Anderson County Review — November 17, 2015
Archived edition of the Anderson County Review from November 17, 2015. Search this edition and others like it on our website or download the original PDF.
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ONE U.S. DOLLAR
November 17, 2015
Probitas,
virtus, integritas
in summa.
Bush City, Colony, Garnett, Greeley, Harris, Kincaid, Lone Elm, Mont Ida, Scipio, Selma, Welda, Westphalia KANSAS
www.garnett-ks.com |
Contents Copyright 2011 Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
| review@garnett-ks.com
150th
Celebrating our
150th birthday
throughout 2015!
Troop 126 recognizes
new Eagle Scouts
See pages 4-5B
SINCE 1865 150th Year, No. 15
See page 1B.
E-statements & Internet Banking
Member FDIC Since 1899
The Anderson County Review
1865 2015
(785) 448-3111
Honoring
Fundraiser planned for boy
burned in Sept. 23 accident WWII veterans
GARNETT – Its been almost
eight weeks since 4-year-old
Tanner Edgecomb was seriously burned in an outdoor fire at
his home, but life is finally
returning to some degree of
normal. Tanners personality
is starting to show through
again, reminding his family
of the fun, energetic little boy
who loves sports and outdoor
activities. He returned home
Friday afternoon.
But a long road is still
ahead, as doctors warned his
parents, Johnathan and Karen
Edgecomb, to plan for about
two years of rehabilitation
and recovery. For now, he will
attend rehabilitation therapy
about three times a week.
A fundraiser to help the
family with financial needs is
planned for 5 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 21, at the Harris Fire
Station, 29112 NW Spruce St.
It will include a barbecue pork
supper and silent auction for a
free-will donation.
Tanner was injured Sept. 23
as the family was preparing to
grill steaks on an outdoor fire
ring at their home near Harris.
Mom Karen Edgecomb said
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Photo Submitted
Tanner Edgecomb is surrounded by his siblings, from left, Selah,
2; Ashley, 17; Riley, 13; and Trey, 10, at Childrens Mercy Hospital.
she doesnt know exactly what
happened, but it appears that
Tanner somehow got too close
to the fire and a spark or something ignited his shirt. Tanner
was burnt from the waist up,
with second and third degree
burns on his abdomen and
chest, his back, both arms, his
neck and face. Burns covered
SEE BURNED ON PAGE 3A
Info sought on deer poaching
GARNETT – Local wildlife and
law enforcement officials are
asking for the publics help to
solve a series of illegal poaching incidents over the past
couple of weeks, primarily in
the western part of Anderson
County.
At least five bucks were illegally shot and killed and left to
rot in rural areas of Anderson
County during about a 10-day
to two-week period, according
to Josh DeHoux, game warden for Anderson County for
Kansas Department of Wildlife
and Parks. Thats an unusu-
ally high number of illegally
killed deer, particularly in such
a short amount of time and in
one general area, he said. The
county typically sees one or
two incidents of poaching each
year.
A gun of some type was confirmed as the weapon used in
at least four of the deer deaths.
While poachers typically kill
deer to illegally obtain their
antlers, these deer have been
left to rot with antlers still
intact. DeHoux said he doesnt
SEE POACHING ON PAGE 3A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015/ Dane Hicks
This deer was illegally killed in
rural Anderson County recently.
Some of Anderson Countys remaining World War II veterans were recognized durng Veterans Day
ceremonies at Anderson County High School Wednesday, Nov. 11.
Schulte
matriarch
remembered
County investigates
suspicious grass fires
GARNETT – Rhoda Schulte
apparently took her role as
family matriarch seriously,
whether that
meant hosting
pool parties
for family and
friends,
or
cooking and
sewing
for
her four children. In her
later years,
Schulte
she became a
de facto grandmother and caretaker of a young
boy.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Vickie Moss
Schulte died Friday, Nov. 13,
after battling cancer. She was 81. David Pozzie flirts with Gwen Sibley while Remi Hedges and Adam Kropf watch during Anderson County
SEE SCHULTE ON PAGE 2A
High School drama clubs production of Emma! A Pop Musical Friday, Nov. 13.
GARNETT – County fire and
emergency officials are hoping
the public can help them determine who may have set several
suspicious grass fires in dangerous, windy conditions last
week.
About five fires last week
appeared to be suspicious, and
occurred during high winds
that helped fan the flames.
At least one of the fires put
homes at risk, but good land
management practices likely
saved those buildings. Mick
Brinkmeyer, county fire chief,
said two fires were fought near
Welda Lake. One of those fires
came near residences at the
lake, but was stopped because
of a fire break between the pas-
ture and residential area.
I have to commend them for
that, Brinkmeyer said of the
property owners. If it wasnt
for that fire break, we would
have lost some houses.
Crews from multiple rural
fire departments – including
Garnett, Welda and Colony battled at least five fires, most
in the Welda area although several miles apart. All appear to
have started in a ditch, but the
cause is under investigation,
Brinkmeyer said. It appears the
fires were intentionally set, he
said.
The county had issued a
burn ban at the time because of
dry, windy conditions.
SEE FIRES ON PAGE 3A
Reach 29,000 readers with your classified ad in the Review and Trading Post. Call the Review today (785) 448-3121
2A
NEWS IN
BRIEF
THANKSGIVING MEAL
The Senior Center Board in
Garnett will have Thanksgiving
meal at noon on Thursday, Nov.
26, at the center, 128 W. Fifth
Ave., Garnett, for anyone in the
community who would like to
attend. The board will furnish
the turkey and dressing, potatoes and gravy, and the drinks
and table service. Everyone who
attends is asked to bring a covered dish or dessert and all are
welcome to attend.
T, V, W TAGS DUE
License plate renewals for all
individuals whose last name
begins with T, V or W are due
by Monday, Nov. 30, at the
Anderson County Treasurers
Office.
COURTHOUSE HOLIDAY
The
Anderson
County
Courthouse will be closed Nov.
26 and 27 in observance of
Thanksgiving.
HOLIDAY TRASH SCHEDULE
Garnett City Hall will be closed
Nov. 26 and 27 in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday. Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday trash routes will be
picked up as usual. Thursday
and Friday routes will be picked
up Thursday, Nov. 26. Customers
need to have their trash set out
by 7 a.m. Thursday.
HOLIDAY HOMES TOUR
The Friends of the Library
Holiday Homes Tour will be 1
p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 6.
Tickets are $8 in advance, $10
day of event.
FOOD DISTRIBUTION
The Emergency Food Assistance
Program distribution will be 4
p.m. Monday, Nov. 23, at the
Anderson County Fairgrounds
Quonset Hut building.
ACHS BAND FUNDRAISER
The Anderson County High
School Band will be raking
leaves for a fundraiser in the evening and on weekends during
the month of November. They
are accepting donations to go
towards future projects. If you
would like your yard raked and
the leaves hauled off. Please
contact Band Director Jeff
Russell to get your name on the
list. 1-785-448-3115 ext 145.
SCHOLASTIC BOOK FAIR
The Garnett Public Library is
hosting a Scholastic Book Fair,
Nov. 16-Nov. 21. There will be
books for ages K-8th grade as
well as some adult books. Most
books are priced below $7. This
is a great opportunity to shop
locally for Christmas presents.
TURKEY GIVEAWAY
Garnett Church of the Nazarene,
258 Park Road, will have a turkey giveaway at 7 p.m. Nov.
18. Call and register, (785) 4483208. You and your family must
be present and attend a short
presentation before the turkeys
are distributed.
SENIOR CENTER DINNER
The next birthday dinner will
be Wednesday, Nov. 18, at the
Garnett Senior Center. The program will be presented by Pam
McSwane and friends. Plan to
attend at 11:30 a.m. to enjoy the
entertainment, but dont forget
to call the day before to reserve
your meal, (785) 448-6996.
DAR CONTEST
Four Winds Chapter of the
National Society of the Daughters
of the American Revolution Junior
American Celebrate America
contest deadline is approaching
soon. All entries are to be turned
in on or before Friday, Nov. 20th,
to Connie Becker, FWNSDAR
Junior American Citizen Chair.
Please contact Becker at 785489-2449 or email her at csbrltiks06@wildblue.net with any
questions or to arrange pickup
of your entry.
VENDORS SOUGHT
The Annual Holiday Boutique will
be on Sunday, December 6, at
Prairie Belles from 12-3 p.m. This
event will be held in conjunction
with the Librarys Holiday Homes
Tour. Any vendor interested in
registering a booth for this event,
please contact Helen at (785)
448-8745.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
RECORD
ANDERSON COUNTY BOARD OF
COMMISSIONERS NOV. 2
Chairman Jerry Howarter called
the meeting of the Anderson
County Commission to order at
9:00 AM on November 2, 2015 at
the County Commission Room.
Attendance:
Jerry Howarter,
Present: Eugene Highberger,
Present: Leslie McGhee, Present.
The pledge of allegiance was
recited. Minutes of the previous
meeting were approved as presented.
Road and Bridge
Lester Welsh, Road and
Bridge Supervisor met with the
commission.
Discussion was
held on the remaining amount
that is unpaid on the bill by
B&B Construction for the work
on Cedar Creek Bridge. James
Campbell, County Counselor
joined the meeting. He informed
the commission of their options
on the remainder of the bridge bill.
Commissioner Highberger moved
to pay the remainder of the bill for
the Cedar Creek Bridge repair.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30. Discussion
was held on the Wagon Wheel
Bridge at Greeley. The accident
report has been forwarded to
James. He is looking into having
the drivers insurance company
pay for the repairs.
Sheriff
Sheriff Valentine met with the
commission. Discussion was held
on the purchase of new vehicles.
Commissioner Highberger moved
to purchase two vehicles from
the Kansas Hwy Patrol Partners
program with the Sheriffs vehicle
not to exceed $31,000 out of the
Jail/Sheriff Reserve and a vehicle for Emergency Management
not to exceed out $39,000 out
of the Equipment Reserve fund.
Commissioner McGhee seconded. Approved 30. Sheriff
Valentine informed the commission they are looking at having a
maintenance program set up with
TFM Comm for the upkeep of the
equipment on the towers.
He
feels the payment for the maintenance should come out of Sheriff,
Dispatch, City, and Emergency
Management.
Recess
Commission recessed meeting
at 12:00 for lunch.
Wind Farm
Chris Stanton, Nathan Vajdos,
and Chris Rundle, Calpine
Corporation met with the commission concerning wind farms. They
have looked at different areas of
the country and feel Anderson
County would be a good location
to locate a farm. It would take
several years to get a plant up and
operating. They reported the life
of a turbine is normally 20 years.
They will issue a decommission
agreement to come back at the
end of the life for the turbines to
take them down.
Meeting adjourned at 4:35 PM
due to no further business.
LAND TRANSFERS
November 5, Robert O Elliott To
Secretary Of Transportation (KS),
1.13 Acres, More Or Less, and
0.21 Acre More Or Less in Welda;
November 6, Thomas G Ensley,
Maxine Ensley To Stanley R
Smith, Frankie J Chapman,
Bounded By A Line Com At Nwcor
Lot 6 Blk 47 And Running Thence
South 40 On East Side Of Maple
Street, Thence East 100, Thence
North On East Side Of Lot 9 40 To
Fourth Street, Thence West 100
To Pob; Being 40 Of North End Of
Lots 5 & 6 Blk 47 Town Of Divide
(NOW Called Colony) & South 10
Of North 50 Lots 5 & 6 Blk 47 City
Of Colony;
November 6, City Of Garnett
To Reuben Esh, A Tract Of Land
In Prairie Grass Addition, A
Subdivision In Anderson County
Described As Follows: All Lot 2,
Lot 3 & Lot 4 As Adjusted In
Boundary Line Adjustment Survey
To Prairie Grass Addition, A
Subdivision In Nw4 23-20-19;
CIVIL CASES FILED
Discover Bank vs. Teal A.
Mead, petition for $12,925,48 plus
costs and interest.
Carrington Mortgage Services
LLC vs. Tracey A. Ahring, Travis
R. Ahring, et al, petition for mortgage foreclosure and $174.937.25
plus costs and interest.
LIMITED ACTION FILED
Ransom Memorial Hospital
vs. Jennifer L. Hartle, asking for
$9337.50 plus costs and interest.
Kyle L. Oswald vs. Bradley
Eugene Stoy, Amand Egger, petition for eviction, damages, and
rent of $2,825 plus costs and
interest.
CRIMINAL CASES FILED
Kylie J. Kanatzar, domestic battery.
Charles Robert Lee, drug pos-
SCHULTE…
FROM PAGE 1A
Dixie Brummel was one of
Schultes longest and dearest friends. They met when
Schulte, then Rhoda Nickelson,
was about 18 and started dating
Dixies brother, Carroll C.D.
Schulte. Rhoda and C.D. were
married in 1954 and divorced
in 1978. Still, Dixie and Rhoda
stayed friends. They often
played golf together and went
shopping together until they
got older and found they didnt
enjoy the pasttime nearly so
much. After Rhoda Schultes
health declined, Brummel
continued to visit her friend
at least two or three times a
week, frequently bringing pie
even though Rhodas appetite
had declined.
She was just a wonderful
lady, Brummel recalled. A
talented woman, a good cook
and fantastic seamstress.
Quilting, crocheting, knitting,
anything crafts. There wasnt a
lot of things she couldnt do.
The Rhoda Schulte household was especially known for
its pool parties. During the
summer months, Schultes pool
was nearly always filled with
friends and family. She often
hosted pool parties after golf
tournaments or just for fun.
Her children frequently invited their friends to the pool as
well. And even friends took
advantage of the pool, Brummel
recalled.
Shed even have people ask
her if they could use the pool for
a party they were having. She
went along with it as long as
they picked up after, Brummel
said.
The Schulte family is
known for its insurance and
real estate business, the C.D.
Schulte Agency in Garnett.
Carroll Schulte purchased the
former A.B. Clark Insurance
Company in 1957, and in 1958
entered a merger-partnership with George Maggio Real
Estate. While C.D. Schulte
was active in the community
in many ways, Rhoda worked
behind the scenes in roles as
bookkeeper, payroll and other
clerical duties, their son, Dan,
recalled. Rhoda remained a
half-owner in the buisness after
the couples divorce in 1978, but
continued to play a role in the
business. She spent some time
in the office nearly every day,
Dan Schulte said.
At the age of 73, Rhoda
Schulte became the babysitter of an infant, Conner Wise.
Conners mother, Rhonda Wise,
was a family friend and had
a difficult time finding some-
one who was willing to babysit
an infant. Rhodas daughter,
Carla, suggested Rhoda, who
babysat the child until he was
about 6-years-old. Rhonda Wise
knew Schulte was a great cook,
so she expected Conner would
have wonderful meals.
She was a total blessing to
us, Wise said. Even as old as
she was, she would get down
on the floor and play with him
when he was little.
Schulte became a sort
of adopted grandmother to
Conner, whose grandparents
lived in Chanute and Florida.
Conner, now 8, considers her
his grandmother and is devestated by the loss, Wise said.
She was very much the
grandma we were hoping for
him to have, Wise said.
Rhoda Schulte is survived
by her children, Kim Schulte
and husband Ken Flaspohler of
Overland Park, Kansas; Scott
Schulte of Garnett, Danny
Schulte of Garnett, Carla Walter
and husband Ryan of Garnett,
Memorial services will be
held at 10:00 a.m., on Wednesday,
November 18, 2015, at the
Feuerborn Family Funeral
Service Chapel, Garnett.
An obituary is on page 3A.
session, driving while suspended,
no proof of vehicle registration.
Zachary T. Frizzell, criminal use
of weapons, 2-counts drug possession, driving on left side of
roadway.
CRIMINAL CASES RESOLVED
Speeding violations:
Damen Lane Abbot, $153 fine.
Karrema Amira Boone-Nash,
$153 fine.
Gary K. Colt, $165 fine.
Thomas David Eureste, $201
fine.
Watonna Deann Parker, $153
fine.
Ed Glenn Turner Jr, $153 fine.
Vue Lor Yer, $165 fine.
ANDERSON COUNTY SHERIFFS
REPORT
Incidents
On October 12, a report of
theft was made in the 100 block
of South Vine Street, Greeley. A
1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee was
stolen valued at $2,000.
Accidents
On October 30, a vehicle driven by Lester H. Yoder struck a
cow on 1600 Road near Crawford
Road. Passengers were Vera
Yoder, Debbie Miller, David Miller,
Lydia Miller, and Demi Miller. No
injuries were reported.
On November 2, a vehicle driven by James A. Bradshaw struck
a deer on Highway 31 near 104
Road.
