police department.
This gets to one of the root causes of
Americas gun culture: In swaths of the country, a gun isnt an optional extra layer of
self-protection, but a necessary first defense.
Rates of gun ownership are highest in remote,
sparsely populated states like Alaska, Idaho,
West Virginia and North Dakota. In a poll of
Texans a few years ago, nearly half of the people said they or a family member owned a gun.
Any gun-control measure that is sweeping
enough to make a dent in the countrys gun
stock and render gun ownership difficult
enough to, at the margins, keep firearms out
of the hands of psychopaths will inevitably
affect law-abiding people as well. In places like
rural Texas, that would rightly be considered
a serious imposition. Without a gun, if something goes wrong, the only option is sitting
and waiting for the authorities to show up.
And the likes of Stephen Willeford and
Johnnie Langendorff, obviously, arent the
waiting kind.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
School funding: How much more is enough?
After the Legislature increased the money
spent on elementary and secondary education
by $295 million this year and next, and raised
Kansans income taxes by about $600 million,
the thought was that this would be a relatively uneventful 2018 session which starts in two
months.
Well, that all went away last week.
Remember the Oct. 2 decision by the Kansas
Supreme Court that the school finance bill
is unconstitutional, apparently because it
doesnt send enough state money to school
districts? The court didnt say just how short
it believed that $194 million this year and
$100 million more in the next year is, but best
guesses are at least $300 million more will be
needed to satisfy the court.
And remember last week, when the states
cadre of economic/financial/budget experts
(the Consensus Revenue Estimating Group)
predicted that the state would receive $230 million more than expected in tax revenues over
the next two fiscal years? There is, of course,
that unseen asterisk over that estimate; its
just a guess and might be more or less than
$230 million and were not going to know just
how much money will be received until probably next June when lawmakers hope to be
long gone from the Capitol and campaigning
for election or re-election.
That relatively simple upcoming session has
evaporated. Spend more money on schools
even the expected, but not yet banked new
moneyand it probably isnt enough to meet
the courts still undefined expectations for
providing a suitable education for the states
children with equal tax effort by the states
school districts.
How much more money is enough? Dont
know.
But the court made clear that more money
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
is needed and failure to meet whatever amount
the court finds adequate would make the
black-robed clan complicit in an unconstitutional system. Theyre apparently not going
there.
So, what happens next session?
Well, it could be that the Legislature will
rewrite the school finance formula to spread
what it last year considered a pretty good
boost in funding some different way. There
are a few little touch-ups that helped get this
years plan passed that could be removed,
but those little provisions are part of what
got the K-12 formula passed in the first place.
Hmmm
Or the Legislature could put whatever unexpected money the revenue estimators predict
will flow to the state into schools, under some
formula that the court likes. Maybe thats
enough, maybe not.
That means no new money for anything
else, ranging from salaries for prison guards
to new prisons to efforts to maintain the avail-
ability and quality of water, or health care for
the poor or, well, whatever else you think is
important.
And theres the most controversial problem-solver, somehow redefining in the constitution the states obligation to finance schools
and the courts ability to determine whether
enough is being spent on K-12 education from
border to border.
That challenge to the Supreme Courts
authority to close schools by declaring the
appropriation for K-12 unconstitutional is the
big fight. Restricting the courts authority to
reject the Legislatures school funding formula would require two-thirds votes in the
House and Senate to forward a constitutional
amendment to the voters who then would need
to approve it. Thats a big job.
Remember the chants about the courts closing schools? They would get louder if a constitutional amendment to strip the court of
its school-closing authority were put on the
same election ballot on which Kansans elect
statewide officials including the governor and
members of the House of Representatives.
Or maybe, just maybe, someone figures out
just how much schools spend on football and
basketball and other non-classroom activities
not strictly linked to reading and long division
and suggests that the state not contribute to
those activities.
Nothing is getting simpler here, and the
boosted revenue estimate isnt going to solve
this. Well see what the Legislature comes up
with, wont we
Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawvers
Capitol Reportto learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit
the website at www.hawvernews.com
citizen. They bought a home near Burlington.
Anyone who lives in Garnett and wants to sell
their home will take an enormous loss if their
neighbors home has the junk around it like the
house across the highway from the grade school.
Come on Garnett, lets all clean up the clutter in
our yards.
Mr. Hicks I think the picture of the dead deer
poking out of the front of the car was just a little
bit too much. Are newspaper sales so low that
you have to stoop to gross pictures on the front
page just to get the public to buy? I remember
from my high school journalism class the idea
of public standards, and I do not believe you
are reflecting the public standards of our community when you show a picture of the carcass
of a dead deer stuck in the front of a car on the
front page of the newspaper. Perhaps you should
go back and retake your own high school journalism class, if you ever had one to begin with.
Thank you.
Quotables:
I have heard there are troubles of more than
one kind. Some come from ahead and some come
from behind. But Ive bought a big bat. Im all
ready you see. Now my troubles are going to
have troubles with me!
Dr. Seuss
Contact your elected officials:
5th Dist. Rep. Lynn
Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 225-6601
President Donald Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
@realDonaldTrump
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
5th Dist. Rep Kevin Jones
300 SW 10th St. Rm 151-S
Topeka, Ks. 66612
(785) 296-6287
kevin.jones@house.ks.gov
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774,
pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2016.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
A look into a two day historical
archaelogical project – Part 1
Monday, Nov. 6, 2017
DIGGING UP THE PAST
I arrived home at
11:30 am from Hays,
Ks., where I participated in a two day historical archaeological
metal detecting project.
I left Garnett at noon
on Friday Nov. 3rd for
Hays, Ks. Here are a
few things I noticed as
Henry Roeckers
I drove along acres and
Call (785) 504-4722 for
acres of unharvested
local archeology information.
soybeans and milo.
The further west I
drove, the drier it became. sleet shower near Russell, Ks.
Some fields are even being
I arrived in Hays at 4:35
baled for cattle feed instead pm, checked into my motel
of harvested. Lots of fields (really a great room) and soon
are being prepared for wheat met three other members of
planting, but a lot of the our metal detecting team who
wheat that has been planted were staying there. Around
and is up is already turning 7:00 pm we all went out to
yellow and very thin. They dinner at a nice Mexican
need moisture really bad.
Restaurant.
I also noticed the huge
After eating and visiting
number of fall baby calves, we returned to our motel for
hundreds of wind towers near a good nights sleep before
Salina and limestone posts reporting to the field in the
still standing. The only wild- morning at 8:00 am.
life I saw were numerous red
To be Contd.
tailed Hawks sitting along the
roadside, waiting for a snack.
Respectfully submitted by:
The only excitement I had
Henry Roeckers 7 Nov. 2017
on my trip was driving into a
10 years ago: Picketing at soldiers funeral
prompts Garnett to look into ways to stop them
10 years ago…
The return of a Parker soldiers body for burial in the
local area over the weekend
has prompted the City of
Garnett to begin research on
an ordinance which would
restrict picketing at funerals
in the city. Cities across the
county have enacted similar
ordinances in response to picketing at funerals of soldiers
by members of a Topeka antigay hate group, the Westboro
Baptist Church.
20 years ago…
A tip to a Garnett gun shop
owner led to arrests of two
Garnett men on Wednesday,
and the possible resolution
of some 13 burglary and theft
incidents in the county since
last summer. Garnett Police
Chief Dan Dietz said officers
have recovered numerous
items of evidence and stolen
property in connection with
the arrests of Damean White,
18, and LeWayne McGuire,
20, both of Garnett. The two
men were charged with felony
counts of aggravated burglary
and theft.
30 years ago…
Residents of the county will
Another K-12 Funding
Record Set in Kansas
T
h
e
Department
of Education
estimates
Kansas school
spending will
increase by
$387.5
million this year
and set a
new per-pupil record of
$13,647. Total
spending of
$6.472 billion is also a new
record. The estimate was
emailed Monday morning to
the Kansas Policy Institute by
KSDE Deputy Commissioner
Dale Dennis.
State aid will jump by $316
million this year; KSDE says
roughly $195 million is attributable to funding added in the
new formula and a $121 million increase in KPERS pension funding. Federal aid is
only expected to increase by
$3 million but local revenue,
most of which is property
taxes, will increase by about
$69 million.
Dave Trabert, president
of Kansas Policy Institute,
offered this upon seeing the
updated estimates, While
Kansas taxpayers continue to fund record-level K-12
spending, the real educational crisis is often missed – low
achievement levels overall
and horrendous achievement gaps for low income
students. The time it would
take to close achievement
gaps for low income students
in Kansas once was measured in decades, but despite
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LOCAL
record-setting funding (nearly $2 billion more since 2005),
the time must now be measured in centuries.
Trabert continued, This
record-setting
spending
wasnt enough to satisfy the
Kansas Supreme Court when
they all but demanded that
more must be spent. Doubling
the state school property tax
or raising the state sales tax to
the highest rate in the nation
might appease the court but
it wont make a dent in the
staggering achievement gaps
facing our state.
Per-pupil spending would
be even higher if not for a
somewhat artificial, one-time
increase in full time equivalent enrollment related to
funding for full day kindergarten. Most school districts
provided full day kindergarten in the past but students
were counted as only halftime because funding was
only provided for a half-day;
districts used other funding
(or a few charged tuition) to
make up the difference. The
new formula provides funding for a full day of kindergarten so students now count
as full time instead of half
time, and the Department of
Education says this change
added about 15,600 students
to the FTE count. Otherwise,
enrollment is expected to
decline by about 1,000 students.
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
THAT WAS THEN
Melissa Hobbs
SEND LOCAL HISTORY PHOTOS, INFORMATION TO
REVIEW@GARNETT-KS.COM
get the chance to take part in
a project they helped to create as the Kansas Lottery officially begins today, Thursday,
November 12. In November
of 1986, 514,273 Kansas, or 65
percent of the voting population, said they wanted the
state to become involved with
the lottery system. The first
project of the Kansas Lottery
is an instant winner game in
which for a buck a resident
can purchase a ticket from a
retailer, scratch off the latex
covering, and reveal a possible
prize. Retailers in the area selling tickets are Sherwood Inn
& Kings Lounge, Derby, Eds
Phillips 66, Caseys, Penns,
Apco, AF Super, Askins-Beller
Liquor, and Wood Oil.
40 years ago…
Social security benefits were
being paid to residents of
Anderson County at the rate
of $394,684 a month at the start
of 1977, according to Dusty
Rhoads, social security manager in Ottawa. Social security
benefits can be paid to retired
person age 62 and over, to
workers who became severely
disabled before age 65, and to
survivors of deceased workers. They can also be paid to
certain dependents of a worker who has retired, become
disabled, or died. Of the 2,199
social security beneficiaries
living in Anderson County,
1,275 are retired workers, 77
are disabled workers, and 328
persons are receiving benefits
as the wives or husband of
retired or disabled workers.
Widows, widowers, and dependent parents of deceased workers number 302. The countys
total population is 8,314.
100 years ago…
Reports have been received
from all the towns in Anderson
County this week that there
is very little coal in the county. Most of the dealers report
no coal and say the coal companies are refusing to take
orders. This situation has
been reported to the state fuel
administrator, who will take
immediate action to relieve the
situation, but the people over
the county are urged to substitute other fuel for coal as much
as possible. As we have a good
supply of gas and wood, we
should use them and remember that other parts of the state
do not have the gas and wood.
The importance of safety on the farm
While a farm or ranch can
be the most wonderful place
in the world to raise a family,
it comes with its own special
set of hazards that dont exist
anywhere else.
In 2015, 401 farmers and
farm workers died from a
work-related injury, resulting in a fatality rate of 19.2
deaths per 100,000 workers.
Transportation incidents,
which include tractor overturns, were the leading cause
of death for these farmers
and farm workers.
On average, 113 youth
less than 20 years of age die
annually from farm-related
injuries in the United States.
Most of these deaths occurring to youth 16-19 years of
age.
Of the leading sources of
fatal injuries to youth, 23
percent involved machinery
(including tractors), 19 percent involved motor vehicles
(including ATVs) and 16 percent were drowned.
Slowing this trend is a
never-ending challenge. It
is also an opportunity every
day.
Children and families
play, live and work on the
farm. Theres no getting
away from the machinery.
This same machinery is
always there and it doesnt
have a heart.
Farm machinery is made
to cut, chop and grind and
it wont distinguish between
crop tissue and human flesh.
Thats why producers must
use their heads, practice
safety and stay out of harms
way.
INSIGHT
JOHN SCHLAGECK, Kansas Farm Bureau
When it comes to the education process of farm safety,
seek out programs offered
by farm organizations
like Kansas Farm Bureau.
Commodity groups may offer
safety instruction as well.
Men, women and children
should attend such learning sessions whenever such
opportunities exist. This
should be a priority for all
who operate tractors, combines, balers, augers and
other machinery.
Kansas Farm Bureaus
safety education arsenal is
filled with a series of displays
that are graphic and show
amputations caused by various types of farm machine.
The idea behind such safe-
ty demonstrations is to offer
safety awareness before a
farmer or rancher needs it.
Everyone becomes a safety advocate after an accident. Farmers and ranchers
should think and practice
safety every moment of every
day.
