Anderson County Review — November 15, 2022
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from November 15, 2022. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
Could you use $1,000 this Christmas?
Learn how receipts from local businesses can win you CASH for Christmas! See pages 8 & 9.
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
O N E M E A S LY U . S . D O L L A R
The
official
newspaper
of of
record
forfor
Anderson
County,
KS,KS,
and
itsits
communities.
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official
newspaper
record
Anderson
County,
and
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E-statements & Internet Banking
www.garnett-ks.com |
November 15, 2022
1865 156th Year, No. 48
(785) 448-3121 SINCE
| review@garnett-ks.com
Member FDIC Since 1899
(785) 448-3111
Gardner wins 75%
Singing In The Rain
in new 9th District
Newcomer fleshes out
freshman legislator group
from around the region
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
TOPEKA Garnett political newcomer Fred Gardner posted a massive win Tuesday in a newly-defined
local Kansas House district as the
local lead in what, despite two of
Republican heartbreakers, constituted an obvious Kansas red wave.
Republicans sealed wins in 40 of
58 contested Kansas House elections
and one seat in the state senate.
Gardner pulled 75 percent of the vote
against challenger Alana Cloutier of
Humboldt in the new 9th District
which includes Anderson and Allen
counties and portions of Linn and
Miami, handily winning the largest
voter block in Allen County with 67
percent of the vote.
Im glad to receive a vote of confidence from the people of the 9th
District, Gardner said of the win.
I look forward to working with
the other representatives the people
of Kansas have chosen. Gardner
thanked his supporters and campaign assistant for helping him
make connections across the four
counties.
Rebecca Schmoe of Richmond
picked up 65 percent of Franklin
County voters to win the 59th
District
House
seat in a strong
GOP
showing.
Schmoe will also
be a first-time
member of the
upcoming legislative class. Another
first-timer, Carrie
Gardner Barth of Baldwin,
scooped up a win
unopposed in the
5th District, which before redistricting included parts of Anderson
County and was held by Republican
Mark Samsel for two terms before
Barth defeated him in the August
primary.
Republicans also won every statewide race on the ballot other than
the governorship. Kris Kobachs
surprise comeback to win the race
for Attorney General by a narrow
margin was the upset of the night.
The failed 2018 governor candidate
won the AGs office by nearly the
same vote as this years Republican
SEE SEATS ON PAGE 2
Locke wins Garnett commissioner post
GARNETT Mark Locke emerged
from a three-way race Tuesday
to take over the vacancy on the
Garnett City Commission.
Locke managed 38 percent 382
to top Justin Thompson with 363
and Troy Armstrong with 225.
Locke is the recently hired director of Anderson County Emergency
Management. He takes office in
January when Greg Gwin leaves
the post after serving some 15 years
on the commission.
The city faces a number of
present and long-term challenges,
including
budgetary concerns,
energy and infrastructure costs for
its municipal utility and continuing
problems staffing
police officers and
other city posts.
Locke Les
McGhee,
Republican
1st District Anderson County
Commissioner, also retained his
seat on Tuesday running unopposed.
Red Wave almost
Despite wins, KSGOP
fails to claim governor,
3rd Dist. Congress seat
BY DANE HICKS
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW
My guess is Pyle must be at the
top of every Democrats Christmas
card list, Kansas GOP Chairman
Mike Kuckleman told the Review.
We would have the Governors
office but for Pyle and his friends in
the Democrat party that played him
for a fool and cost Republicans the
Governors seat.
TOPEKA Despite solid wins
across the rest of Kansas that kept
Republicans
in state offices
and preserved
a supermajority in the Kansas
Legislature,
Republicans
in
the
3rd
Congressional
District failed
once again to persuade Johnson
County against a
liberal Democrat
while GOP voters
statewide were
foiled by a defector from their
Dennis Pyles rift with mainstream Republicans promptown party.
S t a t e ed an Independent run for governor. While Pyle received
Republican offi- only 2 percent of the vote, the 19,000 supporters were
cials and grass- enough to cost Derek Schmidt the office. Democrat
roots GOP voters Laura Kelly was re-elected by just over 14,000 votes.
spent most of
last week castigating Assaria
Republican-turned-Independent and Pyles own home county Saline
1st District State Senator Dennis carried Schmidt by 52 percent
Pyle, who in a rift with GOP gover- and gave Pyle a mere 2 percent.
nor candidate Derek Schmidt peti- Anderson County contributed 143
tioned his way onto the general elec- votes to Pyle. The county carried
tion ballot and diverted 19,000 votes Schmidt with 65 percent of the
that most likely would have been vote. Pyle told a Topeka TV station
Schmidts. Incumbent Governor Schmidt lost due to his own shortLaura Kelly beat Schmidt by just comings.
As much as Kansas desperateover 14,000 votes according to last
weeks unofficial talley 1 percent ly needed a conservative governor,
of the total cast.
SEE LOSS ON PAGE 2
The Anderson County High School drama and music departments
presented Singing In The Rain Friday & Saturday as the schools
annual fall musical. At top, the blue-light rainstorm finale features
lead Gabe Wright along with Rilyn Sommer and a chorus (from left)
of Spencer Rockers, Brooke Galey, Mack Poeverlein, MaKenna
Goetz, Kris Holloway, Christian Barnett and Owen Thompson.
Center left, Easton Mead, Gabe Wright and Ella Reichard plan
movie strategy. Above Kylie Disbrow, Parker McCarty and Bailey
Clawson in an errant pie scene. Bottom right: Gabe Wright and
Ella Reichard share a finale smooch with support from Hope Goetz,
Kylie Disbrow, Kristen Schmit and Emma Schaffer.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 /DANE HICKS-CARLY HICKS
$1,000 Christmas
Giveaway contest
begins this week
GARNETT Linda
Schwegmans Christmas
was $1,000 brighter last
year after she won the
2019 Great Christmas
Giveaway grand prize
so we have to wonder
whose Christmas will get
a boost in 2022?
The biggest Christmas
promotion in the region,
a staple of the area for
24 years sponsored by
The Anderson County
Review and area sponsors, starts with the ad
section in todays paper
on page 8.
To play, just start
collecting sales receipts
from those sponsors this
week, bring them to us
to exchange for drawing
tickets, and your chance
to win starts when you
find the drawing ticket
number in that ad section next week.
Weekly prizes of $50
will be awarded this
year, just like they were
last year to Michelle
Miller, Donna Flamez,
Helen Norman, Martha
Moyer, Gary Steele and
Deanna Hedrick.
All you have to do is
shop our local sponsor
businesses during the
contest period today
through Dec. 16 and save
your receipts. Bring
them to The Review at
112 W. 6th Street, and
well issue you a numbered drawing ticket for
every $10 in qualifying
receipts youve collected plus everyone gets
a free ticket every week
just for the asking with
no purchase necessary to
play.
But remember: only
receipts from our sponsoring merchants qualify
for drawing tickets.
Each week well publish some of the ticket
numbers we draw in the
sponsor ad section of the
paper. Find your number and you can win one
of eight (8) $50 weekly
drawing prizes. All the
ticket numbers go back
into the hopper for the
final drawing of the
SEE CONTEST ON PAGE 2
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 /CHELSEY DALBINI
Bruce Fishback, former Kansas Veterans of Foreign
Wars Commander, addressed an audience gathered
for Garnetts Veterans Day ceremony last week at
Anderson County Junior-Senior High School.
2
NEWS IN
BRIEF
TOYS FOR TOTS
The Review has partnered this
year with the U.S. Marine Corps
Reserve as a drop location for
Toys For Tots. Please drop off
new unopened toys, donations accepted through Dec.
6. Donation boxes are located
at Garnett Publishing, Inc., 112
W. 6th Ave.
THE REVIEWS GREAT
CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY
Make your holidays brighter by
participating in the Reviews
Great Christmas Giveaway. It is
your chance to win part of over
$1,000 in prizes just by shopping select local businesses.
More details in todays paper
on pages 8 and 9.
VFW BREAKFAST
VFW Post 6397 will have breakfast on Sunday, November 20th,
from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Biscuits
and gravy, Belgian waffles,
bacon, sausage & eggs will be
served.
FCC HOLIDAY MART
The First Christian Church will
be hosting their Holiday Mart
on December 3rd from 9 a.m.
– 2 p.m. This includes a bake
sale, soup lunch and craft sale.
Proceeds go to the Christian
Crafters and Mission Team.
SENIOR CENTER
THANKSGIVING
The Garnett Senior Center,
128 W. 5th, will be serving
Thanksgiving dinner at noon
on November 24th. We will
be providing turkey, mashed
potatoes, dressing, gravy and
beverages. Please bring a side
dish or dessert and come join
us for some great food and
good company.
COUNTY REPUBLICANS
TO REORGANIZE DEC. 2
The
Anderson
County
Republican Party Central
Committee will hold its bi-annual reorganizational meeting at
5:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2, 2022,
at The Kirk House at 145 W. 4th
Avenue in Garnett. The meeting is open to all registered
Republicans, although voting
is limited to elected precinct
committeemen and committeewomen. For more information
email chairman Dane Hicks at
ancogop@garnett-ks.com.
DE-STRESSING FOR THE
HOLIDAY SEASON
Deanna Pearce Hedrick will
be speaking at the Garnett
BPW meeting on Tuesday,
November 15th, 6:00 p.m. at
Town Hall Center. Please join
us for a great informative event.
Any questions, please call 785448-8745.
UNPLANNED PREGNANCY
Advice & Aid Pregnancy Center
in Overland Park helps women
and their families make an
educated decision about an
unplanned pregnancy by providing evidence-based, medical information about parenting, adoption and abortion. Call
(913) 962-0200 or visit www.
adviceandaid.com.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
RECORDS
ANDERSON COUNTY COMMISSION
NOVEMBER 7, 2022
Chairman Leslie McGhee called
the meeting of the Anderson County
Commission to order at 9:00
AM on November 7, 2022 at the
Anderson County Commission Room.
Attendance: Leslie McGhee, Present:
David Pracht, Present: Anthony
Mersman, Present. The pledge of
allegiance was recited. Minutes from
the previous meeting were approved
as presented.
Road & Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road & Bridge
Supervisor reported the road department is selling a 1996 mower, 2008
dump truck and a 2011 motor grader
on the Gavel Roads auction.
Anderson County Hospital
Diane Doran, Hospital Board
Member introduced Jeremy Armstrong
as the new Hospital Administrator.
Community Building HVAC Bids
Bids were presented for a new
HVAC system for the Anderson Co
Community Building. Commissioner
Mersman moved and Commissioner
Pracht seconded to accept the bid
from A&H for the amount of $37,032
to be paid out of the ARPA fund.
Approved 3-0.
Adjourn
Meeting adjourned at 12:00PM due
to no further business.
Unified School District No. 365
Board of Educ
Regular meeting held: Thursday,
November 3, 2022, 7:00 p.m., Ray
Meyer Gym Board Room.
Members present: Mike Richards
(President-presiding), Adam Caylor,
Gina Witherspoon and Gaylene
Comfort. Sonya Martin, Gary Teel and
Brian Schafer were absent.
Staff present: Donald Blome
(Superintendent), Paula Wallace
(Clerk), Stacey Hedges (Curriculum
Director), Geoff Meiss (Principal/
ACJSHS), Marshall Nienstedt (Asst.
Principal/ACJSHS), Angela Linn
(Principal/GRE & WES), Dan Ackland
(Principal/GES).
Others present: Reggi Lickteig,
Hope Hill, Aislyn Smith
Call to order: 7:00 p.m. by Richards.
Recognitions: Marshall Nienstedt
recognized the following sports and
other student accomplishments:
Tucker Nelson represented
ACJSHS at the 3A State Cross country meet in Lawrence and finished
37th.
Reese & Reagan Witherspoon
qualified for womens golf and Reagan
advanced to Day #2 and finished tied
for 39th.
FFA had a very successful trip to the
National Convention in Indianapolis
the Poultry team finished in 8th place
and the Milk Quality team finished
in 4th place. All members of both
teams finished in the Gold Division.
Members of the teams are Poultry-Ella
Reichard, Braxton Spencer, Mallory
Wheat & Tyler Gillespie. Milk Quality
team Emma Self, Amelia Cubit,
Sayleen Partida & Lily Keith.
Public Comments: Don Blome presented the board withmegaprojects
in Coffey County.
Ordering and approval of agenda: Motion to approve the agenda
with the addition of 7.4 Property &
Casualty Insurance. Witherspoon,
Caylor, passed 4-0.