On November 4, a vehicle driven by Cody N. Mundell struck a
deer on 1750 Road near Osage
Road.
On November 5, a vehicle driven by Tammy M. Akers struck a
deer on Highway 59 near 2150
Road.
JAIL LOG
Patience Jane Theiss, 31,
Paola, was booked into jail
November 6 by Anderson County
Sheriff for failure to appear.
Bond set at $5,000. Released
November 6.
Susan K. Oler, 54, Garnett, was
booked into jail November 6 by
Garnett Police on a warrant. Bond
set at $2,000.
Marvin Beecher Headrick, 51,
Garnett, was booked into jail
November 7 by Garnett Police
on suspicion of domestic battery. Bond set at $750. Released
November 7.
Hannah Lynn Kaiser, 20,
Greeley, was booked into jail
November 7 by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of drug use/
possession. Bond set at $1,000.
Released November 7.
Zachary Tyler Frizzell, 24,
Greeley, was booked into jail
November 7 by Anderson County
Sheriff on suspicion of use/possession of drugs, criminal use of
weapons, improper driving. Bond
set at $2,500.
Antonio De Montrell Smith,
24, Olathe, was booked into jail
November 7 by Miami County
Sheriff on a warrant. Not bondable.
Michael Dale Eller, 22, Paola,
was booked into jail November
9 by Miami County Sheriff on a
warrant. No bond listed.
Scott William Shay, 49, Paola,
was booked into jail November
9 by Miami County Sheriff on
suspicion of rape. Bond set at
$250,000.
Robert Lee Howard, 52,
Wellsville, was booked into jail
November 9 by Anderson County
Sheriff for failure to appear. Bond
set at $750.
Robert Anthany Blurton, 29,
Parker, was booked into jail
November 10 by Linn County
Sheriff on a warrant. No bond
listed.
John William McCammon, 39,
Adrian MO, was booked into jail
November 10 by Linn County
Sheriff on a warrant. Not bondable.
Jacob Thomas Hays, 25,
Pittsburg, was booked into jail
November 10 by Linn County
Sheriff on probation violation. Not
bondable.
Brandi Jean Edstedt, 23,
Garnett, was booked into jail
November 11 by Garnett Police
on suspicion of driving while suspended. Bond set at $550.
Curtis Ray Dean, 44, Garnett,
was booked into jail November
11 by Anderson County Sheriff
on suspicion of drug use/possession, driving while suspended,
transporting an open container.
Bond set at $1,000. Released
November 11.
JAIL ROSTER
into jail June 11 for Anderson
County, bond set at $30,000.
Jason Hermreck was booked
into jail August 11 for Anderson
County, bond set at $35,000.
Joseph Daulton was booked
into jail August15 for Anderson
County, bond set at $15,000.
Yates Rosendahl was booked
into jail August 27 for Anderson
County, bond set at $2,500.
Charles Steele was booked
into jail August 26 for Anderson
County, bond set at $2,500.
Nathanael Talbert was booked
into jail August 28 for Anderson
County, bond set at $100,000.
Michael SpellMeier was booked
into jail May 21 for Anderson
County, bond set at $250,000.
Harley Crook was booked into
jail September21 for Anderson
County. No bond details.
Daniel
VanNorman
was
booked into jail September 25
for Anderson County. No bond
details.
FARM-INS
Caleb Mendez was booked
into jail October 7 for Douglas
County.
Jason Ridenour was booked
into jail October 7 for Miami
County.
Jeremy Cline was booked
into jail October 16 for Douglas
County.
Jason Allen was booked into jail
October 23 for Douglas County.
Dustin Gould was booked into
jail October 23 for Miami County.
Gloria Souza was booked
into jail October 27 for Douglas
County.
Nathan Vickers was booked
into jail November 2 for Douglas
County.
Noah Falk was booked into jail
November 2 for Douglas County.
Angela Leonard was booked
into jail November 3 for Douglas
County.
Bridgette Mckinsey was booked
into jail November 3 for Douglas
County.
Terry Ballou was booked into
jail November 4 for Miami County.
Herbert Hayden was booked
Anderson County
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To consign items
call for an appointment
REAL ESTATE
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guideand Related Services
Brokers
Also, be sure to check the Reviews Regional Classifieds for listings.
B
R
Benjamin Realty
Sherry Benjamin,Broker
Land Homes Commercial
201 N. Maple
Garnett, Ks 66032
benjaminrealty@earthlink.net
HIGHWAY LOCATION
213 S. Maple, Garnett
(785) 448-6200
(866) 448-6258
hwy@garnettrealestate.com
REALTOR
Office: (785) 448-2550
Home: (785) 241-0532
Cell: (785) 304-2029
DOWNTOWN LOCATION
114 W. 4th, Garnett
(785) 448-6191
(800) 530-5971
downtown@garnettrealestate.com
Scott Schulte, Broker
(785) 448-5351
Delton Hodgson (785) 448-6118
Ron Ratliff
(785) 448-8200
Bob
Umbarger
(785)
448-5905
Beth
Mersman (785) 448-7500
Alberta Bishop (785) 448-7534
Carol Barnes
(785) 448-5300
Mary
Lizer
(785) 448-3238
Donna Morris
(913) 731-2456
SERVING OUR COMMUNITY
Michelle Ware
(785) 214-8489
Cris Anderson
(785) 304-1591
FOR 50 YEARS
Pam Ahring
(785) 204-2405
Marlo Kimzey
(913) 980-3267
Visit our informative website at www.garnettrealestate.com
You can search all MLS listings & more.
Carla (Schulte) Walter, Broker
(785)
448-7658
AFFORDABLE HOME LOANS
To be added to this
once-a-month real estate guide
Call Stacey at (785) 448-3121.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
BURNED…
HAMMONDS
NOVEMBER 7, 1963-NOVEMBER 9, 2015
Christine Jaye Hammonds,
age 52, of Bartlesville,
Oklahoma, passed away on
Monday, November 9, 2015, at
her home.
She was born November
7, 1963, in
Hutchinson,
K a n s a s ,
the
daughter of Lloyd
Vernon and
Edith Irene
(Thompson)
Hammonds.
Hammonds
She graduated
from Ottawa
High School
in Ottawa, Kansas and attended
a Technical School to become a
Phlebotomist. Christine worked
at Quest Laboratories in Tulsa,
Oklahoma for several years.
Christine enjoyed attending
church, reading and singing.
She was a social butterfly, and
never met a stranger.
She was preceded in death by
her father, Lloyd Hammonds;
step-father, Nick Correa; and
FROM PAGE 1A
companion, Alvin Long.
Christine is survived by her
mother, Edith Correa of Cabot,
Arkansas; sister, Rhonda
Cumplido and husband Jorge
of Kincaid, Kansas; two brothers, N. Quincy Correa and wife
Pam of Seattle, Washington;
Lefric Mears and wife Heather
of Munford, Tennessee; nieces and nephews, Jake Turner,
Nathan Mears, Eli Mears;
Amy Foulk, Gabrielle Correa,
Roy Hoggatt and wife Tera,
Veronica Cumplido, Ashley
Cumplido, Audrey Cumplido,
Jorge Cumplido Jr; and many
other relatives and friends.
Funeral services were
Friday, November 13, 2015, at
Hope Chapel in Moran. Burial
followed in the Fairview
Cemetery, in Mildred.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to the Christine
Hammonds Memorial Fund.
You may send your condolences to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com.
HULETT
Services for Marjorie Lucille
Hulett, 80 of Garnett, are pending under the direction of
Farris-Feuerborn Chapels of
Garnett.
She passed away Monday,
Nov 16, 2015.
more than 36 percent of his
body.
At first, the family didnt
realize the extent of his injuries. They immediately drove
him to Ransom Memorial
Hospital in Ottawa. As health
care workers washed his body,
they started to see the reality
of the situation. Tanner, who
had intermittent fits of crying
on the way to the hospital in
Ottawa, went into shock when
they arrived and he was placed
on oxygen.
I think we were in a little
bit of denial, Karen Edgecomb
said.
Tanner was taken by ambulance to Childrens Mercy
Hospital in Kansas City, where
he remained for seven weeks.
For the first week or so, he
was sedated in the Pediatric
Intensive Care unit. He has
received several skin grafts
and continues to receive physical therapy.
Tanners time at Childrens
Mercy coincided with the
Kansas City Royals historic
playoff and World Series run.
Tanner is a big Royals fan,
and the Royals organization is
known to support Childrens
SCHULTE
Wise from birth to age 6. He
added to her love of life and she
said, He kept her young. She
was also Grandma Rhoda to
him.
She enjoyed golfing and the
monthly socials at the Country
Club.
Rhoda was preceded in death
by her parents, Goldia (1970)
and Jeremiah (1972) and one
sister, Carol Ann Nickelson
(1989).
Rhoda is survived by her
children, Kim Schulte and
husband Ken Flaspohler of
Overland Park, Kansas; Scott
Schulte of Garnett, Danny
Schulte of Garnett, Carla Walter
and husband Ryan of Garnett,
four grandchildren, Spencer
Walter and Sammy Walter;
Alexis Schulte and Nicholas
Schulte; four step grandchildren, Jennifer, Allie, Stephen,
and Brandon Flaspohler; and
several extended family and
friends.
Memorial services will
be held at 10:00 a.m., on
Wednesday, November 18,
2015, at the Feuerborn Family
Funeral
Service
Chapel,
Garnett. Family will greet
friends Tuesday evening at the
funeral home from 6:00 p.m. to
8:00 p.m.
Memorial
Contributions
may be made to Garnett
Country Club.
You may send your condolences to the family at www.
feuerbornfuneral.com.
Mercy. While Tanner was at
the hospital, the Royals mascot, Slugger, made a visit.
Karen Edgecomb said meeting
Slugger was a highlight, one of
the bright spots during a very
difficult time.
The family is grateful for the
support and encouragement
of their church and friends,
Edgecomb said. They belong to
the Dunkard Brothers Church
in Grandview, Mo., and said
the church has been very supportive. Their friends, including Greg and Carol Miller who
are helping organize this weekends fundraiser, also have
been a great source of help.
Everyone has pitched in
and we have a lot of support.
Were very appreciative of
all the prayers and support,
Edgecomb said. Were making
it with Gods help and healing.
In addition to Tanner, the
family includes four other
children from ages 17 to 2:
Ashley, Riley, Trey and Selah.
Johnathan Edgecomb owns and
operates Edgecomb Flooring.
For more information about
the barbecue pork supper fundraiser, contact Greg Miller at
(785) 448-4602, Merle Edgecomb Kansas City Royals mascot Slugger visited Tanner Edgecomb at
at (785) 448-4058, or Aaron Childrens Mercy Hospital.
Bowman at (620) 341-0883.
POACHING…
FROM PAGE 1A
MAY 20, 1934-NOVEMBER 13, 2015
Rhoda Jeanette (Nickelson)
Schulte, age 81, of Garnett,
Kansas passed away at her
home on Friday, November 13,
2015.
She was born May 20, 1934,
on a farm near or in Garnett,
Kansas. She is the daughter of
Jeremiah Jerry and Goldia D.
(Whightsil) Nickelson.
She lived in Garnett all of her
life and graduated
from
Garnett High
School in 1952.
She worked at
the Medical
Center
in
Garnett for Dr.
White right
out of high
Schulte
school
and
later in her
own business, the C.D. Schulte
Agency.
Rhoda was united in marriage to C.D. (Carroll) Schulte
on June 23, 1954. They later
divorced in 1978. To this union,
four children were born.
She enjoyed dancing, sewing, her flowers, crocheting,
knitting, making quilts and
cooking. Fried chicken and
pies were her specialty. Quite
a few will also remember,
Hamburger Saturday.
Rhoda loved people and
opened her home and pool to
all through the years. But her
greatest love was her children
and grandchildren. When she
was 73, she babysat Conner
know if that means the poachers were somehow unable to
track the deer and retrieve the
racks, or if the animals were
killed for fun.
Poaching is a criminal act
punishable by jail time and
fines in the thousands of dollars.
Not only is the activity illegal, its also very dangerous
and unethical, DeHoux said.
In most cases, poachers fire
guns from the roadway, which
in itself is an illegal act. Even
though the activity tends to
occur in rural areas, there is
no way for the poacher to know
if someone else may be in the
vicinty. An innocent person
could be shot or killed.
If theyre shooting into a
field, they dont know if theres
somebody out there, DeHoux
said.
Poaching also deprives law
abiding hunters from collecting quality animals, he said.
Hunting is a popular and sometimes expensive sport, and
quality bucks are highly valued prizes. Many hunters also
consume meat from the animal.
Theyre stealing from the
public, DeHoux said. Theyre
taking that opportunity away
from other people.
People who see suspicious activities should call
FIRES…
FROM PAGE 1A
Most people around here
are smart enough to know
not to burn when its windy,
Brinkmeyer said.
Fire officials are investigating whether the recent bout of
suspicious fires are tied to similar suspicious fires in early
2014.
Anyone with information
about the fires is asked to call
Anderson County Emergency
Management at (785) 448-6797, or
the Anderson County Sheriffs
Department at (785) 448-6823.
Brinkmeyer asks residents to
watch for suspicious activity
in the area, and to report such
activity immediately.
You name it,
we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
ROBERT E. BOOTS, Deceased
Case No. 15-PR-24
Proceeding Under K.S.A. Chapter 59
3×8
reach
John D. Watt, Executor
John D. Watt
Attorney at Law
815 5th St., PO Box 56
Wamego, KS 66547
785-456-2231
S. Ct. #9453
nv10t3
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL
PERSONS CONCERNED:
You are hereby notified that on October 30.
2015, a Petition for Probate of Will and Issuance
of Letters Testamentary was filed in this Court by
John D. Watt, Executor of the Estate of Robert
E. Boots, deceased.
All creditors of the Decedent are notified to
exhibit their demands against the Estate within
four (4) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice, as provided by law, and if
their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall
be forever barred.
1×2
AD
2×3
benjamin realty
PROFESSIONAL TAX PREPARATION
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
2×2
Enrolled Agent
Unfiled Returns
Representing
Clients
Before:
Offers in Compromise
tax time
IRS Exam Division
IRS Collection Division
IRS Appeals Division
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
JO WOLKEN
TAX-TIME TAX SERVICE, INC.
785-448-3056 415 S. Oak, Garnett
911 or local law enforcement
like the Anderson County
Sheriffs Department at (785)
448-6823. Suspicious activities
can include things like seeing
someone shooting a gun from
the road or finding people trespassing on land. If you see criminal activities taking place, call
911 immediately, DeHoux said.
The more quickly you call, the
better chance law enforcement
has of finding the poachers,
DeHoux said.
Someone who has information about past poaching or
illegal activity that already
occurred is asked to call
Operation Game Thief hotline
at 877-426-3843. You can remain
anonymous.
Some people seem reluctant
to report suspicious activity,
DeHoux said. Hes trying to
change that mindset by reminding people that poachers cannot be stopped unless they are
caught and prosecuted. He has
heard from some landowners
who found someone illegally
hunting on their land and told
them to leave, but that doesnt
solve the problem. The poacher
simply will move to another
property, DeHoux said.
All they are doing is sending a recurring problem down
the road for their neighbors to
deal with, he said.
FREE
2×3
turkey
giveaway!
church
of nazaNovember 18 at 7 p.m.
rene
Please call ahead and register for your free turkey.
You and your family must be present and attend a
short presentation before the turkeys are distributed.
Garnett Church of the Nazarene
785-448-3208
258 Park Road
Garnett, KS
29,00
Total R 0
eaders
!
Notice to settle Boots estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, November 10, 2015)
3A
REMEMBRANCES
Liens & Levies
Innocent Spouse Relief
Audit Reconsiderations
Payroll Tax Problems
TAX DEBTS TAX PROBLEMS
MORE
REACH,
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Run any display ad
in The Review, get
additional readers
in Lawrence/Douglas
County with
The Trading Post
at 1/2 price.
Contact us for details.
(785) 448-3121
review@garnett-ks.com
4A
Selected by newspaper professionals nationwide for 43 Awards of Excellence
in editorial, column writing, photography and advertising.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
EDITORIAL
Mizzous many faces of shame
With all the hullaballoo coming out of
Columbia, Mo., last week with racist unrest on
the campus of the University of Missouri, theres
an overriding story thats been ignored.
And that is this: The right to free speech is
guaranteed regardless of your color; however,
your right to not be offended thats not guaranteed at all.
Not that anyone at Mizzou gets any awards
for their conduct the past week.