Not enough time and haste
are two of the main reasons
farmers wind up in accidents. The reason most farm
fatalities are male is because
more men handle the equipment.
Farm safety is not always
an easy message for farmers
and ranchers to implement
in the workplace. However,
the point is to think and plan
to stay healthy, active and
safe in what can be a potentially hazardous environment.
John Schlageck is a leading
commentator on agriculture
and rural Kansas. Born and
raised on a diversified farm
in northwestern Kansas, his
writing reflects a lifetime of
experience, knowledge and
passion.
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421 S. Maple Garnett, KS 66032 (785) 448-3131
111 E. 4th Ave. Garnett (785) 448-2284
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6A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
LOCAL
First quarter coming to a close for
Crest students – Its an exciting
time at Crest, says superintendent
Calendar
Nov. 15-Lions Club, United
Methodist Church, basement,
7 p.m.; 15-County bus to Iola,
phone 24 hrs. before you need a
ride 785-448-4410 any weekday;
20-Seekers Not Slackers 4-H
Club, Lone Elm Community
Building, 7 p.m.; Jolly Dozen
Club, 7 p.m.
School Calendar
Nov.13-high school scholars
at Marmaton Valley, 4 p.m.;
middle school basketball at
Marmaton Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Meal Site
Nov. 10-taco salad with
cheese, pinto beans, lettuce,
tortilla chips, sunshine fruit;
13-Swiss steak, au gratin potato, winter blend veggies, wheat
bread, plums; 15-Birthday mealfried chicken breast, mashed
potatoes, gravy, green beans,
roll, cake, ice cream. Phone 620852-3457 for meal reservations.
Christian Church
The Nov. 5 sermon was
given by Chase Riebel.
Mens Bible Study-Tuesday
Morning, 7 a.m.; Small GroupTuesdays at 7 p.m. (Wittmers);
Wednesdays at 7 p.m. (Brant
McGhees), or Thursdays
at 6:30 p.m. (Gillilands) for
Grace is Greater.
Nov.
18-Harvest Feast at 5 p.m. at the
City Hall Community Room.
A good sized crowd attended
the Hayrack Ride and Picnic
Sunday evening at Steve and
Lynette Prasko home.
Cowboy Church
At High Point Cowboy
Church Nov. 5 reading from
Ephesians 1:17-23, Pastor Jon
Petty said believers received
Gods spirit when they were
born again and asked what
are you doing with it?
Saturday, November 11,
Toronto Cowboy Church will
be hosting a Fall Roundup
Fun Day for the family at
the arena with games, races,
events, music and food from
10-5 pm; bring the kids, bring
your horse.
UMC
Scripture presented Nov. 5
United Methodist Church service was Psalm 107: 1-7, 33-37,
Joshua 3:7-17, 1 Thessalonians
2:9-13, and Matthew 2:1-12.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, Justa Small
Church.
The United Methodist
Women November Challenge
is Thanksgiving Feast (food for
2 families).
Crest Superintendent
Chuck
Mahon,
Crest
Superintendent writes, We
are almost finished with the
first nine weeks of school and
by now, everyone has fallen
back into the familiar school
routines. As an educational
leader I like procedures and I
have to admit that one of the
things I like most about working in a school is the consistency of a schedule.
Organization
provides
assurance and continuity and,
usually, young people work better in this type of environment,
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
not to mention the adults! This
includes the daily class schedule as well as the busy activities schedule at Crest. With
the implementation of an eight
period day last year we have
had to create a schedule that
meets our needs. In addition we
had to adjust our early release
Wednesday schedule.
The great thing about our
Wednesday schedule is its
all about putting students
first. The staff at Crest works
hard during our Wednesday
meetings to improve student
instruction and simultaneously
discussing those students that
need extra help in the classes
they struggle. For the entire
student body, we continue to
work with them on character
and teaming the value of good
communication and taking
responsibility for their actions.
This is why school leadership
must exert effort to sustain a
culture of growth and improvement, but at the same time,
be very aware of the pressures
that can influence the school
environment whenever new
initiatives or programs are put
in place. It is an exciting time
at Crest and I am excited to be
a part of it.
Lions
At the November 1 meeting
reports were made as follows:
Kim Colgin has yet to follow up
on the 501 (c) issue; Sue Colgin
will contact Travis Hermreck
about the vision check for
Crest school. She also reported
that members have collected
approximately 300 more glasses.
The Colony Christmas
Parade will be on December 2.
Santa Claus will attend. Gene
Anderson requested the club
notify members that have been
dropped from the membership
list. Discussion was held about
the annual Christmas dinner.
They will check date, time
and where for this year. DeDe
McMullen mentioned they need
to start planning for adopting
a family for Christmas. Terry
Weldin announced Lion David
Branton of Garnett will be the
new assistant Zone Chairman.
The District Convention will
be held on March 2 and in
Wichita. A raffle will be held
for a homemade pie cooked
by Wanda Weldin. The tickets
will be available at $5 apiece.
The meeting was adjourned
by President Bill Ulrich. Next
meeting is Nov. 15.
Around Town
Halloween was a big thing
in Colony this year. It began
when the Christian Church
Richmond Museum
Chili & Soup Supper
Saturday, Nov. 18
5p.m.-7p.m.
Donations to be
used to pay for
a new floor!
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
The Gun Guys
uns
Ladies Day
Every Tuesday!
es of G
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
785-418-0711
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
thegunguys@yahoo.com
Homemade
Pan-fried Chicken
2×2
Every
Sunday 11-2
Parker1Stop
(with real mashed potatoes
and homemade gravy)
Did you know we also have Pizza?
RESULTS…
FROM PAGE 1
held an October Bash, and
Monster Mash with a Trunk
Treat on Oct. 28. Soup, music
a corn hole tournament and
a movie completed the entertainment. A party was held at
the home of Geri Godderz and
a party was also held at the
school with the Colony Lions
Club and Parents and Teachers
Organization (PTO) helping
with that. Regardless of the
quite cool Halloween evening,
there were several trick or
treaters about town. It is fun
to see their costumes and the
showing of their bags for popcorn, candies, etc..
BRECHEISEN…
FROM PAGE 1
Infantry Division of the 30th
Infantry Regiment in World
War II. He said they started
in Tunisia in northern Africa
and went to Sicily, where they
made the Palermo invasion.
In August 1944, Brecheisen
was part of the invasion of
southern France. They went
up the Rhine River, and for
part of the war were assigned
to the French Army where
they fought in the Battle of
the Colmar Pocket. He said
they fought to the Rhine
twice, first in the south and
then in the north near the city
of Worms.
Brecheisen eventually got
as far as Salzburg, Austria.
He also received the Silver
Star and Purple Heart, and
the French Croix de Guerre.
They dont toss them around
for nothing, Brecheisen said.
Brecheisen served in the
Kansas National Guard after
his return from WWII until
he reached mandatory retirement age in 1982 with the rank
of Major, just 28 days short
of 40 years. He had a career
with the Kansas Department
of Transportation and retired
in 1986.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-14-17 / Photo Submitted
Halloween party at Crest School. Pictured is Maxwell Black portraying painter Bob Ross. Maxwell is the son of Seth and Angie Black.
At Colony Lions Club table are Lions members Ron and DeDe
McMullen (not pictured).
MANHUNT…
FROM PAGE 1
cuffed behind his back.
Payton Grimmett, 36 of
Topeka, had outstanding warrants from Shawnee County
for parole violation, and with
his hands bound behind him
escaped into the countryside
wearing sweat pants, a t-shirt
and a hoodie. Temperatures
dipped into the 30s into
Thursday morning with heavy
frost.
Another occupant of the car,
Derek Hilliard of Garnett, was
taken into custody and faces
charges of distribution of stimulants. Lacey Womelsdorf, 27
of Humboldt, was questioned
and released. Valentine said
the group was enroute from
Topeka to Humboldt when the
incident occurred.
Grimmett was taken into
custody shortly before 8 a.m.
Thursday still in handcuffs,
walking down U.S. 59 toward
Garnett. In addition to charges
related to probation violation,
he faces charges of escape from
custody, obstruction of legal
process, possession of paraphernalia and theft.
The incident prompted several Code Red emergency calls
Wednesday night, cautioning
local residents of the escape
and warning them to lock their
homes and lock and remove
keys from vehicles. The last
call was made around 3:30 a.m.
Thursday morning.
CHARGES
FROM PAGE 1
gations against Laiter.
Laiter faces 11 counts of
unlawful sexual relations
and two counts of attempted
unlawful sexual relations.
election represented 13% of city
and county voters who took
part in the races.. Even with
the small turnout the race was
a break in a string of recent
city elections which saw no
contested races since Preston
Peine defeated longtime commissioner Mike Norman in
2012. Both Blackie and recent
commissioner appointee Jody
Cole were appointed by the
remaining commissioners to
fill vacancies left by resignations.
Incumbent Sonya Martin
defeated challenger Scott
Rogers by 316-226 in the race
for Unified School District 365
Position 5. In a race featuring
two newcomers to the USD
365 board, Gina Witherspoon
defeated Nicci Denny 273-243.
Jody Newton defeated Joel
Sprague for a seat on the
Frontier Council Extension
District board by 454 votes to
408.
Uncontested races included Michael Richards on the
USD 365 school board, Bryan
Miller, Jeffrey McAdam and
Travis Church on the USD 479
school board, Michael Davis
for Kincaid mayor, Allen
Edgerton, Joan Stoneking and
Carolyn Whitcomb for Kincaid
city council members, Melissa
Hobbs for Colony Mayor and
Richard Buckle and Steve
Wallace for Colony council
members.
Reach 29,000
readers
every week
in Anderson,
Franklin &
Douglas
counties
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2017 tax levies for Anderson County
(First Published in Anderson County Review, October 31, 2017)
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Notice of hearing Notice of sale
(First Published in Anderson
County Review, November 7,
2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
OF ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS FOURTH JUDICIAL
DISTRICT
IN THE INTEREST OF:
R.P.
Year of Birth: 2008 a female
NOTICE
OF
HEARINGPublication
Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2237
TO: Joshua Hill and all other
persons who are or may be
concerned
Case No. 2017-JC-9
You are hereby notified that
a petition has been filed in this
court alleging that the child
named above is a Child in Need
of Care. The Court may find
that the parents are unfit by
reason or conduct or condition which renders the parents
unable to care properly for a
child, the conduct or condition
is unlikely to change in the
foreseeable future, the parental
rights of the parent should be
terminated, and a permanent
custodian should be appointed
for the child.
A hearing on the petition
is scheduled for the 5th day of
December, 2017, at 11:00 oclock
a.m. At the hearing the Court
may issue orders relating to
the care, custody and control
of the child. The hearing will
determine if the parents should
be deprived of their parental
rights and the right to custody
of the child.
The parent and any other
person having legal custody
are required to appear before
this Court on the date and time
shown, or to file your written
response to the petition with
the Clerk of the District Court
prior to that time. Failure to
respond or to appear before
the Court at the time shown
will not prevent the Court from
entering judgment as requested in the petition, finding that
the child is a Child in Need of
Care, removing the child from
the custody of parent, parents
or any other present legal custodian until further order of the
Court, or finding the parents
unfit, and entering an order
permanently terminating the
parents parental rights.
An attorney has been
appointed as guardian ad litem
for the child: (Give name and
contact information.) Forrest
Lowry, 785-242-8500. You have
the right to appear before the
Court and be heard personally,
either with or without an attorney. The Court will appoint
an attorney for any parent
who desires an attorney but
is financially unable to hire
one. The Court may order one
or both parents to pay child
support. An attorney has been
appointed for you: (Give name
and contact information.)
Date and time of hearing:
December 5, 2017, at 11:00
oclock a.m. Place of hearing: Anderson County Court
House, 100 E. 4th Ave., Garnett,
Kansas 66032.
Clerk of the District Court
Nv7t2*
Notice of hearing
(First Published in Anderson
County Review, November 7,
2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
OF ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS FOURTH JUDICIAL
DISTRICT
IN THE INTEREST OF:
O.P.
Year of Birth: 2008 a female
NOTICE
OF
HEARINGPublication
Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2237
TO: Joshua Hill and all other
persons who are or may be
concerned
Case No. 2017-JC-10
You are hereby notified
that a petition has been filed
in this court alleging that the
child named above is a Child
in Need of Care. The Court
may find that the parents are
unfit by reason or conduct or
condition which renders the
parents unable to care properly for a child, the conduct or
condition is unlikely to change
in the foreseeable future, the
parental rights of the parent
should be terminated, and a
permanent custodian should
be appointed for the child.
A hearing on the petition
is scheduled for the 5th day of
December, 2017, at 11:00 oclock
a.m. At the hearing the Court
may issue orders relating to
the care, custody and control
of the child. The hearing will
determine if the parents should
be deprived of their parental
rights and the right to custody
of the child.
The parent and any other person having legal custody are
required to appear before this
Court on the date and time
shown, or to file your written
response to the petition with
the Clerk of the District Court
prior to that time. Failure to
respond or to appear before
the Court at the time shown
will not prevent the Court from
entering judgment as requested in the petition, finding that
the child is a Child in Need
of Care, removing the child
from the custody of parent,
parents or any other present
legal custodian until further
order of the Court, or finding
the parents unfit, and entering
an order permanently terminating the parents parental
rights.