Reports and Information
Budget Summary
KASB Convention Information
Consent Agenda: Motion to approve
the consent agenda. Witherspoon,
Comfort, passed 4-0.
Approved minutes of October 6th
regular meeting.
Payment of Claims
Treasurers Report
Activity Fund Account Statements
Credit Card Account Statement
Budget Transfers
Action Item
Dishwasher Equipment – No Action
Discussion Items:
Curriculum & Accreditation
School Vehicles
2023-2024 School Calendar
(Preliminary)
Property & Casualty Insurance
Break:
None
Executive session:
None
Personnal:
Motion to approve the verbal resignation of Kathy Dudney as cook at
GES Richards, Witherspoon, passed
4-0.
Motion to approve the resignation of Mike Kellerman as Assistant
High School Girls Basketball coach.
Richards, Caylor, passed 4-0.
Motion to approve Lisa Kelley as a
Bus Driver Aide with salary and benefits as per the transportation handbook. Richards, Witherspoon, passed
4-0.
Motion to approve Angela Scheckel
as a cook with salary and benefits as
per the classified handbook. Richards,
Comfort, passed 4-0.
Motion to approve the supplemental assignment recommendation of Vance Gorman as Assistant
High School Girls Basketball coach.
Richards, Witherspoon, passed 4-0.
Adjourned: 7:26 p.m. Witherspoon,
Caylor. Passed 4-0.
Paula Wallace, Clerk
APPROVED:
Revenue has filed a Sales Tax Warrant
against Alkima Green in the amount of
$1,672.80 for unpaid 2021 Individual
Incomes Taxes.
Citibank has filed suit against
Donald Dishman in the amount of
$3,556.66 for unpaid goods and/or
services.
Henry L Womelsdorf and Christena
M Womelsdorf to Raymond Bonnett
and Elizabeth Bonnett: NW/4 of NW/4
of 22-22-20.
Jon M Conley to Regina C Conley
Trustee and Conley Join Revocable
Trust Dated 10-27-2022: W2 NE4
14-23-20 less a tract 2 acres described
as follows: Beg at NECOR W2 NE4,
thence west 300, Sec 18 Twp 23
Range 20 – NW, SW Qtr/Qtr(s) of the
NE Quarter W2 NE4 16-23-20.
ANDERSON COUNTY JAIL ROSTER
Land Transfers
ANDERSON COUNTY
CIVIL CASES FILED
Clara C. Rockers, Trustee Under
the Rockers Family Revocable
Intervivos Trust dated April 15, 1997,
as Amended and Restated and Helen
L. Rockers, Trustee of the Rockers
Family Trust dated March 4, 2015,
as Amended July 2, 2020, have filed
suit against Richard B. Ohmes and
Casie Pearson in dispute over common boundaries brought about by
errors in the first deed used in 1975
to determine common boundary.
The Kansas Department of
LOSS…
FROM PAGE 1
Republican party gave us a candidate that could not and did
not win, Pyle said. The Pyle
team sent a needed message
to the Republican party, that
Kansas needed a strong conservative candidate.
Pyle even went to far as to
cast suspicion on the vote itself.
All said, Schmidt got the
anti-Kelly vote, period.
The left-wing endorsements
for Kelly gave her the win.
Or, there was an issue with
the voting machines?, he said.
The
heartburn
for
CONTEST…
FROM PAGE 1
$1,000 grand prize at the
end of the contest in mid
December in time for you
to spend your winnings for
Christmas or into the New
Year.
Sponsor packages are still
available for additional businesses that want to participate. Contact the Anderson
County Review at (785) 4483121 to participate as a sponsor.
ANDERSON COUNTY
TRAFFIC CASES FILED
Steven Lynn Brodmerkle has been
charged with operating a vehicle without registration or w/ expired tag.
Andrea Marie Cude has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a 65
mph zone, $153.
Jessica Lynn Morton has been
charged with speeding 75 mph in a 65
mph zone, $153.
Jason A Petford has been charged
with driving under the influence of
drugs/alcohol;1st conviction.
Kelly E Sheffield has been charged
with driving under the influence of
drugs/alcohol;1st conviction.
Emilo Revaldo Blackbourne has
been charged with speeding 75 mph
in a 65 mph zone, $153.
Giovanni Rodriguez was booked
into jail on March 3, 2021.
Sabre Suire was booked into jail on
November 12, 2021.
Tyler Rhodes was booked into jail
on April 30, 2022.
Jeffrey Gregg was booked into jail
on July 19, 2022.
Isidro Madrid was booked into jail
on August 12, 2022.
Sean Williams was booked into jail
on August 22, 2022.
But support in the rural
counties was dwarfed by
pro-abortion Democrat influence in Johnson County, where
incumbent Democrat Sharice
Davids picked up a surplus of
nearly 40,000 voters to cruise to
a crushing 12 point win.
As in her previous two
terms, Davids remains the only
Democrat among the Kansas
congressional
contingent,
which holds Republicans in its
other three congressional and
both Senate seats.`
Monday: Tacos & chicken enchiladas
Tuesday: Open-face roast beef
Wednesday: Fried chicken
ALL AVAILABLE
Thursday: Meatloaf
FAMILY-STYLE!
Every Sunday
Friday: Chicken fried steak
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
or chicken fried chicken
Saturday: Wings- EVERY Saturday!
Homemade
1st Saturday:
Ribeye Steak
PAN-FRIED
2nd Saturday:
Chicken Enchiladas
CHICKEN
3rd Saturday:
Boiled Shrimp
4th Saturday:
Fried Catfish
5th Saturday:
Sues Choice
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Our Ottawa office:
785-521-2030
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205 N Maple St. Garnett 785-448-2284
706 N. Lindenwood Dr.
Hannah Morgan, Agent
Olathe, Ks. 66062
427 S Main St. Ottawa
(913) 661-0466
Commercial Insurance
General Liability Commercial Auto
Property Work Comp Bonding
Courtney Tucker,
Tucker, Agent
Courtney
Agent
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
ctucker@agencywest-ins.com
Garnett
131 E 4th Ave
113 S Maple
785-448-3191
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to change without notice. Fees can reduce earnings on the account.
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Anderson Co. Hospital
SEATS…
FROM PAGE 1
Governor Candidate Derek
Schmidt would have, if not
for rogue GOP Independent
Dennis Pyles 19,000 diverted
votes.
Republicans won handily
in those races: incumbent secretary of state Scott Schwab
defeated Democrat Jeanna
Repass with 59 percent; Steve
Johnson beat incumbent
Democrat Lynn Rogers for
state treasurer with 54 percent;
incumbent Vickie Schmidt kept
her commissioner of insurance post from Kiel Corkran,
a Democrat, with 63 percent.
Jerry Moran cruised to an
easy win over Democrat Mark
Holland to win his U.S. Senate
seat with 60 percent of the vote.
Republican incumbent congressmen Jake LaTurner, Ron
Estes and Tracey Mann won
easy victories in the 2nd, 4th
and 1st Districts.
Anderson County voters set
the pace for returns in each of
those state races, voting red in
the 60, 70 and even 80 percent
range in each of those offices.
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saintlukeskc.org/cardioscan
We have
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14 MONTH
CD SPECIAL!
2×3
Agency West
Residential Insurance
Auto Home
Farm Life Health
ANDERSON COUNTY FARM-INS
Kevin Grob was booked into jail on
June 13, 2022.
Charles Rogers was booked into
jail on July 25, 2022.
Andrew Jessip was booked into jail
on September 8, 2022.
Jonathan Kyle Luna was booked
into jail on October 3, 2022.
Brandon Demetri Santana was
booked into jail on October 10, 2022.
Anthony Loren-Jermill Conner was
booked into jail on October 13, 2022.
Randell Smith was booked into jail
on October 17, 2022.
Thomas Martin was booked into jail
on October 17, 2022.
Jessica Jeanine Schmidt was
booked into jail on October 25, 2022.
Larry Donell Robinson was booked
into jail on November 4, 2022.
Loren Partrich was booked into jail
on October 17, 2022.
CALL AHEAD- PICK UP (913) 898-6211
Sunday: Homemade
pan-fried chicken w/sides
Republicans didnt end with
the governors race.
Anderson Countians gave
Amanda Adkins an even larger margin than they gave
Schmidt in the 3rd District
Congressional contest, offering up 70 percent of the county vote to the former Cerner
executive and health administration professional. Franklin
and additional portions of
Miami counties also added to
the redistricted 3rd and gave
Adkins better than 60 percent
of their vote totals.
Andrew Ryan Keuchel was booked
into jail on September 20, 2022.
Jessica Lynn Koopman was booked
into jail on October 7, 2022.
John Randall Penner was booked
into jail on October 12, 2022.
Josef Black was booked into jail on
October 19, 2022.
Jesse Dean Osborn was booked
into jail on October 23, 2022.
Christopher Thomas Parsons was
booked into jail on October 25, 2022.
Rashawna Rose Stripling was
booked into jail on October 27, 2022.
Matthew Wesley Stark was booked
into jail on November 3, 2022.
James ONeal Gossett was booked
into jail on November 7, 2022.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
PRATHER
JUNE 25, 1935 – NOVEMBER 8, 2022
Richard B. Prather, age 87,
of Garnett, Kansas, passed
away on Tuesday, November
8, 2022, at the Anderson County
Hospital.
Richard was born on June
25, 1935, at the
family home
in Kincaid,
K a n s a s .
He was the
fourth of four
children born
to Romie D.
and Nellie
Prather
( M o o r e )
Prather.
R i c h a r d
graduated from Kincaid High
School in 1953.
Richard was united in marriage to Dolores J. Weirich
on June 12, 1955, in Kincaid,
Kansas.
He was preceded in death
by his parents; son, Melvin
Jerry Prather on January 19,
2020; two sisters, Wanda, who
passed away at a young age,
and Ramona Taylor; and brother, Dr. Elvin Prather, DVM.
Richard is survived by his
wife, Dolores Prather, of the
home; son, Norman T. Prather
and Cindi of Ida Grove, Iowa;
daughter, Sherry Lust and
Terry of Bellevue, Nebraska;
five grandchildren, Matthew
Lust and Josie, Adam Lust
and Katelyn, Amy Lust, Phillip
Prather and Theresa, and Lane
Prather; and six great granddaughters.
After high school graduation Richard became a partner
in his Dads farming operation, an occupation he loved.
The Hilltop Farm Grade A
Dairy started December 1955.
Richard worked hard on his
goals to breed the highest
producing and best-looking
Holstein cows that he could.
He held leadership positions
in state and regional Holstein
organizations.
Richard loved working with
young people, he coached his
childrens ball teams, was a
4-H leader and taught Sunday
School.
Richard served in leadership roles in several community organizations including:
First Baptist Churches in
Kincaid and Garnett; Crest
School Board, President of
Anderson County Fair Board
and Anderson County Farm
Bureau; President Lyon
Coffey Electric and Kansas
Electric Cooperative; and
President of Central Region
American Baptist Men. He
was on the founding Board of
Anderson County RWD #5 and
Martindale Villas for Senior
Living in Kincaid.
Richards innovative spirit
helped him overcome many
challenges that he faced especially after being diagnosed
with Inclusion Body Myositis
(IBM), a muscle disease, 15
years ago.
A memorial service for
Richard will be held at 10:30AM
on Saturday, December 3, 2022,
at the First Baptist Church
Garnett, Kansas. His family
will greet friends on Friday evening from 6:00PM to 8:00PM at
the Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel in Garnett.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to First Baptist
Church Sanctuary Chair Fund
or to The IBM Research Fund
at Johns Hopkins Medical
Center and left in care of the
funeral home.
Condolences may be sent to
the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com
3
REMEMBRANCES
Colony Christian Church What is awaiting you?
– How to free ourselves
Have you ever gotten tangled up in something? A barbwire fence, a thorn bush, the
bed sheets, the wrong crowd,
the thoughts inside your
mind? It can be a struggle
to get untangled from these
things. That is how it is when
we try to untangle ourselves
from the sin in our lives after
we come to Jesus for salvation.
Colossians 3:1-12 gives us some
tips on how to free ourselves
from the sins of our former
way of life that try to keep us
tangled up in its snare. First,
we must set our sights on the
realities of heaven. When you
are driving, the best way to get
to your destination is to keep
your eyes on the road ahead
(Prov 4:27). When we focus our
attention on something to our
right or our left, our course
direction starts to shift causing
us to take a quick hard swerve,
or slowly drift overtime and
we miss our mark. Secondly,
if we wish to stay free from the
entanglements of sin, we cant
remain bare. The bible tells us
to strip off our former way
of life including greed, anger,
slander, idolatry, sexual immo-
rality, and evil desires. Do
not remain naked and vulnerable. Col 3:12-14 Since God
chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe
yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience.