1) The schools administrators were so inept
they let a campus issue blow up into a national
public relations disaster. How many degrees
do you have to have as a university bureaucrat
to know that in the post-Ferguson era, anytime
somebody starts yelling racism, you empanel a
task force of some kind to investigate? Had system president Tim Wolfe acted like an administrator who was actually worth his $459,000 a year
salary, the issue could have been addressed on
campus instead of all across the country.
2) The protestors werent very sympathetic either. In an era that has seen more blacks
attend the university, more financial aid and
scholarships awarded to black students and
more black-only organizations developed than
any time in MU history, protestors complained
of systemic racism at the university. Hunger
striker and grad student Johnathan Butler
decried white privilege, even though his
fathers salary is more than $6 million a year
courtesy of his job at Union Pacific Railroad in
Omaha. A wigged-out professor of mass communications fell in with other protestors attempting
to censor press coverage of their protest (on public ground, no less) asking for muscle to throw
a cameraman out. Student body president Payton
Head fabricated sightings of the KKK and told
students he was working with local police and
the Missouri National Guard to respond (all completely false.) After the attack on Paris by ISIS
Friday night, protestors and other black activists
across the country tweeted their disgust for news
coverage of the Paris attacks when the media
should be focusing its attention on the trials and
tribulations of black college students at Mizzou
and racial disparity elsewhere.
3) Missouri was a slave state, and theres
been a redneck element there since statehood
and there probably always will be. Forget the
REVIEW COMMENTARY
DANE HICKS, Publisher
lofty principals of multicultural acceptance
however many individuals are actually responsible for the legitimate racist acts at Mizzou
and however many there have really been,
their actions have been flat out rude. One may
not agree with the Al Sharptons and the Jesse
Jacksons and the Barack Obamas in what I call
their blatant race baiting, but theres no excuse
for being personally insulting to someone else
whose perspective and opinion differs. Throwing
cotton balls in front of the black cultural center
or hollering the n word from a passing vehicle
says a lot more about you than it does your target.
4) The campus police, in what may be one of
the most ridiculous memos to students and faculty ever distributed, informed them that if they
witnessed hateful or hurtful speech or actions
to contact MUPD immediately. It wasnt against
the law, they said, but they were students, the
Office of Student Conduct would deal with them
apparently like theyre all in kindergarten.
Im not sure what a university can do to
make rednecks more culturally sensitive or
make them less jealous of black success. Im not
sure what it can do to make blacks on campus
less inclined to default to the cop-out protections
of screaming racism at every drop of the hat.
I know there are a lot of people now whove
forgotten the accolades and accomplishments of
the 176 year-old, first public university west of
the Mississippi. I know fewer people, black or
white, now want to send their kids to Mizzou. I
know as a graduate, Im ashamed of the whole
mess.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEWS
PHONE FORUM
Record your comments on the topic of your choice at (785) 448-2500, press option 1. You do not need to
leave your name. Comments will be published anonymously. Calls may be edited for publication or omitted.
The fiasco at Missouri University is just
a microcosm of whats happening to the
rest of the country. The inmates are running the asylum.
Hitler was responsible for the extermination of over 6 million Jews, and our
current president has to be responsible for the extinction of over a million
Christians over in the Middle East.
To the City of Garnett: Whats the big
deal with the farm trucks on Fourth
Street? Farmers trying to get to and from
their fields without going an extra 10
miles around Garnett, when the county
runs their big rock trucks up and down
Fourth Street? Come on, lets get our
program together. Farmers arent going
Americas stupendous bounty
We live in an age of miracles. Throughout
all of human history, material progress
essentially didnt exist until around 1800. The
economic trajectory was flat until the human
lot began to improve in ways that would have
been unimaginable in prior millennia.
This change gave us the world as we know
it. In her brilliant book on the transformation,
Bourgeois Dignity, Deirdre McCloskey
writes how the average person in the world
subsisted on roughly $3 a day during humanitys long economic stasis. Then, with the
breakout, countries that experienced modern
growth over the past couple of centuries saw
their material well-being increase by at least
a factor of 16 — a transformational leap ahead
for nearly everyone living in those countries.
Thanksgiving is, in part, a festival of abundance, and despite the steep recession and
grindingly mediocre recovery, we still are
better situated to celebrate it than people in
any other age or place.
America has always been materially blessed, relative to other parts of the world. In the
Colonial period, American men and women
were already taller than their British counterparts, thanks to a better standard of living.
Americans achieved modern heights by the
middle of the 18th century, according to
economic historian Robert Fogel, and had
already reached levels of life expectancy
not attained by the general population of
England or even by the British peerage until
NATIONAL COMMENTARY
RICH LOWRY, King Features Syndicate
the first quarter of the 20th century.
Life was nonetheless still characterized
by deprivations almost completely alien to
us. Across the 20th century, the routine misery lifted and we witnessed the profusion
of almost all of the things we now take for
granted.
Between 1900 and 2000, indoor toilets, telephones and automobiles in the U.S. went
from rare to practically universal, according
to the study Century of Difference. In 1920,
about a quarter of Americans owned an automobile. Now, 57 percent of households own
two or more cars.
McCloskey catalogs the other indicators
of progress. In 1875, people spent roughly
three-quarters of their income on the basics
of food, clothing and shelter. By the mid1990s, the figure had shrunk to 13 percent.
Meanwhile, spending on recreation doubled. (The author Gregg Easterbrook points
out that in 2001, Americans spent a greater
amount on recreational watercraft than the
gross domestic product of South Korea.)
The bounty of consumer comforts and
goods has extended to poor households.
In 2010, 80 percent of poor households had
air conditioning; only about third of all
Americans had it in 1970. Even poor households have televisions (96 percent), and washers and dryers (68 and 65 percent, respectively). None of this is to deny that material
deprivation exists, but what once were the
hallmarks of middle-class life are now widely
diffused.
The American publics economic discontents are justified, with the job market not
yet healed, with incomes stagnant, and with
income mobility too limited. But the epoch
of the nearly inevitable $3-a-day livelihood
is past. Compared to most of human history,
when, in the words of Deirdre McCloskey,
illiteracy, disease, superstition, periodic
starvation, and lack of prospects were the
norm, we live in the sunlit uplands. For that,
we should be grateful.
Rich Lowry is editor of The National
Review.
Drinking game: When legislators say in the classroom
Statehouse habitus are gearing up for
another session where the most frequently
used phrase will be spent in the classroom.
Thats the school finance phrase that
draws the most attention, that sounds on its
face as a reasonable use of those state dollars.
You send your kids to school, and when they
come home seven hours later, well, you want
to know that all those $4 billion plus in state
tax dollars went to teach them things they
didnt know when they arrived.
Thats where this spent in the classroom
phrase comes in. Everybody wants tax dollars for public education to be spent on educating his/her kids or grandkids or neighbors kidsin those classrooms.
But theres a lot that school districts do
that doesnt involve direct pupil-to-teacher
contact in a classroom.
The kids ride a bus to school? Thats
not in the classroom spending, according
to many legislatorsbut isnt talked about
much because most legislators constituents
school districts bus kids to school, where the
classrooms are.
And, if theres a lunch program, well,
those lunches arent generally eaten in the
classroom, and the halls and classrooms that
are cleaned, well, thats not direct teacher-to-pupil contact.
Oh, and dont forget that someone manages those schools, makes sure that the furnace
is running, the windows arent broken, that
equipment is bought at the best price, bills
are paid and the employees who work for
your local unified school district are paid,
and their checks are double-checked and the
STATE COMMENTARY
MARTIN HAWVER, At The Rail
deductions for taxes made.
All that non-classroom spending is important. There is probably some magic percentage that only accountants know that defines
an efficiently run school district.
But, in a state with school districts ranging from 80 students to 47,000 students, were
figuring that the spent in the classroom vs.
not spent in the classroom costs are going
to vary dramatically. Its the management
costs of a giant district spread over more
pupils. Thats why a gallon jug of milk costs
less than buying eight pint cartons of milk;
its called economies of scale.
But about all were hearing from lawmakers is in the classroom.
That catch phrase is getting a little old, and
while total costs are the least complicated for
legislators to get a handle on, its probably
not as important as how well the student do,
what they learn, and are they going to know
enough to go on to post-secondary schools or
maybe just get a job and move out.
The upcoming legislative session is where
the real work will start on assembling a new
school finance formula to replace the interim
block grant program which enters its second
and likely last year for the 2016-17 school
year.
That block grant program essentially
takes state aid the districts received in the
2014-2015 school year and just continues it for
two years, regardless of changes in makeup
of the school districts and numbers of pupils
(if enrollment growth is less than 2 percent),
and tells the districts to spend it however
they think they need to provide an education
to their pupils.
But dont forget, that even with a relatively clean sheet of paper to start with, much
of what well hear about financing public
education next session is going to be about
in the classroom with whatever links can
be established to performance of studentsat
the lowest cost to the state treasury.
Maybe that phrase will work out, but were
trying to remember the last time anyone got
cheaper drinks by taking their own glass, ice
and an olive on a toothpick into a bar trying
to pay for just the vodka and vermouth.
Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC
of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of
Hawvers Capitol Reportto learn more about
this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com
to hurt that road.
Seriously? The USD 365 website is updated through 2013? Yes, 2013.
Obama has referred to ISIS as junior
varsity, after theyve killed hundreds
of thousands of Christians and millions
of other innocent people sitting around
watching movies or something. Then we
have African Americans in this country
that break the law, and then a policeman
shoots them and hes considered a murderer and a terrorist. This just doesnt
make sense. I guess Obama feels he must
support his Muslim brothers.
I think this community should rally in
support of the child who got raped by
Michael Spellmeier by showing up at his
sentencing hearing and voicing our feelings to the judge. No plea bargain for this
child rapist. Thank you.
ACH provides
wonderful care
To the Editor and to the citizens of Anderson
County,
We are so very thankful for the new hospital
and its wonderful nursing staff.
Richard has
a debilitating
muscle disease
called Inclusive
Body Myositis (IBM) which caused him to fall
and break bones in his foot and kneecap, leaving
him unable to be at home during the healing process. Without the new hospital and its modern
equipment, we would have had to go out of town
for this long period of rehabilitation.
The PT team is amazing and working hard to
get Richard back on his feet.
We appreciate the hospital so much. Thank
you.
Sincerely,
Richard and Dolores Prather
Contact Your
Legislator
Senator Pat Roberts
302 Hart Senate O.B.,
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-4774, Fax (202) 224-3514
email pat_roberts@roberts.senate.gov
Senator Jerry Moran
2202 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 224-6521. Fax: (202) 228-6966
www.moran.senate.gov
5th Dist. Rep. Lynn Jenkins
130 Connor House Office Building
Washington, D.C., 20510
(202) 225-6601
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 Periodiacls class mail at Garnett, Ks., 66032,
permit number 214-200.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to:
The Anderson County Review
P.O. Box 409 Garnett, KS 66032
(785) 448-3121
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
LOCAL
Silver Haired Legislature addresses senior issues
The Silver Haired Legislature
met October 6-8 in Topeka to address
issues that impact the growing number of seniors in Kansas. The Kansas
State Legislature created the Silver
Haired Legislature in 1982 as a unicameral body of 125 representatives.
Each representative must be at least
60 years old and be elected from their
home county. Clarence Hermann was
chosen to represent Anderson County
seniors, Speaker Don Woodward,
Auburn, and Presidnet Jay Rowh,
Beloit, preside over the delegates.
The Annual Silver Haired
Legislature provides experience in the
political process, informs the public
and Kansas Legislature of the interests, concerns and needs of more than
450,000 Kansas seniors. At the fall conference, an agenda is decided upon
for presentation to the Kansas State
Legislature.
During the most recent Conference
of Seniors two bills and five resolutions based on the needs identified
by delegates were adopted. One bill
declares, The state policy should
maintain Medicare, Medicaid, the
Childrens Health Insurance Program
and all Federal Health Care programs
should continue to be administered
under exsisting Federal Law, and
that the state shall not enter into
any agreement which would establish
block grant funding for any Federal
Health Care Program within this
state. This bill would continue funding for KanCare benefits for Elderly,
Children and Low Income families
but would not make any agreement
for block grant funding for additional
healthcare programs in the Affordable
Health Care Act. It addresses the
Health Care Compact passed by the
Kansas Legislature during the 2014
session, if passed by Congress, Kansas
would join other states in the compact
by funding those health plans internally without Federal Government
Funds.
A second bill seeks to strengthen
funding of the Kansas Senior Care
Act, suggesting that the amount of
funding provided by the state for the
Senior Care Act is maintained at, or
increased from, the level of funding
provided during Fiscal 2015. The
Senior Care Act provides In-Home
Services to elderly Kansans who contribute to the cost of services based on
their ability to pay for services. This
sliding scale payment for services
would continue to bolster the program
for those seniors unable to pay the full
amount or those that find themselves
with no way to pay for their services.
Resolution 3202 urges the Kansas
Legislature to maintain a full-time
regional ombudsman in each of the
eleven Area Agencies on Aging in
Kansas. Since 2008, the Kansas Long
Term Care Ombudsman Program
has been cut 27% in State General
Funding and 5% in Federal Funding,
reducing the program from 9 FullTime paid positions to 7. Regional
positions, along with volunteers,
investigate complaints from residents
of Adult Care Facilities pro bono.
These complaints include issues such
as privacy, level of care, improper
administration, and discharge procedures. Represenation for these complaints if often presented but with the
shrinking Ombudsman positions the
time necessary to investigate the complaints properly is taking longer.
Resolution 3203 urged Silver Haired
Legislators throughout Kansas to contact their respective State and Federal
Representation to support reauthorization and increased funding for the
Older Americans Act. First passed in
1965, part of the Great Society Reforms
from the Johnson Administration,
it funded home-delivered meal programs, personal care, homemaker
services, respite care, and adult pro-
tective services relating to financial
exploitation. It also funded the States
efforts to improve transportation services provided to the elderly and mental helath screening and treatment.
Noting that the countrys Baby
Boomer Generation are turning 65
and the population of older Americans
in need is growing, increased funding
is not only recommended, it is direly
needed.
Medical research has discovered
beneficial uses for marijuana and utilize it for treatment in a growing number of conditions and alleviating pain,
nausea and other symptoms of chronic disease. Resolution 3204 suggests
that the Kansas State Legislature
legalize the medical use of marijuana
for certain debilitating medical conditions. 22 States and the District of
Columbia have removed state level
criminal penalties for the medical use
of marijuana.
Resolution 3207 addresses the need
for the expansion of Medicaid in
Kansas. That would improve health
outcomes by reducing the number of
uninsured Kansans. By improving
preventative and primary care access,
and by allowing for substance abuse
treatment and mental health counseling and screening, the quality of
5A
life of many Kansans would improve
exponentially. Expansion would also
yield new jobs and increase economic
activitiy throughout Kansas. Federal
Funds would pay 100% of services for
expansion through 2016 and would
cover 90% in the future, at the same
time reducing the burden of uncompensated care for hospitals.
Support and preservation of
Social Security and Medicare were
addressed in Resolution 3208. Nearly
92% of elderly Kansas recieves Social
Security, about 55% of the typical older
Kansans family income. Without
those benefits, it is estimated that 40%
of elderly would fall belove the poverty line. Nearly 97% of Kansans over
the age of 65 are enrolled in Medicare.
Approximately 450,000 are provided
coverage for inpatient and outpatient
Hospital services, skilled nursing services, hospice and home health care
services.
These resolutions and bills will
be presented to the Kansas State
Legislature when it recovenes after the
holiday break in January. Hermann
said, It is my continued ambition
to make sure that the concerns of
my fellow seniors and the residents
of Anderson County have a voice in
some of these bills and resolutions.
Early childhood origins of mean behavior, bullying Westphalia announces
When we think of bullying
behavior, we often think of it
occurring between school-age
children. To date, little attention has been given to the relationship between early childhood experiences and bullying
behaviors later in life.
Among school-aged children, bullying is characterized by: 1.) aggressive behavior 2.) that is repeated or has
the potential of being repeated
and 3.) reflects an imbalance of
power between the aggressor
and victim.
Early childhood often
marks the first opportunity
for young children to interact with each other. Research
shows that a young childs
aggressive behaviors become
more organized into bullying-like behavior during the
preschool years. These behaviors are similar to bullying in
many ways, but may not be
EXTENSION NEWS
REBECCA MCFARLAND, Frontier Extension District
carried out consistently over
time, or the dynamic between
the two children or groups of
children may not reflect a consistent imbalance of power.
Understanding and addressing the root causes of bullying
is important, given the sometimes devastating consequences to its victims. Participation
in bullying behavior, both as a
target as well as an aggressor
is a risk factor for suicide
among adolescents. In addition to the emotional and psy-
chological consequences that
have been well-documented,
research has found that being
subjected to exclusion and
separation activates the same
part of the brain that responds
to physical pain. This evidence
suggests that even non-physical forms of bullying can be
perceived as pain.