An attorney has been
appointed as guardian ad litem
for the child: (Give name and
contact information.) Forrest
Lowry, 785-242-8500. You have
the right to appear before the
Court and be heard personally,
either with or without an attorney. The Court will appoint
an attorney for any parent
who desires an attorney but
is financially unable to hire
one. The Court may order one
or both parents to pay child
support. An attorney has been
appointed for you: (Give name
and contact information.)
7A
PUBLIC NOTICE
(First published in The
Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, November 14, 2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
OF ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
CIT Bank, N.A.
Plaintiff,
vs.
Norma Delight Tilton, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 17CV19
Court Number:
Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
Notice Of Sale
Under and by virtue of an
Order of Sale issued to me by
the Clerk of the District Court
of Anderson County, Kansas,
the undersigned Sheriff of
Anderson County, Kansas, will
offer for sale at public auction
and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the
West Door of the Courthouse
at Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, on December 7, 2017,
at 10:00 AM, the following real
estate:
THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE
SITUATED IN ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS, TO WIT:
BEGINNING AT THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF
THE WEST HALF (W/2) OF
THE NORTHEAST QUARTER
(NE/4) OF SECTION NINE (9),
TOWNSHIP TWENTY-THREE
(23), RANGE TWENTY (20),
THENCE WEST 645 FEET,
THENCE SOUTH 599 FEET,
THENCE WEST 222 FEET,
THENCE SOUTH 713 FEET,
THENCE EAST 231 FEET,
THENCE SOUTH 565 FEET,
THENCE EAST 661 FEET,
THENCE NORTH 1,905 FEET
TO PLACE OF BEGINNING,
ALL IN SECTION NINE (9),
TOWNSHIP TWENTY-THREE
(23),
RANGE
TWENTY
(20), EAST OF THE SIXTH
PRINCIPAL
MERIDIAN,
CONSISTING OF 34 ACRES,
MORE OR LESS
ALSO DESCRIBED AS:
BEGINNING AT THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF
THE WEST HALF (W/2) OF
THE NORTHEAST QUARTER
(NE/4) OF SECTION NINE
(9), TOWNSHIP TWENTYTHREE (23), RANGE TWENTY
(20), ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS, THENCE WEST
645 FEET, THENCE SOUTH
599 FEET, THENCE WEST
222 FEET, THENCE SOUTH
713 FEET, THENCE EAST
231 FEET, THENCE SOUTH
565 FEET, THENCE EAST
661 FEET, THENCE NORTH
1,905 FEET TO PLACE OF
BEGINNING, ALL IN SECTION
NINE
(9),
TOWNSHIP
TWENTY-THREE
(23),
RANGE TWENTY (20), EAST
OF THE SIXTH PRINCIPAL
MERIDIAN, EXCEPT ANY
PART THEREOF NOW IN OR
USED FOR STREET, ROAD
OR HIGHWAY, commonly known as 26652 SE 300th
Road, Kincaid, KS 66039 (the
Property) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled
case. The sale is to be made
without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further
subject to the approval of the
Court. For more information,
visit www.Southlaw.com
Vernon L Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County, Kansas
Prepared By:
SouthLaw, P.C.
Blair T. Gisi (KS #24096)
245 N. Waco, Suite 410
Wichita, KS 67202
(316) 684-7733
(316) 684-7766 (Fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(202698)
Notice of hearing and
notice to creditors
(First Published in Anderson County Review,
October 31, 2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ANDERSON
COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
ERNESTINE C. SMITHERAN, Deceased.
Case No. 17-PR-36
NOTICE OF HEARING AND NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in this court by Lois S. Diggs, an
heir, devisee and legatee, and executor named
in the Last Will and Testament of Ernestine C.
Smitheran, deceased, dated June 10, 2015,
praying the will filed with the petition be admitted
to probate and record; petitioner, be appointed
executor without bond and that she be granted
Letters Testamentary.
You are required to file your written defenses
thereto on or before November 27, 2017, at 9:00
a.m. in the district court in Garnett, Anderson
County, Kansas, at which time and place the
cause will be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course
upon the said petition.
All creditors are notified to exhibit their
demands against the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i) four months from the
date of the first publication of this notice as provided by law or (ii) thirty days after actual notice was
given as provided by law to those creditors whose
identity is known or reasonably ascertainable; and
if their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall
be forever barred.
LOIS S. DIGGS
Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 S. Oak. St., P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
oc31t3*
Notice of filing
application
Date and time of hearing:
December 5, 2017, at 11:00
oclock a.m. Place of hearing: Anderson County Court
House, 100 E. 4th Ave., Garnett,
Kansas 66032.
Clerk of the District Court
Nv7t2 (First published in The
Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, November 14, 2017)
BEFORE
THE
STATE
CORPORATION
COMMISSION
OF
THE
STATE OF KANSAS NOTICE
OF FILING APPLICATION
RE: Quad Operating LLCapplication for a permit to
authorize the enhanced recovery of saltwater into the Donley
1I & 2I located in Anderson
County, Kansas.
TO: All oil & gas producers,
unleased mineral interest owners, landowners, and all persons whomever concerned.
You, and each of you, are
hereby notified that Quad
Operating LLC has filed an
application to commence the
injection of saltwater into
the squirrel formation at the
Donley 1I located 5261FSL,
846FEL; 2I located 5271FSL,
514FEL in sec31 T22 R19E; all
in Anderson County, Kansas,
with a maximum operation
pressure of 600 psig and maximum injection rate of 100 bbls
per day.
Any persons who object
to or protest this application
shall be required to file their
objections or protest with the
Conservation Division of the
State Corporation Commission
of the State of Kansas within thirty (30) days from the
date of this publication. These
protests shall be filed pursuant to Commission regulations
and must state specific reasons
why granting the application
may cause waste, violate correlative rights or pollute the
natural resources of the State
of Kansas.
All persons interested or
concerned shall take notice of
the foregoing and shall govern
themselves accordingly.
Quad Operating, LLC
7 Tee Drive
Iola, KS 66749
(785) 448-8363
Notice of hearing and
notice to creditors
First published in The
Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, November 14, 2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON
COUNTY,
KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
MERLIN RAY CARPENTER,
Deceased.
Case No. 17-PR-37
NOTICE OF HEARING AND
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO
ALL PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that:
1. A petition has been filed in
this court by Joanne L. May,
one of the heirs at law of the
decedent, praying that she be
appointed administrator of
this estate under the Kansas
Simplified Estates Act, the
amount of administrators
bond be fixed and Letters of
Administration issue to her.
2. Under the provisions of the
Kansas Simplified Estates Act,
the court need not supervise
administration of this estate,
and no notice of any action
of the administrator will be
given, except for the sale of
real estate and final settlement
of the estate
3. If written objections to sim-
plified administration are filed
with the court, the court may
order that supervised administration ensue.
4. You are required to file your
written defenses thereto on or
before December 11, 2017, at
9:30 a.m. in the district court
in Garnett, Anderson County,
Kansas, at which time and place
the cause will be heard. Should
you fail therein, judgment and
decree will be entered in due
course upon the said petition.
5. All creditors are notified to
exhibit their demands against
the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i)
four months from the date of
the first publication of this
notice as provided by law or (ii)
thirty days after actual notice
was given as provided by law to
those creditors whose identity
is known or reasonably ascertainable; and if their demands
are not thus exhibited, they
shall be forever barred.
JOANNE L. MAY
Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
Nv14t3*
Notice of sheriffs sale
(First Published in Anderson
County Review, November 7,
2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
OF ANDERSON COUNTY,
KANSAS
SITTING
IN
GARNETT
The
Southeast
Kansas
Prosperity Foundation, Inc.,
Plaintiff,
v.
Triple K Lumber Products,
LLC, et. al.,
Defendants.
Case No. 2017-CV-000032
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
Notice is hereby given
that under and by virtue of
an Order of Sale issued and
delivered to me for execution by the District Judge of
the County of Anderson, and
State of Kansas, in a certain
action pending in said court,
wherein The Southeast Kansas
Prosperity Foundation, Inc., is
plaintiff, and Brandon Gates,
Randi Gates and Triple K
Lumber Products, LLC, are
defendants, I will at the front
door of the Anderson County
Courthouse 100 East 4th Ave.,
Garnett, Kansas, on November
30, 2017 at 10:00 A.M. of said
day, offer for sale and sell at
public action for cash in hand
and as one entire tract or parcel, the following described real
estate, situated in the County of
Anderson and State of Kansas,
to-wit:
Lots Nine (9), Ten (10),
Eleven (11) and Twelve (12) in
Block Seventeen (17) in the city
of Kincaid, Kansas.
Said real estate will be sold
without appraisement and is
subject to a three (3) month
redemption period, and such
will be sold for the purpose of
satisfying the unpaid balance
of the judgment rendered in
said action in favor of the
Plaintiff. Said sale is subject to
the approval of the court.
Vernon L. Valentine, Sheriff
Anderson County
State of Kansas
By: Lucas J. Nodine, KS #23841
Nodine Legal, LLC
115 S. 18th St., Suite 212
P.O. Box 1125
Parsons, KS 67357
Ph/Fx: (620) 717-7668
Em: lnodine@nodinelegal.com
Attorney for Plaintiff
This is a communication from
a debt collector. This is an
attempt to collect a debt and
any information obtained will
be used for that purpose.
Nv7t3*
Notice of hearing and
notice to creditors
(First published in The
Anderson County Review,
Tuesday, November 14, 2017)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON
COUNTY,
KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
RICHARD D. HOFFMAN,
Deceased.
Case No. 17-PR-38
NOTICE OF HEARING AND
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO
ALL PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that
a petition has been filed in this
court by Mary Ann Hoffman, an
heir, devisee and legatee, and
executor named in the Joint,
Mutual and Contractual last
Will and Testament of Richard
D. Hoffman and Mary Ann
Hoffman, deceased, dated
November 16, 2004, praying
the will filed with the petition
be admitted to probate and
record; petitioner be appointed as executor without bond
and that petitioner be granted
Letters Testamentary.
You are required to file
your written defenses thereto
on or before December 11th,
2017, at 9:30 a.m. in the district
court in Garnett, Anderson
County, Kansas, at which time
and place the cause will be
heard. Should you fail therein,
judgment and decree will be
entered in due course upon the
said petition.
All creditors are notified to
exhibit their demands against
the above-captioned estate
within the later of either (i)
four months from the date of
the first publication of this
notice as provided by law or
(ii) thirty days after actual
notice was given as provided by law to those creditors
whose identity is known or
reasonably ascertainable; and
if their demands are not thus
exhibited, they shall be forever
barred.
MARY ANN HOFFMAN
Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #7280
503 So. Oak St. P.O. Box 348
Garnett, KS 66032-0348
785-448-6131; FAX: 785-448-2475
solander@embarqmail.com
Attorney for Petitioner
Nv14t3*
8A
Deer activity highest in November
Tips to stay safe while driving
Fall is officially here, and
AAA Kansas is warning drivers to be more cautious on
the roads. Deer mating season is right around the corner, and October, November
and December are the worst
months of the year for motor
vehicle collisions with animals. A collision with a deer
or other animal can cause significant damage to your vehicle, if not destroy it completely, and could result in serious
injuries or fatalities for drivers or passengers. According
to the Insurance Institute for
Highway Safety (IIHS) in 2015,
there were 186 fatalities from
collisions with animals nationwide.
Animal-vehicle collisions
start to increase in October and
peak in mid-November, said
Shawn Steward, spokesman
for AAA Kansas. As the deer
population grows and our cities spread into formerly rural
areas, motorists need to be
even more cautious and alert
behind the wheel, especially at
dawn and dusk, times of the
highest deer activity.
The Kansas Department of
Transportation (KDOT) reports
that in 2016, there were 10,150
crashes in Kansas involving
deer, resulting in 593 people
being injured and 7 killed.
Deer and other animals are
unpredictable and you never
know when they might dash
out in front of your vehicle. But
there are actions you can take
to help prevent an accident or
reduce the damage from an animal collision, noted Steward.
First and foremost, always
protect yourself by wearing a
seat belt and removing all distractions behind the wheel.
In the event of a collision
with an animal, AAA Kansas
recommends:
Following the collision, call
the police/sheriff.
Avoid approaching the deer/
animal. A frightened or wounded animal can hurt you or further injure itself.
Put the vehicles hazard
lights on; whether its light or
dark outside.
If possible, move the vehicle to a safe location, out of
the roadway, and wait for help
to arrive. Your safety and the
safety of your passengers is
most important.
It is always best to call the
Kansas Highway Patrol or local
police or sheriffs department
in the event of a collision, says
AAA Kansas Steward. The
authorities can file a report
and can make the roadway
safer for other motorists by
helping to remove the animal
or other debris.
Contact your insurance
agent or company representative as quickly as possible to
report any damage to your car.
Collision with a deer or other
animals is covered under the
comprehensive portion of your
automobile policy.