Make allowance for each others faults, and forgive anyone
who offends you. Remember,
the Lord forgave you, so you
must forgive others. Above all,
clothe yourselves with love,
which binds us all together in
perfect harmony. Set your
sights on the reality of heaven
and put on Christ. Then sin
wont have the power to trip
you up or hold you down.
Hear all our sermons by
using your favorite podcast
app, on our Facebook page,
or on our website at www.
colonychristianchurch.org.
Tuesdays- Mens Bible study
7 a.m. in church basement,
Women's Bible study 8:30 am
at parsonage. Men on Fire life
group will be the 2nd Friday of
the month. Wednesdays – Meal
@ 5:30, Youth group at 6:00 in
the sanctuary and adult Bible
study at the parsonage at 7:00.
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Iola Location:
202 S. State St.
Iola, KS 66749
620-363-5005
In Matthew 7:16, Jesus says,
Enter through the narrow
gate. For wide is the gate and
broad is the road that leads
to destruction and many enter
through it. But small is the
gate and narrow the road that
leads to life, and only a few
find it. So what does the wide
gate and the broad road look
like? Jesus doesnt elaborate
but simply says, it leads to
destruction. There are several levels of destruction. One
might not see a need for God
in their life, they are quite satisfied. Destruction can come
in the form of a lust for power,
alcohol or drug abuse, pornography, the pursuit of money
and on and on. Anything that
controls us at the expense of
our relationship with Jesus is
destructive. Disturbingly the
passage states many people
reside in that trap.
The Hebrew word for
destruction is Abaddon, which
is the abode of the dead or the
grave. One has to ask, how
can so many people get trapped
in this existence? The simple
answer is their mind is held
captive by one of the destructive elements above.
On the other hand Jesus
talks about the alternative to
this when he says, But small
is the gate and narrow is the
road that leads to life and only
a few find it. A misconception exists here because those
WEEKLY DEVOTIONAL
BY DAVID BILDERBACK
who choose this path are often
viewed as weak, unable to
make decisions for themselves.
Know this, it takes no strength
to give into a destructive
force, however, a tremendous
amount of strength is required
to resist this kind of temptation. The Apostle Paul addresses this in 2 Corinthians 12:10
when he says, That is why for
Christs sake I delight in weakness, in insults, in hardships,
in persecutions, in difficulties.
For when I am weak, then I am
strong. Living a destructive
lifestyle will leave us searching at the end of our life, however we will never find what it
is we are searching for because
God does not exist on the broad
road. The best we can do is to
try to be happy with the choice
we made instead of Jesus. Not
surprisingly many people are
happy with their decision, not
realizing that only destruction
awaits them.
David Bilderback, Ministry on
the Holiness of God.
DID YOU KNOW the Anderson County Review
is the longest continuously operating business
in Anderson County, founded in 1865?
2×2 Good
Shepherd
Emporia Location:
1 S Commercial St.
Emporia, KS 66801
620-342-5573
Ottawa Location:
Corner K68 & Main
Ottawa, KS 66067
785-229-0684
Anderson County Area
Religious Services Directory
get revised church directory
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday Service 10:00 am
Wednesday 7pm
East 6th & Hwy 169, Garnett, KS
Pastor – Joshua Ford (785) 448-3908
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
Garnett Publishing, Inc
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett
(785) 448-3121
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Sunday Connect Groups 9 am
Sunday Worship Service 10:00am
Bible Studies Sunday 6:00pm
258 W. Park Road, Garnett, Ks.
(785) 448-3208
Senior Pastor – Scott King
Childrens Pastor -Sarah Pridey
Jordan Dages – Teen Ministries
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 9am
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
785-594-2603
morningstarcarehomes.com
Anderson
County
News
(785) 242- 1220
Mon – Fri
8:00am
Country Favorites
Your only locally-owned bank.
131 E. 4th Ave PO Box 327 Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3191
NORTHCOTT CHURCH
Sunday Morning Bible Study 9am
Sunday Worship 10am
12425 SW Barton Rd., Colony, KS 66015
(620) 228-9324
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School and Fellowship 9:30am,
Morning Svc. 10:30am
Transportation – Call before 8:30
(785) 448-5749
417 South Walnut, Garnett, KS
Pastor Daniel Meyer
BEACON OF TRUTH
Sunday Worship Service 10:00am
Hwy 59 & Allen Rd., Richmond, KS
(785) 229-5172
Pastor – Reuben Esh
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Mass Sunday 8am
Greeley, KS
(785) 448-3846
Pastor Fr. Daniel Stover
COLONY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Cross Training 9:45am
Sunday Worship 10:45am
306 Maple, Colony, KS 66015
(620) 852-3200
Pastor – Chase Riebel
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
www.fccgarnett.org
Early Worship 8am
Sunday School (All Ages) 9:15am
Second Worship Service 10:30am
Childrens Church 11am
Nursery Provided
Second & Walnut, Garnett, KS
(785) 448-3452
Chris Goetz, Pastor
Bryar Wight, Youth Coordinator
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
MONT IDA CHURCH
Sunday School 9:30am
Church 10:40am
(785) 448-8042
1300 & Broomall Rd, Welda, KS 66091
From Garnett – 7th St, W 7 miles, S 3 miles
Pastor – Vernon Yoder
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
Pastor Fr. Daniel Stover
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Worship 9am
(785) 835-6273
Scipio, KS
Fr. Gerald Williams
ST. TERESA CATHOLIC CHURCH
Westphalia, KS
Mass: Sunday 8am
Fr. John Samineni
(620) 364-2416
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 9:15 a.m.
Sunday Worship 10:30am
Bible Study Wed. 10am
Chancel Choir Sun 9am
(785) 448-6833
2nd & Oak, Garnett, KS
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
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School (All Ages) 10:00 am
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00am
116 N. Kallock, Richmond, KS
(785) 835-6235
ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Emerald (Hwy 31 West of Harris, KS)
Mass: Saturday 4:00 pm
Fr. Colin Haganey
(620) 364-5671
WELDA UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday Church School 9:45am
Church Services & Childrens Church
11am
Nursery Available
(785) 448-2358
Welda, KS
Pastor – Bill Nelson
COLONY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Church Services 9:30am
Colony, KS
Parsonage (620) 852-3103
Church Office (620) 852-3106
Pastor – Dorothy Welch
Strong churches make
strong communities.
Join a church family
in the local area
today!
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
Advertise
here.
If you would like to advertise
your business in this directory,
call Stacey at 785-448-3121 or
email
Callreview@garnett-ks.com
(785) 448-3121
Hwy 59 in Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6393 or (785) 448-6494
Call-ins Welcome!
LIVING WATERS BIBLE TEMPLE
Sunday School 10am
Sunday Service 11am
305 E. 2nd
Garnett, KS
(785) 304-9032
Pastor – Michael Lobdell
This listing of local places of worship paid for by the businesses you see here. Show your appreciation with your patronage.
4
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OPINION
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
KSGOP refuse to learn from history
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
Thats the original phrase by George
Santayana we mangle from time to time as If
you dont remember history, youre doomed to
repeat it
Either one should be the motto of the Kansas
Republican Party.
In 2018, a contentious gubernatorial primary
produced a wounded nominee in Kris Kobach
and a fractured party to compete with an inconsequential Democrat in Laura Kelly with little
record of accomplishment. And then there was
gadfly Independent candidate Greg Orman who
liked to run for office just to have something to
do.
At least in that campaign, observers didnt
have to hear him constantly bray about Pat
RaaabbertsPat Raaabberts as he had done
four years earlier. The GOP never united, the
losing primary candidates supporters took their
ball and went home, and the Democrat, despite
only 25% in party registration in the state, went
to Cedar Crest.
Fast forward four years and as Yogi Berra
used to say Its dj vu all over again. Except
this time there was no contentious primary,
save for a malcontent yahoo from Kincaid who
did some of his Quixotic campaigning from a jail
cell. The Republican nominee Derek Schmidt
was a liberal, declared Arlyn Briggs as he
clinked his tin cup on his cell bars pro-illegal
immigration and other sins that made Schmidt
unfit to be governor. Incredibly, this Eugene
V. Debs wannabe got 20% of the primary vote
80,000 Republicans apparently didnt mind their
chosen candidate was campaigning from county
lockup.
Kelly was still inconsequential four years
later, but with a record this time to prove it.
She turned the state over to Dr. Strangelove of
the state health department; closed businesses,
churches and schools in a Covid Panic, vetoed
laws to protect female athletes from boys-whosay-theyre-girls, and presided over an incompetent Labor Department where people shed
thrown out of work couldnt get jobless benefits
but criminals and hackers could.
There was also another Third Wheel, desperate for attention but pitifully short on accomplishments. Dennis Pyle echoed the county jail
inmate annoyance in the primary there was
no difference between Kelly and Schmidt he
huffedpeas in a pod.
GUEST EDITORIAL
DAVID HICKS, Guest Writer
Pyle had no hope of winning and no idea what
to do if he did. This tantrum candidate had no
grasp of history, either, identifying him as a true
Republican regardless of what he called himself.
He was oblivious to what conservative icon
William F. Buckley had cautioned his readers
and audiences: Support the most conservative
candidate who can win.
Pyle didnt; neither did his supporters have
an epiphany in the waning days of the campaign
when they could see the light in the tunnel was
a train bearing down on their party and their
governorship.
Kansas Republicans didnt invent the circular firing squad, theyre just perfecting it.
This is a party with 45% of the voter registration in the state, yet they couldnt prevent Laura
Kelly from winning two terms, after Kathleen
Sebelius won two of her own. They even let Joan
Finney win a term.
Joan Finney.
But Republicans have a history (theres that
darn word again) of stealing defeat from the jaws
of victory. Even The Gipper was guilty once,
or at least his supporters were. When Ronald
Reagan lost the nail-biting 1976 GOP nomination
to President Ford, neither man, nor their wives,
could stomach one another long enough to make
peace, unite on a ticket, and win an election
against a nobody. So, the nobody James Earl
Carter Jr., governor of Georgia won. And
Americans paid the price.
Missouri Republicans were so incensed by
the nomination defeat they turned on their own
governor Ford-supporting Kit Bond who had
convinced himself he was on Fords short list
for a running mate. If he was, he lost as he lost
SEE HICKS ON PAGE 5
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 n
a.m.e. Comments may be published anonymously.
Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
Maybe instead of worrying about drag queens
performing at a Halloween show, the Review
should instead show up to court to watch the
incompetence that is Elizabeth Oliver, our current county prosecutor. Last week I spent the
afternoon watching her wander around the
courtroom in what appeared to be leopard print
pajamas and a bath robe complete with full-on
bed head. Its bad enough that the president of
Garnetts BPW doesnt understand what professional attire is, but listening to her make
nonsensical arguments was just excruciating. I
truly hope the Review will do a thorough investigation into her background and qualifications
before the next election.
Nobody should be talking politics at church. Not
in a sermon, not in a group, not in somebodys
home. Leave politics out of it.
Whats different about Wabaunsee, Ks., schools?
Optimism, determination, accountability,
respect. Those are integral elements of the
culture at the Wabaunsee school district, and
it shows in test scores and in the attitudes of
the students, faculty, parents, and community
members.
For the last several years, state assessment scores in most Kansas districts have
been trending downwards, but USD 329 in
Wabaunsee County has been bucking the
trend. For example, math proficiency in
Wabaunsee steadily improved from 40% in
2018 to 50% this year, while the state average
dropped from 32% to 29%.
The Sentinel asked Superintendent Dr.
Troy Pitsch what his district was doing differently. He just took over the districts reins in
July of this year and said he couldnt take any
of the credit, but there is something different
from his previous postings. He invited us to
come see what he called Element X and
we took him up on the invitation on Nov. 4,
2022. After a tour of the district, this reporter took part in a 12-person panel discussion
with teachers, students, community members,
members of the administration, and the president of the USD 329 board of education.
Culture is the difference in Wabaunsee
The adults and students in the discussion
didnt point to a single Element X. They
COMMENTARY
PATRICK RICHARDSON, THE SENTINEL
spoke of several things, like having a small,
tight-knit, rural county with a fairly demographically homogeneous population, but that
is hardly uncommon in Kansas. The districts
size about 425 students may be a contributing factor, but while other districts with
similar enrollment, shown in the adjacent
table, tend to do better than the state average,
they dont have the steady improvement trend
like Wabaunsee.