There is a substantial body
of evidence that lends support
to the following theories about
the roots of bullying behavior
in early childhood:
Parenting behavior and
characteristics, particularly parenting style, parental
involvement, and engagement
are related to the development of mean or aggressive
behaviors.
Early childhood maltreatment, such as physical abuse,
is a significant predictor for
involvement in bullying, both
as the target and as the aggres-
sor.
The quantity and content of
television media exposure has
been linked to both the development of bullying behaviors
as well as pro-social skills.
So, what can be done to prevent bullying perpetration and
victimization in early childhood? The early years present a unique opportunity to
take advantage of a variety of
caregiver-child relationships
and social settings (home,
preschool, child care settings,
playground, etc.) where modeling, teaching, and reinforcing
pro-social behaviors, such as
empathy, kindness, assertiveness and problem-solving can
take place. Current evidence
stresses the need to focus on
promoting and teaching positive social and emotional
skills and interactions to prevent later bullying behaviors.
first quarter honor rolls
Westphalia Junior High
School has released its honor
rolls for the first quarter.
PRINCIPAL HONOR ROLL
1st QUARTER
To be on the Principals
Honor Roll, a student must
have a 4.00 GPA.
Eighth Grade Becky Kropf
and Derek Ratzlaff
Seventh Grade Dylan
Miller 90th
birthday
Eileen Miller will celebrate
her 90th birthday on Nov. 17.
Cards may be sent to her at
Golden Heights Living Center,
101 N. Pine #106, Garnett KS
66032.
Cole, Hannah Gardner, April
Powls and Katie Schmit
TEACHER HONOR ROLL 1st
QUARTER
To be on the Teachers Honor
Roll, a student must have 3.5 to
3.99 GPA.
Seventh Grade Sophia
Cole, Larry Ratzlaff, Korey
Rohde and Maddie Womelsdorf
1×2
AD
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
6×10.5
guest home estates
Crossroads Hospice provided gift of the day for Jim Craig on November
5th. Jims biggest wish was to tour Allen Fieldhouse and stand on the large
Jayhawk in center court. Jim along with hospice toured the mens training
facility, locker room and then a huge surprise was meeting Coach Bill Self. Jim gave Coach Self one piece of advice you
need to recruit players that stay more than one year. Coach Self agreed and simply smiled. Jim stated several times
throughout the day, I may be 80, but I feel like I am 16 today.
Jim has lived at Guest Home Estates for several years and always has a smile on his face when greeting people who visit.
Crossroads Hospice is proud to serve Anderson County residents and provide many types of services in our community.
Expect more from us, we do.
Guest Home Estates VII
Assisted Living
806 W. 4th Avenue Garnett, KS
(785) 448-6884
6A
LOCAL
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Christmas parade scheduled for Dec. 5
Calendar
Nov. 19-County bus to Iola,
phone 24 hrs. before you need
a ride 785-448-4410 any weekday; 15-City Council meeting,
City Hall community room, 7
p.m.; Fire Dept. fire meeting,
fire station, 7 p.m.; 25-Happy
Thanksgiving! All businesses
closed.
School Calendar
19: Host MS Basketball @ 5
p.m. vs. Westphalia; 20: FCA
Game Night in Kincaid 6:30 9:30
p.m.; 21: State Football; 25-29:
Thanksgiving Break
Meal Site
Nov. 20-hamburger, carrot and
raisin salad, sliced tomato, bun,
jello with fruit; 12-chicken lasagna-rollup, peas, bread, pears;
15-live music, Vision cards
accepted-turkey roast, mashed
potatoes, gravy, green bean,
roll, pumpkin pie; l7-Thanksgiving Holiday. Phone 620-8523450 for meal reservations.
Christian Church
Scripture presented at
Sundays service was Isaiah
55:10-11. Pastor Zolls sermon
was entitled Not by my Power,
but by Your Spirit. Mens Bible
Study Tuesday Morning, 7
a.m.; Cross Training Classes at
9:24 a.m. each Sunday. Classes
for all ages. Adults studying
Colossians; Nov. 15-Womens
Celebrate Recovery will meet 6
p.m. at the church.
UMC
Presented at Sundays
United Methodist Church service was The Apostles Creed,
Ruth 3:1-5, 4: 13-17, Hebrews
9:24-28 and Mark 12:38-44.
Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, Putting on the
Grace Clothes.
Pastor Welch and family are
hosting an open house at the
Methodist Church on Dec. 5
following the Christmas parade
activities until 8 p.m.
UMW
Their Nov. 5 meeting was
held in fellowship hall of the
church with seven members
in attendance. Pastor Dorothy
Welch gave the prayer. She
spoke about The Womens
Conference she attended at
St. Marks United Methodist
Church, Wichita. They hope for
a larger attendance next year.
COLONY NEWS
Mrs. Morris Luedke
Contact (620) 852-3379 or
colonynews@ckt.net with Colony news.
UMW November challenge is
Thanksgiving for three families. Their Hugs and Muffins
project was distributed at Crest
and LeRoy schools. There will
be a facility and fellowship
meeting at Camp Chippewau
near Ottawa on Nov. 14. For
more information phone 785242-6797. December challenge
for the group is for one familys Christmas. All exchanged
Thanksgiving memories, fun
times with families. Dec. 5
immediately following the
annual Christmas Parade, all
are welcome to drop in at the
United Methodist Church to
visit and become acquainted
with Pastor Dorothy and her
family. All members present
brought finger food for refreshments. Next meeting is Dec. 3.
Christmas Parade
Saturday Dec. 5 is the 11th
Annual Christmas Parade in
Colony. Organizers would love
and more than welcome, any
and all participation! Entries
do not need to be extravagant
or time-consuming……….just
simply participation! Eleven
years ago, organizers began
this event by simply trying to
bring our area together, promoting Christmas spirit and
kindness, all while attempting
to keep the evening simple and
enjoyable for everyone.
This year again will have
the Our Community Cares.
Ornaments are for sale at the
GSSB Bank in Colony for $5
each. When you purchase an
ornament in memory of or as
a special intention for someone struggling and put their
name on it, there will be no
explanation of the issue or
situation to be included, just
the name. The list of names
JJJ Club makes plans
for holiday meeting
The JJJ Club met Nov. 11
with Clarann Kempnich. There
were seven members present.
Roll call was answered, donations taken up for ECKAN.
It was decided to have the
clubs Christmas luncheon
at the Chinese restaurant at
11:30. Sandra Baugher will host
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Allene Luedke
July 30, 2015 at a Colony Little League Ball meeting held, it was
voted for a new ballpark infield and womens restroom to be constructed at the Colony ballpark. Elected that evening were officers Seth Black, president; Gerald Jones, vice-president, Abigail
Hermreck, secretary and Angie Black, treasurer. Above Kevin
Nilges, a little leaguer baseball player parent, (donating his time)
began work with a skid loader.
will be read that evening and
ornaments placed on the City
Christmas tree just prior to the
parade at 6:15 pm, followed by
a moment of silence. Proceeds
are split 100% equally between
the Colony Fire Department
and the Colony Lions Club each
year.
Christmas program schedule: 4-6 p.m.-chili soup fundraiser supper by Crest Fellowship
and Christian Athletes; 6 p.m.Our Community Cares Tree
Trimming Ceremony; 6:25-City
Street Lighting; 6:30-Parade. A
coffee and hot chocolate stand
(fundraiser for Colony Youth
Group) will be located under
Colony GSSB branch drive-thru. Santa Claus will meet with
little tots immediately following the parade in front of the
bank. Ice/freezing rain or
snow storm cancels the event.
Lions
At the Nov. 4 meeting with
Sue Colgin, president in charge
it was announced to the 13
members in attendance that
members Donna Westerman
and Bill Ulrich be sent Get
Well cards. Victoria Faulkner
will do this. Student with financial needs and assistance dog
donation is on hold at present. David Teterault and Butch
Lytle met Brian Ulrich at Bill
Ulrichs home and got all of the
wood moved for the Bill Ulrich
family.
Dec. 2 meeting will be a Pizza
meal with the cooks invited
and perhaps another invitation
also.
Location will be announced.
2×2
diy
the Dec. 9 meeting at Darlene
Thompsons home.
Cards were played. Darlene
won high, Sharon MIller second high and Sandra low.
Refreshments of vanilla
sugar cookies, ice cream and
coffee were served.
4×8.5
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Special Financing Available*
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Fabrics under $7/yd.
Country Fabrics
108 E. 5th Ave.
Garnett, KS
785-448-0003
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Mon. – Fri. 9 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Sat. 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
See Country Fabrics for the full Simplicity by Brother line and price list!
*Subject to credit approval. Minimum monthly payments required.
See store for details.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Photo Submitted by Angie Black
Looking northwest at approximately same position as the top
(before) picture, is todays very much improved ball field. Both pictures are taken from home team batters box. Work is now taking
place for the womens restroom to be added to the present mens
restroom and confession stand. Funds are needed and much
appreciated for this project. Please phone Angie Black, treasurer,
at 620-757-6782.
Butch Lytle will check with
the school about the number of
students that will need treats
from Santa this year. Members
voted to have another Gun-AMonth fundraiser. Ten were
in favor, two against and one
abstained. Kenton King will
begin preparing the list and get
tickets printed. A sales award
for the top seller was suggested
and agreed upon to give the
winner an award of dinner for
two. Next regular meeting is
Dec. 2 at 7 p.m.
Around Town
Congratulations to Dexter
Wiley upon receiving his
Bachelor of Science degree at
K-State University. He was
one of 304 earning a Bachelors
degree. Dexter is the son of
Mark and Sharon Wiley.
Congratulations are also in
order to Tammy and Jeff Dieker
at the birth of a great grand
daughter and great grandparents Sheldon and Ruth Caudell
on Oct. 9. She is the daughter
of Lindsay and Dereck Caudell,
Iola.
See Rod at Dales Body Shop
2×3
for all your
dales
auto body needs!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
7A
LOCAL
Holiday Homes Tour readies for the season
Yes, this is
difficult teaching
In Marks gospel chapter
8:31-36 Jesus predicts his death.
He spoke to the disciples plainly saying, The Son of Man
must suffer many things and
be rejected by the elders, chief
priests and teachers of the law,
and that he must be killed and
after three days rise again. It
is interesting to note that Jesus
had a significant following of
people from all walks of life.
His teaching, healing and miracles had captured the hearts of
the people and at the same time
caused a great deal of distress
for the religious establishment
specifically the Pharisees. It is
at this point that Jesus begins
to reveal to all the true cost of
following him.
Then he called the crowd to
him along with his disciples
and said: If anyone would
come after me, he must deny
himself and take up his cross
and follow me. Now we hear
the people say: This is difficult
teaching who can accept it.?
Following Jesus requires
self-denial. Dietrich Bonheffer
said, When Christ calls a man
he bids him die. This is what
separates most non-believers
from God. Christ calls us to
die to our old ways. These old
ways die hard and with some
they never die. A relationship,
a habit or even a way of life are
not easy to change.
This world where you and I
live, move and have our being
was created by God and God as
the creator is greater than the
creature you and I. Jesus says,
For whoever wants to save his
life will lose it, but whoever
WEEKLY
DEVOTIONAL
By David Bilderback
The Friends of the Garnett
Public Library will host
their annual Holiday Homes
Tour from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. on
Sunday, Dec. 6. Advance tickets are $8 and $10 the day of the
event.
The stops along the tour
include:
First United Methodist
Alice and Ron Anderegg,
504 S. Vine St., will present
Christmas of Comfort and
Joy.
Jenny and Charlie Jasper,
32710 NE 1500 Road, will
present A Country Fresh
Christmas.
Jody and Alan Newton,
22601 NE Utah Road, will pres-
David Bilderback: A Ministry
on the Holiness of God.
Central Heights Middle School announces honor roll
Central Heights Middle
School has announced its First
Quarter Honor Rolls.
All As
Sixth Grade: Kaydance
Bond,
Brock
Clifton,
Airyanna Fletcher, David
Krone, Brooklyn Kurtz, Rylee
were in third place.
The Garnett Duplicate McCurry, Lily Meyer, Lily
Bridge Club welcomes all Roll.
Seventh Grade: Cass
bridge players Wednesdays at 1
Burroughs, Nikita dAugereau,
p.m. at the Garnett Inn.
Faith Mildfelt, Isaiah Thao.
Eighth Grade: Madison
Bridges, Abby Brown, Landen
Compton, Cyla Gardner, Taylor
Jilek, Darbie Lear, Ryder Roll,
Tyler Stevenson
Principals Honor Roll
Sixth Grade: Kaydance
Bond, Kierstyn Blaufuss,
Alexis Bowker, Jennifer Hale,
Cameron Peel.
Seventh Grade: Brady
Burson, Luke Cotter, Anna
Farris, Emily Hale.
Eighth Grade: Hannah
Jumet, Harlee Poage, Timmy
Smith, Josh Thompson
Honor Roll
Sixth Grade: Kaydance
Bond, Chris Burris, Tyler
Calvert, Taryn Compton,
Shalana Eastman, Dominic
Lopez, Austin Richardson.
Seventh Grade: Alyssa
Beets, Orvel Broce, Luke
Detwiler, Mikalea Dock, Tessa
Evans, Lucas Herman, Bylon
Hitsman, Phoebe Hutchinson,
Dylan Kimball, Reagan Lee,
Kennz
McCleary,
Crais
CONTRACTORS
Guide
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GUTTERING
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BUILDING CONTRACTORS
McGurk, Chloe Moore, Cauy
Newell, Dakota Pendleton,
Joseph
Roberts, Kaylee
Stone, Leah Swartley, Anna
Thompson, Mya Williams.
Eighth Grade: Jessica
Asbury, Alexis Best, Bralen
Bowker,
Alex
Cannady,
Adriana
Casida, Austin
Coffman, Samantha Ferris,
Jonathan Fox, Tony Kirkland,
Mason
McCurry, Hailee
Riemer, Avery Stalford, Kylie
Suwalski, Alysa Wiederholt.
Get the job done right!
Check this handy directory
of contracting companies
before you take on that
home or business project.
AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING
NOW
FEATURING
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Lawrence (785) 749-0600 Ottawa (785) 242-3714
Baldwin City (785) 594-3357
(620) 363-4327
GLASS
ent Farmhouse Christmas.
Two of the homes are
located in the country east of
Garnett. There will be bussing
available leaving from the
library at intervals.
It is requested that participants follow the suggested
order printed on their tickets.
loses his life for me and for
the gospel will save it. If we
live eighty years on this earth
we will be doing well. Eighty
years of lets say, doing things
our way does not seem like a
very good trade for eternal life.
Jesus sums that up well when
he says, What good is it for a
man to gain the whole world,
yet forfeit his soul.
The Jewish people were
promised a Messiah and when
he came they didnt recognize
him. The Messiah they were
expecting would free them from
the oppression of Rome and set
up a kingdom. The Messiah
that came taught, healed, performed miracles and then they
crucified him just as Jesus predicted to the disciples. When
Jesus resurrected from the
grave and went to sit at the
right hand of God he paid the
full price once and for all for
your and my sins. Jesus said,
I am the way, and the truth,
and the life. No one comes to
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Photo Submitted
the Father except through me.
(John 14:6) If we are not careful The following students tried out for the KMEA District II Honor band, Morgan Egidy, Tyler Secrest, Eddie Gruver, and Nate Gainer on
we can become so entangled Saturday, November 7th at Parsons Kansas. Morgan and Tyler were both accepted into the District Honor band making them eligible to
in this world we will end up try out for the Kansas All State Band.
trading a small block of time,
this life, for eternity. Yes this
is difficult teaching. Can you
accept it?
Duplicate Bridge played
At the duplicate bridge
match November 11 in Garnett,
Charles and Peggy Carlson tied
with Steve Brodmerkle and
Anita Dennis for first and second. Jim and Norma Johnson
Church, 205 S. Oak St., will
be the featured church with a
program, A Savior is Born,
from 1 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
The Garnett Public
Library, 125 W. Fourth Ave.,
will offer entertainment and
refreshments from 1:30 p.m.
to 4 p.m. with Once Upon a
Time as their theme.
BUILDING MATERIALS
SEPTIC TANKS / SYSTEMS
D&S Sanitation LLC
Brian Falk
SIDING & WINDOWS
Construction Supply
Contractors Residential & Farm
410 N. Maple
Garnett, KS
785-448-7106
LIME & LIMESTONE
FLOORING
TRUSS SUPPLIERS
GAS – PROPANE
Visit The Anderson County Review
online at www.garnett-ks.com.