AAA Kansas offers these
tips to help prevent an accident
or to reduce damage from an
animal collision:
Pay attention to road signs.
Yellow, diamond-shaped signs
with an image of a deer indicate areas with high levels of
deer activity.
Keep your eyes moving back
and forth. Continuously sweep
your eyes across the road in
front of you for signs of animals and movement. Animals
may also be alongside the road,
so make sure to look to the
right and left, as well. While
the most likely accident is you
hitting an animal, on occasion
they might also hit you by running into the side of your car.
Be especially attentive in
early morning and evening
Eight tips for
navigating holiday
food temptations
(BPT) – The holidays throw in
a lot of temptations from every
direction if dieting or watching
your weight. Holiday parties
and get-togethers in particular
can be a healthful-eating challenge. Caught up in conversation among friends and family,
surrounded by tasty food and
drinks, its easy to lose track
of what and how much is being
eaten. Registered Dietitian
Sarah Galicki offers tips for
staying the course through the
holidays.
There are a lot of calories
packed into this time of year.
Youre doing your holiday baking, people are dropping off
candy and treats, there are parties with all-you-can-eat buffets
and creamy drinks like eggnog,
so its important to be prepared. It is possible to navigate
the holidays without gaining
weight by doing these things.
Eat first. Never go to a party
hungry. If you do, chances are
youll wind up eating too much,
too fast. Eat a snack before you
go, such as some Greek yogurt,
which is loaded with protein
and calcium. Add fruit for extra
taste and nutrients, and top
with pistachios for crunch and
good fats.
Drink wisely. If you want to
indulge a little bit, have some
champagne or white wine. A
4-ounce glass has approximately 100 calories. By comparison,
a cup of traditional eggnog has
344 calories and 19 grams of fat
(11 grams saturated fat). Skip
the creamy drinks. The best bet
is to avoid alcohol altogether if
possible. Drink a spritzer made
with sparkling water, cranberry and a lime instead. It looks
festive, tastes great and has
hardly any calories.
Fill up on finger foods. Small,
bite-size appetizers limit the
calorie impact. A good option?
Pistachios. Theyre great to
snack on; 49 have exactly 150
calories, and they satisfy that
crunchy craving. Plus, theyre
full of nutrients and fill you
up. The healthy fats will help
regulate your blood-sugar level
throughout the night, which is
really helpful if youre drinking. Wrap some up decoratively
and take along for a hostess
gift to be sure theres a healthy
choice on hand. And everyone
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
LOCAL
loves pistachios.
Survey
your
options.
Mindful eating is always key
in any situation. Once the buffet table opens, take a visual
sweep past it before jumping
in line and making your selections. This way youll avoid
piling one of everything onto
your plate needlessly when you
eventually pass through.
Dont be first in line. The
food in a buffet line looks pretty
in the beginning. Once people
serve themselves, its not as
appealing and youll eat less.
Get a small plate. This trick
helps limit portion size.
Avoid the white stuff. Given
other options, skip the white
rice, white pasta and white
bread. Theyre loaded with calories but no nutrients. Choose
items with whole grains
instead. Theyre full of nutrients and have fiber, which will
fill you up so you wont eat as
much.
Delight in dessert. Dessert
is probably the toughest temptation of all. But theres no reason to skip. Most of us have a
sweet tooth. Satisfy that sweet
craving with some fresh fruit.
To make sure its available,
bring some as a hostess gift; its
always welcome.
Overall, pace yourself,
advises Galicki. Enjoy the
food and festivities.
2×3
Yutzy
hours. Many animals, especially deer, are most active from
5-8 a.m. and 5-8 p.m. prime
commuting times for many
people.
Use high beams when
theres no oncoming traffic.
You can spot animals sooner.
Sometimes the light reflecting
off their eyes will reveal their
location.
Slow down, and watch for
other deer to appear. Deer rarely travel alone, so if you see
one, there are likely to be more
nearby.
Slow down around curves.
Its harder to spot animals
down the road when going
around curves.
One long blast. A long blast
on your horn may frighten animals away from your vehicle.
Use brakes if an impact
is imminent. Dont swerve.
Instead, stay in your lane.
Swerving away from animals
can confuse them so they dont
know which way to run. It
can also put you in the path
of oncoming vehicles or cause
you to crash into something
like a lamppost or a tree.
Always wear a seatbelt.
The chances of getting injured
when hitting an animal are
much higher if you dont have
your seatbelt on. Also never
drive drunk, distracted or
drowsy.
Consider purchasing
comprehensive
insurance,
if you dont already have it.
Comprehensive insurance is
the type of insurance that covers animal strikes.
AAA has posted a helpful
Fall Driving video at aaa.
com/TV. If you have questions
or are concerned about gaps in
your existing coverage, please
contact a local insurance agent
at 800-445-0659, or AAA.com/
insurance.
Duplicate
bridge
played
95th Birthday
Laverne Howarter of
Welda, will turn 95 on
November 17. A family dinner will be held
to celebrate. A card
shower is planned and
greetings may be sent
to her at: 16702 S Hwy
59, Welda, KS 66091.
Howarter
Steve Brodmerkle of Neosho
Falls and Anita Dennis of
Garnett won the duplicate
bridge match November 8 in
Garnett.
The Ottawa team of Marilyn
Grace and Wanda Kirkland
came in second Third place
went to the Garnett team of
Lynda Feuerborn and Faye
Leitch.
The Garnett Duplicate
Bridge Club welcomes all players Wednesdays at 1:00 at the
Garnett Inn.
Hulcy earns certificate as
a breastfeeding educator
Sarah Hulcy of Southeast
Kansas
Multi-County
Health Department, otherwise known as Anderson
County Health Department,
recently completed a three
day workshop on clinical
breastfeeding assistance in
Blue Springs, Missouri near
Kansas City. The conference
was sponsored by Lactation
Consultant Services.
In addition to participating in the workshop which
addressed the normal course
of lactation, she completed
an assessment and problem solving practicum, and
an examination addressing
usual circumstances and
common challenges with
breastfeeding. She was
awarded certification as a
breastfeeding educator.
Southeast Kansas MultiCounty Health Department
has
two
Certified
Breastfeeding Educators,
Hulcy in Anderson County
and Deidre Wilson in Allen
County. Today, most mothers breastfeed. Employed
mothers, mothers at home,
mothers of premature or ill
3×10
infants, and mothers in a
variety of special situations
choose breastfeeding because
of its numerous benefits.
Scientific
investigations have recently identified significant benefits of
breastfeeding which include
increase intelligence, protection against childhood
infections, diabetes, liver
diseases, and certain types
of cancers, allergies, immune
system disorders, and sudden infant death syndrome.
Mothers who breastfeed have
a reduced incidence of breast
cancer and osteoporosis.
Mothers often explain that
they initiate breastfeeding
because of the benefits for
their baby, but they continue
breastfeeding because they
enjoy a special closeness
with their breastfed babies.
As breastfeeding becomes
more popular, mothers look
to health care providers for
assistance. Traditional mother-to-daughter teaching and
assistance is less available
since there is a generation of
grandmothers who primarily bottle-fed their babies.
Increased geographic mobility among extended families
further decreases assistance
available to new mothers.
The conference was
developed and presented by Deb Bocar, RN, PhD.
Dr. Bocar, an International
Board Certified Lactation
Consultant (IBCLC), noted
that families who would benefit most from breastfeeding,
breastfeed least often. She
shared strategies to encourage mothers to breastfeed
and assist them in a variety of special family circumstances.
Practical assistance from
knowledgeable healthcare
providers is critical to get
breastfeeding off to a good
start. Experts must also be
available for telephone assistance, home health care, and
out-patient consultations to
assist mothers in overcoming
common challenges during
the first few weeks, emphasized Dr. Bocar. Certified
Breastfeeding Educators are
qualified to assist families
to meet their breastfeeding
goals.
29,00
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B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, November 14
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior
Center Dominoes, cards and pool table
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at City
Hall
6 p.m. – Alzheimers Support
at Parkview Heights
7 p.m. – Legion BIngo at VFW
Wednesday, November 15
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
Noon – Birthday dinner at Garnett
Senior Center, with entertainment.
RSVP to (785) 448-6996 the day
before.
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, November 16
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
Center
Monday, November 20
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
6:30 p.m. – Webelos 1 & 2
(fourth & fifth grades) Den Club
Scouts meeting
6:30 p.m. – Bear (third grade)
Den Cub Scouts meeting
Tuesday, November 21
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
Wednesday, November 22
10:30 a.m. – Kincaid Community
Library Family Story Time
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate Bridge
at the Garnett Inn
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist Club
at Mr. Ds Restaurant
7 p.m. – Garnett Public Library
Book Discussion
Thursday, November 23
Thanksgiving
Saturday, November 25
47th Annual Christmas Parade
and Lighting Ceremony
Small Business Saturday
Monday, November 27
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
1-2 p.m. – Anderson County
Caregiver Support Group, Park
Place Plaza North Club House
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6-8:30 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery,
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade)
Den Cub Scouts and Wolves
(second grade) Den Cub Scouts
meeting
Tuesday, November 29
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – 3 p.m. – Garnett Senior
Center – Dominoes, cards and
pool table
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
plazacinemaottawa.com
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-14-2017 / DANE HICKS
Spencer Hermanns character stresses under the pressure as
a finalist in the ACHS presentation of The 25th Annual Putnam
County Spelling Bee on Saturday. His audience of supporters
includes, from left, Bethany Powls, April Powls, Aaron Kubacka,
and Carly Hicks.
Richmond Museum works for new floor
The Richmond Community
Museum is undertaking
a huge project — having a
cement floor poured in the
50ft X 50ft.display area. There
are three big parts of the
projectboxing and storing
everything off-site, tearing
up and disposing the wooden
floor, and paying for the new
floor.
Donations are needed to
help with the cost of about
$22,000, and volunteers are
needed to help with the physical work, said Dennis Peters
who co-chairs the project
with Brent Randal.
Friends of the Museum
can help with the first part,
financial donations, by coming to the Museum Chili
and Soup Supper Saturday,
November 18th, serving
5-7 p.m. at the Richmond
Community Building. A full
menu is served for a donation. The Museum will open
at 3 that day with no admission charge.
T h e
Museum does
have some savings, but it is not
wise to deplete
too much of that
account, so its
necessary
to
raise as much as
possible,: said
treasurer Kelley
Hennessey.
The Museum
has had visitors
from 30 Kansas
towns and 13 other states,
in addition to Paupa New
Guinea in 2017. The Central
Heights 4th grade classes will
visit in early December and
the next week a writer/historian from Iowa will arrive to
do some research.
The Richmond Museum
opened in June 2008 after
three years of work and
fund-raising to renovate the
old lumber yard into display
space. Nearly all of the more
than 1,000 artifacts and thou-
sands of archival (paper)
records are from and about
the community.
Over the years, the
Museum
has
received
grants from Walmart, the
Kansas Humanities Council,
Franklin Co. Foundation, and
Franklin Co. Convention and
Visitors Bureau, but no tax
The Pieces & Patches
Quilt Guild meets
The Pieces & Patches Quilt
Guild was called to order by
President Joleata Kent on
October 26, 2017 at 9:32 a.m. at
the Garnett Extension Annex.
Roll call was answered by 25
members. There was one guest.
The minutes of the September
meeting were approved. A
reminder to pay dues was
given.
Committee Reports:
Charity Quilts Lou Ann
Shmidl and Sandra Moffatt are
now handling charity quilts.
Lou Ann showed the new
tags that will go on the quilts
identifying that the quilt was
made by members of the guild,
Garnett, KS, without a specific
street address. Joen Truhe and
Margery Hunt donated charity
quilts this month.
Opportunity Quilt 2018 and
2019Judy Stukey reports that
the 2018 quilt is in the queue at
the quilters. The 2019 committee does not yet have a chair.
Block of the Month
Cynthia Fletcher showed her
BOM top. Cynthia is receptive
to ideas about what to do for
the 2018 BOM which will start
in December.
Challenge blocksTwo Not
Your Mommas Log Cabin
completed projects were shown
by Cynthia Fletcher (table
cover) and Phyllis Gordon
(bear wall hanging). Members
are asked to bring their projects back in November for the
ending of the challenge.
Christmas Luncheon There
were not enough persons signed
up, and the list was recirculated. The committee will meet
before the November meeting
so that an announcement can
be made at the November meeting about what to bring. The
December meeting will be the
3rd Thursday, the 21st. We will
have a Secret Sister reveal (by
card) and draw secret sisters
for the new year.
Quilt Retreat 2018 – The
retreat date has been set for
October 15-17, 2018. The retreat
will be limited to 16. A waiting
list will be started if more than
16 wish to attend.
Secret Sisters Two secret
sisters received birthday gifts:
Terrie Gifford and Lois Miller.
Show & Tell The following
items were shown:
Cynthia Fletcher a KSU lap
quilt.
Sandra Moffatt BOM project from Overbrooks quilt
shop from Eleanor Burns
Els Kitchen and featuring
a scalloped border using Bun
Millers ruler; custom quilted
by Sandy Miller
Judy McArdle- a turkey
table runner.
Marvelle Harris 2 items: a
bear wall hanging and a purple
table centerpiece.