The driving factor seems to be a noticeably
different culture of accountability and mutual
respect that pervades every aspect of the dis-
trict. The collaborative atmosphere between
parents, students, and the district is unlike
anything the Sentinel has experienced elsewhere.
Wabaunsee High School physics and chemistry teacher Lisa Hall, who, unlike many of
the educators in the district, is not from the
area, said shes noted a distinct lack of finger-pointing between parents and the school.
Ive often been put in a situation by parents and community members (where) theyre
blaming the teachers for lack of student success, Hall said of other districts where shes
taught. And of course, teachers are often
blaming the family, well, this kid comes from
a bad family, or they dont have parents
support, or they dont have an environment
where they can study.
Here, those two things are one and the
same. Here, the community members and parents and teacher, theyre all unified, Theres
no finger pointing.
Starting in 2016 and 2017, every district in
the region showed reductions in proficiency at about the same time the Kansas State
Department of Education began de-emphasizing academic improvement in 2016 with
its Kansans Can initiative and putting more
SEE RICHARDSON ON PAGE 7
Why dont Democrats care about crime?
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul delivered
one of the most memorable lines of the midterm debates when she said she didnt know
why her Republican opponent, Lee Zeldin,
cared so much about locking up criminals.
Hochuls highhandedness encapsulated an
attitude toward crime and punishment that
has been shaped by the decarceration movement.
Progressives have accepted a wholesale
critique of the criminal justice system that
is deeply flawed, not to say a complete fantasy. Its premises are false, and its effects are
destructive. At the same time, it has made
— for the second national election in a row
— Democrats vulnerable to a Republican fusillade on crime.
If the 2022 midterms can drive a stake
through the decarceration movement, which
gained intellectual ground during the Obama
years and seemed set to sweep all before it in
the immediate aftermath of the death of George
Floyd, they will have done a favor to the country — and, incidentally, the Democratic Party.
A key erroneous contention of this critique is that the U.S. spent decades arbitrarily
locking up millions of people to make itself
a deeply unjust carceral state. In reality, as
criminologist Barry Latzer points out in his
book The Myth of Overpunishment, the U.S.
experienced a massive crime wave beginning
half a century ago that naturally resulted in
more imprisonments. From 1960-1990, violent
crime arrests increased more than 400% and
prison commitments more than 270%.
Another myth is that prisons are full of
small-time or nonviolent offenders. According
to Latzer, more than half of inmates in state
prisons have committed violent crimes such
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
as murder, rape or assault. Another 16%
have committed significant property crimes,
including felony theft and burglary.
How about drug crimes? They account for
14% of imprisonments, and less than 4% are
for possession (and those offenders may well
be guilty of other crimes).
Its not true that an overly punitive U.S. is
always throwing away the key. In his book
Criminal (In)Justice, Rafael Mangual of
the Manhattan Institute points out that state
prisoners serve a median sentence of roughly
15 months and violent offenders less than two
and a half years.
Its not as though, by the way, we are catching every criminal and nailing him to the
wall. About half of murderers are arrested and
imprisoned, Latzer writes, while only about
6% of other violent offenders are brought to
justice.
A tiny percentage of the population, something like 5%, is responsible for about 50% of
crime. According to Latzer, 400,000 state pris-
oners released in 2005 had been arrested 4.3
million times prior to their incarceration and
83% of them got rearrested within nine years
of being released.
As the headlines from around the country
about monsters with long rap sheets committing terrible crimes emphasize, we should
be seeking to put such dangerous people out
of commission. And we arent doing it with
requisite seriousness.
Even prior to the tumult of 2020, over the
prior decade we had combined decarceration
(with the prison population declining by 17%)
and de-policing (with 25% fewer arrests).
Robust policing is, of course, an indispensable part of maintaining order. Mangual
writes that the simple proposition that more
policing means less crime is one of the most
consistent and robust findings in the criminological literature.
Maybe Democrats will begin to acknowledge this and sue for a formal divorce from the
decarceration movement.
Democrats wouldnt have to try to deny
their true views, minimize the spike in certain categories of crime, or — like Hochul
— express bemused contempt for a tough-oncrime position if they simply acknowledged
that we need more cops arresting more criminals, and these offenders should be put behind
bars more reliably and for longer sentences.
If the party didnt get this after the 2020
election, maybe there is, to paraphrase the
folk expression, education in the second kick
of the mule.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
Can someone explain to me why some houses
in this town have to pass inspection and some
dont, or does it have something to do with
where youre from?
I want God to know Im so sorry and sad again
that Im being forced to fund abortions via my
tax dollars going to support these slaughterhouses. Thanks to Governor Kelly, AKA Margaret
Sanger, Ive become, against my will, an accessory to murder. Whos fighting for the lives of
these babies? Why are their lives less valuable
than those of these birthing people? Why as a
society have we sunk so low as to embrace abortion as a form of birth control?
I wanted to say if you missed the Garnett high
school kids put on Singing In The Rain this
weekend you really missed a show. Great job all
you kids and the teachers who put it on.
The American Library Association is a farleft Democrat organization whose president,
Emily Drabinski is a self-described Marxist.
They have their so-called Banned Books Week
that includes kiddie porn, while their members
exclude from public libraries books with viewpoints or authors that challenge their far left
Democrat propaganda.
Contact your elected leaders:
President Joseph Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1111
Governor Laura Kelly
300 SW 10th Ave #241s,
Topeka, KS 66612
(202) 224-6521
email form:
www.governor.kansas.gov
Senator Roger Marshall
Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office
Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521
3rd Dist. Congressman
Sharice Davids
1541 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C., 20515
(202) 225-2865
12 Dist. Sen. Caryn Tyson
300 SW 10th St. Rm 236-E
Topeka, Ks. 66612 (785) 296-6838
P.O. Box 191 Parker, Ks. 66072
(913) 898-2366
caryn.tyson@senate.ks.gov
9th Dist. Rep
Kent Thompson
300 SW 10th St. Room 187-N
Topeka, KS 66612
Office: (620) 496-2255
Home: (620) 365-3197
kent.thompson@house.ks.gov
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
FORMERLY THE GARNETT PLAINDEALER, THE ANDERSON
COUNTY REPUBLICAN, THE REPUBLICAN-PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT
JOURNAL PLAINDEALER, THE GARNETT REVIEW, THE GREELEY GRAPHIC,
THE ANDERSON COUNTIAN.
Published each Tuesday by Garnett Publishing, Inc.,
and entered as Periodicals Class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200. Copyright Garnett Publishing, Inc., 2018.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
112 W. 6th Ave. P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121review@garnett-ks.com
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
Kay and I embark on
another mystery tour
Kay and I recently decided
it was high-time we took another trip, and guess what? Thats
exactly what we did.
In fact we just got back home
on Monday 7 Nov. 2022. We
took a 6 day bus MYSTERY
TOUR with Heritage Tours out
of Yoder, Ks. Angie Bozeman
the owner of Heritage Tours
was our Tour Hostess and our
driver was Keith Leinbach.
For the next few weeks I will
be sharing our wonderful tour
with you.
Friday 31 October: At 12:55
we left Garnett on our way to
our motel in South Hutchinson,
Ks.. Lots of soybean harvesting as we drove along and this
meant lots of big trucks on the
highways. Our one and only
detour was in El Dorado, Ks.
Beautiful big yellow leaved
trees started appearing along
the highway near Kechi, Ks. We
never did learn their names.
Just south of Hutchinson we
stopped at the large Kutters
Furniture Store where we
just looked around for about
30 minutes. At 4:35 p.m. we
arrived at our motel and got
our room assignment. It was
63 degrees when we paid a visit
to McDonalds just across the
street from our motel. Off to
sleep as we had to rise early in
the morning.
Saturday 1 Nov. 22: Up
at 5:00. A quick breakfast at
McDonalds and a short drive to
Yoder. We loaded the bus shortly after 7:00 and wheels were
turning at 7:30: There were 49
plus Angie and Keith on our
bus. It wasnt long until Angie
held a short Devotional time,
which she did each and everyday of our trip. She always
asked Gods protection over
our motor coach as we traveled
along. About 9:00 Angie passed
out ballpoint pens, name tags
to put on our windows and
small travel bags to place on
DIGGING UP THE PAST
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 504-4722 for
local archeology information.
our seats. At 10:05 we took our
first restroom break at a Rest
Stop on Hwy. 169. After our
stop we played a game called
Battle. The right side of the
bus was called the Mystery
Seekers and the left side were
the Back Seat Drivers. Angie
would ask everyone who had
certain items (comb, nail clippers, quarter, ticketstub, etc.
etc.) Then she would count
each side and total them up.
The Mystery Seekers won by 7.
Kay and I were on the winning
team. We crossed the Missouri
state line at 11:30 and stopped in
Joplin, Missouri at the Joplin
History & Mineral Museum for
a tour and lunch. They had
a huge display of cookie cutters and everyone could get
a free Cookie Kutter. On the
road again at 1:10 p.m. Watched
a video of Jean Robinson, a
comedian (Great). Our afternoon break was at the WalMart store in Mountain Grove,
Missouri. The remainder of the
afternoon we had all kinds of
quizzes and word search puzzles to solve. Our final stop of
the day was at the Drury Inn in
Popular Bluff, Missouri,where
we enjoyed their Kickback dinner from 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. before
retiring for the day.
I will continue sharing our
trip with you in my next column.
Respectfully submitted by:
Henry Roeckers. 9Nov022
5
HISTORY
20 years ago… New jail shot down by a nearly 2-1 vote
10 years ago…
The results of the recent elections are new faces all around.
On the Homefront, Brandon
Jones will replace incumbent
Fred Campbell as County
Attorney. Jones will be splitting
his time between Anderson and
Osage counties as he does his
best to keep the county moving
forward. Another new face will
be in the Sheriffs office as well,
Sheriff-Elect Vernon Valentine
plans to shake things up in his
new department. He plans to
reduce the number of supervisors to the sheriff, undersheriff
and a chief deputy. Valentine
says he does not plan to terminate any positions, but change
will not be limited to the job
titles that some employees may
retain. The Sheriff-Elect plans
to make some changes to policy
and procedure regarding officers who live outside the county. He specifically wants to lift
that restriction to allow officers
to live outside the county but
would like to require that supervisors live within the countys
borders.
20 years ago…
Anderson County voters
spoke loud and clear as the new
jail issue fails nearly 2-1. The
ballot proposal would have built
a new jail in Garnetts Industrial
Park. The jail issue would have
increased sales tax by $0.01 to
fund the $5.2 million proposal.
The new facility would have
replaced the countys current
antique 1929 facility. The vintage property is outdated and
on the verge of condemnation.
THAT WAS THEN
Chelsey DAlbini
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
Also tax related, the USD 365
Board backed down from another facilities election. The results
reported from a facilities survey
showed that the public is adamantly against a property tax
increase, or at least until the
economy improves. 300 homes
were called to get a better picture of the reasoning behind
the failure of the $16 million
schools package proposed last
summer. The project would
have build a new building or
renovated existing structures in
Garnett, Greeley, Mont Ida and
Westphalia.
30 years ago….
During a regular commission meeting Tuesday night,
the commission approved drafting an amendment to its current regulations which would
require members of an airport
board to be City of Garnett residents. The commission will
continue to review the ordinance and vote on the measure
at the next meeting, where it
will review suggested names
of board members. Currently,
the ordinance requires that all
members be residents of the
community, but lacks diversity in the usage of the airport.
Mayor Dan Benjamin says that
hed like to see that board contain local businessmen, but also
include pilots, skydivers and
other businesses that would use
the airport and its facilities.
The City of Garnett
Commission adopted new regulations as they pertain to the
local Fire Department. The new
regulations set the maximum
number of firemen who can be
attending school at one time at
six. The commission stressed
that should the department
have more than six wanting to
go to one fire training session,
that it can be brought before the
commission. The guidelines for
conduct of the volunteers also
outline the duties of the fire
chief and his deputy chiefs.
Representatives
from
Skidmore & Associates, an engineering firm that has helped
the City of Garnett on several projects, will be in town
this week viewing the Richart
Hotel and the IOOF building
both on Fourth Avenue, with
an effort to make suggestion
for renovation or demolition to
the Commission. According to
City Manager Rick Doran the
process for demolition continues on the hotel. However, the
engineering firm was contacted
to help provide expertise on its
demolition since it shares an
exterior wall with an existing
business.
40 years ago…
Cased gun laws and prairie
HICKS…
FROM PAGE 4
his day job a few months later
when Reagan supporters sat on
their hands, and Bonds national ambitions were derailed in a
stunning upset.