If you would like to advertise your business in this directory
call Stacey at 785-448-3121, or email review@garnett-ks.com.
8A
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
LOCAL
Bulldogs, Viking picked for
Pioneer League Honors
WELLSVILLE Three
Anderson County volleyball
players and another from
Central Heights were chosen
for Pioneer League honors
during the league meeting
last week.
Bulldog seniors Reagan
Jirak and MaKayla Kueser
both received selections to
the Pioneer Leagues First
Team. Senior Cassidy Lutz was
picked for the leagues second
team, along with sophomore
Shelbi Hettinger from Central
Heights.
The Bulldogs won their
4A Division II sub state tournament and made their first
appearance in the State
Championship Tournament in
15 years last month, but lost
two of their three opening
matchups on the tournaments
first day.
Im very pleased the league
coaches recognized these
girls, said Bulldog head coach
Glenn Suderman. These girls
Jirak
Kueser
represented our school well in
league play and at the state
tournament. Their skills and
leadership will be missed after
playing for us so many years.
Jirak was a four-year starter
for the Bulldogs, was voted allleague as a junior and was voted
to the Bulldog Invitational
All-Tournament Team in 2015.
Kueser, also a 4-year starter,
was voted all-league in 2014 and
was voted team Most Valuable
Player and 2015 Bulldog of the
Year. Lutz distinguished herself as a setter and middle hitter.
Hettinger was Central
Lutz
Hettinger
Heights defensive standout
for the season, won accolades
from her coach and from others
for her tough-hustling efforts.
Head coach Cadi Marcum said
Hettingers efforts came out
in a near-comeback win in the
Viking sub state game against
Jayhawk Linn in a 25-27 finish
that ended the Vikings playoff
hopes.
Shelbi stepped up and continued to dig ball after ball,
Marcum said. She never gave
up on a play without giving it
her all. I can never ask more
than that.
AC cross country honored by league
GARNETT Cross country
coaches in the Pioneer League
picked
eleven
Anderson
County cross country runners
for league honors last week.
Varsity runners selected
for first team league honors
included Averi Wilson, Tiffany
Mills, Gwen Sibley and Trevor
McDaniel.
Second team honors went to
Maddie Goode, Remi Hedges,
Bel Sibley, Paige Scheckel,
Josh McAuley, Owen Lutz and
Damone Kueser.
Selections are made by
league coaches after each season
performance.
Pioneer
League schools include Garnett,
Osawatomie, Central Heights,
Prairie View, Wellsville, Santa
Fe Trail and Iola.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Vickie Moss
Two construction projects are underway near the Garnett swimming pool. In the foreground, local metal
artist Mike Hill is constructing a large metal butterfly that will be part of a sitting area. It is one of several
arts related projects paid for with a state grant. Other projects were childrens arts classes, a national
art contest, a new sound system downtown and architectural renderings for the Chamber Players new
theater. The construction equipment machines in the background are preparing the site for a new sewer
lift station for the city, one of several infrastructure improvement projects undertaken by city leaders this
year.
You name it, we print it.
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
Everyone will think
we retouched our
legs like they do in
I know,
magazines!
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Photo Submitted
right?
A semi-tractor was involved in an accident north of Colony on U.S. 169 early Monday morning, Nov. 16.
The condition of the driver and other information was not available as of press time.
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1B
B
Section
CALENDAR
Tuesday, November 17
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club
at Garnett Inn and Suites
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School girls basketball at
Prairie View
4 p.m. – ACJH girls basketball
at home with Burlington
Wednesday, November 18
ACHS Stuco Pioneer League,
at Santa Fe Trail
1 p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
3:45 p.m. – Wellness Committee
at GES
4:15 p.m. – ACHS JV/varsity
Scholar Bowl at Eudora
6 p.m. – Anderson County
CloverPatch Kids Club for
all 5 and 6 year olds,
Community Building
7 p.m. – ACHS Fall Sports Awards
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club
at the Garnett Riding Arena
7 p.m. – Colony Lions Club at
Colony United Methodist
Church
7 p.m. – Kincaid Lions Club at
Kincaid-Selma United
Methodist Church
Thursday, November 19
4 p.m. – Central Heights Middle
School girls basketball at
home with Osawatomie
4 p.m. – ACJH girls basketball
at Prairie View
4 p.m. – AC Invitational Varsity
Scholars Bowl
5 p.m. – Westphalia basketball
5:30 p.m. – Garnett Business &
Professional Women at
Archer Room at Library
6 p.m. – 13 Point Pitch and
snacks at the Garnett Senior
Center
7:30 p.m. – Delphian Masonic
Lodge No. 44
Friday, November 20
7 p.m. – AC band concert, grades
6-12, at ACHS
Monday, November 23
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
1-2 p.m. – Anderson County
Caregiver Support Group,
Garnett Recreation Center
4 p.m. – ACJH girls basketball
at home with Santa Fe Trail
5 p.m. – Westphalia basketball
vs. Marmaton Valley at Greeley
6 p.m. – Friends of the Arts
6:30 p.m. – Tigers (first grade)
Den Cub Scouts and Wolves
(second grade) Den Cub Scouts
meeting
Tuesday, November 24
9 a.m. – TOPS at Garnett
Methodist Church basement,
2nd & Oak
Noon – Rotary International Club,
at Garnett Inn and Suites
1 p.m. – USD 365 grade 6 Quiz
Bowl at GES
6 p.m. – City of Garnett at
City Hall
7 p.m. – Legion BIngo at VFW
Wednesday, November 25
No school, Thanksgiving break
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Optimist
Club at Mr. Ds Restaurant
1p.m. – Garnett Duplicate
Bridge at the Garnett Inn
7 p.m. – Garnett Saddle Club at
the Garnett riding arena
Thursday, November 26
Noon – Thanksgiving meal at the
Garnett Senior Center
Saturday, November 28
Garnett Christmas parade
Monday, November 30
9 a.m. – Anderson County
Commission at the Anderson
County Annex
9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. – Friendship
Quilters at the Kincaid-Selma
United Methodist Church
6:30 p.m. – Garnett Lions Club
at VFW
1802 1/2 East St.,
IOLA
More information:
(620) 365-2255
or visit
www.bbtheatres.com
Americas
Oldest
Cinema
Movie MuseuM open 1-4 p.M.
For show times visit our website
plazacinemagicexperience.com
209 S. Main, Historic Downtown Ottawa
Cinema Line 785.242.0777
community
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Troop 126 Scouts attain Eagle rank
Five Scouts from Troop 126 were
awarded the highest rank in Scouting
in an Eagle Court of Honor ceremony
on October 25th, 2015. This was the
first time in troop history that this
many young men celebrated this milestone together.
Stephen Callow, Peyton Fields,
Aaron Kubacka, Isaac Kubacka and
Samuel Wood were honored at the
Troops charter organization, Garnett
First United Methodist Church. Scouts
of Troop 126 served as Ushers, Greeters,
Color Guard, Honor Guard and Candle
Lighters for the late afternoon formal
ceremony. Committee Members Les
Garber and Jason Sjorlund co-hosted
the service. The Eagle Scout Award
was presented by Twin Rivers District
Commissioner Peter Meline, and the
Eagle Scout Oath was administered
by Randy Kidder, Heart of America
District Director. Parents of each
scout had the honor of replacing their
troop scarf with the Eagle Scout scarf
and pinning on their award.
A dinner reception was held immediately following the ceremony to celebrate the accomplishments of the new
Eagle Scouts.
Stephen Todd Callow
Stephen is a 17 year old senior at
Anderson County Jr-Sr High School. He
has served as Senior Patrol Leader for
Troop 126. Railroading is his favorite
merit badge out of the 37 he has earned
in his scouting career thus far. Stephens
best scouting memory is the two summers spent serving on staff at H Roe
Bartle Scout Reservation and working his
Runner paint. When camping, his favorite
meal is his famous Dutch Oven Pepperoni
Lasagna.
Jason Sjorlund, Heart of America
Council Chaplain, is Stephens Scouting
Mentor. Stephen admires the way Jason
has always helped him out through rough
times as well as being available to other
Scouts to help them along the Scouting
road.
Stephens Eagle Scout Service Project
was a community flag retirement ceremony, and building and placing public flag
depository boxes.
Stephen is a recipient of the Den Chief
Service Award for his service to Pack 3126.
Additionally, he has earned the Hometown
Service award, World Conservation
Award and the National Outdoors Award
in Camping. He has served two summers on staff at the H Roe Bartle Scout
Reservation and has elevated to Runner in
the Tribe of Mic-O-Say. Stephen also holds
the Firemn Chit, Whittling Chip and the
Paul Bunyan proficiency cards.
When Stephen isnt scouting, he enjoys
singing, and playing the trumpet for military funerals and also with the Garnett
Community Band. He also likes to be
outdoors camping, fishing/bow fishing,
hunting, and trap/target shooting. Other
interests include baseball, railroading and
hanging out with friends.
Stephen is the son of John and Jackie
Olson, and the late Garrett Callow.
Isaac Scott Kubacka
Isaac is a 16 year old junior at Anderson
County Jr-Sr High School. He currently
serves as Senior Patrol Leader for Troop
126 and Webelos Den Chief for Pack 3126.
Kayaking, Insect Study and Hiking are
his top three favorite merit badges out of
the 81 he has earned in his scouting career
thus far. Isaacs best scouting memory is backpacking the Boston Mountain
Range on the Ozark Highlands Trail with
his trail crew Bill & Sam
Wood, OJ & Orvel Broce
and Aaron Kubacka. When
camping, his favorite meal is
the award winning Troop 126
John Brown Stew.
Isaacs father, Troop
126 Committee Chair Scott
Kubacka is his Scouting
Mentor. Isaac notes that
his Dad has been with him
along his Scouting journey
from the very beginning. He
has imparted a vast amount
of wisdom, knowledge and
skills that have made Isaac
successful in his Scouting
Career.
Isaacs Eagle Scout
Service Project was building
and placing a cooking fire pit
and campsite clean-up in the
Red Jacket Corner Campsite
of Garnetts North Lake.
Isaac has held the positions of Librarian, Troop
Guide and APL for Troop
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW 11-17-2015 / Photo Submission
126. He served on staff at
Les
Garber
recognizes
new
Eagle
Scouts
from Garnett Troop 126, from left: Stephen Callow,
the Theodore Naish Scout
Reservation for two sessions Peyton Fields, Aaron Kubacka, Isaac Kubacka and Samuel Wood during an Eagle Scout Court
as a Buddy Scout for scouts of Honor ceremony Oct. 25. Eagle Scout is the highest rank in Scouting.
with disabilities, as well
as staff for the 2015 Twin
Rivers Cub Scout Day Camp. Other scout- as well as staff for the 2015 Twin Rivers playing football as a stand-out varsity
ing awards include World Conservation Cub Scout Day Camp. Other scouting starter for the Osawatomie Trojans. He
Award, National Outdoor Award in awards include World Conservation also demonstrates his athleticism as a
Camping (with devices) and Hiking (with Award, National Outdoor Award in high school Track & Field competitor.
Peyton is the son of Shane and Mary
device), Den Chief Service Award, Fifty Camping (with device) and Hiking (with
Miler Award for Hiking, Hometown USA device), Den Chief Service Award, Fifty Fields.
Samuel Tyler Wood
Award, the Complete Angler Award, and Miler Award for Hiking, Hometown USA
Sam is a 14 year old freshman at Central
Kayaking patch. Isaac also carries the Award, the Complete Angler Award, and
Firemn Chit, Whittling Chip and Paul Kayaking patch. Aaron also carries the Heights High School. He serves Troop
Firemn Chit, Whittling Chip and Paul 126 as Assistant Patrol Leader. Aviation,
Bunyan proficiency cards.
Hiking and Backpacking are his top three
When Isaac isnt scouting, he enjoys par- Bunyan proficiency cards.
When Aaron isnt scouting, he enjoys favorite merit badges. His sash currently
ticipating in FFA, Science Club, Scholars
Bowl, and singing with the Chamber playing football and basketball at ACJSHS. holds 55 merit badges and he will have
Singers honor ensemble at ACHS. Isaac He is a member of the ACHS FFA chap- earned another 10 by November 2015s
is on the Academic Honor Roll at ACHS. ter and sings with the Chamber Singers Court of Honor. Sams best scouting memHe also enjoys fishing, being outside, and honor ensemble. He also spends his free ory is his time spent at H Roe Bartle
learning about the world around him. time trap/target shooting, swimming and Scout Reservation and earning his MicIsaac also likes to read, travel, and spend drawing. Aaron also enjoys traveling and O-Say claw for Brave. Sam doesnt have a
spending time with his family.
favorite camp meal, but rather Chocolate
time with his family.
Aaron is the son of Scott and Bonnie Browns as a favorite dessert.
Isaac is the son of Scott and Bonnie
Kubacka.
Sam states that his Dad, Assistant
Kubacka.
Scoutmaster Bill Wood is his mentor. Not
Peyton Keith Fields
Aaron Paul Kubacka
Peyton is an 18 year old senior at only does his dad teach him things, but
Aaron is a 15 year old freshman at
Anderson County Jr-Sr High School. He Osawatomie High School. He recently Bill is active in almost all of the scouting
is currently serving as Patrol Leader for served as Troop Guide for Troop 126. activities and has made sure that Sam and
Troop 126 and Webelos Den Chief for Pack Kayaking, Wilderness Survival and Rifle other boys can hike and see nature in ways
3126. Backpacking, Small Boat Sailing Shooting are his top three favorite merit that most kids dont get to experience it.
Sams Eagle Scout Service Project was a
and Hiking are his top three favorite merit badges. Peytons best scouting memory
badges out of the 62 he has earned in his is the time spent at H Roe Bartle Scout flagpole at the Richmond Community Ball
scouting career thus far. Aarons best Reservation and earning his paint eleva- Fields.
Samuel has served as Chaplains Aide
scouting memory is the excitement and tions in the Tribe of Mic-O-Say. Peyton
honor of finally becoming a Brave in the doesnt have a favorite meal, but enjoys and Assistant Senior Patrol Leader of
Troop 126. In addition, Sam served as
great tribe of Mic-O-Say. When camp- Dutch Oven Desserts when camping.
Peytons father, Assistant Scoutmaster Senior Patrol Leader during the 2015
ing, his favorite meal is Stephens famous
Shane Fields is his Scouting Mentor. Bartle Summer Camp Session. Sam has
Dutch Oven Lasagna.
Assistant Scoutmaster Bill Wood is Peyton appreciates his constant encour- served on Twin Rivers Day Camp staff in
Aarons Scouting Mentor. Aaron relates agement and support, as well as time both 2014 and 2015. He has earned the BSA
that Bill always pushes him to be the very and energy Shane invested to help him World Conservation Award, Hometown
best he can be mentally, physically and through his Scouting Career and Eagle USA Award, Complete Angler Award and
morally. Bill makes it a priority to develop Rank. Shane was also instrumental in Emergency Preparedness Award. Sam
leadership skills within the young men of helping Peyton earn his Religious Award also wears the BSA Kayaking Award and
has earned BSA National Outdoor Awards
Troop 126. Aaron also enjoys Bills funny in Scouting.
Peytons Eagle Scout Service Project with devices in both camping and hiking.
stories and the great adventures he takes
was a flagpole and sign at the Osawatomie Sam is an avid hiker. He has made mulhim on.
tiple hikes in the Rocky Mountains, The
Aarons Eagle Scout Service Project Community Garden.
Peyton has served Troop 126 as Ozark Highland Trail, The Ozark Trail,
was a landscaping and beautification project at the Garnett Church of the Nazarene. Assistant Patrol Leader, Patrol Leader and and The BSA Trail on Petit Jean Mountain
He also provided a bench at the childrens most recently, Troop Guide. He earned the in Arkansas. He is a recipient of the 50
National Outdoor Award in Camping, the Miler Award.
play area at the church.
Sam is on the Academic Honor Roll. He
Aaron has held the positions of Scribe World Conservation Award and the God
and Patrol Leader in Troop 126. He and Life Religious Award. He also car- was an active member of his middle school
served on staff at the Theodore Naish ries the Whittling Chip proficiency card. football, basketball and track teams. He is
Scout Reservation for one session as a Peyton retires his scouting career with 31 a member of the Robotics group and enjoys
building and cycling.
Buddy Scout for scouts with disabilities, merit badges on his sash.
Peyton is an avid athlete and enjoys
Samuel is the son of Bill and Kim Wood.