Marlene Walburn a snowman wall hanging.
Violet Holt a quilt using
black, white and gray fabrics
with neutral shirtings.
Phyllis Gordon a quilt top
sewn at the September retreat.
Joyce Buckley a jelly-roll
quilt made in three days from
beginning to finish featuring
patriotic colors, made for a
VFW raffle.
Jackie Gardner a table
runner made at the September
retreat, and three Christmas
ornaments.
The Show and Tell drawing
was won by Cynthia Fletcher.
The meeting was adjourned
by Joleata Kent. Following,
Jeanette Gadelman showed us
a Bernina I Quilt video tutorial by Bonnie Browning on
making sharks teeth and prairie points.
Minutes recorded by Connie
Hatch
monies have been or are allocated.
Everything that happens
at the Richmond Museum
is donated, including all the
finances, explained Peters.
This project is no different. It is expected some local
4-H members, Boy Scouts,
Richmond Ruritans, and
Central Heights School students will help pack and
move boxes. Older students
may also help remove the
floor.
Work days have not yet
been set, but will be advertised later so others may also
volunteer to help.
For now, bring your
friends to the Chili and Soup
Supper November 18th.
Checks may be mailed to P.
O. Box 284, Richmond, KS
66080.
Golden Prairie
Beekeepers to
meet Nov. 14th
Our next monthly Golden
Prairie Beekeepers meeting will
be Nov 14th @ 6:30 pm 2017
Meeting
Location,
Garnett
Extension Office – 411 S. Oak Box
423, Garnett, Ks 66032.
Our Nov 14 speaker is from
Iola Ks, Mr Ron Smail. Ron
will be speaking on Sustainable
Beekeeping.
Sustainable beekeeping is a lost
art of maintaining your apiary
(Not an individual hive). Using
your own assets you have and
using them to replace dead outs,
raising your own queens, doing
hive increases, and any other
needs your apiary needs or you
want. This was common practice
in the mid 1800s and lost with the
ease of commercial raised nucs,
package bees, and queens. A big
part of sustainable beekeeping can
be done by the inexperienced beekeeper if they understand a few
simple steps. Would it be helpful
if you had young vigorous queens
early in the spring, also if you
could replace your winter dead
out hive in March without costing
you any money. How about the
weak hive just before honey flow,
if you had extra assets to add to
this hive so it can make you a box
of honey instead of being taken
over by SHB. These issues and
many others are what sustainable
beekeeping is all about and with a
few adjustments in how we manage our apiaries this is possible.
Ron has 130 hives and wants to
keep increasing his hive numbers.
So Beekeepers this is a different
style of beekeeping. Come on out
to the meeting lets all have a good
time.
Also Ron is the President
of the Heartlands Beekeepers
Association of Southeast Kansas.
Golden Prairie Beekeepers
meeting is open to the public.
If you have any questions, please
call Marlin McGowin at (785) 4331381.
Orthopaedic care
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1B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Kansas State University researchers
verify feed allowances for gestating sows
MANHATTAN, Kan.
Kansas State University
researchers have completed
two exhaustive studies that
measured the impact of how
much feed a pregnant sow eats
and the effect that has on her
growth, feed efficiency and on
her baby pigs.
The study monitored 2,000
sows on a commerical farm.
What theyre reporting is
a set of good news findings
for the industry: essentially,
the current recommendations
for gestating feeding programs
are sufficient to support fetal
growth and to support the
moms weight gain.
The ramifications are that
it helps us with our feed allowances for gestating sows,
said Bob Goodband, a swine
nutritionist in the department
of animal sciences and industry. We really didnt see any
major problems with sows and
their litters with the current
feeding practices producers
typically implement on their
farms. People dont need to
implement elaborate feeding
programs; they just need to
stick to the basics of gestation
feeding.
Goodband
said
the
researchers were concerned
that the sows would not be
eating enough in the last week
of gestation to support their
energy requirements, which
would mean that they would
be unable to support fetal
growth, weight gain and fetal
gain. But, the studies results
show that, for the most part,
they were able to do that,
according to Goodband.
The research involved
two studies on a commercial
farm, and involved more than
2,000 sows in group housing,
or large pens of 270 sows in
each. Kansas State University
doctoral student Lori Thomas
weighed more than 15,000 piglets over six months to help
verify the findings.
We monitored the sows
throughout the entire course
of gestation and we were able
to partition out their nutrition
requirements into how much
energy in their diet went for
maintenance, and growth of
the sow, and how much was
left over for her developing
litter, Thomas said.
The researchers monitored
all of the sows using electronic
sow feeding systems and ear
tags equipped with electronic
transponders. It allowed them
to know exactly when the sow
entered the feeding area and
how much of the allocated 4
to 5 pounds of feed she consumed.
After eating, the sow exited
through an alleyway, where
she had to cross over a scale
before entering the main pen.
Within the first 10-15 days,
when we mixed the sows in
the pen, we found that they
dont eat their full feed allowance that we expect them to,
Thomas said. Both our young
sows and our old sows might
not be consuming all the feed
they are offered in early gestation. Thats important for
the producer to be aware of
because a lot of times they
think they put them in the pen
and they just assume they are
consuming all of their feed, but
its really hard to monitor.
Thomas said that gathering
feed intake values and body
weights through the entire
course of gestation is unique,
its never been done before on
a commercial farm.
Theres a lot there about
precision feeding and gestating sows, the importance of
CONTEST
FROM PAGE 1
participating merchant stores
an effort to help retain those
dollars in the local community.
Advertisements from sponsoring merchants are published
on the two-page spread in the
Review each week.
The promotion works as
follows: Shoppers save their
receipts from participating
merchant stores and bring
them to the Review each week
during business hours or on
Saturdays from 8 a.m.-12 noon.
All those receipts are added up,
and shoppers receive a numbered drawing ticket for each
$10 theyve spent at participating stores. The Review will
also give away one free ticket
each week per household – just
come to the Review and ask for
your ticket.
The Review draws from all
those numbers each week and
publishes at least one number
per week in a participating
sponsors ad in the two-page
ad section. If you find one of
your ticket numbers in an ad,
you win $50! If no one claims
a weekly winner by the Friday
after the number is published,
that prize forwards to the next
week and is up for grabs again
with a new number published.
Ad sections with ticket numbers will be published Nov. 21,
28, Dec. 5, 12 and 19.
All the tickets issued during
the course of the promotion
are entered for the grand prize
drawing on Dec. 15, with the
grand prize number to be published in the Dec. 19 Review.
Prizes must be claimed by
5 p.m. December 22. Any
unclaimed prizes as of that
deadline will also be awarded
to the Grand Prize Winner.
See pages (4B & 5B) of todays
Review for the ad section from
sponsoring merchants and
complete rules.
If youre an area subscriber playing the promotion and
live out of the area and are
concerned that your paper
might not be delivered in time
to claim your weekly prize,
you can request a code to read
your paper online as early
as Tuesday morning the day
of publication. Just call the
Review at (785) 448-3121 and
request your online password.
2B
Local
End of Daylight Saving Time
Means Increased Driving Danger
meeting nutrient requirements, she said. What were
doing here is helping us define
that.
In a second study, the
researchers also tested levels
of lysine in swine feed, and
its potential affect on piglets
birth weight. They thought
that by increasing the lysine
intake of the sows diet, it
might increase birth weight,
an important consideration
on many farms as litter size
increases.
As we increased the lysine
level, it increased the sows
weight gain, without affecting
back fat thickness, Thomas
said. This means that while
not affecting the piglets
weight, the sows that were
fed more lysine probably had
greater lean protein deposition. This might affect subsequent performance, and we
are currently looking into that
by following the sows through
their second litter.
Goodband said the research
will help Kansas State
University in its work to continually develop optimal feed
formulations for swine
We see a lot of people
over-formulate their gestation
diets, and what Loris data is
telling us is that you dont necessarily have to do that, he
said. From Loris data, our
standard recommendations
appear to be fine.
Results of this study will
be highlighted during the
50th annual K-State Swine
Day, which takes place
on Thursday, Nov. 16, in
Manhattan. For more information on this years event, visit
www.asi.k-state.edu/events/
swine-day.
Annual Fall Back means
sun glare for the AM commute,
darkness for the PM commute
and potential for drowsy drivers.
With the end of Daylight
Saving Time, many may have
rejoiced the extra hour of
sleep. However, AAA Kansas
is reminding drivers to be prepared for potential challenges
such as changes in sleep patterns that may increase chances of drowsy driving.
Shorter days means many
of us will be driving home from
work in the dark, said Shawn
Steward, AAA Kansas spokesman. The risk of drowsy driving also increases with the
time change, so drivers should
begin taking proper precautions now to ensure they get
adequate rest.
Sleep-deprived
drivers
cause more than 6,400 deaths
and 50,000 debilitating injuries
on American roadways each
year (1). Kansas Department
of Transportation data from
last year reveals that drivers
being fatigued or falling asleep
was cited as a contributing
factor in 1,045 traffic crashes in the state. Symptoms of
drowsy driving can include
having trouble keeping eyes
open, drifting from lanes or
not remembering the last few
miles driven. However, more
than half of drivers involved
in fatigue-related crashes experienced no symptoms before
falling asleep behind the wheel.
Drivers should not rely
solely on their bodies to provide warning signs of fatigue
and should instead prioritize
getting plenty of sleep in their
ANDERSON
2×2 Centerville Community Church
Saturday, November18
Centerville
Chr
Serving 5 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Turkey & all the trimmings!
Salads and desserts!
and pedestrians.
AAA Kansas offers the following tips to help drivers
avoid potential crashes:
Rest Up: Get plenty of rest
before getting behind the wheel
of a vehicle. If you do begin to
feel drowsy while driving, pull
over immediately and rest or
call a family member or friend
for assistance.
Be prepared for morning/
afternoon sun glare: Sun glare
in the morning or late afternoon can cause temporary
blindness. To reduce the glare,
AAA Kansas recommends
wearing high-quality sunglasses and adjusting the cars
sun visors as needed. Use of
the night setting on rearview
mirrors can reduce glare from
headlights approaching from
the rear.
Car Care Maintenance:
Keep headlights, tail lights, signal lights, and windows (inside
and out) clean.
Ensure headlights are properly aimed: Misaimed headlights blind other drivers and
reduce visibility.
Keep headlights on low
beams when following another
vehicle, so other drivers are
not blinded.
Reduce your speed and
increase your following distances. It is more difficult to
judge other vehicles speeds
and distances at night.
Be mindful of pedestrians
and crosswalks: Yield the right
of way to pedestrians in crosswalks and do not pass vehicles
stopped at crosswalks.
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×12.5
biz directory
MIKE HERMRECK
DIGITAL COPIERS
Sales & Service
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
(785) 448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave. Garnett
Tues. – Thur. 11 a.m. – 11 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. – 2 a.m.
Daily Specials
Lunch Delivery M-F
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
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Garnett
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429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
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N. Hwy. 59 Garnett
(785) 448-5441
Patriots Bank Bldg.
Princeton
(785) 937-2269
E-Statements &
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The TV Shoppe
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
Garnett Colony Hepler
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213 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Annual Harvest Supper
daily schedules and simply be
aware that the shorter days
this time of year can create
more drowsiness behind the
wheel, continued Steward of
AAA Kansas.
Research from 2016 AAA
Foundation for Traffic Safety
report on sleep deprivation
and motor vehicle crashes (see
attached infographic) shows
that drivers who miss between
one to two hours of the recommended seven hours of sleep
in a 24-hour period nearly double their risk for a crash.(2)
With drowsy driving involved
in more than one in five fatal
crashes on U.S. roadways each
year, getting less than seven
hours of sleep may have deadly
consequences.
In addition, data from the
2016 AAA Foundation for
Traffic Safety Culture Index
study, shows that nearly all
motorists (95.9 percent) view
drowsy driving as a serious
threat to their safety and a completely unacceptable behavior;
yet, approximately 3 in 10 (28.9
percent) admit to driving when
they were so tired that they
had a hard time keeping their
eyes open at some point in the
past month.
Although the risks of driving while drowsy are well documented, that still does stop
drivers from practicing this
dangerous behavior, added
AAA Kansas Steward. With
traffic death rates three times
greater at night than during
the day, drivers can prevent
these tragedies by being proactive with getting adequate
rest and being mindful of other
traveling drivers, bicyclists
Mon – Fri
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3B
local
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Disability advocates Shopping Lists Save Time, Money
improve their
community for all
A
new
video
titled
Stoplights Dont Stop Us!
tells the story of people with
disabilities in Emporia who
advocated for change in their
community as part of their
involvement in a University of
Kansas research project.
As a result of their work
with the city of Emporia and
the Kansas Department of
Transportation, more time was
added to the crosswalk timer at
a busy downtown intersection,
which is also a state highway.
This change makes it safer for
all residents of the community
to cross the street.
These advocates carried
out their work as part of a
project conducted by KUs
Research & Training Center on
Independent Living (RTC/IL)
and KUs Center for Community
Health & Development. The
research team for Building
Capacity for Full Community
Participation partnered with
nine centers for independent
living (CILs) in five states.