The 1992 vanity campaigns
of Pat Buchanan and Ross
Perot undid George Bushs
second term ambitions, and
ushered in eight years of Bill
and Hillary Clinton, the blue
dress, and later on, the basket
of deplorables.
So, Dennis Pyle did just what
came naturally. He and his supporters got the governor they
wanted. Problem is, the rest of
us get to share the government
they deserve.
David Hicks is a political analyst living in Bonner Springs
and a contributor to The
Anderson County Review.
chickens are on the mind of
Ralph Adams lately. On prairie chicken opening day, Adam
is patrolling the local fields
checking hunters with his dog
Warden. Adams says Kansas
law is lacking in some areas,
citing a cased gun law that
could help reduce the number
of accidents and road hunting
considerably. Adams notes that
most other states do have a law
that requires guns be empty and
cased when in a vehicle. Adams
is new to the area, previously
working near Dayton, Ohio but
moved to Kansas for a variety of
experience. Transitioning from
a county of 600,000 to a swath of
area encompassing merely 7,000
has given him time to really
examine Kansas Law. Adams
says his work is far more than
just being in the field to check
licenses, its being the public face of the Fish and Game
Commission and about teaching preservation.
Anderson County has been
plagued by a string of non-injury accidents that have kept
local law enforcement busy.
Reported accidents at the DayNite Store on Highway 59 when
a driver backed into an advertising sign. A hit-and-run accident damaged a vehicle at Pizza
Hut occurred after a vehicle
was side-wiped and left scratches. Another happened at the
Apco Station when a vehicle
struck a fuel pump, and another
accident at the intersection of
5th and Walnut.
You name it,
we print it.
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Publishing, Inc.
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6
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
LOCAL
Howarters 100th Bday Notice of Ordinance establishing the Guffey Community Improvement District
ORDINANCE NO. 4242
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF GARNETT
ESTABLISHING THE GUFFEY COMMUNITY
IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT; AUTHORIZING
THE MAKING OF CERTAIN PROJECT
IMPROVEMENTS RELATING THERETO;
APPROVING THE ESTIMATED COSTS OF
SUCH PROJECT IMPROVEMENTS; LEVYING
A2.0% CID SALES TAX; PROVIDING FOR
THE METHOD OF FINANCING THE SAME;
AND AUTHORIZING THE EXECUTION OF
A DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT RELATING
THERETO.
WHEREAS, the City of Garnett, Kansas (the
"City") is a municipal corporation duly organized
and validly existing under the laws of the State
of Kansas (the "State"); and
WHEREAS, the provisions of K.S.A. l 2-6a26 et
seq., as amended, (the "CID Act") set f01th the
procedure for the establishment of a community
improvement district ("CID"); and
Howarter of Topeka and their
two daughters Katey and
Caroline, and son David and
Alisha Howarter of Frisco,
Texas and daughter Nadia will
host a family party at Lone
Elm Community Building on
Saturday, November 19th.
Lavernes
address
is
Parkview Heights, 101 N. Pine,
Garnett, if you would like to
send her birthday greetings.
Anderson County Hospital
welcomes Dung Mac,
MD, to Hospitalist Team
GARNETT – Anderson County
Hospital and Allen County
Regional
Hospital
are pleased
to welcome
Dung Mac,
MD, to the
hospitalist
team.
Dr.
Mac joins Vu
Nguyen, DO,
Mac
who has been
working as
a hospitalist at both locations
since the program launched
at Allen County Regional
Hospital in November 2021.
Hospitalists are physicians who specialize in hospital-based care and coordinate
all aspects of care for patients
in the hospital, working in collaboration with nursing staff,
the patients primary care provider, and other specialists.
The hospitalist leads the hospital medical team and coordinates care for patients, making
sure the patient receives the
right care in a timely manner.
Hospitalists spend their
time focused on patients in the
hospital. They connect with
the patients primary care provider to ensure everyone is on
the same page from the very
beginning to the end of a hospital stay, and then transition
care back to the patients primary provider at discharge,
said Jeremy Armstrong,
Administrator, Allen County
Regional
Hospital
and
Anderson County Hospital.
Were glad to have Dr.
Mac caring for our patients in
Garnett and Iola. He communicates well and involves the
patient in making decisions
about their care plan. Hes
been a great addition to the
team.
Dr. Mac is board-certified in
internal medicine. He completed his medical degree at the
University of Texas Medical
Branch John Sealy School of
Medicine in Galveston, Texas.
He then completed his internal medicine residency at the
University of New Mexico
Health Science Center in
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Dr. Mac has close ties to
Kansas. He grew up in Wichita
and is glad to have the opportunity to return to Kansas to
be near family and friends. Dr.
Mac enjoys hiking, camping,
and exploring nature in his
free time.
Local physicians who are
on the hospitals medical staff
continue to have the option
and may choose to admit and
provide inpatient care for their
patients.
ARE YOU HAPPY
WITH YOUR LATEST
TAX BILL?
Wow… 3 days before the mid term election & I got my County Tax bill.
Mine nearly DOUBLED. Are YOU happy with YOUR taxes?
Well, if NOT:
Its a wakeup call that asks You –
Who did You VOTE for at the polls?
Want to fight back? DO THIS: When you pay your tax, ALSO
attach a note saying: IM Protesting my Taxes. And include
Your reasons WHY. Heres an example: I Am PROTESTING
MY TAXES cause the value assumed for my house Fails to
take into account its old age, repairs that would be needed
before it could even sell, rotted wood that needs to be replaced… (etc).
This is EXACTLY WHY I am going to Keep running as a
write in Candidate for my County District. To answer those
who asked me: WHY I decided to be a Write-In: This County
charges candidates $50.00 to even get on the ballot – PLUS
charges another 1% of the salary for the job / OR they want
a petition with the signatures of 3% of a partys registered voters (which is nonsense since LESS than 1/2 of the registered
voters ever even Vote!)
Hang in there & for now: pay that inflated property tax bill.
It wasnt just a coincidence you got your tax bill just before
the election. We need to KEEP IN MIND – WHICH POLITICIANS APPROVE THESE JACKED UP TAXES & Then
vote to Remove them from Office. WE all have to make do
with finances in our homes – its high time politicians do
likewise and pass fair budgets.
Paid for by: Steve Gorsline
WHEREAS, a petition (the "Petition") was filed
with the City Clerk of the City proposing the
creation of a community improvement district pursuant to the Act to be known as the
Guffey Community Improvement District (the
"District"), the completion of a project relating
thereto as more paiticularly described herein
(the "Project") and the imposition of a CID Sales
Tax in the amount of 2.0% (the "CID Sales Tax")
in order to pay the costs of the Project; and
WHEREAS, the Petition was signed by the
owners ofone hundred percent (100%) of all
land and all of the assessed value within the
proposed District, exclusive of land owned by
the City for infrastructure purposes; and
WHEREAS, the CID Act provides that prior to
creating any CID, the Governing Body shall,
by resolution, direct and order a public hearing
on the advisability of creation of such CID and
the construction and expenditure of costs of
community improvement district projects relating thereto, and give notice of the hearing by
publication once each week for two consecutive
weeks in the official City newspaper, the second
publication to be at least seven days prior to the
hearing, and by the mailing of notice to the owners of propetty within the proposed CID; and
WHEREAS, the Governing Body adopted
Resolution No. 2022-13 (the "Resolution") on
October 11, 2022, directing that a public hearing on the proposed District be held November
8, 2022, and requiring that the City Clerk
provide for notice of such public hearing as set
fo1th in the Act; and
WHEREAS, the Goveming Body hereby further
finds and determines that it is necessary and
advisable and in the interest of the public
health, safety and welfare, including economic
development, of the City, to authorize the
execution of the Development Agreement and
related documents.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF
GARNETT, KANSAS:
Section 1. Creation of the District. The
Governing Body hereby finds and dete1mines
that the Petition is sufficient and that all notices
required to be given under the CJD Act were
given in accordance with the CJD Act. The
Governing Body hereby creates the Guffey
Community Improvement District within the
City and approve the boundaries thereof (the
"District"). A legal description of the property
within the District is set forth in Exhibit A
attached hereto and incorporated by reference.
A map generally outlining the boundaries of
the District is attached hereto as Exhibit B and
incorporated herein by reference.
Section 2. Authorization of Project. The
Project described in the Petition consists of the
design, engineering, construction, furnishing
and equipping of a single tenant retail facility (the "Project"). The general components
of the Project include but are not limited to
such items as demolition, site preparation and
development, construction of a building and
tenant finish improvements, including FF&E,
construction of infrastructure and surface parking; ongoing operation and maintenance costs
and any other items or uses associated with the
Project as authorized by the Act. The Governing
Body hereby approves the Project.
Section 3. Estimated Cost. The estimated
cost of the Project to be completed within the
District is $1,505,000.
Section 5. Imposition of the Community
Improvement District Sales Tax. In order to
provide for the payment of a pmtion of the costs
of the Project on a pay-as-you-go basis, the
Governing Body hereby imposes the CID Sales
Tax within the District in an amount of2.0%
on the selling of tangible personal prope1ty
at retail or rendering or furnishing services
taxable pursuant to the Kansas retailers' sales
tax act within the District. The City Clerk shall
cause all notices required by the CJD Act to
be given following passage of this ordinance,
specifically including the submittal by the City of
a ce1tified copy of this ordinance to the Kansas
Department of Revenue ("KDOR") following
publication hereof. Such CJD Sales Tax shall
commence on the first day of the calendar
quaiter next following the 90th day after receipt
.by the KDOR of the certified copy of this
Ordinance sent by the City, and remain in effect
for 22 years, or such lesser period as may
be required for payment from CID Sales Tax
revenues of the costs approved for the Project
in the Development Agreement, whichever is
the lesser period.
Section 6. Collection of the Sales Tax. The
collection of the CID Sales Tax shall be made in
the manner presented in the CID Act
Section 7. Segregation of the Sales Tax
Revenues; All re{enues derived from the collection of the CID Sales Tax shall be deposited
into a special fund of the City to be' designated
as the Guffey CID Sales Tax Revenue Fund.
Such revenues shall be used to pay the costs
of the Project on a pay-as-you-go basis and
related expenses described in the Development
Agreement.
Section 8. Development Agreement. The
Development Agreement, is hereby approved
in substantially the form presented to the
Governing Body with such alterations, changes
or additions as may be approved by the City
Manager and as to form by the City Attorney.
The Mayor or Vice Mayor of the City is hereby authorized and directed to execute the
Development Agreement and such other documents, statements, certificates and instruments
as may be necessary or desirable to carry out
and comply with the intent of this Ordinance
in such final form as are approved by the City
Manager, or designate, and the City Attorney,
and the execution or taking of such actions shall
be conclusive evidence of such form, necessity
or advisability. The City Clerk or any Deputy
City Clerk is hereby authorized to attest to and
affix the seal of the City to the Development
Agreement and such other documents, ce1tificates and instruments as may be necessary
or desirable to can-y out and comply with the
intent of this Ordinance.
Section 9. Repealer. Ordinance No. 4239
originally passed by the Governing Body on
September 27, 2022, is hereby repealed.
Section 10. Further Authority. The City shall,
and the officers, employees and agents of
the City, including Gilmore & Bell, P.C., the
City's bond counsel, are hereby authorized
and directed to, take such action, expend such
funds and execute such other documents, certificates and instruments, as may be necessary
or desirable to carry out and comply with the
intent of this Ordinance and to carry out, comply
with and perform the duties of the City with
respect thereto.
Section 11. Effective Date. This Ordinance
shall take effect from and after its passage
by the Governing Body, and its publication
once in the official newspaper of the City. This
Ordinance shall be recorded with the Anderson
County Register of Deeds.
PASSED by the City Commission of the City
of Garnett, Kansas on November 8, 2022 and
SIGNED by the Mayor.
/s/Greg Gwin
Mayor
ATTEST:
/s/Patricia Brewer
City Clerk
EXHIBIT A
LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF DISTRICT
Commencing at the Southwest Corner of
Section Nineteen (19), Township Twenty (20),
Range Twenty (20), thence Notth 253 feet,
thence East 360 feet, thence South 100 feet,
thence West I 00 feet, thence South 153 feet,
thence West 260 feet to the point of beginning,
which is the entire ELLIS ADDITION to the City
of Garnett, Anderson County, Kansas.
Commonly known as: 506 N. Maple, Garnett,
KS 66032. PIO #002091903004012000 Quick
Ref ID# R2207.