Richmond Museum fundraiser goal could be doubled
Richmond
Community
Museums Chili and Soup
Supper on Saturday, November
21, has a high goal this year -that of raising $500 which will
then be applied for a matching grant from MWA (Modern
Woodmen of America) .
Were excited to have this
fundraiser that can become
$1,000 if we raise $500, said
Museum President Mary
Tooley. Laura Deters of rural
Princeton, MWA representative, will assist the Museum
with the grant application.
Supper will be served from
5-7 p.m. at the Community
Building.
There will be a choice of two
kinds of chili or vegetable-beef
soup with relishes, dessert and
a beverage.for a donation to
the Museum.
Sarah Peters chairs the
event and all board members
help. They are Mary Tooley,
Janice McIntosh, Dennis
Peters, Kelley Hennessey,
Lester Wuertz, Charlie Prue,
Todd Mildfelt, Carol Powelson,
Pat Mason, Nadine Poss and
Pat Vining. Others from the
community also volunteer.
There will be drawings for
some nice prizes.
The Museum will open at 3
with no admission charge, as
always.
The Central Heights 4th
grade classes visited the
Museum recently with Dennis
Peters and Mary Tooley as
hosts.
Come to Richmond to the
Museums supper November
21st and help the group meet its
goal of qualifying for a MWA
matching grant. This is a great
opportunity for the Museum.
Area resident publishes new novel Peters plans book signing
How do you fight the
demons of your past? How do
you face the ones that you left
behind? Delve into one mans
deepest and darkest fears as
he tries to find the answers to
survive.
Pamela Peters, a college professor and local photographer,
has released her second novel,
The War Within: The Battle
Rages On. The novel is the
sequel to The War Within
and the second of a three-part
series focusing on the psychological challenges soldiers can
face when they try to adapt to
life after fighting in a war.
Peters, a graduate of
Pittsburg State University,
is an instructor of Mass
Communication at Lane
College in Jackson, Tennessee
and owner; photographer,
and lecturer of Wild Radiance
Photography in Richmond,
KS. She is the photographer
and author of Photographing
Kenyas Backyard, an educational photography book about
the wildlife and landscape of
Kenya. She has been recognized at the state and national
levels as a collegiate broadcaster where she has combined her
love of the visual arts with
her knowledge of history,
especially with her documentary with co-producer Kristen
Livingston, Osa Johnson: The
Woman Time Forgot.
Her novels were created out
of her experience interviewing war veterans for her collegiate documentary, The USS
Dunlap: Recollections of Those
Who Served. Set at the end of
the American Civil War, The
War Within: The Battle Rages
On continues to follow Daniel
Reed as he tries to come to
terms with what he did during
the war. Daniel feels guilty
over all of the deaths that he
has had a hand in. Now that
he has found his family he
must come to terms with his
own conscious. He thinks his
journey has come to an end,
but for Daniel it is just the
beginning. Daniel must come
face to face with all of the horrors and memories of his past
in order to pursue his future.
Sometimes moving on means
going back.
The War Within: The
Battle Rages On will be available on Amazon November, 11,
2015.
For more information about
Pamela Peters or her work
visit her website wwwwildradiance hatoora
Peters is available for
interviews and appearances.
To book presentation, media
appearances, interviews, or
book-signings contact her at
wildradiancephoto(amail.com.
at Richmond Museum
A recent addition to the
Richmond
Community
Museums Chili and Soup
Supper Saturday evening,
November 21, is a book signing
by Pamela Peters of Jackson,
Tenn., formerly of Richmond.
Peters will be at the
Richmond Museum from 5-7
p.m. to sign copies of her second
book The War Within Rages
On. The book is a sequel to
her first novel about the post
Civil War experiences of veteran Daniel Reed.
Visitors are encouraged to
tour the Museum, meet and
greet the author, and have supper of chili or soup with all the
extras just a short distance east
at the Richmond Community
Bldg. from 5-7 p.m. The Museum
will open at 3 and has no admission charge.
Thanksgiving meal offered
The Senior Center Board
in Garnett is hosting a
Thanksgiving meal at noon on
Thursday, Nov. 26, for anyone
in the community who would
like to attend.
The annual Thanksgiving
event, sponsored by the board,
will furnish the turkey and
dressing, potatoes and gravy,
and the drinks and table service.
Everyone who attends is
asked to bring a covered dish or
dessert and all are welcome to
attend.
2B
Need customers?
Tell Big Brother
If youre starting up a business, you need one thing in a
hurry.
Customers.
You can drag along for
months slowly scratching up
a clientele, or you can bring
a pulse of customers straight
away but you better be ready
if you choose this route.
I call it the Big Brother
launch.
The ideas pretty simple:
You piggyback yourself with a
complimentary business thats
already established, and you
convince your Big Brother
youll provide a free premium
to him for your pick of his customers if hell allow you to promote to them.
In writing for Entrepreneur,
Brad Sugars terms the approach
host-beneficiary and recounts
the story of a high-end womens apparel store opening in
an urban area which set up a
deal with a local BMW dealership to give a $100 kimono
free to the dealerships female
customers as a reward for doing
business with the dealership.
The women received a letter
from the dealer detailing the
giveaway, and they had to bring
the letter to the store to get the
freebie.
The $100 kimonos actually
cost the new store $16 apiece.
Some 600 women responded
to the letter, and when they
picked up their free kimono
they bought an average of $400
each in additional merchandise
on their initial visit. So by partnering with a Big Brother, the
store invested $9,600 in kimonos and generated $240,000 in
revenues in a matter of days.
More importantly, the womens shop garnered a group of
highly sought-after customers
wealthier women who like to
shop to start forming their
core sales efforts around. No
doubt the store had a customer
values card signup (providing
address, phone and email info)
primed and ready when these
ladies hit the door to get their
kimono and check out the store.
And the Big Brother got a cool
way to endear itself to some of
its customers in hopes of some
repeat business, for free.
A couple of keys to a good Big
HOW TO SELL STUFF
Dane Hicks
Review Publisher
Brother promo:
1) Pick the target: Be
specific in your objective. The
womens store wanted high-end
female spenders, so its owner
picked a luxury car dealership.
A gun shop might partner with
a farm equipment dealer; a
flower shop with a hair & nail
salon; a bowling alley with a
teen fashion store.
2) A great offer. Customers
wont react to 10 percent off a
left-handed glove on the second
Tuesday of the month. Make
it good and make it free. Come
up with an item or service that
has a high perceived value but a
low actual cost to you.
3) Provide the letter. You
will provide the letter to your
Big Brother defining the deal,
which hell put on his letterhead. You will pay for postage,
printing or other costs in distributing it to his customers a
small price to pay for access to
his customers and his passive
endorsement of your business.
4) Have a hook. Be ready
with a plan that turns redeemers into repeat customers a
rewards plan that offers benefits in exchange for capturing
their data; an engaging game
they can play over time to win
prizes. Make an impression
that brings them back. As they
leave, go outside and wash their
car windshield for them!
Theres no faster way to build
the customers you want, the
way you want and in the time
you want than a Big Brother
promo.
Dane Hicks is president of
Garnett Publishing, Inc., and
publisher of The Anderson
County Review. Comments or
questions may be directed to him
at review@garnett-ks.com or
(785) 448-3121.
Sewing club to deliver
Christmas stockings
to Childrens Mercy
The Zig Zag Club met
November
4th
at
the
Presbyterian
church
in
Osawatomie with a carry
in lunch. Eleven members
and one guest attended. The
meeting was hosted by Grace
Donham and Jackie Leach.
President Grace Donham
called the meeting to order. Roll
call was completed. Minutes of
the October 7th meeting were
reviewed and approved. Jackie
Leach provided an update on
the current treasurers report
and the proceeds from the
White Elephant sale.
Birthdays honored for this
month were Grace Donham,
Berniece
Peterson,
and
Marilynn Lolly
Election of officers were
completed. Grace Donham will
remain as President, Loretta
Crozier was elected to the Vice
President. Jackie Leach will
continue as treasurer and will
assume the duties of secretary.
( The position was combined for
2016).
Dues were collected from
memebrs present for the 2016
membership.
The food which was collected will go to the Garnett Food
Pantry this year. Mary Fagg
graciously offered to delivery it.
Virginia provided information on the past several years
on donations of food and money
prior to decision being made for
this year.
The childrens stocking
were viewed by all. A total of
54 were completed and will be
delivered to the Rodney White
Childrens foundation by Janet
Weiderholdt. Following them
being stuffed with goodies they
will be taken to Childrens
Mercy for distribution. There
were 29 walker holders completed which will be given to
Vintage Park in Ottawa. They
will be distributed by Pat
McFarland a longtime member
of Zig Zag.
Mary Fagg won the door
prize.
Further discussion will be
done at the December meeting
for the individual or family
money donation.
Judy Wiederholt will host the
December meeting. Location
will be announced.
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
LOCAL
BUSINESS BEAT
School nutrition professional
recognized for completing
certified Child Nutrition
Manager training
TOPEKAOver 800 school nutrition
professionals have participated in the
Child Nutrition Management Academy
sponsored by Child Nutrition &
Wellness, Kansas State Department of
Education (KSDE). The Child Nutrition
Management Academy is a professional development program for current
and aspiring school nutrition managers and directors. The goal of the Child
Nutrition Management Academy is to
develop knowledgeable and effective
managers who are prepared to lead their
programs to excellence. Child Nutrition
Manager Certification is a recognition
program sponsored by Child Nutrition &
Wellness at the Kansas State Department
of Education.
Mary Carey, who works in Unified
School District No. 365, Garnett, has
achieved the Certified Child Nutrition
Manager 3 distinction for completing
180 hours of KSDE-sponsored Child
Nutrition Management Academy training. KSDE commends Mary Carey for her
dedication to Child Nutrition Programs
and professional development.
Local musicians song used in
documentary about Ukraine
A Garnett woman who is an alternative rock musician recently returned
from the Ukraine to see the premiere of
a documentary that featured one of her
songs.
Tara Elisha, who previously was
known as Tara Elisha
Hardwick, and her
producer, James Gray,
attended the premiere
of a documentary,
I Am a Ukrainian:
Personal Stories of a
Revolution, at the U.S.
consulate in Kieve,
Ukraine, on Oct. 22.
Tara Elisha
The film was made by
Emmy Award-winning
filmmaker Ben Moses (producer, Good
Morning Vietnam) about the 2014 revolution in Ukraine. Moses included Tara
Elishas newest single, The Last Stand
(Of Free Thinking People), in the documentary.
A music video for the song is also
being planned and will include video
filmed in historic Independence Square
in the heart of Kiev; the site of the 2013
Euromaidan demonstrations that led to
the 2014 Ukrainian revolution.
The Last Stand was recorded at
Green Jeans Studio in Wichita, in early
2013. At the time of recording, there
was no connection between the song
and the unrest in Ukraine. Tara and
James co-wrote the song and said they
inspired by events happening all around
the world including the United States.
Many of Taras songs attempt to expose
the underlying corruption embedded in
the powerful institutions that control
our world. Her frustrations with her
own governments lack of concern for the
people it is supposed to serve boiled over
and this song was the result. In early
2014 Tara watched Yulia Marushevskas
I Am a Ukrainian video on YouTube.
Miller nominated
for Horizon award
EMPORIA A 2010
graduate of Anderson
County High School
now
teaching
in
Emporia is among
the nominees for
the Kansas Horizon
Award for First Year
Educators.
Alissa Miller gradMiller
uated from Emporia
State University in
2014 and teaches Language Arts to 6th
graders at Emporia Middle School. She
began her second year in the position in
August.
Four regions will select eight winners apiece for the Horizon award.
Winners will be recognizd at the Kansas
ANDERSON
COUNTY
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Check your local area businesses first – keep your local dollars at home!
4×10.5
biz directory
DIGITAL COPIERS
COLOR PRINTERS
NETWORK PRINTERS
NETWORK SCANNERS
FACSIMILE
On-the-Farm Service Alignments
MIKE HERMRECK
Sales & Service
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
(785) 448-3212
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
Cooper Jetzon Kumho
BECKMAN MOTORS
111 E. 4th Ave. Garnett
North Hwy. 59
in Garnett, KS Jetzon
Cooper
Kumho
Current Rebate
$2000
CARPETING
SERVICE
448-3720
Carpet – Vinyl
Laminate – Hardwood
Ceramic & VC Tile
See dealer for
additional rebates.
(785) 448-6122
429 N. Maple Next to Country Mart
(785) 448-5441
Reliable, Dependable, Consistent
Always There Always Caring
Jo Wolken E.A., A.T.A.
IRAs
Mutual Funds
Investments
Aaron Lizer
Agent
(785) 448-2284
Patriots Bank Bldg. Princeton
(785) 937-2269
Patriots Bank Bldg. Richmond
(785) 835-6161
E-Statements &
Online Banking
The TV Shoppe
Continuing to serve
you after 31 years.
Hours:
785-448-3056
Mon. – Fri. 8:30 a.m. – 10 a.m.
www.taxtimetaxserviceinc.com
HELPING YOU PLAN
TODAY FOR TOMORROW
120 S. Maple PO Box 66 Garnett, KS 66032
Phone: (785) 448-6125 Cell: (785) 448-4428
Fax: (785) 448-5878
Garnett Colony Hepler
Ottawa Pomona
St. Paul Walnut
Please call 785-448-5931
after 10 a.m. and
leave Tony a message.
Millers Construction, Inc.
Garnett, KS
Since 1980
Delden Doors & Openers
We sell & service these
brands & more.
Call for quotes & details.
Everett Miller (785) 448-6788
SALES & SERVICE
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
The video went viral, earning over 8
million views on YouTube. After seeing
this video, Tara was moved by Yulias
passionate pleas to the rest of the world
to help her country. Tara reached out
to Yulia and offered her song, The Last
Stand to use for the cause.
When I first contacted the filmmaker
who had helped Yulia with her video, I
had no idea he was an award winning
filmmaker. I found his production company and just shot an email over with the
song attached, Tara said. That email
was forwarded to Ben Moses. Within an
hour Ben personally responded to Taras
email telling her that he loved the song
and would like to use it in the full length
documentary that he was working on
covering the Ukrainian revolution.
Tara and Ben worked on an alternate version of the song with the lyrics
altered slightly to more closely match
the scenes the song was to be used in.
Ben sent a rough cut of the full documentary to Tara in early 2015 and Tara was
thrilled to see how her song was going to
be used. Tara and James met with Ben
Moses and Yulia Marushevska in St.
Louis in March of 2015. Yulia, who is one
of the primary focuses of the film, was in
the U.S. on a speaking tour and she was
traveling with Ben when they stopped
over in St. Louis, Missouri.
Tara is the daughter of former Garnett
residents Mike and Pam Hardwick. She
was homeschooled and earned Bachelors
degree from Pittsburg State University
and a Masters Degree in Music from
Emporia State University. She was a
music teacher in Iola and Ottawa before
resigning to record and perform her own
music about four years ago.
Her first album, Phantom, was
released in 2013 through Tate Music
Group. Her second album, Insane, is
scheduled to be released later this year.
This second album will contain both versions of her song The Last Stand (Of Free
Thinking People).
The single currently is available for
download on iTunes, Amazon, Spotify,
and other music sites, or visit www.taraelishamusic.com and sign up to receive
free downloads of seven of her songs.
Exemplary Educators Netowrk (KEEN)
education conference in early 2016.
Alissa is the daughter of Robert and
Michelle Miller of Garnett.
Grain Handling Equipment
Livestock Waterers
To advertise in this
directory contact
Stacey at
785-448-3121.
HOMER RIFFEY SERVICE
321 N. Grant Garnett, Kansas 785-448-2384
Rodney Miller (785) 448-3085
And
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Mon-Fri 8:00am.
ENROLL FOR SPRING NOW
6×1.5
neosho cccSemester Classes begin January 19, 2016
900 E. Logan, Ottawa, KS
785.242.2067
www.neosho.edu
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
3B
LOCAL
Portraits 2005: Greeley to sell liquor on Sundays
of Honor
The Reviews Portraits of Honor veterans pictorial book features
photographs with basic information about Anderson County veterans
during the past 150 years. In the weeks surrounding the books release
in November 2015, The Review will feature more information about
selected veterans beyond the basic details provided in the book.
John Daugherty
Sgt. John Daugherty served
20 years in the U.S. Air Force,
1956-1976, where he worked in
teletype, crypto and photography, received a unit citation and
Good Conduct Medal. Daugherty
served in Vietnam, Germany,
England, Guam and was in
Alaska during the Cuban Crisis.