They provided CIL staff with
technical assistance and advocacy tools for making community change, including training from KUs Community Tool
Box.
Centers for independent
living advocate for the rights
of people with disabilities and
provide them with support services and programs they need
to achieve self-sufficient and
productive lives.
Our partnership with CILs
is essential to the success of our
work, said Glen White, director of the RTC/IL. This project helped CIL staff increase
their communitys capacity for
change through new or revised
programs, practices or policies
that allow greater participation
of people with disabilities.
People who want to learn more
about how to make community change can download
the free publication Your
Action Planning Guide for
Promoting Full Community
Participation Among People
with Disabilities: A Resource
for Independent Living Centers
and Other Community-based
Initiatives at www.rtcil.org.
This research intervention
was one of five conducted by
the RTC/IL during a grant
funding period of 2012-2017.
Success stories for all five projects highlight the ways people with disabilities around
the U.S. took action to expand
opportunities for participation
in their communities. Each
project had a different focus,
including managing ones
own health and improving the
usability of ones home.
The video Stoplights Dont
Stop Us! is also available with
audio description.
ACHS Band
will perform
an Electric
Light Show
The ACHS Band will be
performing an Electric Light
Show on Tuesday, November
14th at 6:30 P.M. at the high
school football stadium.
This performance is
the first of its kind here in
Garnett and everyone is
invited! We hope to see you
there!
Are you looking for an easy
way to save $1,000 or more a
year?
Use a shopping list. The
average shopper spends 40
percent more on impulse purchases when
shopping
without a list. If you spend
$50 each week at the grocery
store, theres a good chance
that $20 of those purchases
are unplanned. That adds up!
The average shopper
spends $2.17 for every minute theyre in a supermarket. Youre likely to spend 50
cents more for every minute
you are at the grocery store
beyond the first
30 minutes.
Here are some tips for saving with a list:
Write your grocery list
in the same order as the aisle
layout of the store, or group
your shopping list so that
foods are listed by category.
This will help you reduce the
amount of time you spend in
the store. The more time you
spend looking for items in a
supermarket, the more food
dollars youre likely to spend.
Keep your weekly shopping list in a handy central
location so you can note
which items to buy more of as
you use them throughout the
week.
Ask family members to
add to it as needed. The goal is
to avoid running out of items
and making frequent return
trips to the store.
Before shopping, check
your kitchen to make sure
you have the ingredients
and the amounts that youll
need in order to prepare
the meals and recipes you
planned for the week. If possible, plan to prepare extra
servings on the days when
you cook so that you can
freeze the extras for a future
day when you dont have time
to cook. Add any necessary
items to your grocery list.
Assistance with Medicare is
closer than you might think
More than two dozen K-State
Research and Extension agents
at county and district offices
are trained and ready to help
senior citizens explore all
the options available to them
through their Medicare plans.
Through a statewide program called Senior Health
Insurance Counseling for
Kansas (SHICK), trained extension agents can help older
adults choose their best plan
especially when it comes to
prescription drug plans, better known as Medicare Part D.
Of the 350 SHICK counselors
assisting Kansas citizens, 31 of
those are also K-State Research
and Extension agents.
Were just here to provide
guidance, to help consumers make informed choices,
said Susie Latta, a family
and consumer sciences agent
with K-State Research and
Extensions Marshall County
office. Were not selling anything, were not paid to point
people in a certain direction.
The SHICK program falls
under the nationwide State
Health Insurance Assistance
Programs (SHIPs), which were
set up by Congress. The goal
is to help seniors who may be
overwhelmed or confused by
what can seem like a mountain
of paperwork and fine-print
rules among different prescription drug plans.
People eligible for free
SHICK counseling include
everyone over age 65 with a
valid Medicare card, as well as
disabled people of any age with
a Medicare card, as long as
they are past their 25th month
of Social Security disability.
People with renal issues are
commonly eligible, as well.
Its free, its unbiased, its
confidential and its available to anyone with questions
about Medicare, said Jennifer
Schroeder, a family and consumer science agent for Reno
County.
Insurance agents and people
who may work for health care
or prescription drug companies are not allowed to become
SHICK counselors. Thats to
help ensure that counselors are
objective, Schroeder said. We
get additional training every
year theres a minimum
number of training hours that
are required.
SHICK counselor John
White
(right)
discusses
Medicare options with Kansas
residents. Photo courtesy of
Kansas Department of Aging
and Disability Services. |
Download this photo.
To ensure that the most
accurate advice is given, clients should bring to the meeting everything they have pertaining to their health-care
situation. This could include
health-care bills and statements, information related to
current health care and prescription drug plans, as well as
brochures, mail and publications concerning current plan
options.
Schroeder said that its also
helpful for adult children to
accompany their parents on
these visits.
Ive seen parents and their
children in here, working
through the drug plan, she
said. Its a little bit of a learning curve at first for their child
to understand, but we can help
them get a grasp on what they
need to know, in advance of
the time when they will have to
step in and make decisions for
their parents.
Drug plans are a significant
aspect of health care, and Latta
says its a good idea to consider
ones options.
Even if they already have a
retirement that includes a prescription drug plan, its a good
idea to shop around. You wont
know what savings might be
out there unless you ask, Latta
said.
Last year during open
enrollment
in
Marshall
County, Latta continued, I
saw more than 700 people as a
SHICK counselor, and helped
save them about $215,000.
Thats money they can use on
other critical expenses. Its
really about helping people
save money.
And theres more: Because
personal health is one of K-State
Research and Extensions Five
Grand Challenges, a K-State
Research and Extension SHICK
counselor can offer assistance
and guidance on many other
things.
We can talk with people
about nutrition and health,
tell them where the food banks
are in their community, said
Latta. We can help them with
radon test kits or staying prepared for a disaster. Programs
like Stay Strong, Stay Healthy
or Walk Kansas. We can serve
as a one-stop shopping resource
for a lot of issues they may be
dealing with.
To find your nearest SHICK
counselor, call 800-860-5260 or
visit the Kansas Department
for Aging and Disability
Services SHICK website and
click on Locating Help.
Buy according to the list
when you get to the store.
Coupons or Generic
Brands?
By buying generic or store
brands, you could save 40 percent on your groceries. Store
and generic brands usually
cost less than name brands.
If buying name-brand
foods, check for coupons
in newspapers and on the
Internet. Before using a coupon, compare prices of different brands. Use coupons
only for foods already on your
grocery list. Use them on the
stores double or triple coupon days, if available.
Tips for Getting More Value
for Your Dollars Spent on
Meat
Chuck, round, flank, plate,
shank and brisket are less
costly and less tender cuts.
But after marinating or being
cooked with liquids, such as
in a slow cooker or boiled
gently in stews, these cuts
become very tender. Rib and
loin cuts are more tender and
can be cooked without added
liquids, such as by stir-frying,
broiling or grilling.
Lean cuts provide more
meat for your dollar.
Consider the amount of
cooked lean meat or the number of servings obtained for
the price. The cut with a low
price per pound is not always
the best buy if it contains a
great deal of bone, gristle or
fat.
A pound of raw meat without bones or fat will provide
about 12 ounces after cooking.
Plan to serve three ounces
cooked meat per person per
meal.
If you can afford the initial
cost, buying in bulk will save
money. Compare two packages of the same cut of meat,
and buy the one that costs
the least per pound. Freeze
the surplus in meal-sized portions, either before or after
cooking the meat.
Do the preparation work
yourself. For instance, slice
your own steaks or kabob
chunks, make your own meat
patties, and cook meats yourself to reduce costs.
Shopping Tips that Lower
Your At-Home Food Costs
If possible, keep your
kitchen pantry, refrigerator
and freezer supplied with
basic foods. These will help
you be ready when youre
hungry for a quick, tasty and
nourishing
meal or snack!
Plan to shop during the
least busy times. Weekdays
and early mornings tend to
be less crowded, which lets
you get in and out of the store
quickly.
Shop less often. This will
save you time, as well as saving you money on gasoline
and on impulse buying.
When taking advantage
of special pricing, remember
that discounts only save you
money if the product is one
that you need and normally
buy, and will actually use.
Buy non-perishable discounted items in bulk, when
possible.
Use the unit price as a
quick way to compare products of different brands and
sizes. Unit price labels are
usually found on the shelf
edge directly below or above
the food item in the grocery
store. You can calculate the
unit price by dividing the
total price by the number of
units it contains.
Look for grocery bargains
on both the top and bottom
shelves, and in out-of-the-way
spaces. Middle shelves and
center-stage areas typically
dont hold the best buys.
Purchase fresh fruit and
vegetables in the produce section of the store rather than
from the salad bar. Salad bar
items tend to cost more per
unit price. Exception: If you
only need a small amount of
a perishable item, buying a
small quantity from the salad
bar may result in less waste
and in money saved.
Buy fresh fruits and vegetables in season when they
are cheaper. An outdoor market with locally-grown food
may offer you savings on
fresh produce.
Buy more expensive foods
only when they are on sale,
and then buy a little extra to
freeze, if possible.
To waste fewer materials, use washable and durable
food covers, utensils, cloths,
beverage containers and
food containers more often.
Reuseable products cost less
than always buying disposable ones.
Keeping a Price Book
You will likely save
money by keeping notes on
the prices of items that you
often purchase and of your
more expensive grocery
items. For example, to start,
record the regular price and
the sale price, if there is one,
of your five most-commonly
purchased food items, such as
milk or a loaf of bread or jar
of peanut butter.
If you shop at several gro-
4×8.5
The Chamber Players
cery stores, make columns
to record the prices at each
store.
Youll begin to notice
where certain items are sold
for less money, as well as
trends in sales.
Although a price book
requires some extra time at
first, it allows you to track
good deals.
Caregiver
Support
Group
meets
monthly
Statistics show that 1 out of
every 2 people over the age of
80 will suffer with some form of
Dementia.
With this diagnosis it will
soon effect spouses, family
members, friends and individuals with the diagnosis.
Please let us help you. The
Area Agency on Aging hosts
a Caregivers Support Group
the 4th Monday of every month
from 1-2 pm at 105 Park Place
North Community Room in
Garnett.
Please contact Shannon at
785-242-7200 if you have any
questions.
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
LOCAL
THE REVIEWS 19TH ANNUAL
RULES
1. Collect your receipts and coupons
dated Nov. 14-Dec. 15 from any of
these participating merchants, and
bring your receipts and coupons
to Garnett Publishing each week.
Receipts must be turned in by 5 p.m.
Dec. 15, 2017.
2. For every $10 spent at these participating merchants, receive one ticket
(excludes bank deposits). Maximum
250 tickets per receipt. Take your
receipts and coupons to Garnett
Publishing to receive your tickets.
necessary. Simply stop by 112 W. 6th
Avenue in Garnett to get your weekly ticket. Garnett Publishing, Inc. is
also a participating merchant and
will issue tickets for every $10 of your
purchases.
3. In additon to sales receipts, Garnett
Publishing will issue one ticket per
week, per household, no purchase
4. Grand prize winning ticket number published in the December 19
edition of The Anderson County
This Holiday
Season…
2×5
See Better,
vision source Look Great,
Save Money!
Review. Grand prize must be claimed
by noon Friday, Dec. 22.
5. Weekly winning ticket numbers
will be hidden within The Great
Christmas Giveaway ad section
during the Nov. 21, Nov. 28, Dec. 5,
and Dec. 12 issues of the Review.
Weekly winning ticket numbers must
be claimed by 5 p.m. each respective
2019
2×5
baumans
Get $50 Off Exam
Friday.
6. All prize monies are issued in
certificates redeemable only at The
Great Christmas Giveaway participating merchants.
7. Any unclaimed prizes as of noon
Friday, Dec. 22, will be awarded to
the Grand Prize winner.
Come In &
2×5
Check
Out Our
Trade Winds
Daily Specials!
Trade Winds Gift Certificates
Make Great Gifts!
(Normal price $124)
Cannot be combined with insurance.
FREE Single Vision Lenses
with purchase of Frame
Cannot be combined with insurance.
Offers good through January 31, 2018
115 N. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-6879
Hours:
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 – 5:30
Sat. 9:00 – 4:00
785-448-5856
110 W. 5th Ave Garnett
Shop With Us!
2×5
Medicare
D
auburn
Plan Counseling
Is your Medicare D Plan still
the best one for you in 2018?
Our trained staff is available to answer your questions
and help you make an informed decision.
Now through December 7th
Save your receipts for
2x5more chances to win in
The
Great Christmas
princeton
quickGiveaway!!
Fuel
stop Seven Cedars
Pizza Program
2×5
diversified
products
Liquor Store
Cigar Humidor
Purina Feed
and MUCH MORE!
Caring for the health of you and your community
429 N. Maple M-F 8:30-7; Sat. 8:30-2 448.6122
Ask us about iMedicare.
See our New Display of
Americas #1 Selling Storm Doors!
2×5
garnett
value
be ordered
trueCan
in different
colors or choose
a standard white,
hidden screen,
full length glass,
half glass,
different handles,
all with the easy
hang feature.
Garnett Home Center and Rental
410 N. Maple Garnett, KS
(785) 448-7106
Gift Certificates Available!