Exhibit B
MAP OF DISTRICT
WHEREAS; the Resolution was published
once each week for two consecutive weeks
in the official City newspaper and mailed by
United States ce,tified mail, return receipt
requested, to each owner or owners of record,
whether resident or not, of real prope1ty within
the proposed District; and
WHEREAS, the CID Act further authorizes the
City, in order to pay the costs of such projects,
to impose a community improvement district
sales tax on the selling of tangible personal
property at retail or rendering or furnishing of
taxable services within a CID in any increment
of .10% or .25% not to exceed 2.0% and to
reimburse the costs of community improvement
district projects from community improvement
district sales tax; and
WHEREAS, on November 8, 2022, the
Governing Body conducted a public hearing
on the proposed District, the proposed Project
related thereto, the method of financing the
same and the imposition of the CJD Sales
Tax; and
Section 4. Method of Financing. The Project
will be financed on a pay-as-you-go basis from
revenues received from the imposition the CJD
Sales Tax on the selling of tangible personal
property at retail or rendering or furnishing
services taxable pursuant to the provisions of
the Kansas retailers' sales tax act within the
District. There will be no special assessments
levied pursuant to the CJD Act and there will
be no bonds issued pursuant to the CID Act.
600 N. Maple St
N. Maple St.
Laverne Howarter is celebrating her 100th birthday on
November 17th. Laverne was
born and raised in Anderson
County. She attended school,
raised her family, worked, and
was a farm wife for her entire
life.
Lavernes family of Jerry
and Pam Howarter of Garnett
and their 3 sons Jamie, Mark
and Matt, and Terry and Susan
WHEREAS, the City and Guffey Properties, LLC,
have negotiated the terms of a Development
Agreement, dated as of November 15, 2022
(the "Development Agreement") relating to
the development of the proposed Project, the
distribution of the CJD Sales Tax and related
matters; and
560 N. Maple St
507 N. Maple St
N. Maple St.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 / SUBMITTED
ate the District and set forth the boundaries
thereof, authorize the Project relating thereto,
approve the estimated costs of such community improvement district projects, approve
the method of financing the same and impose
the CID Sales Tax, all in accordance with the
provisions of the CID Act; and
W. Hwy 31
W. Hwy 31
WHEREAS, the Governing Body hereby finds
and determines it to be advisable to cre-
N. Maple St.
(Published in the Anderson County Review on
November 15, 2022)
506 N. Maple St
W. Park Rd
W. Park Rd
W. Park Rd
Ottawa, Kansas
430 N. Maple St
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Listen to
Anderson
County Today!
Mon-Fri:
8:00am
community
7
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
CALENDAR
Tuesday, November 15
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:00 p.m. – Anderson County
Economic Development Meeting
5:30 p.m. – BPW Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
6:00 p.m. – Planning Commission
Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, November 16
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
12:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, November 17
4:00 p.m. – Walker Art Committee
Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Friday, November 18
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Saturday, November 19
6:00 p.m. – Gospel Music on the
Square
Sunday, November 20
9:00 a.m. – VFW Breakfast
Monday, November 21
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
3:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting @
Miracle House
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
6:00 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
Meeting
Tuesday, November 22
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
6:00 p.m. – City Commission
Meeting
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, November 23
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
12:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, November 24
Thanksgiving Day
12:00 p.m. – Senior Center
Thanksgiving
Friday, November 25
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Saturday, November 26
Small Business Saturday hosted by
Garnett Area Chamber of Commerce
6:30 p.m. – 51st Annual GACC
Christmas Parade and Lighting
Ceremony
Monday, November 28
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
9:00 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission Meeting
3:30 p.m. – TOPS Meeting @
Miracle House
6:00 p.m. – Celebrate Recovery
Tuesday, November 29
12:00 p.m. – Rotary International
Club Meeting
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – American Legion Bingo
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
Wednesday, November 30
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
12:00 p.m. – Duplicate Bridge
Thursday, December 1, 2022
5:30 p.m. – PM Yoga
6:00 p.m. – 13-Point Pitch & Snacks
6:30 p.m. – Historical Society
Meeting
6:30 p.m. – USD 365 Endowment
Association
7:00 p.m. – Alcoholics Anonymous
7:00 p.m. – USD 365 Board of
Education Meeting
Friday, December 2, 2022
8:45 a.m. – AM Yoga
Westphalia School Halloween Parade
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 / SUBMITTED
The
Westphalia
6th-8th grade band
students played in
the School Halloween
Parade.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 / SUBMITTED
Pictured above are:
Kathy Yoder and Bree
Schafer.
Westphalia Eighth Grade student Shanae Yoder, pictured with Jerry
Smith of the Lions Club, won the Peace Poster Contest judged by
the Westphalia Lions Club.
PSRT met Nov. 9th – Birthday
Bash to be March 15, 2023
On the right: Kale
Schafer
On the far right: Brody
Wiesner
RICHARDSON…
FROM PAGE 4
emphasis on so-called Social
Emotional Learning.
In contrast, while the educators present said SEL is
important, academics are the
primary focus of the district.
We are a data-driven district, we meet the kids where
they are, first-grade teacher
Susan Gronquist said. So
although we have a standard
to meet, we work with them
and get them to those standards.
We have intervention
groups, we have support from
the community, we have support in our schools, from our
administration, to take the latest research and apply that in
our classrooms and use the
data and continually assess,
so that we know exactly where
our students are, so we know
what interventions that might
need to be put in place to help
that student succeed. When
the student feels that support
they arent left floundering
or nobody cares. They know
that you care because youre
helping them succeed.
Pitsch said in a phone interview that numbers began to
trend back upwards around
the same time the district started using the Leader in Me
program as part of their SEL
curriculum, but at the same
time, teachers said SEL isnt
something thats emphasized
as separate from academics
but is just part of everything
they do.
But this isnt the SEL that
some parents feel is an invasion of family privacy and
bleeds into diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). In
Wabaunsee, SEL is about leadership development.
Leader in Me is a program
developed by Steven Covey,
author of The Seven Habits
of Highly Effective People,
adapted to an educational setting.
What we consider SEL
is leadership development,
Pitsch said.
That was echoed by teachers who said SEL simply
infuses every interaction with
the students and by students
who say they take ownership
of their own grades and their
own success.
Emphasis on academic
improvement and
accountability
The Kansas Department of
Educations Kansans Can
initiative de-emphasizes academic improvement. In fact,
academic improvement is
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail
met at Town Hall Center on
November 9, 2022 at 7:00 p.m.
Twenty five members were
present.
Trail members will be
busy in the next couple of
weeks getting ready for the
Christmas parade by constructing a Christmas parade
float on November 14, 2022 at
1:00 p.m. Members will also
be decorating the Harris Park
absent in their Outcomes for
Progress.
By contrast, academic
improvement is the primary
focus in USD 329 Wabaunsee.
Grade school students, for
example, have goal books
which contain their Wildly
Important Goals or WIGs
that include things like test
scores and future goals. By
junior high and high school,
those numbers are entered
into Google spreadsheets for
the students to track.
Payton Wertz, a student at
WHS, said that focusing on
their own scores has helped
her with a subject she struggles with math.
Thats always been a subject that Ive struggled with,
and the teacher she would
have us all fill out a Google
spreadsheet of the test score
that we scored and where we
want to be by the end of this
quarter, Wertz said. And
almost every time you see that
increase because you want to
get better, because why would
you not want to? We want to
improve ourselves, we want to
be prepared for when we go to
university or trade school, or
join the family business.
Pitsch, who did not participate in the focus group, but
watched carefully, noted that
focus as well.
Theyre watching their
scores, like kids look at
after-action screens on video
games, he said. Theyre looking at their data. So theyre
plotting trajectories in their
head where theyre setting
goals themselves, and they
may not be articulated goals,
but maybe just the goal is I
want to do better than the time
before kind of thing.
At the end of the panel discussion, it was clear there was
deep respect between the community members, the district,
the students, and the administration. The students appeared
to be almost endlessly optimistic about their future, and
everyone from the district
offices to the community is
determined the students will
do well.
Pitsch says other districts
are taking notice.
The improvement in performance has garnered the
interest of other districts,
he said. Some of whom
have requested the opportunity to visit the district and
learn more about USD 329s
approaches to student learning.
Patrick Richardson reports
for The Sentinel, which is
owned by The Kansas Policy
Institute.
for Christmas on November 18,
2022 at 1:00 p.m.
It was announced that the
Birthday Bash will be March
15, 2023 at the Anderson County
High School.
Members voted to give
Chamber Bucks to Anderson
County E-Kan for Christmas.
Anyone interested in becoming a member of the PSRT
please contact Skip Landis.
8
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
LOCAL
THE REVIEWS 24TH ANNUAL
RULES
1. Collect your receipts and coupons
dated Nov. 15-Dec. 16 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. 18, 2022.
2. For every $10 spent at these partic-
ipating merchants, receive one ticket
(excludes bank deposits). Maximum
250 tickets per receipt. Take your
receipts and coupons to Garnett
Publishing to receive your tickets.
3. In additon to sales receipts, Garnett
Publishing will issue one ticket per
week, per household, no purchase
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.
4. Grand prize winning ticket number
published in the December 20 edition of The Anderson County Review.
Grand prize must be claimed by noon
Monday, Dec. 26.
5. Weekly winning ticket numbers will
be hidden within The Great Christmas
Giveaway ad section during the Nov.
22, Nov. 29, Dec. 6, and Dec. 13 issues
of the Review. Weekly winning ticket
numbers must be claimed by 5 p.m.
each respective Friday.
6. All prize monies are issued in certificates redeemable only at The Great
Christmas Giveaway participating
PRIZES:
$1,000
GRAND PRIZE
Delicious pies, fresh-baked rolls
for Thanksgiving & Christmas!
Order yours today. Call (913) 898-6211.
and eight
$50 weekly prizes
You can win extra
SPENDING MONEY
just by watching these
merchants ads in The Review.
merchants.
7. Any unclaimed prizes as of 5 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 16, will be awarded to the
Grand Prize winner.
8. Must be 14 or over to play. Business
owners, employees and their families are eligible to play, but may not
submit receipts from their affiliated
business.
Let us do the baking for
your Thanksgiving!
Dinner rolls
(6/$6, 9/$8, 12/$10)
Cinnamon rolls
(4/$6.50, 8/$12, 12/$15)
Honey Wheat Bread $4
Quick Breads $5
Bananna
Pumpkin
Zuchinnia
Apple
Jalapeno Bread $6.50
Pepperoni Bread $6.50
Cookies $8.50/doz
Monster
Oatmeal Rasin
Chocolate Chip
Peanut Butter
Sugar Cookie
Snickerdoodle
Choc Crinkle
Fruit Pies $15
Gooseberry
Cherry
Peach
Blueberry
Blackberry
Apple
Mixed Berry
Cream Pies $15
Chocolate
Peanut Butter
Lemon
Choc. Peanut Btr
Raspberry
Coconut
Pecan
Pumpkin
*Order by Nov. 19
Mon.-Fr. 8-5:30 Sat. 8-4 Closed Sun.
22800 NW 1700 Rd Garnett (785) 204-1961
Get Everything
you need for your
Thanksgiving Dinner at
Country Mart.
Home-baked pie
for your holidays!
Happy Thanksgiving
from all of us at
One week
notice please.
110 W. 5th Garnett
(785) 448-5856
425 N. Maple Garnett 785-448-2121
3 full floors of merchandise
thousands of various items
more than 50 booths
booth space available $1/sq.ft.
new inventory arriving
all the time
come browse & enjoy!
121 E. 4th Street, Garnett, Ks.
(785) 418-1060 (785) 418-1508
Open Tues-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Closed Sun. & Mon.
Let them decide…
Gift
Certificates
always fit everybody!
6th Ave Boutique & Western Wear
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Wine
Wednesday
10% off all wine!
Mon. – Fri. 7 a.m. – 9 p.m.
Hours:
Sat. 8 a.m. – 9 p.m.
Sunday 12
p.m.
– 89-9
p.m.
Mon.
Sat
No alcohol sales
Sunday
before 9 a.m.12-6
Mon. – Sat.
or before noon Sun.
MAPLE STREET LIQUOR
& CONVENIENCE STORE
313 S. Maple Garnett, KS (785) 448-2102
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
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!
LOCAL
Sponsors of the
2022 Great
Christmas Giveaway!
SPONSORS
(Cut this out and take it with you when you shop!)
D&M Mini Barns
Garnett Country Mart
Garnett Home Center & Rental
AuBurn Pharmacy
Trade Winds Bar & Grill
Yutzy Custom Structures
4th Street Flea Market
Wolken Tire
6th Avenue Boutique
Baumans Carpet & Furniture
& Western Wear
Garnett Pizza Hut
Maple Street Liquor
GSSB
The Anderson County Review
1-Stop-Parker
7th Street Grocery
Come see
us for
loans with
low fees.