He is pictured with Le Thi Diem
Trang (Keela Renae Daugherty),
a Vietnamese orphan at the Hoi
Duc Anh orphanage, adopted by
Daugherty.
John and Keela Daugherty
Copies of Portraits of Honor is available from The Review for $39.95
($43.35 with tax) and may be purchased now by contacting our office,
112 W. Sixth Ave., Garnett KS 66032, (785) 448-3121,
email admin@garnett-ks.com
After detour and rain,
Fall Fling begins
with history lesson
Just as I promised, for the
next couple of weeks I will be
sharing my adventure of attending the 2015 KAA Fall Fling at
Fort Larned.
My trip to Fort Larned began
at 6:45am on Friday 30 October.
Everything was going just great
until I came upon a detour sign
Southwest of Emporia and that
was only the beginning of my
problems. About 1/2 way into
my detour someone had played
around with the detour signs
and I found myself driving
approximately 50 miles out of
my way. Finally I arrived at
McPherson, and thats where
I took my first much needed
break at McDonalds. Soon I
was on my merry way, until I
ran into rain just east of Great
Bend, on into Larned, arriving
at 12:15 pm at the Townsman
Inn where I had made reservations. I soon found out I
couldnt check in until after 4:30
pm. I quickly gave Kay a call
to let her know I had arrived
safely. I then filled my truck
with gas and drove on out to the
Fort Larned Visitors Center.
Raining hard! At 1:00 pm I
attended a very interesting talk
by Park Ranger George Elmore
on the history of the Fort.
From 2:00-2:30 we had a break
and then the Lead Technical
Advisor Doug Scott gave us a
talk and demonstration on the
proper use of metal detectors
in the field of Archaeology.
DIGGING UP THE PAST
THAT WAS THEN
Vickie Moss
Send historic photos, information
to review@garnett-ks.com
commission was considering
the appointment of a committee
to study the issue, Brownrigg
said, Quite possibly, yes.
November 20, 1995
Pretrial motions continued
last Wednesday in a wrongful
death lawsuit brought by the
family of DeDe Galey against
several defendants stemming
from an Aug. 12, 1993, traffic accident that took her life
northeast of Garnett on a county road. The accident occurred
when Galey, in her capacity as
a rural mail carrier, was westbound at a county intersection
when her vehicle was struck
Notice to settle Yoder estate
(First published in The Anderson County
Review, Tuesday, November 3, 2015)
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS
In the Matter of the Estate of
ORA W. YODER, Deceased
Case No. 15-PR-23
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 Vera Irene
Borntrager, one of the heirs at law of Ora
W. Yoder, deceased, praying that descent be
Henry Roeckers
Call (785) 448-6244 for
determined of decedents interest in certain
local archeology information.
Anderson County, Kansas, real estate particularly described in said petition and of all other
He also informed us the num- Kansas real estate and all personal property
ber one metal detector at this
time in America is the Mine
Lab which is manufactured in
Australia.
Our last speaker of the day
was Archaeologist Gina Powell
(First published in The Anderson County
the Principal Investigator of
Review, Tuesday, November 17, 2015)
this project. Gina covered all
the Dos & Donts of the next
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF Anderson
two days in the field. Our work
County, KANSAS
area, work assignments, workCIVIL DEPARTMENT
ing hours, roll calls, safety etc.
etc.
I was back to motel at 4:45pm The Bank of New York Mellon, f/k/a The Bank of
and found out I was assigned New York, as trustee for the certificate holders
to a very nice room. After of the CWABS, Inc., Asset-Backed Certificates
cleaning up, I walked directly Series 2004-12
across the street to Taco Bell Plaintiff,
where I ate my supper (dinner).
vs.
Bedtime 10:00 pm and its still
Brad A. McGregor, et al.
showering outside.
One thing I learned for sure Defendants,
owned by the decedent at the time of his death
and that the estate be assigned in accordance
with the laws of intestate succession.
You are required to file your written defenses
thereto on or before the 30th day of November,
2015, 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.
VERA IRENE BORNTRAGER
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
nv3t3
by a southbound vehicle. The
suit alleges the county negligent in allowing vegetation to
grow on its right-of-way so as to
impede visibility and a property also bore that responsibility
in that manner, and that the
other driver was traveling in
a company vehicle at a rate of
speed higher than that allowed
by state law.
A long-awaited sewer project which will begin replacing
aging sewer lines in the citys
oldest southeast quadrant got
a boost last week when Garnett
City Commissioners jumped
through several administrative
hoops which will net a $400,000
Community
Development
Block Grant for the project.
November 18, 1985
The decision to declare the
gunshot death of a local woman
a homicide or suicide is being
held until laboratory and autopsy reports are made available to
investigators. The 21-year-old
woman died of a shotgun wound
Nov. 12 on West Seventh Avenue
in Garnett.
An Anderson County Sheriffs
Department automobile was
swept off the road by water on
east Fourth Street Thursday as a
deputy attempted to answer a call
concerning a non-injury vehicle
accident.
November 18, 1915
A force of men have been at
work the past two days putting
in the curbing on West Fourth
Avenue, working toward the
courthouse square. The work
will continue until it is finished
on Fourth and Fifth avenues and
on three sides of the square, if the
weather permits, and the paving
will be done in the spring.
Last week, Ernest Holmes
sold one of his fine Holstein cows
for $135, the purchaser being
a Bourbon County man. Mr.
Holmes had some of his cows
on exhibition at the Farmers
institute here last week, and they
are certainly beauties. He says it
cost no more to raise good stock
than to raise scrubs, and the good
stock bring better prices.
New Indoor Range
2×2
NOW OPEN
gun guys
ns
es of Gu
ALL Mak Ammo
Archer y sses
CC H C la
785-418-0711
Ladies Day
412 S. Main St.,Ottawa
Every Tuesday!
Mon-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6
www.thegunguys.net
info@thegunguys.net
Dont Turn Your Back On Pain
If you want to feel your absolute best,
2×2
Let the healing hands of gentle chiropractic care
help
you avoid injuries,
prevent spinal degeneration
balanced
health
and maintain a healthy balance in your life.
No Popping No Cracking No Twisting
Dr. Glenn D. Bauman-Chiropractic Physician
519 S. Maple Garnett
785-448-2422 Fax 785-448-2427
M/W/F: 8 a.m. – 6 p.m. T/Th: 9 a.m. – Noon
Notice to sell McGregor property
today, while driving across
Kansas is our state definitely
has no shortage of deer, coyotes,
skunks, raccoons, possums, red
tail hawks and other wildlife.
(To be Continued)
Rail trail friends meet
Friends of the Prairie Spirit
Rail Trail met November 11,
2015 at the depot. Seventeen
members were present.
A memorial bench in honor
of Jerry and Karen Showalter
will be placed at the depot this
fall.
It was announced that the
Halloween Haunted House had
been a success again this year.
760 attended the evening activities.
Members will be constructing a float for the Christmas
parade Tuesday evening,
November 17th at the country
home of Glenn and Ruth Lee
November 15, 2005
Unless a petition is filed in
protest, Greeley will be the only
town in Anderson County to
take advantage of a change in
state law which allows retail
businesses to sell beer and alcohol on Sunday. The Greeley
city council approved the measure by passing an ordinance at
its Nov. 7 meeting to authorize
the sale of cereal malt beverages in the original package
within the city limits, as well as
the retailing of liquor, on any
Sunday except Easter, between
the hours of 12 noon and 9 p.m.
Anderson County Sheriff
Scot
Brownrigg
meet
with
Anderson
County
Commissioners last week to
discuss possibilities for an
new county jail, but those discussions were very preliminary, according to Brownrigg.
He said the conversation was
about direction only and no
details with regards to the size
or location of a facility were
mentioned. When asked if the
Hastert.
Members will decorate the
Harris Park on Friday afternoon November 20th beginning
at 1:00 p.m.
The Christmas party will
be held at the Garnett Inn and
Suites December 9, 2015 beginning at 6:00 p.m. All are asked
to bring a snack and a white elephant. An ugly sweater contest
will be held.
There will be no January
meeting.
Membership is open to anyone interested in promoting the
Prairie Spirit Rail Trail.
You name it, we print it.
Case No.15CV1
Court No.
Title to Real Estate Involved
Pursuant to K.S.A. 60
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under
and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me
by the Clerk of the District Court of Anderson
County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of
Anderson County, Kansas, will offer for sale
at public auction and sell to the highest bidder
for cash in hand at the west side entrance of
the Anderson County, Courthouse, Kansas, on
December 10, 2015 at the time of 10:00 AM, the
following real estate:
THE NORTH HALF OF LOTS 4, 5 AND 6, IN
BLOCK 3. [MORE ACCURATELY DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS: THE NORTH HALF (N/2) OF
LOTS FOUR (4), FIVE (5), AND SIX (6) IN
BLOCK THREE (3) IN THE CITY OF WELDA,
ANDERSON COUNTY, KANSAS.] TAX ID NO.
181-02-0-00-06-007.00-0, Commonly known as
18879 SW Iola St., Welda, KS 66091 (the
Property) MS165154
to satisfy the judgment in the above entitled
case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period
as provided by law, and further subject to the
approval of the Court.
Anderson County Sheriff
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
By: /s/ Chad R. Doornink
Chad R. Doornink, #23536
cdoornink@msfirm.com
Jason A. Orr, #22222
jorr@msfirm.com
8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180
Overland Park, KS 66210
(913) 339-9132
(913) 339-9045 (fax)
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS ATTORNEYS
FOR The Bank of New York Mellon, f/k/a
The Bank of New York, as trustee for the
certificate holders of the CWABS, Inc.,
Asset-Backed Certificates Series 2004-12 IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE.
nv17t3
Anderson County
news DAILY
at 8 a.m.
KOFO 1220 AM
Garnett Publishing, Inc. (785) 448-3121
Providing quality
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Aaron
120Lizer
S Maple
KS 66032
120Garnett,
S. Maple
Garnett,
KS 66032
785-448-6125
785-448-6125
1The guarantees expressed are based on the claimspaying ability of Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company and current
guaranteed interest rate is 1.00%. 2Based on the Company?s 5/1/14 declared interest rate for the Flexible Premium Portfolio
10 option of the nonparticipating annuities (Select IV Fixed Annuity). Assumes a premium payment of $100,000 or higher
with the following additional premium bandings: $25,000 $99,999 (2.15%) and $0 $24,999 (1.80%). Listed rates are
neither guaranteed nor estimated for the future. Please call 800/2474170 for today?s rates. A 10% tax applies to most
withdrawals made from an annuity prior to age 59 1/2. Surrender charges may apply to any withdrawals. Surrender charge
periods for a Select IV Portfolio 10: 9% 0% over ten years for issue age 60+ or 10% 0% over ten years for issue up to age
59. Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company*, West Des Moines, IA. *Company provider of Farm Bureau Financial Services
A134MS1 (514)
No Prepay Required!
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Pump
First, Then Pay
short
stop
or
Pay At The Pump
Now Available
102 S. Walnut
Ottawa, KS
420 S. Maple St. Garnett, KS
4B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
LOCAL
THE REVIEWS 16TH ANNUAL
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.
RULES
1. Collect your receipts and coupons
dated Nov. 17-Dec. 18 from any of
these participating merchants, and
immediately bring your receipts and
coupons to Garnett Publishing each
week. Receipts must be turned in by
5 p.m. Dec. 18, 2015.
2. For every $10 spent at these participating merchants, receive one
ticket (excludes bank deposits). Take
your receipts and coupons to Garnett
Publishing to receive your tickets.
Avenue in Garnett to get your weekly ticket. Garnett Publishing, Inc. is
also a participating merchant and
will issue tickets for every $10 of your
purchases.
3. In additon to sales receipts, Garnett
Publishing will issue one ticket per
week, per household, no purchase
necessary. Simply stop by 112 W. 6th
4. Grand prize winning ticket numbers published in the December
22 edition of The Anderson County
Review. Grand prizes must be claimed
2×5
Open Thanksgiving
AD
Day
6am – Noon
so our employees
can spend time with
their families.
Happy Thanksgiving
from all of us at
by noon Monday Dec. 28 (need not
be present to win).
5. Weekly winning ticket numbers will
be hidden within The Great Christmas
Giveaway ad section during the Nov.
24, Dec. 1, Dec. 8 and Dec. 15 issues
of the Review. Weekly winning ticket
numbers must be claimed by 5 p.m.
each respective Friday.
All Jewelry
2×5
Buy 1, Get 2nd 1/2 Off!
6th ave Nov. 16-21
7. Any unclaimed prizes as of noon
Monday Dec. 28, will be awarded to
the Grand Prize winner.
QUALITY
Service
2×5
You
lifecare burlingDESERVE
2×5
AD
ton
Short Term Rehab
Outpatient Rehab
Inhouse Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapy
Wound Care
IV Therapy
Respite Care
24 Hr. Nursing Care
Specialized Alzheimers/Dementia Unit
601 Cross Street
Burlington, KS
620-364-2117
425 N. Maple Garnett 785-448-2121
Put Some Sparkle in Your Holidays!
6. All prize monies are issued in certificates redeemable only at The Great
Christmas Giveaway participating
merchants.
Shop With Us!
Save your receipts for
2x5more chances to win in
The
ADGreat Christmas Giveaway!!
Fuel
Seven Cedars
Pizza Program
Liquor Store
Cigar Humidor
Purina Feed
and MUCH MORE!
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
2×5
AD
This Holiday
Season…
See Better,
Look Great,
Save Money!
Get $50 Off Exam
(Normal price $124)
Cannot be combined with insurance.
FREE Single Vision Lenses
with purchase of Frame
Cannot be combined with insurance.
Offers good through January 31, 2016
Hours : Mon. – Fri. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
427 W. 6th Ave. Garnett
(785) 448-2276
Come by and see
2x5the new 2016
AD
Chevrolets,
Buicks &
Fords, and
check out the
Great Savings!
Gift Certificates Available!
Make the Holidays Sparkle…
2×5
true value
Adding Owens
Corning
AttiCat
Expanding
Blown-in
Insulation to
your attic is a
fast, easy and
affordable way
to save
on energy.
BECKMAN MOTORS
North Hwy. 59 in Garnett, KS (785) 448-5441
www.beckmanmotorsinc.com
115 N. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-6879
Garnett True Value
Home Center
410 N. Maple
(785) 448-7106
www.truevalue.com/garnett
2×5
AD
With this
Rose Gold and
Diamond Ring
for $799
No need to go anywhere else this Holiday Season.
Suttons Jewelry, since 1950,
giving you the old fashioned feel of excellent
customer service and its what you deserve from
a full service hometown jeweler.
Suttons Jewelry
207 S. Main
Downtown Ottawa
www.suttonsjewelryinc.com
(785) 242-3723
November Hours:
Tuesday – Friday 10 a.m. -5:30 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Closed Sundays and Mondays
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Save your
Clip this out for handy reference when shopping this Holiday
receipts and
season! Shop or visit these merchants and win prizes from the
merchant-issued
3×5 Great Christmas Giveaway!
GCG coupons from
ADPharmacy
AuBurn
Lybarger Oil, Inc.
these merchants
Barneys Liquors
Miller Hardware
today and earn
Beckman Motors
Orscheln
your tickets. The
Bluestem Farm & Ranch
Plaschka & Kramer Liquor/
more you spend,
Caseys
Princeton Quick Stop
the more tickets
Country Mart – Garnett
6th Ave Boutique & Bronze
you earn. Watch
Garnett Publishing
Sandras Quick Stop
these ads each
Garnett True Value Home Center Suttons Jewelry
week for your
Vision Source
ticket numbers and GSSB
win instant weekly Life Care Center of Burlington Wolken Tire
$50 prizes!
2×5
AD
Stop in to stock up on all
your farm necessities!
2×5
AD
Get Your Home Ready
For the Holidays
with
2×5
Answers & Low Prices Down Every Aisle SM
5B
LOCAL
2×5
AD
miller
Let us help you
make the perfect
Thanksgiving celebration!
Come see our ever
expanding selection of wines,
beers and spirits!
700 North Maple St.
Come see all the latest colors to make your home
feel warm and inviting this holiday season.
703 N. Maple Garnett
785-448-3241
Garnett, KS 785-448-2188
Mon-sat: 8AM-7PM Sun: 10Am-6PM
Connect with us anytime.
www.orschelnfarmhome.com
2×5
gpi
313 S. Maple Garnett
(785) 448-3815
Get Your Vehicle
2×5
Ready For Winter!
AD
(785) 448-3212
The only number
you need for the
Best Service!