Come by and see
2x5the new 2018
b e c k m a Buicks
n
Chevrolets,
&
motors
Fords, and
check out the
Great Savings!
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
2×5
Open
country mart
Thanksgiving Day
6am – 9pm
Happy
Thanksgiving
from all of us
at
425 N. Maple Garnett 785-448-2121
5B
LOCAL
PRIZES:
Sponsors of the
Great Christmas Giveaway!
$1,000
GRAND PRIZE
(Cut this out and take it with you when you shop!)
Check next weeks list for
any late additions to this list!
and eight $50 weekly prizes
You can win extra
SPENDING MONEY
just by watching these
merchants ads in The Review.
Save your receipts and merchant-issued GCG coupons from
these merchants today and earn your tickets.
The more you spend, the more tickets you earn.
Watch these ads each week for your ticket numbers
and win instant weekly $50 prizes!
2×5
diversified supply
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
AuBurn Pharmacy
Baumans
Beckman Motors
Country Mart – Garnett
Diversified Products
Diversified Supply
Garnett Publishing
Garnett Home Center & Rental
GSSB
Life Care Center of Burlington
Page Enterprise LLC
Plaschka & Kramer Liquor/
Princeton Quick Stop
Trade Winds Bar & Grill
Vision Source
Wolken Tire
QUALITY
Service
2×5
You
lifecare cneter
DESERVE
burling Short Term Rehab
2×5
gpi
Outpatient Rehab
Inhouse Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapy
Wound Care
IV Therapy
Respite Care
24 Hr. Nursing Care
Specialized Alzheimers/Dementia Unit
601 Cross Street
Burlington, KS
620-364-2117
Get Your Vehicle
2×5
Ready For Winter!
wolken tire
(785) 448-3212
The only number
you need for the
Best Service!
2×5
gssb
Come see
us for
loans with
low fees.
Longer Term
Loans on
Homes and
Ag Land.
Internet
banking
and
e-statements.
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
785-448-3212
THE REVIEWS 19TH ANNUAL
2×5
page enterprises
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Answer to MAGIC MAZE is on page 8B
6B
CLASSIFIEDS
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
SERVICES
For rent or sale – in Garnett. 2
bedroom, 1 bath house. Newly
renovated. Central heat and
air. $550 rent. (785) 204-2142 or
(785) 448-4010.
nv7t4*
You have been dreaming about
it…now is your chance! Move to
the country and enjoy this 3br,2ba Dutch Barn style home on
5 serene acres near Meriden,
Ks. Large living/dining room
is perfect for entertaining,
or relax on the massive front
porch that stretches across the
entire front of the home. With
Village Greens golf course and
Perry Lake just min away,
you will have countless activities to fill your day. The 4 car
garage has plenty of room for
your vehicles and toys! Retire
to your huge master suite to
wind down at the end of the
day. 199,900 Pia Friend Realty,
Darrell Mooney 785-393-3957
oc24*yr*
Investor Alert! Coveted East
Lawrence location! Two bedroom, one bath bungalow with
wrap-around porch. Some
mechanicals updated. Needs
cosmetic work. Easy walk to
downtown Lawrence and just
steps away from Burroughs
walking trail. Backs up to green
space. $104,000.
Pia Friend
Realty, Darrell Mooney 785-3933957
oc24*yr*
Quiet Community of Olivet
just off of Melvern Lake. Two
bedroom plus. Spacious kitchen, formal dining room, large
entry room and living room.
Many new updates recently, including paint, flooring,
furnace, insulation, etc. 2 car
detached garage, large corner lot. NEVA SMITH RE/
MAX Connections 785-229-0504
nevasmith.com
*mc21*
Coal Creek Estates last 2-acre
building site for sale by owner.
Includes water meter ($6,000
value). On paved road 3 miles
north of Baldwin City, approximately 10 miles from Lawrence.
Requires septic system. No
owner financing. $51,500. Ralph
Earles. (785) 594-3529, (785) 5507332.
**nv24yr**
Like New Country Home on
old farmstead (Osage County)
on almost 5 acres. Three main
floor bedrooms, including
master-suite. Energy Efficient
Home with walk/out basement
that includes built-in storm
shelter. Outbuildings, nature,
asparagus, apple, peach, pear,
pecan trees. Contact Neva
Smith RE/MAX Connections
785-229-0504 nevasmith.com
*mc21*
Printing: Business cards, cus
tom envelopes, statements,
forms customized to your
specific needs; flyers to promote your business or event.
Custom rubber stamps, printed balloons, pens, custom wall
or desk plaques. 4 color brochures, 4 color flyers or cards
printed and direct mailed to
your most likely customers.
Anderson Countys full-service
printer for 150 years, Garnett
Publishing, Inc., 112 W. 6th in
Garnett. (785) 448-3121, admin@
garnett-ks.com. Call for a quote
today.
fb02tfn
SERVICES
ryter
(913) 594-2495
STATEWIDE
1×2
ADVERTISING
AD
Send your ad to more
than 100 Kansas
newspapers for as little
as $300. Ask about
other states too!
(785) 448- 3121
1×3
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
1×3
1×3
schulte
Mundell Outdoors, LLC
mund
MISCELLANEOUS
Driveway Repair
Blading Gravel Top Soil
(785) 448-8186
Call for a quote.
1×2
edgeco
Check out our
Monthly Specials
Cracked pecans – 5#, $20 cash.
(785) 867-3671.
oc31t2*
Non GMO – farm fresh eggs for
sale. (785) 204-2894.
oc31t2
Diesel Generator – HP
13123023, $3,750. (785) 448-6191.
nv14tf
40 Grade A Steel Cargo
Containers $1650.00 in KC.
$1950.00 in Solomon Ks. 20s
45s 48s & 53s also available
Call 785 655 9430 or go online
to Chuckhenry.com for pricing, availability & Freight estimates.
Positions available at
Life Care Center of Burlington
Gates Corporation
1450 Montana Road
2×3
Iola, KS
Production and Warehouse help needed.
GATES
Up to $2000 Bonus for continuous service.
Applications will be taken weekdays
7 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the facility.
Pre-employment background checks, drug
screen and a physical ability testing required.
Benefits available within 30 days.
2×3
RN/LPN – full time and part time
LIFECARE
CNA – full time and part time
Central Supply – part time
Please apply at
http://lifecarecenterofburlington.com/careers,
in person at
601 Cross St.
Burlington, KS
or send your resume to
Tracy_Bartley@lcca.com
Equal Opportunity Employer
Public Auction
Owner: Kent Smalygo
Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017 | STARTS @ 9:42 A.M.
4800 E. 400 Road l Oologah, OK 74053
2×4
KPA MORTON
1941 WILLYS COUPE, VEHICLES, TRACTOR,
LOADER, BOATS, TRAILERS, TOY HAULER, CAR
LIFTS, MOTORCYCLES, JET SKI, 4 WHEELERS,
IMPLEMENTS, RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT, WELDER/
GENERATORS, FORKLIFTS, ARCADE GAMES,
GOLF CARTS, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE & ITEMS,
EXERCISE EQUIP, COCA COLA MEMORABILIA,
WB PIPE, SCRAP METAL
Running 2 – 3 Auction Rings All Day!
Auctioneers Note: Kent is selling his excess equipment and assets no longer needed at this time.
Larger items will sell at 12:47 pm. Lots of pasture parking will be available. There will be many items
added up to auction time. Visit our website for updated pictures at www.chuppsauction.com or follow us
on Facebook for updates.
Directions: From Oologah, OK, at the Jct of Hwy 169 & Hwy 88, take Hwy 169 South for 2.7 miles to S 4078 Rd, turn right
on S 4078 Rd and go .7 mi. Road will dead end at property. From Collinsville, OK, at the Jct of Hwy 169 & Hwy 20 West (N
146th St N), take Hwy 169 North for 5.5 miles to S 4080 Rd and make a U-turn back on Hwy 169 South for .2 miles to S
4078 Rd. Turn right on S 4078 Rd and go .7 mi. Road will dead end at property. Look for all auction signs.
Terms: Cash Credit Cards Check with Proper ID OK Sales Tax Applies unless exemption is shown. NOT
RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS. ANY ANNOUNCEMENTS DAY OF SALE SUPERSEDES PREVIOUS ADVERTISING.
For full item list, more info & pictures visit chuppsauction.com
CHUPPS AUCTION CO.
Stan Chupp – (918) 638-1157 | E. J. Chupp – (918) 639-8555
Dale Chupp, Realtor, Century 21, NEOKLA – (918) 630-0495
Answer to SUPER CROSSWORD is on page 8B
Public Auction
Saturday, November 18, 2017 – 9:00 A.M.
Sunday, November 19, 2017 – 12:30 P.M.
Sale Location: 1171 1100 St, Iola, KS.
3 Miles West of Iola, KS on Hwy 54 to 1000 Rd, 1 Mile South,
1/2 Mile East on Nebraska, South to Sale
Scrap Iron and Salvage Equip. Sells Saturday
Oil Field Equipment Sells Saturday
Tools, Shop Items & Misc. Sell Sunday
Guns Sell Sunday 2:00 PM
Combines, Tractors, Trucks, Etc. Sell Saturday
Farm Equipment & Machinery Sell Saturday
Household Items Sell Sunday
GO to www.allencountyauction.com or
www.kansasauctions.net
To See Complete Sale Bill
Seller: Don Hammer Estate and Hammer Trust
Answer to SUDOKU is on page 8B
Allen County Auction Service
Allen County Realty, Inc. 620-365-3178
Auctioneers:
Gerald Gray, Cody Davis & Jack Franklin
7B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
CLASSIFIEDS
Why do you think they call it
CREEPSLIST?
Advertise LOCALLY with people you trust.
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
MISCELLANEOUS
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
Diagnosed with Mesothelioma
or Asbestos Lung Cancer? If so,
you and your family may be
entitled to a substantial financial award. We can help you
get cash quick! Call 24/7: 855510-4274
Oxygen – Anytime. Anywhere.
No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One
G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA
approved! Free info kit: 844359-3973
Updating your bathroom
does not have to be expensive
or take weeks to complete.
BathWraps makes it easy. Call
855-324-2317 today for a free in
home consultation.
MISCELLANEOUS
NOTICES
Save on your Medicare
Supplement! Free quotes from
top providers. Excellent coverage. Call for a no obligation
quote to see how much you can
save! 855-587-1299
Sawmills from only $4397.00Make & Save Money with your
own bandmill- Cut lumber any
dimension. In stock ready to
ship! Free Info/DVD: www.
NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800578-1363 Ext.300N
Viagra and Cialis Users!
Theres a cheaper alternative
than high drugstore prices!
50 Pills Special $99.00 FREE
Shipping! 100% guaranteed.
Call Now! 855-850-3904
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tfn
AUTOS
Im here to find you
the perfect vehicle.
1 x 4
stiles
701 N. Maple Garnett
Cell 913-731-8900
Bus. 785-448-5441
Toll Free 1-800-385-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
stantonstiles@hotmail.com
WANTED
Calculus Tutor – wanted for
pre-engineering high school
senior. Garnett area. (785) 5942372.
nv7t3
FARM & AG
Seed wheat – Bulk, 400 bushel.
(785) 867-3268.
nv7t2*
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25
or more trees. Call (916) 2326781 in St. Joseph for details.
oc17tf
Edgecomb Builders
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Bobcat Oilfield Service, Inc
2×2
Ideal
Candidate would have some or all of the following experience:
BOBCAT
Crude Oil Producer operating in Miami and Linn
Counties seeks oil field pumpers, roustabout
and pulling unit operators.
Pulling Unit Lease Pumping Water-flood Must pass drug test
We offer competitive pay and benefits after probationary period including:
Uniforms provided Paid holidays Paid vacation
Simple IRA with company match
Call us at 913-837-5199 to schedule a time for an interview or
email: bobcatoilrob@gmail.com
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
Happiness is . . . Making
Thanksgiving easy. Get your
paper plates, napkins, dip
mixes, desserts and flavored
coffee at Josephines. Fall decorations too. (785) 448-3038.
nv14t1
Happiness is . . . submitting
your FREE wedding announcement ONLINE for publication in The Anderson County
Review. Go to www.garnett-ks.
com and click the form under
Submit News. Fill in the form
and click SUBMIT. Available
FREE 24 hours/day!
oc24tf
Happiness is . . . Going to the
Friends of the Library Holiday
Homes Tour on Sunday,
December 3. Entertainment
and refreshments at the library
from 12:00 – 1:00. Tickets and
maps available at the library.
$8 in advance, $10 day of event.
oc31t5
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth Announcements
Business News
Send it in ONLINE
Go to www.garnett-ks.com and click
the appropriate form under Submit News.*
FREE
2×2
BUY 3, GET 1
ONfiller
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS!
Scott Stiles
Sales Representative
BECKMAN MOTORS
2×2
General Contractor
EDGECOMB Custom Homes
Wedding, Engagement,
Anniversary & Birth
Announcements
Business News
HAPPY ADS
Happiness is… Having the
Reviews EagleEye News
Drone do aerial photography or
videography for your wedding,
special event, property survey,
promotional video, high-altitude equipment or building
inspection, etc. Real-time view
from up to 400 feet elevation, up
to nearly 1 mile range. Contact
the Anderson County Review
at (785) 448-3121 for more info.
oc11tfn
Its quick & easy!