Longer Term
Loans on
Homes and
Ag Land.
Download
Our
Mobile
App!
9
PRIZES:
$1,000
GRAND PRIZE
and eight
$50 weekly prizes
You can win extra
SPENDING MONEY
just by watching these
merchants ads in The Review.
Some gifts
only give once…
GPI
…but a gift
subscription to
the Review gives
for the whole year!
52 issues, $48.66 (tax included)
Subscribe by phone
(785) 448-3121 or email
review@garnett-ks.com
Adorable kids
play houses!
Your YCS receipt is worth
250
TICKETS!
Purchase a
mini-structure and
your receipt is worth
$250 tickets
in the drawing!
Solidly constructed and designed
for decades of urban or farm use.
Stop by and tour our lot for great storage ideas.
(785) 504-9625 24751 N Highway 169, Garnett
Lifetime warranty, frame & mechanics, USA made all hardwood frame, 3
year warranty on motor & electrical available on wide selection of reclining sofas, loveseats and recliners from Best Home Furnishings!
www.dmminibarns.com
PRIZES:
$1,000
GRAND PRIZE
and eight
$50 weekly prizes
You can win extra
SPENDING MONEY
just by watching these
merchants ads in The Review.
Medicare D
Plan Counseling
Is your Medicare D Plan still
the best one for you?
Our trained and professional staff are
available to answer your questions and help
you make an informed decision.
Get Your Vehicle
Ready For Winter!
(785) 448-3212
The only number you
need for the Best Service!
Tires, Oil Changes and Alignments
Now through
December 7th
785-448-6122
429 N. Maple Street, Garnett
Monday-Friday 8:30-7:00
Saturday 8:30-2:00
AuBurnPharmacies.com
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
785-448-3212
10
CLASSIFIEDS /
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Notice
Your
RIGHT
to know,
guaranteed
by Kansas
Law.
2022 Anderson County tax levies
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
2×4 kpa morton
( First Published in the Anderson County Review, Tuesday, November 8, 2022)
The
Anderson
County
Review
is the
official
newspaper of
record for
Anderson
County,
The City
of Garnett,
USD 365, and
the other
incorporated
cities in
Anderson
County. Notices
published
here meet all
required
statutory legal
par a.m.eters.
Notice of suit
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, November 8, 2022)
In the District Court of Anderson County
Warren Wright plaintiff, vs. Kristine Huston
defendants case no. AN-2022-CV-23
Notice of Suit (K.S.A. 60-307)
The state of Kansas to all persons concern:
You are here by notified that a petition has
been filed in this court by Warren Wright plaintiff
praying for an order quieting the title to the
following describe personal property: 2006 f250
VIN. 1FTSW21P76EB76697
The petition further seeks and order assigning
title to said vehicle, holding the plaintiff to be the
owner of fee simple title to the above described
personal property free of all right, title, interest
of all other persons who are or may be concerned and that they in each of them be forever
barred and foreclosed of & from all right, title,
interest, lien, estate, or equity of redemption in
or to the above describe personal property or
any part thereof. you are here by required to
plead to said petition on or before December
18, 2022. in said court at Anderson County
Kansas. should you fail therein, judgment and
decree will be entered in due course upon
said petition.
Warren Wright, plaintiff
28957 NE Scott Rd
Garnett, KS 66032
307-259-1717
nv8t3*
Notice of hearing
(First published in the Anderson County
Review, November 15, 2022)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
BEVERLY JO ELLIOTT, a/k/a
BEVERLY JO BARROWS, Deceased
Case #AN-2022-PR-000030
NOTICE OF HEARING
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS
CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that a petition has
been filed in this court by Robert O. Elliott, an
heir at law of Beverly Jo Elliott a/k/a Beverly
Jo Barrows, deceased, praying that descent
be determined of decedent, Beverly Jo Elliott
a/k/a Beverly Jo Barrows, and that title to
her interest in certain real estate situated in
Anderson County, Kansas, in Sherman County,
Kansas, and Cheyenne County , Kansas, par-
ticularly described in said petition, and all other
Kansas real estate and all personal property
situated and located in the state of Kansas, if
any, as was or may have been owned by said
decedent at the time of her death be assigned
in accordance with the terms of the settlement
agreement filed with the said petition.
You are required to file your written defenses
thereto on or before the 12th day of December,
2022, at 9:00 a.m., in the District Court,
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 petition.
ROBERT O. ELLIOTT
Petitioner
Terry J. Solander #07280
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
Public
Notice
Your RIGHT to
know, guaranteed
by Kansas Law.
nv15t3*
Estate Auction
Anderson County Fairgrounds Quonset Hut
Saturday, November 19th @ 10 a.m.
TOOLS/ OUTDOORS
Round bale horse feeder
Lots of 6.5 Tposts
1.5 rolls of 2 pt. Barbed wire
8 pipe gate
15 & 25 gallon ATV sprayers
Penda Poly truck tool box
Little Red Wagon, Radio Flyer
Live trap
Small chicken crate
Wood ladder
Bauer electric metal bandsaw w/ case
Predator gas powered post auger
Two wheel dolly
Dewalt 12 V and 14.4 cordless drills
Drywall trails and tools
Several 5 gallon poly gas cans
T-post driver
Forney Easy Weld 110v stick welder
Several small floor jacks
Crescent 18 inch adjustable wrench
Crescent 12 inch adjustable wrench
Dewalt 9 inch diamond Cutting wheels
2 inch ratchet straps
Dewalt reset saw slash with case
Campbell Hausfeld half-inch drive air impact
7 gallon air bubble
Craftsman two section rolling toolbox
Craftsman Rally Box 4 drawer toolbox
Craftsman wrenches
Channel lock nippers
4 foot level
Hudson commercial backpack sprayer
Black & Decker bench grinder
Campbell Hausfeld 13 gallon, 4 hp air
compressor
6 foot aluminum step ladder
Coleman PowerMate 6875 max watts
portable generator, 11 horse motor
Stingray squadron bicycle
Car ramps
Weather Guard aluminum diamond plate
truck toolbox
Bauer 24 foot fiberglass extension ladder
Roll of chain-link fence and Tposts
Mr. Heater propane Buddy heater
MTD Black 21 push mower
Propane turkey fryer
Short aluminum stand, 4 x 2
Concrete yard ornaments; deer, fox, giraffe,
elephant, bear, alligator, bobcat, etc
Small Windmill
Wood life size cowboy cutouts
3 windmill wheel & tail
Horse carousel patio lamp
Discovery 1100 metal detector
FURNITURE/HOUSEHOLD
Bartlett home furnishings solid oak dresser,
nice
Solid oak five gun case/with storage
compartment, nice
Solid Oak twin size bed
Oak glider rocker, nice
Round dining table and four chairs
Nice swivel rocker
Round glass front display cabinet
Large round top glass front display cabinet
Wicker 2 drawer night stand
Plant stand
Vintage wood hall tree
Modern wood two door TV stand
Matching modern metal glass top TV stand,
coffee table and 2 side tables, very nice
Blue padded arm chair and ottomanVintage Singer sewing machine in wooden
cabinet
2 Oriental black cabinets
2 Oriental black side tables
small green rocker chair
Black metal coffee table and two end tables
with tile and glass tops
Several nice waiting room chairs
Several Venus Plus hair salon chairs and sink
Orbitrek Platinum exercise machine
Gazelle Edge exerciser
NordicTrack treadmill
Schwinn recumbent stationary bike
Kitchen
Pampered Chef stoneware casserole dish,
large
Pampered chef stoneware muffin pan
Pyrex glass bowls, bread pans, pie pans
Glass and stainless mixing bowls
Aluminum and stainless cookware
Sunbeam Easy Clean Waffle Maker
GlasBake bowls
Glass horse cutting boards
Kitchen utensils
Silverware
Velata crepe maker
Sunbeam electric mixer and bowls
Anchor Hocking 8 cup glass mixing bowl
Aroma 8 quart electric roaster oven
Foodsaver model Vac 300
Ceramic and tin roosters
Horseshoe lamp
Large green decorative lamp
Cookie jars; Racoon, Coca Cola soda
fountain, Black Americana, Bears,
Cookie Monster
Maxine in Pink Convertible, Owl, Harry and
David Moose cookie jar
Purple glassware
Lots of Western decor and Figurines
Brass candle holders
Lots of nice Fall & Christmas decor
APPLIANCES
2001 Kenmore chest freezer, large
GE microwave oven
Vizio 32 flatscreen TV, HDTV, HDMI
Sanyo 26 flatscreen TV
Samsung 32 flatscreen TV
ILive boombox
EdenPure portable elec, heater
COLLECTIBLES
Tony Gonzalez autographed picture, framed
and matted
Priest Holmes Team Priest Football, NIB
2003 Limited Edition of 25,000 Series 5 KC
Chiefs Football
2005 Wayne Gretzky figurine,NIB
Upper Deck Michael Jordan Flying High all
metal collector cards
Kelly Russell Limited Edition George Brett
litho, card
2008 Alex Gordon commemorative bobble
head, NIB
2014 Mr. Royal Bobble Head, Special
edition, NIB
2021 Topps Baseball Series 2 baseball cards,
NIB
Tiger Woods 2000 129th Open Champion 19
under tin
Budweiser 41st anniversary edition Stein,
Brewery Lights, NIB
KU Piggy Bank
Ceramic dolls
Ceramic Barbie, Mattel, Holiday Special
Edition, NIB
Flying-O pedal tractor, chain drive
transmission
Old Pedal tractor, ??? Brand
Ertl Allis Chalmers D 19 toy tractor, 1/16
scale, NIB
Ertl Gleaner L3 combine, stock number
1207, 1/32 scale
2004 Ertl Oliver 77, NF, 1/64, NIB
1995 Ertl Agco delivery truck with tractor,
1/64 scale, NIB
2006 Ertl hauler semi with John Deere fourwheel-drive tractor, 1/64, NIB
Ertl D10N Caterpillar bulldozer, 1/48
2008 John Deere 7700 combine with corn
attachment, 1/50, NIB
Alice Chalmers D 19, 1/64
Agco 9695 tractor, 1/50
JD Model B Tractor, 1/50, NIB
Oliver 77 NF, 1/64, NIB
Ertl gravity flow wagon, NIB
2005 Cat 315C L Hydraulic Excavator,
1/87, NIB
Construction minis Cat Dozer & Wheel
Loader, NIB
1986 Ertl Deutz Allis 6260,1/64, NIB
1990 Ertl Deutz Allis round baler, 1/64, NIB
Ertl Oliver 1950-T, FWA, 1/16, NIB
Ertl Allis Chalmers Roto baler, #2620, NIB
2000 Ertl Oliver OC-3 crawler, 1/16, NIB
JD 720, 1/16
Ertl Red 4 wheel wagon, 1/16
Massey Ferguson license plate
JD 7720 tractor #22, 1/50, NIB
2006 Ertl JD Road Grader, 1/50, NIB
SpecCast Oliver Highly Detailed Super 77
Diesel Tractor, NF, 1/16, NIB
SpecCast Highly Detailed 77 LP-Gas Tractor,
WF, 1/16, NIB
Scale Models Massey Ferguson 8590 Rotary
Combine, 1/64, NIB
Ertl AMT 1972 Chevrolet Flpickup, 1/25, NIB
Breyer Molding Co. Simmental bull
2 Breyer Bucking bulls
Breyer Hereford bull
Breyer Bay cutting horse
Breyer Bay horse
Early 1970s Comic books, Tom & Jerry,
Dennis the Menace, Popeye, Batman,
Spider Man
Winchester knife set, wood case
1990s Metal advertising signs; Marilyn
Monroe Lustre-Crme, Campbells Soup,
Swifts Borax, RC, Coca Cola, Moms Bed &
dBreakfast
7-Up and Dr Pepper wood crates
Nice Wood Rocking Horse
Several Elvis Liquor Decanters
PICTURES/ PRINTS
Elvis prints, framed
Ed Fink drawing
Several Marcia Baldwin horse paintings
Ruane Manning horse pic
Several Tammy Scholle pics
T. Morgan Crain picture
4- Bill Jaxon Divine Intervention, The
Answer, Quarter A Day, In The Glow, all
with Certificate of Authenticity
Several Beatles posters
Pam Ahring Estate Auction
Nothing removed from premises until paid for. Cash, check and now accepting credit & debit cards w/ 3% per transaction fee.