601 South Oak
Garnett, Kansas
785-448-3212
2×5
AD
2×5
AD
November Special
Large Specialty
Calizones
$10.00 each
(Regularly $11.99)
Sun-Thurs. 11am – 8pm
Fri & Sat. 11am – 9pm
Dine In, Carryout & Delivery
Drive thru window on north
side of building.
(785) 448-6582
Sandra & Terry Zook
24963 NE 169 Hwy
Junction 59/169 Garnett
(785) 448-6602
2×5
AD
From All of Us
At
N. HWY 59 GARNETT (785) 448-5512
Toll Free: 1-877-592-2743
www.lybargeroil.com
FUEL PROPANE LUBES
2×5
AD
Come see
us for
loans with
low fees.
Longer Term
Loans on
Homes and
Ag Land.
Internet
banking
and
e-statements.
6B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
LOCAL
FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE
Two bedroom, very clean, CH
& CA, attached garage. $500/
month. (785) 418-5435.
oc13tf
1 & 2 bedroom – 1 bath, clean,
no pets, no smoking, $375 rent,
$375 deposit. (785) 204-2361.
oc27t4
Small & very clean – 2 bedroom. 311 West 8th, Garnett.
Perfect for 1 or 2. No smoking.
$465/mo. References and deposit required. (785) 448-8590, leave
message.
nv10t2
For Sale by Owner – Beautiful
nine year old, 3800+ sq. ft. home
on 3+ acres, blacktop, in country, just outside Garnett, KS
with 60×42 barn, all in excellent condition. Must see to
appreciate. $258,900. Serious
inquiries only please. (785) 2041992.
oc27t4*
REAL ESTATE
Osage City Building – for sale
or lease, 8500 sq. ft. Great commercial or retail location. (785)
841-3902 or (785) 979-1008.
**jy7**
15 acre – mini farm, 10 minutes
north of Lawrence! (2977 Union
Road) 3-4 farmhouse on full
basement. Old style barn with
stalls, chicken coop, stocked
pond, old windmill, pipe fencing/corrals, fruit trees, garden, gorgeous setting. House
needs cosmetics, $199,000. Pics
at www.piafriend.com. Pia
Friend Realty, (785) 393-3957.
**nv12**
1820 Miller Drive, Lawrence,
$99,900. 3 bedroom, 1 bath
remodeled in (02). Just updated with new HVAC, new paint
inside and out, carpet thru-out,
kitchen floor plus lots more.
Vacant and move-in-ready. Not
a drive by. Diann Lutackas,
KW Legacy Partners, Inc. (785)
633-4333, text: 80354 to 79564.
**jn16**
364 E 1750 Rd, Baldwin City
$330,000. 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms on 5 acres in the country
but close to town. The outbuilding has 3 parking areas and
a studio area upstairs with a
furnace and shop downstairs.
Patty Wiseman, ReeceNichols
Preferred Realty 913-709-0963
**ap21**
4 buildable lots, a house
can be built on each lot. SW
of Wichita in Harper, Kansas.
$20,000 talkes all. taxes are low,
1 lot has cave. Harper is at
Hwy. 2 and 160. Iris Faucett,
(620) 491-0936.
**jn30**
1×3
We offer competitive
compensation, medical, dental,
vision benefits, 401K, vacation
time, growth opportunity
and more.
Apply online:
www.genesiscareers.jobs
Email:
marcia.hunter@genesishcc.com
1×3
EEO/AA, M/F, Vet, Disabled
SERVICES
CARS & TRUCKS
1989 Chevy Silverado – Great
shape! 350 motor, all electric,
camper shell and tow bar. Well
maintained, every 3,000 miles.
(620) 363-4754.
nv10t2*
HELP WANTED
Butler
Transport Your
Partner In Excellence. CDL
Class A Drivers Needed. Sign
on Bonus. All miles paid. 1-800528-7825 or www.butlertransport.com
Convoy Systems is hiring
Class A drivers to run from
Kansas City to the west coast.
Home Weekly! Great Benefits!
www.convoysystems.com Call
Lori 1-800-926-6869 ext. 303.
Hecks Small
Engine Repair
from $50 to $100*
toward the purchase of a
new, powerful Jonsered.
Alcoholics Anonymous Garnett: Tues. & Thurs. 7 p.m,
510 South Oak, (620) 228-2597 or
(785) 241-0586.
nv21tf
Hope Unlimited offers services to victims of domestic
violence and sexual abuse. call
(620) 365-7566 or Kansas Hotline
(888) END-ABUSE (select local
option) for free, confidential
assistance.
ag24tf
1×3
B & B Bridge Company, LLC
2×2
is taking applications for construction laborers.
b&B
Work will be in the local area along with
other jobs in Kansas and Oklahoma.
DRUG SCREEN REQUIRED
If interested call Angie at 620-423-1016 or apply at:
6th & Central St. Paul, KS
We are An Equal Opportunity Employer
CHILDRENS
AIDE
2×3
CHILDRENS
– Working with children after
sek AIDE
mental
school, 15-20 hours/Mon.-Thurs. Requires drivers
license and reliable vehicle. Prefer experience
health
w/children. Min. 18 years old.
Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center
PO Box 807
Iola, KS 66749.
Applications at 519 S. Elm.
EOE/AA.
MISC. FOR SALE
1×3
COMPUTER
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WORK
DIRECTV Starting at $19.99/
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COMPUTER EXPERTS
GARNETT
785.304.1843
MISC. FOR SALE
1×3
(913) 594-2495
Pool table – antique organ
(very nice), treadmill, wood
stove. Call (785) 204-2451.
nv17t1*
RN OPPORTUNITY
Life
2x3Care Center of Burlington
1×3
AD
Check out our
Monthly Specials
STAFF
COORDINATOR
lifeDEVELOPMENT
care
Full-time position available for a registered nurse
with active state license. Teaching/training
experience preferred. We offer great pay and
benefits in a team-oriented environment.
Tracy Bartley
620-364-2117 620-364-2013 Fax
601 Cross St. Burlington, KS 66839
Tracy_Bartley@LCCA.com
LifeCareCareers.com
EOE/M/F/V/D – 65585
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(785) 448-3121
JB Construction
Anderson County Hospital, Saint Lukes Health System has
positions posted online on their website. View a listing of all
openings online. Some of our available positions include:
2×3
and
Registered co
Nurse, full
time night shift in Med/Surg
hosp
Registered Nurse or LPN, full time night shift in RLC
Certified Nursing Assistant, full time night shift in Med/Surg
Patient Access Rep, part time as needed in Patient Access
Nutrition, Housekeeping, and Laundry PRN positions
Registered Nurse and CNA PRN positions, all shifts
EMS positions, PRN
2×2
jb const
Decks
Siding
Pole Buildings
Joe Borntreger
(785) 448-8803
joeborntreger@yahoo.com
new.ads.multiple_Layout
1 9/18/14
2:29 PM Page 1
Here's What Morton Customers Say
Apply online at www.saintlukeshealthsystem.org/jobs See online
postings for more information on each open position. We Hire
Only Non-Tobacco Users. EOE.
COMMUNITY
CORRECTIONS
CLINICIAN
2×3
Elizabeth
Layton Center
seeks a Kansas licensed
elizabeth
layton
mental health professional to provide care
coordination and therapy full time for referrals
from Community Corrections for the 4th Judicial
District in Ottawa. Some experience in treating
substance use preferred, but not required.
Open until filled.
Submit interest & resume to:
HR, ELC, PO Box 677, Ottawa, KS 66067
hr@laytoncenter.org
EOE
Anderson County Road Dept. is accepting bids for
an all metal building, 130 x 80, with plumbing and
electric and finished office space. Bids will be due by
Monday, November 23rd at 9:00 a.m., bids received
after the specified time will be returned unopened.
Bids shall be submitted in a sealed envelope and
labeled New Shop Bid. Bid plans are available upon
request at 409 S. Oak St., Garnett, KS or for questions
call 785-448-3724. A pre-bid conference will be
held on November 10th at 10:00 a.m. for building
contractors and 1:00 p.m. for plumbing & electric
contractors at 409 S. Oak St., Garnett.
2×3
And co eng
2×4
kpa respite
The whole process it
was quick and the quality
was there, they did not cut
corners, they took their
time, they knew what they
were doing. It was a
really, really overall
positive experience.
Kim F.
Call to discuss your building needs
Eight offices serving Kansas
800-447-7436
mortonbuildings.com
mortonbuildings.com
The statements and opinions about products expressed here are those of specific customers and
should not be construed to represent all buildings or products sold, manufactured, distributed or
constructed by Morton Buildings. Copyright Morton Buildings 2012. All rights reserved. A
listing of GC licenses available at mortonbuildings.com/licenses.aspx. REF CODE 043.
GENERAL PURPOSE | FARM | COMMERCIAL | EQUESTRIAN
Sell to
2×4
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Garn
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29,000
$ 695
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for only
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Drug screen required.
Questions, call Michelle at 620-365-5717.
SERVICES
You name it,
we print it.
Westphalia, KS
785-893-1620
HELP WANTED
2×4
kpa qsi
1 x 4
richRN – 6A-6P
mond
RN/LPN
A leader in the healthcare
industry, Genesis HealthCare
is now hiring at Richmond
Healthcare and Rehabilitation
Center located in Richmond, KS
SERVICES
FT every other weekend
CNAs
DIETARY COOK/AIDE
1×3
2×2
Bring us your tired, old saw hecks
running
or not – and get
HELP WANTED
ce
a
loos
Oska
Reach 29,000 readers in Anderson, Franklin and
Douglas counties – and beyond – when you run your
For Sale, Services, Auction or Help Wanted ad
in The Anderson County Review and
The Trading Post. Its almost a GUARANTEED sale,
and all for just $6.95 for 20 words (larger ads cost a
little more). Just drop by our ofce at 112 W. 6th in
Garnett or use the handy form below to print your ad
and mail with your payment.
Heading:
No. times ad to run:
Ad Start Date:
x$6.95 = Amount Enclosed
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
LOCAL
How much junk…
…is in your trunk?
Place your ad to sell your items today!
7B
Its EASY to place your ad! (785) 448-3121 (800) 683-4505 admin@garnett-ks.com
Rates
Up to 20 Words………..$4.95
Each addtl word…………….55
(Commercial……65)
BONUS: Add $2 for 10,000
additional households in
Lawrence/Douglas County in
The Trading Post.
Display Ads, per column
inch………$8.50
Statewide placement available,
Call for details.
Terms
Cash in advance
Visa, Mastercard, Discover
Credit to established accounts
Deadline
Classied Ads: 10am Friday
Display Ads: Noon Thursday
Call or send in your ad:
(785) 448-3121
(800) 683-4505 (out of area)
FAX: (785) 448-6253
EMAIL: admin@garnett-ks.com
Mail:
Garnett Publishing, Inc.
P.O. Box 409
Garnett, KS 66032
NOTICES
FARM & AG
PETS
Stop overpaying for your
prescriptions! Save up to 93%!
Call our licensed Canadian and
International pharmacy service to compare prices and get
$15.00 off your first prescription and Free Shipping. 1-800981-6179
Gun Show Nov. 21-22 Sat. 9-5
& Sun. 9-4 Wichita Kansas
Coliseum (I-135th & E 85th
Street) Buy-Sell-Trade Info: (56)
927-8176
24 ft. – Trailman flatbed trailer. (620) 363-1145.
nv10t3*
#1 in Hunting Leases. The
Best Land = The Most Success.
www.BaseCampLeasing.com/
hunt 866-309-1507. Lease your
private hunting spot now.
Registered Shih Tzu – shots
and wormed. Male, $250;
female, $300; older males, $200.
(785) 733-2699.
nv17t3*
1×2
AD
Want to buy – small loveseat
or recliner in black, grays or
mauve. (785) 448-3348.
nv17t1
1×3
AD
Happiness is . . . Enjoying
the featured exhibit provided
by the Heartland Art Guild
at the Walker Community
Gallery through November 30.
nv17t1
AD
LIVESTOCK
Hecks
Storage Buildings
448-0319
or
204-0369
Delivery Available
MAKE MONEY
USE THE
CLASSIFIEDS!!
Crisis Intervention Coordinator
2×3
eckan
ECKAN (a community action agency) is seeking
to hire an Anderson County Crisis Intervention
Coordinator. This part-time (20 hrs.) position
will operate out of Garnett to provide case
management and other support services to
low-income families throughout Anderson
County. Must be well-organized and have
effective communication skills. Bachelors
Degree in Human Services field preferred, but
not required. $11,400/year. Open until filled.
For a complete job description go to www.eckan.org.
A printable application can also be
downloaded from the site for interested applicants.
785-242-7450, ext. 7100. EOE M/F/D/V.
Red Poll Cattle – bulls, heifers
and cows. (620) 363-1145. nv10t3
Rose Katzers family wishes to thank
everyone for their prayers, cards,
flowers, food and memorial fund
donations. A special thank you to
Reuben, Moria and the staff at
Feuerborn Funeral Home. Thank you to
Father Mathew, Jane Lickteig and Mary
Milner for a beautiful service.
A big thank you to the very caring
staff of Golden Heights.
Happiness is . . . Richmond
Community museum chili/
soup supper, 5-7 p.m. Saturday
at the Community Building &
Pamela Peters book signing,
5-7pm at the museum. nv17t1
Happiness is . . . Shopping
at Josephines November 27th,
in store specials and food samples. No traffic, no hassel. Shop
at home. Christmas cards and
computer paper. 421. S. Oak on
the Square.
nv17t1
1×3
AD
1×2
katzer
Shirley, Fred and
Theresa and families
HAPPY ADS
1×3
MISC. FOR SALE
WANTED
Card of Thanks
The Anderson
County Review
785-448-3121
DONT NEGLECT YOUR CRAWL SPACE
2×2
kpa dry base-
Restore your homes value encapsulate your area today!
316-243-9342 888-485-6398 www.DryBasementKansas.com
2×2
thermo fisher
Eight
2×2
WELL
rcQUALIFIED
truckingCDL DRIVERS WANTED!!!
Hopper bottom company with regional, dedicated
runs, home on weekends. Benefits include, paid
vacation, health insurance and safety incentive bonus.
Call Dan @ 620-437-6616, Johnnie @ 620-437-6323
or send request for application by email to
dredding@rctruckinginc.com
2×4
kpa insurance
Sales Support Technician
Quality Structures, Inc.
167 Hwy 59, Richmond, KS 66080
Monday – Friday 8:00 am 5:00 pm
Job Summary
2×5 Draw and material
list QSI structures.
Major Job Responsibilities Include:
qsiwith Construction Maestro and Google Sketch-up; Prepare
Proficient
drawings and material list; Interface with sales, production, shipping
and administrative departments as required; Interface with
Construction Maestro software representatives to improve effectiveness
of software systems.
Knowledge, Abilities and Skills Required:
Ability to perform tasks accurately, effectively and in a timely manner;
Must be able to multitask and possess good communications skills;
Must be detailed oriented and have the ability to work under time
constraints; Computer literate with specialized skills in CAD programs;
Highly detail oriented with excellent follow-through skills; High math
aptitude with knowledge of trigonometry;
Previous construction experience, preferably in the post frame industry;
Ability to interface with suppliers, crews and personnel; Read and
interpret engineered drawings.
Benefits include: Paid vacation; Company paid health insurance; 401K
Qualified candidates may apply by sending
their resume to Dan Schaefer at:
Mail: 167 Hwy 59, Richmond, KS 66080 Fax: 785-835-6120
Email: dan.schaefer@qualitystructures.com
Quality Structures, Inc.
Specializing in Complete Post Frame Buildings
3×5
Lifecare Center
3×5
beckman motors
Eight
RN/LPN – Full-time position available
for Kansas-licensed nurses 12 hour shifts, nights & days
CNAs – full-time days & full-time nights
Dietary Aide – part time
Housekeeping – Full time
Accounts Payable/Payroll – full time
8B
THE ANDERSON COUNTY REVIEW Tuesday, November 17, 2015
LOCAL
Now
Available For
Christmas…
6×21
portraits of honor
Only
Featuring more than 800 historic
photographs of Anderson Countys
military veterans from every era.
Published in celebration of the
150th anniversary of
The Anderson County Review in
2015.
$
39
Pick up your copy today at our
offices at 112 W. 6th in Garnett, or
order by phone and well ship
anywhere in the country for $5.
(785) 448-3121 admin@garnett-ks.com
$
Save
95
5
00
l copy of
a
n
o
s
r
e
p
r
u
o
y
Purchase
lar price
u
g
e
r
t
a
r
o
n
o
Portraits of H
off up
5
$
e
v
a
s
d
n
a
5
through Dec. 1
s for
ie
p
o
c
l
a
n
io
it
d
to five ad
ing.
iv
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