* Photos need to be emailed separately to garnett-ks.com
2×2
JB
(785) 448-3121 FAX (785) 448-6253 review@garnett-ks.com
Help Wanted: Legal Secretary
2×3
Anderson County Attorneys Office
Under the supervision of the County Attorney, the
AND
CO
Legal Secretary performs difficult and varied legal and
ATTOR
secretarial
duties. Information handled in this office is
of a confidential nature. The starting wage is $14.22/
hr. Resumes will be accepted in the County Attorneys
Office through December 1st 2017.
Anderson County is an equal
opportunity employer.
2×5
ORV
Career Opportunities!
RN/LPN – $1500 Sign On Bonus*
CMA/CNA – $750 Sign On Bonus*
CNA/CMA
RN/LPN
Dietary Aide/Cooks
Facility Maintenance
Competitive Wages, Shift Differentials
and Benefit Packages.
Have questions, call 785-242-5399
ask for Mandy or Minnie
1100 W. 15th Street
Ottawa, KS 66067
3X3 BECKMANS
Outstanding Performance in
GM Sales for all of Kansas
Eight
Bank Teller
2×2
Bank of Greeley, 118 W. Brown St., Greeley, has an
BANK
OF
opening
for full time
tellerGR
position.
Competitive salary and benefits.
Contact Mike, Pat or Doug Rockers
at
(785) 867-2010
2×4
The following
opportunities are available:
AND
CO jobHOSP
House Supervisor, Registered Nurse – Full-time nights in Med/Surg or ED
Registered Nurse I – Full-time Nights & PRN positions in Med/Surg or ED
LPN – Part Time & PRN position in Residential Living Center
Certified Nursing Assistant – Full Time and Part Time positions all shifts in
Residential Living Center
Certified Medication Aide – Full & Part Time positions day shift in Residential
Living Center
Nutrition Services Aide – Full Time in Nutrition Services
Clinical Lab Scientist -Part Time in Laboratory
Paramedic – Full Time & PRN in EMS
Housekeeping Associate – PRN in Environmental Services
Radiology Tech Multi Modality – PRN in Radiology Department
Patient Access Representative – PRN in Patient Access Department
Registered Nurse – PRN all shifts in Med/Surg, ED, Surgical Services &
Residential Living Center
Patient Account Representative Healthcare Hospital Billing & Follow Up Full Time in Patient Accounting Department
Patient Access Representative – Full Time & PRN in Patient Access
2×4
AD
8B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 14, 2017
LOCAL
Friends of
PSRT meets
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-14-17 / Photo Submitted
Three Anderson County Bulldog football players were recognized as 2nd Team All-League players this
season. Tanner Spencer was voted in as a receiver. Spencer had 16 receptions for 272 yards and 3
touchdowns. Spencer also added 48 carries for 415 yards. Logan Allen was elected as a runningback.
Allen ran the ball 216 times for 1172 yards and 13 touchdowns. Dallas Higginbotham represented the
defense, compiling 64 tackles to lead the Bulldogs defensively.
Get salty to fight stress
(BPT) – Stress. No one wants
it, but we all experience it from
time to time. Higher levels of
stress can cause problems at
work and home. But stress is not
just hard on your mental well-being; it is also hard on your body
and can lead to many negative
health outcomes.
Stress levels can increase significantly when economic times
are tough. The British Health
and Social Care Information
Centre found that stress had
increased by 47 percent during
that countrys recession and
stress was the single biggest
cause of sickness in the UK,
affecting 20 percent of the population. Professor Cary Cooper of
Lancaster University, an expert
on stress, was alarmed and told
The Independent, I have never
seen figures like this before.
Stress is a trigger mechanism
for a range of conditions, from
heart attacks to immune system
disorders, mental illness and
depression and anxiety.
Everyone is familiar with
comfort foods, but the comfort
foods that have been shown to
actually reduce stress all contain
salt. Stress is characterized in
the human body by high levels of cortisol, referred to as the
stress hormone. Scientific
research has shown, in animals
and humans, that increased
levels of salt consumption are
effective in reducing levels of
cortisol.
Research from the University
of Haifa, published in the science
journal Appetite, confirmed the
relationship between salt and
stress in humans. Researchers
found an inverse correlation
between salt and depression/
stress, especially in women.
Craving salty foods may be a biological defense mechanism we
evolved to cope with daily stress.
The researchers reviewed data
from the U.S. National Health
and Nutrition Examination
Survey using 10,000 individuals
and demonstrated that depression and stress were higher in
individuals who consumed less
salt. The trend was more prevalent in women than men. They
noted that the relationship of
higher depression with lower
salt intake in humans was consistent with the results of animal studies. They also found
that young people, up to age 19,
selectively choose foods that are
higher in salt, indicating a natural feedback mechanism driving them to consume higher salt
foods and rewarding them with
more vigorous growth.
Other good stress-relieving tips include getting a good
nights sleep and taking time off
to focus on relaxation and regular exercise, which has added
health benefits. Of course, with
exercise, another benefit of salt
becomes apparent, as this vital
nutrient is necessary to remain
properly hydrated and healthy.
When you sweat, you lose not
just water but also electrolytes
(including sodium), which need
to be replenished.
Whether they are called comfort foods or mood stabilizers,
research indicates salty foods
are effective at making us feel
better and reducing our heightened stress levels. So, the next
time you finish a stressful day
and want to wind down and
relax, dont be surprised if you
instinctively reach for a salty
snack.
Friends of the Prairie Spirit
Rail Trail met at the Garnett
Public Library November 8,
2017 at 7:00 pm. Twenty-one
members were present.
Ruth Theis thanked Tom
Lewis for making the cabinets
to place the name plates. They
are in the depot now and all of
the tiles have been taken up.
Terry Singer reported that
958 ghosts and goblins were at
the Halloween Haunted House.
She thanked members for their
help.
Skip Landis had been at the
Garnett Running Clubs run
and given them water from the
trail group.
There will be a work day
at the Glenn Hastert country
home for the Christmas float
on Sunday, November 12, 2017
at 2:00 p.m.
Once again the trail group
will decorate the Donna Harris
Park for Christmas. It will be
decorated on Wednesday afternoon, November 15th at 2:00
p.m.
The trail Christmas Party
will be held at the Racers
Lounge on December 13, 2017 at
7:00 p.m. Members are to bring
snacks and a white elephant.
Ed Britton Memorial
Optimist Scholarship
Application Available
Applications are now
available
for
the
Ed
Britton Memorial Optimist
Scholarship. The $500 scholarship is awarded annually
to an upper level college student.
The requirements for applicants include the following:
1) be a graduate from high
school in USD 365; 2) have
completed at least 60 semester
hours of work in a recognized
four-year university and/or
junior college; 3) be carrying
at least 12 hours per semester
during the scholarship year;
and 4) have a minimum grade
point average of 2.5 during
the most recent thirty hours
of study.
Application forms may be
picked up at area banks. The
due date for applications is
December 1, 2017.
Anyone having questions
concerning the scholarship should contact Kenny
Kellstadt at 448-6261 or Stacey
Hedges at 448-6155.
Chapter Y PEO meets
Chapter Y PEO met at the
home of Lynda Feuerborn
with Lucille Holderman as
co-hostess on November 6,
2017.
During the business meeting, Diane Doran shared that
five sisters had visited Cottey
College located in Nevada,
Missouri, on October 21st.
Cottey College is owned
by PEO and they were very
impressed with the facility
and the institution itself. It
made the sisters very proud to
be a part of such a wonderful
place that promotes womens
education.
Following the business
meeting, Liz Meyer from
Chapter FU in Fort Scott
spoke to the group with enthusiasm in her voice about some
of the ways we can promote
PEO.
She visited with us about
membership, social activities,
and the scholarships that are
available through PEO.
Also, she shared that the
celebration of the 150th birthday of PEO will be held at the
international convention in
Des Moines, Iowa.
Engagement
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-14-17 / Photo Submitted
Donna Nichols is pleased to
announce her engagement to
Timothy Christo of Rochester
NY. Donna is the daughter
of Carl Nichols and the late
Dawanna Nichols. Their wedding is set for July 7th 2018 in
Alden, NY.
Lions hear presentation
from ACH chief
Garnett The Garnett Lions
Club heard an update on the
Anderson County Hospital last
week from hospital administrator Rich McCain.
Fifteen members attended
the meeting and reviewed the
clubs recent Soup and Chili
Supper fund raiser by project chairman Skip Landis.
President Dane Hicks noted the
club will have a float in the 47th
Annual Garnett Area Chamber
of Commerce Christmas Parade
on Nov. 25.
Hicks announced the receipt
of two banner patches from
District 17N, one for Centennial
Membership Growth and one
for overall Club Satisfaction.
Earl Lizer was honored with a
Centennial pin for his recruitment efforts in the first half of
the year.
Lion Delton Hodgson estimated the club had 250 trick
or treaters at the caboose on
Halloween Night.
The annual Lions Christmas
for Kids program will be
Sunday, Dec. 17 at 4 p.m. at
the Senior Center in Garnett.
Lions Betty Lybarger, Richard
Fisher and John Malone will
spearhead the project.
Hicks noted the Kansas
Humanities project, Oral
History of local Vietnam
Veterans, was still on the clubs
Goals & Visioning agenda but
was not yet being directly pursued.
McCain has been in the
head post at ACH nearly two
years and said in that time hes
watched the outpatient clinic
traffic increase at the same
time the hospitals patient
satisfaction scores and other
quality scoring metrics have
increased. He said the facility works hard to manage and
critique its services with input
from its staff and has developed
an employee engagement program to that end. He noted the
facility recently switched to a
new full-patient data software
program called Epic which
required staff to make the transition in a single day.
Gas prices up
20-30% from
Updated Agricultural
Economic Impact Reports a year ago
by County Available
MANHATTAN, Kan.
The Kansas Department of
Agriculture is committed to
providing an environment that
enhances and encourages economic growth of the agriculture
industry and the Kansas economy. The departments interactive map of Kansas, showing
the economic impact of agriculture broken down by county,
has recently been updated to
provide citizens with statistics
adjusted for 2017.
Located on the KDA website, the interactive map can
be used to find the agricultural
economic facts for each of the
105 counties in Kansas. KDA
annually updates the statistics
on the map to give the states
driving economic industry the
recognition it deserves. In the
65 sectors of Kansas agriculture that were recognized for
this data compilation, the total
economic output is nearly $68
billion. Agriculture also supports more than 246,000 jobs
statewide.
Kansas agriculture has
a significant impact on the
state, contributing nearly
45% of the states total economy, said Kansas Secretary of
Agriculture Jackie McClaskey.
Every county plays an important role in the states agriculture industry.
The interactive map allows
users to see detailed agricul-
tural statistics including farm
numbers, leading agricultural
sectors and value-added data
for each county. KDA utilizes data compiled by the U.S.
Department of Agricultures
National
Agricultural
Statistics Service. The economic impact data is sourced from
the most recent IMPLAN data
available.
The county statistics map is
available at agriculture.ks.gov/
ksag. For updated information,
click on a county and find the
2017 Full Report for County
after the county sector list.
As next weeks busy
Thanksgiving travel weekend approaches, motorists in
Kansas and across the country
are paying more for gasoline
this fall, compared to recent
years. While the average price
of gas in Kansas remained the
same from a week ago $2.40/
gallon that price is 23 percent higher than one year ago,
when the statewide average
was $1.95.
Many cities across Kansas
are seeing gas prices 20 percent to 30 percent higher,
when compared to the same
time in 2016, said Jennifer
Haugh, AAA Kansas spokeswoman. Gasoline supply has
been limited by strong demand
this October and November,
keeping the price at the pumps
higher. As Kansans prepare to
travel for Thanksgiving dinner with friends and family,
they will need to budget a bit
more for gas this year. Were
still in pretty good shape
nationally, though, as Kansas
has the 12th lowest state gas
price average in the United
States this week.
National Perspective
At $2.56, the national gas
price average has increased
nine cents inside of 13 days.
Strong fall consumer gasoline demand has continued
into November and is chipping away at national gasoline inventory. The Energy
Information Administration
(EIA) reports total gasoline
inventories dropped by 3.3 million bbl in their latest report.
Not
enough bidders
AT YOUR RECENT AUCTION?
If youve recently heard about people being
dissatisfied with the results of their auction or
estate/farm sale, it may be because their auctioneer didnt put their advertisement in front
of people who have money to spend. You want
BUYERS at your auction… not GAWKERS!
The Anderson County Review has the LARGEST PAID CIRCULATION of any publication
read in this area. People BUY the Review
because they intend to READ it not like
junk mail and they have the DISPOSABLE
INCOME to be the kind of audience you want
at your auction. Add The Trading Post and total
29,000 readers along Hwy 59 from Lawrence
to Anderson County.
Tell your auctioneer to put your ad in front of
the bidders with the buying power to make
your sale a huge success advertise it in the
Review!
(785) 448-3121