Auction Company not responsible for theft, accident or loss
Statements made day of auction take precedence over printed details Pictures and sale bill on KansasAuctions.net
YODER AUCTION SERVICE
Auctioneers: Ben Yoder (785) 448-4419 Jr. Miller (620) 200-3007 James Yoder (620) 228-3548 Laverne Yoder (785) 204-2700
Ringman: Lavern Keim Clerk: Beth Rockers Cashiers: Ruby Schmucker & Karyn Yoder
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
CLASSIFIEDS
Happy Ad!
11
If youre happy and you know it…
Place a
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Advertising Rates
Classified Rates:
Up to 20 Words …………………….$6.00
Each addtl word……………………..55
(Commercial) …………………………65
Class Display……………..$9.54/clm.in.
Run Of Press Rates:
Standard ROP ……………$8.72/clm.in.
Color……………………………………..$65
Pre-print inserts ……………….$158.40
Front Page
Masthead Banner (w/color) ……$300
Bottom Page (w/color)…………..$100
Statewide/multi-state ………… Quote
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classified Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
REAL ESTATE
Mike
Hermreck
1×1
REALTOR
(785)
hermreck
448-8345
mikehermreck@crownrealty.com
View all local properties for sale at our website:
1x1property
source
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
Call
(785) 448-3999
1×3
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL:
admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
REAL ESTATE
GOLD KEY REALTY
gold ke
Carla Walter Owner/Broker
785-448-7658 (cell)
www.goldkeyrealtyks.com
View all local properties for sale at our website:
ksprop
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Now offering
Auction
Services!
Call
(785) 448-3999
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
MISCELLANEOUS
Place your 25-word classified
in the Kansas Press Association
and 135 more newspapers for
only $300/ week. Find employees, sell your home or your
car. Call the Kansas Press
Association @ 785-271-5304 tod
ay!
Beautify your home with
energy efficient new windows!
They will increase your homes
value & decrease your energy
bills. Replace all or a few! Call
now to get your free, no-obligation quote. 877-859-1337
Long Distance Moving:
Call today for a free quote
from Americas Most Trusted
Interstate Movers. Let us take
the stress out of moving! Speak
to a Relocation Specialist, call
888-788-0471
Top Ca$h paid for old guitars!! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin,
Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone,
Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker,
Prairie State, DAngelico,
Stromberg.
And
Gibson
Mandolins / Banjos. 855-4546658
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Guest Home Estates
2×2
guest home
is looking for full-time CMAs, shift varies, who are
wanting to work with our team.
We offer Health Insurance and Competitive Wages.
If you are interested in this position,
please contact Sandra Johnson
at 785-448-6884
or come by our home
at 806 West 4th, Garnett.
We are excited to meet with you.
PUBLIC
AUCTION
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
FARM & AG
Never Pay For Covered Home
Repairs Again! Complete Care
Home Warranty covers all
major systems and appliances.
30 day risk free. $200.00 off + 2
free Months! 844-237-1432
Update your home with
Beautiful New Blinds & Shades.
Free in-home estimates make it
convenient to shop from home.
Professional installation. Top
quality – Made in the USA. Call
for free consultation: 844-7400117. Ask about our specials!
Donate your car to charity. Receive maximum value
of write off for your taxes.
Running or not! All conditions
accepted. Free pickup. Call for
details. 844-268-9386
B a t h r o o m
Renovations. Easy, one day
updates! We specialize in safe
bathing. Grab bars, no slip
flooring & seated showers. Call
for a free in-home consultation: 855-382-1221
New Authors Wanted! Page
Publishing will help you
self-publish your own book.
FREE author submission
kit!
Limited offer!Why
wait? Call now: 855-939-2090
DirecTV Satellite TV Service
Starting at $74.99/month! Free
Installation! 160+ channels
available. Call Now to Get the
Most Sports & Entertainment
on TV! 888-721-1550
Never clean your gutters
again! Affordable, professionally installed gutter guards
protect your gutters and home
from debris and leaves forever!
For a free Quote call: 844-6071363
Paying top Ca$h for mens
sports watches! Rolex, Breitling,
Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer,
Daytona, GMT, Submariner
and Speedmaster. Call 844-5750691
Discount Air Travel. Call
Flight Services for best pricing on domestic & international flights inside and from
the US. Serving United, Delta,
American & Southwest and
many more airlines. Call for
free quote now! Have travel
dates ready! 833-381-1348
Save your home! Are you
behind paying your mortgage?
Denied a Loan Modification?
Threatened with foreclosure?
Call the Homeowners Relief
Line now for Help! 888-975-1473
American Walnut – buying
standing timber. Must have 25 or
more trees. Call (916) 232-6781 in
St. Joseph for details.
fb15tf
Billys Hot
Rod Art, Inc.
We draw any
make & model.
(785) 204-2275
1×1
rytter
(913) 594-2495
1×2
Edgecom
Check out our
Floor
Monthly Specials
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
2×2 JB Construction
jb const
Decks Siding
Pole Buildings Garages
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803 joe.borntreger@yahoo.com
2×4 kpa kdot
Job Summary: Prepare purchase orders and purchase
all materials needed for client jobs. Maintain and
monitor inventory. Maintain relationships with
vendors. Work with yard crew.
For a detailed job description and to fill out an
application visit the QSI website at:
www.qualitystructures.com/careers
Quality Structures
167 Hwy 59, Richmond, KS 66080
785-835-6100
Teresa Hodges, Controller
teresa.hodges@qualitystructures.com
Happiness is… Donating
a new unwrapped toy to Toys
for Tots. Drop boxes located at
Garnett Publishing, 112 West
6th. Donations collected through
December 6.
nv8t4*
Happiness is… First Christian
Church Holiday Mart! Saturday,
December 3, 9am-2pm. Bake sale,
soup lunch, craft sale. Proceeds
go to Christian Crafters and
Mission Team.
nv15t3*
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
Happiness is… Breakfast at
the VFW! 9am-1pm Sunday,
November 20. Biscuits and gravy,
belgian waffles, bacon, sausage
and eggs. nv15t1*
You name it,
we print it.
Edgecomb Builders
2×2
edgecomb
General Contractor
Custom Homes
Additions
Finishing Trimwork
Remodels
Lonnie Edgecomb (785) 204-1580
Up t
$70 o
0
2×4 focus
BON
US!*
Focus Workforce Management is
currently seeking seasonal pickers/
packers/warehouse associates for a
large distribution center
in Ottawa, KS!
Pay up to
19/hr
$
Shifts: Daylight/Evening/Weekend
Apply today at www.focusjobs.com or call 785.832.7000
Office location 1529 N. Davis Rd Ottawa, KS 66067
Send a friend referral bonus available!
Auctioneers:
Gerald Gray and Colton Heffern
Full Time
Monday-Friday 8am to 5pm
(flexible hours)
HAPPY ADS
Need extra cash for the Holiday?
Real Nice Household Items and Good Collectibles
Go To www.allencountyauction.com or
www.Kansasauctions.net for pictures and sale bill
Allen County Auction Service (620-365-3178)
Quality Structures
Alcohol Anonymous meetings. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
7 p.m. 510 S. Oak, Garnett.
(785) 241-0586.
tf
The family of Ronald K. Ron
Lickteig wishes to express
their deep appreciation to our
relatives, friends and neighbors
who offered us kindness, gave
memorial and mass donations,
sent flowers, attended the
funeral, and shared messages
of comfort to ease our sorrow
at his passing. Special thanks to
the St. Johns parishioners and
the local Greeley community
for the delicious food for the
luncheon and for serving the
meal. Our gratitude goes to
Reuben and the staff at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service
for their professional service.
Our heartfelt regards go to
Rev. Jerry Williams, O.Carm. for
leading the service with such
grace and for consoling us with
his eulogy.
NOW HIRING SEASONAL HELP!
Saturday, November 19 9:00 AM
824 North 11th St. Humboldt, Kansas
Seller: Patricia Becker Estate
Purchaser
NOTICES
Card of Thanks
*restrictions apply, see office for details
Meter Reader
City of Garnett, Kansas
The City of Garnett is currently accepting applications for the position of Meter Reader. Duties include reading of utility meters used by residential,
commercial, and industrial customers and other
related duties as required. This position works
eight hour day shifts Monday through Friday in
a forty-hour workweek. The ideal candidate will
have a high school diploma or GED.
For a complete job description and application,
stop by City Hall, 131 W. 5th Ave, Garnett, or visit
www.simplygarnett.com. Competitive salary
based upon qualifications and excellent benefits
package with a starting wage
of $15.00. The position will
remain open until filled. EOE
DETENTION OFFICER
Anderson County Kansas Sheriffs Office has a fulltime detention officer opening. Starting pay 17.09 per
hour with an increase for experience. Must be 18 years
old, high school diploma, or its equivalent, have a valid
Driver License, pass criminal background, a general
knowledge test. 12 hours shift 14 days a month with
paid lunch and health benefits.
Call 785-448-5678 for application or
stop by 135 E 5th Ave Garnett KS. 66032.
ANCOSO is an equal opportunity
employer complies with veterans preference laws.
12
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 15, 2022
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 / SUBMITTED
Crest School recognized the recipients of the Leadership Award at
the last home football game on October 27th. The students listed
were selected by the staff members for possessing the different
characteristic traits of Leadership! Front row, from left: Stormi Yoder,
Hayden Powell, Tatum Caudell, Penny Womelsdorf, Nicole Bain,
Bailey Boone, Kroy Walter, Dagon Denny. Back row, from left: Kallei
Robb, Wyatt Dickerson, Kinley Edgerton, Kayla Hermreck, Kamryn
Luedke.
Anderson County Farm Bureau Babysitting Clinic
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 / SUBMITTED
Seekers Not Slackers kicked off the new 4 H year on Sunday,
October 16th at the Lone Elm Community Building. We slated officers for the upcoming year and discussed other items coming up
for fall. It was a Halloween themed meeting. The fall committee had
a scavenger hunt, a haunted room and a halloween costume contest along with the meeting. The top three winners of the Halloween
contest were Hudson Powell, Hattie Walter and Lizzie Ellington.
Ben Yoder, Your Kansas Realtor/Auctioneer
The Kansas Property Place, LLC
Cell/Text (785) 448-4419
Office (785) 448-3999
www.KsPropertyPlace.com
Ben@KsPropertyPlace.com
501 E. 4th Ave., Garnett, KS
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
10.37 FM 1220 AM
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-15-2022 / SUBMITTED
The Babysitting Clinic was held
Saturday, November 5th at the
Anderson County Annex sponsored by Anderson County Farm
Bureau Association.
Guest
speakers were Emergency
Medical Technicians for the
Anderson County Ambulance
Service. They spoke on first
aid, choking and how to handle other medical emergencies; Liza Perry (former school
counselor) spoke on managing
young children and Chelsea
Richmond, District Extension
Agent Nutrition, Food Safety,
and Health spoke on nutrition and healthy snack ideas.
Sixteen children were in attendance. Completing the course
were as follows: Lilly Beaudry,
Parker Brooks, Everlee Crum,
Mackenzie Dilley, Destiene
Eaks, Maci Keith, Hudson
Kirkland, Rayna Kuhlman,
Sage Partida, Sienna Partida,
Hope Pracht, Skylar Salazar,
Bree Schaffer, Quinn Schilling,
Coevin Velvick and Kayle
Feuerborn.
Anderson County Farm Bureau
provided lunch and booklets of
babysitting information. Cindy
Ecclefield, Anderson Co. Farm
Bureau Coordinator planned
and organized the event.
Debbie Kueser, Anderson Co.
Farm Bureau Vice-President
To order call (785) 448-5711
or text (785) 204-1382
3×10.5
email:
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Country
2×4
QSI
Thanksgiving
You Dream It.
We Build It.
Agricultural
Garages / Hobby Shops
Commercial
Equestrian
From size to accessories, each QSI post-frame building
can be tailored to meet your specific needs.
Contact us for details.
QualityStructures.com
800-374-6988
Richmond, Kansas
Building the Rural American Dream
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To advertise your business
here
contact Stacey at (785)
448-3121.
1403 Baptiste Dr.
M-Sat 9am-11pm
PAOLA 913-557-5600 Sun Noon-8pm
Baked Goods & Pies
MIDWEST COLLISION INC.
31570 Old KC Rd. PAOLA (913) 294-4016
Homemade Baked Pies …………………………………………………. $14.95 +tax
(Apple, Cherry, Peach, Pecan, Pumpkin )
Homemade Dinner Rolls ………………………………………….$4.95/doz. +tax
Homemade Honey Wheat Bread ……………………………………… $3.95 +tax
Pumpkin Loaf ……………………………………………………………….. $9.25 +tax
*Place your order early!

